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COPPER PRICES Ave. for mo. of Jnr.e .1S57E Ave for mo of July .1361,3 Ave for mo. of Aug. .13723 Ave. month of Sept. .1374 Av. wk. end 10-18-22 .K.firt Close wk. end 10-1S 22 .13.r.2.". THE WEATHER ARIZONA Sunday and Monday fair, not much change in temperature. VOL. 26 NO. 252 BISBEE, ARIZONA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 22, 1922 Price Five Cents MARITIME 'DRY' ING GOES INTO EFFECT RU! I To Ask Indictments In' Mystery' Murder o -a 9 i ! kbk AMMMiiMiAn r i -(- i p- r p r r ii-i -r -r n - T T 1 ill mm n T n ri n r PROSEGUTDR IS FIDEHT OF i, on STRIKE ORDER IS DEFENDED STRONGER CHE 01 DAUGHERTY Ex-Kaiser Maintains Veil of Secrecy Over His Plans for ApproachinglNuptials LOORN, Holland, Oct. 21. (By the j Associated Press) The veil of secre-l 1 cy that has hidden the life of the ex-! Grand Jury to Be Asked to j Says Injunction Least Drastic kaiser since he took up his residence j I T, ; NWr Trew i Means of Rescuing U. S. n Holland becomes more impenetra-j 1UU1V.I MlUHIMVii J - o DonWe flavin or Case ! From Civil War tate are extremely reticent about it I all. f ! Even those ho are in the ex-kai ser crats ceived as visitors to the former em- LLOYD GEORGE IN DEFENSE OF PERFORMANCES 's entourage! the few Dutch aristo-!,-, . . n . r r j ts who from time to time are re-; Retiring Premier Defends His Administration ) to Big Leeds Audience PLANS REMAIN SECRET! ble than ever before as curiosity in-; peror's retreat carry themselves with I creases abroad due to his forthcoming! a hauteur and a superior air of re I marriage with the Princess of Reuss. j serve that even the nerviest reporter TWO ARE QUESTIONED i SPEAKS ON WAR FRAUDS i This curiosity does not greatly af- cannot penetrate. All that the corres- v flict the villagers of Loom. They j pondents have found out is that both Refuses to Disclose Identity of Declares 1 3 War Time rraudj air of indifference, even of boredom.; monies are to take place November 3 Retrains rrom Revealing Any Twr Who Are Said to Be ' Indictments Have Already .Nine-tenths of them are austere Cal-: within the premises of the chateau Part ot His future rlEtns ; Total Number Mail Clerks Arraigned Now Reaches 30 COUNCIL BLUFFS, la., Oct. 21. The total of clerks arraigned for robbery ot the United States mails here, was brought to 30 this after noon when Alva M. Young, Des Moines, surrendered himself, plead ed guilty and furnished bond of $250. The other four men for whom warrants have been issued, 'have arranged to surrender Monday, the inspectors said tonight. The thirty four are all the mail theft cases which will be presented to the federal- grand jury which convenes October 31, Inspector C. H. Glenn, in charge of the investigation said tonight. 'EXTENSION OF ; TIE EXPIRED AT MIDNIGHT; 1 Enforcement Officials Hope ful of Decision Coming From Federal Court U. S. REPLY IS DELAYED Witnesses of Crime Been Returned j vinists and they look upon pomp and) and they will be attended by a Dutch; Deals Onlv ith Past .panoply as sinful vanities. Being; government secretary from The V I . - . n 1 l. . 1 ! 1L .1 . 1 T . . 1 . .1 - I CANTON, Ohio, Oct. 21.- -Making1 -(By the his only NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J .' Oct. 21. Developments in the investigation j Associated Press) ofthe murder of Rev. Wheeler Hallj campaign speech to the voters of his and Mrs. Eleanor Re.nhardt Mills to-(home Attorney oneral Daugh- nlght centered about thP 9.tt.ns of the, an accounling of Mmwwi tuum, ( .... , " r. his stewardship at Washington, de erv.ue .noiiuuj, wi.ru, n n-t strict Sabbatharians they disapprove ' Hague, the governor of the province! iof William's choice of Sunday as the; of Utrecht, the burgomaster of Loornj LEEDS, Oct. 21 (By the Associat-j day for the wedding feast. a few of the Dutch nobility residing) et Press) in a cnaractenstic speecn But they do not say so out loud, atl on neighboring estates, and about 50! before a sympathetic audience today) least the tradesmen who cater to Wil- invited guests from Germany, mainly j David Lloyd George defended his ad-1 liam's estate and the workmen who dignitaries under the old regime, and ministration but refrained from reveal occasionally are given jobs on the es-i army generals. ing his program. He spoke strongly indictments against at least two per sons, probably a man and a woman, will be asked by County Prosecutor Ueekman. Confident that he has built up a stronger case than is generally be-jthem undfir the conslituti0n Teved Prosecutor Beenman touayi questioned several of the newer fig- Ia lhe strike emergency, the attor res Tn the mvsterv. He discl0sed y general said, the federal govern nothing of the results, fending his course in the Chicago in- i junction proceedings, and in the pro secution of war frauds and declared that despite"accusation and calumny" the department of justice would pro ceed to perform its duties as it sees 60 IDE I. IN. I. HERS SEIZED AND LOCKED UP State Department Is Awaiting ! Report Giving Details of Esmeralda Seizure I . . .-. . . 1 X n. . . i-. l.mi-t ty of the two persons, said to be wit nesses of the double slaying, upon whose testimony he is believed to rely greatly in obtaining the indictments. Two persons were questioned today, one a maid in the Hall home and the other a vestry man in the rector's church. The latter, Ralph V. Gorsline who was examined in his home by Prosecutor Beekman, was reported tb have accompanied a young woman drastic means at hand for rescums the country from "the grip of civil war". He associated some of the blame to "the radicalism and charac ter" of "prominent labor leaders," and some of it to "hard boiled" railway executives, and asserted that any at torney general who would not have acted Hnder the circumstances, "should be impeached." . . Declaring the real purpose ot at- imulw V MOOTS home from the Y. M. C. A. on the Stacks on the department's record in night of the murder. Whether in so war frauds investigation was to force the hand of the government and pre maturely disclose important evidence, Mr. (Dautierty said such assaults had been inspired not by the department's inactivity, but because tender spots had been touched by the suits already (Continued on Pase Two) JEWELL SEEKING doing, he chanced upon knowledge of the crime either in passing the sceue of the murder or else where was not learned. Timothy N. Pfeiffer, counsel for Mrs. Hall, made known the nature of the examination of Barbara Tourgh, a maid in the Hall home, who wasj prilled for two hours today. The maid! denied, he said, that Mrs.' Hall had told her of the minister's death be fore the finding of the bodies was an nounced. It has been reported that Mrs. Hall asked her maid to wash some white socks an hour before the murders became known, saying: 'r. Hall is dead, and he will need them." nemer ll is upon inese iiurra f . j o 11 ii that Prosecutor Beekman intends to! bhopcratts Leader Valls Upon build the case he will present to the grand jury Monday, or upon discov eries not yet made public is not known. He expressed confidence in obtaining an indictment, saying he has "something" to justify his action in putting the case before that body. TO REOPEN GftSE Labor Board for First Time Since Union's Strike ERE OF DESPERAD SRE MYSTERY nnniriri n. iiian hi nu ii i n mini- MI! HI MM un iklllM ILLU Kknu ONCE HER KU KLUX KLANI ri .1 nf the nast. hut vneuelv of the future.! I Oman 1 Apparently his plans are not yet : tion to Members of Local formed, or he feels that the time isi i vrr T rV-,;-,H - He promised the people that what ever the future might bring, he would do nothing mean or paltry, declaring: "I will play no part that is unwor thy of the confidence placed in me by the people of this country at the great est moment in the empire's history." Mr ! WASHINGTON. Oct. 21 Provisions ! of the liquor statutes, held by Atior ', ney General Daugherty to prohibit : transportation and gale of alcoholic i beverages on American vessels any ; where and on foreign vessels within three miles of the United States roast ! became effective tonight at midnight. The extension of time ordered by i President Harding to permit ship lines to arrange their affairs to ron ; form to the ruling expired at midnight and enforcement of the declared sug- jgestions for a further extension had Ore.. Oct. 21. Withnot been approved., I. W. W. invasion of; . , ...,.., - id Police Turn Atten- PORTLAND, the threatened Portland a complete failure, accordin a Hpieirtn nnm i n a T mm til. foftorul td officials, pol.ce again turned the.rj ,n Yorkwnere the attention to local members of the or-. jnten)retation of ,he law , vn. gan.zat.on today anl in a wholesale der both and Ami(.an raid on the I. W. . hall nrrestedi, . ' . , . Lloyd George did not say spe- sixty alleged rad.cals. , . vi,Qt. n nt t. .jn lt,tM cifically that it was his purpose to; The 60 all of wnom ha(1 been . ,.. lead the liberal body. He did refrain tnrouh the niUnic iDal court and who i ,. v.. r i ax nio ouu 1 1 vT i ui in , eta i h l 4 1 VJ Jail Breaker Declared to Be Motion to Discharge Jury and I?8 at Manchester, from endorsing Aus,ha(1 been re,ea8ed earn O,,- t UA Cf T,l n,i-J k ten Chamberla.n s pronouncement were locked up on char Alleged Thieves Free j Judge at Hearing PHOENIX. Oct. 21. Charlie Fowler; CORSICANA,' Tex., Oct- 21. (By reputed bad hombre and horse thief, the Associated Press) The overrul-i may be in Mexico: he may be in Cali-, ing of the defendant's motion to dis fornia or he may be in Timbuctoo. charge the jury on account of R. J. There are lots of places in any one! Banks' alleged disqualifications as a of which Charlie may be, but Sheriff I juror and the admission by Eearle B. W. A. Campbell of Coconino county j Mayfield, the Democratic nominee for and Sheriff Frank Wheatland of Mon-j senator, that he had once belonged to tezuma county, Colorado, have quit j the Ku Klux Klan, featured today's trying to puzzle it out. Yesterday, the j session of the court in the Mayfield two officers left Phoenix taking with! ballot injunction suit, them J. H. Cook, erstwhile partner ofj The motion "to discharge the jury Fowler, who was captured by the pur- and stop the trial was overruled late suing posse last Wednesday morning, j today by Judge Scarborough. Both Cook and Fowler are said toj it was brought out by testimony be members of a horse stealing band : that there was a meetine of the Cor ner in the day charges of vagran- that the labor party was a menace to, .y orders issued by police chief Jen the country. After reviewing the btna .winitfiv th i v achievements' of his government in i v.0,,i w,. ,i i, oa ooiii r.,tv,o 1 -nr ani inrV. anil nartirrnlarlv hnW.I .... . u ... 1 rest fictions. tllUS giving a further ing up us success in restoring ureal ; suU iu n)ore wholesale raids. " The Britain s commercial prestige, he ex claimed: law. It is" pointed out that only vessels which clear from foreign ports after midnight tonight come within these automatic stay" of from five to sev- I rt I -j -a tlio t! ana rf mnut fifntl AH day was quiet so far as the longshore-, J , . , . .. , . . the regular Atlantic routes and of an men s strike was concerned, picket , , , ,. , . . even lone,er period with respect to lines were reduced, according to po- , . ....... ,. . . , , ships crosstng the Pacific, l'ce reports. No violence was at-1 . B ltepiy Dy tne state aepartment 10 "And they have smashed the com bination that has pulled through our iraae, our commerce aim our creuu , temnted. Non-union men went to and throughout the world; it is a crime j from tntjr WOrk without molestation.! tne protests of Great Mritain against against the nation He voiced a warm tribute to his chancellors of the exchequer, Mr. that has been operating extensively in Colorado. One other member of! the band, a man named Smith; arrest ed with Fowler and Cook near Wins low, is still in jail at Winslow. For some reason he, didn't make his geta way when hi3 two pals escaped. The other two members of the gang are reported to have been arrested in Apache county. Fowler is the only one of the band still at large. Last reports of Fowler were that he was seen in Yuma at one o'clock Fri- Though police squads searched all t incoming freight trains today, they I were able to find no one who might j seizure of the Canadian steamer Em erald tonight still was awaiting a de tailed report from the New York pro- (Contlnued on Pare Two) be classed as a "red." Assassins Set Day For Wirth's Death; Chancellor Lives CHICAGO, Oct. 21 (By the Asso ciated Press) For the first time since I the call for the federated shop crafts i to walk out on July 1, B. M. Jewell, president of the organization, today 'called on the United States railroad road tkket to Yuma and then spent j board, holding a lengthy conference j a couple of hours looking around the with Chairman Ben Hooper. Fresi-. railroad station here waiting for the sicana Ku Klux Klan near Kerens last! night and the Mayfield injunction suiti was discussed. That there was aj Democratic meeting" in this samel vicinity last night was also testified! to by Alfred R. Young, of Corsicana, who admitted he is a member of the klan. As to the Ku Klux Klan, Mr. May field said he was once a member but had resigned in January this year. Notification of acceptance of his res ignation was received in January, he; said. no TT TAR IFF MEASURE Declares International Co operation to Prevent War One of Big Problems hibition director giving details of the rase against, that shin. The brief re- j Sixteen men who admitted member port receive(, Veterdav. declaring th j ship in the I. W. W. were among those j Emerald ha(1 mef,aiIy' communicated released in municipal court today by, with lhe shore by means of small ot considered sufficiently for the purpose of thq udge stated, in ordering the men's j g,ate department whic h had requested release, that his association with rad- Secretary Mellon to obtain and trans icals in the last few days had madejmit all details bearing upon the inci him a "bit of a radical himself." The; aent. i statement of Judge Fkwall came fol-l it.i n.. , ... .. lne su .Judge Ekwall. They had been charg-!boatg wag m ed by the police with vagrancy. The informa,ive announced by PEORIA, Ills., Oct. .lowing the examination of a foreigner; Presid(nt ,Iai.dins, enforcement of the who had been arrested by the PpHce.;iiqftor and CUBtomg ,awg al gea wou,,, , x..c ,.. i u.e ,.Mu..r-r .ibe rejrtrU.tpd tQ tne bree mi,e was an I. W. W. . . , , , . , , .... . .. . , ... ...except in cases of ships which ha -No I wasn t until I was put in Jail tablitihed communi0a,ion with A last night. Now I am one." the A.- territory by their own boat BERLIN, Oct. 21. This was the day set for the assassination of Chancellor Wirth, but he was still living and happy tonight, and a young man, said by the police to have informed them; of the plot, remained imprisoned at j Hagen in the province of Westphalia. According to the information which the police said he gave them, the mur der was to have been carried out in the same manner as the assassination dent Jewell notified Chairman Hooper that the shopcrafts within a few days would present a petition to the board for re-opening of its case against the New York Central, involving estab lishment of the piece work system in shops, at Elkhart, Ind. This question was before the board prior to the walkout. The meeting between President Jewell and Chairman Hooper was marked by manifest cordiality. j President Jewell's visit with Chair man Hooper is regarded as an indi cation that his union again will take ua, ...u.umB u, lCr , ... r u r t j said. ti0nal co operation to prevent war and ,.i ur-.euuu.wum. u. .r-oa He attended klan meetings at Dal- a sound basis for agriculture are .nues ed8l r.meu.x. ne ,s ba... ( las Qainseville, Long View and Arkanj among the biggest problems Qonfront- navtj ciime 10 i iuieui.x. uougni a ran- saa Pass dnrine- his ramimlni hut did not make political speeches at any oif them, he said. "Friends asked me to go to them, and I went." he said. Mr. Mayfield joined the klan at Austin and resigned at-Austin, accord ing to his testimony. He was on the stand nearly all morning. train to depart. According to the sheriff and Fow ler's partner, J. H. Cook, the fugitive comes . from a " respectable and well known family and his father is said to have been at one time postmaster 21. Interna- fendant answered. "Well, I was made something of a radical myself yesierday," the jurist answered. ing the country, William G. McAdoo, j Despite the apparent change of at former secretary of the treasury, de- j titude of the municipal court, the po- be restricted to the three mile zone except in cases of ships which had es- nier'- I can lerrnory dj me:r own uuais, ui j in such a manner as brought them I within tlie purview of court decisions ; holding such craft to be legally with . in the zono, although physically out. side. clared here tonight in a Democratic campaign address. He charged that the Republican administration had by a policy of deflation, destroyed pros perity. He also attacked the Fordney McCumber tariff bill. "It is estimated that the cost of liv- When .'udge Scarborough adjourned jng to the American people will be iu of the late Foreign Minister Rathenau The youth was publicly reported toj its place before .the board to argue have said that an organization sworn j disputes with railroad managements to bring about the assassination of! arising prior to the signing of the the chancellor had hired him to do It.; Baltimore agreement. It was also .1 v. . . 1. ....' n n - i T lnnll nnnn siairu iu Ul me uiuuu t i avui and that he accepted the engagement,! but fro mthe beginning never Intended to keep his word. Nine Burn to Death . in Fire in New York the board to hear controversies with roads not parties to the Baltimore agreement. It was unofficially an nounced that the railroad board wilt grant Prescient Jewell's petition. Russian Millions Will Need Relief only 1400,000,000 will go into the fed- lSvoSSS Sat f MOnt i CUrt t0daV UnUI IO",,a; "10r"1Ug Hcrea'V lue Foey-McCumb mA C"nt- Co'ora(to- j announced that "we think all the tes-bill $4,000,000.000 per annum, of. which Asserts U. S. Tariff Threatens Europe With Desttution lice continued their campaign against; the -Undesirables " Between a. "id-, RogniZatlOll of nieht and siv o rlork tonight fl-I iier-! sons, 60 of whom were avowed I. W. j W. were arrested. Twenty-five were picked up in the 1. W. W. hall and about the streets. Eighteen were re-' leased after examinatiou by the pclice. i Sultan's Authority to Govern Refused timony is in." In case it is argument in the case will irt Monday morning. Obregon Discusses Capital and Labor I CONSTANTINOPLE. Oct. 21 Rafet j Pasha announced tonight that the An gora government refused to recognize the sultan's authority to govern the eral treasury." he said. The speaker charged that the fram-1 v- Cl LI 1 L l 1 clllU LJclUUI i Turks. It respected lhe Calipsate n ers of the bill purposed to destroyed 7l fU Xfnircn'inormon ' a re,iKious symbol, but declined to ad- he I T' m i. i omumvi itiv.ii nni the sultan s temporal power. BERLIN, Oct. 21; (By the Associat ! , ; ed Press) The tariff of the United MOSCOW. Oct. 21. (By the Asso-i States, coupled with the demand forjeiated Press) Eight million Russiansj repayment of war loans, threatens to; will have to be helped through the drive Europe to destitution, declared! winter in one way or another after! Herr Gcthein', former minister of fi- January 1. and the soviet government nance and at present Democratic! will be able to take care of about only leader in the Reischtag, discussing the! half this number, Leo Kaneneff. who American foreign trade and keep the I American markets for monopolists de claring that destruction or restriction of foreign trade "does secret and ir reparable injury to the American 'The Nationalists." re added, "will MEXICO CITY, Oct. 21. (By theinot e ruled by numarfhs.- Wit are the Associated Press) President Obre- i champions of the democracy, which i gon, speaking to the newspaper cor-! dawning in the Near rL. tn v.,.. CWA NEW YORK, Oct. 22. Nine lives! ' J$0V With Milder were lost and several persons were in-' Jured early today in a fire that swept " a six-story double tenement house at SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Oct Lexington avenue and 110th street, Robert William Lynch, 17 years new tariff policy of the United States today. "If the United States does not ac cept European industrial products in payment." he added, "she will lose Europe shortly as a buyer." "Such goods as Europe cannot dis pense with will be obtained from oth- 21. 1 er lands which will take the products containing 21 families. RE-ELECTED PRESIDENT. PITTSBURGH. Oct. 21. Mrs. Wil bur P. Thirkield, Cambridge, Mass., was re-elected president of the Wo man's Home Missionary Society at to day's session of the board of managers. old. was formally charged with murder tonight. The police say the boy had confessed to killing Thomas J. Mc cormick, 16. last night, because Mc Cormick had "picked on him." Lynch is said to bare declared that McCormick threw a knife at of European industry in exchange. LEGION HEAD TO SPEAK. NOGALES, Oct. 21 Celora M. Stod dard of Phoenix. Arizona, state com mander of the American Legion, will be the principal speaker at the armis- bim.ltiee day celebration in this city, fit whereupon he drew a revolver in self! was announced tonight at headquar defense and fired fivo times. 'ters of the local post. E.; t farmer and working man. With his ; respondents today said that harmony ' foreign market cut off, the farmer betweelt capital and labor would be TViV HTvno A 5 rill 11 IIP achieved "if capital will place upon I 1 " 1 its eyes the glasses of large, vision, which will permit it to see more clear ly into the future." was acting premier during Lenine's illness, has reported to Colonel Wil liam N. Haskell, head of the American Relief administration activities field. Kameneff estimates th figures represent minimum require- j ments and that the number of needy; may increase if the winter is parties ularlv severe. must dump his surplus on the home market at rirmous prices." Similarly with foreign markets re stricted, manufacturers do not work to capacity and the working man is affected, he said. 1 a Wing Is Successful Hjis declaration was prompted by: NEW YORK. Oct. 21 Develon- in the! League of Nations at his M Opens Lonterence dispatches from the i telling of the spread United States ments of a new type of airplane wing of radicalism i for the United States mail service. there and the energetic means to be which it is declared, will more than adonted bv the United States covern-, double the carrying capacity of the ment to meet the movement. 'phrt.es now in use. was announced to- The president ajs-r-ed th.it- Ik-, day by the Aeromarine Airways, Inc. suspension of guar.mers- in Mexico lhe :ietv win;:, designed by raul V1ENN V Oct 20. The league ofiould not be granted at lint lin.e. as , Zimmerman, Aevomprine Airways en nations association opened a confer-! it permitted of many abuses and w;.s j gineer, said the announcement, in ence here today with delegates seated' practicat-le only In abnormal times, nights between New York and Wash from 19 countries. America was rep-j Requests for the susnn.uop of guar- ington, a standard mail plane equipped MINISTER TO U. S. THE HAGUE. Oct. 21. Jonkheer Dr. A. C. D. Van Do Graeff, Nether lands minister to Tokio, has been ap pointed Dutch minister to the United ) the States, it was learned here today. He i tions. said by rresiuent UDregon to De grow-, un t'.e new wings, ti.e aom...... will succeed .Dr. J. C. A. Everwijn. I Soviet Russia and the states formed ing better. He denied that General j ment said, speeds as low as 6S-mile! whose resignation as minister to out of one time Austro Hungarian ter- Joaquin Amaro was in tevolt in the j an hour nnd as high as 100 miles Washington was announced last July, ritory were not represented. states of Coahuila and Nuevo Leon, .could m maintained. resented by Professor Jerimiah Jenkslantees have been m-n- by many per- with the wings, carried 1,032 pounds of New York University. Turkey and sons i'. view of the cp'Jn.ic of c. inie. ! of mail instead of the usual 40i Ukraine had the largest delega ! The revolutionary situation was ' pounds. i ' -7.: