NOW SEEK HALL MURDER SUSPECT To-Nlght's Weather SHOWER8. To-Morrow' Wother SHOWERS COOLER. WALL STREET SECOND wall mSM STPEET MB closing mm TABLES. llifflilM mt Ij EDITION I "Circulation Books Open to All." I "Circulation Books Open to All." i VOL. LXIII. NO. 22,175 DAILY. Copyright (Nr York World) b; FrcM t'ubliahlna CMiipaar, 1021. NEW YORK, TUESDAY,' OCTOBER 10, 1922. F.nltrvd in Srrond-fl.im Mntttr Vo.t orricc. Nw York. N, T. PRICE THREE CENTS WML, Ms 9 Standard Oil ROCKEFELLER S. 0. STOCKS IN SENSATIONAL RISE, JUMP BILLION DOLLARS IN VALUE Many Shares Have Soared From SO to 200 Points in the Last Week. SET NEW PRECEDENT. New York Company Shares Alone Have Increased $275, 000.000 This- Year. Wull Street la witnessing Increases In the quoted market value of shares of companies that originally con stituted the Standard Oil Trust which are without precedent In market annnls. When tho trust was dissolved by Supremo Court decree In 1911 the original company was split up Into thirty. three units. The value of sliiira since dissolution now show a pi lee appreciation of more than ' ?3, 000,000,000. Making a comparison with the low piiceB of this year the shares of theso various -units .show an Incrcaso In murjket value of- a, billion dollars. During the last week alone many of the shares of companies that consti tuted tho trust ten yeais ago have lison from 50 to 200 points, und have added from $10,000,000 to neaily $200, 000,000, to the collective wculth or itycl.hofdyrs. t current lnuiUet pi ices tho Mian-., or 'ho standard Oil Compan of Imli . show un appreciation of nearly $130,000,000 coinprcd with the low of thf.i year. Shares of the Standard Oil Company of New Jer&ey show an Incrcaso Jn market value of slightly moro than $30,000,000, shares of the Standard Oil Company of California have increased moro than $16j,000,000,whlle shares ot the Standard Oil Company of New York alone have Increased in market value $275,000,000. It was stated at tho time ot the dis solution of the trust that John D. Kockefcllcr owned 30 per cent, of tho block. Had .Mr. Rockefeller retained JiM original holding hla wealth meas Uied by Standard Oil shares alone would show an appreciation of moro than a billion dollars In ten years, to which tills year has cotnrlbuted lp proximately $400,000,000. ' Wall Street has been at a total loss to understand tho reason back of tho urgent buying of the shares. It Is known that many of tho Standard Oil units havo planned to follow tho ex ample of tho Standard Oil Company of California and tho Standard Oil Company ot New York and readjust capital, through which stockholders will recclvo large stock dividends. (Continued on Second Page.) TIERNAN WON'T ' FIGHT WIFE'S SUIT Professor Not to Oppose Divorce Action. SOUTH DEND, Ind., Oct. 10. Prof. John P. Tlernan of Notre Dame Univer sity, the complaining husband In the Tleroan-Poulln paternity suit, will not contest his wife's action for divorce, he Intimated to-day. The case will prob ably go by default when Mrs. Tlernan presses her charge that Tlernan was 'cruel and Inhuman" beforo as well as after the, Poulln affair. SToni wXnrrwro nv weather The following message was received to-day at the local office ofcthe Weather Bureau from Washington, D. C: "Small crafts warning Indicated at 10 A. M., Delaware Dreakwater to Nan tucket, Jasa. Increasing southeast winds, possibly becoming strong this afternoon or to-night with thick, show cry weather." A FORD A DAY GIVEN AWAY EXPECT ARMISTICE WITH TURKS TO BE SIGNEDJjfVTETO-DAY Conferees Return to Mudania to Receive Reply From Angora Assembly. . CONSTANTINOPLE. Oct. 10 (As sociated Press). Tho signing of the protocol nrmlstlco at Mudania Is ex pected to tako place at 6 o'clock this afternoon, according to an announce ment by tho Havas Agency, the einl-ofllcla1 French news organiza tion. Gen. Harington and his Mart, who arrived hero on the Iron Duko at 1.45 this morning, expect to return to Mudania at 3 P. M. MUDANIA, Oct. 10 (Associated Press). The, Allied Generals drew up their final armistice convention here last evening and submitted It to Ismet Pasha, the Turkish Nationalist representative. The Angora Govern ment was given until & P. M. to-day lo accept or I eject It. TERMS ALLIES GAVE KEMAL AT THRACE Gives Complete Possession In About 45 Days. MUDANIA, Oct. 10 (Associated Press). Tho conventions as submit ted to tho Nationalists contains these specifications: I That the Greek evacuation ot Thraco sha'll be carried out within about fifteen days. II That tho Greek civil authorities, Including tho gendarmerie, shall be withdrawn as soon as possible. Ill That aa the Greek authorities withdraw tho civil powers will bo handed over to tho Allied authorities who will transmit tnem to tno Turk ish authorities on tho same day. IV That this transfer shall be wholly concluded throughout Eastern Thraco within a minimum period of thirty days after the evacuation of the Greek troops has been concluded; V. That tho civil authorities of the Angora Government shall be ac companied by such forces of tho Na tionalist gendarmcrio as are strictly necessary for tho maintenance of law, order and local security. VI. That tho various operations In tho withdrawal of tho Greek troops and tho transfer of tho civil admin istration shall bo carried out under (Continued on Socond Page.) The World's Great Lead Number of Advertisements Yesterday THE WORLD 6,010 Ads. The Times 2,335 Ads. The Herald 864 Ads. The American 787 Ads. The Tribune 280 Ads. WORLD over all comblnd 1,744 Ads. THE WORLD printed 2,213 more Ads. than corresponding day ot last year. Stocks CANDLER S FIANCEE DENOUNCES HIM AS HE JILTS HER Mrs. De Beouchel Issues Long Statement Saying She Will Fight for Honor. CHALLENGES CHARGES Declares Coca Cola Man Re fuses Demand That He Name Her Traducers. ATLANTA, Oct. 10. The romance, of Asa G. Candler, aged coca cola manufacturer, came to an abrupt ending to-day. Mrs. Onezlma Debou'chel," i New Orleans beauty, made public 'a state mcnt asserting that Candler' hod broken his engagement to hereon ac count of certain reports brought to him reflecting on her character, and that Candler had refused and was still refusing to furnish her 'with the names of the party or parties act cubing her, Mrs. Dcbouchel came to Atlanta last night, after calling Mr. Candler over tho long distance telephone. On reaching Atlanta sho said sho notified Mr. Candler, and he and his son. Asa G. Candler jrA 'eihje? to her hotel and tho three were" Vn' conference nearly two hours. "Mr. Candler was very much broken up," .Mrs. Debouchel said. "I felt sorryfor him. ,He told me he still loved me1 and wanted1 to, marry me and that'ho'dl'd riqt! believe this hideous slander which lias been taken to him and yet lie. refused, to' give me tho name of tho man ,,'or. men who accused me. ' Tho charges against her, Mrs. Do Bouchel said, went back to a Con federate re-unlon in .Atlanta, three or four years ago. Sho niado tho fol lowing statement: "Mr. Candler and I were to haov been married on the 20th of Septem ber. All arrangements were made, clergyman engaged, cards of an nouncement printed and we were to Iks at home here In Atlanta on Oct. 10. "On Sept. 15 he wrote me that It would not be fair to marry me and bring me here, where I would bo slighted on account of reports circu lated here against me. "These reports, according to him, wero that during a 'Confqderate re union In Atlanta three or four years ago, when I had the supremo honor of being ChapercnrMjeneral and when I was attended 'every moment, I had sollcltcdtwb men to visit me at the hotel-at night.. '.'These reports'had been brought to him, he said, from 'sources he wj:s bound to believe,' Just before he was to take the train for our wedding. They would, he said, follow m-j wher ever I might go. I would nsve'r bo able to hold my head up again. "This hideous slander and Mr. (Continued oh, Second Pago.) France w Expected to Protest Ruling Against Liquor on Ships Jusserand Probably Will Be tion of International Law. PARIS, Oct. 10 (Associated Press). The French Government Is closely studying tho situation created by Attorney General Daugherty'B ruling that foreign vessels shall not be allowed to bring wines or liquors lnsldo the American three-mile limit. What action will be taken eventual-- ly Is still uncertain, but It seems most probable tbat Ambassador Jusserand will tako back to Washing ton with him, when he sails on Oct. 21, Instructions to st forth, that tho French foreign trade will bo greatly damaged by this ruling. The question of Us validity under International law may bo raised, as well as the bearing the ruling has on Jump ROBBERS HOLD UP DIAMOND CUTTER: GET $23000 GEMS Enter Office at No. 284 Pearl Street and Attack Tyo Occupants. BEATEN UNCONSCIOUS Two Thugs Bind Shop ( Owner and Broker, Then Make Escape. Shouts on the sixth floor of the office building at No. 284 Pearl Street, two doors from Bcekman Street, at 9 o'clock to-day caused tho elevator man, James Hall, to call tho Super intendent, E. Jonathan, and take him up to find out what was tho matter. As the elevator reached the sixth floor Q, Galcr, a diamond broker, canta hopping out of tho door of room No. 605, occupied by A. Tarvltzky. who has a diamond cutting shop Gator's feet were bound together, as were, his hands, and there was a towel twisted about his neck. Blood was streaming from a gash over his right eye. Hall c it tho twine about the man's feet and hands and lod him Into the djamond cutter's office, where Tar vltzky was found similarly bound and with his face marked with sloshes and brt.lses. Jonathan went down In the elevator and ran to the Bcekman Street hospital and brought' back a surgeon. Tarvltzky and Galer said they had been looking over a package of un cut stones when two rough looking men entered and aold they were dia mond cutters looking for work. When Tarvltzky said he needed no help, the two drew revolvers, he said, and set upon him and the broker, beating them over the heads with the butts of their revolvers until they were uncon scious. When he recovered, Tarvltzky said, the strangers were gone, as well as a quantity of uncut stones. Ho tele phoned to the Diamond Drill Carbon Company at No. 63 Park Row that a collection of diamonds sent to him by them for cutting and valued at $23,000 were among the missing gems. When tho detectives of tho Oak Street Station arrived they were un able to get a satisfactory description of, the robbers ..from eiUier tho dia mond cutter or, tho .broker, '.Neither. Hall nor Jonathan had seen tho strangers enter the building and Hall was particularly positive he had taken no ono up In the elevator during the morning except tenants of the build ing, and Galer and that he hod not seen or heard any one coming down the stairs before he heard the shouts for help. Instructed to Raise Ques the question of the freedom of the seas. It Is held In certain Frencl. quarters' that tho seas cannot be said to be frco If the whips of one nation are so ham pered by the regulations of another nation that they aro unable to put into the lattcr's ports under the same con ditions as In all other ports of the world. a Billion Dollars in SEVEN INJURED AS TRAINS CRASH AT COS GOB CONN Two Locomotives and Three Coaches Derailed When Local Sidewipes Freight. ALL TRAFFIC BLOCKED Passengers in Panic, but None Is Hurt Seriously by: Accident. seven persons were Injured, none fatally, when local train No. 2?2 ot tho New Haven lino, from Stamford to New Haven, Conn., sldcswlpod i way freight at Cos Cob shortly bo fore 1 o'clock this afternoon. ' The freight, eastbound, was pullfnsr out or a siding on track No. 4 -twhen the passenger train, travelling, l was reported, at a rate of 10 miles an hour, struck It. Tho passenger train had two loco- motives and tho freight one. All three wero badly smashed. In addition o tho locomotives, a mall car, baggage car and ono coach of tho passongcr train were' derailed. , The Injured Included two memUers fyf ti Llu . ' . t.cgi, w?w, mree memoers ot the passenger crew and two rjatumn. gers. The dejaJlod.coach was a smok'-. o "..in nicio were no women and chil dren In It For a time panic reigned In the other coaches, but subsided wnen it was found there were no In juries outside ot shock." Jfost of the ujuicu wero ireaiea ui tne Station In StamforaY " 1 - , Traffic on the eastbound tracks was Interrupted several Hours. ' ' An official statement from the New York, New Haven' and Hartford rail road said: '' ; "At 12.S0 P. M. an eastbound way freight was pulling out of a siding on Track No. 4 when tho motor of the freight was sides wiped by train No. 282, local from Stamford to New Ha ven. The motor of the frcljrht. both motors of the passenger train, a mall car, baggage car and coach were in. railed. There were no serious inlnrW Tho members of both cnglnd crews were slightly Injured. Doth cast bound tracks wero blocked by the ac-' cldcnt." ROBBED OF $1,300 IN GREENWICH VILLAGE Seeking .Fiartcee, Man Meets thugs, Is Assaulted. ,Bound hand and foot, Seymour Ely lu.nlw.;t- t'h,l. . 1 1 , i . . y . -uiA, v jiu buiu ue waa a cue retery to Mr. Whiting In Detroit.""' was found .at the'.-foot of a stoop at' No. It6 Waverly Place, at 2 A. M to-day. He said he had been black jacked by two men und robbed of $1,300 in cash and Jewelry. He has been at the Hotel McAlpln since Sept. 17. According to the story he told De tective Campbell of the Charles' Street station, he went to the Waverly Place address to confer with his fiancee, re garding -the furniture for their1 home. The money he carried was to havo been spent for It. On reaching the flat she had oocu. pled, he said, he found she had moved to the Hotel Judson. As he was leav ing two men seized him, slugged him. carried him Into the . empty room where his fiancee had lived and robbed him. They left him trussted up, he said, but he managed to roll out, through the hall and to the stoop, where Policeman Joseph Gor don found him. GERMAN MAitK NOW 3,054 TO THE DOLLAR Kerr Low Tlrrnrit Slude an Contlun Kxclmnae. LONDON. Oct. 10. The German mark fell to new low levels on Uii Lon don Exchange to-day, belnr quoted at lt.30 at ! record low of 1J.S00 - the pound, or approximately 3,054 to the American dollar. FREE GIRL WHOSE PLEA TO EDWARDS CAUSED MURDER ARRESTS ) I Fjire on Guards With Smug gled Revolvers, Slaying One and Wounding Five. (DUBLIN, Oct. 10 (Associated Press). Armed with revolvers smug gled in Dy some undisclosed means, Irish Irregular Army prisoners In the Mountjoy Jail hero made a determined attempt ,, to escape to. day. In. tho 'lighting whlch'followcd within the Jail wjilfs'two of tho participants -were killed, ono a guard and tho other a Prisoner, while fivo guards ''and a number of prisoners were woumled. (Oii.ii.nucil on Second Page.) Two Murders a Week by Police, Says Deputy Commissioner Leach Rum-Hounds Must Go, Declares Enright's First Assist ant at Cop's Trial. "There's a murder a week due to drunken policemen," declared Dep uty Police Commissioner Leach In Brooklyn to-duv. "Two since last Saturday. We are going to rid tho department Of the rum-hounds." It was In tho trial of Patrolman' John Dolan ot the Dutler Street Sta tion that the Deputy Commissioner was moved to make these remarks. Dolan was charged with being drunk on duty Sept. 14, and the gravest testimony against him was that of Dr. Leahy, a police surgeon. "Dolan reported sick four times In May," said the doctor; "twice in June, twice In July and three times In September. Each time the trouble was alcohol. I don't know what his Special Daily Prize for Four Weeks For "What Did You See To-Day? " J TWO PARTIES BELIEVED TO HAVE HAD A HAND I HALL - Absence di Blood Under the Body of Mrs. Mills Now Prompts Suspicion Her, Throat Was Cut Some Time After She and Rector Had Been Shot tp Death. Prosecutors Admit They Doubt Authenticity of Confession Made by Schneider, but Say "He Knows Something" -- Bahmer Girl At tempted Suicide Over Him. r (Special From a Staff Correspondent of T Evening World.) ' NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Oct. 10. Were there tyo parties of spies upon suspected love affairs on the. Phillips's farm the rigl)l the Rev. Edward Wheeler Mall and Mrs. Eleanor Rcmhardt Mill? were shot tb death? It is possible that the one party, seeking divorc: evidence rather than murder, found themselves close behind a band of drunken boys who did the killing in a mistaken belief as to thr entity. i There was no blood found under the. bqdy bf Mrs. Mills, though her hdad was nearly cut off. Did a member of the second. party, in a ,fren,ry of jealousy, attempt to wreak vengeance oh tfie dead, woman by slashing at hep throat and neck when she was growing cold? In tho. confusion of doubt and suspicion whlctbava. grown but of Hi t later developments of the Hall-MUlBf tragedy the'qe questions arc telua nsked on the streets by persons who are absorbed thV'murder puzzle to tho point of forgctfulncss ot thclrdally routine of 'business, and domes tic life. , , , ; fbo EO-called "solution" of the murder dO(i.not dissolve In pulHv opinion.'- :j 3 MEN IN AUTO HOLD UP OTHER AUTO Get $60 and Dinmond Ring After Asking Directions. ..Three men In on automobile who asked directions to Hempstead, I I., last night held up B. I wuey or No. 929 Newklrk Avenue, Brooklyn, while he was driving with two com panions along Fulton Avenue juai outsldo of Central Park, L. I., fled with 60 and a diamond ring, Wiley reported to the Nassau County authorities. With Wiley at the time, ho said, were the Misses Florence and a race Sullivan',' sisters and 'school .teachers of .Hempstead. He said the machine turned quickly In front of htm, blocking the road, Aa he was about to reply to the question, the men produced revolvers, ho said, robbing htm of his money and Miss Florence Sullivan of the ring. record In August was, because I was on my vacation then." Dolan, In his own behalf, denied that he was a drinking man, but said he had suffered from Indigestion and had been using a medicine prescribed for that. . "Here's a bottle ot It, you can smell it," he said. "Tako that stuff away," ordered Deputy Leach, "It's the same old story. I'll tako up your caso with Commissioner Enrlght." Then he mode the comment quoted above on police murders. Value MILLS ER PR08ECUTORS DOUBT STORY OF 8CHNEIDER. On the , vryhlghest authority, The Evening World, Is Informed that neither Josecutor Strieker of Mid dlesex County nor Prosecutor Deel.- man of Somerset County believes tin story of Ilaymond Schneider that In saw his friend, Clifford Hayes, shorti tho minister and (the choir singer. The most that they tell their In tlmate friends Is that they belle. tho boy knows something.' ' When Haymood Schneider began confessing" at dawn yesterday Iih said some things which, wero plainly untrte. Everything ho said waa taken fdown by a stenographer: Mr. Strieker studied over the first state ment and' then went back'tq'tthe bov nnd pointed out the -utter Im'probn bl(lty of some of his story. Schneldei promptly corrected tho. tdle. to nt J.I . Strieker's criticism. This continued until Mr. Strieker .and Mr. Ileckmun had five different statements from Schneider, each one of which lie signed, declaring that It was tin; truth, , the whole truth and nothing but the truth. He signed the last onn in his cell In the Somervllle Jail at five minutes after 10 o'clock last night.. i One. pt the discrepancies which Schnetdsr haggled most about wax the tlnVo! at' which tho minister an1 his choir singer were killed. The "confession" nt first fixed the time at 1 o'clock Friday morning, which accounts for the formal charge that he committed the murder Sept. IB. Instead of Sept. 14. The shots and screams on the Phillips farm were heard by at least six persons at a time which they fix. varylngly, at half past 10 or 11 o'clock Thursday night. 'Detective Totten of Somerset. County, after a talk with Schneider to-day, asserted meaningly that tlu ProKecutor had nt last a reasonably sounding explanation as to the at tempted beheading of the 'body of Mr. Mills, but that It made It necessan- or mm ana Mr, ueemnan to comu back to New Brunswick and questlo: some of those who were und. MURD See Page 23 '"'S 1 1 a i8 1 m t J