rTIili wbrtetKMW to Th BU. TERN NTINEL W,tc4 row SA M '. Subscription Frl; injur! iBTwr' H - $1.50 per Yccir I- WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. TUESDAY, OCT. 3 1 , 1 922 Slxty-ScczrAh Yczi If! lfT- - TP! V a. , , -,, ,; -;. " Tr : . MB o Arre.? Ye In Halls-Mills Murder Case At New Brunswick, N. J. WES r Ued luesaaysan ECHV ft Vussolini To Head New try By Command of ing Victor Emanuel KED TO BOLSHEVISM tlnst "The Politicians' Is r Younger Element, Many km Rdne Veterans of JjftStf L Thousands Black-Shlrt Army Beady To March ILCDHTROLLIVmGWAB TflLY TODAY TO BE AGCEP L Oct. 30 Benito Mussolini, br the fascisti, called by King Emanuel to form a cabinet, in Rome this morning, thronging the neighborhood railway terminal gave him L.iaiucri welcome.-. Capital was lavishly decorated lags today, out caim was- oe fntained. It Is believed the Lnistry will be constituted, in, EiMa t,t th AAV ' fc the faselstl leader arrived tauecchia, before taking a Rome, thousands ot fasclSU u-Aipnmpr) him. In a kddresfl Mussolini exhorted the to remain calm and patriotic L. t i:i- in Italv. susnended Ey by order of the military Itiea. was resumed today, the It of railways announced. y- klns'8 troops unquestloningly led lorries to pass in and out city. . . regulars and f ascistl oore Ives with marked gracious- iwarde foreigners, doing their to alleviate the Inconvenience bv the prevalence 01 some-, near martial -law.'.'; As . " an ile. one of the occupants of was ih rorresnondent. ai- the tnvn nt flra.nciano last , a young corporal jumped ! the ear to escort H saieiy the town. The citiiena under ireasion the occupants were larrest, jeered them until the explained the ' passengers Americans. Then the crowd prvinir "Vivt America."-. 1 Incident typical of the attl- large sections of the people along the route to noma group of shepherds forgot Ini'ttM ninmpntnrllv. '. ' fi.nd as a party of black-shirted marched along the road, "Vivia Fascisti." . n. Oct. 30 (W The Asso I'ress) The triumphant BNTINI-lil) ON PAGB TWO) e'restsin case INST MRS. CHAMPION fcland, Oct. 30 The state its ease at noon today in the of Mrs. Mable Champion, with the Hlaylng of Thomas fmnell, of New Haven. Conn., : te officers who arrested Mrs. lion and her husband follow- shooting were the last wit- to testify. v , Berueant Schneider, the first called this morning, testified rs. Champion tried to trick to believing that O'Csnnell a dying condition in a hos- fter the shooting, had cleared any connection- with the THEORY OF 'THE III TED Railroad Labor Board Says To Take This As Basis Would Wreck All Roads WOULD ADD $3,122,952,387 Public And Road Members of Board Take Position That Just And Reas- onable Wage Is a Uvlng Wage; Warren Stone, of Engineers, Won't Discuss Decision S NOW CON T ROL I VLADIVOSTOK J'laging Allowed And Got Nent Is Maintaining - Splendid Order ivostok. Oct. So Excsof for pi, which the Japanese were r l" move when th-tf Vftrtuatea Pok' 1'ttle of value was left f" the incoming nhita. trooDS. ftreating white troops requl r 8,1 'he water transport, from reakr to launches, and carr F v. rything that could b Ven to office curtains. . I white troops even took a shlp f mmunition, which H was re- a going to Chang Tsao-Lln, downed kin f Mannhuria. "'imated that 15.000 . Deopls " CltV nrir,r ,V. . w .f r- iwreeg. During the panic r' their possessions greatly real value. j'. Panic Wnn linnalUJ . m V,n. "eds have not molested any a massacre at Nlkolosk enied by Japanese arriving The Chita force have desire to make peace ui nations and to open, trade "lth them. - :. "nder-in-Chiet Uovollvich, of . lu,'nary committee. - In srI government here,' In rTw- nnoaneed the revolu ' mmittee would not recog Vpane army bat was wlll- -'i wita the JapaneM imo- Chicago, Oct. SO Majority mem bers of the United States Railroad Labor Board today had re-alHrmed their assertion that a "Just and reasonable" wage shall be the basis for their decisions In wage disputes between the carriers and their em ployes. In their opinion formally handed down last night In the case of the maintenance of way employes, the majority members declared that "the living wage" demands of the workers would bring financial ruin to the rallrpads. . vWashlngton, Oct. 30 The asser tion that a "livlne wage is some thing that every, person must have in order to livo," was the only com ment Warren S. Stone, grand chief of the- Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, would make today on '.he attack of the public and railroad groups of the Itailro! Labor Board on theory of the "lining wage" as basis for determining the pay of railroad workers. ; Mr. Stone, who Vas a caller tt the White House, said he wanted to see the full text if the pronounce ment maae puonciast nignt in uni cego before entering into full dis cussion of the position the two groups had taken. The brotherhood thief said his Visit with President Harding was merely a personal discussion of the situation. Board's Decision Milonirn tict 3D Attacking the theory of "the livlnfc wage" as a basis for determining wages ot rail road workers, the public and rail road groups of the Railway Labor Board in an opinion made public last night, declared such a course "if carried to its legitimate conclu- i ..i .......n r iurv railroad in B1UI1B, WUU1U ' . v v j the United States andjif extended to other Industries, would carry them into communistic ruin." The opinion, in tne iorm oi . joinder to a dissenting opinion filed by A. O. Wharton, labor member, in the recent decision increasing the pay of maintenance ot way two cents an hour, declared if em ployes were granted a 72 and 76 cents minimum wage for common labor with corresponding differen- Atho, iinHopa. an increase of 125.7 per cent in the nation s rail- . . . . 1 J U wtAnnBoaW road wage diu woum u .... This, the opinion said, would add S3 122,852,387 to the annual pay roll bringing It to 5,589,445,93, which would mean, " added an annual deficit to the carriers of JZ.241, bi(- 18. Kven if the 48 cent minimum wage . a t... . mainlpnance of way reuuwu y - . men were granted and correspond ing differentials were made for other classes of employes, the opinion said, an increase of 60.45 per cent i wages would be necessary, adding 11 249 390,994 to the annual wage bill of the roads, bringing it up to $3,725,884,640, thus forcing the car riers to face an annual deficit of 378 078 125' Wng Wage", Is Mcllfluons. The phrase "living wage was termed in the opinion as a bit of meltfluous phraseology. lated to deceive the unthinking. "If the contentions were that tho .board should establish a 'living wage v (CONTINUED ON PAQB TWO) BELIEVE SHIELD Seek Names of All Disabled Persons In North Carolina Raleigh, Oct. SO Social work ers, red cross workers, school superintendents, teachers and home demonstration agents today launched a drive for obtaining the names of aU physically dis abled persons Of North Carolina, including children, In order that they way be rehabilitated ' or treated.-......- .... The Governor recently made an appeal In behalf .of the State's cripplea and urged that the names of all. crippled persons be re ported to the Department of Vo cational Rehabilitation of the State Department of Education and Public Welfare at 'Raleigh. NEGROES El NDORSE mm S ORDER Congratulate Him On His De mand That K. K. K. Leaders In Kansas Be Expelled New York, Oct. 80 The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People today, sent a tele gram to Gov. Henry :i J. Allen, of Kansas, congratulating him upon his assertion that he had directed the attorney general to take action to expel from the state all officials of the Ku Klux Klan. The message follows: -"The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, rep resenting 100,000 persons in 400 branches thruout the, country, 'con gratulates you and the. state ot Kan sas on your order to expel from the state the leaders of the Ku Klux Klan., . :.): "We hope the example -you "have set will be followed in other states where these forces, b v. stirrina UD I race' Hatred " religious ' Intolerance and lawlessness, have attempted to undermine the American ideal." r : R0ADFRQMHI6HHEVVBRUHSWICK PDIHTTO HIGH CASE IS READY ROCKHOTPAYtNE FDR GRAND JURY Petition Declares It Has Been Impossible To Make Road Meet Expenses WANTS TO ABANDON ROAD I. C. C. Commission Asked To Grant Request Without Hearing, Unless The North Carolina State An tboritlcs Intervene To Ask . For Consideration Request Washington, Oct. 30 Pur- euant to an order of the cort directing a receivership, now installed over its property,' the Carolina and Yadkin Railroad applied today to the Interstate Commerce Commission for au thority to abandon completely its 35-mile line running' from High Point to High Rock in North Carolina. Ithas proven impossible for several years to make the road pay operating expenses, the pe tition said, and the court order has finally directed the receiver to cease making any attempt. The commission was asked to grapt the application without a hearing, Unless North Carolina state" authorities intervented to ask consideration. - WAS MURDERED Two Arrests Been Made In Con nection With Disappearance Of U. S. Relief Worker . Moscow, uci. v -r-dated Pre)-Two .rrest8 hav , been made n conni.-.. philliD nearance two weeks ag- of cni np ? Shield. American relief worker L Slmbftk. according to a telegram roMived here trom w- - SietL head of the field forces of American relief administration. imm Saturday night last the au thorim. w.' nc.inegd to believe th relief worker, whose homj te Hon concernmg ' received here. ..111 SSfffi Vndth. body in th. river a'.nce Shield s nsi n th. bank above Simbirsk aeverai Winston1 Salem Sketches Pen Etchings ot Men of Affairs of Twln-Clly byHarry Palmer. Well Known New York World Artist, from Photos' by Matthews . s ; : Not Thought, However, That It Will Go Before That Body ". Before Tomorrow JURORS ARE SUMMONED Stated It Will Require 34 Honrs To Get Members Together! Mrs. Gib son Says Site Is Anxious To Meet Mr. Hall Face To Face To AceuHO Her Of The Crime IC ' v ill . ' Peter A. Gorrell. president of the Wlnston-Salera Chamber of Com merce, is a citlien of the Twin-City who has never failed to respond to n u t tiaiv. 10 evei j movement, whether large or small, muTtM.ic.. , forth to advance hi commercial or civic welfare of 'Winston-Salem he has unselfishly given of hi. time and energy in the business world, he la lest known being Identified with the tobacco Tndustry. He ia ona ot the lirtners In Gorrell's Warehouse, one S? the oldest warehouses In Wln-rton-Salem. founded, by nla fathw. A. B. Gorrell. Mr. Oorrell is Inter ested In several other leading busi ness enterprises of the city, among them the J. Q. Flynt Tobacco Com pany. rkitBantinff ftmnnff hia moat re cent contribution to the civic wel fare of the community or nis na tivity are his elTorta In behalf of the movement to build a modern hotel for .Winston-Salem. In the campaign looking to the launching of the movement for this project; riMAll va nn af th !eailra and gave much of his time to put- "(CONTOnjBp OMPAO TWOJ v ; New Brunswick, N. J., Oct, SO Possibility that the Hall-Mills mur der case would bo presented to the grand jury today seemed remote this morning. Information from Somervllle, county seat, was to the effect that notices had not been for warded to members of the grand jury and that It would require at least 24 hours for the Inquisitors to assemble after receiving notices. Special Deputy Attorney General W. A. Mott, today reiterated his con fidence in the story told him by Mrs. Jane Gibson, that she witnessed the murder. Mr. and Mrs. Tingle, witnesses, have corroborated Mrs. Gibson's story Insofar as the hour of the murder, , Wants to Meet Mrs. Hall. New Brunswick, Oct. 30 Mrs. Jane Gibson, pig raise and self styled eye-witness of the murder of Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs. Eleanor Relnhardt Mills, says she wanted an opportunity to confront Mrs. Hall and challenge her to ssy that she was not present at the slay ing of her husband and did not re turn later and arrange his clothes and glasses, Mrs. Hall, -thru her attorney, has emphatically denied that she was on the Phillips farm on the night that her husband was shot to death with his choir singer. Mrs. Gibson explained that it was more than mere curiosity which prompted hef to return to the Phil lips farm after she alleges she wit nessed the murders. She claimed that in her original statement'to tho authorities she explained that she lost one of-her moccasins. That It was while she was hunting for It thnt she saw the double slaying and rode away on her mule at once. Nought Her Footwear NAt until shn reached home, Mrs. Gibson said, did she realise that the nresence of her footwear on the farm, near the scene of the mur (CONTIWIWCU ON PAGE TWO) VIRGINIA BOY, HURT IN FOOTBALL GAME, DIES Danville. Va., Oct. 80 Eugenlo Fratarcangelb, 21, a South' Boston Military Adademy student, died here today as 'the result 'of Injuries re ceived in a football game last Sat urday afternoon. . Attending physicians said they thought he suffered a blow On the head early In the game. ALL INDICATE THEY WILL ACCEPT U. S. INVITATION Washington, Oct. 20 (By the As sociated Press) -All five ot the Cen tral American governments, invited by the United States to confer here on December 4 on measures for closer friendship and co-operation, have indicated informally that they will accept. ...... v FASCISTI LEADER FORCES ITALY TO CHOOSE NEW STATE LEADER PI y1; . ; CioTtnnl CtollttL " ' rVi ' " 'i '- " -4 X - " ' ill' r v " III cabinet and 4Helr V . ' - l N ' .j ' The resignation ot the Italian cab-y. Inet, headed by Premier' Facta, forcd by th tasolitl thru their op position to th threat to mobilise military and in dustrlal forces unless the cabinet re signed, brings Italy face to face with another political crisis, . Benito Mui sollnl, head of the faselstl, Is th man responsible for the rise In pow er of that body. Early dispatches stated that VlttorM? Orlando, pre mier during the wari or Giovanni Oiolltti, . also a former premier, v. might be summoned by King Em manuel to form a new cabinet. ' flttorlo Orlando, iS:CATIIEnillE nOSIERTELLINO StDRYTOJURY Woman Who Shot Husband and Stenographer Say She' Did Not Remember Shooting ON TRIAL FOR HER LIFE Phlladclphla'a Sensational Murder Tr'al Reached Its Climax When , 81ms Mounted ; Witnosa Stamli Told Her Story AVhllo Sib. " ' blngi Buy Husband Vntrao . : ASKS HARDING FOR A PERSONAL REPLY Committee of 48 Again Writes President About The Daugh erty Injunction Matter New York, Oct. 86 J. A. H. Hop kins, chairman of the committee of Forty-Eight, last night made public a letter to President Harding asking a personal reply from the executive lu ins euiunv torney General Daugherty be sus pended from office pending a hear ing of the Impeachment charge brought by nepreseniauve neuer, ot Minnesota. The letter followed receipt by Mr. Hookina of advice from the attorney general's office that a previous com munication to President Harding, voicing the committee's demand, had been turned over o r. imugnrny find "would receive serious consider ation. "In calling your attontlon to th gross Impropriety of some of Mr. Uaugherty'a acts," th letter to the. iiitant said, "we deeply wish to point out that the seriousness of the situation which led to this demand and necessity for drastic action rel ative thereto has merely been en hanced by the action which yon have taken. T H E H IAWASSEEI ONE MEMBER OF IN CHEROKEE TO MASKED PARTY BE HARNESSED SHOTAriD KILLED, 60,000 Horsepower - Will - Be Generated By Construction Of Two Big Dams COST BE OVER 15,000,000 Carollna-Tcnncnsee Power Co.'s Pres ident Make Known Planet Mean Much For Western Carolina, . East Tennessee - and - North Georgia When Completed .' Ashevllle, Oct. 20-r-Complstlon ot plans for a hydro-etectrto power de velopment on ths Hlawasse' river In Cherokee county, Involving tha construction of two huge dams and two generating stations, was an nounced here yesterday by W. V. 1. Powellaqn, of New York, president of Carolina-Tennessee Power company. Th project will be sufficient to generate 40,404 horsepower and the outlay involved will ha from 15,000, 000 t $7,004,000. s , Included In the program, which is perhaps the most comprehensive ver planned tor the western section of North Csrollna, la the develop ment ot other industries to utilise th power which will be generated at the plant. The power so generated will make possible exploitation of the vast natural resources of the west, ern section of thl state and the ad jacent areas of Tennessee and Georgia and Is expected to attract capital for these developments many times aa large as that represented in the water power protect Legislation Involving few Iracta ot land that would necessarily be ao qulsltloned for th dam and Im pounding lakes Is all that sUnds la the way of th program, Mr. Powell on said. These suits, which are in the nature o( condemnation proceed ings, will be tried in ins superior court at Murphy beginning November 12. As boob as aausraciory awiue ment hi effected th program will go forward, Mr. Powellson said. Tha Miital Is available when prelimi nary surveys are completed, and plana and specinrations lor in winuug tlon are almost finished. Effort To Kidnap Town Consta bles at Spleter, Okla., Turns : 7 Out To Be Tragedy " t ' OTHERS WERE WOUNDED Dead Man Was Masked And His Comrade Carried Hun OAT, Taking .' .Body To His Homei The Party : , Evidently Meant To Ho ' 'Violence , To The Officer . Henrietta, Okla., Oot. ' 80- (By Th Associated ' Press) Reec Ad- klns, of Dewar, Okla., was shot to death, and; Thomas' Bogus,; Spleter city constable, was wounded, prob. ably, fatally, at Spleter City, near here last night. . when a band . of masked men, of wMch Adklnf was a member, called Bogus from it motion picture theatre, and attempted to kidnap him in a motor car. .' ." Bogus drew a pistol and began firing when the party attempted to antic him Into tha motor car, police said. They . reported he admitted killing Adklns, : Other members of the masked party . may have been wounded, according to Constable Georg Davis, who emptied hia pistol at tha machine in which they drov away. - : .. :' ::---:f' '?'-i Local police said th members ot the band wore blue - Jumpers and masks of a dark blue material. They were said to be members of newly organised eecrt society, known as tha Tru4 Blue." "A cotton rope was found at th place where their ear stood in front of the theatre. They carried Adkins rnody with them as they drove away, going to his home at Dewar. ' - - , - Alt ho the theatre near which th shooting occurred was crowded ' at th time there wer few persons In the street. Bogua .was formerly a deputy sheriff her. Philadelphia, Oct, 80 Mrs. Cath erine Roster, charged with th kill ing ot her husband, dsear, and Mil dred O, Reckitt, hia atenographer, testified ttJday In her trial for the slaying of the girl, that, she did not remmbr tha shootlng, ; sh said sh saw her husband and MIhs Reck itt In h's ofjlcs, that ah screamed and Imew no more until sh found herself in the hands of the police. In a vole hardly audlbl and fre qusntly Interrupted by weeping, Mrs. Roster told her story of event In th family and. th conduct of her hua. band until the shooting. She teatl- fled that while she wss expecting the birth of baby, Arthur Roaler, broth er of Oscar, told hei Qsoar wag pay ing attention to his stenographer. Miss Reckitt, . Sh also testified that Arthur; had Attempted to trap her Into a compromising situation, ', Mr. Rosier testified that her hus band admitted to her that he w going ut with Miss RecklU- and added that he loved IM ttenogra pher and not her, "He said he wanted' m tr' get a divorce and that there was nothing I could do to make him give her up," Mr. Rosier said. Mrs. Rosier testified that sh asked Oscar ta be permitted to plead with Miss Reckitt to give him up for the sak ot the baby, ; The i mention of. the baby caused Mra. Hosier to burst Into tear and she eollped Into the arm of a court officer, . When she revived she told of In cident of her husband treatment of her; of f repeated -remark by Arthur that her husband was not true to her.' and that of her tnrthn, efforts to hav her husbaud give up Miss Reokltt. ' . Haltingly, th sobbing witness told of her visit to tha oilloes. of seeing her husband and M'as Rikltt, and deciding to purchase a reolvrr to commit suleld In their prmnc un less the husband gave up th girl. When she returned tn the offices, the defendant testified, aha saw them together. "I crem'd nd that I the last I remember." .... - . Mr. Rosier completely ' broke down, her head resting on the rail of the witness stand. : . - When she recovered her attorney asked her whether sh had any in tention of killing any one. . "No, noj t was to make 1h final appeal," she replied. v end if he re fused, to kilt .myself right before them both,". . , - ' Mr, Rosier was turned over to Maurlc 3, Seiner, assistant district attorney, for cross-examination. CORONER bRDERSAN ' INQUIRY INTO DEATHS Nw ' York, Oct."'' 10 Coroner 1 Frederick Snowden today ordered an autopsy in an effort to determine cw Daniel Cohen, II, and France Cohen, hi bride of a month, met death. Their bodies unclothed, were found In th bathroom ot their apartment In Yonkers last night. Cohen lay face down on the floor with on hand on th aid of th bath tub. Mrs. Cohen' body was under water In the tub. Neither body bor signs of violence.. j - l , r ... "It looks tike murder. Coroner Snowden said, "but we will not know the exact cause of death until an autopsy has been performed. , There are indication that th woman was killed under the watat by some one. It la a vary odd cas." .-;. ELIOTSTAluG BY LEAGUEJFIIAInS He And Other Prominent Advo cates In Massachusetts En , dorse "Prohr Candidate Boston. Oct 84 Dr. Charlee W. Eliot, president emeritus of Harvard University, and a group of other im porter of Wood row Wilson's policies, hav signed a statement .endorsing the candidacy of John A. Nirhollna, prohibition candidate for United States senator.- The declaration ot endorsement waa made public simul taneously wttlT a (statement signeit by Ntchollas in which he declare.! in favor ot the United States enter ing the League of Nations, and la favor ot moderate tariff. -