Reno Evening Gazette (Newspaper) - February 4, 1922, Reno, Nevada SETTLEMENTS Copper 34 New York not received and nearby later St Louis FORTY-SIXTH YEAR TEN PAGES RENO NEVADA FEBRUARY 4 1922 TEN PAGES 30 ARMS CONFERENCE AT WASHINGTON CONCLUDES ITS WORK EPISCOPAL CLERGY ASK 7 DAYS FOR PERFORMING MARRIAGE TO BE FOLLOWED Custom to Be Established by Ministers But Will Not Be v Enforced Arbitrarily Decision Follows Conference of Clergy and Bishop at An- Convocation Episcopal ministers of Nevada lowing i at rhe convocation in Reno last week agreed among and with Bishop George C to establish the custom of risking for seven days notice before performing a marriage ceremony To Safeguard Marriage Realizing that tho of riage and tho marriage relationship lightly regarded these days as evidenced by the prevalence ot di- says a statement issued by Rev Edward Tanner Brown and that parent thoughtlessness of many who enter this sacred union and more tho marriage problem should bo guarded before the wedding as well as the decision was made to tusk for the week's notice The custom which we propose to establish will not be at all said Mr Brown It is intended to safeguard the marriage relationship Elopements Recalled The statement sent out by Mr Brown as executive secretary for makes no reference to the fact that the past few months have seen several sensational elopements of Reno young people in which In some in- stances one or both of the contracting persons were guilty of perjury as to age in obtaining a marriage license The statement There Is growing minds of the best people country the con- viction that the state as well as the church must eventually make a certain period ot probation before such a step as marriage is taken Our nation and civilization are founded on the security the home All right-minded persons must unite in preserving this institution Seven Days to Consider Surely sown days tire all too short a for consideration of a life re- There is now pending be- fore congress the Jones constitutional amendment to establish a minimum standard of marriage and divorce an expected result of which would be a month's publication of the banns of matrimony and so the prevention of hasty marriage The Episcopal Church having the most strict law relative to which allows no exceptions is the natural in this advanced stop of ing marriage at the beginning BIG LIQUOR IS ON IN TEXAS TEAGUE Tox Feb stilla captured sixty-one prisoners in tody a large quantity of liquor In- the toll of a series of systematic con- ducted by Texas rangers guardsmen and prohibition ment officers in the six hundred square miles of Freestone country's sparsely settled and densely wooded territory over which martial law was extended by gubernatorial proclamation day Raids were still in today and officials in charge announcing that they be the area affected is cleared of illicit uor a shot by the raiders and what shooting was done fry the moonshiners is believed to have boon for the purpose of conveying signals Heavy arms including several chine guns carried by the raiders caused the fugitives to summary surrender HOLDS UP SALOON THEN REPORTS IT SAN FRANCISCO Feb Gilroy is under arrest hero today on a charge of is being field for trial in the superior court Late yesterday Gilroy police headquarters and handed a revolver and in cash to the desk sergeant saying they Were the loot he obtained he held up a soft drink earlier in the day He declared he committed the bery while under the influence of liquor and wanted to even things with the law BURIES RAILROAD TRAIN AND 110 PERSONS KILLED TOKIO Feb the hundred and ten persons were killed and numbers of others injured when a railway train was buried by an Itoigawa station cording to a from gano today The victims were most part farmers workmen and way employes who were engaged in clearing snow from the way tracks Medical relief has been dispatched to the scene Nagano BY CARDINALS FOR NEW POPE ROUE Fob the Associated ballot for the tion of a successor to Pope Benedict was taken by the conclave of the red College this morning but without result no candidate receiving a number of votes Smoke began to appear from the chimney of the Sistine chapel shortly before twelve o'clock The expectant crowds watched eagerly but the smoke cloud at once began to the dark color which indicated that there had been no choice A ballot taken this afternoon by the Sacred College of Cardinals the ond of today's ballots failed to elect a successor to the late Pope Benedict XV POUGHKEEPSIE N Feb 4 Counsel for James A today in blocking at least temporarily another effort by Mrs Anne U SUIlman to obtain additional expense and tho appointment of a commission to take testimony at Montreal in the divorce case Motions to these ends were held ing for a week by Supreme Court tice Justice upheld the ob- of Mr Stillman's counsel that the affidavits supporting the tion were on hearsay and fore were insufficient TEAM RACE BERLIN N II Feb T Walden of Wonalancet an American driving a team of American bred kimo dogs won today the international team and his huskies showed a higher score for both speed and con- dition in the three days much Jean of Bersimis P Q and his Canadian mongrel team Lebel ished second forty-five minutes hind in the composite score and ques Suzanne of Lake Placid N Y a poor third 176 INDICTED HE ONCE ESCORTED KAISER DIES ESTATE ONTARIO Cal Feb 4 Baron George von Rochow once a member of the military escort of former Emperor William left an estate valued at died here recently according to for Jotters of tion just filed by the public trator IN BANK FRAUD ST LOUIS Feb total of 176 indictments were returned yesterday in the grand jury's final report of its in- of the alleged shortage of the Night and Day Bank funds for which A O ier previously had arrested and indicted Some of the indictments are directed against other officials of the bank and its directors among them former Gov E W Major and Judge W H Allen of the St Louis court of appeals All have been released on bonds ARTIST DIES NEW YORK Feb Butler Yeats eighty-three years old Irish painter and writer and father of iam Butler Teats the poet is dead at his heart disease Los Angeles Sheriff Declares Taylor's Slayer Killed Him For Revenge and Jealousy Dual Life of Slain Director Is Revealed Brother Also Is Mystery Man LOS ANGELES Feb a woman was involved in the of William D Taylor film director is the theory advanced by Sheriff iam I Traeger Los county From what I have able to tho sheriff said it appears to me that one woman and one man are sible for the victim's death woman supplied the incentive and the man did tho slaying Actress and Hep Director Sought The latest motion picture actress to be drawn into the investigation said at one time to have been intimately associated with Taylor was understood to be out of the city but tho police gave no intimation as to tho abouts of the director whose name was inked with hers In the stories told the detectives by a number of persons at an inquiry over several While efforts were being made by he officers to locate the actress and the director it was understood the est angle to the investigation would not cause them to relax their search or Edward F Sands Taylor's formal utler said also to be known as ward Fitz and alleged to a deserter from the army Revenge and Jealousy The closer their scrutiny into the ife of the dead director the more some of the detectives said they became in their original theory that ho motive of the crime was revenge vith jealousy as the probable direct cause Claire Windsor motion picture ress revealed a threat by Taylor against Sands She told of accompanying Taylor to a hotel party within a week before his death She said Taylor was talking of the robbery of certain jewels which he police and Taylor attributed to Sands according to the police Threatened to Kill Sands Miss Windsor said that Taylor in this connection If I ever ay my hands on Sands I will kill lim Windsor in discussing it said hat Taylor seemed very determined because Sands robbed him of every cent he had at the time Mr Taylor made secret of his plan to kill his said she as he old a number of people he would kill aim it he ever got his hands on him Miss Windsor said that sho had known Taylor a but never very well Sands Seen in Los Angeles Sands who has become a mystery man in connection with the slaying was reported to the police as having been seen in Los Angeles Tuesday the day preceding the murder and evening the night of the der A man whoso name the police leld is reported to have informed de that he conversed with Turn to Pace Two HIS FIRST TIGER Jan Prince of Wales received an orthodox Hindu welcome when he entered the oC he shot his first tiger At the Nepal border line the prince passed through a triumphal arch dec- orated with banana leaves and skins of tigers bears black deer and other animals On the other side of the arch was written in gold Hearty Welcome to Britain's Sporting and the reverse side bore God Bless the Soldier Son Ae he entered the Nepal men stood on both sides of the road with brass and copper plates in their hands containing flowers rice and abir vermillion These they threw at the prince who edged their warm welcome Dy leaving his car and salaaming to the men who were overjoyed at this show oC ness The tiger shot by the prince ured nine feet six inches in length Three other tigers were shot by bers the ALL IRELAND TO CONFER IS MICHAEL COLLINS IDEA LONDON Feb the Asso- Collins j to Premier Craig of Ulster for a conference of the representatives of the whole of Ireland to adopt a com- mon policy a constitution is the main outcome thus far of the new deadlock in the Irish situation but it is too soon indicate whether any im- portant development is likely from it The editorial writers insist that the boundary question is one for the two Irish governments to settle and that the English government must keep out of the vortex of Irish politics Southern Ireland stands for termination of those sections involved in the dispute over Ulster's boundary according to Arthur Griffith of the Dail Eireann in an Dublin today in which he fully upheld the attitude of Michael Collins head of the provisional government in hia recent conference with Premier Craig of Ulster ALASKA NOW HAS ITS TRACK OF STEEL Above along the river cany on 350 miles from Seward where the railroad runs Center mine district which has reopened operations How supplies were to the interior of Alaska Lieut Frederick Wears the Sustina bridge longest single span bridge the Mississippi built during the months Map s h e re FIGHTS DRV LAW YERINGTON Feb to the Prohibition Of- Nash and Brown raided the place conducted by Frank Rosaschi yesterday resisted arrest ind was clubbed over the head with a before he would submit He s ut liberty today on bail at ind sit last night by Smith United States whom he was brought on as of officer and violating he act Tho resisting caused the im- position of the bail John Perri bartender at fame place was released on bond as was Ed Tanner of the hotel was also II Is two of whiskey wore seined at hotel and me at The mm are to have a preliminary today THEY'RE RESCUED ARE TIRED OF THEIR MOSCOW Jan is a lost Russia Nobody wants to sing it It is never heard in the streets of Moscow or in the towns of the provinces When it is played in public gatherings the crowds and audiences refuse to join in he singing This was illustrated at the era recently when Leon Trotzky the war minister appeared with some friends in a box The orchestra struck up the tune of the revolution and but a very few in the audience rose out of Lately Isadora Duncan after a lic performance of her dances asked the audience to join her in singing the This seemed u signal for the audience to leave body began out as the orchestra played and Miss Duncan was left to sing alone One of the reasons for the lack of enthusiasm for the song is that it has been Kung oo much People are tired of it here just British soldiers got tired of ANCHORAGE Feb to the Alaska Railroad is finished The real last spike has been driven into on the bridge at Riley Creek near national parks by one of the track layers this week Later some time in the summer it will be replaced by a golden spike when the formal dedication of tho will bo celebrated but the road will not wait till then The railroad runs from Seward to Fairbanks 467 milea and has branches to coal fields which make a total trackage of 539 miles The cost was approximately Harding to Be There Work during the winter months brought many hardships Supplies had to be carried by tractor and truck i through heavy snows over forest lands jand through streams Thoro were few conveyances made their own pathways iis they ploughed their way along All Alaska is looking forward to the Turn to Page Two NEW YORK Feb story of days of prayer in a raging sea of prayers answered in the nick of time by two women and six of the crew of the Nova ian steamer Donald Ij Cook who ar- rived today on tankers from Mexico where they had been landed by the British steamer San Eduardo The battered water logged hulk of the Cook went less than two they had taken off the cued mariners declared SHELL HITS BOAT SAN Cal Feb Robinson a sailor of the United Pacific fleet was drowned today when a motor boat in which he and two companions were serving as crew to tow a target was by a wild pedo fired by the submarine Robinson's companions were rescued KENYON AWAITS RULING BEFORE DONNING ERMINE DES MOINES la Feb By the Associated N E Kendall received a telegram from Senator yon today stating that he will not re- sign his seat in the United States ate to accept the appointment of cuit judge of the eighth district until the constitutional question has been settled FOR LINCOLN PLANT Feb of Henry Ford made today the only bid lor the property of the Lincoln Motor Company at the auction sale held at direction of United States Dis- Judge Arthur J Tultle The bid was the lowest figure that Judge Tuttle will accept Both George T Judson local er and E T Berger Detroit attorney who yesterday qualified as bidders by filing certified checks for each in federal court announced their withdrawal shortly before the sale took place N Y HOUSE NEW YORK Feb actual condition of the clearing house banks and trust companies ifor the week shows that they hold in ex- cess of legal requirements This is a of from last week NEW YORK Fob British ex- change all high records for i two awl one-half this market today demand sterling rising to v This is an overnight gain of one and and an advance of ten and cents from the low ami compares with a minimum of registered hero exactly two years ago All other foreign exchanges moved forward with the British rate greatest strength being Known by Swiss and Scandinavian countries ROSSETER MAY HEAD PACIFIC SHIP COMBINE SAN FRANCISCO Feb pointment of John II Rosseter of San Francisco as head of tho proposed Pacific ship combine is be- ing talked of in San Francisco marine was director of ations for the United States shipping during the war and is recognized as an authority on Pacific shipping OFFICER AND BANDIT SHOT IN JEWEL THEFT CHICAGO Feb bandits day entered a jewelry store in the Sheridan Road residential tion handcuffed the proprietor and a customer und after gathering up ry valued at fought a pistol fight with policemen outside in which one policeman and one of the bandits were wounded The wounded was FINISHED TODAY AT MEETING OP DELEGATES Balfour Declares Nations Must Observe Settlement Of Far East Question Other Minor Matters Cleared Up Shantung Controversy At Last Adjusted WASHINGTON Feb the Associated arms ence today up its work with a whirlwind of action H formally approved Iho various to make for peace in the Far East And in the closing moments Arthur J Balfour the Brit- ish the feeling of everywhere that China Is the keystone of that a solemn warning that the world expected the settlement arrived at to bo inspected in strict good faith Outside the Comity of Any nation the British statesman said which in the future aimed to transgress tho principles laid down In conference with regard to China need not plead ignorance nor seek to invoke any secret understanding with minor Chinese officials Such a nation Mr Balfour impressively de- clared would bo considered the comity of nations Tho delegation leaders took to pay tribute to President Harding for the calling of the ence and for its work and the ence put the formal stamp of approval on the results of its work Work Accomplished These were principally final al of the four-power Pacific treaty a supplement excluding the land islands of Japan from its terms final approval of the Far Eastern treaty affirmed anew the open in China and providing for her rity against foreign exploitation and encroachment final approval of a treaty revising the system of Chinese customs measure ed as vital to the rehabilitation of China by herself formal ment of a declaration of principles oh the Siberian question pledging the integrity of that land Shantung Settlement Formal announcement of the ment by Japan to hand back to conclusion of a sub- ject that almost wrecked the peace conference at also one of the results of the conference as well as formal of a dec- of Japan's famous twenty-one demands on China and formal an- of Japan's abandonment of the much attacked group five A provision to tho naval limitation treaty that none of the powers pledged may sell any of their warships be- tween now and the time they are scrapped removed any ing A Board of Reference A resolution was unanimously ed which was designed to provide for dealing with questions that might arise in connection with tho ex- of provisions of articles of the Chinese general treaty relating to the open door policy and conduct of the Chinese railway It provides that a hoard of reference be established in which any questions arising be referred for investigation arid report It also stipulated that the special conference provided for in the treaty relating to Chinese customs tariff shall formulate for approval of the powers concerned a detailed plan for tho con- of the bard Final approval was providing for n conference within hno months to consider rules of exclusive of submarine and chemical warfare The plenary session was adjourned at p in after in most exactly four hours with ion made for a final session and sine Uio adjournment Monday ATLAW FLEET COW IS MAN'S BEST FRIEND N Y WOMEN HAVE DECIDED NEW YORK that the New York's city federation of women's clubs oppose the employment of dogs in vivisection were voted down by that organization last night after a heated debate the point at issue in- that old favorite of the ing Is the dog or the cow the best friend of Mrs Belle de Rivera founder and honorary president of the federation proposed resolutions the exemption of dogs from vivisection call upon Arliss actor to AT Cuba Feb Atlantic fleet steamed Into amo bay today and anchored off naval base that for more than a score of years been the winter ground and for Yankee Here the gobs and their officers will remain until April working a bit and having the play that keeps Jack a bright snappy boy None of the sailors had put foot on land since January 3 when their wont to sea for the annual cruise in Southern waters until launches came chugging to the shore today GOV IS SET FOR MARCH 6 who after a short address said the dog was man's best friend That started things and Mrs iam president of the council if Jewish women took instant tion to his statement asserting the cow held the place of honor Dr Simon Flexner of the Ifr Institute was rushed into the de- bate but said that cows did not lend themselves readily to the vivisection arid that dog's did as their blood bones and nerves bore close resemblance to those of man WAUKEGAN 111 Feb the Associated Claire C Edwards today set the trial of CMv Len Small to start March 6 The state asked for fifty jurors a day at- tho start SAILS FOR HOME ANTWERP Feb United States army transport Cantigny with 1100 officers and men of the American In Germany from on board sailed from this port last ning for America