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LA PUT SIX EXMINISTERS TO DEATH 4 WEfTDh-C- I\' . WEDNESDAY'S WEATHER Fair. MWML HI gpy TION EDITION 1 \Circulation Books Open to All.\ I \Circulation Books Open to All.\ Vo5 lIII. NO. 22,217 DAILY. C)rl(lil robllolilng (New lorti Coinpanj, Vurlil) IKS. dj t'rc NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1922. I'o. Knterril I Office, n 8rcnd-C- New VorU. Matttf N. V. PRICE THREE CENTS REJECT Members of Found GTiill.v by Courl Martial. KING IS Admiral Goudas and Gen. Slratigos Arc Given Life ATHENS, Nov. 28 (United Press). Six members of the Creek Cabinet thnt fell when Kinci Ctinslantine ab- - dicatcd were executed lieer it was officially announced. They wero (hot by a firing squad. Tho Ministers svero condemned by n Military Court which investigated the recent Greek defeat in the war with Turkey, and were accused of being for the Greek collapse. ATHENS, Nov. 28 (Associated PrfM). Tho six former Cabinet Of- ficers and urmj- - officials convicted of, lush treason in connrotion with the Greek military dtsastcrin Asia Minor were executed ) shooting. They were- - Former I'rcmicis Gounails, Pioto-padadak- ls niul Stratos; - St, ThrotoUis, former ar Mlnlstor, M.-- - Haltuzzis, noiuor 01 poruonos in several iormcr Cabinets, and Gon. Hadjancstls, Commandor of the Greek forces at tho time ut the Asia Minor military disastor. Fines ranging from 200,000 to 1,000,000 drachmas were Imposed on the prisonem. In addition, iGens. StratlcjoH iiutl HadjiincoHs and Ad- miral Guiidas wore sentenced to mil- itary degradation. LONDON, Nov. IS. The Hritlsh cclitly informed tiro Greek Govern- ment that If the prisoners 'were exe- cuted lie would depart. Upon receipt ot the news of the executions, the Foreign Olllce stated that Mr. Llndley had probably already left tho capital. Tho action ot the Greeks In tho face pf tho British representations maj- oring serious results to their govern- ment. Tho trial of several former Greek Jllnlstcra and military officials who wcro charged with high treason as tho result of tho army's recent defeat by tho Turks, began ou Nov. 13. Tbo court martial was instituted by a do- - crco of tlio Revolutionary Commltteo filter an Investigation by a special commltteo of Inquiry had resulted In u report charging ticason. Former King Constantino was de clared exempt from, tho charts on tbo Uivund that hu was not rcuponslblo for nv nrlrt flint led r, llin IHlimnll nf tho Turkish armies. It was decided that hla Ministers must bear tbo full responsibility. Tho uccused men wore permitted to testify in their own defense. ed and Plead iot Guilty to There was mil to a convontlon of lasb. named tho Indictments failed arrest Each principal was accompanied ellliT by .1 hoilyg'iard or by n corps J assistants and mingling with them wero numerous inwyors nnn ponds-me- n end n preventatives of bonding companies A pica not guilty was entcreil In each ease and tho court grantd n iinj two weejjs ' le change.i plea may made 01 motions may entered. The Ixudamen had a and prosperous cay, for every man the \5 under Indictment furnished ball nd Hio made tho hail high. MRS. HALL'S DEMAND FACE iX GREEK EX-MINIS- TER EXECUTED FOR TREASON IN LOSING WAR Constantini's Jjpibinet EXONERATED. Imprisonment. Aljeg Bootlegg TO WITH T SECRET OF AGE AND VITALITY IS OUT AND IT'S EGGS I'CRi) for IlrrnkfnHf, Klslit Ubk for \upper \rdrrs Vis e fof\ r so a. si. CHICAGO. 'Nov. 38. Clcmunccau's secret of longevity, witlj a ictcntlon of ltallty and enduranco tliat would tax ths energies ot a man half lib elghty-on- o Scars, Is eggs. s- - Ho ordcicd eight ot them, soft boiled, for his supper last night, nnd ato them retiring far .the night ho tor flvo moio soft boiled eggs for breakfast at i.au i ma morning. FRENCH CABINET APPROVES PLAN RHNELAND Ready to Occupy Ruhr Dis trict on 24 Hours' Notice if German' Defaults. PARIS, Nov. (Associated Tress), Tho intention ot Trance to \pay\ herself\ In Germany comes u full meeting of the Cabinctto-day- . A plan for direct action through the seizure of part of the Ituhr district and absolute control ot tho French section ot t lie llhlncland, which was considered and approved at day's meeting military und civil authorities at tho Elyseo Palace, will be submitted for final approval. Thero is no longer much faith hero In any lnter-allle- d solution the reparations question, even though tho Brussels conference is held. Marshal Focli find Major Gen. Buat, tho French chlcf-of-staf- f, aro under stood havo told President Mlileiand and I'rcmlcr Polncaro at yesterday's meeting that a plan for expanding tho military occupation of tho right bank of the Rhino had been prepared with utmost care and that it cpuld be exe cuted, witnin vwenty-iou- r Hours' no- - tlco and M. Tiraid, High Commia sloncr for tho Khinciand, said that cii! administration ot tho territory could taken over Immediately. This program would be applicable only artcr Jan. id, xor uarmany now has a moratorium until the end December and the first payment undei tho existing schemo repara- tions, now In suspension, would be duo in the middle January. franco is now leaay \to go It (Continued on Second Page ) ers 'Convene' Retinue With 25 Men Who Federal alleged Bootleggers the Federal appear and warrants wero Issued for i ne iuiui or mo Donas required was 1317,500. KosBelr, ox-wi- agent, and Morris Sweetwood, dc scribed by Assistant Dlstrcit Attorney Clark as the principal liootlcggcrs in this community, were required to put up nonus or Joo.ooo (IRti). jiost oJ miier nnn mcir ivu nxed at 110,000. Cunttunra Tulmadta tr rir.t ilm. tismbinn drtna wliu her ln)mltb; humur la \Cmt 1 At A&M, () And $317,500 Bail Lawyers, Bodyguard CLEMENCEAU'S Indictments. Fork Over Building y when twenty-llv- o members that now popular profes- sion appeared before Dlctrict Judge Julian to plcnd to Indictments found against them by the Grand Jury Thursday. Four of tboso In their of of during which of lie bo happy Judge of lieforc asked IS before yestcr of ot to bo of ot ot in Mnnnic ine ihm Wt.\ of .Mack to of HARD NG Al L OSS WHAT TO 00 WITH THE KU KLUX KLAN Pressure From. All Sides to Do bometning uaugnerty Studying Laws. AFFECTS DEMOCRATS. Local Conditions Make Klansmen Strong Wing orParty. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of JThe Eve ning World. WASHINGTON, Nov. 2S (Copy right). Prosecution of the Ku Ktux Klan for alleged violations of the Federal penal code is under considera tion at the Department of Justice. The letter of Senator David Walsh of Massachusetts, Democrat, haa had the effect of promoting a search for prece- dents. President Harding in on rec- ord agalnht the activities of .secret or- ganizations such as tho Ku Klux Klan and there Is no question about the ad ministration's hostility to the move- ment as practised. The only question is as to the power of the \Federal Gov- - rnmcnt to cope with the matter. , Irrespective ot the decision unclicd by tho Administration, enough has happened already to indlcato that no more embarrassing question has been injected in American politico then that of tho Ku Klux Klan. PjllliclmB of both parties agree that ultimately It will have far reaching CQiisequen.ios on party alignments in different parta of tho country. Broadly speaking, tho Democratic rarty Is picked to suffer most from the issue. The Kll Klux Klan In strongest in the South, wbeio the movement aims to a large extent at the suppression of the Negro's as- - pirationrf towaul social and polltltv.l equality. While it is true the Democratic Party in the South is divided on the question, the chances are that tne strongest .support for the Ku Klux will continue to come from the South. Tlie Northern Democrats, on the other hand, will bo confronted with the problem ot aligning themselves for or against the Ku\KIux Klan, and men like Senator Walsh and others, (Continued on Fourth Page.) LOUISIANA KU KLUX INVITES GOVERNOR TO INITIATION OF 2,000 Klan Strews I'amphlrta on I.nvni if lifriidTi- - Wlio Una Ilrrn Klslil- - Inir the Order. ifipcrlal lo Tho Kittling World. BATON ROUGE, I.a., Nov. IS. During tho nlgrjt members ot the Ku Klux Klan littered the lawn of Gov. Parker's mansion with literature ad vertising a Klan initiation raeelln? hero Thursday night at which. It In claimed, 1,000 new members will be sworn m. included in the advertising matter were invitations to thq Governor, who is opposed to the Klan and has con- sistently fought It, to attend the initi- ation. ARMY PONY BLIMP MAKES 450 MILES IN TEN HOURS Seta American rtecord In If11kM to Alnlianm nELLEVIIJ-D- , 111. Nov. 2S (Asjo noted Press). A. record American llirfit for a pony blimp was made yes terdny when tlin small dirigible of Scott Field, the Govcrnmont s iiKiiier-ina- n nil station, near hern, traversed 450 iTiticj from the He'd to Rymin, Ala . In ten hour?, army ofllrers announced Tho blimp is tho only one of its kind In tho army and its normal flight .c is 150 miles, it was explained. Three men were aboard: First Lieut. I'. A. Anderson, the pilot,, took tho blimp aloft at 11 A. M. fo ran ordinary flight, not expecting to go out of alglit of the field. lie encountered a heavy windstorm, however, and decided to try for a record, roaming he count not return to the hangar in the gale. He shut off tho motor and let the 100- - foot cigar shaped bag nclo with the wind. Veil nlll netrr kouw how nturli m Hlnk cumej'i until sou ecs Coniunco Talmadrt a illn 'Cur hi \Ksst Is Wct,\ AdrU 'A BOWIES AGREE TO SETTLE WAR IN BUILDING TRADES Lockout and Strikes Called Off Under Permanent' Agreement Terms. RIVAL UNIONS MERGE. Peace Forced by Lockwood Committee Seen as No- table Achievement. Tho lockout order ot the Masons and Builders' Association, which vould have tied up all building opera- tions in tills city, including a part of Long Island, and 'thrown 125,000 men out of wotk has been re- scinded through the efforts of tho tockwood Housing Committer, and tho striking bricklayers havo been or- dered to return to th\c clgtlt Jobs they descried. The Lockwood Housing Committee, it. tlio dosing days of th majority iff its members, has performed a notable achievement, and tho mem- bers, with Its voluntary counsel, Samuel Untermycr, worked 'through, tho better part or last night to ac- complish its task. ( Chairman Lockwood said, after ad- journment of tho commlttoe for two weeks, thut outside of the bcnefjtjo tho gencrjl public, the agreement which hail b.-c- lorccd upon the con- tending sides meant a saving to labor of $37,500,000 for the next thirty days. Tho throwing oui of employment of 125,000 meant the sufforing of 025,-00- 0 persons, counting live to a'family, for tho majority of those interested aro married men, licpolntcd out. Willie tho effect of the agreement is a truce until Doc. 31. it means, In rr illt, a permanent settlement of the Inbor difficulties. Doth wdes ugiecd to the appointment of u board of ar- bitration, in whose hands tho whole mutter will rot. Chairman Lockwood and Samuel Untermycr being part ot the arbitration buard. It is arced that the International Hod Carriers and Independent Hod Carriers' unions will the merged into one union. The crisis In the building trades was caused by tlio disagree- ment between tho two unions, the In- dependents being a separato union, not affiliated with any other labor organization, while the intornation.:l Is affiliated with the American Fed- eration of Labor. It was claimed .that the indepen- dents were resoitlng to unfair means to tako away members of the inter- national and force them into their union, and. that the MaBons and Builders' Association was behind the movement. This was tho icason gien for tho strike ot the brlcSgaycis un eight buildings, which was inet\T\ Hie lockout order, Uclng MV all building operations. Both sides wero called into c t t i - enco with tho Lockwood Committee and its coumsel, separately, lcf. iu tho committee met this hj nlc.T. Uach agreed to tho proposition put to them by Mr. Untcrmeyor ast niyi't. contingent on the. other- - .M.lw ca-- y- ins out its part of the agrceriio it im- mediately. Then each member to the agreement was put on the stand. ,undcr a waiver of Immunity, und his promise made a matter of record. They were Gro- - vnnnl B. Dioguardla, President of the Independent Hodcarriers; Paul A (Continued on Second Pac i The World's Great Annual Winter Resort Number The Annual Winter Itcso, . .ber of Tho Woild will be publl.-- l Mill day, December 10th, Tliu lletui' und Travel Advertisements In this JIUon will bo reproduced In book form I ii ad dltlon to wld) distribution lu t' I lilted mates, Ucriniida, Cuba an. I '' iiRdn. Thu World's Whiter itcsort j\. . lll t,o distributed In J \l unco f m Tim World'a Paris office. Adtru-- i Lords for this grunt number must I Th; World offk before Wcdne i., Ue ceiubcr till. THE SUNDAY WORLD CIRCULATES IN OVER 600,000 HOMES. ALERED E: LINDSAY GIVEN FIVE-YEA- R TERM IN SING SING Broker Who Duped Women vOut of ?500,00fl Nearly Faints at Sentence. MUST DO HARD LABOR. Passed as Morean Associate Mrs. Lillian B. Duke Among Victims. Alfred F.. Lindsay, the broker with an elaborate home in South Nyack, who dcl'iaudcd a number of women prominent In out or moio limn half a million dollats by represent- ing hinself as a confidant of J. P. Morgan and other Wall Street men, w'as y sentenced to servo from fhc to ten years at hard labor in Sins Sing Prison. Judge Manetiso of General Scsslor.s. iwiiii pcmcnccu i,unisa.v.,on inn pirn or feuilt to one of nine Indictments, not rvuiui ,,i,.- - j'i inwuvi IUI I'il'JlllK upon women, but surprised him with the prison term, because Llnd.iny had Relieved sentcneo would be suspended. He almost collapsed after Judg'e. Manetiso added tho hnrd labor atlpu- - kitlon.,to tho prison term, his face going deathly white. He will be taken to Sing Sing late this nftecnoon. , In his spectacular and profitable career as a swindles which beuan In 1008,\ Lindsay represented brnhielf as a member of I he \Domino Club, mi organization Which, nJ lie told his vomeii dnper. was made up of promi nent men in Wall Street who met in masks nt various hotels, nnd dis- cussed market movements. In tills way, he said, lie was ablo to get \In side Information\ about prospective financial deals, which he as.su rod his lctlms would be highly profitable to him should they let him Invest money In them. Lindsay pleaded guilty to the rrnitds last March and bus been ill tlie Tombs Prison cinee June. He lsflfty years old. a florid fiill-blno- d type and pos sessed of an imjiatiating manner which went easily with the women he victimized. licforo sentencing Lindsay, Judge Mancuso called to tho stand y Mrs. W. H. Arnold of No. 152. West 71th Street, complainant in tho in- dictment to which tlio prisoner plead- ed guilt. She repealed iter former statements about meeting Lindsay through Miss Florence James of No. 22 Bast 89th Street, a relative of the Harrimans, and giving him ?20, CD0 for investment. She never received a penny in return, she eald. When thu couit asked her It It should be meiei-fu- l, she replied that all she wanted was her m6ney back. Miss Margaret llogeit of No. 311 West .\iTth Stiei.t. atiothni victim, was also questioned bj tho court. Shu met Llndsaj through Dr. Knuto Arvnl Knllnd, an nssbcisto ot Llnd?tV, wlio is in the Tombs awaiting w... teneo for receiving st.ikn property in his transactions 'will Lindsay. Henry Goklsleln. Llndfuy'-- . .ii pleaded for his client, detail li'g that Mrs. Arnold lent the money to (Continued on Second Page M'ADOO ARRESTED S?OR SPEEDING, FACES TERM IN PRISON '1 rat rlllnir Til Mile mi llnur ti Make Adilresk UiT)cr When Halted. FItESNO. Cal., Nov. 23 -- William Uiblu McAdoo of Los Angeles, former Secretary of tho Treasury, was arretted in Tulaie County yesterday afternoon and cited to appear bfforc Judge J. S. Clack Satuidiiy lu answer a chare of speeding at the rate of fifty-on- e miles an hour. According to tlio IrafllL.- officer wl;o orrcfcled Mr. McAdoo, he d tho McAdoo car, containing Mr. and Mrs. MeAdoo and their chauffeur, thiec miles. McAdoo was en lotito to Fiesno. whero he .iddremicd tlie Uar Associations ot hree counties lat night. Judge Cluck has tho, reputation uf Jailing dilvcis eaught exceeding fifty miles un hour in Tiiluiu County. Moilli nnillni in Una fur. (.\n.taiur Tut uitiJi In \l.'siH la Wst.\ At th Sirnii.l Ada. MURDER GRAND JURY MRS. FRANCES S. HALL, WHO DEMAND'S RIGHT TO FACE MURDER JURY 125TH ST. CROWDS SEE THIEF CHASE IN GEM ROBBERY Man Breaks Window Con- - Saining ,s5,0,000 Jewels Flees as Many \Screams. West U'5th Street was put Into tur moil at Its most rruwded hour y by a buhl attempt to lob the Jewelry store of IWrbeit. Serirlson on' the noitheast corner of lStth Street unci tb Avenue Hundreds of parsons heard the c'uik of breaking glass and looked lo see a young man rather neatlv limited breaking through the plate glass vln-do- of the store, 6 feel high nnd moio than 20 fe.ct In width. Thero were shouts and screams half a block .way to give tho alarm. Tho man was mini; a inlssilo wrapped in a crumbled ar.d .vaddod newspaper. \ The spectators saw the man leaeh Ins hand Ihiougli Iho hole he had made In tlio window and scoop up some of the jewels, which were ar- ranged In tieis wltln. Mr. Sorglson told the police that Ills display was woi th more than J50.000. Snatching what he could reach the man made off up Seventh Avenue. Police Lieut. Helms and Detective Garvey came running Yo tho shouting crowd from opposite directions. The fleeing man had almost n block start of them. They-sa- w him turn east on 120th Street and fearing to lose him commandeered tlie nutomobilo of Lee Poberilns of No. 95 Nassau Street, and overtook tho fugitive at Lenox Avenue. The policeman took him to the West 123d Stiect station with a Kie.it crowd following. Tho prisoner suld ho was lthelnhold KochholTi. a night cashier in restaurant ut No. 3059 Decatur Stieet, Wllito 1'laJns. Mr. Seigismi said ho mlssrd thteo rings set with diamonds, three wrist watches and a diamond-encruste- d cigar cutter fiom his window display. Nothing was found In the possession of tho prison- er, but n cardboard lio.x In which a ring might have been mounted Scores ot See Here of The most beautiful exhibition of y Cyril for pure that glistened in the sunshine rap Turnepdld his first writing lowei whero scorer of t'lotiiMiids watched. Out of tlio tail of the plane iisiied n. white, fcathrry smoke whojj toxture appeared Identical with that of tlio fleecy clouds framing tho blue \surfncst\ on which ho wrote First lu letters a mile high Capt. Turner wrote the wool \Hello.\ then neat comma, and \I.. S. A.\ tlie last threu Inttors must havo been nearly two miles high, nnd the whole greet- ing Mt probabl) i.ono fen above tlie ground. still was the nlr tl.ai the legend remained legible tor soveral tninuton after It had been written. Then tho Plan wnt far up tewn and repeated. 4 V fc V.! MB. HALT 'S INSISTENT PLEA TO FACE m REJECTED Widow Goes to Court House in Effort to Meet Attacks,of Mrs. Gibson, but Somerset Balks Her \Mule Woman\ Ques- tioned Almost Two Hours. (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) SO.M13RVILLE, N. J., Nov. 28. At tho very clo-- o ot tho Investigation of the Somerset County Grand Jury Into tbo murder' ot tho Rev. Edward Wheeler Hull oud Mrs. Klcanor Mills nearly ten weeks ago on tlio Phillips farm, Mrs, Frances Noel Stevens Hall inado an appeal ut tho door ot the Grand Jury room for uthnnco to dofond homclf from the aeknowlodsod suspicion lbatbo was Implicated lit tho shooting ot her husband and the choir olngcr nnd tho slashing ot tho throat of Mrs. Mills, ' 0 SCOVER ANOTHER 000.000 DEFICIT 0 CITY'S BUDGET 'Better Not Look Further,\ Moans Board Member at \Husli\ Session. The Hoard ot Kstlmale In secret session to. day dug up $1,000,000 to pay dellclenciCB created when (lie 1922 budget was fixed up nnd pre- sented to the public. Then sonic, tiling terrible happened, fame one, probably Comptroller Craig, discov- ered, another deficit of Jl.000.000! \We'll better not look any more,\' moaned a member ot the Kstimnt i ion in. - nil might oiscovci a inirii million.\ While Mayor Hylan was away there wore several open sessions of tho Kstlmate Hoard nt which Comptroller Craig iappedllio five Ilorough Presi- dents for not limiting good a deficiency estlmutcd at from it million dollars to a mlllon nnd a half. This money was pledged, the Comptroller charged, when It was taken out of tho acocunls of ehnritnlile Institutions and final dis- position of aphes and garbago and Muck Into tho lCditcntlon budget. This was pa it of tho scheme of financing which oarned the nleknamo of \tho burlesque budget of 11T22.\ Comptroller Crnlg denounced the borrowing of money from one source to patch up another nnd \make It look presentable on parade,\ as ho termed it. To-da- with the Mayor K ', Iho old seciet sessions wero icneweb. Just (Continued on Second rage.) Captain Turner Give First Aerial \Penmanship.\ alrpl.mo night that New York eer its message or the Hudson where other thousands watched. Ii was the first tltme thnt New Yoik had ;eon this kind of \sky writing.\ Tho \white Ink\ used la n smoke generated by a chemical com position invonted by Major Jack Savage of London. At the tlmo of the Victory Pnradu in London tho wotd \Victory\ was thus written nt night, in a lulmnous, phosphorescent smoke, by Capt. Hob. rrt Sehollrld Wood, thru or the Itoyal Air Force, now a membei of The ICvent.ig World's editorial staff. Onl.inte I nlmncuc'. rlinriu'ttrliutlnn of Mini Toy In \Kittt I W.n\ a a rtvtlalloa. ; tj Striuil.t-AiJ- U. Flyer Writes on Shy Above City 'Hello, U.S. A.,' in Letters Mile High Thousands Exhibition saw was presented over Manhattan soon after twcle o'clock by ('apt. Turner In a plane equipped \sky-writing- .\ In a white He HaviUnd plane Manhattan a was .So IS BRUSQUELY Prose- cutor BY BEEKMAN Her nlea. made liv her nrasrnm .uul by tho application of her counsel, former Asslstnnt District Attorney Timothy Newel Pfclffcr of New York, was brusquely denied by Asariah Bcckman, 1'rozecutor ot tho Pleas of Momerect, who has been working with Hpcclal Prosecutor Wilbur A. Molt designated by Attorney Cineral MC- - Cran to tales over the Ifall.SIllla case. M.M. Hail,ji(lUuJier,,dosesl,-.Wtnd- . Miss Sftllta Peters, .daughter ot (lie ricv, John P. Peters of New' Voik, nnd Mr. Pfclffcr, walked unmolested into the rotunda which has been guarded by Stute trcopora against nil but thoso upon whom subpoenas had been served. Mr.' Pfelffer us ho passed tho guard was uskcd.lf any .of t party had subpoenas. He 'shook s head negatively. Mrs. Hull seated herself at the door of tho Grand Jury room. Miss Peter took a book from under her arm nnd began lo read. Mr. Pfclffcr watched the Grand Jury door. Sir. Ilcckman came out to tell the State troopers to bring Mrs.iJano Gib- son from his omec, where she had been sequestered rrom tho oilier wit- nesses to the Grand Jury room. \Will you sen mo now, Mr. Ueek-mnn- oaked Mr. Pfelffer, springing up and wulklng towaid him. \No.\ said Mr. Heokman, frowning and with decidedly hostUo oraplwsls, \I will not see you,\ The apmerset Prosecutor turned on his heel and went back\ Into the Gran. I Jury room. He had mado It obvious Jhat ho and Mr. Molt would resist to tho utmost any effort to get tho Grand Jury to grant the pcrMstmt requests of Mrs. Hall that she he nllowed to waive Immunity and testify. As Mrs. Gibson was taken Into th Grand Jury room Mrs. Hall gavo hor a casual sldawlse glance which wan without marked curiosity, though it Is tlio first tiinu she has knowingly had an opportunity of lookln at her accuser. Mrs. Glbuou did not appar- ently know of Mrs. Hall's presenc In the Court House. Mrs. Ibbon was in the Grand Jury room longer than any other witness who has been examined. She emerged two hours, less ten minutes, after her entrance und went to Mr. Qeekman's office to get her wraps. As she came out her veil was drawn down oer her futc. County Detective Geort\ Totten took iter by the arm and led her to a county automobile, whll Sttate Troopers kept any one lrom approaching\ them. Passing Mrs. Hall a: arm's length. Mrs. Gibson did not so much as glance nt her. though Mrs! Hsll cyod tho farm woman narrowly. Mrs. Gib- son's eyos were tilled with tears and her lips before she pullod down her M wero tremulous. The Grand Jut\ adjourned for lunch live minutes after Mrs. Gibson was ecuaod. Mr. Pfelffer. Mrs. Hall and Mia Prteis rose as though to Join them in leaving tho building. A troopor in tcrforcd and asked them to stand back until the jurors had left the, building. Mrs. Hall smiled as though In lecog-nltio- n of one or two ot tho Jurymen. There was no response In kind from any of theni. It was announced tlvur one or two more wltnosscs would be cal lad aftor lunch but that undei nu ouo of them. In the restaurants and on the sliot corners thore were emphaUe cspros-sion- s ot feeling that the uninvited presence of Mrs. Hall at the Court House might prejudice the. Grt 1 .JS 71 ii 1