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jmEbJJbbbbKbbISSS 4 . jj iiii The Evening Newspaper O jr3 ty s &. " WEATHER FORECAST I -2hi icSteraay. tljL rliriifi C , rising temperature jn west 9si? A T-nr- PORTION. M $A 11 FEARLESS, INDEPENDENT, PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER. ? Fortyond Year-No. 29QPrlce P,vo Cent. QGDEN CITY, UTAH, THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 21, 1912 , Entered as seond.e. Matter at th. Po.tofflce, Ogdcn. Utah i BULGARIAN TERMS I ARE IMPOSSIBLE is I Turkish Grand Vizier Says Proposals Must Be h Radically Altered or War Will Continue Com- mander-m-Chief to Resume Operations. j SCOURGE OF CHOLERA MYFORCE EASY TERMS Position of Both Armies Rapidly Becoming Un H tenable in Face of Terrible Disease Ravages m w Repulse of Bulgarians Encourages Turks. i' I Constantinople, Nov. 21. The Otto- man government has rejected the termB offered by the allied Balkan ; nations. t Nasim Pasha, the Turkish com mander In chief, has been ordored to . i reaumo operations. I i Nazlm Pasha, the Turkish com- mander In chief, In a further telo- ! i gram to the Ottoman war office to- j 'day, sbvb: "According to reports just receiv- ! ed, Turkish reconnoitorlng partlos have confirmed the roport that the enomy abandoned the trenches held , during the last three days facing the j line of forts In the zone which they i had occupied. Sl "The Bulgarians have fallen back K at certain points as much as four and one-half miles from the Turkish lines. jjj A number of wounded and many dead jgj i bodies wore found in the Bulgarian I trenches besides rifles, ammunition Hi and other equipment." Hi The sound of heavy firing, presum- 3g ; ably from naval guns, was again nu- gg dlble today, 3111 London, Nov. 21. The Bulgarian yi terms of peace are impossible, ac- lUTUB cording to the Tur". ish grand vizier, .rflaD anc ' "J" are 'nG5e(l "Pn the war 'nJf will continue. Ho mnde this state- BK mont to the correspondent of the BJ Daily Mall at Constantinople today. "Si Kiamll Pasha said: J HI "I received last night communica- Hjl tion through the Russian ambassador HI lo Turkex of tho terms which the SjW Bulgarians suggest for an armistice 5 n ljillnilnarj tlho;rdiscussIon of Bj ihe termsofvljeacLer The terms are B impossible,, ami nless tfiov arc radi-, M rally altered the war will be con- rjwl tjn-ipd. nzR "The Bulgarians ask for tho sur- fcicg render of Adrianople. Scutari, Janina ID and the Tchatalja lines " B The only hope of peace, the corre- suondent adds, now seems to He in ifS the fact that these demands of the 'jjjfc allies probably were determined uo- I-n before the unsuccessful attacks were made by the Bulgarians on the Tchatalja lines during the flrBt three (ai, days of thlR week. CHOLERA MAY FORCE TERMS. Sj London, Nov 21. The scourge of r cholera, more deadly than human- 1 ( -nrought rifles or cannon, will force jli .easy terms and their prompt acccpt- i , anco between tho battle scarred ar- slh mies, resting today before the city of 111 Constantinople while their command j crs negotiate. Tho feeling in Con st tstantInople Is that the Bulgarians' a terms will have to be harsher than 1 , they are believed to bo to canso the I Turkish plenipotentiaries to reject rt I them. ' Prom Sofia comes a report through i the semi-official agency at Vienna 1 1 that tho terms offered to Turkey are j! not uncompromising either in form or B,! In substance, and that they even HI! leave the door open to modification. I It Is thought here that this Is likely I to turn out to bo correct, as the po ll sitlons of both armies must rapidly 0 f become untenable in face of the rav- I ages of cholera. 0 I European Conference. Ill There has been much talk of a Eu- Jl ropean conference as soon as hostill- 11 ties cease, for the discussion of In- M tornatlonal questions arising out of the war. Sir Edward Grey, the British for- I eign minister, however, announced to- I day In the houso of commons that ': tho question whether a conference should or should not be held had not ' been definitely considered by the Eu- ropean powers. Tho Bulgarian losses in dead and wounded during the fighting at Tcha- I tala totals 3.000, according to offl- I clal advices telegraphed by a special I correspondent from Constantinople I today. I ; Terrific damago was done to tne Bulgarian column which attacked the Turkish left wing, probably by tho shells from the Turkish warships. One 1 of these fell on a Bulgarian ammuni tion train, which exploded, resulting In great loss of life. Ij ! TURKISH. PRESS I j NOT RELIABLE II London. Nov. 21 Reliable cye- p . . witnesses of the fighting on the Turic- "' ish left wing at Tchatalja report that JV it appears to have resulted in the Bul- garians retiring nlong the road from ffl ; Papas Burgas toward the village or Jj: Tchatalja. according to the corres- I I pondent of the Dally News. One re- I port says they foil back ten miles. '" It appears, according to this cor- lt respondent, doubtful whether the cn- if ' thuslastlc descriptions by the TurklBh Jlfe press of victories on the right wing 1 are Tollable. The Turkish losses hero I Mr have been admittedly heavy, but tlie If arrival of troops from Syria has furtn. fl m cr strengthened the defense. It is $M also evident that tho supply and Jf commissariat difficulties of the Otto- jj man army have been somewhat re lieved. Compliments Bulgarian General. Tho conclusion Is drawn In Con stantinople that it Bhould now be easier to arrange terms unless the Turkish army authorities make tho mistake of supposing that a success ful defense justifies defiance. Wound ed Turkish officers highly compliment tho energy shown by Goneral Von Hochwaschter, to whom some of them attributes a great part of the credit for defense on the Turkish right wing. It is clear that tho Bulgarians have exacuated the positions facing tho Hamldeih forts, according to the Times' correspondent. The Turks followed the retreating Bulgarians with their artillery which has a longer range. Tho correspond ent adds- Operations Not Understood. "I cannot understand the Bulgarian operations. Their withdrawal prob ably Is a feint, but if so why did they malte such strenuous efforts to en trench themselves?" Tho correspondent suggests that tho Bulgarians may hao imagined they would have an easy path to Con stantinople or .porhnpsthe Bulgarian generals were ordered to make a demonstration without seriously com mitting their troops. He adds: Massed Strength of Turks. "The Turks are massed in such strength on tho Mathmoud Pasha lines that they look as though they would be able to resist indefinitely, any attempt of the Bulgarians to ap proach them. The Bulgarians have retired to tho hills in tho immediate vicinity of Tchatalja villuge and the Turkish troops have re-occupied some small villages on the plain facing the Hamodieh forts. Whatever may bo the importance of this mo'ement it has acted as a strong tonic to the spirit of tho Turkish troops." Red Crescent Attendants D o Nothing For Cholera Sufferers Constantinople, Nov. 21. Heart rending scenes of sufforlng and mis ery are enacted dally at tho Turkish cholera camp at San Stefano. Tho correspondent of the Associated reus, accompanied by the secretary of n foreign embassy and by Major Clyde S. Ford, U. S. A., who Is here on leave of absence, paid a vi6it thero today Two Ottoman soldiers were standing on guard at tho entrance to tho camp but they mado no move. Their duty was to prevent those within the cor don from escaping and not to hinder people from ontorlng. Corpses lay In groups of three or fours. Around a one-atory stable at the foot of a rail road embandment was a group of sixty dead and dying, lying close to gether on tho slopes of a manure pllo which the sick men had found softer than tho hard ground. One man on top of the pile was digging with his fingers a sort of trough In which to lie. Tho trough soon became his gravo. Dead and Dying Uncarcd For. A group of tents stood In the cen ter where four or five Turkish sol diers bearing the Insignia of the Red Crescent stood on guard. Inside, tho sick and dead lay in groups. The dqctor on duty counted 22 patients in one tent, whllo double that number lav outside, sheltered from the wind by the canvas. Some of tho stricken men found difficulty In getting Into tho Moslem position for prayer, look ing toward tho cast One praying victim was so weak that he could not replace his blanket around his head when the wind blew it off. Tho Red Crescent attendants made no attempt to assist any of these suf fering soldiers, not even placing stones which wore plentiful, under their heads, to permit them to lie easier. Attendants Insolent. A number of these attendants gathered around to watch while the visitors were approximating the camp One of them became insolent and was ordered off by the doctor Struggle For Water. A water cart drawn by a donkey passed along tho road. Those of the victims who were able to rise to tholr feet went uuassistcd toward It and struggled feebly for a drink. Those unable to rise got none. In a similar way, what appeared to be army bread was distributed to those able to reach tho place of distribution. Several of the sick men raised themselves with difficulty and stum bled toward a well, from which thoy tried to dip water with their long sashes, wetting tho onds nnd moisten ing their parched mouths with them. Hundreds Dead Thousands Sick Thero were hundreds of dend and thousands of Blck in thlB camp, many of them lying on the opon ground and great numbers supporting their backs against tho housos along tho opon fieldB, most of which are deserted. PROFESSOR ADAMS SENDS MESSAGE Philadelphia, Nov 21. The follow ing letter dated November 5 from the Rev. Herbert Adams Gibbons, profes 6on of political economy In Roberts college. Constantinople, has been re ceived hero: "Tho Bulgarians are near the city and wo feel that If they win they will bo so fast on the heels of tho Turks that tho soldiers will not have any time to do damage. They will be too much interested In saving their own skins. Tho different ombassles are on tho alert. The government, realiz ing that if a massacro Is allowed Con stantinople Is lost to tho Turks, will do its very best to preserve order. "All the women of our colony are busy with Red Cross work. They do not want to leave unless it Is abso lutely necessary. We are right by the water s edge here and the Russian bat tleships are hovering around the en trance to the Bosphorous so we don't feel exactly hopeless " Servians Cruelly Murder Women, Children and Prisoners Vienna, Nov. 21. The terms offered to Turkey by the Balkan nations are neither in form nor in substance un compromising, according to Informa tion derived from an authoritative source in Sofia. They even leave the door open to eventual modifications by negotiations so that it may be as sumed that Turkey will accept them and a truce will be brought about Servian Barbarities on Albanians. The Reichspost sent Instructions to i Lieutenant Wagner. Its correspond ent, to proceed to Prisrend, but the Servian government prevented him from going. While staying at Nish. Lieutenant Wagner roports that he heard well nigh incredible details of the barbarities committed by tho Ser vian troops on the Albanians. A Red Cross doctor with the Servian army told him: "Tho Servians gave no quarter. All the Albanians, armed or unarmed, as well as the women and children, who fell into their hands, were merciless ly killed. "General Stephauovltch, the Serv ian commander, had the Albanians captured at Kratova formed in two rows and shot dead with machine guns, the general saying. 'We must extirpate those Austro-Hungarian fa vorites General Zlvkovltch also had 950 Albanians and Turkish notables cut down near Zionltzn. After the bat tle of Kumanova numerous wounded Albanians and Turks were burled with the dead. In the Servian for tress of Nish several Albanian wom en suspected of thi owing bombs at the Sen-Ian troops entering Vcriso vltz were killed by the Servian troops, who battered In their skulls with tho butts of their rifles. "Another Turkish prisoner was beaten to death In tho hospital at Nish, and one was maltreated and kicked by tho Servians until ho was dead." BLOODIEST BATTLE OF BALKAN WAR Bolgrade, Servia, Nov. 21 Twenty thousand of the SO.OOO Turks who de fended Monastir wcro killed or wounded in tho four-day battle that preceded tho capturp of the city by the Servian army, it was estimated today. The Servian loss was almost as great In the defense of tho fort ress tho Inhabitants of tho city fought with great ferocity side by side with tho Turkish regulars. They had been armed with rifles provided by the regular army. Tho Turks had 100 guns. Men Wade Breast-Deep in Water. Tho brunt of the attack on the fort ress was borne bv the Servian infan try. The men waded through breast deep water of tho marshes and took possession of the fort. Bloodiest Battle of War, The fighting was very severe and in the end tho Turkish troops wore ab solutely beyond the control of their officers, each mun fleeing the way he thought best. It Is thought many of them fell Into the hands of the Greeks from Salonikl. Tho battle Is described by some of the officers present as one of tho bloodiest en counters of the war. It extended over a Hue thirty miles long The Turks In replv to each assault the Servians made, made fierce counter attacks but always were repulsed. AMBASSADOR SENT TO GERMANY Berlin, Nov. 21. Osman Nlzaml Pasha, Turkish ambassador to Ger many, was ordered to Constantinoplo today to assist in tho peace negotiations. BULGARIANS ATTACK CRUISER Sofia, Bulgaria, Nov. 21. Tho Turk, ish cruiser, Hamidleh, which was at tacked today by Bulgarian torpedo boats In tho Black Sea, oft tho port of Varna, was hit by a torpedo. The vessel, however, put out to sea on being joined by another Turkish cruiser. The four nttacklng torpedo boats returned to Varna with dam aged smokestacks. EMPEROR JOSEPH PRAISES TROOPS Vienna, Nov. 21. Emperor Fran cis Joseph expressed his admiration at tho way the Bulsarlan troops had behaved during tho war in the course of a speech to the Hungarian dele gates at a banquet last evonlng. On tho other hand, howovcr, his majesty declared he could not understand why tho fortunes of war were so unfavor able to tho Turks. Referring to tbo dispatch of an Austro-Hungarian consular official to investigate the situation at Prizrend, tho emperor expressed the hope that the reports published regarding the Servian treatment of tho Austrian consul would prove exaggerated and that tho Incident would be settled peacefully. GREEK TROOPS CUT OFF REAR GUARD Athens, Greece, Nov 21. Greek troops have occupied the Turkish town of Fiorina, to the south of Mon astir, and cut off the rear guard of the Turklshr army retreating from Monastir after Its capture by the Ser vians. The Turkish soldiers, who succeed ed in escaping through the Servian line around Monastir, number about 30.000. Large quantities cf ammunition and stores fell into the hands of the Greeks when they were cut off the rear guard. TERMS NOT ULTIMATUM. Sofia, Nov ' 21 Tho terms for an armistice proposed by the Bulgarians are In no way In tho nature of an ul timatum, according to official cir cles here. It Is open to tho Turkish government to make counter propos als. The official announcement of the rejection of Bulgaria's terras read. "Tho porte, finding tho Bulgarian conditions for an armistice lnaccept ablo, has ordered Nazlm Pasha to re sume military operations." MONEY FOR RED CROSS. Washington, Nov. 21. The Red Cross today received $S,000 from va rious sources for the relief of the suf ferers in tho Balkan war, making the total contributions up to date for that charity $1S,000. 'PI? MIC &R1? Both Leaders and Twelve Men Are Killed EI Paso, Texas, Nov. 21. In a bat tle near Madera, Chihuahua, federals under General Jose Blanco yestorday defeated two bands of rebels com manded by Rlcardo Terrazas and Juan Ramos, killing 12 rebels, In cluding both leaders, according to a report made today to General Tru cy Aubert in Juarez. Fcdernl losses woro not given. The reported killing of General An tonio Rojas by Blanco's rurales is de nied In Juarez. Tho rebels assaulted the town soon after daybreak. Tho federal garri son of little more than 100 men re sponded with spirit, but the rebels crept close to the outskirts of the town and tossed hand grenades of dynamlto luto the outlying houses, which had been fortified by the fed erals, shattering the buildings and burning the defenders in tho debris and bricks. A report received at noon by Gen eral E. Z. Stoever said that Captain Rossnno of the federal troops was among the refugees to the American side of the Hnc and related the story of the town's capture. He was un ablo lo tell the number of dead The rebels" strength Is not known, but they were beliovcd to have been led by Inez Salazen, who has combined various small rebel groups in the neighborhood. Tho Palomaa-Colupibus placo of en try Is a Bub-port to tho El Paao-Jua-rez poit for Mexican and American customs and immigration. It Is the key to the overland trails loading In to Casas Grandes district, where Its possession by rebels Is considered an Important step toward controlling the vicinity below the New Mexico bor-dci. oo TIFT RAN A In Kansas-Wilson Vote, 143,670; Teddy 120,- 123; Taft 74,844 Topeka, Kan.. Nov. 21. Woodrow Wilson carried Kansas by a plural ity bf 23,547 over Roosevelt Taft ran third in the state, being 30,000 behind Roosevelt. The ofllclal figures given out by tho seeretnry of stato today follow: Wilson t-..143,C70 Roosevelt 120,12a Taft 74.8-M Dobs 2C.S07 Roosevelt carried 31iout of the 107 counties and Taft two Doniphan and Chautauqua. Dobs carried Craw frd cunty. the first time In the his tory of the state that Socialist car ried a Kansas county. ,; St '- MANY ARE ARRESTED In Government "Anti-Race-Suicide Raid Begun Yesterday Washington, Nov. 21. One hundred and forty-two persons, including 99 men and 13 women, have been arrest ed In the government's "antl-raco su icide" crusade, according to compila tion made today of figures In the di vision of Inspection in the postofflco department. Forty-two bua'ness con corns were Included In official re ports, approximately fifty representa tives of the concorns having been ar rested. Tho tabulations show no returns thus far as to the arrest of twenty persons Indicted by federal grand Jur ies In various parts of the country prior to the raid The total round-up will exceed probably the totil of 173 fixed yesterday by tho inspectors, be cause arrests were made in a few cases In Chicago and in the far west where the department did not know the cases were ready. In very few Instances was thero failures to make the arrests determined upon. Big Crowd Sees Rose, Vallon and Webber Leave the Prison New York, Nov 21. Sam Schopps, one of the four Informera, whose tes timony resulted In the conviction of Charles Becker and tho four gunmen for the murder of Herman Rosenthal, was discharged from custody today. He had been hold on a technical charge of vagrancy Schepps refused to divulge his plans for tho future. A crowd of 1.500 persons witnessed the release of Rose, Webber and Val lon from the Wo-3t Side prison this afternoou. Rose left In one automo bile and Webber, accompanied bvJiks. wife, was whirled away in another" Vallon slipped out by a side entrance mingled with the crowd and disap peared unrecognized except by a feiv REFUSES TO Chief Justice of Canal Zone Continues to Hold Gen. Mena Washington. Nov. 21. Chief Justlco H. A Gudgor of the supreme court or tho Panama canal zone has refused, according to news received here to day, to grant a writ of habeas corpus In tho case of the Nlcaraguan revolu tionary leader, General Louis Mena, and his son, Daniel Mena, 'detained'' at Ancon by the United States. General Mena and his son were tak en to Ancon on a United States war ship, after their surrender to Ameri can marines September 26, following the battle at Barranca. Since their arrival at tho zone October 1 General Mena has been confined to the hospi tal because of Illness, while his son has been kept under surveillance. It Is the intention of the United tSates lo restrain their freedom until conditions in Nicaragua become nor mal and the government there is able to securely maintain Itself against fur ther revolutlonarj attempts. Alienists Study Curious Mental Slants of Carl Riedelbach. Los Angeles, Cal . Nov. 21. Carl Riodolbach. the German bombmakor of many aliases, who emptied the mu nicipal polico building Tuesday, when ho walked in, carrying enough dyna mite to blow up a city block, continued today to puzzle alienists with evi dences of the curious mental slauta that Impair an otherwise well-poised Intellect "Next to Lincoln, the Emancipator. I am the greatest man In the world," said Riedelbach. complacently, to tho alienists today. "Are the papers not full of accounts of me?" "I wanted a wife, children, homo," he added. "Had life given me all of those I never would have thought of what I tried to do. Thero aro many mon like me." May Send Him to Asylum. Tho authorities have not yet deter mined what to do with Riedelbach, but it Is probable that ho will bo com mitted to an asylum. From a legal standpoint, it was said, a charge of having carried concealod weapons was tho only one on which Riedelbach could be prosecuted. ANNA SHAW IS HOPEFUL Opens National S u i - frage Convention ' Many Men Present Philadelphia, Nov. 21. "Heretofore wo had to inspiro enthualnsm; now wo have to hold It dowi ," declarod Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, president of the National Woman Suffrage asso ciation, In formally opening tho fourth convention of that body today. "The outlook for the triumph of our cause was nover as bright as it la today," continued Dr Shaw, "and in the course of a very few years I have no doubt that women In" every state In the Union will be exercising their right of suffrage." Encircling Independence squ2ro, where the meeting was held, wero five stands from which prominent ad vocates of womans' rights told the reason why equal suffrage should bo uulvcrsally granted. The square was filled to Its capacity, mon predom inating. Prominent among the speakers woro Mrs. Susan Fitzgerald of Boston, national recording secre tary; Mrs. Hsrriet Burton Laldiaw of New York. Mrs Agnes Jenko, Ne Hampshire and Mrs. Frances BJork man. New York "The women's declaration of rights, which was adopted at the first meeting of woman suffragists In Seneca Falls, N. Y , In 1848, was read by Mrs. Otis Skinner of Philadelphia. Prior to the open air meeting a session of the executive board was held In WItherspoon hall, after which more than 500 delegates from all sec tions of the country were conveyed in automobile to the square. At the meeting purely routine mat ters were discussod, principally whether the national federation as a body should endorse party politics. The business session of the con vention was held this afternoon. CHURCH IS DESTROYED Loss $100,000 Priest and Firemen Over come By Smoke Lowell. Mass., Nor. 21. A priest and 20 firemen were overcome by smoke from a fire that today de stroyed the interior of St. Jean Bap tlste church, a large French Catholic edifice. The financial loS3 Is esti mated at $100,000. About 150 worshipers wero attend ing the mass when tho fire was dis covered in a room behind tho altar. A moment later the lights went out and thero was a slight explosion. Tho officiating priest requested th,o con gregation to leave and thoy walked out quietly. ' Rev. Father Daron, who went Into the building with others to savo the stutuar and vestments, was over come by smoke and had to be carrlod out. VOUNG GIRL Threw Herself in Front of Auto to Save Sister From Kidnaper Chicago, Nov. 21. Luigi Naora, a young Italian girl, throw hersolf in front of an automobile today and thus prevented tho kidnaping of her 15-ycar-old slstor, Nicollata, who had been seized near her home and thrown Into the car Rather than run down Lulgi, tho driver of tho ma chine stopped and tho delay gave tho polico time to capture tho would-bo abductors. Polico assert that the leader of tho kidnapors. who gave his name as Lucchla Cera, came from West Hammond, tho village in which Miss Virginia Brooks conducted an anti-vice crusade. In the automobllo woro found a re volver and a hankorchief saturated with chloroform. John Ulrlch, driver of tho car, said that he was employed by an automobile llvory company and had picked up the men on a tolephone ordor to the livery. UV UNIQUE PARADE IN NEW YORK CITY Now York, Nov. 21. Tho street magnatos of New Yoric City turned aside from their dally routine today lo furnish the city with one of tho most unique "parades' ever seen here. It was a proceEBlon of street cars, showing the types that havo been in service in this city from tho time of the old horse-drawn vehicles to the double-decked street car that boou Is to be put into operation on Broad way. Nearly seventy distinct tytpes of cars havo been used In New York sinco tho first street railway was es tablished. Horse cars woro followed by cable cars, and then by olectrlo cars of many varIotiosfcthe latest be ing the pay-as-yoiiicnter, the hobblo skirt, or steplcss car,' and tho double decker. . DYNAMITERS I CORNERED I McManigal Tells How I They Escaped From U Burns' Employes H Indianapolis, Nov. 21. How cm. H ployes of W. J. Buni3, a detective, had the L03 Angeles dynamiters "cor- VM nercd" in a room in a boarding houso H at-Conover, Wis., five months before H tho arrests were made and allowed vM them to escape, was related by Ortlo l E. McManigal in resuming his confos- !M slon at the "dynamite conspiracy" H trial today. H McManigal said in November, 1910, H the month after tho Times was blown l up, he and James B. McNamara had been hunting five miles from Conover H when one day ho mlssod James B. anil later found him drunk In the boardlDg H house talking to detectives. McMan- IH igal said McNamara's description had H beon published everywhere and ho had H received mail at Conover, but, after a H discussion with the detectives, they H managed to escape McNamara the H next month caused another explosion H at Los Angeled and ten other explo- H sions followed before the arrests in H April, 1911. M McManigal Raid that McNamara at- H tempted to kill him. "He -wanted me H to hold a tin can and let him shoot a H hole through it." said McManigal. -I M told him to put a hole through him- H self if he wanted to kill anybod" H McManigal also stated that in es- H caping from Los Angeles, after blow- H ing up the Times building James 3., H going by way of San FTanc'sco, drop- H ped four infernal machines In the bay H between San Francisco and Oakland H "When I saw James B in the com- H pany of the detectives, I thought the H game was up," said McManigal. "I told H him he had probably told them every- H thing and I was going to quit right H there. That was why he wanted me H to hold up the can for him to shoot H "In telling mo of his Los Angeles H experiences James B. said he would H have put a bomb in the Times auxll- H lary plant if he could have located it H that night. He said, leaving Los An- H geles, he went to San Francisco to jfl get money and remained thero four H days. Crossing to Oakland on his way east, ho said he threw four infer- l nal machines in the bay to get rid. of ( H them. He stoppod'at Salt Lake City M and, remalned-two woeftg with J. B. H Munsey. - VX , """"McManigal previously had said that ( H the first day they arrived In the Wis- IH consln woods to hide James B. "took M a shot" at him H Parts of an Infernal machine found ft in wrecks of buildings and bridges ( Kt in various cities wcro exhibited at the "dynamite conspiracy" trial to- l day. M W. E. Griffith, chief of polico of H Kansas City, identified an infernal M machine lost by Ortle E. McManigal H in a swamp near the Missouri river B after McManigal had blown up part H of a bridge. Chief Griffith said aft- H er, the explosion on August 23, 1910. M he caused the arrest of W Bert H Brown and W. E. McCain, union of- H ficlals, but the prisoners, after mak- M Ing a statement rocorded by stenos- M raphers, refused to sign It. The stato- M ment, which was not orad, was Intro- H duced by the government, fM Henry W. I.egleitner of Denver, M a member of the iron workers' exec- H utivc board, when arrested last win- H tor admitted that the union officials M expended money without giving an 1 accounting to the members, accord- vM ing to 8amuol A. Meyer. Meyer tes- H tified that ho asked Legleltner about B the $1,000 a month which the govern- IIJ ment charges was used by J. J. Mc- 11 Namara for dynamiting. HH "He replied he thought an Inner M circle of officials in the union con- -: trolled the finances," said Moyor He I HH also said President Frank M. Ryan j HJ had authority to pay out money when ; HI tho executlvo board was not in ses- '' HH sion and no accounting was given of , iHH tho $1,000 a month paid to McNa- ; HI mora. ' IHfl SEARCH IN I EVERY CITY I Police Scour Country for j j I Murderer of Mrs. I Emma Kraft I H Chicago. Nov. 21. Polico In every , BJ city In America hunted today for HJ John B. Koettera, 36 years old, be- 'B cause Mrs. Emma Kraft, tho CIncin- j .HJ natl widow who came to Chicago to 1. HJ marry tbo man, was murdered, tho j HJ polico say, by Kocttors, in a down 1 BJ town hotel and robbed of $5,000. ii BJ The woman was beaten into un- I JH consciousness with a hammer and il dlod throo days later without being j B able to explain the mystery of tho j assault. li'l Positive identification of the slain jj M woman waB mado today by Mrs. An- j M na Kloker of Cincinnati, a niece of vBl tho victim, and her daughter, Flor- j BJ enco, 18 years old, in the county j BJ morgue. H 1 H AVIATOR FREY KILLED. H Rheims, Nov. 21. Andro Froy, tho I IH well known aviator, was killed hero j !H today. Whllo flying, around tho aero- j BJ drome his planes collapsed and he loll I j BJ a distance of 150 foot Froy partlacl- r H pated in the international meet at j jjflj Chicago last September and was j fM placed third. . . J BJ