Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 22, 1912, Page 2

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00 A FEW — MORE T0 LIST OF DEAD| John J. McNamara’s Instructions to Ortie McManigal When He Was Sending Him to Los Angeles to Blow Up Aux- iliary of Times Plant—Wanted Another Explosion to Di- l veit Sespicion Fiosi 3 Beother, McMunigal Testihes. | Indianapolis, Nov: 21 — Equipped with 12 quarts of nitro-glyeerine, Or- tie E. McManigal in December, 1910, went to Los Angeles, Cal, commis- sioned te destroy the Times auxiliary plnt and by “adding a few more to the list of dead” to take suspicion off James B, MeNamara, who had killed 21 persons in the wreck of the Times buijding two months before. cManigal so testified today at the “dynamite conspiracy” trial. He named men other than the MeNamaras as having inspired the second Los An- geles dynamite plot. He sald he was prevented from carrying it out by the discovery on reaching Los Angeles that the auxiliary plant was too well guard- ed and illuminated at might. Instead he set & bomb in an iron works plant to explode Christmas day. Referred to as “Christmas Present.” That was the “Christmas present,” he sald, Olaf A. Tveitmoe, a labor un- fon official in San Francisco, had asked for, and on his return east he stopped off at Labor temple in San Francisco and, on Tvietmoe's being abeent, he teft’ this message with Fugene A. Clancy: “Tell Tveitmoe his Christmas pres- ent has been delivered.” N Tt was the same “Christmas present,” the government charges, which Tveit- moe later referred to in a letter to Frank M. Ryan, president of the Iron Workers' International union. Called Down by John McNamara. On his return to Indianapolis Mc- Manigal said he was “called down" by John J. McNamara because not enough damage had been done at Los Angeles and John J. proposed to send to Los Angeles by express bombs so regulated that they would explode when unwrap- ped, but McManigal protested, saying the expi ns might occur on the train and kill innocent people. McManigal and James B. had been hiding in the Wisconsin woods, Mc- Manigal said, like a pair of pirates, each with a red handkerchief about his head, in conformity with the game laws, and a rifle over his shoulder, when a number of detectives appeared at their lodglmg house. FEluding the detectives, they came to Indianapolls. “Add Few More to List of Dead.” Bo elated was John J. McNamara eover the escape of his brother that he | proposed that McManigal at once for Los Angeles. “John J. said he had been to a labor convention at St. Louis and had seen Tveitmoe there and that Tveitmoe wanted some more explosions to come off on the coast,” said McManigal “James B. said he would like to go out and do it, but J. J. objected, say- ing they were looking for a man of his description on the coast and it would be a good idea for a stranger to do the jobs and get back east as soon as possible, and then the au- thoritles would think their man was etill In Los Angeles. He said I was to cause three explosions—the Times auxiliary plant, the Baker Iron works and the Llewellyn Iron works. He sald: Put a good mess of it under the Times auxiliary and add a few more to start DETROIT SOCIETY WOMAN MARRIED TO A CHAUFFEUR Bridegroom Represented Himself to Be Son of His Employer. Chicago, Nov. 21.—Mrs. Aimee Giv- ms, formerly of Detroit and divorced w~ife of Robert 8. Givins, a member 8f Chicago’s fashionable set, today dis- | T zovered that she was the central figure in a strange matrimonial tangle. After eloping to Crown Point, Ind., Wednes(lay, with a man whom shé be- leved to be a son of Marshall M. Kirkman, formerly vice president of the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad Co., she was told that the man was Mr. Kirkman's chauffeur. At the marriage, which took place at two o'clock in the morning, the bridegroom gave his name as “Edward B. Kirman,” There is no member of the Kirkman family by that name. Servants in the Kirkman family as- sert that “Edward B, Kirkman” in reality is Willlam Boehm, Mr., Kirk- man’s chauffeur, recently released from service, Detectives are searching for Boehm, fi'lr.m is said to have gone to Danville, Undesirable Woman to Be Deported. San Francisco, Nov, 21—Mrs, J. Ward Carter of London, who was ar- rested yesterday at & fashionable ho- tel and taken to the federal detention station as an undesirable alien, will be deported by the steamer Nile, saii- ing November 23, according to immi- gration officials’ announcement today. Bhe must make her way home by an- other route than across the United Gtates. Shot His Stepmother, Hammeond, Ind., Nov, 21.—¥Frank Cravens, aged 19, during a quarrel, shot his step-mother, Mrs, ~Lircoln Cravens, and then shot himself, Late today Mrs, Cravens and her step-son were &till alive, but their condition ‘was sald to be hopeless. Wake Up‘!_ You Lazy Stomach! Make Your Stomach Cheerfully Do It's Work—S8tuart’'s Dyspepsia Tablets Digest Your Food and As- sist the Stomach, People who complain they are worn to a frazzle are nearly always dyspep- tic and are recommended to use Stu- art’s Dyspepsia Tablets. The stomach gm lazy, food ferments and sours, gas elehes up, there are symptoms of bloating, the blood becomes thick and sluggish, the liver {8 blamed, the head 18 heavy, the mind a blank and the dining réom is a chamber of horrors. One of the greatest evils of our modern life i8 the quick lunch. To this evil, a8 much or more, than any other, may be traced the preponderance of the stomach troubles of our times. Instend of taking time to thoroughly masticate the food before swallowing it, the average person rushes through the meal, bolting the food, deglutition taking place whils it is only partially mixed with salivdimnd only half mas- ticated, thus leaving the stomach to do the work the teeth should have done, Stuart's Dyspepsia. Tablets contain digestive elements, a single grain being capable of digesting 8,000 grains of food, including meat g8, grain, veg- etables, starches and mineral matters, They prepare every partiele of food by thoréugh digestion for ready absorp- tion and assimilation by the lacteal glands, whieh pass it inte the bleod whenee it is eendusted te all parts of the system, rebullding and revitalizing it, druggist has Btuart’s Dyspep- alu.?:zleu in steck and wells mt 50 eents a box, the list of dead. They've been ques- tioning Tveitmoe and Anton Johanns- sen out there and we'll throw them off the traek.’ Load Suitcase With Bomb. “He also told me to fix up some kind of a suitcase with a bomb in it so that it would explede when anybody opened it. “He remembered how the bombs at General Otis’ and Mr. Zeehandlaar's houses on the morning of the Times explosien had failed to work and the evidence was in the hands of the au- thorities. He wanted it fixed so that if the police got hold of any of my bombs there woudn’t be much of the bombs left after they were opened. “When I arrived in Los Angeles and had buried the explosive in a gravel pit near the river, I looked over the three places I was to blow up and saw that all but the Llewellyn Iron works were too heavily guarded. On Christ- mas eve, going into the Lilewellyn grounds, a dynamite cap exploded and injured my hand. That put me out of humor, So I placed the 12 quarts all in one shot and set it for 2 o’clock the next morning. Gave Clancy a Fright. “Then I went to,San Francisco and called at Labor temple. There I met Clancy. He appeared about to faint when I sald jokingly, T've come to get the Los Angeles dynamiter,’ for he had been reading about the explosion. When he learned who I was he became calm. “When I reached Indianapolis in January, John J., his brother and I met in a closed room at the iron workers’ headquarters. John J. was all ruffled up because I had not done more dam- age. He sald I had spent too much money to do so little damage. Then he asked me how cenditions were on the Pacific coast and whether they had forgotten about the Times explo- ston, I told him they certainly had not, for everybody was looking for that big reward. I said I saw a de- scription of the three men posted in a saloon at Madison and Market streets, Chicago, and I had taken R. H. Holi- ban of the Chicago union over to look at it. Dynamite Substituted Glycerine. “The dynamiting jobs were to go right on, only hereafter dynamite was to be used instéad of nitro-glycerine, as it was more effective. John J. then told me of the proposal to send bombs by express to non-union contractors. I told him that wouldn't be right, for you never could tell who would open the packages, and they might explode on the train. He replied he didn’t care about that. “I went to Tiffin, O., and began to steal dynamite from a stone quarry at Bloomville, O., and store it in a shed at the rear of my father's house at Tif- fin. I stole three or four hundred pounde, and on taking some of it to Indianapolis it was arranged for J. B. to help me carry it all here. The idea was that to steal the explosive was better than to buy it, for then no rec- ords were kept.” for Nitro- BALDWIN BANQUETS THE DEMOCRATIC LEADERS Says Republican Party Has Been “Chewed Up and /Spit Out.” New Haven, Conn., Nov. 21.—Gov. Simeon E. Baldwin tonight gave a “cnmmimentuy dinner at the Hotel aft to members of the democratic state central commlittee, the speakers’ bureau, officers of the Democratic State club, presidential electors, con- gressmen-elect and members staff. Covers were lald for seventy. The governor acted as toastmaster. There were no set speeches. The gov- ernor sald In part: “I am glad to welcome this evening so many of the men whose hard and intelligent work has freed Connecticut from the crushing Incubus of republi- can machine domination. The road to wise and well considered political progress is now open and ready for travel. All roads, of every kind, in Connecticut, are soon going to be Passable, and ready for travel, even if it should happen to take a new highway commissioner to do it. _“The handful of republican politi- cians who thought they owned the state have found they didn’t. They, naturally, from the Hartford Courant down, are feeling a little blue. I have a r‘riend who, when a young engineer laying out a railread in the far west, was invited to a ball at the house of one of the chief men in the neighbor- hood. The dancing lasted to well to- ward sunrise. The next evening he made his party call on the young lady of the house. “I hope, Miss Flo, you don’t feel teo tired after the ball.” “You bet,” she replied, “I feel like I had been chéwed up and spit out.” “That is just what the country has been doing with the republican party. It has been chewed up and spit out And the best men did it; the best men in all parties were determined to have it so. “I issued a proclamation a week or two ago, for a public Thanksgiving; but I did not put into it the thing to be most thankful for. And that thing is the magnificent effort by which the boss ridden, tariff burdened American people wrenched themselves free on November 5 and started on a new ca- reer of industrial prosperity and so- cial advancement, under leaders whom they knew they could trust—trust to p)u: a(iu} trust to execute. “An cannot let this occasios thhpul expressing my very de:pp:;‘)f preciation of the largely increased plu- rality by which I received a re-elec« tion. It touched me prefoundly. Neth- ing can be dearer to a man in office than the feeling that the people be- Live\l'{a”lhat he has tried to serve them ell.’ » et THE NATIONAL GRANGE DEFEATS BRAUER PLAN Co-operative Mn’klfinn‘ Scheme Beat- en After a Shrap Fight. Spokane, Wash,, Nov. 21~—The Brauer plan for a $10,000,000 corpora- tion for direct co-operative marketing of farm products was voted down by the national grange today after a sharp fight, In place of the Brauer plan, the grange endorsed a plan for state and national “bureaus of information” as the first step toward co-operative mar- ketlng of farm products. By this plan each state grange will establish a bu- reau through which subordinate granges will keep informed as to mar- keting conditions, [N Two Escape from County Jail. New Haven, Nov, 21,—Fugene Bal- lergeon and Earl Ryan made their es- eape from the New Haven county jail factory here late this afternoon, by cutting the bolts from the steel bars in a window, Although their escape was discovered within a short time, no trace of the men has been found, There is little doubt that the incu- bator has not always been given the eredit it deserves for having brought the poultry industry up to its present enviable pesition, of his NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1912 ] ’ - John -Dough— - raised on Fleischmann’s ~ Yeast Copyright 112 by The Flelschmann Company 0 AN 3 AN S T % READ is a great bone, brawn and brain builder. For thou- sands of years it has been the chief food of the most progressive nations of the world. Eat More Bread If everybody would eat more bread and less meat and other heavy foods, everybody would be better off physically and mentally. The cost of living would also be materially reduced. Eat More Bread Good bread is the easiest-to-digest food—the most nourishing, wholesome and satisfying— and the best bread, the lightest, tenderest and tastiest bread, is always made with FLEISCHMANN’S YEAST. Eat that kind. _ More result of the discovery of smallpox by the ;vnd\fit‘*:r Fe passenger train which was Denver at 9.45 this morning from Chi- cago. LOS ANGELES DYNAMITER ARRAIGNED IN COURT. Preliminary Mearing of His Case Set for Monday. Los Angeles, Nov. 21.—Carl Reidel- bach, who invaded central police sta- tion Tuesday with an infernal ma- chine, was arraigned in the municipal court today and charged with a vidla- tion of the section of the penal code which prohibits the placing of dyna- mite in any place where human beings congregate, with maliclous ‘;purpose to kill or maim. One year to life- impris- onment is the penalty prescribed. The arraignment was the result of a decision today on the part of the au- thorities that none of the state hos- pitals for the insane has sufficient safeguards against the escape of homi- cidal lunatics. Riedlbach, showing no symptoms of skull fracture when brought into court, had his preliminary hearing set for next Monday, 5 Demoscrats Hungry for Jobs, ‘Washington, Nov, 21.—A deluge of demands for opportunity to serve the government—with proper eémoluments —is sweeping over tha advance guard of demecratic congressmen in Wash- ington. Thousands’ of letters asking for government employment have been received, and the senate and house postoffices are working overtime hand- ling the mail WON'T REACH JURY BEFORE SATURDAY. Arguments at Ettor Trial Will Con- sume Most of Today. Salem, Mass., Nov. 21.—District At~ torney Henry C. Attwill of Essex coun- ty tomorrow will make for the com- monwealth the argument to the jury in the trial of Ettor, Giovannitti and Caruso for the Lopizzo murder in the Lawrence textile strike. He will fol- low W, Scott Peters, who expects to close. 0 nbehalf of Giovannitti, unless Ettor, who would like to say a few words to the jury, is permitted to do 80 by his counsel. Such an unusual procedure was deemed unlikely tonight. The probability of the case going to the jury tomorrow night is now remote, as the remaining arguments are ex- pected to take most of the day and the charge to the jury by Judge Quinnm, which is to follow, will, owing to the unusual nature of the case, be a lengthy one and may not be delivered until Saturday. The !cd{ of a Well Dressed Woman who committed suicide last Tuesday by walking intq, the ocean at Revere Beach was identifled as that of Mrs. Maria J, Fleming of New York city. ROBIN TESTIFIES THAT HYDE FORCED A LOAN. Compelled Northern Bank to Aid Car- neaie Trust Company. New York, Nov. 21.—Joseph G. Robin testified at the trial of former City Chamberlain Charles H. Hyde today that Hyde by his control of city de- posits forc the Northern bank to loan the Carnegie Trust company $130,- 000 when the latter institution was about to collapse late in 1910. Robin, himself gullty of grand larceny in con- nection with the wrecking of the Northern bank, and who has been in the Tom®be for several months awaiting sentence, is the state’s principal wit- ness against Hyde, charged with ac- cepting a bribe as a public officer. Wilson Not Thinking of Cabinet. Heamilton, Bermuda, Nov, 21.—"1 am not thinking of the cabinet appoint- ments nowadays,” gaid the president- elect today, “but much bigger things than that” Mr, Wilson, though os- tensibly resting, is at work on his plan for the reform of the tariff, currency and other important matters, Quarantined In 8leeping Car, Denver, Col, Nov, 21.—Hight passen- gers and a porter will be compelled to remain under quarantine for two weeks a of & due i STRATFORD BOY OF 13 FORGED WOMAN'S NAME Collected $25 and Spent it for a Bieys cle and Candy. Stratford, Conn, Nov. 21.—Osman Willlams, the 13-year old som of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Willlams, wus ar- rested tonight, charged with . jng with the United States malls, was released in the cus of his « the arrival here row of postal inspectors from +.nat .the youth 8 | the nmame of Mrs. Rosie s weeu lecter, containd boy is sald to have said he spent the money for & candy and lunches. el e O Four Informers Boupd for Albany, N, Y, Nov. Webber, Harry Vallon, Bam Schepps, the four inforn Rosenthal case, who were re New York today, are been passi | the ‘westwi 1 The four men are sald in & sleeper at Castis Rock, Col. as & wav to Texas.

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