PART OSTE. NEWS ; SECTION : PAOES.05E TO EIGHT. T ' ITT A HK J VI A H A UNDAY MEM ' ' 1HU WEATHER - Generally Fair VOL. XLH-NO. 17. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1912-SIX SECTIONS FIFTY-EIGHT PAGES SINGLE COPY FIVE ' CENTS. ROS ENTH AL MURDER ORD ERED BY B BALD JACK INSISTS Honrs of Savage Cross-Examination Fail to Shake Story of Man Who Hired Gunmen. ' , if ; ROSE UNRUFFLED BY ORDEAL Tunis State's Evidence to Avoid . . Being Thrown to Wolves. VILE CHARACTER IS ADMITTED Slaying of Gambler Added to Perjury . . and Other Crimes. " TAFT PARTY FORBES" GUESTS President Makes Last Stop Before Arriving at New York. PICTURESftUE SCENE ON HUDSON Fleet Assembled for Review, ' To Tether with Shore of "River Ilium. lasted to Signalise Com pie. tlon of Mobilisation. NO GBAFT PAID BY DEAD MAN Failure to Keep Revelations , br Rosenthal Oat of the Newspaper ' Renders Becker Desperate in Resolve. NEW . YORK, Oct 12.-Long hours of cross-examination by supperless lawyers, before a supperless court and jury failed tonight to make "Bald Jack" Rose vary his story of the part he played and the part, he says former Folice lieutenant Becker played In the murder' of Herman Rosenthal, the gambler. ' : "Becker told me," ; he said, "that he wanted , Rosenthal murdered, shot, croaked or dynamited. At his bidding X got the gunmen to kill Rosenthal.' ' 1 hid after , the murder. I saw Becker that morning and later talked with him over the telephone.' I paid the gunmen $1,000 tor Becker and told them , he said not to worry, but to lay low. . , "I gave myself up and became a state's witness because Becker deserted me like a , dirty dog a&d was. getUus ready to throw- me to the wolves." Jodgre Refuses Delay.. " , Justice Goff convened the afternoon session "of court at 2:15. Shortly ' alter 9 o'clock tonight he declared It adjourned until Monday morning after John F. Mc Intyre, Becker's lawyer, protested he was on the. verge of collapse. Court, . Jury, counsel, witnesses and the accused had "been without food since noon lunch eon. Justice Golf, white haired and of venerable appearance, seemed the least fatigued of all in the court room. '-' warned you,", he told John F. M fl inty, Becker's lawyer, "early in the evening, that we would finish this cross examination if we had to sit to mid night. , I meant it'yv- . V "I am on the verge of collapse." pleaded Mclntyre. ."Proceed with the ease;'! . was Justice Goffs reply. . . i . .,'." ' Not for three hours thereafter was court adjourned. Becker."' Wol and' stoical, leaned on the. table: at which he sat, his chin In bis hand, his elbow on the table, during the long cross examination. - Twenty feejt back in the first row of seats, usually reserved for spectators, sat his wife. Her eyes were for her hueband rather than for the court Once, only once, he glanced back at her and ' smiled. , ' - . Bald Jack Endnrea Ordeal. . "Bald Jack" Rose thick lipped, wide -, eared and without a hair on his glisten ing head was unruffled by the ordeal. Once he faltered when Becker's lawyer hurled question after question at - him, "' each ending with "and when you said that you lied didn't you?" Once; he :. . leaned forward, burled his .face In his , hands and tottered on tha. stand. He , seemed about to faint and tie court quickly ordered a halt in the proceed ings and windows were lowered to revive him. Within a lew minutes he was re freshed and the cross-examination con- ' tlnued. ' '-. ' Rose admitted time after time that he had lied, had perjured himself, had been a gambler and had been engaged for . twenty years In illegitimate business. He admitted that he was testifying to save his own life, but said he was telling the truth now. He said he had concluded to become state's-witness only when the electric chair stared him In the face and added that he was not ashamed of his determination. ' ; ; ' ' Toid to Have Rosenthal Killed. Without emotion, in a slow drawl, he said be bad deliberately . planned : at Becker's behest vto "put Rosenthal where he would never worry anybody 'else." He knew, he added, that it was a terrible deed to plan. "Where was your .conscience?", de manded the lawyer. . . "I don't know,' he Said, measuring his, words and facing the lawyer squarely, "I never saw it" .'. "Do you now Intend to lead a respect able llfeT' 1 . J "Yes, but not In this community. 'I WOOD'S HOLE, Mass.. Oct 12,-The Mayflower, fogbound for five hours out side Bussard's bay, dropped anchor off Wood's Hole at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The president and Mrs. Taft Miss Helen Taft and their guests were taken ashore at 6 o'clock to become the guests over night and part of Sunday of W. Cameron Forbes, governor general of the Philip pines, who has a summer place on Nau shon island. The Mayflower with the president and his guests will leave Wood's Hole for New York at 3 o'clock tomorrow after noon. It Is due In New York Monday and the president will spend two days reviewing the fleet Although detained at sea most of the afternoon the president did not '.ose sight of the fact that a world's series cham pionship game pf base ball was being played In Boston. --'-'- --A wireless Inquiry was sent out asking the score, details of hits and errors und the names of the players makln the scores. An aerogram giving tha desired Information was sent to the Mayflower.. Fleet Illuminated. NEW YORK, - Oct. 12. Lights blazed aloft and ashore tonight when the great lleet, assembled here for presidential re view, and the shores of 'the Hudson, on which the armada floats, were Illumi nated to signalize completion of the mobi lization. The spectacle drew tens of thousands of persons to Riverside drive. The ' Illumination will be repeated ' Sun day and Monday nights. . Monday Is the day for the review of the fleet by Secretary of the Navy Meyer and Tuesday the culmination of the naval demonstration will come with the review by ..President Taft . Ir j Tonight's illumination crowned a . no table day of activity on land for the man-o'-warsmen,' more than S.Wi of the Jackies and marines participating In a parade down Broadway and Fifth ave nue. Along the line of march thousands of persons assembled ' and cheered the tars as they passed, , while in front of the public library building at Fifth ave nue and Forty-second street Secretary of the Navy Meyer, Rear Admiral Oster haus, commanding the fleet, and Mayor Gaynor reviewed the marchers. CONVICTS BREAK OUT OF WyOMING PRISON Nineteen Men in Stripes Escape from State Penitentiary Located , . at Rawlins. RESIDENTS OF CITY TERRIFIED Bad Men Break Hole Through Fence , . of Stockade. , ; , NINE ARE QUICKLY RECAPTURED Remainder of Convicts at Large in ' Hills Surrounding City. FOLLOWS PREVIOUS TROUBLES Remarkable Plot Laid by Inmates of . Penitentiary Results in Escape of More Than Dosen ..Late in Day. : Busy oil Real Business Nebraska Woman : Verifies Letters in Case (Continued on Second Page.) The Weather Forecast for Sunday and Monday: For Nebraska, Iowa and South Dakota: Fair Sunday and Monday, Temperature at Omtfhit ' Yesterday. Hour. Deg. 5 a. m 41 t a. m 42 7 a. m. n 8 a. m.... 3 a. m 43 10 a m -:9 11 a. m.. .......... 53 12 m. ...... 58 1 p. m....;. 61 : - ' INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. Oct, ia.Mla Gar EVv5in!tn, a stenographer, formerly employed by John J. McUamara, now In prison In California, , at the "dynamite conspiracy" trial today Identified a cir cular letter 'as having' been addressed to all local unions of the International As sociation of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, notifying them of a temporary suspension of a detailed accounting of the union's finances. . It was after this letter that the executive board, the attorney charged, headed by President Frank M. Ryan, in 1906 began al lowing $1,000 monthly to MoNamara that he secretly might carry on the explosions which continued until his arrest in April, 191L The government asserted that ex plosions previously were few,' but that after the regular allowance to McNamara. Ortie E, , MeMantgal and James B. , Mc Namara, directed by Herbert S. Hockln, were put to work. '.' Miss Sylvia C. Smith and Mrs. A. T. Hull of Kimball, Neb., also employed by McNamara as stenographers. Identi fied letters taken from the ironworkers' files after the headquarters were removed to. Indianapolis. Many of the letters , the witnesses testified were, in McNamara'B handwriting. v ; "referred to executive board," or "referred to F. M. Ryan." They were the letters which the govern ment, in Its opening statement, said would show that a dynamite conspiracy was conducted through the mails and which show the defendants to be "linked to gether In guilt" The witnesses identified letters as hav ing been received from W. Bert Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Edward Smythe. Peoria, ? 111. ; Paul J. Morrln, St Louis. Mo.; Fred Mooney, Duluth, Minn., and Moulton H. Davis, West Chester, Pa., all of whom are defendants. Roosevelt Forces Are Surrendering All Along the Line , Not only republican but democratic or- CHEYENNE. Wyo., Oct 12.-(Speclai Telegram.) Wlthjn two weeks of the lynching of Jim Wlgfall, a negro assault fiend, by convicts In the Wyoming peni tentiary at Rawlins, nineteen convicts this afternoon made a successful break for liberty, beating a board out of the prison stockada and scattering Into the rugged country near the prison walls. Guards on the walls were cot aware that the break had been made until a commotion arose among seventy other convicts In the compound who refused to take advantage of the opportunity to escape. By that time the fugitives were gone. ; Tonight nine have been captured and poshes are scouring all' the surrounding country. One party of the convicts met a grocery wagon loaded with supplies near the hills, captured it and drove into the hills,, abandoning the wagon, but takjng Its contents with them. Othw fugitives met trusties returning from a stone quarry and asked them to join in the flight, but they refused. 8everal of the fugitives are armed with hammers and hatchets, with which they were working In . the compound. Among them is Jim (Butch) Dalton, a life term murderer, who Is accounted the most desperate of the men. Warden Felix Alston, who was in his office when the break occurred, Is leading a posse. Dalton formerly was a member of the Whitney gang of bank robbers. ' Town in State of Terror. The town is patrolled by armed citi zens tonight and men and women sit, In their homes with weapons clos at hand listening for intruders. The fugitives are known to be the most desperate of the penitentiary's Inmates, led by the des perado Palton, reported at first as cap tured,, and wilt take a long chance to secure weapons and clothes. - A reign of terror . began. t Ji'clocli this afternoon when ftdm the penitentiary; burst 4 bedlam of shouts of convicts and through the streets' of the northern part of the town nineteen close cropped, hard featured mem in prison-uniform, ran-In a body.;5 . ,-' ...... J Horses tethered in front of saloons were grabbed by the leaders and bore them at breakneck speed through the town and away to . the hills, outdistancing tne guards that closed in on the rear of the fugitives after losing precious minutes In vestigating the cause of the uproar tn the cells. . . ''..' ' .: : . Nine Convicts Captured, : Four of the fugitives hiding in a canyon north of Rawlins were caught half an hour after the outbreak and a fifth was cajtured making for the railroad. Three were cornered In another canyon, a mile west of the town, by mounted pursuers, but have not been taken . The guards returning with the five prisoners : were greeted by the convicts with an uproar of groans, and It ' was then discovered that in the excitement of pursuit another prisoner1 'had escaped making twenty in all.' ' . '. , V - .'.'-' 'i'-W' .': ' Shortly before 7 o'clock tonight four fugitives were discovered hiding In a barn within a block of the prison. ' Two were captured by guards, but two got away from the officers, who feared to fire be cause of a crowd In the vicinity. '' - A little later Warden Alston arrived at the penitentiary with two men he had taken single-handed. ' This raised the number to nine recaptured of the nine teen in. the original getaway. . - ( ,-' A searching party of citizens was or ganized at 8 o'clock to make a house to house search of every house In the north end of town In the hope of finding more of the men and to reassure the terror stricken citizens. '.,'.,. . Mrs; Wise Insane. After Suit Fails Rose Wise of Weeping Water, mother of Bertha Mott, whose troubles have re ceived, much notoriety, was taken from ganlzatlons are getting a steady flow of 'her cell In the county jail last night to reports prom, various parts of the state .the county hospital, where she is said to that the Roosevelt sentiment is losing ! be violently insane. ; Mrs. Wise was being ground. , - , , Held for the grand' Jury on a charge of j Thirty-seven letters have been received 'assault to do. bodily harm, and she had by the Woodrqw Wilson league in re-i just failed in an attempt to secure her sponse to inquiries mailed out Septem- J release by habeas corpus proceedings. Her ber 24 containing a series of questions failure weighed heavily on her mind and among which was: "Has the Roosevelt ! u believed to.be the cause of her in sentlment increased or diminished since sanity ' '' ' -'" v. . f his Chicago convention?" Only one let-j Two' months ago Mrs. .Wise and her ter In the thirty-seven said that the i fli1B-htr Krth Mntt becam mhrrnt ; . .. i V t f-. STUDENTS INVADE STAGE IN THEIR JOY Creighton Boys Give Theater Crowds Several Shivers Celebrating Victory on Gridiron. ;' POLICE CALLED IN AT KRUG Young- Men Buffeted, Few. Are Handcuffed and Lectured, While Others Rival Antelopes In " ,''- Maklna; Getaway. WALLACE BLACK ENDS LIFE Bookkeeper for. Commission Firm ' - . Shoots Himself. mm 10 THE OLD HOMESTEAD Wife and Family Pussled to Ascribe Motive for Deed- Body Not . Identified for Some Time , . After Act. :." .' ' . Dying in the rear of the homestead where he was born, Wallace Black, book keeper for" the Wood Commission com pany of South Omaha, was found with a hole tn his right U'tnpie at 6 o'clock last night by Mrs. Mollis King, who Firarby-4he Mmirsi lives -tlS09 fWllilanif streets Every In spired by therictory of the Crelghtoft dicatlon pointed to suicide, for grasped teafn on the foot ball field, a lot of Creighton boys made things lively on the downtown streets last night.. Especially did they -make their1 presence manifest afthe front doors of the theaters, much to the worry ' of t doorkeepers, ushers, managers and policement. Six of the fu ture B. As. were taken handcuffed to the station, while quite a' number of others fehowed the policemen ', who chased them how fast a college freshman can go through an alley when it is time to go At the Gay ety they frightened the audi ence Into thinking a near riot was at hand by marching Into the theater, giv ing their joyous yells and marching out again. Down at the Krug they got a little different reception. The good na tured copper at ,the door there coaxed them to move on, and they moved over to the Orpheum. , . ," Here they encountered a copper who Is an athlete himself; he doesn't deny it, and proceeded to prove it .by slamming right and left Into the bunch. Several ii). m. . S p. m.... , 4 p. m.... E p. m.... p. m.... 7 p. m.... 63 63 63 69 . 57 .00 Comparative Loral Record. . - 1912. 1911. 1910. 1309 illgnen yesterday 63,; 69 81 Mean temperature. 62 66 Temoeratura and nmnlnlttinn toit-s- ..: tne normal : . Normal temperature ............j ' t7 Deficiency for tha day s Total deficiency since March 1. 168 Normal precipitation... Winch Defiicency for the day.......... .09 inch !. r, .anfai since . r-ch 1...23. inches Deficiency since March 1 1.91 inches Deficiency for cor, period, 1911.13.79 Inches Dltet ncy for cor. period, 1910.12.23 inches T indicates trace of precipitation. L. A. WiuLtiH. Local Forccaater. in ' a free-for-all fight in the north part of the city, at; which time Mrs. Wise struck Mrs. Burt Mott, aged 71, on the leg with a ball bat, breaking the limb lit two places. Mrs. Mott Is recovering. '' DRUGGED AND ROBBED; l -UNCONSCIOUS FORTY HOURS '26 S2 .00 Roosevelt sentiment was gaining. Thlrtv- ono of them said the Roosevelt senti ment was diminishing decidedly. This is the second bunch of such cir culars sent out by the Woodrow Wilson league. The first batch was mailed Au gust 29, the last one September 21 The first showed the Roosevelt sentiment de creasing In a large Per cent of cases, but not so large as the last lettersl Tha last letters are from the following coun- j After being unconscious for nearly forty ties: Saline, Butler, Otoe, Colfax. Cedar. hours, the result of drugs administered Dodge and Howard. They were mailed 'in a saloon near Tenth and Davenport to the men who were the democratic 'street, William Campbell, a farm hand committeemen ' two years ago, " regard- living near Atlantic, la., revived yester less of what .may or may not be their i day morning at St Joseph's hospital and politics at present" Expressed in per- told Police Surgeon T. T. Harris that he centage83.7 per cent of the replies 'had been drugged and robbed of 2S. showed - the Roosevelt sentiment dimin- j He is still in a serious condition, but it ishlng; 13 per cent gave It as oncer-lis believed he will recover.' Campbell tain; while 2.8 per cent gave It as In- 'was unable to describe the men who drug creasing. In other words, only one out J jrtd him, but he says two white men of thlrtyeeven queries estimated the ! bought him a drink, after which be re-' Boosevelt sentiment to be on the Increase j membered nothing.. He y at the time In bis community." . , , he had 83 In his pocket book- ' M 1 ' . , (Continued on Second Page,) ... Congressman Kinkaid Says He Will Return, to Battle in Sixth CRAWFORD, Neb.,, Oct 12,-(Special Telegram.) Congressman Kinkaid to night, after the Sixth district republican" congressional committee had asked him to withdraw his declination of the nomi nation for congress, wired back that-he would re-enter the race. , His telegram reads: "Will accepj. if it will .' not antagonize any county. . Be regarded as political duty." ; . ; - Twenty-seven counties of the thirty-five tn the district were represented and the choce of Judge Kinkaid was unanimous. The following telegram was at once dis patched to h'R)t O'NelHj- ;;-; "The - republican committee ! of the Sixth district In meeting assembled Is unanimously ,of the A opinion that ' you Should withdraw your declination as a candidate for congress and accept the nomination by this committee, which ac tion Is earnestly requested and cordially insisted upon by every .. member of the committee. Notwithstanding your im paired health will not permit of ' a vigor ous persona campaign, we believe it lo be a duty to the people of the district that this be done. Please wire answer at once' . : . '.. .' While waiting for his "answer t.n en thusiastic meeting was held In the ;ra house and attended by several hundred people. A number of democrats attended tightly in his left hand Black clutched a new ; revolver and the wound in his head had every appearance of ope self-inflicted., - , ,i .. f, , r,. f ..... When found he was still alive but un conscious, but he died In St. Joseph's hos pital at 7:30 o'clock while Police Sur geon Harris sought to save his life. Mrs. King, who lives where Black was found told The Bee last night that sho first saw him at about ? 4 o'clock and that he had walked staggering through the back yard. She thought nothing of It at the time, but when she went to feed her chickens at 6 o'clock she saw him sitting down, propped, against the coop, (Continued on Second Page.) Young Bryan's Boat ;;; Cause of Drowning. ; of Negro Fisherman ' FREDERICKSBURG, Va.. Oct. U (Speclal Telegram.) Word reached here today telling of the drowning of an aged negro fisherman In a; river in Lancaster county, forty miles below Fredericks burg, as a result of the collision of a row boat with a gasoline launch operated by William J. Bryan. Jr., son of. the Ne braska statesman, who has been visiting relatives In that section for some days. So far as can be ascertained, the launch accidentally rammed the boat, causing the negro to be thrown Into the water. Being unable to swim the unfortunate man quickly sank, despite the efforts of young Bryan to save his life. Another occupant of the launch whose name has nJt been ascertained here Is said to have also' used every endeavor to rescue the negro. It was 'several hours before the body was recovered. f ' : -''' ' ,, ;. r Bryan and his companion were exoner ated from blame at a coroner's hearing. Hot Steel' Burn m' : ; f v s0ut Larsen's Eye , John Larson, aged 22, a blacksmith liv ing at 2223 North Fourteenth street, tost his left eye, and may become totally blind as the result of being struck by a red hot piece of steel yesterday noon' In the workshop of the.pmaha Motor company. 1311 North Twentieth street. ;5 Larsen was pounding a piece of steel when suddenly a small particle broke off and flew . into, his eye. He fell to the floor, and suffering Intense , pain, was taken to the Swedish Mission hospital. where steps were taken tp save the other this mass meeting and announced their "J- the nerves of which were paralysed... aljeglanpe - toJudg. ,nkald.. ; Short A,m?al-fnt ne va8 resting easily. Suffragette Army ; Marches to London EDINBURGH, Scotland, Oct 12.--A small army of suffragettes set out today from this city to march to London, where they. Intend to present a petition: to Pre mier Asqulth. -.-. ; , .: V They are -under the -leadership of Mrs. De Fonts Blanque, who will make the journey on horseback at the head of her SECRETARY WT ; REJECTS DEMAND Nebraska Official Turns Down Re ' ; quest' of Republicans for Place ' "'; for Electors - - CULVER VOICES THE PROTEST speeches by F. M. Currie and Judge Reese of Broken Bow, Paul Humphrey Of O'Neill and Howard O. Wilson of Alnsworth were made and liberally ap plauded.. The general sentiment of this entire community, regardless of party af filiation, Is in favor of judge Kinkaid. NEXT MEETING OF MASONS TO BE HELD IN SWITZERLAND Files Document, at State . Hoase Which Official Ref asee t ttco i - . nlse, peclarlac Has No Power ' .'...''.'"''; to Do So. . V (From a Staff Ccrresbohdent) tiNCOLN, Oct H-'cSpeclaU-Thers has been filed, In tha office of ths secre tary of state a 'communication from the regular ' state republican committee' pro testing against the names" ' of the bull moose electors remaining upon the re publican ticket and demanding that the secretary of state remove them and place In their stead those of the' republican electors recently filed by petition. ; ' . The. document was filed several days ago with the understanding' that It should not be made, public pending tne action of the Epperson committee In se curing 'the resignation of the bull moose electors from the republican ticket and, when last night the bull moose electors refused to resign, the paper was made public' this morning. j , Protest - of Committee. ' The communication Is signed by Gen eral J. H. Culver, vice chairman of the republican . committee, and also by the secretary, and sets forth that as the so called republican electors have repudi ated the republican national ticket and have repudiated the declaration made at the time of the primary that they were republicans and would support the noml- i WASHINGTON, Oct. 12.-The second In ternational conference of Scottish Rite Masons, which has bVien In session hero i forces. . It Is believed the march . will take several days,, adjourned todav after a j about six weeks, those participating ex short business session.4 At the final meet-I peeling to cover about ten. miles a day,' . lnf tt was decjded that the third Inter-1 At every-stoppfngo place on the way national conference will be held at Lau- t meetings will be held. ' A special uniform sane, Switzerland la May, 1917. I is to be worn by the marchers. , (Continued on Third Page.) , . , Mrs, Touzalin Dies1 1 Ignorant of Death 1 of Her Daughter 1 Mrs. Gertrude EX jjouzalln, mother of Mrs. Opal Morley, f hose ieath In Lon don was reported recently, died at her apartments In the Madison at S o'clock yesterday afternoon after an illness of a week. ' , ' '-.'' ' "- . , Mrs. Tousalln never knew that her daughter had died, for her advanced age and, falling health made it Imperative to keep the news, from her.. She was 77 years old . and had been a restdent Of Omaha many years. Mr. Touaalln was at one time' general ' manager of the Burlington railroad.) ' ' . ' i She has a son Hvlng here, Arthur D. Touzalin, and a son In San Antonio, Texi, David, i A daughter, Mrs. ,W. H. Clark, whose husband is. a brother of Frank Clark of this city, lives in Manila. ' , j Dean J. A. Tancock will conduct the funeral i services over : Mrs. Tousalln. Services will be 'held at the reside nc of her soil, In the Majestic apartments, Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Schoolboy Eeceives . j Fracture of Spine , : ' " '- " ';- WUUant Herekt, 11 years old, & school boy, living at 4116 Camden avenue, Is In a dangerous condition as the result of be ing thrown from a hayrack on Grand avenue near Thirty-seventh street late yesterday afternoon. His spine is frac tured and his left side partly paralysed. Today he will have to undergo n opera tion to save., him from ' permanent dis ability, - -...,',-", V, , -- Young Herekt was driving a team of i horses along Grand avenue when one shied at a piece of paper. Both reared and In the excitement the lad lost his bold on the wagon seat and was thrown to , the ground. ' The wagon wheels squeezed him against a telephone pole and rendered htm unoobsdous. Witnesses took him to his home and he was at: tended by Dr. V. IL Ellis. . :i : i mm m BREAKS TURKS' LlflEj WESTS TUSHI CITY Forces of King. Nicholas Fighlf lor.. Four Days Along the WhoUj Frontier. J GREECE HAS ENOUGH RECRUITS Mobilization Centers Already Over- f , whelmed with Volunteers. ITALY GIVES TIME TO TURKEY Three Days of Grace Granted -in . Which War May Be Ended. GIVES POWERS MUCH CONCERN I f, ' : ' ." . Great Nations Are Anxious for Otto mans Not to Pat Tramp Card , .' , In IUnds of Balkan Coa ' federacy. PODGOUITZA, Montenegro, ' Oct 12.- After an engagement' lasting untH- mid day the Montenegrins broke through thn . Turkish ranks near Tush! and Invested the town, which Is completely Jut off from Scutari. I . j . , t . The Montenegrin srmy has teen fight ing for four days along the whole fron tier, penetrating the Turkish territory slowly, owing to the many fortifications. The Turks have burned several Malls sort .villages.' .. . . " t Many wounded Turks have been brought to Padgorltsa. , ' 1 ' , Tarklsh City Attacked. CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct lZ-Monte-negrln troops have crossed -the border Into the sanjak of Novlpasar and ore no attacking Sienltsa, according to offlc' f Information received by the ports. Sie -'. Itsa is a town close to the Servian frci -tier. . , , , ' . "' The Greek consulate here handed ove'J Its archives to the French embassy. ,-f ii- Servian cousulate has been put lis charge of Russia. ,(- i ." 1 v '. ' General Commits Svlclde. LONDON, Oct. 12,-Desperat8 fighting tor the possession of Barana between tha Turkish and Montenegrin armies In the vicinity of Lake Tuscari is in progress. The town has been repeatedly taken and retaken by both sides, says a diH patch - from : Cettlnje today. Turkish troops repulsed the Montenegrins after ' another sharp engagement at Tushl. I The Montenegrin General Lasovltch lias taken the place of General Bosovltch; who committed suicide when the fc! . reproved him on the field of battle' for wasting ammunition. ' ' -Jf ' Th Turkish ' troops 1 orvtff.r Monte negrin frontier ire (Offering stubborn T.slstance ,i,t6 : i the.Montenegrln ad vance '.on Scutari, accbrdiiig to tha latest advices from ' Podgorttsa. Tho fighting; has been of. the most sever character, both sides' losing heavily, ; Too Many Greek Volunteers. Greece Is entirely above board with its preparations. Crown Prince Constan tly left Athens today to take command of the army. ! .' ; - j -Vienna advices say Turkey will mass 460.000 men against1 the Bulgarians and leave only two divisions to oppose Mon tenegro. Turkey apparently is willing to saclflce ' its ' outposts' on that border for the time being. ; e ' ' Latest advices from Podgorlua Bay the Montenegrins have occupied the town ' of Tushl and that great losses have oc curred on both sides. ; : - The mobilization of the Greek army has been successful ; beyond , expecUtlon, Troops to the number of 125,000 will bo . concentrated , on the frontier by Monday and , another 30,000 are being equipped. The mobilisation centers of the govern- (Continued on Second Page, ) ' YOUTHFUL BURGLAR CAUGHT ' WITH LOOT WORTH $10,000 ; NKW TORK. Oct. 12,-An exciting burglar chase through the streets of Flatbush, Brooklyn, late tonight resulted' In the capture of a prisoner ln whoso possession a store of plunder was found, the value of which a police est! ma to placed at 110,000." The . loot was in the ., form of watches, rings, necklaces and . other Jewelry of value, believed by tho authorities to be the product of a series of burglaries tn the Flatbush district re cently. The prisoner gave his name an Michael Carbons, a 17-year-old clerk out of work,. ' ' . . . NEPHEW OF DIAZ JOINS r REVOLT AGAINST MADER0 "mEXICO.CTTT Oct. 12.-Ceneral Felix Dlas has ' joined the rebellion, against Madero, who forced, from the presidency his uncle, Porflrio Dias. This is the news sent from the state of Vera Crus today. President Madero Ms reluctant to believn the -report but there appeals little doubt of its accuracy, v ; ; ; ' ? ,. ' The Captain ol Industry eek The Want Ads today are Just as indispensable to modern business and private life as are the tele phone or the railroad. , . . , Before the day of Want Ads the sudden leaving of a trusted book keeper,' stenographer or salesman might seriously cripple a business for days or weeks at a time, but today the Insertion of a little Want Ad brings a new employe to fill the vacancy on short notice. The growing factory supplants certain machines" with, those of larger type or they substitute automobiles for their dray wagons little Want Ad in The Bee brings a purchaser lor the ma chinery pr the horses which hare been discarded. The progressive up-to-date buslDes man is a con stant' user of Wct Ads. Tyler 1000