f- 1
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I F.fticth Year-No 25a OGDEN CITY, UTAH SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 25, 1920." LAsFeDITION 4 P. M. H
! WAR WITH U. S. SUICIDE, JAPANESE HOLD
L Utah Bank Robbers A re Captured
I HARDING SAYS
I HE WILL EIIIE
I U. S. NEW DEAL
Candidate Gives Front Porch
Talk to Group of Commer- j
Y cial Travelers
V WILSON GOVERNMENT
-A ROUNDLY DENOUNCED
gfjg -
Senator Promises New Era of
Business and Greater
Efficiency
; !-J MARION ".. Sept. 2.V An era of
Vkrxfll business stability ami of business-like
yjgPJ government was promised by Senate
' Harding today In a front porch Speech
j-nM lo n gathering Of several thousand
MlB commercial travellers who came from
fTfjPl sll parts of the country under t:ic
85 auspices of tho Harding and Coolidge
IcSw Travelling Men's league.
'v!y? The business methods of the Demc-
wi' OratiC administration, both in the con-
fjgf duet of Its own affairs and In Its
'(frfefr relations to private enterprise, were
. denounced by the Republican nominee
-Sr' M "meddling and autocratic" to a de-
: . groo threatening Industrial chaos. Ho
0, i outlined a policy of common counsel
; y- in contrast to one man Judgment"
f ' ;lpd pledged himself to an idealism
' fcf based on such sense that It does not
L . treat the nation's business with BUS-
J'fcj picion and contempt.
Ml INS COMPIiETE f 11 N(.B
i : J I believe that everywhere In the i
. i land." said Senator Harding, 'there is i
ii&jiM the opinion that we have had enough,
s of government excess! c,. rallzod
t-i'-''Sf In executive powers: enough of auto-
-i cratlc government unwilling to 1
counsel and advice; enough of govern-
K ment which Ignores the represent. i-
Bjf ' live branch and Us close contact with
'HfS P01ulal' Will. 1 want it very ex-
pllcltly understood that my election to
f!j the executive office means complete j
'8 change from the one man policy which i
-fjWf htfN characterized our national govern- I
. ,' fhent during the pasl . -PEOP1
E PA1 BILLb.
Sb " believe that the people of Ainorl-
a ca need not b( told thai they paj
52 the hlll of administrative government '
BWH whofM distension for war still remains
V. '; over-distend peai It
?ri come common knowledge that there (
j tre between 11 ,000 and 18,0
Wmrn on payroll of tho United
"WiB who win be kepi there, tut
1 unless wc have a new management.
WH The people know very well that onl
,( , mi Intelligent opposition prevented
HH the present administration from n.uk
ing an expenditure of over eleven bll- I
ttjm lions of dollar in a peace year and the
?gfl eleven billions would have ben a nas-
flgjH onably large draft upon a people who
S2?z In 1516 paid one billion dollars for
'Jrrl their current expends of government
in slM SS HARD BIT
Hft "Ti" 'i lc Know wh
t thi Upon s "American busi-
iflE ness was facing disruption and the
fHj American worklngman unemployment,
H' and that another year of folly now
would mean Industrial plants closed in
HH idleness and laborers walking amoiic
them looking In vain for tho Joy of
BUB a day's productive work
,&t in se and in good con-
EffR science It has been necessary for all of
us to reeognl.e that we lii
I ragged toward chaos. A nation which
flBB i.rideK it.--lf upon It- business si use
jVH has been forced to see Its govcr.i-
pJB I ment twlidod In'.. it;
PJBfefl waste and slipshoddiness And that I
administration almost innocent, w
WJfi may say. of business principle, an ud-
7r ministration which could not attend to
Rjfy Its own business well, with new ceon-
Ifl . mm, theories, with pertinents, with
ff" activities In which 11 was never in-
lo- tended government should participate
W& ' and with laWS and executive orders
J B4 which failed to curb profiteering or
) contribute to our high standard of
St j American business, has reached out its
14. hindering hands In menace to Ameri-j
I lR i:in business und American prosper-
flfc K. C. MAN IS PRESIDENT
il OF BOILERMAKERS' UNION
111 KANSAS CITY -.pi J. A .
HUB I- ianklln. Kansas City, Kan., was
wlll elected president of the International i
Brotherhood of Boilermakers, iron1
gtfl Shipbuilders and Helpers of America I
Sftl ul the convention today.
Enl A special committee named to In -1
5QH vestlgata charges of un-Americaniam I
g2i and radicalism against several dele-
Wjj gates, reported today and was die-1
gm charged. It was understood all ac-1
g i.-used delegates were acquitted, with
pS) one exception. John McK- In. , t Se-
1; , little. Wash., who was denied oeal
I lnel week and expelled from the i. roth-J
!fl erhood. t
:' I COX VISITS VETS
IN DENVER HOSPITAL
t ' ll DBNVBR, "olo.. Bepl 26 A visit
pal J I to a hospital near here for former
W II service men was- paid early this morn-
,,y -Jovc'3r Cox, of ii,.,, 2emO"
IB . ,-iatie prt ildential candidate, bel
; ) Mlu departure for northern Colorado
I' jv9X v'' "l:;l''T. I'l older t . . rtleel I h
. w1 ormei i srvlt m a, Govt rnor Cox left
jt7 his hotel about 7 a m. after brealt-
KSK75 ft with the hospital officers, visited
j . th various ward;. , and sihook hands
with bed-ridden patients.
1 FACES
PROBERS BUT
i KEEPS NAMES
Financing of Stars and Stripes :
Comes Up for Close
Investigation
DENIES DEMOCRATIC
GROUP HAS CONTROL
Witness Says Threats Were
Made Against New
Publication
i
WASHINGTON, Sept 25 The ab
jsence of witnesses having halted Its
inquiry into Implied charges that Cmv
. i on Cox In CIS ieeejed a concealed
'campaign contribution of 16000 from
jtho Dayton (O.) .Metal Products com
Ipany, the Senate campaign investigat
ing compilttee turned Its attention to-
I a to the financing of the Stars and
i Stripes, a soldier publication,
j The committee planned to conclude
I its present session here today and It
has not yet decided when it will go
(into the Dayton matter. Chairman
jlCenyon Indicated that the committee
luouid meet next on October 18 at St.
Louis.
Mis E M. Parks, assistant and sec
retar to V I . .lamieson, director of
tinahce for the Democratic national
committee, was questioned as to the fi
nanolng of the Stars and Stripes. She
I told of negotiations opened with the
j national committee b Joseph IL fl'er-
jnan, secretarytreasurer of the Stars
land Stripes Publishing company ami
i said that Hhe had undertaken to un
derwrlte $18,000 tor the publication.
Of this Bum, ahe said, she furnished
$10 uu" i I she obtained the remain
der from lriends.
I RIKNDS GIVE COIN,
May 1 ;uid." tho witness said, "that
the Democratic national committee nor
I tiny member of it as such, has never
contributed -i dollar to the paper or
I lent me a cent."
Asked who were the friends who
loaned her money. Mrs. Parks said;
"I don't care lo Say. That Is my
'personal business."
I Oialrmuii Kenyon said the source
of funds was Important but Mrs- Parks
refused to change her statement.
Questions h Senator Edge, Itepub
llcan. Nt w Jersey, developed that oi
Jler cent Of the stock hud been rKe-i
Mrs. Parks.
"Then was a reason for this." she
said. "We had i clear understanding
that I vis to liavi control of the pn
pei BO that it should never take any
pai ian politic i policy "
Mi l; PERSONAL VFFIAR.
The witness s.ild that Mr Jamleson
I personally loaned her $10"0 anil add
ed: "I Intent! to pay every cent of thesp
obligations personally, it la my per
sonal affair and I huvu always paid
I my own debts."
"I ask you again for the names who
have advanced money for the publi
cation of this paper," said Chairman
K ii on.
' I don'l care to state
"Then you refuse to answer?"
Mrs Parks repeated her answer,
adding.
"1 think this Is persecution, directed
towards in own personal business,
when there is no connection between
the paper and the national commit
tee or the campaign financing.
BONUS Pi TOPIC
"There hue been 1 1 m 'i n i e r a I ' I c Im
plications agulnst it. Republicans
I have come to me and said in a threat
ening was that we would be put out of
business unless we gave It up "
"Who are theso Republicans'" the
chairman asked.
Mi Richard Waldo for one." Mrs
Parks rt piled.
"He wanted you to come out against
the bonus plan?" asked Senutor Reed,
Democrat, of Missouri.
He did Mrs Parks replied. "Our
position always has been to print the
; opinion on these subjects of the boys
themselves, as the letters come to us
.from them."
"The treasurer of the Democratic
.national committee. I understand h.is
declared ho considered the Stars and
,Strlpe8 unfriendly to the party,' Mrs
1 Parks said.
oo
COSMOPOLITAN TRUST CO.
OF BOSTON IS CLOSED
BOSTON, Sept. 25. The Cosmopoli
tan Trust company, of this city with a
.savings and banking department and
I agencies abroad, was elosetl hy Rank
I Commissioner Joseph C Allen at nine
o'clock this morning
Tie Cosmopolitan is the fifth bank
I In this city to be closed by CommiS
; sinner Allen In the last flvc weeks.
The first of these was the HahOVer
Trust company, which went to the uali
with the collapse of the get-rlch-qulpk
scheme of Charles Pons!, Hm largest
individual depositor.
JAPANESE BUSINESS MEN
WANT PEACE WITH CHINA
ToKIu. -vi- 24 Sps-v settle
ment or ,alons pending between
Japan and China, including earls uith
jdrnwal of Japanese troops from Shan
tung and a solution of the Tslng-Tao
question, has been advised by the
I China-Japanese association In eoih-
munlcatlon to Premier Hara This as
sociation is headed by Viscount Kllchl
IShibusawa, conservative lender.
JAPAN LEAVES
BAD TASTE, SAYS
U. S. LAWMAKER
Describes Treatment of Kor
eans by Police as Brutal:
Charges Likely
"HONOU'LU, Sept,. 24 Members!
of the American congressional parts
returning from a tour of "the Par Kasl,
including the Philippines, China,
Korea and Japan on the transport
Madawaska, arrived here today and
expected to depart Saturday for Ban
Francisco.
Describing a meeting of Koreans ;
he addressed in Seoul which wss
broken up by Japanese police, Repre-'
aentatlve Hugh S, Hersman of Cali
; fornla a ii (
JAP I'oi.h i: DBUTAIi
'The meeting was absolutely non
jpoliticq,!, but simply a welcome to tho
I Americans. The Japanese police i
I adopted measujEBa of extreme brutal-1
.ity in arresting the Koreans. 1 myself
rt scued one man who was being kick-
jod. I refused to leave until all had
been re'eased, which flnaih was done."
Mr Hersman said ho believed that
I no compromise, but only absolute ln
! dependence, would satisfy the Kor
eans 1 have formed deep convictions re
garding Japan. he continued, "and I
feel American must have a strong
' Irlental policy without delay."
ANGRY AT .? IP M M
Congressman Hersman said ho loft
the congressional party in Korea and
refused to I" th' official guest of the
; Japanese government after his exper
iences and his observations in Korea
j Senator Harris, of Georgia, aald he I
believed the Japanese realized they
had made a mistake in Korea and that!
the situation appears more promis
ing." Discussing the Philippines. Repre
sentative John Small said he believed
I the Filipinos had made out a prima
facie case in fax or of Independence,
and added.
'T think. In order to pn servo pood
! faith, congress must consider Philip
pine Independence at an early date and
pass such legislation, accompanied by
Conditions similar to these applied to
Cuba
BODY OF OLIVE THOMAS
IS LANDED AT NEW YORK
NEW YORK. Sept. 26. The body
of Olive Thomas, motion picture ac
tress, who died recently in Paris of
mercurial poison, arrived here today
on the steamship Mauritania. The
funcj-ii services will be mid nexl
Tuesday In St. Thomas Protestant
Episcopal church, where Miss Thomai
worshipped. (
GOOD BUSINESS
! PROMISED FOR
REST OF YEAR
WASHINGTON, Sept. it,.
j Good business for the rest of this
year despite disturbing factors in
the cdmnaercial, industrial and
agricultural outlook, is predicted
in a report made publie today by
the committee on statistics anil
standards of the chamber of com
merce of the United Statesc. The
reporl, which deals with condl
lions as observed this month
describes buying as Of liberal
volume but on a s.mi ami SObe
basis of needs us contrasted to ,
the speculative purchasing of pre
vious months.
The committee says thai "a
cloud has appeared on the auto
mobile horizon"' which it adds
"seema to presage very deflni! -
I v lessened production in the near
future and probably different und
more economical methods of dis
tribution' Despite gootl crops, the commit
tee declares the farmers' horizon
Is not without its cloud, describ
ing the car shortage evil :is far
reaching wilh the result that ilu:
elevators are full cf grain and un
able to get cars.
CREW OF STEAMER
WON'T WORK IF
SOLDIERS SAIL
TRIESTE, Sept. 24. The crew j
of the steamship Gabions, from
Bombay to Trlest, refused to op-,
Orate the ship yesterday at Venice,
where the ship called, because 500 J
troops were embarked. The men
declared ih soldiers were "to be
used against the working class "
It develops the troops were be
ing sent to flood districts near
this city, where thousah'da Of per
sons were made homeless
WRANGEL TAKES
10,000 CAPTIVE
N SIX DAYS
SJ2BABTOPOL, Bout. 23. (By
The Associated Press.) General 1
Wrangel, opposing Ru.M.ir, bol
shevlk forces on the southern
front, hns taken more than U.
ooo prison era in sis days, hi cavr I
airy surrounding the bOlshevikl
illojig o front ot' ipo mjlles. lie In
now reported i be outflanking
1 red forces on the Lmlcuer nvor. i
mm reds
THREATEN TO
CALL STRIKE
Government Hopes to Bring
About Peaceful Solution of
Difficulties
MEXICO CITY. Sept 25. Leaders
on the "communis! federation of the
Mexican proletariat. ' oted last night
to eall a general strike Otcober 1
unless disputes between employers
and workers are .. tiled before Septem
ber .10. It was stated this action
Was taken in Conjunction with simi
lar organisations in the I nite.l Slates
Snd Canada, Ihe movement being Tot
tered by Industrial Workers of 'he
World, with the Intention of making
It effective In the three countries.
REUS M KLLOWb.
M a in federation leaders asserted
there were 340 branches throughout
tho republic affiliated with th fed
eration und that they would follow
order, together with 7" branches of
a less radical organization called the
"workers confederation of the Mexlcac
region."
This organisation known as the
"yellows," has beep opposing the niore
radical policies of the communist fed
eration Upon receiving news that a strike
vote had been taken, the, presidential
office Is reported to hav Issued in
structions to push peaceful Interven
tion measures for the purpose of set
tling Industrial disputes before the
end cf the mouth
TIIRl . ITS UTTERED.
The more Important controversies
Include those affecting cotton mills In
several central states and the rail
ways. Threats to raise the red and black
flag of communism over factories
where the demands of workers urn
not met are attributed to leaders ot
the communist federation
FROSTS LATE IN WEEK
ARE PREDICTED FOR UTAH
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25. Weather
prediction,! for the week, beginning
Monday, are:
Upper Mississippi and lower Mis
souri valleys; Fair and much cooler
at beginning of week with some proba
bility of frosts in north and west
part-; of district; generally fair and
cool thereafter.
Rocky mountain and plateau re
gion Pair and cooler with frosts
latter pari of tha wvok: generally fair
with normal temperature.
Pacific, --late Generally fair and
cool. e'rosts are likt !y !a interior of
Washington und Oregon.
CHASE SOUTH
OP SILT LAKE 1
j LEADS TO JAIL
Quartet of Robbers Uses,
Stolen OqcJen Automobile to
Speed Away
.
BANDITS LEAVE MOTOR
NEAR PR0V0 CANYON
Some of Gang Said to Have
Confessed Crime: Part of
Money Found
SALT LAKE, Sept. Z'j Four men,
who yesterday morning robbed the
Sugar Banking company of Sugar
house, and who are though' to have
robbed tlie aafeti deposit boxes of
the First National bank of Morgan,
jwcro arrested shortly after midnight
I this morning und ure now in the Salt
Lake county Jail. The men give their
I names as F. J. Rogers, 2. C P Smith.
46; William H. Bonney and H A
G rive 1 1.
The bandits were taken into custod;
a little more than twelve hours after
i the Sugarhouse robberj and less than
twenty-four hours aft r the looting of
the Morgan bank's aft deposit
vaults.
Attention was first attracted to the
men, which later developed Into .'
chase, when the men wen- seen speed
ing south In a now Nash touring" car.
which was stolen from the PaclfiO
N'ash Motor company in I 'gdbli last
Wednesday morning
POSSES .l l I i: UL
Heports of ihe speeding car were
dispatched to different o.t. s who
were working in the vicinity nd a
plan was devised to capture the rob
bers in Prove canyon They abandon
eti 'he cur, however and made their
way out or i no capyon ey toot
The car was found abandoned on tho
Clyde ranch near Provo. It carried
the i igdon dealer's number. )Z'. When
found on the ranch the back curtains
jof the car were found to huve been
i slit in such a Way SS to permit ob
servation of a in pursuing machine and
uils to permit pus-'ible shooting at anv
pursii) rs by the bandits
' The Btolen car was driven through
i the towns from Salt Lake and Provo
lat a speed close to fifty miles an hour
ami it Was this excessive speed which
ha'd much to do with tracing the ban
, tilts, for It Was report.-d to peace off
icers as far south as Provo, ami they
J were watching for the fugitive car.
'Besides, a description of the car had
(been also sent out and the men could
'not have proceeded along the high
ways farther than they did. without
; capture.
HIDING IN R
I Rogers and Smith were captured
last night about 10:10 o'clock by
Sheriff John Cdriess and Deputies Bd
Parson and Frank Barnes of Suit
I Lake; Deputy Sheriff Wilford Rasmus
:sen of L lah county and Lbi n Mann.
Juvenile officer of Provo. The men
(wen- found hiding In a railroad box
car at Orem. Officers brought them
ilo Salt Lake
The two men arc said to have con
fessed i heir crime to Sheriff Corless
and ih stated that they were un
as Isted n iht- bank robbery at Sugar
house. They did not know at the Unit
however, that their pais hail bet-n ar
rested at Linden and were then on
their way to Salt Lake. e Rqgera -'"'i
mlth, Sherlft Corless found three
rolls of currency which totalled (2843
From the two men at Linden ourrenos
, totalling $i'Ss4 was recovered. The
latter two were brought to Salt Lake
. i ere i in io line, an Ivlng al i ;3 5
o'clock.
Tin authorities believe that the
four men also robbed the bank at
Morgan but they have no direct evi
dence to bear out their belief, they ad
mit Il Is believed that the bandits
hlil a considerable amount of silver
before they were captured.
AND OLI OFFENDER
Grivell, who was arrested at Linden
with Bonnes, wis recently released
from the countv Jail and Is an old
offender, according 'o the police.
These two were captured after they
had attempted to steal un automobile
on Provo bench. They were traced
i from this point.
The four robbers went together to
I Orem, where Smith and Rogers were
liter captured. Bonney and GrlVell
I continued along the tracks toward Lln-
'den officers saw the two nun run
I from a truck and crouch behind a
I milk platform. The officers thew a
fl ishlight on the men arid ordered
'their hands up. The order was obeyed
without resistance
I The arrest of Rogers and Smith was
made at the Pleasant GrOVC Canning
company's plant at the edge of Orem.
MORGAN ROBBERY
MORGAN, Sept tt. Estimates dif
fer as to the umount obtained bv rob
bers who dynafcnlted the .safely deposit
vault yeserday morning and pried
I open fifteen deposit boxes, The esti
mates range fro I10Q0 to 5 1 u.J007 but
there will be no loss to the boxbold
ers or the bank, as the Institution it
'protected by insurance Cashier
Charles Heiner says ho expects the
I loss to he less than $2S0ti.
The exact figures will not be known
until owners of Die boxes make a care-
IXul check of their holdings.
WISE MEN OF I
NIPPON POilT I
OUT DANGERS I
War Means Loss of Japan H
Foreign Trade and Almost
Certain Defeat H
UNITED STATES WOULD H
GAIN BY SUCH MOVE B
Wide Publicity Given to Mili- H
tary Articles on Possible
Strife H
TOKIO, Sept. 24 (By the Assocl-
aled Press.) Suggestions that a Joint PH
high commission be appointed to find
a solution of the California iiroblem
l ;.. to be favored in responsible PH
i In lea here. Viscount Kentaro Ran
eko, privj councillor, Viscount Kllchl
ShibusaWa, chairman ot tho Toklo
Bankers' association, and Premier PH
Hara have bean conferring frequently
and the impression has been gained PH
that the proposition for a Joint com- PH
j mission was the outgrowth ot meet- PH
IngS of prominent Americans and Jap-
anese in this city last spring.
DEI Mis Mil GTV1 S. T
Details of the plan are as yet nebu
lous, but the Asabl Shlmbun, of Asaka
lays the underlying Ides is for Presir I
dent Wilson to name a commission In- PH
.clutliiig the secretory of state, some
'senators ami representatives, and also PH
well qualified Japanese Ilk viscount
iTakaak' Kato, former Japanese am- PH
Ibassador to Great Britain. Succeed- I t
ling steps, 'he. newspaper says, would
I be Japanese Insistence upon treaty vH
rights ami then un appeal to tho su
(preme court ot the I nited States, ask
jlng that operation of I'ailfornla Stat
jutes be suspended. The newspapers JH
belieye the Japanese public Is general- H
ly pessimistic over present negotla
lions In Washington and has a tendon
cy to criticize the cabinet for adopting
what is declared to bi u "lukewarm, M
make -shift policy.' ,9!
PEERS QUOTED. JBft
Lrnnam'ed peers arc iuoted by the rl
newspaper Ohu-Ho Shlmbtip of this r
0H3 as counselling the govet-nment to
I exercise the greatest patience in deal
ling with America, as they are posi-
live any other attitude would bosui
I t idal They point out that if she rc
sorted to arms. Japan's first step
would in. necessarily the withdrawal PB
of all Japanese In America, which,
they assert "would greatly please Am
erica " Suspension of commercial in
tercourse would not have the most dire
consequences to Japan, they declare,
ind li la pan should succeed In land
Ing troops on American soil, the Am
Orleans would not suffer as much as
the Japanese.
WOl M -I i. FATE. HP'
They point out that shoubl Japan
suffer defeat, her fate would be sealed
ami therefore it would be the wisest
to await a favorable turn in the sltua-
jtion placing full confidence in the
character and principles of the Amer
lean people. A series ot' articles writ
ten i. Generul Kojlro Sato, In which m&A
he discusses the military josslbilltles PPPJ
if Japan should go to war with Amer- i
lea, are being given wide publicity.
CHINA TAKES PROPERTY K
OF OLD RUSSIAN REGIME
PLKlNii. Sept. 24 (By the Associ-
ated Press) Prince Koudacheff, PPPJ
Russian minister here, announced to- PPJ
day ho was leaving China, this coming PPPJ
SS a sequal to the decision of the for- PPJ
eign office to terminate official rela- PPH
turns v. ith the Russian legation
Prict Koudacheff, in acknowledlng PPH
receipt of a copj of the foreign office PH
decree; expressed the hope that PH
Pinna - promise relative to the safe- PPPJ
guarding o Russian Interests will bfl PPPJ
carried out. He gave warnjng that BPM
this must be based on "an exact op- PPH
plication of the status quo and Russo
Chinese treaties."
The fon lKii office sas that tcrmlna- PPPJ
Hon of relations with the legation docs FPPJ
not impair treaties, between China and PPPJ
iHus8la which, in the meantime; will pPPJ
in- held In abeyance Besides 200.000 PIJ
Rysslan cltisens In this country, con- PPB
cessions al Tien Tsln and HankoWj PH
Propert) rights In cemeteries and PPB
control Of several colonies in the Al at SPPB
district will pass under Chinese juris?
diction as a result of the diplomatic PPJ
situation between the two countries. PPPJ
D. & R. G. ORDERED SOLD
BY ONE FEDERAL JUDGE j
DENVER, Colo., Sept- 25. Sale of'
the Denver & Rio Grande railroad v.;s lpa
signed 111 federal court here toduy by PPPJ
fudge Waltel 11 Bandbbrn. The order PPPJ
was the result of action brought by PPJ
the Equitable Trust company, of New PPIJ
York. A petition of a stockholders' PPIJ
committee for postponement was PPPJ
heard and rejected.
The order must be signed by Judge PPH
Robert E. Bowls also before it I PPJ
comes effective. Judge Be wis Is out PPPJ
city.
The order instructs William A. Jack- IIIB
son. special muster, to advertise tho PPJ
sale of the road for four weeks be- PPH
fore Its sale to satisfy a judgment ol PH
$88.197,41.48.
Judge Lewis was said to be In west- PPIR
ern Colorado today . H
00 PPPH
POLICE OF SALT LAKE ..;
PUZZLED BY 'BOMB' NOTE
SAlr BAKE. Sept. 25. Police here
today were working to apprehend the PPH
author of the letter received by Chief PPPJ
of Police Joseph K Burbrtdgt yeater- PPH
day, statins that the ermon building PPH
would bo destroyed. The possibility PPH
thai the letter was written by the
bandits who robbed Hie Sugar bank j PPH
as a ruse to draw reserves from the ; PPPJ
central station has been abandoned. H