OCR Text |
Show DAILY UTAH STATE Utahna Theater WEEK the DRAMA "jkLL j COMEDY IN DIXIE Days Doings In Utah WILL SERVE 6IRL WITH THE a and 30c Getting Your Clothes in Shape? Send ua your good that you are thinking of wearing, and we will make them look epick and epan new again. If they are crumpled and museed, we will restore their ahape and their beauty in ehort order. We are experts at thie business, and can give you the fleetest satisfaction both as the quality of our work and our wonderfully of our stress upon. Ogden Steam Laundry Co. Joe Sullivan, convicted of the murder of Polite Officer Charles S. Ford of Salt Lake City was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor by Judge George G. Armstrong In the Third district-court at Salt Lake yesterday. Sullivan smiled as sentence was pronounced and while he fully realised the import of the penalty he appeared cheerful. To a Tribune representative he said: I want to say that 1 got an absolutely square deal from Judge Armstrong. He was fair and impartial throughout the whole trial, and he seemed dispostd to give me every show. I don't think the Jury . gave me fair treatment. From my observations, I believe that man In Utah, especially a stranger, as I am, must prove his Innocence beyond all doubt before a Jury will return a verdict of not guilty. I had always supposed that a Jury assumed a man. to be innocent until he was proven guilty, but in this esse the Jury evidently started off with the assumption that I was guilty. Did you, at any time previous to your being sentenced, fear that the death penalty would be pronounced? Sullivan raised his manacled hands and slightly tipped back his hat. He threw one leg over the other and set tied himself well down In his chair. His eyes narrowed into slits, his brow became wrinkled and his lips tightly drawn; then he said: "When a man gets Into such a preAND CLEANERS. LAUNDERERS dicament as this Ifi ala of one and 174. 4S7 25th Street. Either Phone, half a dosen of the other. don't fear death; I have never feared it during this trial. 1 have been so close to death on the sea. In wrecks, and In CITCHELL BROTHERS accidents on shipboard, that I am prepared for it. I have some ambition, for some hopes, but of what good are they COPINGS, HEADSTONES, ETC now? I am completely shut out And Home la. lee yeur Deal peep looking at the years ahead of me out gey big commieetons to sgawta. thert, the other looks better. Tea, It Yard eppseita City Cemetery. X Genacsti la more Inviting. US BEFORE YOU BUY. EE Ogden Rapid 1 ransit Co. TIME CAKD When asked whether he would attempt to display Ms characteristic Ingenuity with the hope of affecting an escape, he said: "I did escape from the Jail at Ogden. But I deny emphatically that I ever tried to get out of the rotary In the county Jail. I did not do that. THROUGH CARS. Pint Wash. Ave. car leaves North end Wash. Ave.... end 15 min. thereafter till First Wash. Ave. car leaves South end Ave.... and 15 min. thereafter till First 25th Street ear leaves West end 25th Street.:.. end 15 min. thereafter till First 25th Street car leaves East end 25th Street and 15 min. thereafter till First 22nd Btreet car leaves East end 22nd Street.... and 15 min. thereafter till Find 22nd Street car leaves Depot and 15 min. thereafter till Big Clearance Sale of j IUJHE PIES STEAL TRAY OF GEMS Joe Sullivan Sentenced Yesterday Annie Bruce of Smoot, Wyo., Is Boyd Park Store in Salt Lake LootFor the Murder of Police OfCharged With the Murder ed of $2,500 Worth of of Her Father. ficer C. S. Ford. Diamonds. IUBURSI HAIR low prlcea But the high grade work is what we lay greatest WOMEN PUT POISON AJJFE TERM AND lOc. 20c, PAGE THREE, 10, 19CL . LAND THE JOURNAL. FRIDAY. APRIL 0:11 a.m. 11 :M p.m. COAL LAND FRAUDS IN SOUTHERN 0:15 a.m. 11:20 p.m. UTAH 0:20 a.m 11:45 p.m Orange Seeley of Castledale, and 0:15 a.m Joseph Seeley of IJt Pleasant testi11:20 p.m fied before Master In Chancery 8. H. In the coal fraud case against Lewis 0:07 a.m. 11:22 p.m the Utah Fuel company at Salt Lake yesterday that they had entered upon 0:22 s.m coal lands in the 'SunnysUe district 11:57 p.m which, when the land was opened for Through Cara Leaving Cartier at 25th entry, they had transferred by some and Washinpten Ave. papers drawn up by Robert Forrester Pint Wasu. Ave. car going Who the of the Utah Fuel company. North loaves comer 0:25 a.m. uncertain. were was They they grantee and 15 min. thereafter rill 11:40 p.m. admitted receiving 1160 from Forrester. First Wash. Ave. ear going South leaves comer They also admitted that acting as 0:05 am tad 15 min. thereafter till 11:60 p.m an agent tor some party, Forrester That 25th 8 treat car had spent several thousand dollars on East leaves corner going 0:00 a.m. the coal It conand 15 min. thereafter till 11:60 p.mi the land, developing tained. After their transfer of the Pint 25tb Streot car going West leaves comer...... C:.25 a.m. entry papers In 1900 the Utah Fuel ad IS min. thereafter till 11:40 p.m. company continued the mining of the Tint 22nd Street car going coal on the land. East leaves comer 0:26 a.m The government proposes to show and 16 min. thereafter till 11:40 p.m. the two witnesses with other that First 22nd Btreet ear going were employed by the Utah to Depot leaves comer... 0:20 a.m. ond 15 min. thereafter tin 11:26 p.m. Fuel company, to locate on the land, with the understanding that, when the Canyon Cara district was surveyed, and the coal First Canyon car leaves De-to entry, the entry-me- n Pot at . 10:15 am. land thrown open would transfer their Interest to And every hour thereafter Its agents. The 1160 tntll .. 0:16 p.m. the company or sdmitted by the witnesses examined First Canyon car leaves Ogyesterday to have been paid them will den canyon 10:45 am. he shown by the government, so Its And every hour thereafter attorneys claim, to be the consideraanti 0:45 p.m. tion or which the Mings were made. Through Hot Springe Cara First Hot Springs car leaves 25th 8L and Wash. ave. a 0:26 am. And every hour thereafter until 0:25 p.m. ROAD First Hot Springs car leaves Hot Springs at 7:16 a.m. And every hour thereafter . . "til According to the Herald lnalda of 10:16 p.m. daya trains will be running and alxty On Tuesday and Friday nights a late carrying passenger between Bingham at is run for theaters Junction and Wasatch, in the Vnouth of Notiea Little Cottonwood canyon and. If the resume Care leaving la shippers of Alta are ready to Washington avenue at 11:45 and 12 p. m. go to the the marketing of ore, freight trains Fuww Housa will be landing the product Of the Alta -- Cats leaving east end of Twenty-Hmsmines at the sampling mills at Bandy 1:4 And 12 p. m. go to Power at the same time. From Bingham I Junction to Wasatch, the cosy summer ttn " report In the mouth of the canyon, is M; From SMdr u Cmroi. tTUlSfS mouth of C00700 I ' 10. A Jury EVANSTON, Wy. was secured to try the case of Annie Bruce charged with the murder of her father of strychnine poising at Smoot, Wyo., late yesterday afternoon. County Attorney David G. Thomas, In his opening statement to the Jury, stated that prosecution would prove that the defendant was guilty of the crime committed, by reliable witnesses and a written confessiou of Annie Bruce, made in the preaenct of himself, the sheriff and his 'deputy. J. H. Kyckman, of the defense, stated to tht Jury that they would prove the written confession to be of no value, and that girl had been Induced to sign her name to a tyank sheet of puptr, over which the prosecution afterward wrote the confessiou. Following is the confession, as signed by Annie Bruce: "August 17, 1907: 1, Auiite Bruce, of Smoot, Wyo., make the following statement of my own free will and accord, without any promise of reward from any one, and without compulsion or therats- - or hop of benefit, but simply to relieve by conscience of the guilt upon my soul. "On tht 20th doy af March A. D., 1907, I made live pies. While 1 was In the act of making the pies a feel ing or a wish cams over me to kill some one, and this feeling 1 could not resist, so 1 went to the store and procured a bottle of poison, which 1 knew was there. I took the bottle of poison out of the lower box. Which was full, and to do so 1 removed the upper box. After I secured the poison 1 put the upper box on the lower box, and went into the kitchen, and while no one waa looking X emptied the bottle of poison In the pie. The poison was strychnine. I put the poison into the last pie 1 made. In the morning ms and myself were preparing paa lunch, and ma said to me, 'Annie, fetch me a pie from the cupboard.' I bought the pie which I had poisoned. I knew It waa poisoned, and this pie was afterward sent by ma to the ranch. It waa the pie that killed my pa. After pa died felt awfully sorry; I bawled and cried a great deal. I yet feet awfully sorry that I put the poison In the pie that killed pa. I make this stattment in the presence of D. G. Thomas, County and Prosecuting Attorney; Johnathan Jons, sheriff, and William Dehoney, deputy sheriff. ANNIE BRUCE. Signed by "In the presence of D. G. Thomas, Jonathan Jones and W. C. Dehoney. DEDICATE CHURCH IN SEPTEMBER The new cathedral, St. Mary Magdalen, at Salt Lakq, will be dedicated in September. Bishop Laurence Scan-la- n says that everything will he in readiness by that time for the consecration of the edifice. The bishop is awaiting the arrival of the great organ and the three altars and expects to rertdve them within two months It will require another month's time to cninplete the furlshlngs, but all will be in readiness for the dedication by Developments today in the 8al( Lake diamond robbery case point to th fact that the gang at uork consists of five three women and two men. It is supposed to be the same gang that was run out of Denver sometime ago. All the principal stores in Salt Lake have been victimised a ml it is claimed that the gang has got away with thousands of dollars worth of goods. They also go In for the picket pocket business. It is eaid that they have also operated in Ogden. Detect Ives have a? good description of the gang and It is believed they will yet be arrested. Entire Stock reduced nearly one-ha- lf in price Ogden Furniture & Carpet Co. YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD HYRUM PINGREE, MGR. 4 I J. E. DOOLY. President. JOSEPH S. PEERY. Vice-Pr- d- - Female crooks carried off a tray containing (2,500 worth of diamond and pearl studs from the Jewelry store of Boyd Park, at 170 South Main street, Salt Lake, on Saturday afternoon about 4:20 o'clock, aaya the Herald. Through the failure of the police to take prompt action in the raae, the thieves were able to successfully slip from the city. Being chiefly concerned about hushing up the story. Chief Pitt did not take the members of the police force into his confidence, and It waa therefore Impossible for them to assist in the work of running down the thieves. Police Sergeant Hempel, who now ranks In the police department after Chief Pitt,' did not know of the daring Jewel theft until yesterday afternoon, when he dropped into Park's Jewelry store and was told of what had occurred. About 4 o'clock on last Saturday afternoon Samuel C. Park, manager of the Boyd Park store, saw the tray tilled with diamond and pearl studs in the show case at the front of the sore. A little later he sent a clerk, Alexander A. Thomas, son of Postmaster Thomas, for the tray. After exam-lu- g the contents he returned the tray to Thomas and asked him to again place it In the show rase. Case Was Not Locked This Thomas did. But he placed the trsy in the end of the show case that Is farthest awsy from the door, Instead of the end near the door, where he had found it. The show cases are usually kept locked, but Mr. Thomas, seeing several women who seemed to be waiting to buy something, did not at once close the case. There were three women grouped about the case, two In front and one standing at the end, close to the oiwn end of the show case. He asked if they were waiting to msklng a purchase. They replied that they were merely waiting for a friend, motioning toward a woman who was standing at a counter on the oppoelte side of the store. They were respectable-lookin- g women, and the clerk suspected nothing. He went to the back of the store to siieak to Manager Park. He waa gone only a few minutes. But in that short time some one had reached into the show case and pulled out the tray of studa Women Disappeared When' the clerk returned the three women at the counter had disappeared. As tM tray was taken as well as Jhe Jewels it contained, it is believed that well-dresee- d, RALPH E. HOAG, Cashier. A. V. MclNTOSM, Asst. Cashier. es jThe UTAH NATIONAL BANK Or I OGDEN UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY Interest Paid on Savinas Accounts and Time Deposits the thief must have been one of the STRAWBERRY women. She probably carried the tray NEW THING from the store under her Jacket, or passed it to a companion .who wore a long cloak. The store was crowded at the time with buyers who had apparently come to Salt Lake from the country for the conference, and had seised the opportunity to do their shopping. The following circular offering a reward of (250 for the recovery of the Jewelry and a reward of (250 for the capture of the thlevea has been Issued by Chief Pitt at the request of Mr. - Park: The following goods contained In a d stud tray with bottle green border and black lining, were taken by sneak thieves from a show case Saturday, April I, 190(, at about 4 o'clock p. m. The numbers preceding the Items aro scratched in fine figures somewhere on the mounting, and represented the stock numbers of the goods where the description la recorded. The prices given are the costa at the market value at the time the goods were purchased. The diamond studs are all mounted with possibly one or two exceptions. The In spiral back sftd mountings. pearl studs are mounted with button barks and the smaller pearls with the patent spring back similar to the barter stud back. The quality of the diamond studs Is top crystal or hatter, with the exception of No. 4,2(1, which la a good quality of allver rap, European cut, and medium thick edge. A reward, of (250 will be given for the recovery of the stolen property, and an additional reward of (250 will be given for the capture and the conviction of the thlevea The following is a list of the dla-mastuds stolen; No. 4,(20, 4 carat, No. ,587, carat. (18; No. 4.7((, carat, (44; No. 4.(11, 1 carat, (05; Ka 4,421, carat, carat, (47; No. 4,212, 1 (27.60; No. 4.470, I- -l carat, (41; No. plush-line- nd 1-- (; 1- -1 1- -2 l-- (2 6-- 22 1- -2 04 2-- 04 11 carats. (287; Na 4.871, (216.40; Na 4,6(7, 4 carat, (112; No. 4.2(1. 2 carats, (516.71; No. 4.5(6, I 4 carats, 1221.26. 4.514, 1 1 5-- 1 l- -l (-- 14 carats, 1-- 1- -2 (-- 1-- PROVO, April red-lett- The committee on er A GOOD PARTNER A substantial bank focount makes a good partner one whs will work to your interest; eno whs will remove many a stumbling block from your path( one who will old to yeur opportunities; one whs ia powerful enough to assist you. If you wsnt this partner for yours start an account with ua, practise thrift and economy you can do it if you will end the outcome will be satisfactory to you. 06DEN STATE DANK f Ogdei, llfib 1-- For envelopes, letterheads, business cards, dodgers, rtcH call up The Journal Job rooms. Beth phone 664. IN PROVO advertising and promotion from the Provo Commercial club launched the matter of eetahllshlng a Strawberry day for Provo at the club meeting Wednesday. The date fur holding the festival was not set, but It will be about June 20. In addition to the advertising committee from the club (he following committee waa appointed to perfect plane: C. F. Decker, W. M. Roy lame, W. H. Ray, C. E; Loose, R. W. Brereton, C. A. Glaxler and M. C. Newel. An effort is being made to enlist the support of the farmers and fruit raisers who are not members of the club. The proposition la to make the festival a day for the Garden city. Hundreds of caaee of berries will be given away to the visiting public, and luscious herrieeln souvenir cups given to all passengers on the trains which pass through the city on that date. In addition to the Strawberry day It is the intention of the Commercial club to prepare a number of attractions for the occasion. Among the things of Interest spoken of are races at the fair grounds, a Wild West show In the evening end musical entertainments at the taberacla and opera house. 10 1-- 10. J. Ca BlfilOW Meeseeaseecsos M. Browning As P. Re A. Prtlts VicR-Pm- t. Cashier. Bigolow Mayas eeeqa Assta Csstiisre - Hill COME 10 HIM SSEMBLED in thjs busy store is a most bewildering assortment of the seasons newest and best goods. Youll find the choosing here easy, pleasant and economical. We are showing what you want at what you want to pay. Garments of supreme modishness, A fabrics of elegant fashionableness, and little needfuls,' usefuls and requisite of the newest fads and fancies. All the clever innovations of a new season are embodied in our showings. Every department is full of new things, making it a most desirable opportunity for those who shop to get the best goods, the best values, and the best satisfaction by coming here first. ter-NtaA- w! W 2KrL. . ud fltpot. " . po-- no,... am. " 'zzzrz j ''and JJo EHJMT & BIRdDS 2429-2431-24- 33 WASHINGTON AVENUE ssaten. 1 j |