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Show fWuSiSo ;1 PEESS iBBurac UTAH p sms VUTHEI E3BECAST CENERALLt ft FA1B TODAY y NO. 156. VOI. I OGDEN CITY, IS TO RELIEVE PORT ARTHUR 'floss on the Spot Aver that Obedience Wilj Cost an Irreparable Reverse, Putting Port Arthur in More Serious Plight. UTAH. FRIDAY MORNING. JUNE PRICE FIVE CENTS 3. 1904. another Tuesday last. Smith did not to ibc bank. He sent a message saving that he had been taking the bank and that he was money fri.-nnot able to cover it ui. Ho also said that a he could noi hope to make good the loss he would not ran away hut would meet whatever punishment the courts might tueto out to hint. "As near as we can make out by the examination thus far given we believe that ho has taken about $Jd.0Ui. That Is the sum which ho himself estimated. He was tinder bonds for $15, (Hit) given As Smith by an indemnity company. savs he lias not saved a penny during his lifetime and canuol make good the loss, we shall have to stand the f the defalcation above the in bond. "Sir. Smith says he has been speru-lutin- g -and that lie took the money for that purpose. The bank ia safe and sound and there Is no danger to either our depositors or stockholders." Smith waa arrested and held In bail for examination June 11. Springfield, Ilia, June 2 A desperCheyenne, Wya, June 2 The WyoIt was stated tonight after a later ate effort, on the of republican ming Democratic state convention to- invest tgatlon into the hanks aceunts, leaders to break part deadlock In the day selacted delegates to the national that Smiths the alrearh would shortage couvention and Instructed them to elate couvention failed today, and at most $7o.tiu0. vote for Wm. R. Hearn as a candidate 8 o'clock tonight tha assemblage took for the presijency. The resolutions recess until 10 o'clock tomorrow withwere li:i above the containing out. having nominated a candidate for and Heanst'a adopted unanimously governor. name was cheered. The attempt to bring alsnittha break adnued endorsed The resolutions was a spectacular one. the democratic national platform of Reeves, chairman of the commit19()0. condemn the tram, condemn the tee on resolutions, and chairman Canrepublican administration for its failnon engineered the plan, which waa ure to enforce the anti-trulaws, and made possible by the report of the coin-n- il condemn the republican majority in lice on resolutions which presented congress for not passing the the resolution whlch.lt originated and bill. They also endorse the candiwa referred to the commlttria at yesdacy of Wm. R. Heam for the presiLouis Athletic Events terday's session. Theresolutkm wss to First dency and Instructs the Wyoming delthe effect that the delegates be released egation to vote for H caret in the St. from instructions, and when it waa preWeather. Louh convention Just aa long aa there Handicapped by sented Mr.. Reese called on the candi1 a possibility of hla lieing nominatdates one by one, to come before the ed. convention and express their opinion The following delegate and alterregarding It. nates to the national ion vent Ion were Each declared In favor of the resoselected: is Soft and Field la Muddy Track lution, speaking In the order named: Delegates Colon Hun I or. Senator J. Summary of Frank O. Lowden, Governor Richard A. Rogers, G. E. Beck. R N. Stlckney, Results. T. Yales. Charles 8. Heneen, Attorney-Gener- al J. U. Allard and Mr. Creewell. Howland J. Hamlin, Lawrence Alternates Colonel Plekett, 8. W. Y. Sherman, Congressman Vespasian Madison, J. T. Hoop, Park C. Hayes, Warner and John H. Pierce. J. M. Thomas and A. G. llolmea Congressman Cannon demanded the SL Louis, June 2. The flral day's Jobn E. Osltnrn of Raw-lin- e was made national committeeman. veenu of the A. A. U. handicap meet attention of the convention and elo-o the delegates A motion that the convention sugat the Stadium were held today under quently pleaded with He declared that gest to the state central committee that moat discouraging circumstances. The break the deadlock. the next state convention be held at Held was muddy and the track soft, the delegates must compromise, and attention to the fart that the Sheridan waa adopted. and the meet waa held in a drizzling called convention by Ha Inaction waa Injuring rain. party, not only In IlliThe handicap run was won he republican but In the entire nation. nois, C. New M. A. C. A. F. Rogers, by Let us this resolution, he York, whose handicap' was 44 yards. Mld..and aJopt a ticket, and let's nominate 1:&7. Time It today. do Won handicap, run. by There was not a vote against the resJames McGarvan of Bethlehem, Pa., but when the roll waa called olution, 5 sechandicap 0 yards Time, 10 ballot there waa for the substantial change from the ballots Boist Democrats Want Practice Pun- onds. hurdle. Won ly 8. H, Smith, no of the previous day. On the next balHead Man ished Hearct handicap Washington university; lot taken before noon receae a number With T urn 18 seconds. Time, yards. of unlnstructed delegate voted for d II. hurdle. Won J. Hill, by Boise, Idaho, June 2 The demoSberman, whose speech lieforo M. A. C. handicap, 7 yards. Judge the convention had made a good imcratic convention of this county waa Time. 25 Baltimore; seconds. held today and was of great imporpression and he received 80 votes. s run. Won by J. McGowWhen the convention reconvened for tance because Senator Dulwis plan for 10 an, Bethlehem, Pa., handicap, yds. the afternoon session the long expert-edealing with the Mormon questltdi Time, 22 seconds. break from Yates to Lowden came was brought forward and aJnpted by Pole vault. Won by Dan Billion, St. and he got the vole of Speaker CanThe resolutions the convention. Ixuils university, scratch man, height, non's district as well as the votes of adopted demand a plank in the nation10 feet. 2 inches. several other counties and some scatal platform favoring the submission of Running bmsd Jump. Won by J. H. tering delegates. For several ballots an amendment to the constitution Hill. M. A. C. Baltimore scratch, dis- bis vote Increased until be got a vote giving congress authority to deal with tance. tt feet. Then the tide turned, and of 681 the problem of polygamy and punish Running high jump. Won by J. J. on the closing ballot, the seventy-eight- h. those guilty of polygamous practice. 6 inches. New York, handicap, his vote was dropped (o 552 2. The convention waa dominated by Rvan, It requires 752 to nominate. friends of Hearat, but they did not In- Height. 5 feet, 8 Inches. Yates' low vote during the day waa Putting the shot. Won by F. C. struct for him, contenting themselves W arm bold, N. 81. L. T. C. St. Loti's, 362 and his closing vote was 405. There wlh passing a commendatory resoluhandicap. 3 feet. Distance, 39 feet, waa no material change in the other tion. .1-Inches. candidates. More excitement prevailed during Throwing the hammer. Won by A. I). PI aw, P. A. C., San Francisco, the afternoon aeaalon, scratch: Distance, 156 feet, 6 Lowden's delegates started aeveral Inches. demonstrations in order to stampede weight. Won by the convention anJ they made a great Throwing W. H. Williams, Iowa State college, noise when Lowden began to fall bach, fed. Distance, 32 feet, 11 The Yatea people began a demonstrahandicap, Inches. tion and let down from the girders a Refuial to Serve Negroea Starts Sanguinary Gun Play. of the Russian glari. Seeing the failure of this attack the gunboats concentrated the whole of their Are on be point where General Okul intended to drive home hie wedge, and by evening the works were practicable fur assault by a general who had such infantry as the Japanese and who waa prepared to take the responsibility or would seem as such fearful lossca-J- t If the actual carrying of the work had been another Alma. The word was given for another bayonet attack. Delegates Are Elected and In Then the whole Japanese front surged forward and the moral balance went strutted for Him. over to the side of the Japanese, the Russians retiring before them. 1 learn that it was the mining ship Amur which laid the mines that destroyed the Halsuae. On the morning la Conof the catastrophe a Jajmnese gunboat Republican Administration to Enforce Failure demned foe off. I escort flotilla cut brr and her Anti-TruLaws. can learn nothing of her fate, but suspect that they succeeded in slipping back into Port Arthur. come i Fort is Inscription on Banner Let Down from Girders by Yates Forces Hold the Istl-an- Solution st no Nearer. $15,-Ot- May june I The correspondent of Japanese by our troop. de Prle at St Petersburg. 31, haa been reoccnpled EMBEZZLED $17,000. Baltimore, June 2. Jesse B. Baker, J-hOur patrols May 31 had a skirmish a bookkeeper formerly employed by in Laio Lin pass, ten miles south of the National Hewanl bank of this city, MTtpb: Alexieff and General Ku-k- ln Bin Yvng with a Japanese detachment was arrested here today, charged with yktroy embexslement He admitted that there bavin naked the emperor to compoeed of two companies of Infantry was a shortage In bis accounts of besum. and half Wo a hla of majesty squadron cavalry. dispute, SJ theircouncil tween $10,000 and $12,000. Includtn had one Cossack wounded. of war, Sid There Is no change In the situation JSuterof War Sakahroff, Marine Mlniater Plehve. at New Chwang or Kin Chou." ffier Vellieff and tor aeveral hours ne eouncll debated Solo. DETAILS OF KIN CHOU. that the "iTe reason to believe ii. for preaervin the naval base London, June 3 The Times steamer Jfpnrt Arthur and the loaa of prestige Halmun returned to Che Foo June 2 OR JL fau of Port Arthur would entail from a cruise in Kin Chou bay. The his in prevailing the argument Port Arthur refugees that the native !Lfii. General Kuropatkln has and civilian population get only such to to advised attempt Aoeforv been food as arrives on junks from Chinese to act the with but iutre the fortress, themselves have ports or what imteat prudence. A general whom I secreted. The they military authorities England is Disgruntled Over Etsrvlewed on the subject of the coun-- dl all available food. On "K Kuropatkln la weak requisitioned aald- half tt la estimated that the rations n Lost Palma Trophy, -- oath to advance he will commit garrison has enough for five months irious blunder. The number of hla live The moored at Injured warships i mom i Insufficient, and the condl- - the PoiArthur Jetties the correspondtwnannder which he would act are unent lernrhi, have been denuded of evfcrorable. He might meet an almost ; erything movable. Port Arthur and Attention Is Called to Vindication of reverse, irreparable The correspondent says: L further from relief than ever. If America in British NewsKin of witnesses battle the of Eye tTJ to relieve Port Arthur we will Chou describe It as an unprecedented papers. le doing exactly what the Japanese military spectacle. thousand Forty hope fbr." Japanese were massed behind the western spur of the mountains under from London, June f Telegrams such email cover as waa afforded by New York, June 2. Referring to different points aeem to coullrm the the twin peaks. The troops were withattLondon reports in relation to the Palnmon that General Kuropatkln la in 20,000 yards of the Russian works empting a diversion in the direction of There waa so little room to deploy for ma trophy shot last year at Blaley, port Arthur, Russian reinforcements, attack that battalions of Japanese England, General Bird W. Spencer, granting to a dispatch from Tipn troops were obliged to eland in the eea president of the National Rifle assoHa are moving southward from Kal waiting for the moment of attack, ex- ciation, In a statement today calla atping toward WafSngtlen under Gen, posed to a veritable inferno of Are tention to the publication last year of at Kalkenburg. They comprise a battthe Russian The sheila similar reports, which he says werewaa from batteries that time fully cleared up. There er, of artillery, foer Siberian regi-ics- plowed Into their masses and n company of Cos sacks, Meantime battery after battery of some correspondence between the Na 13,000 men. Another brig-li- e Japanese gune went Into action upon Uonal Rifles association of Great Brian articles published In la following, the intention being Chlayan Data and a sustained gunboat tain regarding a engage the Japanese now attacking lire played upon' the Russian works the Washington Evening Star, July 29, lbrt Arthur In their rear. About midday the energy of the Rus- 1903. In which it waa stated that the at sian defenders The Standard's correepondent In the works in front American team had used arms and foul play waa charged Tlea Tain sending the - same, new of Mauchla YIng village seemed ex4 hausted by the gunboat firs Two Jap- against the American team. Colonel yi: The Russian force in the engage-sea- t anese battalions appeared over the Bruce, who waa captain of the Amerat Wafangtien May 80th, la supp- saddle between the peaks and made a ican team, reported In this connection osed to have been formed of four desperate effort to carry the nearest nt the meeting of the directors of the Siberian regiments which were reAt first the strug- American association last January that Russian works. ported to have left Tachlachao May 18, gling walls of Mauchla Ying gave them the character of the rifles used was thorsome cover and a moment's breathing oughly understood by every team capbeing the first portion of a reliving eohimn for Port Arthur. The railway place. Then the gallant little Infant- tain and no objection whatever was n k fslrty Intact from the north of rymen crept on again up the slopes raised that all known makes of rifles but ia completely destroyed toward the Russian position. It waa an were to be used by the American team; from there to Pulantien. The Japane- Impossible taak. As yet the defenders that the riflea In question were freely se are unconcerned over this demun-uatlopassed over to officers and members of had not been sufficiently shaken. An avalanche of concentrated fire other team a, to the officers of the combeing convinced that It will be impracticable for the Ruselane to from infantry In the trenches, machine petition and to others, for examination and that the rifles nove sufficient force to prove effectgnne in the Russian works and quick-firin- g and trial If desired; ive." Held artillery in the supporting used were fully and publicly sanctioned These reports are received with certdefenses struck the Japanese. They by the National Rifle Association of ain measures of skepticism In Lond- melted away from the glaciers Ilka America. General Spencer quoted from London on. The belief here la General solder before the flame of a blow-pip- e. II undertaking auen a des- A few teeming to have charmed lives papers describing the American rifles perate move he can only be doing no straggled on until they reached the and stating that the matter had been ia deference to the strongest carefully gone Into by a selected com political wire entanglements. Rifle Associapressure and against hla better JudgIt waa In vain. Heroic effort was mlttee of the National and that the ment. wasted. Within fifteen minutes these tion of Great Britain , were unanimously permitted to be No further news of any kind haa two battalions ceased to exist except as been received about the movements a trail of mutilated bodies at tha foot used. ef the Japanese forces Generals Ku-roand are working in utmost RIFLES IRE THE SQUARE . I ts Waf-ugtle- ki unanimity. According to the Chronicles Tokio eorresponuent. the Russians have com- feet around them. London, June 3. The Dally Mali's correepondent, cabling June 8. nays: General Stalkenberg with 14.000 Russians, made up of artillery, cavalry ud Infantry, haa marched south of Yang In the direction of Wafangtien. Large forces of Chinese bandits are collecting in the hills northeast of the LUo river and are preparing to cut the railway north of Mukden" The correspondent of the Dally at Nagasaki cables that transports loaded with troops continue to we western Japan dally for the theatre of war. A large proportion of those despatched during the past week, he My, were to reinforce General Oku." New Chwang under date of Ex-Prc- se OF FAST ELECTRIC CARS West Bound Passenger and East Bound Freight Meet at Full Speed Over Dozen Are Injured in Spot Far from Aid. antl-Shod-- St DUBOIS d DEALS WITH POLYGAMY 1-- sixty-seven- 120-ya- th rd S-- G 22)-yar- 6 220-yard- 2. 2 MIDNIGHT FIGHT IN RESTAURANT Knoxville, Tenn., June 2. A bloody at midnight in a restaurant on Central street Aa a result oue man Is dead and two mortally wounded. Constable G. G. Gamble and T. W. McCarthy were eating when Lum and Wash Miller, negroea, came Into the place and asked for something to eat McCarthy ordered the negroea to wait until they finished. Shooting at once began. Lum waa shot by Gamble and killed, but not till he bad shot Gamble in the abdomen and In the leg. Wash Miller was shot through the right arm and In the chest by a negro named Cook, who was trying to hit Constable McCarthy. The two wounded men can live but a few hours. SPECULATED OR Norwalk. Ohio, June 2. 81 persona were killed and a dozen or more hurt late this afternoon aa a result of y Shore Electric Horn there and reports that seventy collision on the Lake last arshins and troopships have railroad between an east bound a westbound there. One thousand electric passenger car andWell's Corner, pullers had been garrisoned ashore. package freight car at Reinforcements for the Japanese army, a few miles east of this city: hich la The dead: attacking Fort Arthur, hava Men landed northeast of Tallen Wan Charles Peck. Lorain, Ohio. Their number la unknown. W. W. Sherwood, Garreltaon, Ohio, Y. N. Sullivan. Blnghampton, N. . Seoul. June Clarence Ketchum, Laraln, Ohio. p. m The Jap-nes- e Indlan- consul at Gensan reports a Rua-"Ralph Williams, (colored), advance on Kovuen, 22 mile a,- Un!dentill2d man; In hla pocket waa fWth of Gensan. Their commissariat arrived at Puk Chong. For some a key ring with the name George Judd wnth there has been a diplomatic Taylor, Ohio. Seriously Injured: rrrlonlence between China and tern wr, over the Steve Watergo. body crushed, in Ken Tao boundary head. about and at the mouth of the Tumen bly cut Frank Libling. Cleveland, head badly . w; Anally has been decided to Japanese arbi to government CURoe Burns, Cleveland, head badly lrte"Jp the matter. cut teeth knocked out. InM McDonald. Cleveland, Internal London, June 8 Advices from 1 the Dally Mall say that five juries. left aide badly crushed leg Mrs W. R. Ensign, Toledo, have been onurtmartialed .""Tmen rt,ot b,nt :, Krementchug and seven at p,UIVA matorman on ffll George Steurgeln. having led mutinous crushed. badly package car, among troops going to a point 10 the far The accident occurred at from any quite distant with 3wfoJlt iSt erhurg, June 2 The follow-- ,, means of communicationand nuw 1a,,lcgram ,rom General Knropat where every physician hurried to the une has beeq received: "ft . attended to they were in the direction of Jured had been Pw'il nr w an Cheng. The town of a, which was evacuated by the dla-troo- ps -7:20 u dem-M'rtth- e, I ' of the largest type and were smashed to pieces. They met In collision at full speed. THIEVES ORGANIZED COMPANY Promoters of National Clearing House for Stolen Furs, Are Arrested. New York, June 2. Samuel FUarsky, silent partner of the defunct United Slates Fur company of this city, who, with Emanuel Siigamn, president of the concern, la charged with grand larceny, today made a confession to Assistant District Attorney Gairan, Indicating that the company was a clearing house for fur thieves all over the country. Filaraky aald in his confession, according to Mr. Garvin, that Sigman had many professional thieves In his employ and that he even supplied them with money and tools, and aa the business Increased (hey organized the United States Fur company to betterly dispose of the goods thus obtained. The company was used to undersell similar companies and many fur dealers bad been wairhlng its operations with suspicious eyes for a lung time. AND TRAFFIC IS STOPPED Cloudbursts and Wind Storms Overwhelm Kansas Lightning Claims Two Vic- hold the fort, Chairman Cannon ordered It taken down and a dozen hands tore It from ita fastenings and threw the wreck into the Morgan county Yatea delegation. A tight was prevented only by the Interference of the police, The banner, after its rescue by the Yates men, was hung up In tha rear ot the platform. free-for-- The last ballot tonight, tha 78th, resulted: Yates, 405; Lowden, 533 Henpen', 865 Hamlin, 102; Warner 282; Sherman, 45 and Pierce, 24. l-- 8: CAPTURE MURDERER. 8pokane, Wash., June 2. A special to the Spokesman-Reviefrom Grangevllle, Idaho, saya: T. M. Meyers, who killed George Hrownlee and wounded Wallace Janet t near Crook's corral three weeks ago. was taken from a party of officers when near Whits Bird this morning and lynched. Ths lynchers were masked and outnumbered the officers three to one. The officers rode on to Granve-villa- .. The method of death la not known. Meyer was being taken to tha county jallwhen the lynching psrty overtook the officers. LYNCHERS SUBMARINE TORPEDOING Successfully Firs Missiles Whan Submerged and Traveling. Eight Knots. MFulton" Newport, R. 1., June 2. The second day's government trial of the submarine boat Fulton today was devoted to tbe firing of torpedoes while and Just awash. taken on . Three torpedoes were board at the torpedo atatlon, and the Fulton, accompanied by tha gunboat Hist aX the .tug Powhatan,, with the trial board on the. Hist, went up the bay aa far as Gould island. Two torpedoes were fired while Jhe Fulton was entirely under water and going at a speed of about eight knots. Tbe boat then rose until the conning tower waa In sight, when the third waa discharged. The three torpedoes had an aveN age range of 1.700 yards. Captain Train, president of the trial board, stated tonight that he reports were satisfactory. COTTON MILLS ARE CLOSING Depression In fects Textile Industries Ef- d Operatives. Boston, June 3. Orders were issued today by several cotton mill managers Instructing agents to curtail production on account of the depression in the textile Industry. Many mills In southern and central New England have been running on short time all the spring, and at present about 50,000 operatives are affected. The employes of the Pemberton mills of Lawrence were notified today that the plant would be shut down on Saturday for two month A similar notice was posted at the Methuen mills at Methuen. About one thousand hands are employed by the two concerns. The Arat lington mills cotton department Lawrence is on short time. GOVERNMENT WINS SUGAR DUTY CASE. New York, June 2. The United States circuit court of appeals today handed down a decision in favor of the government In the case of the United States va Bertram Brothers, Benjamin Howell ,t Co., and the American Sugar Refining company, holding that sugar imported Into this country was on a scale based on the polar-aroptest made in a temperature of 25 Topeka, Kan., June 2. Kansas Topeka and Lawrence. No great dam- degrees of centigrade. The decision tbe circuit court's ruling and streams are rapidly rising tonight age is expected from this source. The Santa Ke double track bridge at sustained the opinion of the board of Cloudbursts are reported from Emwashed out In United States general appraisers. poria. Newton, Strong City, Florence, Neva is reported Tonight the Santa Fe management Importance the case ranks second to Manhattan, St John and Saliua. At Lincoln Center more than four Inches annulled all the regular trains running none In customs laws and Involves dibetween Kansas City and Emporia. of water fell In three hours. rectly over 10,000 protests of importers throughout the county. Heavy rains are reported from upEmgorla, Kan., June 2. Aa a result stream In the Kay valley, but most of Tbe significance of assessing sugar the high water trouble is being ex- of the heaviest rain of the year, which for duty under the conditions of a tout Neoeho between fell the la this lands river bottom in afternoon, the made at 25 degrees centigrade Is that perienced overflowing a wide atrip of country. duty la levied on sugar according to the Emporia and Newton. At Emporia the reare Is Railroad traffic rivers suspended. Neosho and Cottonwood number of degrees shown under the Three Santa Fe trains are being held teat. ported as rising a foot an hour. At flooded flood. The Is the which up by rain, Florence the Santa To depot and the telegraph operator had to amounted to a cloudburst, extended as leave. The Santa Fe tracks are a foot far west as Newton. under water at Emporia. Strong City, Florence and Newton, and washed out ..McClelland gets decision.. In several places. Six hundred people St Louis, June 2 Jack Me Clelland were forced to leave their homes in Newton and rescue parties will be at of Pittsburg, was given the decision Hundreds of Miners Are Locating at Bulvilla and Ona Thousand work all night saving people from the over Abe Attell ot San Francisco at Claims Art Staked. flood. The little town of Elmilale. eight the end of the fifteenth round here tomiles from Cottonwood Falls, Is re- night Attell made a claim of foul afround, but after a Cripple Creek, C"la. June 8 Hunported as being under three feet of war ter thedealthirteenth of wrangling. Referee Sharp dreds of prospectors and miners have ter. A severe wind accompanied the great decided to allow It The fight waa taken locations within the past few growrain, greatly damaging fruit and and In fast Kt. John, Sterling At days on Nipple Mountain, almut 13 crops. ing miles south of this district, where a the country district around Sallna. PEOPLE V PRIEST. . gold bearing dike 15 feet wide has liem bouses were demolished by tornadoes. discovered. Sample of ore from the Lou ton, France, June 2 In conseEdward Holmes, of Clements, and O. been asuyed run Olsen, of Concordia, were killed by quence of the refusal of the pastor, to dike which hare $10 a ton In gold. It Is from of $1! Is children who tq iheirflrat trouble experibeing No communion, lightning. songs, a mob estimated that 1000 claims hare alenced by the Rock Island and Union hiJ sung of over a thousand persons wrecked ready been staked. Pacific in moving trains. The camp has lien named Bnllvi'le, The Santa Fe. Missouri Pacific and the pulpit and overturned the statues from the bull quartz found there lh A force In St. John's church ludsy. M. K. A T. are experiencing trouble. abuudanca The Kansas river is rlsiug rapidly at of police dispersed the rioters. tims Tornadoes Demolish Houses and Crops. BANKS FUNDS Che Too, June 0:30 a. m The Japanese have landed another lot of at "oops Tslng Tuilse (Cheng Thalts about twenty miles southeast of iskushan. A Chinese Junk arrive Sal-atai- st light occurred pleted eleven fortresses at Liao Tang ud are laying mines at a distance of b,uuu s great banner, bearing tha quotation Teller Involves His Firm in a Shortage of $70,000. Ha Never Saved a Penny and Was Bonded For Only $15,000 Bank Bears Real d( Los. lc A NEW EL Sew Haven, Conn., June 2. A losa of from $30,000 to $00,000 through em- bezzlement of its funds by a trusted employe, Douglas M. Smith, is admitted bv the officers of the National Tradesmen's bank of this city. The exact losa la not vet known. Smith, who was paying and receiving teller acknowledged that he embezzled about $30,000 and the greater part of it if not all within the past eight or nine months. A statement given out tonight lv Cashier Thompson of the hank says: The examination by the national last December end examiner waa that by the committee of the hank's director shortly afterward. la neither examination was any discrepancy In the accounts of Mr. Smith discovered. When it was decided to have h-- DORADO anti-cleric- al |