Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Ogderi Killer Suspects Face Formal Charges Of Slaying Patrolman SUNDAY MORNING JULY 14 Patrolman Recalls Similar Fate Met by Captain in ’98 Slaying Throngs Surround Brigham Jail on Capture of Murder Suspects Throngs of Cache county residents flocked to the Brigham City Jail when news spread of the capture of two suspects in the murder of Special Ogden Officer Joseph H Quigley above Be low Brigham City Police Chief Jack M Burt left and Patrolman William S Fife who arrested John Ellis and Fred Lnnd i Pair Nabbed in Brigham Qty After Grim Manhunt by Posse From Three Counties Third Man Still Hunted (Continued Irom Page One) the case Sunday tired officers said late Saturday When Chief Burt and Deputy Fife hurriedly summoned by Sexton Nielson advanced warily along each side of the creek they the fugitives concealed in the brush Bathing Swollen Ankle Ellis was bathing a badly swollen right ankle and knee when the officers commanded the pair to throw up their hands Although both men Were startled and seemed for a moment about to flee they offered no resistance The men represented themselves as cousins Jim ahd Tom Bailey and declared they were hitch hiking V d i V VI from Logan The clothing of the men bore blood stains Chief Burt declared and they were removed to the Brigham City jail where Ogden officers later identified them as the pair who were being sought for the slaying of Officer Quigley Elaborate Manhunt While the Brigham City officers were taking their captives to jail one of the most elaborate manhunts — ever organized in the state still was sweeping through fields west of Willard seven miles from the scene of the capture where the gunmen were believed to he holed up Two skirmish lines composed of police deputy sheriffs highway patrolmen and volunteers from three a counties were systematically combing the area west of Willard between o Central railroad the tracks and Willard bay One group in extended order started from South Willard at daybreak and worked northward while a similar group starting from Brigham City worked south Police Plane Joins Overhead a Salt Lake City police department plane piloted by Sergeant Sherman Falkenrath swept over fields and marshes while Salt Lake City police cars in communication with the plane through a y short wave radio hook-u- p stood by to receive directions from Utah-Idah- two-wa- the air In the meantime state highway department representatives had strung field telephones along the highway to relay orders and information to ail members of the huge posse The capture of the fugitives whe were believed to have slipped across the highway under cover of darkness was effected before the posse-me- n combing the bottom lands had reached a central point Sheriff Directs Hunt The hunt was directed by Sheriff Jack Zundel of Boxelder county with Sheriff Oscar Lowder of Weber county Chief Rial C Moore of the Ogden police department Chief Burt of Brigham City and Chief W L Payne of Salt Lake City and George Faulkner and Jack Gridley of the state highway department as his immediate aids When Chief Burt sent word that the fugitives were in jail the possemen hurried to Brigham City A huge crowd assembled In front of” the jail and remained for more than two hours but no disorders of any nature arose Because - - of his lack of finger- printing and photographic equipment Chief Burt turned his prisoners over to Sheriff Zundel After being fingerprinted and photographed the prisoners were compelled to remove their clothing which allegedly was stained with blood and don other apparel Later Removed to' Ogden Later they were removed to Ogden where Ellis was confined in the Ogden city jail and Lund in the Weber county jail Ogden police started grilling Ellis immediately upon his arrival in an effort to obtain the identity of the third bandit who was pursued between houses when Patrolman Quigley and his associates attempted to apprehend the trio for the theft of gasoline Lund was not questioned Saturday afternoon Patrolman Quigley met his death early Friday morning He was accompanying Sergeant L Hilton and Police Chauffeur W S Champneys while making the rounds in the residential district Suspects Flee The officers saw three men siphoning gasoline from a parked automobile and Patrolman Quigley leaped from the police car into the rumble seat on an automobile used by the trio One of the men fled between nearby houses and Sergeant Hilton and Officer Champneys pursued thinking Quigley had arrested the pair In the car and had taken them to police headquarters They heard five ‘sharp reports which they attributed to a backfiring automobile It later developed that the reports were pistol shots that cost Quigley his fife Quigley's dead body was found at the corner of Monroe avenue and Twenty-fift- h Street Murder Car Found The murder car was found Friday afternoon and papers found in the machine served to Identify the fugitives Shortly thereafter an automobile was stolen from the home of Grant Williams at Marriott a f?w miles northwest of Ogden and within an hour dr so came a report from Wll lard that the car while passing a truck went out of control struck down Bonnie Jean Nelson 5 and crashed into g service station the ensuing confusion During the occupants hastened across the vfirldSyWest of Willard me manhunt and the subsequent eapture of Ellis and Lund followed( Chief Burt said that when the men arrived at the Brigham City jail they declared they would not talk until they had eaten Lund had previously attempted to convince the officers that they were and his first Logan hitch-hikestatement at the jail after he had been Identified was that he was a paroled convict from San Quentin He said he had been paroled two Former Sheriff Tells of Fatal Manhunt in Old Ellis would not talk R H Wootjton superintendent of the Utah bureau of identification was at Ogden Saturday and made a thorough investigation of the d car which was found abandoned in Ogden Friafternoon day Superintendent Wootton said he had found several if Special to The Tribune July 13— The murder Thursday of Residential Joseph H Quigley and Saturday of Jack Ellis e J Lund on murder charges recalled to Herbert H Cordon Southern Pacific railroad special agent and former Box Elder county sheriff the notorious “Abe Majors” incident and the death of Captain William Brown Ogden police officer in 1898 Patrolman Quigley came to hia death over a relatively trifling matter — gasoline themt from a parked car — and Officer Brown died as a result of a theft of a bottle of milk 37 years ago Involves Same Territory Brown was killed as was Archie Majors brother of the notrious Abe Majors in the hills east of Willard roughly the same territory covered by the hunt for Ellis and Lund which ended with their capture Saturday near Brigham City The Abe Majors case opened when Fred Hansen was held up by two strangers from Califor- OGDEN here early Patrolman the arrest and Fred - 'ZL ' bullet-p- ierced blood-staine- cache will be A ax '‘satisfactory’ fingreprints Cemetery Searched The Brigham City cemetery was being thoroughly combed Saturday afternoon by Boxelder county peacsi officers after Sexton Nielson had reported that th fugitives while slinging across the cemetery had stopped and apparently concealed some object search for the supposed Sunday v Vv v s M 1 1898 near Three-Mil- e A new trial was granted on a south Of Brigham City The change-o- f venuer end Majors was robbery occurred about 9 p m and convicted in Logan of second-degre- e the bandits obtained some murder and sentenced to life sample pieces of silverware — and a imprisonment Serving 18 years in bottle of milk which they drank on the Utah state prison Majors was the scene paroled then pardoned Hansen was forced by the two He soon was and bandits into the sagebrush about 100 found guilty of apprehended burglaries in Los ths from yards roadway and bound Angeles Cal and sentenced to Folwith strong cords His shoes were som prison where he remained unremoved and placed on the feet of til 1025 the older of the pair of bandits Like the two youths arrested SatFrees Himself urday Majors had served time In a Hansen finally managed to free California prison and won parole himself from the bonds and made Abe Majors a youth of 19 at ths farm where time of the slaying had been pahis way to a near-b- y he obtained a horse and rode into roled from prison but had reported taking new crimBrigham City the county seat to but once before inal trails in Utah seek aid Horses and buggies Mr Cordon sheriff of the counand the revolvers ty and Deputy Thompson got into trusty frontier a buggy and set out for the south to were the implements of the early-da- y Ofman-huhead off the bandit pair and They took up a vigil at the Hot ficers Saturday had modern science Springs to find that as the pair on their side automatic rifles pisapproached they' recognized the of- tols machine guns automobiles raficers and took to the rocky hillside dio and airplanes 11-9- I ’owLi Above throngs of people flocked to the Brigham City pall when news spread of the capture of two suspects in the murder of Special OfBelow ficer Joseph H Quigley Brigham City Police Chief Jack M Burt and Patrolman William S Fife who arrested John Ellis and Fred Lund ' ' $ I' f liance Inc) BUCHAREST July 13 (By Wireless) — In her secluded pink villa on Victoria street Princess Elizabeth the former queen of Greece talked as a disillusioned woman about her divorce from George granted last Saturday in the Bucharest appeal court "It is difficult to marry two types of mentality” she said ‘‘unless there is an overlying strong feeling So much depends upon character and education The temperaments of two nationalities are so essentially different that when the inevitable moment comes a misunderstanding will form a much dseper wound” The scar of her severed marriage are obvious to the eyes of another woman despite the gallant Elizabeth’s efforts to conceal them from the outside world Simple Dignity She received the correspondent in a drawing room of simple dignity d a setting of antique woods and greens There was a nun-lik- e severity in the plain gray gown she wore Her patrician head was silhouetted against white Madonna Hlies in a silvery bowl Although the royal couple had been separated for some time the divorce came as a crushing blow to the Greek monarchists who had through the forthcoming hoped plebiscite to restore George and his queen to the throne “I never would have gone back” she said “I never wanted to be a queen Ever since I was a child I dreaded the thought of it One of the reasons I married my husband was that I thought he never would I hated the go back to the throne hypocrisy the superficiality and the false admiration given to me be- childless In the second year of 5er reign she lost her unborn child To fulfill her maternal longing she now makes a brave attempt to sublimate this need in work for other women’s children “Children interest me most” she said "I have no patience with women who leave their children in the hands of others who lose the love and intimacy which are based on family fife" Reports that Elizabeth has lost her beauty are far from true Her features are finely chiselled her gray eyes warmly responsive Her hair is a lustrous brown worn simply She has the queenly qualities of grace and poise Her femininity was manifest in her confessed distaste for the enfranchisement of her sex "I am perfectly indifferent about votes” "I should never smash she said We women windows for suffrage I am against have better tasks feminism when woman wants all her rights and neglects her own special duties Man is born for outside work woman for the home Only a woman who remains a woman caii provide the necessary fink for family unity” May Not Happen Asked about the Greek plebiscite she said “No one can be sure It will actually come off It may not happen at all The Greeks are always trying to destroy the person on top They poisoned their poets and did away with thsir philosophers That is because they have never found what suited them” “Will your majesty be happier living in private life than you would have been as a queen?” she was asked A wistful look came Into her calm gray eyes "Happiness” she said “is a secondary thing Life is hard and characters are weak We must travel the thorny path of philA person however looks osophy for the rpses that are grown upon & £ fi 1TK glCvv ' gun-batt- yf W Pocatello Woman’s Champion Terrier Wins Dog Lovers’ Diploma of Honor I 7 POCATELLO 7 i dog outstanding achievement either for breed heroism sporting dog or In fact any dor which reaches a degree of excellency in Its particular field Miss Eastwood’s dog was grand-sire- d by the undefeated Champion Captain Hagerty of Denver A coincidence of the Bannock County Kennel show was the fact that the “best of winners” award went to Mullins’ Proud Boy a litter brother of Champion Mullins’ Perfection owned by Mrs Mary Hecht of Pocatello Mrs Hecht also entered "Perfect Girl” which took “winners female” in that show Idaho-T- he lovers’ world paid respects this week to Pocatello and particularly to Miss Gail Eastwood breeder of Boston terriers with the notification from Chicago that her dog Cham-- 8 Mullins’ Perfection a had been awarded the coveted “Diploma of Honor” The "diploma” was awarded by the Dog World magazine award department of which S Barkowski of Chicago is secretary In making the award Mr Barkowski said Miss Eastwood's dog had been awarded the "diploma” "for going best in the show of all breeds at the show of the Bannock County Kennel club at Pocatello June 14 and 15” According to Miss Eastwood the “diploma" virtually places her dog in the hall of fame for dogs for ed ld 1 Children Prepare Pageant as Part Jordan park Miss Ellen Crooks Wales Sugar-hous- e Hit-Ru- n playground Miss Janice Ireland Uintah playground Miss Dorothy Bond negro Jefferson playground Miss Marie Wal- garet Stagg Scotland n Various Nations to Be Represented at Liberty Park July 23 All Observcr Secs Lobbying as Part Of Regular Lawmaking Machinery Driving Charge Stricken ters Of Wagon Days France Jackson playground Miss Marion Johnson Italy Neighbor- arrangements have been completed and rehearsals held at the various Salt Lake City playgrounds for the children's pageant of the Utah Covered Wagon days which will be given Tuesday July 23 at 10 a m on the center lawn of Liberty park It was announced Saturday by Ray T Forsberg supervisor of the Salt Lake City recreation department The children’s pageant will be preceded by a costume parade of children around the Liberty park driveway at 9 a m The children are to be dressed in costumes either as Indians pioneers trappers prospectors or hunters with prizes offered for the best costumes Represent Nations The children of the various playground centers will represent the nationalities of the 15 countries to a born to be cause J happened from which the pioneers came to decisive position of royalty” The Utah prior to the coming of the emgestures of her ringless hands These nationalities as railroad thorns” phasized the controlled emotion in the playground by represented her voice Aberdeen Scotland since the groups are: United States Liberty Only Satisfaction of the clippers has been a park Miss Josephine Hardy Eng‘‘I would rather be a street days land Ensign playground Miss Mar- famous ship building city a than his living sweeper earning queen who had done nothing to de serve her position The only satis faction I have had from the accorded to royalty is that I know the public likes it and I could give them that pleasure My greatest personal satisfaction came from the small things of life— simple not turn up cannot be predicted but if consideration and sincerity (Continued from Pete Nine) honor or beautiful tributes only the the probe be thorough if the methbeen had contacted only by they ods of all the "power lobblists” be true feeling of the heart behind the one member of the power lobby thing” inquired into the experience of the be employed term to If was that be will probably Utah Between Elizabeth and her royal and that was the representative shown delegation to be representative of the husband there existed a wide gulf of of the company operating divergent tastes George is a bon in theirlargest experiences of senators and eon state vivant a lively 100 per cent extrogressmen from other states The vert seeking his pleasure where he They all were In accord that no trouble is the investigation will fall finds it Elizabeth is by nature an Improper approach had been made far short of being thorough and if artist reserved and introspective no improper methods employed no antiadministration members of the She paints and sings threats offered and no rewards inquisitorial committees display ’!My greatest happiness” she said promised if they “voted right" Not something like normal activity and ‘‘has been from the philosophic side one resented being approached not curiosity the inquiry may end In I cannot live without books and one saw anything improper If the power lobby has any- the middle I have tried writing and it thing wrong or anything offensive been employing music the methods in would have been my greatest joy in the methods employed Yet each vogue in the days of the lobby of but there was not time for it" had been approarhed by a "member half a century ago the whole corps Another cause of the marital rift of the power lobby" of Washington correspondents has was the fact that Elizabeth wasj What the lobby investigation will been "asleep at the switch" soft-tone- "X c Princess Elizabeth Talks as Disillusioned Person About Divorce From Claimant to Throne Tells Ambitions (Copyright 1935 North American Newspaper- Al- first-degr- Serves 18 Years nia May Former Greek Queen Stresses Motherhood As Women’s First Duty By GLADYS BAKER They went up the hillside as far as possible seeking a haven under the rocky ledge of Mount Ben Lomond's west face Officers from Ogden called by Sheriff Cordon had traversed both roads to the Hot Srings with the arrival of daylight the six guardians of the peace Sheriff Cordon Deputy Thompson Captain William Brown Deputy Joe Belnap Sheriff Charlie Lane and others set out to capture the two hold-up- s Officers Join Hunt Belnap Brown and Cordon got above the two Majors brothers and when they approached the bandits fled across a slide-roc- k area With the slide rock between the three officers and the desperate brothers Captain Brown fired a warning shot The miniature war began Archie Majors fell dead Abe a Majors sought -- safety behind small rock but when called on to surrender he arose took deliberate aim and Captain Brown fell dead Sheriff Cordon managed to hand- -' cuff Majors who was later brought to trial for murder creek declared Quigley first-degre- how-famo- resumed There was a possibility officers that murder weapon might have been concealed in the cemetery Crowds of spectators had assembled around the city and county jails of Ogden before the captives arrived but no demonstrations were made Included among the fifteen Salt Lake City officers who participated in the hunt was a machine-gu- n squad directed by Sergeant E A Hedman ballistics expert of the department who also will make a miexamination of bullets croscopic removed from the body of Officer Many Incidents Majors’ Case Paralleled by Two Tragedies ‘Abe rs months ago 11 'A 1935 hood house Miss Lillian Thurman Denmark Washington playground Miss Lois Sorensen Sweden LindMiss Shelah sey playgrounds Woodland Hawaii Victory playground Mrs Leona S Hampton and Mrs Vertise Ficke Watts Norway Columbus playground Miss Ida Stewart Germany McKinley playground Miss Hazel Monay Holland Y W C A Miss Ethel ClayMexico Pioneer playground ton Mrs Edna P Price Indians Victory park boys Miss Bea Evans trappers and prospertors Liberty park boys Wind Dancers Wind dancers of the pageant will be Mrs Edna P Price Marion Johnson Ida Stewart Bea Evans Hazel Monay Shelah Woodland Dorothy Gains Motorist Delay of Many Pay Sentence Speeder Fines driving charges against Robert Butler 21 1409 Fourteenth East street were stricken in police court Saturday when no complaint had been filed Butler was arrested Friday charged with striking the car of Owen Nebeker state parole agent at Third East and Eighth South streets Perry Y Taylor 22 237 F street was granted until Tuesday for sentencing on a reckless driving charge The court granted the city Hit-ru- n until Monday to file an amended complaint to a reckless ' driving charge against Homer Benson 20 Failing to appear in court on speeding charges the following bonds: H Ei VUale 25 166 Wiliams street $5 R L Clinton 34 674 Ramona avenue 87 and G M Heppler 30 976 Hollywood avenue $5 Adrian Coleman 35 "was fined $5 on a similar charge A speeding charge against Jack Forscy 17 1558 Fourteenth East street was remanded to the juvenile court OBITUARIES Maurice P Monson 23 was granted until Tuesday to plead to speeding charges J A Mayo 32 forfeited 85 Ray Samuelson RUPERT Idaho — Funeral serv- and Tom Sutton 53 1066 East ices for J A- - Mayo 68 who died Broadway was fined $5 all on stop at his home Monday night of pa- sign charges The city of Tiberias was founded ralysis were conducted Thursday afternoon at the Christian church by Herod Antipas when Christ was the Rev X) W Nutting officiating a boy in Nazareth Burial was in Rupert City cemetery under direction of Goodman Mr Mayo waa born December 12 in Paris 111 He married Myrtle D Vincent on March 25 1892 in Nebraska Chase county They came to Minidoka county in 1915 making their home northeast of VISIT GENEVA RESORT Besides his widow and a daughMrs Harry Meuleman he is survived by three sisttsls Mrs Calvin Spears Los Angeles Cal Mrs Gladys Gideon North Platte Neb and Mrs L V Douglas Beatrice Neb MONDAY Night JULY 1867 Rupert ter P ussian peasants are start- Many ing truck gardening in Manchuria 8TECKER BROS Ills f styling— top to bottom Hermetically §eMhdr Never y Machanitm needs oiling or attention Ejaet-o-Cu- Trey losY ba Fast-freezi- Removes cubes instantly V ) f Ravolrini Shlit Tripb-Stor- ai e V y Everything within easy reach Adds useful space ! K I Handy Trmy on door Convenient for serving and arranging foods 1) ) TtSl Com-ptrtma- nt Vegetables) dairy products fruits) ON THE P B A 110 DOWN Your new Westing-hous- e the world protected A DAY on the Meter Plan will by a GUAR- FIVE-YEA- R ANTEE lowance old PLAN Or ISO one o( the refrigerators finest In be PAYMENT Liberal alfor your icebox A DAY A Orchestra With Mammoth Floor Show WEDNESDAY f J Beauty will Westinghouse PAY FOR ITSELF for as low as only— Present ELI RICE And St New Bond Josephine Hardy Margaret Stagg and Lois Sorenson Miss Jessie Schofield associate supervisor of the city recreation department is general director of the pageant Other members of the directing staff are: Barrie Wanless reader William Morris conductor of the orchestra Miss Helen WilMrs Leona S son dramatics Hampton music and Mrs J M Sinclair costumes mortuary A large amphitheater has been found among ruins of an ancient Roman city unearthed by peasants digging in their fields in central Bosnia JULY 17 ADOLPII BROX And His Orchestra GENEVA RESORT 15 ftoivcHu?wWe SALT LAKE il H E R OGDEN BRIGIIAM LOGAN Ell 0 0 1?0 0 lift R lift R El I GDOLlAISft We Give and Redeem Green Stamps |