Show : I i j jj" r ' I J A THOUGHT WEATHER jUTAnfair—tonight Gcn-- i The lion did! tear in piece enough for 1iis yhclps and stran-ple- d for his lionesses and filled Ids holes with prey and his dens with ravin — Nnhum 2:12 I Hence it happened thatfall the armed prophets conquered all tha unarmed erally land Friday cold-Ic- r In cast portion tonight IDAHO — Unsettled rain north and west moder- fold ate temperature OGrDEN CITY UTAH THURSDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 8 1928 Year— No 113 Fifty-nint- h wmHRil - ! nulla w iwi KMWM HWWSyse IMS?! H! h LAST EDITION EN '11 Jazz Enters u1 Classic Hall 4r Frank Francis tlM!lMJMJWpUllUIWW Next Monday the lately promoted "officials of the Union Pacific will be the guests of Ogden city and the chamber of commerce Union Pacific is one of the great railroads of the United States and those at its head are entitled to be honored street report says that September gross revenues and the first nine months gross of the road are better than during any corresponding period in the Union A-Wal- l Pacific's history in September Freight revenues 153 over a gained fl 145 year ago But passenger business has ' off more than $164000 That Is one of the worries of the heads of railroads today While freight business holds Its own the passenger traffic is decreasing on nearly every road in the United States owing to the competition of the busses and the general use of the automobile DEMOCRATS ASK In Budapest AFTER months of 1027 Union Pacific is now earning on its common 'stock at the rate of " $18 a share ' -- Invasion of American Jazz which is displacing Hungarian folklore music the state conservatory of music decided today to establish a regular chahf for Jazz mu-si- c It is probable that an American expert will be employ cd to instruct the students Gypsies Who constitute 80 per cent of Hungary's musicians recently petitioned: the government to suppress Jazz on the ground that it left them Jobless but the government confessed that it was helpless to stem the tide of syncopated "music sweeping across the Atlantic from t America" :jr SMITH TO HEAD be BIG N Yl BANK FRIENDS LEARN Al Content Thai Only One Man Got More Votes Than He! Did 00 THIEF IS SHOT e POSSE BY UTAH il 'j ' And Two Girls Arrested After Highway Battle Another : ll 841 - LOSE FOUR IN SOUTH Thb Democratic party's national ticket though bolstered with a vice presidential candidate from the solidl South lost four of those supposedly impregnajble states which had been Democratic since s f construction days It cafried onitwo statei outside of the south — Massachusetts and Jlllde Island — whichf apparently were carried by Smit due to a combination of Catholic wet and fpjrelgn popula" tion !:j Alfi of this defeat came in face of the! fact that SrnittV reversed the histoHc policy of hilt party on" the tarlfit and lined it up abreast of the Repuiblicans on the issue of protection Governor Smith proceeded on the theory that the) south would sjay Democratic ho matter what happened and he made hii chief appeal to the business interests of the east and to the farm belt of the west Neither of these appeals resulted in votes for Massachusetts ahd JFlhode Island were not 'rtally won by those appelals and in addition Smith by ignoring sentiment In the fouth lost lldrida Virginia Texas and North Carolina I i 3IOSES QjtpTEI) I As Senator Moses bf New lamp-shir- e said at toe start of the camI paign the nation normally is te000-00- 0 Republican Except iri Massachusetts and Rhode Isiianji--jSmIt- h pid hot appeal to enough RepublJcajiS: to carry any normally Republican state It is a dismal outlook for the defeated Democratic leaders who must now begin the dreary work of rehabilitation in tne' devastated areasJ Thi party is short on man-powExcept for Franklin D Roosevelt Vho has justj been elected govprhor of New York there is no ope in sight as passible candidate fjuV years hence although other fibres r may develop! in the rnean-tin- e Smith has Mid he will not rurj for office agaij)j The question of whether the south will again take command of the party or whether Smith and his friends will further alter its complexion as they did iln the past campaign in the direction of making it a:Aort of wet wing of the Republican party is one that will be fought out before the next presidential campaign smith ga'gged The south tobk Smith because it had no one else and because: he was deemed to have a right to a chance at the nomiantioh in view of his record As getter in New York Trie south turned on Smith and for the first time bolted the party in four states In that sec'j tion In 19 32 if the two-thirrule is retained it can' be expected that the south will insist upon a nominee acceptable to it which Smith was not It will not again take a candidate of whom tit does not approve so long "as the two-thirrule obtains The Smith forces who will control the party machinery durlnpr the intervening four years are likely to seek abolition of that rule In the hope of breaking the veto power of i:::the SOUth At bottom it is t a question ©f whether the Democratfc party will continue essentially a hybrid of the west industrial northern cities and the dry rural southern Istates or whether it will betiome the urban party of the nation and gradually force a shift in the alignment of the two old parties BIG DRY VOTE While the Republican party still holds the Industrial interest$ firmly with it Hoover has in thii cam paign jbid for the dry votewhich is strongest In rural districts Irt acknowledging his election he said the result was a vindication of rwhich "great issues" a statement recalled that of the Anti-Salolmgue which bald the election was Continued on fagg 'Xywt?) two-states- ' - er Man - hiking' to the Pacific coast from Only the years can tell the story their home and were picked up' by of his contribution to his country's men near Salt Lake City Tuesday At Paragonah they stole enough welfare gasoline to continue their trip A when Has he added to or taken away posse pursued them and from' the advancement of this land? they ran out of gasoline again they stole an automobile abandoning More than 50 shots We are too close up to the their own events of today to correctly weigh were exchanged before they were captured in Snow canyon 12 miles them in relation to human II north of here COOLIDGE PRAISES OIL PROSECUTOR I WASHINGTON Nov 8 — (AP) — President Coolidge today accepted the resignation of Owen J Roberts of Philadelphia! special federal oil prosecutor j In a letter addressed to Roberts in Philadelphia the jpresident said in part: VI want to express rriy gratitude to you on behalf of the government for the fidelity and energy with which ypu have prosecuted these eases which have rehere would the south go for turned to the United tSates all Iho assibiance if another "Force bill" property In question and many mil jveie to be preesnted to congress? lions of dollars iu money" i j at :' ds ds ' on "no man ever again will run as a wet" — r FAMOUS EDITOR " 1 T i ' :i "The Women's Christian Tern perance union feels the election of Herbert Hoover is a great victory for constitutional prohibition" Mrs Boole said It recognizea that the defeat of Governor Smith is the rejection of his proposed plan for modification arid nullification through state control of the liquor traffic" - OF STATESMAN IN - BOISE DIES WOMEN CLAIM VICTORY5 CHICAGO Nov 8— AP)— The K Services Today For Calvin Cobb Distinguished Figure In Idaho EOISE' Nov 8 Mrs-Henr- — (AP) — Calvin pobb for many "years editor and publisher of the Idaho Daily Statesman was dead today the victim b£ an! illness that had afflicted him jfor more than a year and services Were to be held this afternoon and hia body taken to Chicago He died late last night with his daughter Margaret and friends at his side He was 75 years of age Mr Cobb recently returned from Chicag® where he underwent an Operation and until aboiit three Weeks ago was believed recovering friuch of his strength Recently however he suffered a relapse and was assisted from his office knd has been confined tp his bed much of the time since Calvin Cobb was one oi the very few remaining editors in the west Who built up an organization about themselves that became! an intl-tnareflection of their !own per'rr- -j sonalities 'j Fearless as an editor he was Considered one of the most progressive men in the! northwest He took over the Idaho Statesman in 1889 after he had engaged in a variety of undertakings that led him from Chicago into Wyoming and finally into Idaho MUSIC AND ART He was a ilover of music and art and was known throughout the state as a most effective editorial j te ' i i writer Women's National Committee for Law Enforcement comprising ten national women's organizations gave out the following! statement today through its president W I'eabody of Massachujr setts: "The election of Herbert Hoover is the answer to the cry! for a referendum on the eighteenth amendment The voters have declared they want more not less prohibition — more not less enforcement of the eighteenth amendment"! The statement described Hoover's victory as the result of Women's outpouring to the polls 16 prevent a break down in law enforcement and said his election should banish forever from American politics "the liquor controlled politician" The woman's national! committee includes the General Federation of orWomen's Clubs Parent-Teachganizations and similar associations FAR WEST ECHOES SALT LAKE Nov (AP) — The election was interpreted generally as a prohibition victbry in this section Opinion was reflected in an editorial in the Salt Lake Tribune and a statement by Governor H C Baldridge of Idaho at er S-- — Boise Baldridge said: The result can be taken as a referendum on the liquor question The Tribune said: The chief cause of the Democratic disaster was the prohibifion issue1 tri-week- WILD OUTBURST man of tile house appropriations committee flecans of several ' Indict oni inents charges of sionsoring and protecting vice and Rambling lieife the question arises Three On State Ticket In Utah -- j whether pp Priest will he seated When ihc seeks admittanc to the lowci house in AVashington LEATHER WOOD W I N S Democrats Make Big G am In Makeup of Next E Legislature I SALT LAKE Nov 8 — ( AP) — Latest available Utah elec- E BUTTERS KNOCKED OUT tion! returns this afternoon show the following vote:! President : Hoover i 692 Smith 80885 senator BamKin berger 76621 0414 congressman first district! Col-to- n UR) 42228 Patterson (D) 31416 supreme justice? term Follnnd (It) 8"947 Thurman (1) 84575 supreme term Hansen justice two-yell) 89839 Gideon (D) 82- - INlOGDEN RAID Mixup 10-ye- ar Follows Visit of SfMen 'To Resort Here I During 4 raid on a sdft drinVT parlort Thifrsefay afternoon at 284 Twenty-fifstreet in the rear of a tailor shjp E E Butters was struck ove the head and received Governor Wattis (II) "(1626 Derh (D) 102174 necretary of state Peters (li) 85223 Welling (D) 87063 attorney general Parker (II) 91128! Clay (!)! 82436 treasurer Chrls-tensc- n (R) 89029 Mehden-ha- ll Tt) 82425 auditor! Ajax (It)! 88820 Farr (I)) 83618 superintendent of sc hoolsj Jen-te- n (I1) 87071 Nuttal (D) 85- - h a lace'ralioh which required several stitches tol close It was reported today The placje was filled With men collecting and paying election bets when federal prohibition agents entered suddenly and unexpectedly Butters was During the mix-u- p head overthe by the butt slugged or a pisiof it was aeciarea ana SAI4T LAKE 'Nov S — (UP No arrests While party leaders were guessing knocked ujneonscious were jmadi and no evidence was today jthe whys and wherefores of confiscatedl the srilit result in Utah's flection 11 tl Butters is a former sheriff the formal minded awaitedjthe returns from 23 missing' pifecincts of Morgan county Four years ngo they had ko wait three weeks for the' complete count There are telegraph offices in only 13 of the 29 counties htAHah and "the lack of communication facilities combined with the slow count Caused by" scratching served to delcjy a final tabulation j The result however was indicated definitely Herbert IlooVer carried the state by a majority of up- Sugar Companies To Make wards of 12000 Returns fom 624 HugejDistribution On precinots out of the state's 647 gave Hoove- - 92756: Smith 80 34 Njpvember 15 Senator William H King's maA total of U 500 000 will be disjority over Ernest Bamberger his tributed by the Amalgamated SuRepublican opponent topped 2 The returns from G24 districts gar company November 1 5 among gave King 96529 votes as Compar- the beet growers supplyipg their ed to 76068 for Bamberger five factories located in Utah MonCongress Don I) Colton a Re- tana 4nd daho J II Bachraan over Knox auditor announced this morning publics n was Pattenson Demcrt 4S22S to The Ogdfn factory located in Irt 624 precincts Wilson lanje has handled 54000 Congressman E O Leatherwood tons of beets so far and the disalso a llepublican appeared to have trict Will receive approximately nosed out Dr J JI Paul Demo- $367 Opo This payment wjll crat in the closest pace of the elec- the averags over the past equal few tion Leatherwood received 4 6226 years Bach man said The second votes In 624 precincts to 45J705 for payment wjill be made December Dr Paul j STATE TICKET VOTE Officials pt the Utah-Idah- o Sugar A minority of approximately 0 company iri releasing their figurejs that! wus piled up by (governor report $3560000 will be disGeorge H Dern Lemocrai in his tributed aniiong the 8000 farmers uuest for He beat Wil- supplying their factories in Utah: liam H Wattis of Weber county Idaho' Montana South Dalsota and 1011 5d to 71167 In 624 precincts Canada This payment represents approxThe vote on the rest of the state ticket In 624 precjnets follows: imately $l)00p00 more than the first paymeht made last year For iustice of supreme curt term— William II Folland Republican 87153S R Thurman Democrat 84671 For justice of supreme court two-ye- ir term — Ephraim jHansen Republican 89027: Valentine Gideon Democrat 82272 NOTED For secretary of state — Jd'Hton H Wellinjr Democrat 86327 John W ' 'I' Peters Republican 84479 For attorney general—George P Check of Tally Books Shows Parker Republican 90304 Joiin K ClaK Democrat 817864 Judges Failed To Count For state treasurer—A T2 Chris-tenseAll Votes Republican 88221 John F Menidenhall Demoprat 1752 Several errors of five and 10 For state auditor — Ivor Ajax' 88006 W Harrison Farr votes were found this morning by Lawrence A Van Dyke Democrat 82952 county clerk when' he commenced his unFor superintendent of public — Dr C IN Jensjen official check of the tally books When tht vote in five districts 86874 L John jNuttall had been tabulated four such erJr Democrat 84649 rors two of five votes each and two UTAH LEGLSLATUItn of 10 votes each had been discovThe pext legislature vill be politically opposed to ered In making their totals the The tretid that judges in each instance had overGovernbr Dern carriedl Dern to victory however looked one or two sets of tallies reducecf the G O P margin to two of five each members Jn the senate and only one in the iiouse Thid was due to the vote in! Salt LakeCity where 10 NEGRO IS TORTURED days agjo jt did not appear that the WITH HEATED FORKS Democrats had a chance Hoover narrowly escaped defeat in the city CHICAGO Nv 8— (AP)— Tor-lur- e and du4 to an apparent last minute forks switch in sentiment the Democrats by fire — swept victory in every othr con- pressed Into tho flesh of the cheeks tent lighted matches held to corch the The senate lineup January 1 will face — again has been resorted Id as a gang method to make an enemy be: 1 — Ti'acy Welling Democrat "squeal" Kdward Jackson negro garage 2— William II Griffin Jr Reworker told- police of the! torture publican 3 — II F Egan Republican yesterday saying it was employed 4 — Ci R Hollingsworth Repub- by two men to for' him to' tell the whereabouts of a man theyl sought lican J F Fowles Democrat The man Jackson said was John 5 — Ray E Dillman Republican C — Hamilton Gardner Repub- (Dingbat) Oberta defeated candilican A B Irvine Republican date for state senator The gangBurton Musser Democrat' Wilson sters also sought "to learn from McCarty Democrat II B Maw Jackson the whereabouts of Danny Democrat D W Parratt! Demo- McFall known to police as a onetime ally of "Polac Joe" Saltis a crat 7 — C- E Young Republican R figure in the "beer racket-- ' "They heated a table Tork red J Evans Democrat hot and pressed :lt against by 8 — George II Ryan Republican cheek" Jackson said "Then they 9 — W D Canland Republican 10 — "W" T Owens Jr Republic- lit matches and held the'flame close i to my face" an J Two men were arrested and 11 — L X Marsden Republican Jackson identified Walter Zwol nski a3 one pf his JojiXurera w ACoflUjaucd ou X'dgq 2LXQ) i J i MILLIONS FOR BEET GROWERS (' i 00 31-4- INWAUSTREET 46 NEW YORK Nov 8 — (AP) — Total sales on the New York exchange crossed the 5000000 share mark today for the second time in history Prices ran up $1 to $23 a share in the early outburst cf buying but a late Belling movement cut down or wiped out many of early gains The stock ticket was more than an hour late at the close of the market on j 10-ye- ar WEBER COUNTY j I ERRORS : jn SHOOT UNDERWORLD FIGURE Nov PHILADELPHIA 8— (AP) — Another victim of gangster's guns was near death in a hospital today his body riddled with eleven bullets His recovery physicians said was doubtful He is William Denni alleged leader of an underworld bandHis STOWAWAY SAILS brother was shot down' In a gang less than three weeks ago FOR UNITED STATES feud Denni was shot as he stood on a street corner last night when an auPARIS Nov 8— (AP)— Clarence tomobile sped past him pumping Terhune who stowed away on the out a fusillade of shots- He refusGraf Zeppelin changed his mind ed to reveal the identity of his asand after cancelling his passage sailants aboard the Majestic yesterday sailed Denni and his brother were witaboard the lie de France It nesses In a murder case several was explained today that! he want- weeks ago If he dies she will he victim of a gang ed to return to the United States the twenty-eight- h with some of the who shootings which are now being In- haq come oyer on Jhe air6hjps estigated £y- a special grand jury ' - - '! s - Re-public- Re-public- heat-redden- GANGSTERS Explosion iof Celluloid Is Cause of Disaster In Massachusetts BIG FIRE FOLLOWS Fourteen Dead And Nine Badly Hurt 1st Toll Bodle$ Hurled LYNN Mats Nov 8 — (AP) — Fourteen persons were known to be dead from!' an explosion which wrecked the plant of the Preble Box Toe companyi and a nearby dwelling house in Bast Lynn today Nine persons were in a serious condition in tfie Lynn Hospital and several others were believed to he missing Firemen werje searching the ruins of the derodlishd plant t or more bodies I The known dead aret Mrs Lllliari Blaney who resid-nex- t ed in a dwelling house to the plants and her four children Alfred P Harris of Lynn John Crowder of Lyjnn Lewis E Puffer of Swampacott Charles Mitchell John WllRoiji a negro! W"illiam Clements a jnegrrt Percy If Smith of Lynn Two unidentified men ALL AT BREAKFAST The woman killed xtfals Mrs Harry Blaney She andlier husband with all their children were at the reakfast table when the explosion came Instantly a stiegt of flame leaped from the faptori 20 feet U their heme bi)rstln£ through a window and enveloping Ithe family Mrs BJaney aid four children were burped and Ismothered to death The others i the ifanfily escaped' with comparatively! minor injuriei There was kserj ojf explosionk in a celluloid mixture fused in the manufacture 61 bex! tos for Phoef The first came at pabout ?:3r o'clock Half n minute later ther was another and later thero were two or three more minor explo sions HURLED INTO STRFLT y One end of the con crete block bujilding jwajj blown Mit and two bodies we-- fhuried intd the street with it The flames which followed the explosions scorched many nearby buildingil nnt tlv?! heat and the force of thfe explosions! broke a large number jpf windows The factory adjoined a district! largely made up ©f frame dwellings of Ocjfcupants these homes in many cases were shaken from their becs The entire fire departmeni was called to the scene Ayhat caused the first explosion had not been In the cpnfusion no determined one could be found who knew just how many persons wefe employed in the factory i i ona-stor- e two-famil- y! 1 j 30-00- j Total Sales Cr o s s Five Million Mark Equalling High Record WRECKS HOME d nj d pas-semrer- fov 8— (LP) — Chicafeo has elected a negro r— ()$ear Ie Priest — to sncx-eethe late Martin li Adden chair- -- FAMILY DEAD WHEN BLAST plIICAXjJO ! !" He took over publication of the Statesman when it was a and his first act was to transform it Into a daily paper The paper had established a record as a Republican bulwark in the state even before Mr Cobb purchased it Mr Cobb's own personality is reflected in his answer to a questionnaire sent out by a publishing house this year HEVEALS HIS PERSONALITY In explaining that the paper had been Republican without-- change since its inception early in the sixties he said it had "supported all Republican candidates beginning with Lincoln in 1864" In answer to a question on civic movement supported or opposed by the paper he wrote "Sixty-fou- r years for files will tell that sorry to say we supported woman suffrage and direct primary Our best work was in getting telegraph telephone and railroads into Boiee and finally main line We opposed free had a hell of a time for siiyer-anslxi months The Statesman started las a Republican paper and the vote here then was usually 7000 Democratic to 400 or 500 Longress Front Chicago Elect All But Republicans v Modification Cry Silenced Temperance Leader Claims j!( tor VER FOR SECRETARY Wet Dares Run Again T4o O JOHN Wi PETERS ' 1 This is the third successive defeat for the party and its worst Returns by the United Press jshow Herbert Hoover with 444 electoral votes passing even the record of Wilson who receivied 435 duao the Republican split between Taft and Women's-National Roosevelt Smith is shown with Committee For Law Enforcement only 8? votes tho lowest of any Joins Mrs Ella A Boole in Declaring That People Democratic presidential candidate and ranking next ' to the historic Show By Votes They Want More Prohibition and eight votes of Taft in 1912 for the consolation prize of presidential More Enforcement i politics Both candidates however polled MEW YORK Nov 8— (UP)— Mrs Ella A Boole president a trejmendous popular vote Latest compilations by The United' Press of the Women's Christian Temperance Union in an exshow Hoover's vote at 17929027 and Smith's at 12801186' This clusive interview with the United Press today said that the gives Hoover a plurality of 5127- - results of the presidential election were so overwhelming that I ST GEORGE Utah! Nov 8r— while (UP) — Fatally wounded He must' have swayed Theodore fleeing from a posse of sheriff's Roosevelt in his progressiveness officers Jerry Wilson 20 of Little and pointed the way which led to Rock Ark died last midnight His the- split in the Republican party companions Jack Williams of Litin 1912 which made possible the tle Rock Gladys Brown 20 and Violet Sutton 21 both of Omaha election of Woodrow Wilson Neb are held on multiple charges stealing gasoline resisting arrest Governor Smith in his defeat may of l and stealing an automobile be searching for comfort of that were "hitchThe said girls they kind Has his defeat helped to clear the political atmosphere? Has his candidacy released the solid south from Democracy and given a new alignment politically? In what direction will the south turn in the future for political friends? CpNTROL -- s Has the candidate liberalized American thought or has his injection of his prohibition views on brought a chaotic state of mind I that subject IN Ry RAYMOND (fLAPPER Unitetl Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK Nov 8 — (UP) — This election has brought the Democratic party face to face with the problem of what its future is to -d- efeated i Popular vote (incomplete)— Hooveit 18299708 Smith 12989093 Hoover plurality 5310615 In 1924 Coolidge had 15725016 Davis 8386503 LaFollette 4822856 Thirteen large cities — Hoover 7 Smith 6 Hoover won Chicago Philadelphia Detroit Baltimore Pittsburg Los Angeles Buffalo Cincinnati Smith won New York Cleveland St Louis Boston San Francisco Newark Total vote in these cities: Smith 3420769 Hoover 3375079 Congress — New senate will have 54 Republicans 40 Democrats one Farmer-Laborit- e one vacancy compared with 47 Republicans I6i bemocrats one Farmer-Laborittwo vacancies Republican lead in house increased' Governors elected — Republican 23 Democratic 11 Hoover Will Seek To Build White G O P Party In Solid South Og-de- with shaping the destiny of this country during his 30 years or more of running for high office as any man in public life j Carolina) i - Perhaps he had as much to do ' Megro Named FIVE ill ONE WELLING ELECTED States carried— Hoover 40 Smith 8 (Alabama Arkansas Georgia Louisiana Massachusetts Mississippi Rhode Island South Dismal Outlook Is Faced By Minority Short of Material SMITH H (By The Associated Press) Electoral Vote— Hoover 444 Smith 87 Hoover majority 357 Iri 1924 Davis Democrat had 136 In 1920 Cox Democrat had 127 ' $53-0000- 'many barriers and was instrumental in creating the progressive element within both parties " I— II new York Nov 8 — When E H'Harriman took over the Union Pacific nearly SO years Governor Alfred E Smith (ad— does ago he found the roadbed in poor "not to run ever for expect public condition and equipment bad office again" but is still undecided He started out to reconstruct the as to what his future business or road much to the dismay of some professional activities will bej" d of the heavy stockholders v who The Herald-Tribujn- e says it is were called on to sanction a great being he is to be offered rumored increase in bonded indebtedness the chairmanship ol the board of directors of a projected new He persisted in his policy of imWall streetj hank The bank provements until he had demon- is being organied by Eugene L strated the wisdom of his foresight Norton vice chairman of the board in the intrinsic value of one of the of the Baltimore Trust company great links in transcontinental The governor's term at Albany ends January l and he will be entransportation titled to a pension olj $6000 a year Since his death the road has been OTHERS MENTIONED in the keeping of men equal to him names of WiJIiam F KenThe in operating ability until today its friend the ny governor's close stock is recognized as one of the most substantial investments In the John J Raskob thej Fisher brothers of Detroit and members of the United States duPont family are being mentionas possible associates on the Much credit must be given to ed of directors ofjthe new bank board those who have watched over the the Herald-Tribune f ieays financial affairs of the company last August Although Raskobj arid to those who have seen to it denied that he was linterested in that the service was of the best the bank the Herald Tribune points out that his statement at that time reThough there has been a open the possibility of future markable growth in Union Pacific left Announcement of defconnection and also in Southern Pacific its inite plans for the formation of the connecting road at this point both bank the paper says it has learnrailroad systems can look forward Was withheld pending the outto 'even greater expansion as the ed come of the election but now may western fringe of states increase in be expected within a few days population and traffic across the f SMITH CHEERFUL Pacific develops The bank will hate the largest funds with which any bank Students of world events predict capital in this ever has that as China and all Asia becomes country been organized inin modernized government and governor was Mis usual buoydustry the west coast of America antThe self jt in its commerce over the Pacific "I've nothing but pleasant memwill rival our Atlantic coast ories" he said of the campaign He and continued "There is When that day comes the Union smiled one and Pacific-Sout- h n thing the figures indicate counPacific through man in the will be doing a business be- that is thatonenoever got more votes try except yond all present calculations for the presidency thjin I did" ' "Who was that governor?" 1 There is consolation for the "Herbert Hoover aspirants to high office that to win office though they failed be their policies may finding expression in public affairs William J Bryan was never successful in his repeated bids for the DEFEAT EVEN IN SOUTH 8 BUDAPEST Hungary Nov Succumbing to the ' For the nine months of 1928 t ending with September the Union Pacific did $120410505 in freight business which Is an increase of $10859000 over the same nine Here's Election Story Told In Few Words WHAT OF PARTY : ed - j ROBINSON RESIST WITH HIS FRIENDS! LITTLE £R0PK Arl Nov 8 — (AP) — Rest an recrestipn among a partyof friends or a hunting trip in southeast Arkar sas was tho mode Senator Joe Ti Robinson Democratic vice presidential candidate wal using today lor restoring the great energies he had forced into a campaign he had waged for th? Democratic party over 25000 miles of travel Jn 30 spates The exact location of the sen- ator's huntingr grouridj jwas not He will Return her announced about Friday His plans have not been announced Kxcept to wire congratulations to his victorious opponents President-elect Hoover audi his long time friend and colleague Senator-Curtivice president-elec- t Senator Robinson has made no comment on si! the election if' ' ASSERTS LIQUOR QUESTION DECIDED BOISE Idaho Nov 8 (AP)— A statement that the electlon'of Herbert Hoover could "be taken as & referendum on the liquor question was given to The Associated Pres by Governor H C BaHrldge wheir returns of the election (Indicated to hint that the state had given an !m- presslve majority to thsi-'- Republican ' ticket ONE MORE CHILD ON MORGAN LIST SALT LAKE Nov !S— Increase of one In the school ipjopulation of the Morgan county school district this year over the number for 1927 is (shown In the census returns from the districed at the offices of Dr C N Jensen state superintendent of public instruction The present total is 769 h GASOLINE TRUCK BURNS AFTER CRASH i " ' s PANGUITCH Nov Levi By-b"Wednesday ee escaped injuries when the truck he was driving crashed into a road grader at the of side of the road five miles-soutThe trucks which wss Panguitch loaded with gasoline- jturned over and took fire It was corordctcly destroyed u j - |