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Show sj THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ANDREW JENSEN, SPANISH FORK UTAH Publisher - - I ordered. Over 300 men are now at work at the site of the new Ilarrlman depot In Salt Lake City. The annual convention of the health officers of Utah will be held in Salt Lake City on April 2. Two free soup kitchens have been opened In Salt Lake City for the benefit of the unemployed. Not a bank In Utah received awards of Panama bonds under the recent Issue for the relief of the money market. John Sullivan of Park City was splitting wood when the ax slipped and severed the forefinger from the left hand. A Greek who has been working at Lakeside was caught underneath falling rock one day last week, and had both legs broken. A coroners Jury at Lehl exonerated Officer Trano for the killing of Roy Johnson, a brakeman who was shot by Trane while resisting arrest. Charles Smith, a member of Salt Lake Citys chuln gang, attempted to escape one day last week and was shot by a guard. Smith was not Seriously Injured. A bill to enlarge the Grand Canyon game preserve has been Introduced In the senate by Senator Smoot The preserve was created In the last congress by a bill offered by Senator Emoot. Ira E. Hayden, 27 years old, an em- ployee of the Iloston Consolidated mill at Garfield, while filling an oil cup, was caught In a rapidly revolving shaft and literally beaten to pieces. While attempting to couple some cars of the Oregon Short Line near (lot Springs, a few mllcB north of Ogden, Patrick M. Stiles, a brakeman, was painfully Injured by having his tip crushed. A cat saved the family of Philip Kopp of Salt Lake from death by hre one night recently, the family escaping from the burning building In their (light clothes after being aroused by the family pet Robert Orraon, a Salt Lake teamster, was caught underneath a wagon loaded with cement, when the vehicle overturned as the result of the horses becoming unmanageable, and so seriously injured that he may die. Backed by some of the wealthiest men of the Intermountain west, an organization has been formed for the purpose of, within the next five months, providing Salt Lake City with a summer race track one mile long. Steve Boblch and three other Austrians, charged with riot at Bingham, In May, 1907, were discharged last week. It was claimed that a number of witnesses had left the country and It was considered impossible to convict the men. At a meeting of the board of park commissioners of Ogden, plans for beautifying the city were discussed by the members. Final arrangements were made for the planting of trees nnd shrubbery in the city ball square and at Lester park. The Union Pacific railroad has discontinued the operation of the Ogden and Coalville local train because the company claims that the cost of oper-atiola In excess of the revenue derived from the number of passengers bandied on this branch. A concerted movement, the avowed purpose of which is "to make Salt Lake a safer place for boys and girls," has grown out of recent meetings held In the Interest of social purity It Is expected that hundreds of women will engage In the work. 8. W. Rlter, a member of the firm of Rlter brothers, druggists of Logan, died of heart failure, while on his way to the poBtofllce. He was 73 years old, and was one of the pioneers of ths Btate, having crossed the plains with one of the first parties In 1847. After falling from the porch at her home in Ogden, Mrs. C. F. Robinson died a few hours later from a fracture of the skull without ever regaining consciousness. Just how the deIs not plorable accident happened known, as Mrs. Robinson was alone at the time. ( J. E. Pettit, state coal mine Inspec-- 1 tor for Utah, has filed a report with the governor showing that during 1907 the fees collected by hla office amounted to $378. He also states that all mlucs in the state have installed the latest appliances for the prevenaccidents. tion The Good Roads association of Ogden has filed articles of incorporation with the secretary of state. The object of the organization Is to promote the building of good roads In Weber county, but the cooperation of other counties In the state will be sought In the movement. James Halvorscn of Richmond, who was beuten Into Insensibility by Glenn Lewis there two weckB ago, following a drunken quarrel at a dance, still lies In a condition In a Salt Lako hospital, with no apparent Ills recovchange In his condition. f ery Is uncertain as yet. The reform party has come Into power at Green River, and the new city council has passed an Ordinance raising the saloon licenses from $400 to $800 a year and made the license law stricter, notably in requiring that there be no tables or seats la ths saloons and uo wine rooms jf semi-conscio- ITS DENMARK STATE NEWS An epidemic of smallpox has again IRE ROUSE NOW BEFORE UTAH broken out at Hooper, Weber county. A brass band 1h being organized at (Vlllai'd, the instruments being FEUDIS NOTED-KENTUC- Extensive Speculation on Bourse of Copenhagen and Tight Money Market the Cause. . There Has Been a Run on a Number of Banks and Two Hava Been Forced to Suspend Payment-Govern- ment Will Aid Banks. . Copenhagen. A financial panic has arisen here on account of a tight money market and extensive specula- tions on the bourse. Two small bank have been affected and one of theso forced to suspend payment There has been a run on several of the banks. The minister of finance on Sunday conferred with the officials of five of the principal banks here, and It was decided that the government, In conjunction with the leading banks, guarantee all the risks for the banks hffected by placing the necessary frinds at their disposal, which will Immediately satisfy all the Danish and foreign creditors. ROOSEVELT SAYS CRITICS LIED. Answers Statements Made Regarding Use of Federal Patronage for Taft. Washington. President Roosevelt on Sunday made answer to the recent public statements that he has mads use of federal patronage to further the presidential interests of Secretary Taft The answer is In form of a letter.- addressed to William Dudley Foulke of Richmond, Ind., and Includes a letter from Mr. Foulke to the president suggesting the need of such a statement The president begins by characterizing the charges as "false and malicious." He follows this with an analysis of all appointments sent by him to the senate for Its action to show that In no case has the proximity of a presidential contest Influenced bis action. RIFLED BANKS VAULTS. Between $40,000 and $50,000 Mysterl-ouel- y Disappears from Salt Lake Bank. Salt lake City. It has Just been discovered that some time during the month of January, some one, presumably an employe, abstracted between $40,000 and $50,000 from the vaults of the Utah National bank of this city. There Is a theory that some employe of the bank, who had access to the unsealed' envelope, got the combination to the reserve money chest, and St a time that was favorable worked the combination and made the biggest haul that Is known to local banking circles. The directors have made good the loss, and detectives are Working on the case. : GRUESOME FIND IN OAKLAND Body of Woman, Sacked and Buried, Unearthed by Workmen. Oakland, Cal. Workmen, making an excavation for a sewer at tire corner of Gibson and Kimball avenues in Elmhurst, discovered the dead body of a woman In a sack, burled about three feet under ground. A quantity of quick lime wan also In the sack, and the remains were so badly decomThe posed as to be unrecognizable. body was found not far from the home of A. Wilkins, who Is now In the Alameda county jail, charged with the murder of Mrs. Verna Carmen, formerly of Kansas City, with whom he lived, and whose body was dug up Inside a shed back of their residence. Wilkins admits that he buried this woman, but asserts that she committed suicide. Horse Race From Denver to Ogden. Ogden, Utah Particulars have been received reagrdlng the horse race to be run from Ogden to Denver from F. O. Bonflls, publisher of the Denver Post The race will be more of an endurance test between eastern and western horses. Six prizes will be given by the Post, aggregating $1,000, for the successful contestants. The winner of the first prize will receive $500. Cavalry horses from the United StateB army will be entered In the contest. The Judges will be selected from Utah, Colorado and Wyoming. MeasDemocratic Leader Introduces ure Agreed Upon by Minority Members of Committee on Banking. Washington. What will be known as the minority currency bill was Introduced on Friday by Representative John Sharp Williams of Mississippi, the Democratic leader of the house, who drew the measure as a result of a harmonious conference of Democratic members of the bouse committee on banking. It repeals all laws permitting national banka to keep three-f- i ths of their reserves In national banks of reserve cities and similar laws permitf of tbe ting such deposit of reserve amounts. It provides that not less than one-haof the reserves now required to be kept In lawful money in central reserve cities shall be hereafter held in gold or gold certificates. It does away with tbe payment of national bank examiners by tbe fee system, and substitutes salaries not less than $3,000 nor in excesB of $5,000 yearly, with actual expenses. It provides that the total liabilities of any national bank, exclusive of tho liabilities of Its members, shall not of the banks paid-iexceed and and unimpaired capital stock, h of Its impaired surplus funds; and that In no event shall the liabilities exceed 30 per cent of the capital stock. No national bank shall loan in the aggregate more than seven times the amount of Its paid-ucapital plus its unimpaired surplus. Any national bank may keep 50 per cent of Its reserve In United States bonds or bonds of states, or tn the bonds of certain municipalities, h of the hut not more than total reserve may be kept In state or municipal bonds; and the bonds shall be acceptable only of such municipalities as have maintained their bonds at or above par for six years precedexist-ens- e ing, and have been in corporate ten years, and have never defaulted In their funded debt, and whose net Indebtedness does not 18 per cent of their taxable one-hal- lf n one-tent- h one-tent- p one-fourt- ex-cee- d property. The comptroller of the currency, immediately after the paasage of the bill, shall furnish a copy of the new law to each bank In the country and Inquire If It will accept the provisions. Consent shall be binding and the liabilities attaching to consent may be enforced by the comptroller. Agreement to accept the provisions shall entitle state banks and trust companies to the benefits of the new law, Tho elastic currency feature of the bill Is contained In a section which provides that these Interconvertible bonds may be deposited Tn the nearand the depositing est bank shall receive in lien thereof United States emergency treasury rotes subject to taxation, redeemable at any tlma, and legal tender. For the creation of a fund of for tho payment of depositors of failed banks, operating under the provisions of this law, there is authorized the Imposition of a tax of of 1 per cent on the de$45,-000,0- and posits of banks so operating, whose consent to be so taxed has been obtained. The final section of the bill provides that no bank officer shall make n loan for the purpose of stock gambling. lurtington la Bound for the Ceaat Cheyenne, Wyo. That the Burling (on railad directors have approved of a new transcontinental route from Its connection with the Northern Pacific In Montana to its terminus at Kearney, Neb., was stated by General Manager Holdredge of the Burlington in a hearing before the state engineer of Wyoming on Friday. The hearing was for the purpose of listening to a protest by the Burlington against the erection of a power dam on the Big Horn river by Aamua Boysen. URN TOBACCO Night Raiders BARNS. Contlnu Outrage) Down In Tennessee. Adams, Tenn. Night riders, well armed nnd mounted, visited the farml of Hugh C. Lawrence nnd Wash T. Vlcker, Frida" night, and destroys) their barna and 30,000 pounda of tobacco, shot and wounded Lawrence and his son, and whipped a negro unThe Lawrences mercifully. openej fire on the riders, who returned It wounding Lawrence In the cheek ami Lawband and hit son In the leg, rence nnd Vlcker never Joined the union. Land Fraud Sleuth la Dead. Portland, Ore. Frank Michael special agent of the department of the interior, died In this city on Sunday of Bright's disease. who was of noble Polish birth, achieved a splendid reputation for his work In connection with the Investigation of coal land frauds In Utah-- Wyoming and Colorado In 1906, nnd it was through his knowledge of the situation that enabled tbe Interstate commerce commission to bring the offenders to Justice. Meyendorff was 68 years of age. City Is Held Responsible, Los Angelos, Cal. An unusual vur diet was returned by the coroner'! Jury that Investigated the collision o i a Brooklyn a Salt Lake train with avenue car. In which the conductor ot th? latter, after giving tbe signal to go ahead, was killed by the crushed car toppling over on him. Rospons1' btlity for the accident la laid at th door of the city of Los Angeles, thn verdict chnrglng that the municipal government failed to provide a watchman at the crossing. Crops on Minidoka Project. Washington. Crop reports for tho Minidoka Irrigation project, southern Idaho, ,foi; the first year show gratifying returns. The total area on the north side of the river was 14,233 acres and 5,507 arres produced good crops and 6,798 fair. On the south side the acreage was 629, of which 80 per cent gave a fair yield. On tho north side of the river 648 farms were cultivated and nearly a third had good crops. The remainder, or over hnlf, had a fair yield, and the failures were only 16 per cent Come to Hla Term. Tangier. Cald Sir Harry MacLean, who has been held In bondage for the Mey-endorf- f, Mey-endorf- f, , Ralsull Forces Mighty Nation te past seven months by the bandit, Ralsull, has been officially turned over to the British charge d'affaires here, In beaccordance with the agreement tween Ralsull and the British government, under which Ralsull Is to receive $100,000 as a ransom, and a guarantee for protection for himself and family. MicLean Is In good health, but he aeems to be weaker and older than before hla capture. NORTHWEST I KOTl f Earle Ryan, aged 22 years, kn, young wife, of whom he wag B,J Jealous, at their home In Colorado by shooting her In the head, and I blew out his own brains. Judge James Hargis, Accused of Com Governor Toole of Montana pllcity In Many Murders, Murdered tendered his resignation to take $ by Drunken Son. April L He will be succeeded by, tenant Governor Edwin Norrlg, Former Chief Executiue of Penn governors health has been bad" Unfavorable tylvania Placed in ) Jackson, Ky. Former County Ju?ge pome time. Refusal of eastern railroads to Ilargls, for many years a member of Light by Witness. the state Democratic executive com- a special rate to Denver' next No mittee, accused of complicity In many ber may cauBe that city to lo. murders and a prominent figure In annual convention of tho Amen Claim la Made That Letter Intended the feuds which have disrupted Federation of Labor, scheduled to be Misleading and a White Breathitt county for Several years, take place at that time. ; was shot and killed in his general wash Wat Prepared at SuggesPresident Roosevelt last store here Thursday afternoon by his to the house bf representatives tion of Pennypacker Bon, Beach Hargis. The son fired five port of the special commission and Others. shots In rapid succession at his fa- vestlgatlon Into the Goldfield k ther, who fell dead while his clerks troubles, In reply to a recent ttt, 4y The ex- tion requiring him to do so. were waiting on customers. Harrisburg, Pa. The trial of Con act cause not been has of murder the Governor Sparks has received ig ot tractor Sanderson and three formei Is supposed to have been from President Roosevelt t state officers charged with conspiracy learned, but differences sage which have the result of in the furnishing of the new capltol, nounclng that Federal troops would "( turn on Friday, existed between father and son for withdrawn from Goldfield, March; cl took a sensational some time. The two men are report- la when Stanford B. Lewis, assistant to expected that the state police b ed to have had a quarrel several will be drawith Architect Huston, declared organized by that date. ; to when the father, It is almatic earnestness that Huston's let- nights ago, of Wyoming paid Into fr state The to resort to vioter to former Attorney General Car leged, was compelled fund In the last fiscal j,' a forest lence ta restrain Lis son. son, explaining his part In tbe con$162,919, divided Into the follot; fit Young Hargis was arrested and Items: at the sugTimber sales, $91,430; p Ilf tracts, had been prepared placed In Jail. He was raving like a Penny-packeth Governor former of gestion officers were com- Ing fees, $69,615; supplementary!; former Auditor General Sny- maniac, and the $1,511; ber sales, special privlltj to drag him to Jail. a der, one of the defendants, and Mr. pelled $362. Judge Hargis will be buried In a ot was misleading Carson, and that it one of Wolfe the firsts Coplnus, casket which he himself purchased and Intended to be a "whitewash. to engage In business In Anacos pl about a month ago. to According to Lewis story, when It and a pioneer iherchant of Monts r: came Hustons turn to write an andied at Rochester, Minn?., on Febm ad GIVES UP THE FIGHT. swer to Mr. Carson, Lewis was tele$, as a result of an operation perfon co phoned to come over to Harrisburg by Former Premier Franco Flees From In the hospital there. Coplnus op pa letana the Pennypacker and Snyder, Lisbon to Save His Life. the first store In Anaconda. ter was prepared at a conference with Col. B. F. Shaw, commanders as Lisbon. The secret and sudden those two officials and the former atvolunteers during the; j0 of Washington the former flight Franco, premier torney general, to dovetail in with of wars of 1835-56- , dian pioneer of ffs Lisbon from across the Portugal, conofficers others prepared by state died frontier into suddenly at; territory, lngton Spain, accompanied by and nected with the construction Ms wife and son, was caused by the home In Portland from a bursted The letter the of capltol. jj equipment to which Lewis referred was one ol threats of death which had been made vessel, following a violent attack an a series written during November and against him. Since the murder of the coughing. He was 7 years old. f an December, 1906, In response to the king, Franco has been In receipt of W. N. Cooley of Kallspell, Mont gr Carson Inquiry Into th capltol scandal. many letters, all threatening senior student In the englneerlnj hl Franco as dictator partment of Stanford university,! as DONT AGREE WITH PRESIDENT. had been Already plotted against and had shot and killed at 1 oclock in or gone about protected by armed guards, morning by W. Uhlman, engineer so' Claim Made by Treasury Department who also watched his house lest those the University power house. Coe, a That Roosevelt Has Exceeded who opposed his Iron rule should do had been to Menlo Park and when at His Authority. him harm, and of late to these were returned he got into Uhlmans (a m fla Washington. William S. Rosslter, added the enmity of those who held by mistake. appointed as acting public printer in that Franco was responsible. IndirectJacob Hilt, who was arrested n th' dace of Public Printer Stillings, went ly, at least, for the tragedy of Satur- time ago on a minor charge and wb wt n lo the treasury department on Friday day last. Two of Franco's ministers case was dismissed, has confessed The de- also have disappeared. to have his bond approved. while! the police of Portland that partment refused to consider the matwas In jail his cellmate, Joseph! r Coxey, Again in Public Eye. ter, on the ground that the president derson, confessed to him that he k , had exceeded his1 authority in appoint SL Louis. General" J. S. Coxey of killed Harry Logan, who was shot1 ing Mr. RoBsiter; that under the law Mount Vernon, O., who led an "army death on the Fourth street bridge J0 the associate public printer, Captaic of unemployed to Washington in 1895, eral months ago. H. T. Brian, succeeds to the vacancy arrived here on Thursday to take part Henry J. Gruber, on trial at Boclde Under this informal ruling Mr. Ros In the convention of Itinerant unemof a LVJc ae alter later In the day stepped aside ployed. The "general announced that Mont, for tbe hold-uPacific train near Butte last Mu.ul and his place was taken by Captain he has been making money during the the murder of Engineer Clow, hue Brian, who will administer the govftp ernment printing office as acting pub- past few years, and will use it to take mltted a written confession a out special train over tbe country Ing George Haskins, still to be te lic printer for the time being. Mr. Rosslter, however, does not relinquish to advertise a bill he has prepared. and George Towers, last week the work of inquiry laid out for him The bill provides that states, counties, tenced to ninety-nin- e years in theyy, by the presidenL Ills position in the townships and cities be permitted to itentlary for the crime. government prliAIng office becomes Issue bonds without interest, the bonds A publicity bureau has been crerwi that of the presidents personal rep- to be deposited with the government, resentative, and he la proceeding with which will permit the issuance of pa- in Denver by the executive commir 8 of the Denver convention lear the Investigation. per money to cover the face. of the which Is acting In connection with at bonds. 80N OF PRIEST A MURDERER. committee on arrangements for If Democratic national convention. Tsla Leader of Band Which Assaisinated Says Waste and Extravagance Caused of the bureau Is to send i " purpose Panic. King Carlo Came From Good and feature stories about kpos news Cincinnati. In his anual address Family. ver and Colorado from now until: " before the National Hardwood Lumconvention Is over. Rio Janeiro. The leader of the band ber association on yoi Thursday, PresiAn eloquent address was delivr1 that murdered King Carlos and Crown dent John B. Rasom declared that In the senate by Senator Pylei t Prince Lulz, at Lisbon, Is Manuel Ret wasteful extravagance In and Silva Bulssa, and he was born In business life was the cause public of tbe re- Washington, in favor of an approi'T1 the province of Braganza, PortugaL cent panic. He spoke of the value tfon by congress of $700,000 for I r He was a son of the Abbe ot Vlnhaea of the movement for eminent exhibit at the Alaska-Yu- t Improving the In and as a boy he went to the Lyceum waterways and national Pacific exposition to be held at Braganza. He bad nine brothers forest lands. He preserving said a large percent- next year. Mr. Pyles pictured In v and sisters, and one of hlg sisters, of the lumber mills were closed, language the settlement of the sho named Belmlra, lived until a short age but that the "lumbermen were far northwest In the face of predicti aim time ago In this city. Manuel was made by distinguished statesmen i not the first criminal In the family. from dead. The report of Secretary to the practical utility of One of his aunts killed a servant In Lewis Doster showed that 76 per cent verse region. her employ when she found that her of the mills had been shut down durtn husband was making love to tbe wo- ing the panic and that most of these By an order signed by Judge Lrer man. She was arrested and sentenced will not begin operations until March of the State District court at Bf to a long term of Imprisonment In 30 or later. Robert M. Lyons, receiver In chi'an(; Africa. of the Aetna bank, which failed In cioi During the last few years Bulssa Sailors Faced Death for Many Months. tober, 1906, is directed to bring was a Republican In politics, and he San Francisco. Tbe long overdue agalnBt F. Augustus Helnze, foRMla had friendly relations with membera on director, and A. B. Clements, forrliev of his party. He became a free schooner William Nottingham, thinker and It was his custom to de- which 50 per cent reinsurance was treasurer, for $97,500, the amount' fend his political Ideas In open dis- quoted, arrived here Thursday, 340 cash due for stock held by Helnn tim cussion In the Btreets and in the cafes dnys from New York, on her way to the bank and which, It has devetehan of Lisbon. Seattle via Melbourne. Daring llclnze never pakl for. Bulssa's friend, who supplied the the entire trip she encountered nearly A special from Lewlstown, rough foregoing Information, does not think weather and was obliged to remain at in sr that he accepted money for the com- Melbourne from Alugust 29 to October says John Walsh, aged 14, accidec: P,ei shot his brother ly mission of his crime. Manuel Bulssa 8 to repair damages nnd obtain a new soldier on a was vicious and wicked In many set of sails.. After ranch playing leaving that port, ways, but he was above taking money she sprang a leak, and for 120 days miles from town. The younger for murdor. Bulssa's family is well the men were forced to work at the died instantly. The two were d' off, not to say wealthy, and still lives pumps to keep afloat The officers and on the ranch when the accident at Vlnhacs. rrew were almost prostrated when curred. End this port was reached. James Cavln Towers, charged Tgqu Considered Needs of Larger Navy. C the murder of Engineer Frank )rl General Bell, chief of toe Gorge Changes Course of Stream Washington of the North Coast Limited train Bee staff of the army, by Invitation of and Floods Streets. the Northern Pacific, was found gQoo Representative Hobson of Alabama, Dillnnvale, O. Heavy rains caused at Boulder, Mont., of murder to5 g; spent three hours on Friday with the the loe In Port creek to gorge on house committee on naval affairs dis- Thursday, and at the Dlllonvllle Ath- second degree. The Jury recomnif'jy ed that the court impose a sen tone 8tep cussing the needs of a larger navy letic park a bank of Ice thirty feet 99 s years. i In relation to the Pacific coast fortififormed. This changed the course of haslmbm who State Wade, Engineer cations and defense. The fortification the stream and water and Ice covered of Sublg bay, near Manila, and the the lower portion of the town to a made a pint of the town of Cut Bfjny need of a dry dock at Pearl harbor, depth of fifteen feet. Fifty families Mont, will report to the state h'allly near Honolulu, were considered. A bill escaped from their homes by horses of land commissioners that practlc-les-t appropriating $200,000 for commence- and boats and first floors were sub- every business house and resident endi ment of the lutter project has been merged. Two Polish boys and one that town is Bltuated upon land o'dlsc Introduced. girl were drowned. by the state and by the Great N'rowl but ern railroad. Thaw Isn't Satisfied and Want to Submarines to Make Record Voyage. It was announced Sundny that Clant Move. New York. Three submarine boats eral Stewart L. Woodford had bplac Flshklll Landing. N. V. With tho of the United States navy, convoyed chosen president of the Hughes Leut purpose of seeking an asylum more by the converted yacht Hist, started of the United States, and that :batc from New York on Thursday on what notification meeting to be held at kecu congenial to Harry K. Thaw than where he la now confined un- is said to bo the longest trip ever Manhattan hotel February 17 der observance. Mrs. Evelyn Neablt made by submarines In the open sea. presidents nnd an advisory comnn will be chosen. Thaw and Daniel O'Reilly, one ol The flotilla Includes the Viper, TaranC Thaw'a counsel, will Inspect tho In- tula and Cuttlefish. Three directors of the defunct Their ultimate W Frees destination Is not tone asylum at Poughkeepsie. made public, but rado State bank, B. II. Mrs Thaw and Mr. O'Reilly visited Thaw they are expected to call at Delaware Frank Eldildge and W. C. CMP breakwater and Hampton Ronds, after were on Friday, when the arrested at Durango, Colo.. 0 contemplated visit to Poughkeepsie was discussed. which they will proceed to some point week, on the "P charge of receiving Joslah Thaw was also a caller on bit farther south, where, In warm waters, at at hank the branch PJoU posits they will engage (n a practice drill. brother. Springs when they know ths bank was Insolvent, , SHOT DOWN BY HIS SON wt r, i ven-getc- e. 1 1 p , lmt-'-a- n ; tf Mat-teuwa- |