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AL AND HIS PAL MAKE ESCAPE IN OSAGE HILLS Posse of Citizens Made No Attempt To Get Them Osage county, the rendezvous for bank robbers and others badly wanted in different places in Oklahoma and Kansas, again swallowed up its children and protected its own when the two bandits who robbed the Chautauqua State bank at Chautauqua, Kans., Monday afternoon of about $1,000 in cash and currency, eluded a posse who were following them and under the cover of darkness made their escape into the Osage hills. The two bandits, said to be Al Spencer and Dick Gregg, escaped in a Hudson speedster following the robbery. An airplane was commandeered by the pursuit and located the bandits near the Bill Easley ranch. A posse of citizens overtook the bandits near Hurd, but believing in the old motto of "safety first," made little or no attempt to capture the men. The bandit car became stalled near Hurd and the robbers took to the woods. It was at this point that the posse overtook them and the bandits took to the woods on foot. The car used by the bandits was stolen from Pawhuska last week and belonged to an Osage Indian. Sheriff Henderson made a trip to the vicinity of Hurd Monday evening but was unable to find any trace of the posse supposed to be trailing the bandits. Osage county officers are reported to be getting so used to the pranks of Spencer that they pay little or no attention to his activities. Through the misunderstanding of a phone message the Enterprise reported in Monday evening's paper that the bank had been robbed at Sapulpa, Okla. This was a mistake and referred to the Chautauqua bank robbery. Moonshiners to Prison. Oklahoma City, Feb. 20.—Fines of $100 and sentences of one year each in the penitentiary were assessed today against John Hurrett and William Butrel, who pleaded guilty to charges of possessing a still. The penalties, meted out by District Judge Wm. Zwick, are the first since the recent passage of a law by the state legislature making the offense a felony.