Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
10 END. MAKE MTS ON TWO WOM Yosses Formed to Hunt in the Dark for Urtknown Assailant Who Spreads Terror in Berkeley. (iy Dotted Presa HERKELEY, ¢ July 31.—The police are i a at a who ts thought © a hegre oF Mexican, wh Li ! attacked two women in Weat Be ey last night The first woman a ted by th flond was Mra, Fred Williams, wife of a contrac a the fellow At ver whed forward and w an fought desperately Mre. Williams wa Ave husband, who rus house to her ald man fled and succeeded in eluding his pursuera Mrs. } vietim of the Anna Lacy she Ninth at. near Austt after Mra, Williams had been by the fellow The man deliberately walked up to her and began to shower blowe upon her head and body. Scream: fug, she fell to the sidewalk, and the b fled, once more making his escape from a posse of angry citt zens who had already begun to search the vicinity after the Williams outrage Aa the result of the attacks citi sens and policemen formed posses and @ search was kept up all night without results. A HALT St fiend, With Mra was Walking down a few minutes felled ary Rusenan was the next} TWO HUNDRED AIOTERS SHOT ~— BY SOLDIERS Spanish Government Tries to Quell Disorders by | Killing Ringleaders in Serious Outbreaks. BARCELONA July "1 ‘Twe hundred rioters were summarily tried, convieted by court martial and Ox t by the military authort The men executed were at various times through few days and held {| today This moro ing they were lined up against a wall and shot The aut that by mak ing whole executiona matters of public knowledge they may be able to overawe the revolutiontate and put an end to the rlots apite the shooting of the re today tive in the suburba, where fired on heuses and destroyed jalderable property, A number of |lives were lost, but no report made | of the total number 200 the rioters were ac they In the clty proper the troops have the situation pretty well in hand. The insurgents are not dis heartened by the victory of the |government, but the military offi cers In command of the elty de jelare the uprising Is near tte end. | | They declare that the backbone of jthe revolution is broken and that ft cannot be revived } Fighting will probably continue |for several days, as there remain js large number of Insurrectionists who have not been subdued. [CHRGES AGHAST YWOGE YKEY ARE. SVEN COMMITEE HUNDREDS ARE DEAD IN TERRIBLE QUAKE Mexican dreds Are Dead, (My United Press) CITY OF MBXICO, July Reports received here today Indl cate that 600 persona were killed in the earthqua which shook Central Mexico yesterday Five believed to be totally destroyed and a number of wrecked by towns are others were partially the tremblors The heaviest damage ta thought to haw been done at Mhilapa, 75 miles from Acapuleo, which the messages today indicate was wiped ompletely off the face of the earth ed to death under falling walle there and thelr bodies cremated tn the fire which followed. Tidal Wave Reported, Reports state that a tidal way followed the great earthquake yes terday and engulfed the water front and a large section of Acapulco. People are rendered panio strick en by the damage wrought by the tes of tremblors, and many are fleeing from the country Bearch of the ruing of Chilpan cingo and Guerrero will add to the liet of casualtios, it la considered certala Hidalgo Titlan, in the atate of Vora Crus, le reported to be almost totally destroyed by the tidal Accura reports of the damage done cannot be obtained until tele graph communteation Is established Reports from the quake sone tp dicate that refugees from the stricken cities «are = suffering severely Completely Destroyed. A message from G. ros, an American commercial traveler, re ceived from the town of Chilpac ingo, says that the place has been Towns Along the Coast Destroyed and It Is Estimated That Hun- _— THE STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1909. COIFFURE Here to the proper atyle In’ hatr look tallor-made-—and | bangs, you see need a bushel of extra halr in order fo get It up in proper shape, and it lia worn by fonable women, The bangs are curled | Jambewool roll, and fastened ia the center of the back with a large shell the large, worn, braided only ornament flat, wb | The | | | loonely ewiteh brought entirely eround the head Is the only false hair worn Its the prettiest interpretation of the banged pompadourless colffure yet shown. One bright girl | know showed me the other day two new summer petticoats she had made, and they were the prettiost an well as the |simplest garments I ever saw of the kind It ta necessary for this young woman to economize in every ¥ Jand her summer laundry blils are | weekly tragedies to her, She loves dainty summer dresses, and the problem of petticoats to wear with |them nearly distracted her, wutil abe hit upon thie solution. She bought sine yards of white cotton crepe at 15 cents « yard eight yards of narrow iinen lace at 6 cents a yard, and nine yards of the eame kind of lace, only wider. at 56 cents a yard, and made two tight-fitting petticoats with full knee flounces trimmed at the bem |with the wide Ince, and narrow dust completely destroyed, The shocks| ruffles trimmed ‘with the narrow contiuve, accompanied by subter-| lace. ranean ramblings and electrical) They are pretty, they ft beautt storms. fully, they do pot creep up, and they Immense damage has been| need only to be washed, dried and wrought on the it cow Com-|ehaken out to be ready to wear munication with the cities of Chi lata and Chilpactago ia cut off and it ls feared they both have suffered weverely A heavy death lst is feared in the atate of Guerroro. It ia rumored that 16 persons were killed In Santa Julia, a suburb of thie city, making a total of deaths in the ral district of 20 and the ay = A, \, p. E, |STATE BAR ASSOCIATION HAS| aumber of persons badly injured 55. -_—— ‘The total attendance at the A.Y P. exposition passed the milifon and a half mark today. During the month of July the exposition fn all) departments did almost exactly 50 cent more business than during une. The attendance of 660,000 In) June waa increased to more than 850,000 for July. The total receipts of the Pay Streak attractions since June 1 have been $497,000, of which $200,000 was June business, The exposition’s percentage for June amounted to $36,000, for July nearly $55,000. The flat rate con- ceasions wil} net the exposition several thousands more. “In running 60 per cent better for July than for June the expost- tion business has met all our ex- tions,” said Director General adeau. “The fair has made a steady profit. The cost of opera- tion has not been over $175,000 per month, while our recelpts for June ‘were about $230,000, and the July ought to show about $530. Thirty per cent of our bonded Indebtedness bas been paid off and we will pay 10 per cent more in a few days, The Seattle fair has more than doubled the record of Portland's exposition for the first two months.” FLIGHT CARRYING ONE GOES OVER TEN-MILE COURSE WITH LIEUTENANT OF SIGNAL CORPS, WASHINGTON, D. C., July 31- Orville Wright last night attained the zenith of his hardearned suc cess, In a ten-mtle cross-country filght, accompanied by Lieut. Ben. Jamin D. Foulers, of the army sig- nal corps, he not only surpassed the speed requirements of his con- tract with the government, but ac- complished the most difficult and daring flight ever planned for a heavierthanatr flying machine Incidentally he broke all speed records over a measured course Hig speed was more than 42 milee an hour, He made the 10 miles flight in 14 minutes and 42 seconds He went up nearly 500 feet in his prossing of the valley of Four-Mile Run and hie average altitude was about 200 feet President Taft arrived upon the arade ground at Fort Myer just in Qimne to see the aeropline land and lo participate in the wild demon stration which welcomed the triumphant aviators CAPT, FIOKE HAS MARY IVENTONS (By United Press.) NAVY YARD, PUGET SOUND, July 31.—Resides directing the Affaire of a flagship and the 800 men under his command, Capt. Bradley A, Fiske, commanding offt cer of the flagship Tennessee at this yard, devotes his spare time to working out inventions of value to the American navy, He holds $4) CORDOVA, July 81—When the patents in the United States, the| steamer Northwestern arrived from Mout Important of which |e on aj Seattle last night with 184 mem naval the navies of polnting. In @ recent article published in the proceedings of the naval insti tute, Capt. Fiske resents the at tempt of Commander Charles N Robinson, of the British navy, to claim for the British navy the credit for originating the present system Of nave! gunnery with telescopte sights. teleseope sight the used In all world in gun THE REPORT AND WILL ACT ON IT IN TIME, (By United Prem) ABERDEEN, Wash, July 31—| The Whehington Tar assoctation, lending Its sessions late yesterday,| selected Hellingham as tte next meeting place. | Charges preferred against Sw pertor Jadge J. B. Yakey of Kitsap county by State Senator J Ww.) Bryan, alleging that the judge fa| lgullty of keeping an irregular ex |pense account and traveling on @ | pass, were referred to the grievance | committee. | Pending the outcome of the} charges hanging over him in con-| [nection with embesziements from | the Great Northern railroad, no ac tion was taken looking to the dis barment of former Supreme Judge} M. J. Gordon of Tacoma. The election of officers resulted as folle: President, C, C. Gone, Walla Walia; secretary, C. W Sohaffer, Olympia; treasurer, Ar thar Remington, Olympla. Today the members of the asso | west coast were down. This was | Many elation are on a trip to Westport. MAAN THINKING HE IS CICK WAKES UP TOWN (Ry United Prev) ROSEBURG, Ore, July 31- “Help! Help! I'm sick!” This strange cry aroused many residents of this city In the early hours this morning, and a8 « result, a young man giving his name as Otto § Bourne fs in tae county jail, awalt ing an Inquest as to ils sanity. Bourne went to one residence and after gaining admission, telephoned for a physician, When the doctor arrived, he refused to take the med icine that was offered. When or dered to leave the house, he con tinued through the residential sec tion, waking up people and crying for help. When it was found that ho re fused ald when it was offered, he was arrested. He sald that his home was in St. Paul, Minn., and {that he had a# brother in Buell, | Idaho ‘BORROWS ON FARM HE DID NOT OWN | j (By United Press.) | 2 ELL, Wash., July $1.~Steve Beskit has been arrested in Tacoma reed with grand larceny by C. W. Boynton, manager of the bank of Boynton Bros, & Co, of this} place Beskit had borrowed $150 of the bank, giving as wecurity a personal |mortgage on some personal prop erty. He represented that he own jed a ranch near here. It transpires that he had bargained for the }ranch and pald $50 on it, but did| not own It, “ENTERTAIN. EDITORS | (iy United Pres.) bers of the National Lge An soctation party the editora found | Cordova prepared to welcome them. A large elcome arch had been erected across the principal stree |A special traln will today carry the | Visitors over the Copper River & Northwestern rallway to the end of construction and will give them a grand view of the glaciers that feed the river. This evening a recep tion and ball will be given, Six Are Killed. Bix persons were killed In Mex feo City and ite environs, Four persons are in boepltals, thetr re covery despaired of The large American colony ce caped unscathed. The peons were terribly frightened. For days they had been predicting disaster, be cause the anow on the peak of the voleano Popocatapet!, visible from this city, has been molting. An old Antec logend declares that when the snow on this volcano disappears, so will the clty at ite base. The property damage here le slight, Bome of the cathedral walls were cracked and scores of adobe walls were sent to the ground, but the main business district showed no signs of the severe shaking which it bad received. All electric currents in the city were shut off at the first shock, and the city re mained tn darkness, Wires Are Down. When the federal telegraph at- tempted to work yesterday, the of fictals found that the wires to the the first intimation that the sea coast had been in the throes of an earthquake. No communteation with the state of Guerrero, the con- ter of the earthquake region of Mex- feo, could be established After hours of effort a wire wos opened by a roundabout way on the Isthmus of Tehauntepec. e first message came from the port of Acapulco and was directed to the director of telographa. It read “Acapulco te in ruins, The loss in incalculable.” Communtestion was then lost. Shortly after 2 o'clock another wire was opened up direct to Acapulco, A message said the lower half of the city had been destroyed. WASHINGTON, July” 31—Tn a message to the department, Ambas sador Thompson says “Two long, severe earthquakes occurred in the valley of Mextoo last night and probably covered all of the territory between here and the Pacific coast. The wires are in bad shape, but it ls reported that Acapulco wan entirely destroyed Probably # dozen persona were kill od here.” SENATE ADDS SUM TO DEFICIENCY BILL (Ry Cntted Press) WASHINGTON, D. C. The urgent defi was reported to t day carries $1,10 of $687,826 from the bill as passed by the house. T principal in- creases were required in order to carry out provisions of the new tariff law Other appropriations were: $100, 000 for nec ary expenses of for: eign trade relations, which come within the Jurisdiction of the state department; $6,000 each for horses and carriages or automobiles for the president and speaker of the house; $7,500 as extra compensation for of. ficers composing the riot committee, and $25,000 to de fray classifying lands in the Yakima Indian reservation BIG MINE IS SOLD (hy Valted Prees.) LO8 ANGRLES, Gale July a1.— John Hayos Hammond, who has been {n Mexico for several wooks, ily I— 1 which senate on Mow 185, an increase has concluded negotiations for the} purchase of the Santa Gertrudis mine, one of the old Pachuca group, according to an announcoment made here today, He acted, it Is report ed, on behalf of Camp Bird, Lamntod, of London, the purchase prece be. Ing $9,000,000, Mexiean Brownsville} again. They can be worn with any summer dress except the very thin white frocks len't she clever, |mine? The smart | trouble with clothes | this friend girl bas of no | MAINLY ABOUT WOME! Old Fashions Revived, ‘The latest fad which the directotre has helped to bring about Is the patch, Both French and English |women e@re reviving this olf style but not yet with the exaggeration ot bygone days Bo far it ta only a bit of black court plaster on which- ever part of the face It sete otf beet, and with the elaborate hairdressing day and the long clinging gowns it te an effective fashion. fio far only dives and little eres. conte have been seen in Parle or ANG DINNERS FEATURE Of NEXT WEEK Formal Functions Planned in Honor of Five Governors to Be at the Exposition. With three governors now visit- |ing In Seattle and two more, with a Meutenant governor, coming next week, the A-Y.-P. exposition will be the scene of more functions, formal, itles and festivities during the com ing seven days than at any time since it opened. Gov. Glasscock of Weat Virginia and Johnson of Min- nesota are now in Seattle, aa ts Gov. Hay of this state. Charles E Hughes of New York comes tomor row to celebrate New York Day on }Monday. Lieutenant Gov, Cox of Kentucky |» also due tomorrow, Kentucky Day being Monday also, Tuesday tf Minnesota Day, and Gov, Johnson will unyell the Hill atatue Also it is Miseourl Day, Twin-City Day and Snohomish County Day. On Wednesday Gov. K. F. Noe! will be in Seattle to help celebrate Missiasippl Day. [t will be Olympta Day and Woodmen of the World Day as well. Thureday is Alaska Children's Day, and Friday ts Alaska Wom en's Day, and National Hostesses Day. Also Illinois Day, Lewiaton,, Idaho, Day, Chehalis County Day, and Sigma Nu Fraternity Day. Sat- urday will conclude the week with Indiana Day, Renton Day Washington Rural Letter Carriers’ Association Day, WILL BUILD BIG STORE A bullding for a large department store ia to be the next structure by the Metropolitan Buti@ing company, on the old University tract The building will be bullt on» the went side of Fourth av. between | University and Seneca sts, and will Jeont $750,000, MINERS ARE OVERCOME. PITTSBURG, Kan, July 3 Forty miners were overcome by in the Central Coal & Coke Co.'s mine, No, $1 quickly placed out of Twelve were seriously three perhaps fatally hurt danger. injured, INSURANCE MEN COMING, One hundred members of the Weat Coast Life Insurance company are expected to arrive in the clty to- night from Ban Francisco, their headquarters, in order to celebrate their day at the exposition. LET BIG CONTRACT. The board of public works yeater day let the contract for the regrad ley, for $862,463.60, TAILOR-MADE GIRL dressing for the girl who waate to inchides | And fan't it pretty? It ik no simple that one does not), New York's most fash the hair ie parted, and waved back over a small LE NAAN MN MOET ES Ma ELT And) | water front, have all heen ¢ All but fifteen were | ing of Dearborn wt. to Lewis & Wis FOR THE Fron YH” CQDK_ BGDK ° _ Carry plete lines at Cornatarch Pudding. level tabloe 6 level tablespoon poons cor Bight stare. suger | 4 level tablespoons cocoa dash of walt, 1 quart milk, wet the mixture A} | with a little cold milk and put rest on to heat, Use a double boiler and etir constantly about min || utes after pouring the hot milk on Flavor with 1 teaspoon vanille after removing from fire and put in mold to cool, Serve with cream Honey Popoorn Balle Take @ pint of honey, put in agate dish and boll un th k, then stir in freshly popped corn, and when coor) mold inte balla Fried Scallops. el, drain an ar be tween towels, Beason with salt ar | pepper; roll in fine crumbs, dip ty egg, again in crumbs and fry 2 mit Jutes In deep fat, then drain with sauce lhrown paper. } | Rye Muffins | One-half cup rye meal, 1 cup flour, % cup sugar, 1 ogg, 2 ten spoons baking powder, plneh of salt "lense try port 1 cup mith and re} London tn the they are very much worn, Rye Bread with Bour Milk Two and one-half cups sour milk lard the size of an ems, # little salt, |# cups rye meal, 1 cup bread four 12% even teaspoons soda, 2 table spoons molasses, Bake in a mod ate oven until when tried with a knitting needle it will not atich | In Defense of “Old Maids.” “Old maids” are accused of being | | prim and narrow-minded, yet every | thing in the life of the “old maid” of today tends to make her just the « poate. The very fact that #he hi to flight her own battles and do b beat to see both sides of an argu. | ment makes her far more broad-| | minded and tolerant than the aver Materials | ge married woman.—The World and| Green corn, twelve ears; sugar.) j Hie Wite lone and one-half cups; vinegar, tw _— cupa; sweet pepr three: tumer / The Untidy Woman. fe, one and one-half teaspoons All worr t be beautiful, white mustard seed, two table but every woman may be neatly and| spoons; celery # one table tidily dressed tf she only will And] spoon; salt, two tablespoons; olive lit ie @ good policy to take trouble | oll, two tablespoons, and cabbage jover one's clothes one head j | People are very apt to judge a woman by her appearance, and if | she ts slovenly in her attire think she tx probably po 4 M O.T HE RA | A mother who looks abead has! Ten things for wh no one has ever yet been sorry. They are posted these seven printed rules on | 1. For doing good to the door of the b oom belonging! 2 For being patient toward ev-|to her two little daughters 1 | erybody Bhut the door, and shut ft softly 3 For hearing before jude Keep your room tn tasteful order 4, For thinking before speaking Have an hour for arixing, and} 6. For holding an angry tongue. | arise, i « For being kind to the dis- Never lot a button stay off 24 treened houre. } 1 For asking pardon for all Always know where your own be wrong® | longings are j $. For speaking evil of none Never let a day pase without do-| 6 For stopping the ears to tale-|ing something (to make someone bearers comfortable | 10. For disbeileving most of the I; Never come to breakfast looking reports ‘untidy, sree see = merelal center of Japan. It ts one of the most picturesque cities of the empire, being girdied with canals an la Venice Situated at the head of the gulf of Osaka in Central Japan, the stricken city would have been the FLAMES AGE DESTROYING jbut for the shallowness of the | water tn ite harbor, which has kept) jit from becoming one of the most) Mr. Allen arrived in the city only important porte of the world. ja few days ago, and is greatly | no the rice and tea center of pleased with tle. He te stop-| 3 | the empire, and there fs but a small ping at the Washington Annex |reaident foreign population, though | 7 | Chief Commercial City ot] Re cee aS ake gon ™ Mrs. Sam Haner Cured ‘ | Japan Fire Swept and . (My United Press) today by a fire, which ie sweeping | New York Day, with Gov, Charies | Osaka. More than 6,000 ho t the A.-Y.-P, exposition on Mon-! Loss of Life Believed to MONDAY 1 AE NEW OBAKA, Japan, July %1.-—-One- YORK OY MT FAIR fourth of thie city was destroyed | Sy Te. Rep jonward with terrific fury and|® Hughes, of that state, as the jthreatens to burn every building | Principal apeaker, will be celebrated a |have already been destroyed, and | (4 Hughes will arrive in [it te believed that the loss of life | Seattle tomorrow morning and be Gov has been enormoun met at the Union station by a com The aqueduct has been dried up| Mtter of the looal New batsty sort by the fire, and firemen are pow.|9tY: At the A.-¥.-P, Amphitheatre etless to combat the Names Monday, 16,000 people will have an opportunity to hear the New York | Dynamite te being used tn an at | Day address by the man made fa | | jtempt to check the fire, with but t+] nous through the Insurance inves tle success, ” © clo o re leity by the hundreds to aid In} ; ps fighting the fire and to control the Guntur paisecnin Ne fall a8 6, preai- panicstricken poople. — 46 bog ‘The fire started early this morn-| The program for New York Day ling, when a resident of the North: | #t the fair includes an informa ern district upset a lamp. luncheon to the governor and party His house caught fire, which soon | @t the New York Bullding at 12:20 |apread to other buildings In the vi Pvp? program in the Amphitheatre at elotty. 2:00, a reception at the New Yor | The fire traveled with great| State Building from 3:00 to 6:04 rapidity, and thousands of houses | and « formal banquet at 7 in the | were reduced to ashes. The flamoa |New York Hullding |Sey: an’ tonight the ‘siteetion to| BON MAR CHE i ic BIG DISPLAY TODAY desperate. Canal Water Bolling. | Bo intense has become the heat| after the main aqueduct dried up| One of the down town features of has become boiling hot and only! the Swedish day is the decorations explosives can now be employed 10| of the Ron Marche in honor of that from the thoursande of flaming| structures that water in the canals, | which the firemen attempted to use | ec {hall tn the Armory building, tn hon-| most populous elty of the empire| meeting the G. A. R. will install leick to my stomach and vomit be | health and ey get in the way of plies ig abso fresh, We Develop, Print and Enlarge fg Amateurs ———— and Better, cheaper than they can do it themselves. The Quaker of Drug Co. 1013-15 first Ave. 406 Pike St BOOTH DECLARES IT 1S FOOL quicker Wine and Liquor company,” a cor-| poration, vs, Thomas Mack, has! TH i served the following highly dignt-| ' fied notice, of which a copy is file be 4 with the court, upon the American | « . ver Savings Bank and Trust company, | ds HAVE NOT who are made parties to the gar-| AIR” BAY nisbee proceedings. It is a literar PRESW Rew a well as belng otherwise _— interesting |. Margaret B, To the American Savings Bank| [ ore and Trust Company:—You are} out hereby notified that th ast known! A-y Pp ¢ place of residence of Thomas Mack, | ind whose account with you has been| writt thie day garnisheed | agate me entitied action, is at | In # Jetter ¢ ing tn the county jail of Spokane) states that the county, Spokane, state of Wash found te ton, according to the best informa-| Btreak x tion and bettef of the mndersigned.| taken the ma The business, ocenpation, trade or| altior cage profession of the said Thomas|denies that they hei gmt Mack {# not definitely known to| sending out “knocks” the undersigned, but I will state! sition : that until stopped by the United| Mrs. Blake's Jetie States authorities, he was a travel-| character of the WG ing man. This notice is served in|no de compliance with one of the fool| ards ar laws of the legisiature of 1900 Our 5 (Signed) RORERT BOOTH dors Attorney for Plaintiffs.” | authorities and The delicious mixture of tenses! *d our efforts and persone ie really worthy of | ™4nity. ‘ Preservation, especially since tt t#| Your a the accomplishment of a styte sen-| D&T of the W. st ator, Mack is charged with pass. | *7Stematle a ‘all ing three worthless checks fo the fair ts aatriey the plaintiff company, to been among the mont, amount of $69.05 altogether, and conslateng we omenneen levery chann OT. Members of the General Custer | licity have camp, Sona of Veterans, will hold | clean exposition, damm & reception this evening in their | port of Christ “When 6 or of Edgar Allon, jr, of Washing. | brought to our ton, D. C, commanderin-chief of | {ted ceitictam J the organization. At the same | been referred at @ sition man the officers elected at Tacoma re- cently. Lifetime of Sufferin “I am fifty-two years of age and{He has have been a constant sufferer with | my body, headaches, dizzy spells, would geting, od cause of nervousness, had pains in and | am over] my spine and back, also my kid-| ings that hai oto neys. For over ten years I have |Dr. Dickey, 1 cammety been constipated, »o chronic I had | wonderful 5 to take cathartics every day of! enough, and | my life, I suffered with Indi, mend him tion, Could not est nor sleep. faa | who is wut ine in my head and base of| (Signed. rain. My eyes began to pain, iteh- | “122 Pidelgo be ed and became tnflamed and dis-! Cross eyes atrelg eased and watered, my sight be ration or jan to fall, my right eye going | antiseptically ft lind. 1 doctored in the East with! With 20 years all kinds of doctors and eyo @pe | ence ay an e| Claliats, no one giving mo relief. |heing a t I tried the doctors here with no bet | collegon of G ter resulta, my eyes getting worse, | am prepared to 1 was at last recommended by Mr& |the most T. A. La Bhure, who had been suf Entire J ey as 1 had, and been cured, to joo too Dr. F, W. Dickey, 204-205 Peo- CONSULTATION FM ple’s Bank ag On Jupe 17th J Charges DR. consulted Dr, W. Dickey. He F W. ‘7 } . . Amertean aA ¢ examined thoroughly, mentally and physically, located the causa, which was due to conditions at the “erman time of birth, He treated my eyes, a corrected my Vision, and gradually 204-205 Peo restored my sight, fitting me with Corner proper glasses. He treated my muse! Offloe houre: cular troubles and nervous system Sundays, 10 to 22 me Phone, Malt by giving me electrical treatments. Specials for Today a j fighting the conflagration, Over) occasion. The main entrance on Choice, fresh dressed hens “ jthree square miles of the city t8| Second ay, is covered with large! poring rae eT now in ashes and It ts certain (Mt) Swedish flags and “Valcommen Spring lamb shoulder chops a.) ‘hundreds of the panic stricken in inane Three huge tas ard When visiting the public market look up this number [habitants who attempted to escape | hung ucross Second av., a large | jby the canals, which traverse the! gwedish flag in the center and a} elty, have met fearful deaths }emaller American flag on each side Tho great toa houses, the largest | of jt, Across the lower end of each in the empire, which od the) fag is written in huge white letters stroyed, | "Welcome, Governor On the and, unless there in a change tn the) gwedish flag these words are in direction of the high wind now gwodiah, TOLO THE TOURISTS Soldiers Fight Flames, (By United Press.) An entire army division from the Osaka military district is now dew perately ane in attémpting to check the conflagration, .and the detonation from the explosives ts adding freeh terror to the stricken LOS ANGHLES, Cal, July SL Rosenting the horrible tales told to | tourlets by white and yellow China town guides, the local Chinese Chamber of Commeroe will meet to- night to discuss plans to abolish the inhabltgnts, The famous caatie, built In 1588, evil they aver ts harming their bus- inews jand one of the most famous struc tures of the empire, Is directly in jthe path of the flames and cannot escape destruction Osaka has @ population of over a million inhabitants and tx the com 1822-24 PIKE PLACE, CHICKENS DRESSED TO ORDER. THE GHOEMAKER, It you can't get boots or H shoes to fit you, get them made H to measure a17 JAMES 8 MALLEABLE RANGES The p of _ every ay é nat Aa stove 409,000 at n Shoes an | POYNGR—FURNITU Baves You 30 per Waldort Bi 708-10 Pike St