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Farmers Protected © Financially Until Shortage : Is Overcome ~ BY EDWIN D. RIDER “KANSAS CITY, Aug, 9.—Ask a “Kansas farmer what he thinks about will make it 50 home runs this and he'll reply by asking if happen to know where he can & wheat car. "Wransportation—that's all Kansas ig ing about these days. the lack of cars is delaying day for a mammoth wheat crop. Phe lack of cars has put a strain on country’s banks, which in turn taxed to the limit the city A a laa ATION IMPROVED LAST FEW WEEKS wer, the car shortage ts improved over three or four ago. looked mighty dark a month "but more cars are coming into now,” says J. C. Mohler, sec of the Kansas state agricul- ure board. officials here say about tars of wheat are coming into City a day now, as compared and 600 a year ago. it the present rate, it will take 5." declares Governor Allen. 9 crop was 125,000,000 bush- . Twelve months after it was har ited, the brokendown transporta- System still has at least 25,000, Dushels of that crop to move! add the present bumper crop pated at from 147,000,000 to 200,- bushels! C is Kansas, rich in wheat, but on cash, going to fight its way this situation ty Governor Worthington of Reserve bank, is opti- over the financia! situation. tightened all other lines of last spring just to be ready to for the agricultural interests,” | Worthington. “All banks which Bye been run on a sound basis have ig to fear.” F. Swinney, president of the rst National bank, casually men- 4 that his bank had borrowed last spring from the Fed- ve bank to care for its correspondents. “And it's banks have all been cared cannot be marketed. ket, will check reckiess ‘CANADA DROPS _ WHEAT BOARD eting Will Revert to Pre-War Methods OTTAWA, Ont, Aug. 9—The Do government has decided that wheat board will not function in | far as the wheat crop of 1920 is This was announced by George Foster, minister of trade ‘exop,” to the “gd times. The government will, 4 , carefully watch the condi tions outside of Canada and will ex the right to proclaim the en legislation of last sea: gaid Sir George, “will revert Ro such action will be found neces ary” | This, however, was before the re Jed the government to rescind its act Operation Trade. The thie pigeons. The raids began under the sparrow. bushels of grain intended for immedi the Board of Trade. Tons of sam Plex are spread about on tables : sample grain. i With the establishment 72 years| a &g0 of the great open market where! of the law of supply and demand ns increase re virt) years went on the pige and the sparrows w elisninated. of grain have been’ pilfered, whic under prevailing prices of whi value of over $6,000. Tides in Sea First Low Tide Second Low Tide First High Tide Second Low Tide I howeve Second High ‘Tide BIG DOCK BEGUN AT KIRKLAND First Constructed on Lake for Ocean Commerce or Harding or whether Babe} |General Stock List at New York Is Off as Trading Is Begun | NEW YORK, Aug, &—After a turbulent day prices on the stock @x- change were steadier at the close today, The market was nervous thru- fout the day, after a big slump at the opening. During the fourth b , gains were made by practically all Madera, and these were intained until th one. Reports of the Russian-Potish situation, « @rep in foreign exchange, expecially demand eterling, and the reports of cotton mille in New Eng- land closing, were the bear factors. ‘Timid traders rushed for cover at the opening and for @ time there were scenos resembling the wild market in when the Buropean war broke out, Improvement in the demand sterling quotations and optimistic reports on the Russo-Pollsh situation from W netOn, coupled with the decision by the conference of Premiers Lioyd George and Millerand at Hythe not to wend troops to the ald of the Pok the market to strenghten toward the cb close after an early low opening at 83%. Closing on were! United States Steel 85%, off %; Baldwin 103%, Construction has already begun on big dock for ocean going |United States Rubber Washington, Mill company hy proximately big lumber dock, | to completion and in use within 60 days, © mill company Pioneer Al Navigator Dies |"¢'ro!eum } pioneer | ** 5 jehanged; Sinclair 25, off 4; Pan-American Petroleun Goth ave.| %8t* Lackawanna & Western 240, off 3; Reading 87%, off %; Crucible Alaska navigator, died suddenty at his home at | Downing first shipped when he was! 15 years old, and made his first run to Alaska 35 years ago. In 1900 Capt. Downing was as signed to the transport Seward and for four years carried troops to the Philippines, after which he again re- sumed his Alaska run fo Years to get the wheat out of) geash, Captain Downing was in com mand of the Redondo for the Alaska ‘The body ts at Bon- Prior to his} Steamship Co. ney-Watson's. From Weather Bureau TATOOSH ISLAND, lear with light foe. ; wiles an beet str Richmond. with bee No oS Guring the night Outside, bound In; A four-masted Fishermen report that the schr William Bowden ts becalmed five miles south of Umatilla light, four-masted schoo off 2; Pan n Petroloum 17%. off 214; Studebaker 61%, off 1%; 2M. up i Retail Stores off 4%) Southern Pacific 91, off %; Republic Iron & Steel TEX, off 1%; Mextoan Petroleum off 3%; Middle tes O 11% off 4%: General Motors 20%, off . eading 86% ff 1\ rucible 3, unchanged; Cuba Cane 38, off % oe ee “NEW YORK, Aug. 9.—The stock market opened today with the gen- eral list down from 1 to 3 points on reports of the seriousness of the Polish situation. Industrials and olls were capecially weak, while the tatls held bteadier. United Fruit was off 3, at 187; Daldwin off 1%, at 104, and Fo: ucts off 2, at 56% " Other opening prices were: Tobacco Products #1, off 1 /Mextea 2%. off 1%; International Paper 72, off 1; New If nine %; Republic Iron & Steel off 1; Southern Railway un off 1; Dela Amer! 1504 a Proa- 126, off 1%: United States Stoel 86%. off 1 During tho firet hour Mexican Petroleum, United States Steel com- Progress. Rails continued to hold fairly well. Rumors that a four-day truce has been declared on the Polish front) and that the situation there was much better caused @ rally which | Ternipe—Locel, per sack Was Beane—ler ib. sent Baldwin up ito 103%. This stock had been under heavy pressure. Mexican Petroleum rallied 4 points, Pan-American ggined more than 2 United States Rubber went up 2%, Atlantic Gulf 6 and Steel com- mon 1K. oe © & @ NEW YORK, Aug noon said “Lonses of 2 to 9 points in the industrial list and of 1 to 8 points In| miueberries railroad descriptions were recorded tn the firet half of the sexsion of | Cantatoupes- the stock market at the beginning of the mew week. At midday there| % Wash were indications that much of the momentum of the decline had bees overcome, and in the second hour of the afternoon substantial recoverie: were noted. “The shorta, however, accelerated covering operations tn the later Hight east wind, In; Str Flavia at 9:20 a m. ind southwest, Hktn Puake at 4:20 p m., signaling “pilot wanted.” Arrivals and Departures August §—Str Southeastern Ala Cross Keys f of Seattle trom WHEAT GAIN IS_CHANGE HUDSON lulu via Han Francisco at tr Nome City Pom; ate Admi n San Francisco « J Bveane from if Prince Rupert from Rupert, B. C., via ports at 4 p.m. ly coming back,” said Swinney.] W. Perry, president of the Na-| via Bellingham at 1:45 Bank of Commerce, said the st August $—Str Brookdale for Honoluty for San Franctaco that there is no danger of/11:15 a m.; str Sa this winter beca eastern Alaskan ports a so use the | Syndareus for Vancouver and Comox. 1h r Horace X. Baxter think this period will prove of |for san Francisco via Eagle Harbor at walue,” Perry declared. “There | 7:20 © m.; str Prince Rupert for Prince be any suffering, but the tight | *¥eert. ¥ Vessels in Other Ports Port Angeles—Arrived August §: Str Mukilteo with bge Big Bonansa durin: Passed in: Str No Cc, at #15 a om; via porte at 11 Rm A large two-n Arrived August 3: Str De- light from Seattle Arrived Auguat str President from San Fran- fan Francisco—Arrtved August 8: Str Admiral Dewey from Seattle at 6 & m. om Tacoma and Everett at Time Again from Townsesd—Paseed tn August 8 Str Brookdale fi 4 August 9: Btr West Satled Avgust %: Str Admiral tle at 2:35 p.m d by Wireless in Governm: ate Ketchikan off Cape Cal marketing of this year’s Usual and normal methods of Reporte: Rodman in Tolmie channel, str Admiral ¢ Falls, southbound, at 4 it ‘circumstances make it necessary to fact in the public interest. From the Present point of view, it is believed » for Tacoma, off Pye str Richmond, miles from Seattle is for Seattle, ‘The government recently had con- ‘tinued the wheat board in power. from Seattio ‘sumption in the United States of thru boards of trade. The of wheat to the open market controled by the law of supply and @emand made governmental contro) Mo longer necessary in Canada and Vessels in Port at Seattle Cove terminai—Bge Henry Vil H. T. Heather. tr Horaisan Maru, Gontinuing the wheat board in active Str Katort Maru. Weat Jester, str ple, ate Admiral Ev: $6,000 Worth of Grain Is Stolen: FromChicagoPit CHICAGO, Aug. 9.—Six thousand @oNars’ worth of grain has been stolen from the Chicago Board ,of es are a flock of Str West Torus Engineering worke—Str Str Kastern Victor. Str West Jos- Puget Bound F 6 & Dredging worke— Hulls Froxton, Leota generalship of the crafty English In a single year some 400,000,000 ate delivery are bought and sold on Alice, motor s#chr Atr Roowevelt, —Motor sche Challam During the day the floors and win-| Heffern dow ledges are sprinkled with this 1, #8. &. Bath, achr Piaatind. $1,651,976 Given County Schools . assistant county superintendent of schools school appropriation of the world’s grain crop is bought and| sold under the stabilizing influence the tricky sparrow taught the pigeon | the secret openings of the bullding| and the art of pilfering. As the} ally over last year. Loot of “Window Dressers” $2,300 °°" and heads of lumber carriers Monday in Detective Giles Humphrey has re. Tt is estimated that tn gathering up for chicken feed the grain tram- pled on the floors and spilt on the ‘window ledges, the janitors lose a bushel a week to the pigeons, which prance and scold at every upper opening of the building. On this basis, in 72 years, some 3,800 bushels | ing $2. He found silks, valued at ) in Alcompleted Tuesday. No foi corn and oats, would have # total uesday. No format an-|| clearings . nth av, and) nouncement of the fi Spring st. Sunday night, ‘ hare sans Nie as opportanity for discussion of armistice terma and peace preliminaries, “A good half of the previous loawon, and in some cases more than half,'¢ was recovered in the last hour or so, but trading was pretty dull on |Peaches—< rh Washington . the*upturn.* AGAIN OFFSET) BAY’S TERMINA Chicago Pit Closes at Sat-|Road May Hit Tidewater at urday’s Levels Fort Churchill weather conditions over a la: he Ton of the grain area today offect | Churchill, Instead of Fort Nelson, ts continued pessimistic military news| suggested as the tidewater terminal Saturday's levela December wheat opened at $2.2 Bp 2iac from the close at Saturd whort seasion, and cl March was start, but | gin, closing at $2. mission appointed by the Dominion government to investigate the road. made, it will considerably lengthen 5%. the road, but it will open up a rich There was heavier trading in corn| ™ineral-bearing region. It will also! than wheat. September corn was|pontpone the completion of the road ise up at the opening, but closed = at $1.45%, off 4%c: December corn |at least until next year and pomibiy opened at $1.23%, off tc, and later |r several years lost 2%e. . The report calle attention to the tember oats opened Mo higher | fish and marine animals in Hudson Se at? closing at 70%0: December | Bay which the road would make qpened at TO%c Up tac, but closed | commercially valuable, It strongly Provisions were Irregular, despite |¢ndorses the suggestion of Vilhjal & higher he market. + |mur Stefansson, Arctic explorer, —_— — that the breeding of reindeer and! Chicago Live Stock jmuskox be taken up extensively in} euaae, tee be the region. It points out that the PN tm coaviak cand ta be gold, #tlver and copper mines already Hulk of sales, $14.15@16.24; bute in operation are extremely rich and $12.75@1 packin, $13 | have only scratched the mineral wealth of the country Steel hag been laid from a connec canners and | #00 with the Canadian N ‘and t why at The Pas within | vem, Sid@is. Bheep— Receipts. head: market nee . or « die. Pl ng Pg ers ery Oh has been built for the remaining di s3@ 11. tance. Large sums of money have ent. nx than 100 at Port N comple the road as soon as pont mand was off 7c st $3.60. An upward | trend during the first he however, and at 10:20 aterime wasl road woukd shorten by 1,000 mi Quoted at $3.61%. Frane demand opened | 1 e-store hay By = at 7.01c, lire demand at 5.01c and marks demand at 2.150. modities bound for Sterling, after dropping to $3.60, ratiied | kets from the p Dige to 4%e nel a. mae uropean mar rie provinces. continued steady toward Tice hficr sutatees| EXhibition Given th ¢ miles south of Duvall this af N. Y. Coffee and Sugar _ Gigiee nee m 1bue per ibs No.4 Banton, eae | Stock Exchange Is eo per Ib Seattle Is in 11th the exchange. |modern pavement gives her the 11th on Pacific Freight place among well-paved cities, ac} roKYO, Aug. 9.—With the fallure ling to a paving census of 140 f of, all lines shipping out of Japanese leading America ¢ at has | 0% ale PPh apices: 1 Steril pe has! ports to arrive at a standard freight ays y the Asphalt] mate, a rate war on the Pacific ix be association of New York. With 35. x predict rhe Bi 400,000 square yards of pavement,| 2%, Predicted. The Brit h, French New Yo : Fs Mt Jand Dutch lines apr to be the | w York ranks first, Chicago #ec:| ones that are holding out, it i» said Jond, and the following cities in the ? order named Philadelphia, Los An b &. &, celow, Kansas City, Portland, Ore, | Building Permits Baltimore, Buffalo, Cincinnatl, Oma ha, se nttle, ‘fan Fouielabe, "wast Nearly $9,000,000 ington and Toledo, With permits totaling $8,924,075, - ~ ————— building for the first seven month» : of this r has nm approximately State Bet in tha: aithoks oatiot the catthecens be: H ing period in 1919, according to the um r Hearing July statement of the city building State public service commissions jof Oregon, Washington and Idaho started informal hearings of lumber- depart $7,609,319.17 | STL the assembly rooms of the Chamber of Commerce in connec: tion with railroad rates of logging | products ¢ Northwest railroads.!| | palances . . a The etings are expected to be| | Spokane 123,781.00 | | 082,116.00 + 753,302.00 | | Balances . . SEATTLE STAR BRISK TRADING AT LOCAL MART Cantaloupes Arrive From Eastern Washington THE WHY oF fr F rank Worked Fast, | But Got Caught | "on the Seattle police ay, and hin suite at the |leppasens LEAVE FROM COLMAN ||DOcK, FOOT OF MAKION STREET The first cantaloupes grown east of the mountaing to appear in ‘the clerks weren't looking. r| 1 bought this tron morning from had worked the same game stores previous! and a detective collared him Farmer Is Killed in Plunge of Auto to $5, which ts 75 cents to $1 abov the current figure a Jifornia are quoted, rading in all lines of fruit and was brink, with prices on "T'm told that scouts are pledged to wear in the butter and cheese Kegs are firm at 68 conta al Markets iA Wholesale Dealers Vegetables and Pru Asparagus Washingt thru the railing of the Steel common sold up at the] marior ru railing of th Mins Makeup Nobody'll come Vancouver Seeks Grain Business VANCOUVER Canadian shipping interests are plan. grain shipping business to England this port and Panama canal was almost near this city fractured skull. He died @ few min- | machine was %, unchanged; International Paper } off his body, Files Suit Against | City for $35,000, adon has filed Vancouver is consid ered an expecially attractive port be: Mrs. Rowena G while Montreal, the present leading | port, in closed by ice five months in Green Peppers Per tb.» band, who was killed by an Everett Okra—Local per Tb. Halliday st don claims the city was negligent in| maintaining on the corner wh ul way killed a platform built | too close to t . To Publish R: Wage Boost List CHICAGO, Aug. 9—The railway | labor board announced today that it would publish tomorrow the wage in crease awards in the case of 70,000) express employes thruout | the country. The case was taken up after the recent disposal of wage increases to| railway workers. While He Bathed, Japs Buy Land in British Columbia R, B.C. Aug. 9 purchased con * Yakima Giems, per ton Rhabers rer m mon, Republic Iron & Steel, Bethlehem H, Retail Stores, Baldwin and | KatebagasPer United States Rubber made new owe for the year. There was Ayttle | strength apparent in the market during the first hour's trading. There| pagar Peas—Per tb. was considerable liquidation of stocks, especially industriala, still in| Sweet Corn Tomatore—Imperial Vail VANCOUVE anese who recently siderable Umber area in the northern part of the province, are again ac- tive In that direction, having begun negotiations, it is learned here, with American Timber com. of Minneapolis, Creag, por Ib.. Mring Neane D. Surveyors for the Japanese have 1 lines over a wide ter. ritory, announcing their intention of acquiring enough timber to warrant construction of several sawmills and a paper mill. Kastern Washington Gravensteins, Cal, per box. ~The Evening Sun financial review this after-| Ai ™ Nass ; MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 19%, PUGET SOUND STEAMERS ALL LOCAL ROUTES to Victoria on Bunday |lenving Beattie Bat inact levery ‘Ywo hours, 600 single trip, $1 round “Ti40 Wiramer Bol Dee, ht/Port Townsend, Port! [Williams and ry to Cut Each Other Jap blood and eaki were spilled Sunday night, when three Japs took on some of the liquor, a product of thelr own still, and then started cut- Motorcycle Officers +7 Dench and R. i | broke ap the party and arrested 8. #0 | Kobayashi, #0, and A. Satto, 40. The Others Were Busy J. F. Hogan gave his body a swim | Sunday near his home at Bothell. tho mid-summer pastime someone took a silver cigaret case and a $1 bill from his pockets. boys, both 14, are being investigated Monday by juvenile authorities, Silk Yarn Still 4 i on Price Decline Silk and cotton yarn in Japan are On July 25 ailk yarn 2 yen a bale for stand- ard quality, which is the lowest fig- ure recorded so far in the recent de Grapre—Mainga, per cra Thompson seedless on receipt in the financial district from London of @ dispatch \Grage Fruit—Caiifornia . to the effect that Rossia had agreed to « truce of four days to give | Heney—Com' Lemone—Per box oe. Laganberries—Mer crate - Drangre—Ter cane... ting each other. asury Notes Free From Taxes WASHINGTON, department nounced an issuance of $150,000,000 of @ per cent treasury certificates, dated August 16. exempt from all present or future excess and war profits and inberitance taxes. chant Buyers of N. W. Meet Here More than 300 delegates to the eighth annual Northwest Merchant Buyers’ week are expected to visit Seattle Monday for the opening ses- More than 1,000 are expected before the meeting closes, The ban- quet will be held Wednesday even- ing at the Hotel Butler. Hulse Files for Superintendent Hulse, for three years superintendent of county has filed his candidacy for |the republican nomination for super intendent to succeed A. 8. Burrows, who ix not eligib Hulse has had 21 years’ experience in school adminis ‘Bible Reading Slayer Faces Noose Unafraid #till slumping. declined to 1,1 Jee Cream Melone—rer Ib .- Prices Paid at Wholessio Almento--Per Fitbertser %. Waeleste “Manchurian to a Paris physician, | premature baldness is due to some trouble with the teeth, FE NA NSS A WESTLAKE Malis 16-17, 2 pkgs corn Saken, the: Ball Mason jars, pta Sic, qta $1.05; 2 cans corn or peas, 66c Stall 105, 3 bare Ivory soap, the; Economy jar capa, 27¢ 2 cans Booth's sardines, t5c; Stall 159, fresh churned butter, 2 Tbe $1.26. cheese, thc TD. Stalls | > @@LOl Cast Olp ko we k@) om, $2.00 owt 4s nese, » CHICAGO, Aug. 9—The tmproved| OTTAWA, Ont. Aug. 9.—-Fort|PemsscPer Dh. DAIRY PRO! Priese Paid te Shippers from Poland and future prices, after|of the Hudson Bay railway tn a re- | @utterfat woes an carly bulen, closed @€ practically | port gubmitted by the mpecial com |RAES—Preth ranch wm A8@ 4 DAIRY PRO! Te this change In the original plan in| pres Mnesmcen eaten Mer. Kags—Preeh rane ehetth Ibe can Wisconsin cream bri nial Best flour, $2.25. Young America Borden's of Co-operative Rogers peanut butter, | Prices Paid by Wholesale Dealers to Shippers The qt. Stalls | ete ckages creamettes, Ihc; Mazola | 2 packages corn bo; 3 Ibs. white beans, isc, Neoilers— A! Stall 102, fresh exes, sc don; 3 doz $1.30; full cream cheese, 290 Ib; 4 cans | euperintendent, for re-election. Beigtan Maree tional rail hamburger, 10¢ Ib; lamb miles of Port Nelson. The roadbed | Teekere—! Stalls 27-28, 3 Ibs. Iba. Siam head rice bh can M. J. Hillis Red can coffee, 606 Iba. fancy head rice, 3 Te $1.10; 5 The $1.80 Royal baking roasted peanuts | Hoge—Fancy « trees been expended in dredging a harbor} at Sockyares Y son and in building docks. Foreign Exchange Western Canadian interests this| YORK. ‘ore! eM De ned ° © r' ° Parad oy gy A year petitioned the government t 2 Ibe, 360; 3 Iba. b0e, PIKE PLACE Stall 17, fine Mediam to choice . hour foli@wed, | ble. By the Port Nelson route the} 2 Iba, Be: 4 the railway haul of grain and com tomato catsup. * 490; 2 packages ifornia white beans, 2 large Ivory soap, 49. Prime epring lamba. . DAILY DAYLIGHT SAN JUAN) we HISCANOS was ‘® & Sux leaves Colman dock & m. daily (except Monday). Sun- >. m. Calls at Richardson, Friday Har- bor, Anacortes each day. West found, Orcas, Tuesday, Thi Saturday; East Sound, Olga, Wi neaiay, Friday. Bunday. HPUGET SOUND NAVIGATION ( TAKE THE BOAT TO TACOMA BOATS LEAVE COLMAN DOCK 7, 10 A. 3.5 7,9 P. vin pay.” aS Tene” ad ebeapest way te ge. Sry OT) Peres Prenen Semmens L101 hee, Sapmene of Alfalfa Crop AND SELL LIBERTY AND VICTORY BONDS We pay New York market price and interest, deducting for brokerage ONE tions and ONE-HALF OF ONE P: An exhibition of the results of ex-| Portland Market Report periments to develop varieties of corn and alfalfa adapted to soll and cli- Barley — Whole NT on $50 and $100 denomi RECT SELLING VALUE of your bonds by deduct market price and adding the interest. See today’ gure the COR brokerage from t) quotations below: PORTLA , Aug. 9.—Butter—tte per tb matic conditions in Western Wash-| Reee—46@ 520 por don ington waa held by the Snoqualmie Bi. ne—85@ 360 per Ib; teetiers, 360 District Farm bureau at the farm of Choese—Tripleta, 21@330 per Ib, J. W. Sinn, crop leader, at his farm | Total. ....891.47 $85.90 $85.7 MORRIS B | Chick Food ana 4th VictoryVictory 448 OTHERS, Inc. 3 CENTRAL BUILDING (GROUND FLOOR), SEATTLE ! . Bugar-—Raw, 16.296 love i 16 9c per Ib; granulated Begun at Shanghai hd oi eae A stock exchange with a capital of more than $5,000,000 has been opene ‘ici Money = Call ny [8 Shanghal. It in the first Chinese |¢ ger cont: ott ths, 9 per cont, merean, | exchange and has four departments |q : tile paper, 6% per cent dealing in stocks, cotton and cotton Marble Grit apt tiver—Landon, 60%e; New York,| yarn, provisions and oil pansion rt bsortd QUENTIN,-Cal, Aug. 9.— Mose Gibson lows here on September 24, the most notorious man killer into other flelds is planned and 103! Meat and Bone brokerage firms are already listed in| Meat Berape Gas Situation Here Stays Unchanged} hag calmly confessed to seven brutal murders and scores of holdups and from Florida to California “I was just appointed to do them,” | said the negro multi-murderer, onounced the lowest type of hu- Gibson is a source of wonder to | criminologists. tion was repor companies in § ed by the distributing ndard are selling at Wadhams O11 Co. ods his Bible sort of jungle fatalism in which he : if as the guiltle strument of Providence seems to per- vade his brain always worked alone and hammer or hatchet on his officials of the the regular quota for this dis Miners Conclude Week’s Session Washington Mine Workers, including 34 unions of coal mine workers, closed Saturday strenuous we ment between the dis trict organization and the Washing. ‘ton Coal Operators’ association, cov- y all the coal mines in His capture followed the murder of Roy Trapp at Fullerton, Cal, and the criminal assault by Gibson upon Mrs Trapp, A man hunt of five in his being taken at Ko- To avoid a where he confessed, and was given the death sentence by Judge Williams, ering virtual de at this time, pg! tte state, was ratition, IN THE SEATTLE STAR - MAIN 600-