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e —T LET ET Fie? — a * & * i ® a il * Lt = located at Mr. and Mrs. Ss @& GOLDBERG White Gold ings, beautl- | fully carved. JESDAY, SEPTEMBER ¢ List of Seattle and Northwest Folks in Danger Zone Is Growing : © SVANY PROMINENT PERSONS if 4 CAUGHT IN DISASTER AREA Relatives Here Anxious! iy Await Word of Fate of Those in Devastated Japa- nese Cities * ‘The great calamity that has ovor: | taken Japan is also reaching far} across the Pacific and being vividly brought home to Seattle, where friends and relatives of former resi ents of this city are scanning the dispatches with growing concern, in the hope that those missing In the great quakes and fires may soon be accounted for. Each day the list of Seattle peo ple who are known to have beon In @ centers of the devastated areas n dispatch telling widaly scattered fos, new names n widely known } ows. f new communities and ¢! of men and wome here are brought to leh PROMINENT PARTY IN YOKOHAMA Leonard Husar, trict attorney for the o whose mother, Mrs Long, ts now in Seattle, to be in the city of Yokohama. arrived there with his bride and a party of several other Americans shortly before the disaster overtook the city, The others, whose fate !s still q matter of confecture, include United States Marshal Thurston Por: | ter, Judge and Mra. Charles Lobin- gler and Miss Loulse McCoubrey, Porter's flancee. Husar is a graduate of the Unt-| versity of California collegs of law} and had practiced his profession | there prior to leaving for the Oriont. His mother came to Seattle several months ago. DR. FREDERICK STABR | IN DANGER Z0N Dr. Frederick Starr, of Seattle, former professor of anthropology at the Universtly of Chicago, is known to be in the Mount Fugi district, | where he went early in August. Mount Fugt is in the very heart of | the earthquake area, and no word has been recelved from the pro- fessor, Dr. Starr's home tn Seattle | Mth ave. NE. | Winfield McLean, | are} Beatrice G. ts belleved He} jeattle missionaries in Japan, holleved to have been tn the stricken | area at the time of the quakes. The | two were members of a party of 100 missfonariés who arrived in Yoko-| hama ehortly before that city was| destroyed. MISSIONARIES ARE PROMINENT HERE McLean {s the oldest son cf Mar. tin McLean, Seattle bank examiner, iam H. Lewts, Seattle con- ‘ty Mrs. McIcan's father. The two jonaries were on their way to Pekin to attend the language school there and were lost trace 4 between Yokohama and Pekin. veyyiliams Irons, of West Seattle, et “Meet us wear diamonds.” | WEISFIELD Seattle’s Credit Jewelers An Honest Regard for Personal Appearance jg the reason why men and women/| desire to wear Diamonds, Watches and other high grade jewelry. The Welsfela & Goldberg plan puts them within easy reach at $1 DOWN and convenient payments. Two beautiful blue white Diamonds set in Beltas Platinum top mountings Look prosperous and feel prospetous— wear a diamond, Pearls Restrung, 40¢ Weisfield & Goldberg rvice ‘Two Stures at Your 302 UNION ST. Opposite Postoftice 310 PIKE ST, Harper Building |- “If Sam Weisfield can't repair your wateh, throw It away. (Trade Mark Registered) For that little lunch just before they part Bluhill : Cheese convenient — Roptettaied sen jon DR. EDWIN 4. BROWN’S DENTAL OFFICES 106 Columbia Bt. Seattle's Leading Dentist for More Than 21 Years THE SMATT HERE'S MORE ABOUT Ey ye Witnes LE STAR E caping Net 1¢ my NURRAG Italian Guns Mussolini Orders Land at Corfu Greece to Pay Up | : ) NT) a ‘i 1 AP! (Oh JAPANESE DISASTER y mn ed torees|_ LONDON, Sept. 4—"lt the Greeks sang > A ATHE! er an forces N, Sept. It th i STARTS ON PAGE 1 OKyo mela es rageay ouded heavy artiliery at| fulfill the conditions of my ultima ee a | */tum and pay up, I will withdraw Gia nee a Y ‘ Corfu and ilding strong fortl| trom Corfu, but they had better oe _ premier, Yamamoto, was falsely reported to| Japanese Cor’ responde ay De aseribes Terrors |"** D confirmed report] pay soon, for next week the price have been assassinated by a Korean, from the island states. Another Premier Mussolint Premier Yamamoto Organizing of Quake and Flame in Nipponese Capital Ay rts ocoupe:| A ihe oreniag. Meee A ; 4 tlol Alt uberis Relicf Work in Stricken Land EDITOR'S NOTH: ‘The first eye-witness unt of the disaster along | t " ion of occupying ! amamotos cabinet, which he organized while the city| tne Pacific coast of Japan and the lows of Mfe and 6 of] A British destro: arrived near| “ny more Greek territory or en was burning, has received royal sanction, it is learned. destruction {n Tokyo and Yokohama ny was brought t the ‘ aa ing t ons,” Muaso: It held its first meeting and made provision for] more than 200 milex south of the Jape apital, by the Toh ¢ pr nc course, $e : _ emergency relief measures, requisitioned supplies and took | *Pondent of the Osaka Mainichi, ‘Tho correspondent made hit wi > Lees eavlesta oh orem Brn resentative of the Sperry Flour mills | Other steps, | the shake n ann flaming aity Saturday gfternoon du the helg Italian subjects or property a here, is believed to have been in the , “s catastrophe, His story follows: quake are. ‘Me rhs aha reat Aine All available warships and steamers have been ordered to} bay “ oa be ipesorthat Si oahens city in his participate in relief work. They must bear the brunt of By the Tokyo Correspondent of the Osaka Mainichi ‘| itinerary and officials of the company |*@ transport service as the railways are disorganized. | (Written for the United Press) FREDERICK | h Ae have expressed fears for his) Osaka, Kobe and other Jarge cities have already shipped} (Copyright, 1924, by United Press) safety quantities of prov ‘ 0 . mae Avie | (Copyright in Canada) peal Se SR qu i provisions to the devastated areas. The} ogaxa, sept, 4—My lost sent of, alm SMV by Von aS ae bie i , ‘goredeg i ene ainichi and the Asahi, two of the greatest newspapers, | Tokyo was at 3 p. m. Saturday. At| the districts of Cloiba, teaws, pe ics ualvesite ‘a pe co-operating in relief work. that time, in the midst of unchecked | Shizuoka and Saitama Waal ata WeetA ta bkee ire is still raging in parts o: , q.|fires and repeated shocks, I saw] The extent of the da and E 81 | i wien was believed to Bave| 1 1 Otte ging in parts of Tokyo and Yokohama.| ooo vinty trying to reach mafo-| casualties was at first ineale FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET { ‘ © ch work © Im e suffering is severe. The inhabitants are resigned to|! F re i perial t ote peliding yo'at the : — r ¥, heedless of hundreds of corpses| lable, At the time I estimated I ee neta eeatin Wein eee ir fate and restrained, however. Ite the-etveets | nearly 200,000 houses had been A Ne : P } tare, one ot the iargest ia the capita | Heavy re nforcements of troops, marines and police have| ‘Tho disaster had come upon To-| Mestroyed in Tokyo and that a LV ew Ur chase Fe rd sane aes in the cals |been ordered to cope with any possible outbreak kyo about three hours ear | ke number of inhabitants had fire. If and her husband were} The first expression of sympathy from any foreign nation The first shock wae felt a lit pene eee Ae Sone RUF vi ‘LE D CURTAINS i At homne' Inions. Oe the garden’ sus |was xeodlved fiom’the 1 { Staten? ) ATION) tle before noon on Saturday crown prince's palace, near od | - Selina tina ‘ce the x from the nited States in the form of Presi-| The center of the quake was bu OC Our £0 ' | { 2 OS awe g icon dent Coolidge's offer of help. then believed to have been at f spans thats | AT SPECIAL PRICES | i Roy D. The commander-in-chief of the American Asiatic fleet| the bottom of the sea, near | versit 1 Mk * atten eas 8 sie fc oS | ts. Penlington fj visited the governor general at Dairen (Port Arthur) of- pon ati bah hid ore feiadceasssnageay hehe { | ‘oniington is editor of the Hast fering lace . ‘ pag Be ; outhw: of us. eal a the ewspaper offices pe Y yea ‘ 2) Bele sates 06 the Wax Bia (eciae: to pees his whole squadron at the disposal of the) form of a dozen terrible, vertical, lly destroyed IMED to fit in with Autumn house- | Orient of the Nort Press. apanese for relief work. fourinch wave movements, the | ‘The jmperial palace furnishing plans is this exceptional Mr, and Mrs * 8 & FSR a oT ke Ae earth beneath us rising and | heavily damaged soa . * i eaatu Gk Sone falling eli fat: 3 4 ae ring of dainty new Ruffled Curtains F friends in 8 ln aed m, Within an hour the quake had|.- sary eg pew SKY ay i H thee seaty. Cowley is steward of HERE’S MORE ABOUT somewhat subsided, Bit’ treuiors darth si : ienty, oe ; Hagel tr sheet Hecag ‘ cape es i Beavis, : continue hich had been recent! plete y, excellently finished, at special prices. i the Imperial Tokyo and was “WP patinued, n front of th tr r Y 1 formerly employed as steward c EME EROR ESCAPES A dinagtrous conflagration fol pe oti: 7 | i mitelOrtental fine vessels STARTS ON PAGE 1 owed, the abaking 6 yiers¢ of Zo | | between ttle and Orient | kyo and Yoko! na. Yojushuka 4 * Both Mr. and Mra, Cowley ar y 7 i Special, Pair Raed 45" paves heat in the siiaen ae to bear word of the prince’s safety to his father dpaohad e | jetty of Tokyo at th jo of the dis. | & ¥ achec 3 avai kyo at the tim: the dis. a mother. SAN PEDRO HIT | rst was judged ss 1 $1 85 Ar. : . . | ger continu : Hy “Dr. and Mra. Mitton Seymour, or te With Grief, Thousand | roi the ult mi -ruftied Marqubets ee ieee it ae neecen ee| Victims of Quake Drown Selves if HUGE WAVES. SatbGs We Curtains with two-inch been received from them. They left} One thousand persons in Tokyo who escaped the earth- One of tho most terrible oc Fatwa Oe Tee ae here early last year. |quake and fire that followed have committed suicide by ad eh currences of those first brief +g TINGLING IN ORIENT |drowning, insane with grief, Warships in Harbor Rocked, hours in the crumbling, burn Special, Pair Don Toe hactis ae In Tokyo and Yokohama less than 48 hours of food sup- by Disturbance pincarpra binir Rhoape sp pe ln ae sasiee Sn. Sohkuhosian6t) the: AG: |ply remains and many thousands are suffering from lack : | lapeed and several hundred em. $1 45 miral-Oriental lino here, has been in}Of drinking water. Engineers are doing their utmost to| SAN PEDRO, Cal, Sept. 4— | ployes were pinned in the ; ¢ Orlent tor the past four years) repair the mains and reservoirs. | i a se Moyers | aoe ere asiar eas —rrudting coer hie tars land ts belleved to have b n the The fla ‘i . Daas pa er earthquake has reached the Pa- nother tragedy of which we quisette Curtains, 2 4 Feycncsely whanethe cokes: aba The flames apprdached the Tokyo jail and, fearing that] cific coast of the United States, | heard early was near Fuji, . vie - pats - 3 tidal waves occurred, His wife and| Pearly a thousand prisoners would be roasted alive, the Four waves, five feet high, | where 500 girl spinners were ee ee eee yearld daughter visited Seattle six| Officials released them. Many of the convicts immediately] Were Feported to have broken | killed in the crash of the fac backs, or Voile Curtains y convicts mediately * months ago. Tinting is son of Alex| started looting. | at Point Fermin, at the entrance | tory. in single or double ering: sali Rhee ‘cniste’ Mata : | to the harbor here, by the look. | When I left Tokyo, frantic ret croseGax wees ucantale ; railroad men. He ty now general| Koreans Reported Foiled [i ae ee : truggiing to esoape thru out tie-backs, freight agent of the Northern Pe-|¢ i one watch was kept today for| str h corpses. ting catree Sth. gecetal in Attempted Revolution \further manifestations of the tidal| |The tremendous convulsions of the quarters in St. F Koreans also are reported to be looting in bands and the | “™urbance be nidtes eat a MN lt Min i as | W. L. Petrie, Arthur Fredrick v0 oe rt The four waves did not have the | the city and this was followed by nu S , and B. Wi Laties also Oriental fep- pisabe police frustrated an attempted revolution. The| tremendous sweep of destructive | me fires. Tho gas became ignit i 2 Gamuaaiiods “ee tha cits, Yare oreans were attempting to arouse socialists and other |tida! waves, but came in with their|¢d and @ hurricane like wind th Special $1. V5 Pair. “2 Meved to have been in the stricken /Malcontents. 3 hey are expelled and the martial law pnder | scimed to Eesti: $9 those Who ee eee be following Ki nde which ‘Tokyo has been heldikince Saturda’’ tighten ja o have witnessed the dis.|shocks fanned the flames and whip cream or white Volle Curtains with narrow ruffles or 7 .- - 2. le turbance. | ped them to every part of the cit Scrim and Marquiset' 2 w 2 4 wore pe Bh Oia reg Rhea Where the workers suffered most was in isolated trage-| ‘Tne first camo shortly after mid-| Houses burned itterally ikea faetoh varia bas, Wun uphemeas wi Sree eee tertadued ckdin-aeuette dies such as one just reported from Osaka b; of Naga-|nicht and the others soon followed, | boxes in a furnace. The fire guined | Northwest, was also ga in the heart of the devastated areas. |S&ki. Fifteen hundred workers at the largest Oriental pieerrene at ontd. terrific headway until st was peters | | r 4 Ho has relatives and many friends cotton mill in the East, located at Shibzuaka, had trouble! ye vetuccnine idane ond Mean | great wind pleked up huge. blasin Special $1 95 Pair im Seattle and Tacoma. " " Nevada, | eres no aie luge blexing |) . = ecg the employers Saturday morning. All were locked in|were described aa roiling giddily | timbers and hurled them along until —sheer Voile Curtains with ruffles and tle-backs, 2% |the factory to prevent their leaving. until thelr quarter boats dipped into | #oon the entire city was in flames. | ene eee —Third Floor U, F " |. While they were thus imprisoned, the quake came, this | He metee,. : In the path of the devouring fiery factory collapsed and the entire 1,500 are reported Milled: cgay tress te teree: TE A eee beauties Ss paripien sare, The New e An intercepted wireless message from the Korea Maru| but little other damage wan reported. | crowded houses, wounded persons * FEDING AID at Yokohama says that explosion of'a huge oil tank there| ® 4. Bantield, « swimmer, who| pinned down by wreckage of the fi "MINERVA YARNS was the principal cause of the damage and started the pricapihagh anteac tne coo ee oy | skilaten Gitsestie slot eae |flames which wiped out most of the city. _ jeaught in the awep Ot the waves| reece them: © reads enka a | EEPING pace with the growin, Ee Warships to Take Food and| The Korea Maru also sent word of a’newly-reported dis-|n4 narrowly escaped being wanes, f gr S yOsue Y Supplies to Japan jaster in connection with Saturday’s shocks and tidal wave. |*"*7- of smart knitted sports wear are the & |The city of Chiba, to the east of Tokyo, with a population| ne vicinity and a watch on ahipe in 50, 000 HOUSES many originations in Wool Yarns from the 2 bas & " : pbsery: | 3 WASHINGTON, Bept. 4.—Speea|°f 50,000, seat of the Japanese medical college, is reported| crs could be found who claimed to Minerva Mills, suggested for knitting a and effectiveness with wh icn(|t® have been destroyed with the greatest death list of all, | have witnessed the disturbance IN T KY fuzzy, warm sweaters, if American naval units are beln ae Ww. dresses, suits and hats. : concentrated for reliet of Jape {Fr EREg MORE ABOUT FEAR ISLANDS © atch Coast for | nese disaster victims wi sostadl: BO ‘ a Gilpaietes. to’ tat mcry Gene RELIEF | Reaction of Quake London Report Says Only, don eueenaa a ‘ - | | SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 4.—Const | DR sf ad 3 ment tr toon Att ani || seams ON PAGE 1}! GINK IN OCEAN( ss: otsi rm cars 2,600 Killed | SWEATERS, DRESSES : son, commander of the Asiatic) [Watch here today for any manttesta-| Lonpon, er | OR SUITS fleet. lee ceeach ore jon of reaction on the coast from NEON ee ae en a : ey cana iat | on ports. hes vahanaberaartiruake |trom ‘Tokyo, cabled to the United : endececs ffi 0 depart-| As president of the Seattle Red} SAN FRANCISCO, Bept. 4—Fear| ‘t+ © quake. Presa this afternoon from Osaka in a Minerva Llama Artwool, 40¢ or care Lon i speeding from|Cross chapter. Mr. Waterhouse will|that Bonin tsland, off the coast of | no suen mm obi vet be frorning | dispatch timed 2:50 p, m. September ball » ft hiness wa! to “ar 0 wucl anifestation had been ob-! | - , ¢0-0f » Dr. J. BE. Crichton, | Japan, thru which some cables are | sory, " ents of a bulletin is. F on ge phen tie flagship, the| chairman of the board of directors, routed, had mink {nto tho sea was Taian tis ofl atleadae | lly aa follows | Minerva Lustre Wool, 60c ball. fe ed cruise ro wi Hlllin an effort to secure authority for| expressed in radiograms received by , hilean earthquake of| = “Orricially reported 350,000 houses Minerva Knittin, re ot ania aol edb: % y ed 36 s f ig Worst 450 [available food and medical supplies.|the expenditure of Red Crone funds | the Radio Corporation of America| severst howe fe the as requtred | Tokyo destroyed; 2,500 killed; 100,000 | ball a j The destroyer tender Blackhawk | to aid in feeding the catastrophe vic-| from the station at Toroka, Japan reek GG WA ilbss citer Cale ae | es 2 ; ey aen ee hina, fF| tims, ‘There ts $98,000 in the Seattle] Interruption of all cables to | istered eh y een heb aerial Oi 9556 | Minerva Iceland Wool, 50c ball. moa go thence tol ped Cross famine fund, and a part| Japan, which still continues, pre- | bors hern Callfornia har. This report indicates that the cas-| Minerva Germantown Zephyr, E sad of this money, !t ts hoped, may bo| vented verification of the report b 7 . ualttes in the earthquake may have ‘ a Weer sabre es f, consisting | used to buy supplies. cable. 2 id sR Cah been greatly exaggerated. It is pos. 600: ball. ; ape vert, Now| J. p, Lowman, H. HB. Holder, sec:| “No news from Bonin island,” t 3 ; compete rk Mig’ Waaineas alec cet Minerva Shetl: 5 wien Bi Preston, Preble, Blcard| retary of the Japan soclety; Kelth| radlogram said, m Bonin Island,” the|| HERE'S MORE ABOUT || waa slightly garbled in transmission, | epee ed Aeotca Peetu ics q yer Shae ead odie tied Middieton, representing #hipping in-| “Feared sank into sea.” | WAVE = that the, number of killed may d sa istledown Wool, 55¢ : he os p -|terests; Mr. Waterhouse, Judge| Other advices said that th Mra trae’ THite sa f with the “utmost dispatch for ° i ba | The first United | st Burke, Christy ‘Thomas, secrotary | £f - h rst United Press report di- bs ‘i This Coat Sweater, medical Fellet in Japan," and pro-| or the anaes Mave Be? poe =f eh gine felt for Enosshima STARTS ON PAGE 2 || rect trom Tokyo, however, estimated | Mey eee ee ae knitted according to. s “ as quickly as possible to ic Chast, Japencee conmuls, COMME) Gaitvibes’ iby <valtene® vounaato | | the deaths at from 600 to 1,000, and 75¢ ball. directions in the Min- okohama, a 3. B. refe ¢ uti tide is at extreme low when the/|It ts possible that with establishment erva Yarn Book (15¢) rn a ), Shank, D. B, ‘Trefethan and M.|ehannels revealed many rumors of| ey 6 commander of this squadron| 2 y 8 Of! rollers appear. |of direct communication the casual- requires 8 balls was ordered to “obtain from the |Furura, iraart the meeting in| islands having disappeared. Tatoosh isiand lighthouse and the | | tles will prove to have been far less Minerva Camet nae be: eh | Judge Burke's office Tuesday. ” 5 baie 4 ss Bi e lable §=medica 4 } Ov" vt PCO! TNT supplies and. medical. wersennel’'| must co-operate to properly finance | tmposaible to verify any of them," eth fi sae Bs Pa birirg KNITTED APPAREL based The destroyer Pecos, now in the|* relief ship. ff one is granted for} was the word which camo thru the| tower and the buildings aaieakot Pe Philippines, has been ordered ‘to|the BuFpor® by the United states offices of the cable company, are 90 fect above tho nea on a flat Minerva Cygnet Loop, plain, 400 ball; ombre, 0c ball, 4 fill up fleet stores with provisions,|SMipPing board. | Varlous civic jor. er 3 tableland pgetst| Sere Lars Wood eno aes % fous: tekss ands other. itabl | ganizations will be asked to partic! 1 a ‘ a | Miner Liama Artwool, 40¢ ball. fons jc apna cans oe sulcatle| Tate TA. pitt ok toed wuppilen. PONY EXP Isat sit of San Pedro, Ban Minerva Caracul Lustre, 65¢ ball, Be supplies, blankets and miscelian.|, C:* hast, Japanese consul, said Ila’ alee “kxnellencea Taki wavreat Bn Gan of TInIet Sia ay GaN ee ee a cous supplies; coffins, hardwaro|that the most pressing need {s for NEAR Maselan iapeiber Lithia’ iceacel and soft of finish, and in welghts suitable for Autumn, bs and all army medical officers avalt,|f0o clothing and medical supplies OAST) Sar tepeeted: Missin daluatttel —Third Floor 3 able and to transport all Ked Cross Flour and rice, canned and frozen| gTRAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo,,|the Idaho and Novada, lying in supplies." salmon, prunes, canned goods and | sept. 4.—Down the western slope of| tho harbor of San Pedro, rolled Ms The Pecos is to go at once to|tents are the more Important items, |the Rockies a lone horseman dashed| wildly in the waves, thelr “quarter U “fas zoned and _ Yokohama, Ohast naid on toward the Golden Gate this| boats dipping into the water, ac 3 aie Bae I, see Lat begrie of ate pres clt:| morning, more than 15 hours ahead| cording to the reports ‘ ° eee jles already is suffering from expos-| of his fastest predecessor on the old| Several hours are required for l by S lk St k; 3 British Island Is |ure and hunger, according to reports) pony express. At 7 a. m. he was|tha waves to reach the Northwest) ove q 0 Ungs - Rocked by Quake received at relief headquarters, Un-|about 30 minutes out of Stenmbont| coast, after being registered = in LONDON, Bept. 4 > {lesa immediate action is taken, It i#| Springs, after covering a wilderness | California, it is reported. | ‘ LONDON, Bept. 4—severs earth. (pointed out, the catastrophe victims | tor miles nearly equal to that of '61.| | Weather department officials are EXCEPTIONALLY ’ quake shocks w: xperience at 10| will require more shrouds than! ‘Thru the earty hours of the morn.| stationed Tuesday at Tatoosh isiand LOW. f o'clock last night and lesser shocks | coats, more coffins than food r ; " | -PRICED AY Pes Tk ae 4ae i | ing the rider shivered in an almost} and other Pacific stations, ready 2 y fh xt 4 a, m, today at| Relief contributions In any amount wintry breeze. to notify Sound cities of any waves Liat sen, he British island of] should be addressed to the Japanese| ‘With still another day in Colo-| that may appear, i | | A dete! fst ys ate in Ray matelho | Reliet committee of tho Seattle) rado, tho express riders face perfect| Small settlements, located at the! | : ou eh ave 0 ‘ : le r minis-|Chamber of Commerce. The relief] weather. They have had record-mak-| mouths of rivers emptying into} z | AT 1 95 PAIR ¥, which gave no detalls jorganization had not yet made ar! ing roads all thru the state, the Pacific are in especial danger, Cc H. | 7 bp One Kill. d, F rangement to handle gifts of sur-| Proportionately large crowds greet| According to navy geodetic aurvey| rown Fieater | Manufacturers’ Samples of high-grade Full |f | ne Kille ‘our #, and for the present contribu-|the riders wnerever they pass, In-|ors. These towns are but a few : fashion i i i i ju tlons should all be in cash, chamber | terest in the memorable event grows| feet above the nea and muy be For Coal or Wood foshionee ‘Ais Stockings, including chiffon, | ; Tulured i in Races |°tfsals announces greater an the West, which depended |!nundated by the waves, they i and sports weights, in plain and clocked jf SALEM, Ore., Sept. 4.—A boy was| er s0 much on riders of frontier days, | claim, | Bo nloket telmmed, Du- styles—black and colors. killed and fo S ee is penetrated deeper ep | a eieee ene Mica-paneled ‘| pe tab eat bhai hee Arrest Man in cht aN Ww. Is F vad |] front door. A thoroughly re- Manufacturers’ Samples in Lace-striped Glove | yenterday. Kidnaping Cage | 4 not betleve ho had anything oman is feare we caleet Silk Stockings. ( 4 Frank McGrath, 14, of Portland, to do with {t directly, his reluctance to Have Drowned Three Sizes: ane eee , i 1 was fatally injured when he walked| PORTLAND, Ore, Sept, 4.—Enrljto answer questions asked him dut-| polio are dragging Green Lake ||| All-Silk, Full-fashioned Stockings in desirable actows the race track and was struck |R. Mercer, the man for whom ther|ing a Jong examination yesterday tor the body of a youn, woman || $17 50 19.50 colors and black, also Black Embroidered-clock aM by hine driven by Pat Reed, love prompted Mamie Fuches, nurso|catsed his retention on $2,000 batl,|heljeved to have been drowned ||| 5 « Stockings. 3 One of the racers. maid, to kidnap infant Daniel D.| which he could not furnish, while bathing Monday, A. fatality 25. (0) zl: The Injured men wore George | Madden, Jr, and pass the child off] Formal charges of kidnaping were|way feared after attendants at ‘the 0) | am Tucker, Medford; Marian Muen and|as hin offspring in an effort to| tiled against the Fuchos girl today.|North Hnd bathing station reported AT 1 85 PAIR | Pe Glen Walker, Portland, and Dick | win him, was held in the elty jall]/The full penalty of the law, 26|/Monday night that some Wornn’ | FRED 5 } Jones, Seattle. All were in difforent here today in connection with the|yeara in prison, will be demanded | | . Att) i ilk ay i ii i zs thelr machines were wrecked at varl-| While authorities have not con-|Jovoph Hammersly, chief district far proven unsuccessful, nor ts the & NELSON | Orcereny snsDiate end colote, sah dat eos ‘, ous times. nected Mercer with the kidnaping, | attorney. identity of the woman known, ~ a ‘ = a jis