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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 19 THE SEATTLE STAR astrous Quake [ Yokohama Burning After Shock of Di ae This picture shows Yokohama a few minutes after the earthquake. Fires are breaking out at scores of differ- ent points, while the waterfront is strewn with wreckage from the collapsed dock in the foreground., The shat- tering of this dock threw a number of persons into the water. This picture was taken from the custom house at the Canadian Pacific docks.—(Copyright 1923, United Newspictures ) NAVY PROBE T0 WOMAN KILLED Seattle Welcomes First SOME IN GAR PLUNGE of Earthquake Refugees tailed Inquiry Into Wreck Sie assmessaec iat ius ics (ED HERE'S MORE ABOUT OKLAHOMA STARTS ON PAGE 1 Ambulances Rush Injured Ones to Hospital; |» Few Have Any Baggage Auto Goes Over Bank on Nisqually Canyon Road Quietly welcomed by a small band |< SAN DIEGO, C 17.—W en an automobi! dick eants he 1 1 of meeting qually ca i t ¢ today, Admiral Sunday, Saroline K I EF. Coont ander Berkeley, was killed t of I < stantly and. Will ' hat he had 9 1610 12th ave. W ‘ ously injured. Fac ing. He was taken to the , county hospital ‘ being rushed to hosplt: Mrs. Facklamd hu to the side! hose few Senttlel of her husband when sho learned of | portunate to have Cogn Mrs. Kloss had been /the ship of mercy, welcomed them| mail any letters, and ntiil has th te ing the, Facklamds in Seattle. with a quiet handclasp or @ sdlema| stamps. All of her property in the iputy Coroner’ A, W, Morrow Al kins, none of the pent-up emotions} stricken district ahe abandoned, for Few persons disembarked early hour, only the seriously that it w ord of t Coontz said t ted to Ko t tom of the catastrophe, and President Je ts Jeft in her pur r dear ones on} chased stamps. She had no tin who were|4 jboard had bee rahip of the press was re-|the t altho publication of ¢ to incite riot or violence or| 6 who Is All of the crew ity will oncape: of the different = truct the work of the military au: | why 6 more th Eatonville investigated the oS deing er im. fhe publicity of jit had been reduced to ruina. aelten ceashagrjoy tr} nae ara psa | Ketea pea mally be Goss as — the deh, One6E the moat terrible experiences | Gun carr poy A ench one may be ex Most of the refugees, many of | of the quakes was undergone t them without a serap of clothing | M. Sandberg, wife of the manager of | first gene SAILOR ROBS save for a few rags which they had|the Gérman bank at Yokohama. Her | tary headquarters SEATTLE CAFE managed to keep on thelr backs, | husband was pinned beneath the fall-| A few fist fights er plept thra the, early hours. They|ing wall of; the bank, with flames | erwine, qu were home—home where nong of} roaring around h Hin leg was } jtar 2 Entering the Third |the ravages of scourge, fire or pesti-| amputatedhurriedly, ave. and Universi them, where the| ried away, Mr. | of fire the Delphy the leading vessel, which ateered the others on ened an oth-|the rocks, have been rec by the mil-| will be used I er | officers f he was car-| ch Engle cafe, : st, about 10:30| lence could visit only to perish Ia Sunday night, 7. J. Develin,| earth did not hop around on one pole | flames. areniger Big Mes a Greseed as a United States Sajl.|!ko a jack-in-the-box, and where} hp clad Clark inauir Or, in uniform, knocked _ the| there were friends and homes. SAFES FELI had bee | © iss Inez tt, senseless,| The rew who disembarked later in | 4 iciaing men | ered he acone number of bills from the/the day register and ran from the place | derous ad no luggage, mo pon-| runks or suitcases to look 0d. bringin 1 filed charges of as- | 10. lark | "Royal Arcanum | Leader Coming When the 2 the Grand ¢ Arear ish the total listed Thirteen are still mise a dead to THRU FLOORS” Walton loft . Okla, the Stat to the Metropolitan theater, where’ after. | One of tho he was harrowing ad-|* of the| Gov most ptured by Patrolman C.| More than 25 bables and small | and lodged in the city|children were numbered among the = to the police. He is|survivors, ono of the most Inter |" ; held on an open charge. lesting of whom was little 16 months | Mr. and Mrs. F. Develin is alleged to have asked|old Phyllis Pierson, daughter of a. T the cashier to change a dollar bill| Mr. and Mrs. H Pierson, Yoko: and when he entered the restaurant,/hama. The little girl was buried which had but a few diners at that|alive under tons of debris from the here today fo where ho will Federation of Labor. | t Mus- | isers ventures exper enced rvivors that eral hou neo with " 1 session of Royal Brit > home | A telegram sent to 9 Musko- hour. As Miss Myntt! turned to ac-|ruins of a 2story build! and| ng in the house toppled| Eee po ag oh: esl nblicegeong etnbes agent. Yoh commodate him he struck her with|yet, was sayed to her parents. | ding to Daly. The office] ar heretaudl ciphet ara ago, will be his fist, the police say, knocking her) yERY FEW OF THEM ne Co., of York, | understand your yellow pa- | present, it was announced Monday to the floor, where she lay uncon-| NEED ANY BAGGAGE Yokohama, was lo-| Per vf pret ot as to Ohare ice ihe eventos er oniber 46: th z relate | NEED A} AGC! eugene ments that went to Okmul- | On tho evening of October 10 the molgua Until revives. of the room|’ Later J2.the day, customs offi. | ated snore her} gee 1 would be whipped’ “You (Beattie ‘councils will hold @. union ae pag siecle room | ‘iaig went thru with the formality | home. s crashed thru the) are hereby advised I leave to ins " ‘ oprie : ; ; a g in honor of Knopf. In screamed and the proprietor, John) oe the inspection of baggage, altho, | floors were toppled from| night for Okmulgee, and will b virgen ee Housas, leaped for the man as he v7 t * apse bs glory h of candidates will be held Mteitpeared cat 'the: ator ind around |i many cases, the query, “Any their places in that city several hours Mon- | at that timo also. r a lbaggage?” produced only a smile| Tho building rocked giddily and! day, unaecompanied or unassist- | the corner of the building. Develin ran up University st,| and a negative shake of the head. |the occupants rushed out to the| ed by any troops, Please pub- Minnesota Hn Cold | t ee a eye Ale At approximately &§ a. m., the |stree Huge flesurea opened and! fish thiy in a prominent place when he was seen by Officer Guettol,| ticoes left the trains. They are|closed in the streets, Flames roared| on the front pages of your con- 3 ; who first thought the man 3 run: “sey J rn git ne Pee Weve Cor W. d Bl T d. ig (for a etrect car. When be|Doveed, st the Pre, New Washing. | thr buildings and a flerce ty-| temptible periodical.” mm owing loday) heard Housas' shouts, Patrolman | earn coves | progr ap rane, Up PAUL, Sept. 17—-A new cold iisatte pels y: (Bbrabons |headquarters, Providence luettel gave chase and pursued Dev-| Wren ry Hospital and Seat: | my he ‘opolltan, where he ¢lin to the Metropolltan, where he| 11. "coceral hospital, for the most |The found him de. Housas identl-| Thine be fied Povetin as the man who had | Part od erp eal ro Cs robbed his cashier, He reported ap-|!"& looked @ 2 imately $30 in bills missing; but| The wanderers will ve in § hospital into this inferno we rushed vi mot ad ene: JAP STEAMERS |e to nt = cin) RESCUE MANY |i“ today and will sweep | region east of the according to} ‘Thermometers | y drops in tem- faces as wo hurried along the| officials: te homes. |streuts. <verywhere men of every | were registering s eave Japan. | p nationa prostrate on the} Cab m rature here in, the police say, had thrown|for two weeks or more, according | pavements, praying to their goda.|telling of the rescue of the money aw: |to statements from the Red (¢ ".| Englishmen, Americans, Mohamme-| thous: s of refugees of all nation. Develin deciared at first that he|Many of them are being care ans, people of all nations called | FREDERICK | alities in the harbor of Yokohama, Sis a eailor; Dut 1 their gods for protection. afterwards is|by local physicians without charge follor x the quakes and es 0! tlleged to have confessed to steal-| ove | “Woe plunged headiong into tho tear a a shies ing the uniform. | al filthy watera of one of the canals. |, we! ceived’ Here: & NELSON ANSAS CITY, murder of Wallace Greene, y attorney and stato senator, | ofle night of June 30, was solved| “You'll never catch me returning) aly and his family are eh route today with the confessions of Ross R.|to Japan. I have had enough earth-|1, New york, where the homo of Richardson and Edward Ryan, who,|auake for the rest of my life, said | ticg of the A. A police suid, admitted committing the| Miss M. C. Stone of Worchester,| which he was murder during an attempted holdup, |Maas., who was a realdent Of Yoko.) 1, iocated Greene was shot, to death in his|hama at the time of the quake. She} garage late Saturday night. \was shopping at noon when the first achat te a — | Seattle Womaii and Children Are Safe |: | Mrs. Esther Coote and her two | ot n, who were in Japan at the vesse | time of the earthquake, are safe, |N ki run laccording to a tyod |duake, and are two of the \by Mra, W. L. David largest ships in the Orient 6th ave. W, who is Mrs. y continued to carry refugeos mother, jand supplies, and will remain on thi Goorgo Blumberg is another se.|Kobe-Yokohama run until all vic. | attleite caught in the q who|tims have been carried from the is now known to be sa His {danger zones, eald the endl mother, Mra. A, Blumberg of 1556}, A total of 21 16th ave. N., reeoived a radiogram | Wa or by the Jap. |from her sor uturday, stating |anese, and it is estimated by offi thet he ts on howd the 8, 8. Presi:|clals of the Nippon Yusen Kaisha | dent Plesce enroute for San Fran-|line that fully 10,000 persons were {cisco, Young Blumberg had prey lcarried frora the danger zones. Jiously been a patient in the Marine| ‘The officers of the ships showed | hospital at Yokohama no preference. and carried ple of [FIRE VISIBLE _ |iamns ming srim ne cin 0., Sept ppon Yusen Kaisha Steamship Co. | QUAKE BEGAN 2" ¥aais tn" taken aboard the Jefferson." he liner Yamashiro Maru arrived |from Kobe at the stricken city of Yokohama shortly after the first «| quake, with hundreds of tons of re Vantine Co. of| jet supplic She retur former manager, dreds of refug her provisions after her departure, the saki Maru and Shanghai Maru arrived at the stricken city and began ¢arrying refugees to Ko », according to th blegram. s were on the Shanghai. prior to the earth fastest «1 to Kobe es, after di | Shortly [liners Na cable tne vessels The Rich Spread for Harvest Bread “The Moon of Falling Leaves” , & —is what the Indian calls September, the i month when the golden cornis harvested for corn meal cakes, muffins and bread. | “CROWN” Heater | For Coal or Wood | Full nickel trimmed, Duplex F Landing parties from the ships re: . alae 5 “The Moon of Rising Sales” is what the recttia apuges aloha the) abdred| || (rateme, iOS. pani” front NUCOA Grocer calls it, for there’s no | FAR AT SRA It" trom the partially wrecket|}) eit, Spread for hot bread so sweet and true- i HAA |dooks, according to the mossaxe, |] is The most marveious scene he had] a c to-lavor as NUCOA— ever witnessed was that of the burn:|statign lit up the sky with a ghostly 18-(nch Btnoh 1 | ing of the cities of Yokohama and | light At first, when we were far | Finest Table Quality ‘Tokyo and the navy oll atation nt out nt sea, coming in from Kobe, tho | $17.50 $19.50 | At One-Half the Price THE BEST FOODS, Inc. CHICAGO KANSAS CITY ded into one, As we nenred | rated and became throe «is: | Yokashuka, according to J. W, May-| fires ble hew of the Koke branch of the Stand: | they se ard Oll Co, who arrived aboard the! tinet bt SAN FRANCISCO Vresident Jefferson night T have ever seen,” said May: | “The two, cities and the great oll hew, who is en route to New York, 22-inch $25.00 q FREDERICK & NELSON DOWMSTARS STONE 800 New Gingham House Dresses More Than 15 New Styles in Good Quality Domestic and Imported Ginghams NEW purchase of Gingham House Dresses just received in the Downstairs Store. An rtment ie that offers an unusually good selection of well-made Dresses in Domestic and Imported fabrics. Each Dress is finished with 2-inch Hem With plain, cross-bar and embroidered organdie col- 2 lars and cuffs, embroidery collars and cuffs, wide and narrow sashes, and other attractive trimming effects. Red, Pink, Blue, Orchid, Green and Black checks, plain Red and Pink. Sizes 36 to 44 —unusually attractive values at $1.55. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Holeproof Hosiery for Women In the Downstairs Store | Silk and artificial-silk Stockings, in mock-seam style. Mer- | At $1.00 cerized lisle hemmed top, heel, toe and sole. Cordovan, White { and Black. | ‘Thread Silk Stockings. leary Si | At $1.65 itvcsam soe ets At $2.00 vin ctceatretn mr | | extrastretch, mercerized lisle ribbed top; mer- cerized lisle ribbed top. Mock-seam style, | cerized lisle heel, sole and toe. Cordovan, with mercerized Isle heel, sole and toe. | White and Biack, Cordovan, White and Black. | Sizes 81 to 10 Autumn Hats of Felt and Velour : $5.00, $5.95 and $7.50 | OWNSTAIRS STORE displays of Felt and Velour Hats for Autumn feature the favored shapes, shades and trimming effects in wide array. Style details, workmanship and quality of materials are unusually fine in these low - priced groups. Five of the Styles Are Sketched Trimmings: grosgrain ribbons, in self and contrasting shades; appli- qued ornaments, uncut chenille, soft crepe bands, velvet and feathers. Gray, purple, orchid, orange, blue, bottle-green, jade-green, lacquer- 2 red. BS Prices $5.00, $5.95 and $7.50. DOWNSTAIRS STORE | If You Need Curtain and Drapery Fabrics, Now Is the Time to Buy Them | Bypass STORE displays are now complete with good assortments of Curtain and Drapery fabrics for the Autumn season, Prices in many instances are unusually attractive, because of advantageous purchases. DRAPERY MARQUISETTE in Blue, Gold and Roso shades. with wide band border effect, Width 86 inches, Special, yard pissveeesseeveces sae Even weave, 18c 386-INCH SILKOLINIS in a wide assortment DOTTED CURTAIN SWISS in an even of attractive patterns suitable for comforter weave, with hemstitched, floral-designed coverings. Special, yard ....... border, Plain and Width 36 inches patterned — centers. Bpeolal, yard ...csseseecseevsn y 30c FIGURED CURTAIN SCRIMS in dots and ventional patternings, in Rose, Blue and Cretonne Remnants CURTAIN VOILES in floral design borders and with attractive plain or patterned centers 86 inches. Special, yard... are 35c Silkoline Remnants Ivory and White, Lengths of 1 tod yards in heavy: Lengths of 2 to § yards. Soft. quality Cretonnes, Good choice 50c finished Siikolines in wide va 15c of attractive. patternings. riety of patter Width 36 Width 60 indhes........ . YARD Pt BCL OMe NER AIC K YARD —DOWNSTAIRS STORE.