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PAGE 4 IN CHINA WAR Manchurian Chief Reports Capture of City PEKIN ; , Fa, m f Presitent femse of ¢ Te Lin The M neunced f captured « Yang 5 portant opulation, 20 miles fr , te Wu Pei F ta mect 2 Chan F 1 Yeading th< SHANGHA! Fighting has been resuir the Wang I district and | f v card i Shanghai last nis t heavy 1) fresh rains ted t | from becom:r G } -toNpox 15.—The Daily | b) Mail's Muka: t Fam interview wit! Manchurian LONDON, Sept The HERE’S MORE ABOUT POOR BOY STARTS ON PAGE 1 Po wouth, with both less off at the due to a railroad aceid 8 Fears ago, is appealing to bis friends | WW help save Bernard QUIT SCHOOL TO SUPPORT FAMILY "My boy had to be was 14 years « Hf the seventh ) t port us. What did he b Thm to keep away from bad com Meany? Nothing but hard kr Hard work; no spending me i peek of; not a thing that most boys p sup ave to teach fp fave to give them a decent start Hf life, the older Grant said | Local American Legion officials today they woukl take Part in the fight to save Gra m the gallows. Attorney J. McCarthy T tained to help in the fight Officials of the legion sald they Would call Grant's case to the atte ton of the nation A or th at St. Paw onvent lastors Condemn Caverly Decision GHICAGO, Sept. 15.—Chi ministers united in Sunday sermons Miitacking the life imprisonment sen Wences imposed on Nathan Leopold Sema Richard foeb. millionaire Ppwutha, who killed 14-year-old Bot ’ ty Franks. Tt matters little what becomes of [the two arch criminals, Loeb and Leopotd, but it does make a Of difference to the m have watched these men escape 7 the sword of justice because of their "money and influence, according to the Rev. Luther Thomas, pastor of Deerfield Presbyterian church. | Rev. Thomas, who soon wil! move Ban Pedro, Cal., suggested that late’s Attorney Robert E. Crowe | ‘Fesign in protest to the sentence. S) "This extreme crime deserved the ‘extreme penalty of the law,” Dr. M.| SP, Boynton, pastor of the Woodlawn | ‘} Baptist church, declared. |The Rev. William J. McNamee, i the pulpit of St. Patrick's latholiec church, said he had long @ personal friend of Justice ly. who sentenced the boys to state penitentiary at Joliet. He| ired the sentence brought to an onalities and friendships. : ee fe must condemn the false phil- osophy which Justice Caverly’s de- ision advocates,” the Rev. McNa-| - mee said. ve must have real men | of the bench, not weaklings. It is} ® Sorry setback for our reputed | democracy and a dastardly example to have, set.” Other ministers in practically ev- | @ry denomination expressed similar | sentiments in the course of their sermons. | < Gives Musenaing His | ~ Bird Collections CHICAGO, Sept. 15.—Nathan Leo- pold, Jr, has presented his exten- Vsive bird collection of 1,500 spect-| mens to two museums. “Bix of the rarest went to the ‘The rest he gave to the museum @f the Audubon society of Elgin, mm. B. ¥. Berryman, president of the Elgin society, had become acquaint- €a with the young slayes thru the Jatter’s ornithological researches. Davis Addresses Barbecue Throng EASTWOOD FARMS, Bunceton, Mo., Sept, 15.—Before a crowd of| between 30,000 and 40,000 persons, Ff John W. Davis, democratic prest- |} dential candidate, today declared he Py directed his remarks not at republi. i. cans and democrats, but at American y dressing the mammoth crowd eat the barbecue at the home of Dr. SA. W. Nelson, democratic guberna- forial cyndidate, Davis characterized the election of Woodrow Wilson as| fin atiawer to the revolt of the people against the Payne-Aldrich tarift act. i, on | wWri’c: | Will ‘Give Bonds for Certificates | |, W. Straus & Co., of New York, Monday announced that permanent first mortgage serial coupon gold! honds of the $1,475,000 Medical and Dental building of Seattle are ready for exchange for interim certificates ions |" | Sunday dance ordinance Field Museum of Natural History.“ T hey Agree on Prohibition it AR = Here are William Jennings Bryan (left) and William Jen-| nings Bryan (right) having a chat Monday morning in front of the Gowman hotel. Mr. Bryan (left) says he agrees with the Commoner’s stand on the prohibition question. Photo: by Frank Jacobs, Sta ¢ Photographer BRYAN, 1 p bet an, the child's father ‘ The r M 7h “ ta n Tue ¢ Brya } ‘ ager for| A Obergs Have Feast on | Rabbits; Here’s How “Empty Hand’ Couple Make Snare From Grape Vine; Mrs. Oberg “Was Hungry” vines, cleverly Mc Bak They have built a < addr ety to tet | Nooksack Piles aves and of Mr. and Mrs, Earl Oberg, 8 et roving to the No’ couple that is p woods wit which to pre food and shelte: Oberg twisted @ yines-into a snare t cau; in its toils a rabbit Saturday. The snare wa again day and f plenty, It was, The Oberg: thelr from tieir menus ome chang camp since la and berries. must uple is battling nature w y nds in the w t te h The Star Mosquitoes have been the big: LOSE PERMIT County and City Consider | Action in Matter both the Obergs are. Obe has not suffered from the scarcity of food, but his wife has been bothered several times by the pangs of hunger, she | admitted & day HERE’S MORE ABOUT MILK STARTS ON PAGE 1 Cancellation of dance hall licenses of the Blue Bird floating pavilion on Lake Washington was being consid. ered Monday by both city and county officials. Mayor Edwin J. Brown ad dressed a letter to the board of coun him is being made because he | that he would accept no Japanes milk at his dairy that much of | ty commissioners and to the city|the milk shipped by the 8 | council asking that the license of the | associat from the dairies of | Blue Bird be revoked. | Japan: | “Reports which I have on this| Guitteau denied that any Japanese boat are sufficient to warrant me in| white milk is saying that they are not conducting | wit. ACCEPT NOTHING their dance in accordance with the BUT “WHITE MILK" law and that they are violating the “Records show that while Crehan : the m laim: per cent of the milk we said. “I do not want respor be hing him is Japanese pro- for operation of this boat duced that only 12 per cent comes police Or executive departments.” from Japanese farms,” he sald. Casper E. Fischer, manager of the} Crehan insisted he would accept] Hippodrome, protested by letter! nothing but “white milk” and that| against Sunday dances on the boat. | this was the reason he was forced] Residents of Leschi park, where the/t, go to the associations in neigh at is moored, declare that its opera-| boring counties where fon in that vicinity in a nulsance| farmers are not members. md also seek cancellation of the Il-| «xo white producer caa live |the $1.80 figure,” he said. “Tt ts| d of county ers will consider the meeting Tuesday. The city council license committee investigat ing the conduct of the dance commission mply an.effort to beat off out npetition. Japan ating with family | Ing a lower grade boat. | hy’ possibly, not. When dc oper-| help and produc-| of milk can ‘get but white farmers can white producers en forced out of the field, The Mayflower Dairy 1s making} arrangements to ship its milk into | Seattle in huge glass-lined tank] Neither side license at its alone, have price present| si : would say Monday} x ‘ whether or not a reduction in re- Hearing on Justice Court| tai prices would fallow the cut in the wholesale price. Kills Wife, Child Then Shoots Self MODESTO, Cal., Sept. 15.—€ Case Set for Afternoon Hearing of a sult to recover $7.4 from the Pacific Telephone & Tele graph Co. will be resumed | day before Justice of the F r Carl Shannon tonight will con- Whitehead. The sult wa | duct; an Mnquest Into! the aéaen of | Attorney Henry Clay Agnew as alimery A. Crosby, Katherine Crosby test case to try ont the ldity of} his wife, and Mary Mannion, 11, the new tariff put into effect by the |daughter of Mra. Croslys te telephone company Crosby, who had been sued for dl-| Agnew claima that the new rates voree and who had been forced by are not on file with the state depart-| Mrs, Crosby to live im tan tie ment of public worms and therefore | house since the Kult. was brought the phone company haa no right to| hammered his wife'n head to n pulp collect them: and then crushed the child's skull, tioned Justice Whitehead ta remove | happone irday night, » Sunday the case to fed court, Argu- | mi ments on this motion will be resumed ning he told of the murdera and Killed himself, blowing his head off when the case is heard Monday, with a shotgun, 1h j PLO ” ati HOLL AG AYE ORENEW BATTLE The Bryans Get Together BRYAN TO HELP" THE SEATTLE § DAVIS HERE Will Open Democratic Fight Here on Wednesday rae |More Vessels Will rpo Appears to Answer to Charg AND BEATEN Loses Diamonds and Cash to Brutal Thug : Aid Wheat Farmers Boiler Explodes; Watchman Killed Py Your Mother Wants You, Art Heacock ves GIRL 1S ROBBED “° Like urt Hearing Finds Minister Is Insane BELIEVE MAN IS DROWNED His Boat Is Found Adrift and Empty Near Lesct Tod They Go to Sea; Rescued f t ; Princess Killed in Mountain Fall The Breakfast Room This floor is Armstrong’s Moulded Inlaid Linoleum, Pat- tern No, 5064 Look for the CIRCLE “A trademark on the burlap back, Linoleum Floors are Good Looking and Last Long because they are made of Cork, Linseed Oil, and Burlap Two ways to be sure of getting genuinelinoleum F you want linoleum, you want it. There is no other floor that .. sold in rolls or rugs that’has the substance, body, and resilience that come from a mixture of powdered cork and oxidized linseed oil, pressed on a strong burlap back. You can always be sure of getting genuine linoleum, made of cork, linseed oil, and burlap, if you look carefully and be sure that it has a burlap back. Burlap is tough and strong; the burlap back is the reason why genuine linoleum does not tear readily. All of Armstrong's Linoleum has the Circle “A” trademark on the burlap back When you see this “A’’ inclosed in a circle, you can be sure you are getting linoleum as fine as any that can be made. Why Cork is used Cork is used in making linoleum because it is tough. Cork resists moisture, i elastic and springy, and deadens sound It is hard to wear out. This is true of a bottle cork. It is also true of the finely round cork used in making Armstrong's Tinoleury: Cork mixed with Linseed Oil Did you ever notice the tough film of oil that forms on a can of paint when ex- posed to the air? ‘That is oxidized linseed oil. In making linoleum, powdered cork is mixed with * linseed oil and the two blend perfectly. This gives linoleum its smooth surface, which makes it so easy toclean. All dust is surface dust. and brushes right up. ‘ Why printed linoleum patterns are so pretty The smoothness of linoleum makes it very easy to print a beautiful and regu- lar design on its surface. The printing is done with heavy linseed oil paints. [he linoleum contains linseed oil, and the two combine perfectly. Varnish, this printed surface when your linoleum is new, and about twice a year thereafter, and the pattern will wear for many years. In inlaid linoleum the colors go all the way through In inlaid linoleum, the colors of the sur- face design run clear through to the bur- lap back. Each little colored block or shape in the pattern is laid separately on the burlap, and the whole pressed together into one piece under heavy rolls. Armstrong's Linoleum Rugs An Armstrong’s Linoleum Rug, printed or inlaid, is made of cork, linseed oil, and burlap, and has the Circle “A” trade- mark on the back. These rugs cost but a trifle more, but are better-looking, and give longer service. They lie flat with- out curling, and are waterproof, sanitary and har to tear. Made in four si Laying fine linoleum for beauty and permanency A good inlaid linoleum floor should be cemented in place over a lining of build- ers’ deadening felt. Laid this way, the seams are not noticeable, the linoleum will not stretch or crack, and will never need refinishing. Wax it, and it gets better-looking A linoleum floor requires very little care. Wash inlaid linoleum when first laid with a mild soap like Ivory. Next wax it thoroughly, rubbing the wax well in. After that a daily brushing or touching up of thewalked-on places on cleaning day with a slightly waxed cloth or dry mop, keeps it in perfect condition. Rewax about once a year. With the aging of the waxed surface, the linoleum softens and mellows in tone. Do you know how pretty linoleum is? . Rolls standing in a store do not give a really good idea of what a beautiful floor linoleum makes. When cemented down and waxed, one of the modern designs of Armstrong’s Linoleum is a lovely floor to lay your fine rugs on—one that will harmonize with your furnishings, and make everything in the room better- looking. Your floor is beautiful, sanitary, permanent, and no trouble at all. Do not scrub your linoleum Harsh scrubbing with strong soaps or powders will injure linoleum or any other fine floor. Itis nevernecessary with lino- leum. Don’tletitbedone. Useonlyamild soap, when washing is really necessary. Write for free sample and booklet Let us send you a sample of Armstrong’s Linoleum and a copy of our 24-page booklet, “New Floors for Old,” contain- ing a score of colorplates of different de- signs that you can see at good stores—Jaspés, carpet inlaids, tile inlaids, and printed patterns; linoleum rugs, printed and inlaid; also information on laying lino- leum and how to care for it. Armstronc Cork Company, Makers of Cork Products since 1860 Linoleum Division, LANCASTER, PENNSYLVANIA Seattle Office—803 Terminal Sales Building. Telephone—Elliott 3641 _Armstrong’s Linoleum for Every Floor in the House og a