Newspaper Page Text
Forty Pages
IN FIVE PARTS
VOL. XXXII, NO. 344-
TRY TO BLEED
THE GOVERNOR
HERRICK OF OHIO MARKED AS
A VICTIM
EXTORTION PLOT IS CHARGED
Cleveland Woman Alleged to Have At.
tempted Blackmail When He First
Announced His Candidacy for
Present Office
Special to The Herald.
CHICAGO, Sept. 9.— lnquiries today
into the so-called Helen Butler case,
which Attorney, W. A. Shay of Cincin
nati Is said to be investigating, osten
sibly in the Interest of a woman against
a wealthy man, brought out the alleged
fact that a plot was made to extort
money from Gov. Herrlck of Ohio when
he first announced his candidacy for the
governorship.
The woman in the case at that time
was known as Minnie Lee, and she con
ducted a rooming house on the west
side in this city. Cleveland detectives
were enlisted in the defense of the gov
ernor and It was found that the claims
of the woman were unfounded. The
case was settled at the time without
publicity as 'soon as the woman was
cronfronted with facts concerning her
career. She received a peremptory
order to leave here, according to the
story, and did so. ' • ,
It is said by persons who claim to
know Minnie Lee that a baby was born
in her boarding house to a woman
known as "Dutch Annie," and that Min
nie Lee subsequently took the child and
went to Cleveland, where she repre
sented that the baby was her own and
that she "would make some millionaire
pay."
TRAVELS MILES WITH
DEAD BABY IN HER ARMS
Mother Heroically Conceals Tragedy
for Fear Conductor Should Re.
move the Corpse
By Associated Press.
STOCKTON, Sept. 9.— With the body
of her 18-months-old baby clasped in
her arms as' though Mt' were a- living
chili Mrs. Abraham Coulter covered
the Journey from Reno, Nev., to Car,
ters, Tuolumne county, this state, keep
ing back the tears as best she could,
and sharing with no one the fact that
her chlld'had died on thetrairi. : ' '
Mrs. Coulter feared that. If the con
ductor of the train on which she was
coming west from her old home In Wis
consin should learn of the little one's
death, he would take the corpse from
her. Acordlngly she resolved to tell
no one the facts,' and took care of her
other two children who were with her
while holding the tiny corpse.
Sho arri'.ed at Carters yesterday
where her husband, who had gone
there several months ago .from Wiscon
sin, has made a home for her.
APPALLING CONDITIONS
EXIST AT SHUSHA
Armenian Bishop Sends an Urgent
Appeal for Aid for the
. •■ Homeless
By Associated Press.
TIFLIS, Sept. 9.— The Armenian
bishop of Shusha has sent a message
to the authorities here saying that the
devastation and resultant misery at
Shusha is appalling. The fighting be
tween the Tartars and Armenians con
tinued uninterruptedly for five days and
hundreds of killed and wounded are
lying in the streets. The bishop adds
that the greater p&rt of the town now
consists of charred ruins, the buildings
destroyed Including the government
offices, churches, schools and shops. He
urgently appeals for ) food, funds and
other ' necessities for the starving and
homeless thousands.
OIL TRUST HAS ACQUIRED! V/iOc
';., SAN FRANCISCO GAS CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 9.— The
Chronicle says today there is no longer
any doubt that the Standard Oil in
terests have acquired the San Francisco
Gas and Electric company. The price
paid, according. to information. receive^
here from New York is $25 cash and'
$65 in five per cent. ' bonds for each
share of the gas company's stock. The
purchasers have deposited $500,000 with
the. Union Trust company of this city
as a guarantee that they will carry out
their part of the contract.
FRENCH AERONAUTS ARE
BELIEVED TO HAVE PERISHED
. LONDON, Sept. 9.— Janques ' Faure.
a well known French aeronaut, accom
panied by the Marquis De Villalonga,
started in a balloon from the. Crystal
palace bound' for Denmark, on Thurs
day evening. Nothing has since been
heard of them and the gravest fears
are now entertained that the aero
nauts have been lost In the North Sea.
GOVERNOR FOLK LEAVES .-
TO VISIT PORTLAND FAIR
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., \ Sept. 9.—
Governor Joseph W. Folk, accompanied
by his : wife, left, at noon today ; for
Portland, Oregon, to attend the Mis
souri day exercises at the exposition.
Los Angeles Herald.
GOVERNOR HERRICK OF OHIO
PANIC PREDICTED
BY ROCKEFELLER
OIL KING PROPHESIES HARD
TIMES
OVERPRODUCTION THE CAUSE
Magnate Declares That Seven Million
Men Will Be Without Work In
1907— Advises That Idle
Build Roads
Special to The Haralfl.
CHICAGO, Sept. 9.— John D. Rocke
feller's advice to Chicago is to put its
vagrants to work building good roads
instead of driving them forth Into the
country. This advice he extends to
the whole country, together with s a
warning that there are hard times com
ing. An industrial panic due to over
production In allllnes Is predicted by
the oil king for 1907-8. '
He thinks the government ought to
begin now and legislate for it. The
only way to provide work for the 7,000,
000 Idle will be to set them at work
building good roads.
These opinions . are ascribed to Mr.
Rockefeller by Colonel W. H. • Moore,
president of the National Good Roads
association, who has had a conversa
tion with the millionaire. Colonel
Moore said Mr. Rockefeller, predicted
that where there '.were 3,000,000 men out
of work in 1893,' there .would be from
7,000,000 to ' 10,000,000 idle' hv:i9Q7-8.
PANAMA*. CANAL DIGGERS
WRUNG BY STARVATION
Exorbitant Prices for Inferior Food
Reduce Working Force to Most
. . Pitiable Conditions
By Associated Press.
NEW YORK, Sept. 9.— lt was learned
today that a condition of practical star
vation, which- has several times re
cently threatened Panama canal labor
ers, was one of the grounds which
caused Thedore P. Shonts, chairman of
the Panama canal commission, to ac
cept the J. E. Markel bid for supplying
food to government employes at Pana
ma, causing two unsuccessful bidders
to protest to President Roosevelt.
The chief engineer, John F. Stevens,
has been sending dally appeals to the
canal commissioners' headquarters to
rend his men food.' _It was said today
by good authority that the laborers who
are doing the hard work have been for
pome time in a" half starved condition,
due to the fact that the demand for
food has raised the prices of all com
modities to abnormal figures in \ Pana
ma. '
The dollar a day men, with eggs at'
10 cents each and bad meat from 20
to 40 cents a pound, have gone for two
and three days at a time without any
food except that got from sucking the
wild cane In the swamps. They have
gathered around ' the quarters of the
officers begging for food, and dally
cables to Washington for food supplies
have been, the result. In this emer
gency one of the reasons for accepting
the Markel bid, it is learned, was the
fact that he has an organized force
ready to put into Panama at once.
FREIGHT TRAINS COLLIDE
AND THREE ARE KILLED
Two Others Reported Injured by Acci
dent on Philadelphia & Reading
Railroad In Pennsylvania
By Associated Press.
PHILADELPHIA, Fa., Sept. 9.—
Three trainmen were^ killed -and two
others were injured early, today in a
collision at Taber Junction, Pa.,
near, here, between freight trains of the
Philadelphia & • Reading railroad '■ and
the Central railroad of New Jersey.
The dead:' ' "•' ' ' ■ ' ;.'„•)
JOHN RANKIN, engineer of, the Cen
tral railroad of New Jersey, train.
HENRY BAKER, conductor' of the
same train. . »,\j . , , '. ■ .j |\. : .;.;.,,'
' FRANK • BOND of , Philadelphia,
brakeman of , the Philadelphia & Read-
Ing train. .-...:
: Fire followed the collision and the
local fire department was called out to
extinguish the flames.
FRENCH CHAMBERS WILL
REASSEMBLE NEXT MONTH
By Associated Press
PARIS, Sept. 9.— The council of min
isters has decided on the" reassembling
of parliament either October 17 or Oc
tober 30, ■ the . date . depending ■on the
wishes of^ the presidents, of, the two
chambers.
LOS ; ANGELES. CAL.. SUNDAY MORNING, 'SEPTEMBER .10,. 1905.
19 MEN KILLED
BY EXPLOSION
RAND POWDER MILLS • ARE
>: DESTROYED -
SCORES. RECEIVE ; INJURIES
In , Town of Fair Chance, Pa., Where
. V the Plant Is Located, Nearly
Every. House Was
..•" . ; Destroyed; '•'••tr.T, ■.-.'; . ;
By Associated Press.
| CONNELLSVILLE, Pa,, Sept. 9.— The
Rand, powder mills at Fair Chance, six
miles south, of Unlontown, were en
tirely . wiped out by an explosion to
day. Of the thirty- two men who went
to work in the mills 19 are known to be
dead. Of these thirteen have been
Identified. ;
Beside nine of the factory force who
i.'ere seriously injured, ' scores of people
iv the town of Fair Chance within half
a mile of the powder mills were more
or. less painfully injured.
. The shock of the explosion. was dis
tinctly ' felt in Connellsville, ■ twenty
miles away, buildings being rocked on
their foundation. 1 At Uniontown hun
dreds of panes of glass were broken. In
the town of Fair Chance there is scarce
ly a house that did not suffer damage.
Hay stacks were toppled . over in the
fields and live stock were stunned. The
rails of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad
and the West Pennsylvania Traction
company were rooted from the roadhed
and traffic was delayed six hours. Train
No. 52 on the Baltimore & Ohio had a
narrow escape from annihilation. .It
bad Just passed the Rand mills when'
the explosion occurred.' The. windows
in the coaches were shattered'and'pas
sengers thrown into a panic. '.
A street car on the West Pennsyl
vania railway had also passed a few
seconds before the explosion , and was
far j enough away to escape damage,
though It was derailed. '■■;■_;
There were seven explosions In all.
Every one of the ten buildings was
totally demolished. The ' debris • that
was strewn over the .ten acres 'of
rround where the plant ..was .. located
took fire soon after the, explosion; and
added its terrors to, the disaster.; ■ \v
Experiences of Survivors
The first three explosions were not
so 'serious as ; the last' four. Then the
packing house pressing ■' room j and
magazine blew up, followed by ; two
cars of dynamite." "Many of the sur
vivors had thrilling , experiences. Or
ville Swayne was working in the glaz
ing room and had gone out for a drink
of water. He was Just ■ outside when
the mixing: mill, went .. up. The ex
plosion threw him high In the air,
but he landed on. his feet in a network
of wires. Dodging these he sped
around the hill and was fifty feet
away when the second explosion . threw
him on his face. He. lay .there stunned
and knew nothing of the terrific blast
that came when' th? storage magazine
went up.
' A half hour after the explosion he
was picked up and carried to a place
of- safety. All day. at short Intervals
searchers would bring In bits of bodies
or clothing. Some of these were carried
in dlshpans or damaged powder cans..
A' majority of ' the dead men were
single, although several of them leave
large families. ' .'. "■" ■- '.
When the bodies were recovered the
work of identification was very diffi
cult. '. . .••'••*•
The hole where the magazine explod
ed is fifteen feet deep and fifteen yards
square. ■ "•' : : . ■ :': '
Conservative estimates place the. loss
to the Rand company, at several, hun
dred, thousand dollars. There are also
extensive losses to private houses and
buildings In-all surrounding towns.
.:.'■■ <■ « ■ • ■ •
FISHERMEN DROWNED AND'
CAPTAIN KILLS HIMSELF
Eight of the Crew of the Joseph H.
Cromwell Lost on the Georges
. ■ . Bank ■ .
«3y Associated Press.
BOSTON, Sept. 9.— The death ",'of
Captain Isaac Fanzer, by suicide, ' and
the loss of eight men by going astray
in a fog, was reported by. the remain-
Ing members of the crew of the Boston
fishing schooner Jos. H. Cromwell, who
brought the vessel into this port today
The men were lost while, out in dories
on the Georges Bank last Wednesday.
The captain jumped overboard and was
drowned Friday morning. He left a
note declaring his intention to commit
suicide. . , . .'..-.
THOMAS W. LAWSON -
SUED FOR $3,750,000
I Louis H. Rahn of Urlque, Mexico,
'r\ ..'..Claims Failure to Keep an
' \\% Agreement
BylAssociated Press.
BOSTON, Sept. 9.— Claiming that he
has been damaged. to the extent of $3,
750,000 by the failure of Thomas "W.
Lawson to keep an agreement with him,
Louis H. Rahn of Urlque, ''Mexico", en
tered . suit against Mr. Lawson . In the
supreme court . today." • ;"..' • ,
PORTSMOUTH PEACE RINGS UP CURTAIN
FOR INFINITELY MORE CRUEL CIVIL WAR
BARON YAMAMOTO
LIST OF DEAD IN
ITALY INCREASES
EARTHQUAKE MORE SERIOUS
V THAN SUPPOSED ;
THOUSANDS KILLED AND HURT
Populace -Still In a State of Terror and
! Those Who Have Homes Stand.
ing Fear.to Enter - i : .
}•;"■ '■■;:;■■; ■jhem''." •■•■..••.- .
By Associated' Press.
ROME, Sept. 9.— The .effects . of .the
earthquake .were more ; disastrous than
at first reported. . Dispatches from the
south give increasing lists of-, dead and
injured,- the- numbers now: running into
the thousands.' Dartirlano alone shows
WOO casualties, 'while" In' Parghella the
number, of. dead .is'iestimated'; at 300 and
at Lappole 200/ J Many; persons are still
entombed In the ruins "of these .and
other • districts. : , In. some cases whole
families* have b'eeri wiped out." ( ;' ; '■'
■ The 1 : gr6at6st ■agitation ;' 'continuos
among the populace. ' ;Slight shock's, are
felt ► occasionally ' and :': ' subterranean
rumblings .; are still " heard. Those . per
sons still possessing homes ..refuse to
enter them.', . ■, ,■ : ■ ■ , • ■■ < ,'
F The ! worst is now , considered i to be
over. Those left destitute- are begin
ning to : feel i the pangs of .hunger and
there is also : much , suffering < by those
insufficiently clad. : Succor. is pouring in
from all quarters, but the destitution
Is so widespread that it. Is Impossible to
supply all the needs of the people.
• In. addition to the gift of King Vic
tor 'Emmanuel and .ministerial sub
sidies, newspapers in every part :of
Italy have opened subscriptions. Pub-
He sympathy) has been -aroused to an
exceptional degree and everybody re
gards the. event as an awful calamity.
Officers and ; private citizens in the
affected provinces and throughout the
kingdom are hastening to assist In the
work of. rescue and are displaying al
most superhuman energy in these ef
forts.; ■. •-' \ :-• '. < """/>". : ■ • : •■-'■, .'
i Official -figures of. victims of the
earthquake yin the j province iof Catan
•taro show that 450 dead have already
been found, that about ■ 1000 . were in
jured arid that there are an enormous
number of. persons without shelter.
AGUINALDO" REPORTED
LEAGUED; WITH OUTLAWS
Captain Baker Testifies That Former
, Leader. ls Director of Pres.
'ent Insurrection '. '
By Associated Press
•'MANILA, | Sept.' 9.— Captain W. 'P.
Baker, 'medical ; officer of the constab
ulary ' service In the province of Ca
vlte,' while testifying in a libel suit
against 'the Renaclemieno/ a native
newspaper,' declared that ; Agu'lnaldo
was In league with the native outlaws.
He said that evidence to this effect was
obtained from captured chiefs.
i "The people understand," he added,
;'that Aguinaldo' ls the director of the
outlaw campaign, and supposedly peace
ful natives are aiding the movement
under -the same understanding."
( Agulnaldb was challenged . to . prove
otherwise. •'• The testimony ha 3 created
a sensation. . . ;. ;.'■'■'.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA I
PEOPLE IN : NEW YORK;
Special to The Herald.
NEW TORK, Sept. 9.— The fol
lowing Southern Calif ornians
were registered at the leading
hotels here this week:
From Los Angeles— J. A. Mont
gomery, .W. T. Altken. C. D. Me- '.
: Intosh, -W.■ E. Neff. H. D. New
comb,', j. Wood. •
: Pasadena— R. M. Robinson..
•„ Santa" Barbara— O. P. Lansing. .;
Fl ELD \ MARSHAL* ?YA>IAtiATA'
RAISULI FIGHTING ' ;
REVOLTING TRIBESMEN
Fierce Hand.to-H and Conflicts, Take
Place in the Outskirts of
, . , Tangier . ..
By Associated Press.
TANGIER, Sept. 9.— There has been
severe hand-to-hand ' fighting all day
in the J outskirts ■ of . the - city. It '.s
thought that the casualties are heavy.
Raisull, 'recently appointed- governor
of several' tribes 'between' Tangier and
Fez, reinforced 500' cavalry, " Is en
deavoring''to subdue the revolting
tribesmen 'whY today, burned a num
ber of villages In the Immediate vicin
ity of Tangier. Thousands of Inhabi
tants of these places fled to j Tangier
and there Is 'great anxiety for the
safety of the town.
A large force of the sultan's troops
has arrived. It ls^ not known whether
they intend to assist or capture Raisull,
who is reported •to have been dismissed
from the position of • governor of -the
district. ;:V;v,~; .-./.■■{* . • .
UNPRECEDENTED STREAM
OF TRAVEL TOWARD COAST
Portland Exposition Has Caused Rec.
ord. Breaking Movement of
People Westward
By Associated Press.
■CHICAGO, Sept. 9.— The Lewis and
Clark exposition at Portland this sum
mer has created a stream of travel to
ward the Pacific coast which exceeds
anything before heard of for so . ex
tended a period.
, The Transcontinental Passenger as
sociation through the joint agency dur
ing the period j between April 10 and
August 31 validated 76,094 tickets which
originated east of Chicago, as follow 3:
To. Portland. 47,113: to Seattle, 2002;
to ■ San' Francisco, 18,749," and to Los
Angeles, 8230. .The validation charge is
50 cents, showing $38,047 revenue to the
association.
NEW POSTMASTER FOR
' TOWN OF NEENACH
Special to The Herald.
WASHINGTON, D. C, Sept. 9.—
Christian Clausen | has been appointed
a fourth class postmaster at Neenach,
Los Angeles county, vice George R.
Bowman.
BIG AMERICAN SYNDICATE
WILL INVEST IN CHILE
By Associated press.
NEW YORK, • Sept. 9.— Newspapers
here announce, says a Herald dispatch
from Valparaiso, Chili, that an Amer
ican syndicate has been organized with
a capital of $100,000,000, f0r Investment
in Chili/- .-
PRICE: DAILY/BY CARRIER, 65 CTS. PER MONTH
COUNT KATSURA
FIGHTING STILL CONTINUES
■ ' By Associated Press.
',', GODZYADANIA, Manchuria,
•• Sept. 8. — (Delayed in- transmls
11 slon) — Despite the fact that dls
■ > patches from St. Petersburg have
" announced that a treaty of peace
',', has been signed, the war opera
• > tlons . have not ceased and both
j | sides stand ready for a fight.
. . Skirmishes have taken place
" daily during the last three days
;; along the entire front, and each
• • day ' has . seen | the . shedding of
1 1 blood uselessly. The casualties
',', during the three days amount to
"three officers and eight men
]', killed, and about ninety wounded.
• • According to reports the Japan
'' ese are concentrating . consider*
Z able forces beyond their left flank
••In the Brainfu district.
FIVE KILLED IN
TROLLEY WRECK
SEVENTY-FIVE PERSONS ARE
INJURED
DISASTER IN PENNSYLVANIA
Passenger and Freight Cars Collide on
Electric Railway Near York.
Farmers Care for the
Wounded
By Associated Press.
YORK, ,Pa., Sept. 9.— Five persons
were killed and seventy-five injured in
a collision between a' passenger and
freight trolley cars on the York & Dal
lastown electric railway today, about
six miles from here. . The dead: - ■
HENRY SPRINKLE, York.
P. L. SENFT, Dallastown.
SETH SENFT, Dallastown.
E.. E. SHINDLER, Windsor.
RALPH MILLICAN, York.
The hospital Is filled with the Injured,
some' of them suffering from serious
wounds.'
The noise of the collision,' followed by
the cries of the Injured, attracted the
attention of the farmers in the vicinity
who rendered all aid possible. Twenty
of the more seriously injured : were
placed on a freight car and brought to
this city. A special car with physicians
was dispatched to the scene and all of
the injured received medical attention.
Some were cared for in near-by farm
houses and others were brought here In
special cars. .It is. not known whether
any of the injured are fatally hurt. .
GUN CLUB MARSHES
i ' ' WILL BE RECLAMED
Scene of Many, Battles Between
Watchmen and Farmers to Be
Put In Cultivation
By Associated Press.
CHICAGO, Sept. 9.— The ditch com
missioners of Lake county, Indiana, are
projecting the reclamation of the hunt
ing marshes which range for miles
along the Calumet river on both sides.
These marshes Include the celebrated
hunting preserves of the Tolleston Gun
club of .Chicago, comprising thousands
of acres of valuable rice .fields.
The reclaiirt-ng of the marshes will
destroy. thejsig hunting preserves, but
the land /^-claimed will be the most
valuable rarming land In Indiana. .
It was Intended at first that the pro
ject' should only embrace the land ad
jacent to Hammond, but . the work of
cutting a new channel and deepening
the Calumet river bed will affect not
only the low land in that vicinity but
the entire Calumet system.
It will take a year or more to finish
the work.
The Tolleston club marshes have been
the scene of fierce and bloody battles
between the club watchmen and . tres
passing - farmers, during . which many
iiave been killed. ,
Main News Section
BUSSIAN LIBEBTT
GETS DEADLY
BLOW
Tl T i
Bureaucracy Is Againv
Triumphant
Bloody Struggle Now
Unavoidable
Katsura, Yamamoto and Members of
Both Houses Meet and Discuss
Treaty Conditions— Yama.
gata Reviews War
Special to The Herald.
LONDON, • Sept. ■ 9.— lt Is becoming
evident that the advent of peace at the \
present ■ moment -is not an ■ unmixed
blessing for the fortunes of j Russians I
when regarded In their broadest aspect.
The war created an opportunity which
bade fair to enable the oppressed mil
lions of Russians to throw off the tyi*
anny: which, for many generations has
crippled the national life.
Organized effort to this end was ne- ■
cesaar lly slow but much bad j been ac- •
complished. The reform ■ leaders ' had ■
got the bureaucracy nearly down. They j
had forced their way past It and had j
told the czar in plain terms. the kind/
of rotten misgovernment he was giv
ing them. This they will not soon be •
able to do again. , • ; ■, • ■ . ;
The bureaucracy is on its feet onca ■
more. With -no foreign war to shake <
its nerves, and with the restoration of .
financial credit to strengthen its one
great weapon of oppression, it is not '
afraid of the independent reformers
just now. The St. Petersburg corres- '
pondent writes that the active reform
ers are all at seal their plans thrown :
into confusion by the unexpected peace.;
They are agreed. only on one point, that
the Portsmouth peace has put the clock
back in Russia.
It must not be inferred, however,
that the "cause "of llberty'has'been'lost '
.or, abandoned.' 1 It. means .■ only.' that,
while liberty might have been won by
constitutional methods If the war had 1
been' allowed to continue a little longer,
it now must, in all ' probability, ', be
fought for.'
' 'That fight, there is too good reason to [
fear, must be far bloodier in order ( to %
succeed than was ' the more civilized
warfare which has been waging In
Manchuria.
Sudden peace has forced the hands of
THE DAPS NEWS-
FORECAST
Southern California: Cloudy on
Sunday; light ' southwest wind.
Maximum temperature in, Los An.
'geles yesterday, 77 degrees; mini,
mum, 60 degrees. ,' ' ,
PART I
I—Try1 — Try to bleed governor. ' ; ■
2 — Sacramento one blaze of light
3 — Pupils housed in shacks. :
A — Southern j California news. '
6—lnhales6 — Inhales gas; may die.
6-7 — Sports. ■ •■- !
8— Elks attend barbacue.
1.3 — Society. .
A — Editorial.
6 — Hatfleld to make rain.
7— Public advertising.
1-3— Real estate. •
4 — Race airships thirty miles.
s— Native Sons hold celebration. .
6.7-B.9.lo— Classified advertisements*
PART IV
Magazine section,
PART V
Colored comic supplement.
EASTERN
Rockefeller predicts disastrous panic
in 1907.
Nineteen persons killed by powder
explosion In Pennsylvania. .••,.,
Five persons killed, seventy-five In
jured, by trolley collision In New York
state. ■
FOREIGN
Revolutionary events In Russia like
ly to take a more sanguinary turn.
Progressive party in . Japan passes
resolutions denouncing the recent ..
treaty. , . ■
Despite armistice encounters be
tween Russian and Japanese troops \
still continue.
COAST
Native Sons' parade at Sacramento is - '
a brilliant affair.
Nelson defeats Britt in eighteenth , '
round and is now world's lightweight "
champion. .
Young man In Pasadena disappears
and fears are felt for his safety.
LOCAL
Elks spend day in Santa Monica can
yon, eating, drinking, singing, running.
Joking, screaming, rusticating, rumlnat-i'
ing, masticating and rejuvenating. : .-,
prominent yachtsman deprecates fact " I
that unexcelled conditions for the sport
here i are almost entirely : unknown , In •"'■
the east. ii n mil ,i | »iiHin i "l>"WSji— "ft— W
I Race of airships occurs today.l VBuI- Tsi
let" and "Man Angel"; being entered.--,^'.
Rainmaker Hatfield to bring. twenty ,i'a
inches of moisture, than to try hlssklU
in South Africa. . > •- - .'•■■■. .
Superintendent > of- Schools James .' Al&i
Foshay - tells why . children ; art taugrht si
la abacks. . *