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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1923)
SEVENTY-TOmD YEAR . SALEM, OREGON;WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 20, 1923 ?PRIC2 FIVE c: f V I I ' I I U I I - U "U 1 u u vj u u j ,vr ;u YJ ;U ,U:UJ OM lCzi i I U-:A 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 m r t 1. 1 1 a -11 i 1. 1 1 11 11 1 iv 11 f 11 1 it 11 v 11 1.1 1111 f 1 ttii 11 1 an :ini 1 1 1 r- . - ? 1 1 , . - ii inii.riiiiu n n i 11 I I I I I I- I i - It I I I I I 'I. n llilslillll I IIT1 hil II Hi IliA Ii" M II II I! II i - '! I I I I II II I 1 11 I I I II 1(11 II .' it L r tk IT TJ T IjI'' Tj I7"T 1 I I 1 11 I 1 1 I I I ll II ' "! I I I II I b! a LiUES BY . i - - - Snatches Burning Fuse From -Beneath 4eat-of . Automo : bile Truck; Is Badly , In - jured By Blast r " HEAR POiriTT OF DEATH Comihlons?sc6'f'ATioit --Without' Harm Through . His?A0t 6f Heroism, 3 - BEND, ' Ore.; Jane .1 9; -While tlie lives t six men hang ia the balance, 15 year - old , Charles Branch risked his own life as aacriUce-lo saTe-theirs, snatching a box of burning fuse and high explosives from, under the seat of the automobile track in -which his companions were riding. ?: A moment later he .was hurled Into the air by the explosion, suf fering terihle injaries, but1 his companions, escaped, liwo with only miner hurts, "the others un scathed, y:.:i ' Tonight the boy was in)a Bend hospital. Despite the fact ttiat his flesh ; la pierced t in ? Innumerable places by twisted' bits jf copper wire and that one eye was virtual ly torn from Its socket, the -youth nay recover, physicians said. Xtnocied TncoBscioits Co great was AfcV force of -the Cc location that A. B. Taylor was knocked . unconscious, b e 1 a g thrown for a disUnce pf fifteen u -t " - tj , ' V ntm- tla rft Vl fTvfn fMllWf wire, ' these two 'being "the 'only ones, aside from Branch, to suffer from, the explosIcari-v"'? j- if Branch wasT placed in an auto-mobile- and hurried to -Redmond for flrtt aid, being brought from there to the hospital In Bend. Craneh and his mother came to ttls section a iawweeas ago uum their Lome ia Enumclaw, "Wash. iv i i Worked for Uncle . - --Toug-rranch 2:ad beenwork ItiS' lut the road construction camp for - bla cnele, A. B. TayIor,- road contractor,' on the Itedmond-SIs-tera -tishway.f our miles from afternoon, a truck load of supplies was nsarlng'camp. -;Laverne Tay lor, son of the ccitractor, was drivln g'ajfd ir C. Taylor, Branch; i::3 ::tl!yan4 it other labor ers "were n the f truck. - A ' box containing' ' 5osen;: root - electric traatorseachMaade f up' of -a r jxiber . stx-. fulnlnate cap and lessfha-iif'iafiulited copper wire and vilad -a-quattity of fnse wa,s under' the-seat..- r ."it .."Caoso -UnkaowB' V ? Haw 'ths'fass'' tecame ignited"1s nr. certain. ..Bra-ach'saw the spark rro-resslng" toward the exploslTesTl T. lih epportusity to. jump - ana save t!.T.Slf. he Ignored the easy way oct. f Ha- called to Laverne Taylor" to stop the truck, reached sad er, the Ef, grasped the box c! ttxlosives Jumped i to the ground, his body Interposed 'be tween the explosives and his com paslons. Only a yard away from the truck,' he was in the act, of .thrswlES the box from htm "when the exclusion' came. ; 2 S!:c:;tcr.3' Discovered . Dy Fcrmtr i liter T.ledf ord M-CDFOIID, Or June 19,Two human ' . tkeletons, apparently those of an: infant and an adult, were discovered today by Samuel T.iteman. who waanlowing a field on the, old A. C. Tsylor place near the Pacifie highway, between aiea ford and Central Toint. The bones gave an appearance of having1 been bailed for several years. h Nothing-Is klaown at present of h nv h-r , a ened to be bttried in, the spotwhere they werevfound. OREGON: -JFairv Wednesdayf t-Tnoderate we5terly winds. ; LOCAL. vniATHER (Tuesday) ' Maximum temperature -.71.' MlnlmuTa'tsmpersturej -49- ; rtlTer, 2vf: t; fal las.j Atr:'-- --?, TSfi-cloady. m CMILD CIIMGE r Walter McDougal, well known in Salens, arid said, to be the son of al wealthy" banker of Buffalo, N, was arrested here yesterday oh a charge of child-stealing preferred by his ex-wife in' Multnomah county, and the arrest was on a warrant- from' th.e office of 'District Attorney Stanley Myers of that, county. , r ' i Tl " - ' 1 : t :-Mrs: McDougal obtained a divorce from McDougal re cently" and the custody of the child was awarded to her. The child, a son, was a student at Hill Military academy, and the allegation is that McDougal took "him' away frcpn the school on the afternoon-of : June 12. He , was "released on bailof $1000 following his arrest yesterday. .r '. ' ' " ,' ! : . f -TriA;MeTonral have lived in Oregon for several vears. niuch of the'time in Salem. First SpeecLSIatedfor.St. -. Louis; r Expected -Back ' rLater in August: " : WASllINGTONV June iSlpj-es-tdent Harding will leave Washing ton shortly after noon tomorrow on the longest trip of his adminr istratlon-in the trip lhat -will take him across the continent, to Alas ka, along the Pacif Ir coast to the Panama canal zone; and to , Porto Rico,-and will keep bim away from the capital for at least two months The first prepared address will be made "In" St -Lbais "Thursday night. .' The other addresses "will be made In .the following cities in the - order ," named : Kansas City, Mo. i Hutchinsin. Kansas: Denver. Cheyenne, Salt -Lake City. Ppca tello. Idaho;, and Idaho Falls f Butte -and -Helena, Mont.: po kaneMeacham and Portland. Or.I liand Ta2bma,-.WasH. : t v . After his visit to Alaska he will speak at Vancouver;' B. C.; Seattle, VaAMAlsM f AM 1 II alas B It 1 San Diego; which will be the port of embarkation for the water trip throurh the 1 Panama' canal to Porto Rico and thence ! to - Ne Tork.; vj '-i'r- "'''-t No definite date for the presi dent's return : to Washington has been set, ,but It Is expected to be about August 25. V - ' ESTEEM IS t t FM-FOIlfOUll Chicago and - Minneapolis I Each Report Two Deaths;. r"Mercliry is High : " ; i- ; . ; i : ":s " : CHICAGO. I June ii9. Two deaths were reported today as a remit of the heat wave whicn struck Chicago yesterday and con tinued unabated Coday, aitnougn slight . teilef . .was f o tyid ' late thl3 afternoon in a shower wnicn tasiea but a few minutes. iThe temper ature this afternoon reached 91 degrees. 1 :" ' ul" ; Joseph Ferguson leu in LAae Michigan from a pier when he was overcome by ithfr heat. Stan ley H611andbeck,. painter, 4was overcome while at work ' and 1 fell four stories, f He was dead when picked 'np. ih--' IK': : r The excessive heat will continue for Cnicaro and the surrounding territory: for "several days, the lo cal Weather bureau announced. " MINNEAPOLIS, June l9.-Two deaths attributed to the heat were reported to the police here today. The -'maximum temperature was 88 r-;r:,; ,-T v r: Frank Markoff8ky, 63, a farmer living: Just outside of town, wm overcome by tbe -heat .and fell from the seat of; the wagon - he was driving. ' He died. Frank Cole, 70, of 'Albert Lea, Minn., was stricken -with heart disease, aggravated by the ,heat and died while seated la his automobile. KU5I LAUNCH READY SEATTLE. Wash.. June 19 IBOESSTiTS launch wth a rated speed of 18 miles in hour arrived here today to -19 us -3 la citcitas rcn.rca- - STEMJRG ! MSIEMf ... v i . , f j mw of STORES TDDPBJ Martha' Washington Corpor-f .ation to - Establish b0 -. - South of Portland . ;One Martha Washington, chain grocery .store, and "perhaps three or liTe.' will be opened: In f Salem before 'August 1; according 'to present plans oi r me Aiar-u Waehnigton Grocery Stores' of the Northwest, ,lnc, whose represen- tatiye, William I. Reauveau .(is now In Salem looking tor suitable locations. Stores will also , be opened in Silverton, Dallas, Inde pendence Harrisburg, and ' other surrounding town, Mr. ;rReau- veau states. 1 - "We buy direct from the manu facturers and are ' in business as a' hard, cold business proposition," he said last -night.' "Some other chain stores buy from the Jobbers in large quantities, but -we go di rect to the manufacturers and buy in ' carload lots.' J '" :!': y ii: We mainUin central distribut ing warehouses with our own' bak eries. 1 The central warehouse for Oregon 'will be in Portland, bat, as i'we open t np more stores, j we plan ' to open another;; sub-warehouse, which may be located in either StletSlfr Eugene. j Fifty stores in the Willamette valley 1 this ' side of Portland will be opened -within the vnext few weeks v by the . company. The stores are not- large land' all are standardised. t - " I , I i plMore -than 50 stores are mil talned ' br the comoanv r in.' Cali fornia with -t-entrl ''distribuUhg points at resno'ana sacramentq The California company -is to be enlirely separate via organisation from the northwe6t company, but the buying bwer'wlirbpool5d. .The! I storea specialise In nation ally advertised goods vand' home Industries. ' Wh tie Californii stores boost - Del llonte- the Or gon stores , plan No ) push "Oregb products, Mr;? ReauveaoXeayS. .; : 1 1 r Stores wilf: be opened in - Port land and down ' the Mower Colum bia toward Astoria - and '. may ; be extended as far south as the state line, according to, present plans. ; .11K0 oy;o6o:! Reunion- of Classes : From 1887 to '1890 WII Be . Greatest Feature RTTGENE. Ore.. - June .19.-- Scores ot former graduates of the TTniveraitv of .Oreson arrived here today to attend the annual reunion and banquet to be held tomorrow marklne the beginning ofj. com mencement week.- A feature1 of the day will - be a reunion of all i-lattsea from 1878 to 1890.' The old graduates will gather and; talk over the possiaiuues ei oreanixine a '. permanent i associa tion in addition to the Alumni as sociation.' The;plan of getting the early day graduates togetner was devised 1 bv 'Daniel Waldo Bass, prominent hotel tian cf eatll3. FOR TIliiOSFER Eight High Prohibition 0f? flcials Will Be Changed ,By,Haynes "For the Good of the Service' "1! ; I " COAST-MEN AFFECTED p PY LATEST SHAKE-UP Kew :l Faces, I Will Soon Be Seen; Upheaval Declared no rouucai wove , WASIilNGTON, June S 19. -4 Transfers 'of . eight'' high lproh.ibl- of fleers,' affecting enforce ment work -4n-19 'States were 'an- nounced today by -Prohibition Commissioner Haynes, who , said all of the shifts fwere '.'for the good of the service,"! and; in. pursuance of :the policy of developing a mo bile", force of enforcemnt officers. Those-at'feetd -by today'8, orders are diyisional chiefs, and Include officials having headquarters at Philadelphia,. Chicago,"-Los Ange les, ' Kansas City, Washington, D. C. High PolntNr C , 5 and Jack sonville, Pla. -L;The transfers are effective July? 1." y i f'- ? ? .. : 4. tA. R.) Harris ( in eharge - of Ihe Illinois-Wiseoasin-Mlchigan 'dlvl sion will" come; Ho; the - national capital as successor" to Edgar N. Read, and -will be succeeded at Chicago by W. jW." Anderson, now stationed at Los 'Angeles in charge Of rtha "Caprornia-Nevada-Hawal division- ' - . , -The new. LosAnge:es chief will be E. E. Hunt nov chief of the Missouri - Kansas Oklahoma-Arkansas division, with headquart ers at Kansas City. JJr." Hunt Is to be succeeded by .William Whit ney. . former .-assistant -director at Seattle. Wash.; and former law officer at 'prohibition headquarters here. , . Soathetnt District ' Watched , F. A. Hazel tine, now: at Philadelphia,- willr be transferred to hold the Florida-Porto 'Rico' division with headquarters at 'JacksonTllle, whereactrrltles' against" rttmrun? ners from Cuba-and the Bahamas are centered. He , has been i at Philadelphia since March' lfiPreT ious to that lie was prohibition dl rectorfdrWashington state.; tt The successor to Mr. Haseltine at the Philadelphia headquarters wfll.i be.'R; B.VSims now chief I of the North Carolina-Virginia divi sion, with headquarters at High Point, N. C. , The, present Florida chief, A. B. Stroup, will be trans ferred to the North Carolina-Virginia divfsion. I ' ' . , k i - - ' ': " " - 1 Will .Improve Efficiency j - Political or other considerations than efficiency,; Commissioner Haynes, were not involved In the transfers which were determined upon at conferences between Com missioner Blair, r the internal revenue bureau, Commissioner Haynes arid E. C. 'Tellowley, chief of prohibition agents. iWa'shington and Anchorage Find Earth Tremors;. be- lieved-Fan' South - WASHINGTON, June K 19. r Earth tremors -were recorded from 5:62' p.nn.,1 to f 6 : 50 'today of the Georgetown University seis mograph; the intensity reaching a maririum between 6:11 and 6: 14, The' center or the disturbance, ac cording ' to Father fToridof, ; ? In charge of the observatory. P- peared to be in -Central or South America. - He said ' the tremors were rather severe. -1 ANCHORAGE,: Alaska, Junee 19. An earthquake; lasting 48 seconds occurred here' at 12:45 o'clock this afternoon. The mo tion i wasi rotary.f Radio . advices stated that4 the volcanic region, on lira AWskaa jwmiwuiu, .m.- tensive disturbances f occurred 'HERE'S ONE : ; ON BIRTCHET, HE IS RAZZED Chief - Rescues Colored Boy From Place . Where Mammy 1 Told Him to Stay .That mammy's instructions were the law and took precedence over inquiries of a strange white man evidentljrvras thebelief of a 7 year-old' colored boy late yester layV:-i,. t-H-l ) - r- While on his way home,' about 6:30 o'clock. Chief Of Polie Birt fcirat f noticed the ltd in Marion square. He . questioned , him, be lieving him to be lost, is the hour was growing late for illttle boys fo be out alone! ; - ' ' In addition to his fright oyer being o accosted, the. youngster btuitered: quite badlyj ;or it might be belter tp sayf he stuttered to a desree'wfiereby the task of glean ing information was almost Impost :M The ch ief called uphe 'atatioa and bad a motorcycle man - come after; him, ;twhile a search was started for .4ils parents. ; - -s These Were' lockted at the Com mercial hotel,- anq came to the sta tion after their .property. . . 1 j "Lawsy, exclaimed the mam my, "I dunno what got in dat chile he alius stay were ah tells him to. . : . t ? ; j - When "he r became calm, 'dat chile" explained that he had tried to tell the chief that he was stay ing where his mammy told him to stay, and that:shn-war coming af ter him In a short, time, f.'j t The - Temalnder of. the police force did; their best -not' to let the chief forget the incident. :j-v:;.: ... . First L Chautauqua pumber Brings TOverflow f- Ng , PoonXhew Tonight CHAUTAUQUA -TODAY Afternoon 2 : 3 0 p. m. -Prelude. Alice Louise Shrode, :( Peerless 'juvenile entertainer. .3:00 p. m. i;,. 4, rr j 'Musical J Lecture-Demonstration, Evelyn M. McClusky, 'The Music Lady." '"- Admission 50c. 'Junior Chautauqua. k -;.vt -Eveninsj . ' 8 . 0 0 p. m.?$ -;-'; ',2 -Entertainment Prelude, Alice! & Louise Shrode. ; ' - f 8:30pjmJ--( ' ' j V Address. "China and he Fu- i tnre Peace of the Pacific"! iDr. .Ng -Poon1' Chew," "The; '-Chinese Mark -Twain." ' i Admission 50c. Practically everybody in Salem took "a last-minute " notion last night to "Turn to- the Right, and the-streets- for three blocks' would hardly hold the automobiles that crowded in aronnd the Chautau qua field. 5W f Crowd: Record -Maker; f '. . It wasjrealiythe greatest crowd that ever thronged the Chautau qua tent j In Salem. The manage ment thought it had a pretty good hunch - as to the attendance. ' but the hunch-, failed like a "pewter razori in a colored picnic. i. .There were not enough -seats hf 'I hun dreds. .'. The 'crowd surged around the tent like iron filings - piling on! a magnet. They tewlll have oceans of chairs 'ton! t; but last night they, didn't -ha guess j the thaft had sira of the audien "Turned to the TU and; pa--; univer tronited" the big peo sity 'for ;its opening -Timber. i Vr The first 7 number given last night was the jIay, v"Turni toj the Right," a fine comedy, with a fine and helpful theme' to balance ' the mirth, and , exceptionally well played. - : ' . ' - r" " Plot Is Elaborate.. I The ' plot 1 is rather -' elaborate, providing for the .successful love affairs - of three - couples. The whole theme of the play turns on the statement! madeby "Joe Bal-; com. the h:ro In the prologue that he will take the first: turo, to 'the PREVENTED Bf -PlGIIiEllS Savannah -Sheriff -Unable -to -Keep Back Crowd of : 2000 ':VVho ; Storm Jail; ; Demanding Negro i y FIREMEM AtiSWER TO - -CALL FROM OFFICER Water 'Has Little Effect - Upon Gathering; One Man . in -Mob Is Shot J SAVANNAH, Ga. . June 20 One man is dead" here -this morn ing and several others in' hospitals in more- or less' serious . condition as a result of firr'g in a 'mob as sembled in front H the jail where Walter " Lee, negrW charged with criminal assault onTa white woman Is being held.' --;;i7s- ' SAVANNAH, Ga., June 20. With 2000 4 persons -before the county Jail, ywhere Walter Lee; negro, charged with criminal i at tack upon -a white woman, 1s com fined, the riot call for the city and eennty officers was sounded short ly, before midnight last' night, v.': Shortly after f midnight, "when the- armed forces about' the Jail had been ; -very ; perceptibly ' in creased,' the crowd was advised by Solicitor General Walter Hartridge and by Sheriff Merritt W. Dixon, who declared It - was . his purpose to protect the prisoner and If any attemtp 'was :made 'to storm! the Jail there' would be bloodshed. At 12:20, when two shots had been heard 'within a block of the Jail and Mayor Seat rook's arrival on the scene had failed to quiet the clamoring 'crowd, a call was sent out for military aid, and at 12:30 a detachment of - machine gun men under Major A. -Russell Moore reached the ; jail ami took possession! v . One 3Ian Shot One man was reported shot and wounded . in . the .general . fighting among the. soldiers and members ot thelhob surrounding the jaiL When1 the' machine gun. rushed the 'crowd ' to -push it back," one man ;on'the front Iibe showed re sistance and he was quickly taken in 'charge and sent to the police station. " ' ' ' .One man 'In the mob, shot in the -abdomen apparently by some one in the1 crowd,' was sent to a hospital in a serious condition. ; 5 .'Chief or '-'Police Hendry was was struck in the stomach by 'a brick,- but Hhe extent' of his in juries has not been determined. . ' Bricka Are Harled - ' ,- Sheriff DixOn address did not quiet the crowd.' - While' there was no rush toward ' the jail, it - was evident that: there was no Inten tion of dispersing. Sheriff Dixon then. gaVe an order which-1 resulted in half ra dozen-streams- of water being sent into the crowd by city firemen. : ' 1 ' - ' ' i Instead -of I flinching from the water the crowd immediately be Kan throwing -bricks at the fire men. In the battle that ensued a brick from some member of the mob knocked ' the , sheriff's . pistol from his hand. , a . SOUGIITIAH Two Petitions, Bearing Many -Names, Are Reported in ) - . V Circulation . EUGENE, Ore., June 19. Two petitions 'for, the recall of Gover nor Walter ' M". Pierce are In .cir culation ' at ' Albany, according to Eugene men who were in that city today. They said - that the peti tions bear numerous signatures. LABORER IS KILLED EUGENE, Or., June 19. Mar gaiito " Soils, Mexican railway la borer, was ' killed instantly - late last night r at i Cushman, . on the Cops ,Bay branch of the Southern Pacific when f he stepped : of f a moving gasoline railroad speeder. The corener is making an investl- RECALLOF? E 0 , t T " ; ! , '' ; J - ..... i v . r ! Molten Rock Moving Toward Linsiaglsssa ct 11: " 5 40 Yarrfi jin Hour; -Railway Juntic:TA!:D b 1 Six New Craters Have Early Hour Tfiis f.Icrnb - 5 is - 1 r CATANIA, iltaly-June 19.-r-(Byj Associated Pr ' Theo-eat lava torrent from Mount Etna bearinsr in it great masses of earth and volcanic stone,: has aire-2 ? r theouses on the-outskirts of the town of; Lire z:. Green fields, orange -proves -and" vineyards have t lowed up, and for miles aronnd; Ihe atmosphere i3 fn--with volcanic smoke and -a rain of blkzk smoke L..2 i which is covering the countryside like a' pall. D'M'PLOS Aircraft ;Held Panacea for Political -Moves in At- j ;;nackfon : England y'y :IC)SCOW. June 19. (By As sociated - f Press. ) -fAn . attack . on England, hints of a Russo-French approachment L;and a plea -. for "more mental International char" acter" marked an addresa by Leon Trotzky, soviet , war minister,, to day -before ' the all-Russlan con gress of metal workers.. , .. t "If : an ultimatum, is presented to ns't ,he 'exclaimed, referring to the- reeent ? British notes,' "let us create .a -detachment of airplanes. If a coup d'etat occurs in Bulgar ia, let -us- boild , another ' detach ment of.alrplanea, and if there is a coup d'etat in Persia build more planes.' : : - . 'The iron of bur : will smust' be transferered to1 the Iron wings of airplanes ;l then we can ' say, look ing .high above at our squadrons fthis is the coup -d'etat In' Persia' and so on. - If -we' transform the criminalities ? of ' the "Bourgeoisie Into' airplanes - then, ' perhaps, we shall be able sometime to bring an end to. their criminalities." , " ."'TTottky said " England ! and Italy had, 'according to Informa tion -at hand, aided in the coup d'etat in Bulgaria and the Brltisi had4 aided ' in the nationalist oven throw in 'Persia. Declaring thaj Rttssia's losses lnt the' world wai were overwhelmingly greater than BrIUins."Trotxky added :,'It wa for this purpose, (perhaps,' ; that "Lord Curson felt strong enough to deliver' his ten day -ultimatum', it waB -necessary ! that the'5 blood of the Russian workers and peasantt be shed. This account f someday we shall present ' to 1 the - English Bourgeoisie. 2 5 ' -. a TO EIGHT FLIf Cherry Pest ''Again Puts in Appearance, Says Asso ; cia,tion Official O. ' E. k Brooks, on whose ! farm the first -work was done a number of years ago along the lines of the suppression of the cherry, fruit fly, has reported that-the fly put In Its appearance yesterday, and" P.' B. Guthrie of the . growers associa tion declares that it is Important that cherry growers immediately begin to spray against the pest.. - "It. should be -urged upon grow ers, especially those who. have the black -varieties or Royal VAnnes whlch'are not to be picked within the next week, to spray immedia tely. Tbeformula'as recommend ed by Professor Lovett of the ag ricultural, college is lead arsenate one-half pound: two quarts of mo lasses or syrup (never honey) and 10. gallons -of water. 1 This is an amount sufficient : , for approxi mately 0 trees. From a pint to a quart of the solution should be used for each tree,- - .u. ; "Everyone should note that In case of a rain following the spray ing, another application should be made. - A second . spraying- Is ad vocated within a week or 10 days GfiOWERS URGED Opened; Fbw Jur.ci.::.;; Several , of the houses ia guaglosia ' have ' been : the frequent earth!iclk5, : townis directly in ti 1 -a w lava -aid 3s doubtless Cz. destruction.- s t : : The molten stream. Is tr: r about 40 yards an hoar er ' : some miracle happens,-LI: sia will; ga under daring tl. r Confcontine it is a. lira. ! yards -wide and nearly -CO deep. , . ' " . .f ; T ' . '. Ejected' - la E ports . "A new , stream cf lava r western side of'Etna iztz Glarre junction on tlie , way. According to le - :: -canoiogists, six new crLi ;s opened I only two bf '!.:.;' , ever.- are of the first i. . . In-these can-cle&rly 13$ lava -In frighlfal turn: ejected 'in irregular i' . . j vast clouds of fumes a r 1 forming -two,- atrr?.r3a ' death, . one of which i down oh "Llnguaglcila, i moving toward ,ctara I threatening ? no la tat lu 1 : though cauting immense c to the vineyards' and not r ' tions- Which Constituted tl e ' oi me-counuTBiae. The 'movement of t!: a stream. Ia so slow, howev .-, rather form a: kind of lale i of the valleys. y 5. ..Pory Unabated' ' ine eexoaus or toe laai. began soon after the f int t ; and a steady line has lc: i i traveling In the direction cf ty' for' the . UstHwo days, they started from ttelr'tc people wenj loaded with i hold treisures but gradually iu nu mese cave c e en &ca ed. ' . V . '.--. ,.-( The fury of Etna has net ed. The, country has-t:--. waste' and presents a intervening villages have L : r literated. - ! . How 1 Begins Aaln r i After. , a -short cessation night; the flow of lava i again in full strength-it!. r Vnm aA-AW1 . which In nar1 Vtnn tnla At one point on the eastcr of the .mountain the strem mile and a half wide. Most of the population of C have) moved down to tL 2 t : town f Riposto ad tie 1 r r are ready to leave et a 1 from the watchers outsi a town. The glow of the err is visible from Naples. 2C3 away. While from Pabrn n seen shooting into the air. f The work of, clearing tta t A .. . - With, the greatest energy an mlrable organization. -Di: : " . -w . is necessary. to induce t! 3 t:r Inhabitants, to abandon tLe: carried out with sympathy kindness.- Airplanes -are used for the first time to the, progress of, the ernrtic: special signaling stations been established at varlozj tegistic " points, giving confl to the people in the fact that are being protected. ' special unit of the Red with supplies have been di ed to comfort the hone';: 3 derers and provide food anj ter for them. COURT OUSTS T.O.W.'. SAN FRANCICCO, Jcr s The- California itata : chiropractors, cenj " I members," and pro:.-.: - ' ernor Richar J : : -. 1 - -ousted frcn t .: - ' 1-it wi-tcr, i3"Q-!ct. ' j t v - '