' ' O 0 0
The feather
Prediction ...Fair ant moderate
Maximum yesterday : H.Vft
Mliuraurutndny 4.5
Weather Yeaf Ago
Matlmmn 82
Minimum 6U
. MEDFORD, OK BOON.' MONDAY. AUGUST 17, 1f)2r
NO. 12(5
Dill TamtMh Tfir.
wUr Kim fourth Vit.
MEPFQRD MAIL ITOBUME 1
SMOKE ClUE
GIVES HOPE
OF CAPTURE
Posses Encircle District Where
Camp Fire Smoke Is Seen
and Start Drive to Effect
Capture" of Convicts Shots
- Heard Increase Suspicion
Search Farm Houses.
MONITOR, Ore.. Aus. IT -Murrji),
lender of the escaped
convicts, Is believed to liave kld
nuied four young men liere Inst
night and forced tlieni to nccnni
puny lilm Is getting out of tho-.
country. The iiIshIiik youths nre:
ljtwience Jacohsen, lx-o Wilde,
Joe Mchie nnd Olio l.m lit.
The four youths were playing
cards iu a imol hall here ahout
two o'clock this morning. Sud
denly they vanished and late to
day no trace had been found.
The Mitchell touring- cur of
Jacohscn's.also Is missing. Offl
ccrs think Jrlurrny forced the
youths to drive him uwuy In ,lu-cobM-n's
cur.
WITH STATE POSSE. NEAR SIL
VERTON. Ore., Auk. 17. Posses
hunting Tom Murray, Ellsworth
Kelly and James WUlos, who killed
two guards when they escaped from
the stuto penitentiary nt Salem last
Wednesday, early- today again turned
tholr attention to tho district about
the John Small ranch, seven smiles
south of Sllverton.. . .
They planned to encircle ond cldso
in on a point where smoke was seen
curling yi between two clumps of
trees at dusk ' last evening. Charles
J. Edison and E. A. Ekman watched
the smoke and said the movement of
the smoke indicated that someone
was trying to' Jop It smothered,
i iTlie - small , rani'li datti'lct : Tins r nr
Mrncted the possemen dally since the
chdse began and some of. the man
hunters think It prohnble that the
tugitlves ore in that ' district, r
: Shots have been . heard in that
district several times. ',
More shooting was henrd Inst night
by George eleaver's sound which has
been stationed pn Union Hill, the
burial , place of tho pioneer Geer
family.
, A tentative plnn to search every
farm house In tho wide man hunt
area Is being discussed by leaders of
tho posses. ' ,'
i It Is regarded as possible that the
' fugitives may have captured some
farmer's Home, sent him about his
work, while holding his fnmily in the
house, ns, hostnges :c give Murray
time to recover from his wound. )
-Murray resorted to similar means
of. hiding after he robbod the bank
ot" Florence, Ore., officers recalled.
... Sock Clue Exploded.
Tho flue upon which the posses
worked most of Saturday afternoon
apd Sundny' wns exploded this morn
ing when Henry JacqUet, upon whoso
fnrm a pnir of discarded socks were
found nnd where tracks -of a man
Lwere found crossing n creek thlB
morning telephoned to explain that
the socks, were some discarded by a
harvest hand employed by him and
thnt the tracks across the creek "he
made himself when turning his cows
out to pasture. .
Chock of the reports from John
Dlehl that a cow on his fnrm had
been milked 'dry on Frldny night nnd
of Joseph L. Kruse, tt neighbor of
Weill's, that his children had found
n revolver and nn empty whiskey
flask 'near a culvert, were Investi
gated by Deputy Warden Lllley this
morning. .
' Lllley reported thnt the Dlehl cow
hnd undoubtedly been milked some
time that night, but said that the
finding of the UFVolvcr nnd whiskey
flask . had nothing to d with the
convicts, as the revolver was a .32
calibre gun, a different type ' from
the ones token ' by the .convicts In
their flight. , ' ,
SALEM, Ore, Aug. 17. A Mitchell
touring car, number 173,732 wns
stolen from the streets of Monitor,
seven miles north of SUverton -be-,
twecn 1 ond 1:30 o'clock this morn-
a (Continued on page six.)
JACK DEMPStY OPENS CALIF. GOLF
COURSE WITH A THREE YARD DRIVE
BAKERSFIELD? Col., Aug. 17.
(A. P.) Jack Dempsey. world's
heavyweight boxing champion, wound
up, took a mighty sweep at a golf
ball which trtckled down the vir
ginal fairway of the newebec golf
course for a few yards, A repressed
titter rippled through tho specta
tors, brilliant as butterflies In sport
clotfees. The champion of tlg heavy
weights essayed another smack at
the hall, eastern standard timing but
if- fit tor the ' raclflc slope, Sealn
Parole Officer at
State Penitentiary
Resigns Under Fire
SALEM. Ore.. Aug. 17. J. V.
Starrett, parole officer at the
state penitentinry, has resigned,
it wns announced at the office
of Governor Pierce today. The
("inventor had no comment to
nutke regarding the resignation.
Starrett has heen under fire in
connection with the break of
four convicts from the prison last
Wednesday.
'
FAKER TRIES TO
ESCAPE ARREST.
SHOTS KILLED
nosiinURCJ, Ore., . Aug. 17. At
tempting flight to evade arrest on a
charge of obtaining money and goods
tinder false pretenses, W. D. Gofurth,
al about 25, of ReVdspart, was shot
and fatally wounded . early Sunday
morning by Deputy Sheriff Kd Grubbe
of KIktou, on the county highway
about a half mile west of that town.
Goforth was put Into an automobile
immediately after the shooting and
rushed to Roseburg for medical at
tention, but he was dead when the car
arrived here. The body was removed
to the Roseburg Undertaking Com
pany's establishment, where Coroner
M. K. Rltter and District Attorney
Guy Cordon are today conducting, an
inquest. ?" - . : ,
J. II. Ooforth, a younger brother
of the dead man, was charged jointly
in the complaint that led to the trag
edy. He took, to his heels at the same
time, but when his brother ' fell
wounded he stopped nnd surrendered.
The two brothers and a third man
known as Brown, have been working
for several ..months past gathering
cblttlm hark near Reedsport. They
contracted bills jn ,nnd around Jleeds
port that hi'ri Hnelr obligation's tip to
an aggregate total of nearly $2,000.
Several days ago the partner known
as Brown mysteriously disappeared.
The creditors of the trio became'sus
picious. Scenting a plot to swindle
them out of the money due them the
creditors of the trio presented n
charge of obtaining money nnd sup
plies by false pretenses.
ETE
E
PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug, 17. Leroy
A. Hansen, formerly a special police
officer here, today wns charged with,
murder following tho fatal shooting
last night of James O'Day. Hansen
told police he shot O'Day because
O'Day was paying too much' atten
tion to Mrs. Hansen. '
The shooting occurred In O'Dny's
apartment. ; Tho; story told to of
ficers today related that during tho
evening Hnnsen told his wife ho was
goinff down town, but instead . loiter
ed about, the outside of tho house,
which was occupied, by both O'Day
ond tfie Hnnsen family. Shortly
afterward Mrs. Hnnsen snld Mr.
O'Day called to borrow her. electric
Iron nnd returned to his room, re
turning a few minutes later to have
her show htm how It worked. She
accompanied him to his room and
Bhowed him how to operate It and
then returned to her own room.
Mrs. Hnnsen said Mr. O'Day In
vited her to accompany him to a
show, but that she refused. James
Elliott, a friend of O'Day, Mrs. Han
sen related, shortly afterward re
turned the Iron.
Hansen returned nnd fired at El
liott who, fled to O'Day's room. A
single shot wns , then .. heard in
O'Day's room, Mrs. Hansen said and
sho heard O'Day groaning. - He died
after being rushed to the emergency
hospital. O'Day's wife Is visiting In
Bend. ....
the hall trickled forth. The thlgl
time broke the spell and Dempsey's
perseverance wns Justly rewarded
and the, new nine hole Lebec golf
course In the Tejon mountains was
formally opened Sunday morning.
A colorful crowd took up aristo
cratic i udgels In he handicap tour
nament, plnyed on the new fairways
ot the beautiful mounialn course,
n tournament which . . was won by
Lane rnssleberry nt Uakersfleld,
whose 17 gave him first prlie.
T
E.
WAR DEBTS
Secy; Mellon and Senator
Smoot Confer With Chief
Executive On Sheet Screen
ed Porch at Plymouth, Re
garding Payment.
PLYMOUTH, Vt., Aug. 17. (A. P.)
President Coolldge expects an agree
ment to be reached, probably tomor
row', on terms for refunding Bel
gium's debt to the United tSates.
An official statement Issued after
the president, had discussed tho sit
uation for two hours today with Sec
retary Mellon and Senator,. Smoot, of
Utah, said "final agreement" was In
sight and that no deadlock had de
veloped. The following statement in the
president's handwriting was given to
newspapermen nt noon:
"Secretary Mellon and Senator
Smoot have reported to the pres
ident the dqtalls of tho Washing
ton con?crencc. ' The progress is
satisfactory. No deadlock has
developed. The secretary and
senator came to Inform the presl- ' ,
. dent of the proposals before mak
ing the final agreement. The con
ference will re-convene at 3 P. M.
Tuesday, when it is expected a
final agreement may be reached,
after which n full nnd complete
statement will bo given to the
press by the American commis
sion." PLYMOUTH. Vt., Aug. 17. (A. P.)
Secretary Mellon nnd Senator Smoot
of Utah, came to the village of Ply
mouth today to discuss the Belgian
debt situation with President Cooltdge.
Arriving nt Ludlow, the nearest rail
road point, the two American debt
commission members were met by a
White House automobile which
brought them to the Coolldge home
stead. They reached here shortly he
fore 10 A. M. and Immediately went
into conference wlth the president.
. Both the seeretnry of the treasury,
who is chairman of the debt commis
sion, nnd Senator Hmoot carried port
folios containing a mass of data oh
the negotiations which have been in
progress In Washington with tho Bel
gian mission.
President Coolldge was waiting for
his visitors on the front porch which
had been screened off by sheets to
afford seclusion. The sheets which
shut tho porch off from view of the
road had been. placed in, position by
tho president and Mrs, Coolldge, aided
by two deputy sheriffs on duty here.
It appeared probable that the pres
ident nnd his callers would remain
on the porch for their conference, in
view of tho warm weather instead of
going Into the adjoining sitting room,
where Mr. Coolldge took the oath of
office as president two years ago.
Secretary Mellon nnd Mr. Smoot
planned to return to Washington later
in the day. They will be back in the
capital to take part in the negotiations
between tho American nnd Bclginn
commission which will be resumed to
morrow. Arrangements were made to have
the two commissioners go to Echo
Lake Inn at Tyson for lunch nnd it
wns thought probable that the presi
dent might accompany them there.
Death Toll of '
the Automobile
REND, Ore., Aug. 17. T. H. Foley,
gpnernl -manager of the Bend Water,
Light and Power company, and
leader -in local civic nnd business
nctlvltlcs, died hero yesterdny ns the
result of injuries he. received in an
nutomohllo accident Snturdny even
ing. .: ,. ; -
William Foley, his son wns with
him when. the accident occurred. Ac
cording to the son, who suffered a
broken nrm, when about 23 miles
east of Bend the machine skidded
completely around, then turned over.
William was thrown clear, hut the
father was pinned beneath the auto
SEATTLE,- Aug. "17. Automobile
accidents in tho Pugef Round country
killed two persons yesterday. Chnrlcs
Kdwnrd Fowler, 21, of Scnttle, met
death nenr Tncnma when a rondster in
which he wbb rldlng-wlth four others,
skidded on a. curve nnd left the road.
Miss Lcnore Duggan, Seattle, who wns
sitting on his Inp, was slightly hurt.
Mnry Healy, 10, Everett, died when
her fnther turned their enr into the
ditch to avoid a collision.
NEW YORK, Aug. 17. Slock prices
swung upward ngalrt today In further
response to Improving business con
ditions and f continuance of relative
ly easy money rates. Public partici
pation was on a larger scale, parti
cularly In th Rallrond shares, several
of which attained new peak prices
for the year. Sharp fluctuations fol
lowed In the high priced Industrials
with Mack Truck tip 12. the out
standing feature" Total sales approx
imated 1,400,000 shares.
PRESIDEN
AS
t
Wall Street Report
Wears Same Shirt
Thirty-One Years
'V: -i
Central I'm. I'huto
-The shirt Prank Bennett,
Durant, Oklu., merchant, wears
in this picture lie purchased in
Tennessee 4 1 ycuj-s uo, and has
bet-musing ooiistuntlv since. It
is made of strongU'otton mate
rial. Bennett figures it is good
for manv more vears.
IS FLAYED FOR
John R. Neal, Senior Defense
Counsel in Scopes Case- Is
AstOUnded at Remarks Made
By Judge Raulston . While
Case Is Still Pending.
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Aug. 17.
i A. P.) Dr. .Inhn n Kflnl senior
-
defense counsel Jn the Scopes evolu -
iion case ai uayion, touny necjarea
that he was astounded at- the
speeches reported to have been made,
by Judge John T. uaulston, at Chi'
cago and Dayton recently. He said
that It was "unthinkable" that a
judge could ho "guilty of such im
priety," while a case was pending In
his court.
Dr. Nenl, discussing" tho appoint
ment of U. V. Ileece, to succeed
John T. Scopes, declared that teach
ers of the country must 'blush with
shame" that a member of tho pro
fession must submit to the ordeal of
a religious questionnaire in order to
get a position.-
Dr. Neal said It would bo actually
scandalous of him to do such a
thing, and "I can hardly believe it
of him."
NASHVILLE. Tenn., Aug. 17. (A
P.) Hnlelgh V. Heece, newspaper
reporter, .selected to fill the place
on the faculty of the Dayton, Tenn.,
high school, made vacant when John
T. Scopes failed of re-election, to
night issued emphatic denial that he
hiil tinm an 1 foot erl In miv rnlfirloilS
questionnaire before he wns given
the position. Hence Is said to have'
issitPil tho rinninl following reeelnt '
of new or-n nhnmo to this effect
MONKEY
0
Chicago talk
having' been mode by Dr. Neal of crudely and by hand with a piece nf leopard, hidden In the ltoise du Polne,
counsel for' Scopes in-tho evolution pillow ticking similar to that used kept relays of police and animal keep
trial, now pending in the courts.. n the prison anA tho other with era yesterday feverishly beating the
"The statement regarding my re- a piece of muslin. This evidence was 21100 aero park In the hope of cap
llglous views was what 1 -made to a rushed to the prison for Identified hiring the beust before ho got hungry
newsnanor renorter and not to the tlon and Inspection by guards. enough to attack humans. Thousands
Khenr county board of .education at
Daytrfn," liooco said.
SHENANDOAH TRIES
EXPERIMENTS AT SEA
I.AKEIIirnST. N. J.. Aug. 17. hnd been left In tho machine by the lln' 10 continue through tho week.
After successfully mooring to the mcn their escape. , I Booths contained exhibits from Iln
tender Pntokn at sea the first tlmo. , Guard Will Kooover. wall, Alaska and the Pacific North
thls action has been performed, the' neports . from the hospital this '' Many thousand visitors aro ex
nnvy dirigible Shenandoah returned morning Indicate that Lute Havaao. peeled dnlly.
last night to 'the naval air station
from Newport, It. I.
Another ' new maneuver was sue-
eessfully accomplished when tho dl -
rlglhlo dropped asea nnchor and
rode at It. Commander Kaehary
Lnndsdown. in charge of tho flight
said last night Ihe tests were as
successful as could be expected.
While the airship was attached to
the Patnka's mooring mast, however,
he snld. It wns demonstrated - that
nrldlllnnnl enulnment would he need-
ed before this can be done In rough
weather. A flat sea was largely re-
sponsible for the success of this test.
The sea anchor, a large Umbrella- Indie-alive of the dostens nf "lends"
shaped ronvas bak, was. dropped that , officials have rocoivod, traced
from a height of 800 feet nnd the and found worthless, was tho le
Bhenandosh rode on It for an hour,
Commander Lansdowne said. . (Continued on page six )
L
KEEP SOLDIERS
IT
T
State Executive, After Tour of
District, Convinced Convicts
.Are Still in Hiding and Will
'.. Soon Make Break for Food
Clues Prove Worthless.
SAI.I5M.: Ore., Aug. 17. National
Cliiardsimn will he kepc. on duty
as long ns IhiM-e is any hope that
the three escapes are hilling out, U
was announced yesterday by tiov
einnr pierce. if any diffietilly Is
found ' in keeping clliv.en volunteers
in the posses arier their cuthusitiMin
has latiKCrt, milKIn wilt- he called to
lake their places, lie declared. The
announcement was made following
a seven hour tour which ho made,
which began shortly atlen ten o'clock
In the murnitiK. taking him through
l ho entire dlslrlct under guard.
"I believe Hint the men are
still hiding somewhere iu the re
gion thnt is being watched, hut
I do not believe we will get
' them ' until they come out of
hiding for food." the governor'
declared after his return to tho
prison. "That I believe will ho
' some lime within the next two
dnvs lor tho men will get sick
eating only berries and
raw
will
fruits -and vegetables and
have to have more
substantial
food."
The situation this morning wns
substantially, tho same as It has re
mnined since Wednesday night.
nc
ports ond rumors enmo In
at perl
mllcai intervals - o u i i " g "" "
nignt ana minuay. inn iiiyuoi,,,,
failed to substantiate tho value ot
any of them.
Accomplice Is Kusppctctl.
Officinls view with concern a 're
mit from Portland police received
"le Saturday that Tom Kelly cousin
i of Ellsworth Kelly, one ot tho es-
' raped- convicts,- who had been em-
nloved ns a taxi driver ln roritano.
hnd left his job Thursday morning
for the announced purposo ot visit
ing his mother In Turner whom he
snld wns seriously HI. He asked Ills
employer for, ohfl obtained $2(i back
nnv' -before leaving Thursday morn
ing. Saturday morning he notified
ting. Hniurony iiiurimiK nv ni.n-
jthe taxi company to send his keys
una me .-.. unn.-. m
him to the Eden Home apartments
in The Dalles.
Prom this report It seems safe to'
GOVERNOR
ON BAND
HUN
presume' that Tom Kelly has gone textile syndicate, and M. Vargasoff,
somewhere - In tho district under techlncal director, have been sentenc
guard, for the purposo of waiting tor, ed to death by the district court on
the exit of Ellsworth from his hid- charges of having favored private
ing with the hope that he moy ho traders in preference of state coopera.
of aid' to him. ' jtive organizations in tho distribution
The; most substantial Information of textile goods assigned to Siberia.
received Sundny was the report of The prosecution accused them also
Captain. Paul Hendricks of tho O. N. f httving accepted brlhes from trail -Q,
at- 10:80 yesterday morning thnt '.
footprints had been found where a' M. Davydoff and M. Polyknff, mem
man had crosseda small creek run-,ners 0f tho textile hoard, also were
ning through tho Henry Jaequet convicted and sentenced to ten years'
ploco. n half mile east of tho Victor Imprisonment and confiscation of
Po nt' HBchool house. He declared
that the tracks were fresh and that
the person who made them had hob
nail r on the left shoe. A truck
was rushed to the district from the
prison and National Guardsmen who
hnd boen scattered over a consider
able area were brought together for
a concentrated search on this lead.
' I - Swlt Furnishes Clue.
At three o'clock Captnln Hendricks
reported the discovery near tho Ja:
quot place of H pair of discnniett
cotton work socks found near a horn
In the direction of Union Hill. One
of the socks had been patched
The Bocks are not tho usual Kind
worn by prisoners hut were of a park. The nnlmul had not been enp-type-worn
by ft few convicts who tured lust nlnht.
hnvo purchased some articles of Tho leopard, recently arrived from
clothing outside, It wns snld. I Abyssinia, displaced the bar over the
Tho patching might enslly have feeding; slot of its rnKO In the joo
heen done by the convicts before they lOKlcnl garden Saturday nnd Jumped
left, for such work Is perrdltted of through a window,
prisoners In their cells and beyond People wore warned to keep nut of
the Inspection of gunrds. . ,lh dnrk spots as tho habit ot tho
A fact which adds further weight leopard Is to lay away In the day time
to this discovery Is that nrisnn of- and hunt food nt night.
.flclals believe that each of the
nnnnort men Innk nn .. nnl- nf
socks with him. Tho basis for this1
belief was tho finding In the Zlpn
taxi of a clean, unused sock which
-wounded guard, will recover. lis
I was snld to bo making- very sntls.
facitory progress. i
l a. .moiuly stream of automobiles
earrylnt curious sightseers passed by
tho prison '.yesterday In nn almost
unbroken line. Trnfflo became lo
congested nutsldn of tho wnlls that
lit was necessary to station a guard
throughout the entire time to keep
the line moving' and to prohibit
nnrklnv. ' llnnnt-tH (rnm HilvMi-Inn Mfiv
ilht . nt .nrB t.,,i.Ai Inm
the elty yesterday with confectioners
and restaurant men reporting a rec-
nrd. breaking 1 business,
President Coolidge
Eats in Public for
1st Time in 2 Yrs.
PLYMOUTH. Vt.. Aug. 17.
(A. P.) lr the first lime since
entering the White House, Presi-
dent Cnnttdge today shared the
accomodations of n public dining
room with other gucsis,
After a conference with Secre
tary Mellon and Senator Smoot.
he motored with them to Tyson.
At tho quaint He ho luke Inn
tho three dined at one end of the
dining room with former fJover
nor Stlckney, of Vermont, for
mer law partner of Attorney
Ceneral Sargent, nt Ludlow,
IS
HEART FAILURE
Miss Kdlth M. Towne, n well-known
business woman of this city, died this
morning of heart failure, at the home
of V. H. McCowan, 1 5 Mistletoe,
street, whero she has lived for the
past five years. Her sudden passing
comes as a tragic shock to a wide
circle of friends and acquaintances.
Miss Towne was In the bathroom
when she was stricken by heart (all
ure and succumbed before medical aid
arrived.
A Ulster of -Miss Towno will arrive
this evening from Powers, Ore., and
the funeral arrangements, which will
'he published later, will be-marie upon
her arrival.
Miss Towne was proprietress of tho
1 Colonial store
in the Liberty build
ing, nnd formorly managed tho Kmart
Shop, which she disposed of recently.
DEATH FOR NOT
T
8VBUDLOVSKA (formerly Kkater
Inburg) Russia, Aug. 17. M. liasanln,
mahnger of the local branch of the
. Mi'B
The supreme court has confirmed
the sentence.
BY WILD LEOPARD
PARIS, Aug. 17. (A. P.) A wild
of persons picnicked today In llic
' "
SenlllP Kiposllinn Opens.
BI3ATTUK, Aug. 17. (A. I'.) An
"l'oslflon of the Pacific Northwest
Merchants Association opened here to-
TIE
SUDDEN VICTIM
M'MILLAN BASE WILL BROADCAST -ESKIMO
CONCERT WEDNESDAY NIGHT
CHltAOO, Aug. 17. (A
P.) The
J'acMlllan polar .expedition from Its
hn" ln l:,.nh.' "reenlnnd, will broad-
I r""1 nn nii-cssimo program on tony
meters next Wednesday night, August
19, from 10 to 12 p. in., eastern
standard time, K. V McDonald, sec
ond in -command of the expedition.
announced In a radio mess. go re-jj
JAPAN COAST
RAVAGED BY
HUGE FLOODS
Tremendous Damage and
Many Lives Lost When
Rains and Typhoons Sweep
Coast of Nippon Osaka,
Kyoto and Kobe Suffer
Property Losses High.
OSAKA, Japan, Aug. 17. (A. P.)
A typhoon struck Osaka, Kyota,
Kobe and vicinity today. The amount
of the damage Is yet to he estimated.
Several thousand houses were
flooded In Osaka. The typhoon caus
ed extensive Interruptions in tele
graph and telephone services, hut the
damage to railroads and shipping
was slight.
TOKYO. Aug. 17. (A. P.) A vio
lent rallstorm flooded various parts of
Japan today. Several persons were
drowned. Damage Is estimated at be
tween SI 5.000,001 and I 0,0 00,0 00.
The coasts of Japan are particular
ly liable to damnge by typhoons nt
this aseson when storms of this type,
this season when storms of this type,
great circular winds, have their In
ception in the equatorial Pacific,
sweep up the shores of Asia, leaving;
millions of dollars damage in their
wake. . The most disastrous of recent
Kar Eastern typhoons wns that of
August, ' 1913, which ravaged Hong
Kong and Rhanghnl, Tokyo was vish .
ed by disastrous typhoons In Septem
ber, 1017, and October, 1820. Tho
low-lying wards of tho city, along
Tokyo Bay and the flumldu river,
mostly reclaimed ground, suffered
most, as the waters of the bay back
up in tho numerous cunals of these
districts, flooding thousands of homes.
- Osaka.,' Also, because of ihelapge.
nuinher of its canals, usually Suffers -heavily
-from, typhoona-whlch ooniv
hine heavy winds with severe rains.
Ocean waters driving Into the canals,
cause the Inundation of large areas.
Kobe, more sheltered, suffers less, Ke
yoto, being Inluud, Is not subject to
flooding from the ocean, but Its low
er dislrluts aro easily Inundated from
the rlvoi-s which flow through It.
Earthquakes uro the most disas
trous of Japan's natural scourges and
seismic visitations have been frequent
sinoo the great holocaust ot Reptem
her 1, 1923, hundreds haying been -killed
In tho Tyo-Oka quake In west
ern Japan last May. But typhoons
nnd their accompanying floods are a'
good second In .the loss of life and
property hey cause. August, Septem
ber nnd October are typhoon months.
CONTINUE FIGHT
MIAMI, Fin., Aug. 17. Colors
under which William Jertnlngs Bryan
waged his fight against the teaching
of evolution In the schools of Amerl
ca will not be furled.
Ills only son, William Jennings
Ilryun, Jr., In an Intorvlew with the
Miami Dnlly News toddy said that
ho will carry on the work In Which
his father was engnged at the time
of his death and will continue to en
gage In legal fights to take . the
teaching of evolution out of ' the
schools.
Mr. Ilryun Is slill busy settling the
affairs of his father's former estate
and Is engnged In numerous confer
ences with his fnlhor's former busi
ness associates. Ho plans - to leave
next week for T.os Angeles whero his
legal practice demands attention. . ;,.
AMF.fUCAN.
At- Chicago
rielroit J II 0
Chlrogo i s 2
Holloway and Ilassler; Blankenshlp
nnd Huhnlk. "
NATIONAL
At New York
Philadelphia ; ...J ft J
New York 8 0 1
Carlson., nnd .llenllno; Greenfield
nnd Hnydcr.
reived by the Zenith Radio corpo
ration here yesterdny. ,
The program will Include song and -instrumental
numbers fenturlng the
"klloul" which "resembles a tennis
racquet with the skin ot tho Walrus
stretched across its frame drum fash
j.,n nnd hound together with sinews."
McDonald's message said. .
BASEBALL SCORES