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Show The Dail. Herald Is. delivered by carriers each, afternoon In Sprin0-viHe- ,' PleaeantVlew, provo Bench, LakevleW and IVneyard. - . i THIRTY-EIGHT- YEAR. H " P TPI--I II A HE-HERALO. A Ui n.n ill iL A li--f LB 11 A First in news first iicirculation, first first delivered In the homes. In advertising, and . - . ' - .v.. ... ": '' '.; X"' 1TIIE ; : - ''- ' . .: : PRICE TWO CENT! i ' - fair tonight - -'- PROVO, UTAH, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1923. NO. 70. r WEATEZ2 UTAH Generally and Tuesday. - . . . . JMU Partial Eclinse ofi Sun Viewed by :Many Here Smoked glasses were fashionable in Provo and .Springville from 12:3? until 3:11 this afternoon, for during that time the . sup -- was eclipse visible in all Utah". shadow began crossThe-mopn'- 37, AndJt ing the sun's face was not until 3:11 that the lunar at-1- "blanket was entirely removed from the sun. When the moon was exactly in the sun's center, as viewed from Provo, more than three-fourth-s of the sun was hidden, and those persons who .had provided themselves with smoked j. glasses were well repaid for their solar ob- . ':. . servation. At 1:56 this, afternoon of the surface of the sun was covered by the moon. That was, of course, the . ideal time for smoked glass observation, and the occasion was taken advantage of by hundreds - of Provo and Springville people. Ordinary affairs of life were for the moment suspended and mankind gazed earnestly into the face of the sun. Partial darkness settled upon the earth, and the cool f evening waa .. felt. Then as the moon slowly but surely moved across the sun more daylight came and more" warmth. Not a few persons were heard to question what would happen to mortals on the earth it the moon ever got between the sun and the earth and remained there! seventy-seven-hundredt- - , r For the first time Jn 54 years in the United Stated the sun was in a total eclipse throughout several points in southern California -- and the northwestern edge of Lower California Monday for brief periods ranging from 3 minutes, and 31 seconds at Ensanada, Baja,. California, where the eclipse was the longest, to 50 seconds at Santa Barbara, where it was the shortest. Elaborate preparations had been made by scientists, - who were at various points to make hurried photographs with. powerful scieen-tifi- c instruments for future study. Among the most important angles studed by the scientists was that dealing Witlt the Einstein theory. Such a test was made last year in the Southern Hemisphere when a IS - ' ; n, , ea. 1 . . . . - 48 seconds. San Diego, 2 minutes 43 sec.: .. onds. minutes 30 seconds Lompoc, La JollaZ minutes 26 seconds Del Mar, 1 minute 56 seconds Santa Barbara, 50 seconds. - 1 total eclipse took place there, hut astronomers did not agree on the findings and deductions made. Con sequently it still remains a question in many scientist's minus wneiner or not light is' "bent" in Its trans mission across the universe by the attraction of gravity. For several days before the eclipse scientists' who made the ob servations today drilled and re hearsed in what they were to do as the time of the eclipse was so limited they had to do their work was anv nart of the eclipse tnat "eot away" from the scientists to day it was beyond the power, of mortal man to capture it. An idea of the preparatoy work to which, the -- scientists, put them selves is obtained from- - the fact that pecialTJermissloniad to be secured from Los Angeles,. Orange And San Diego County authorities for transporting - the heavy ma- terials used.-Runni- ns: .. .' V". '."V Supt. H. A. Dixon. The institute will begin . Thursday evening with the public session dn the audltorinum of the Central school.. The speakers will be President F. S. Harris of the Young university and Dr. C. N. Jen-sejsuperintendent of public in? struction ln Utah.' The public is invited to attend the meeting. Music will be furnished by the Provo high schools girls' glee club "under the direction" of Ernest Paxbian, supervisor of music of the Provo city schools.. Afton Stout will also render some bass solos. At the Friday morning session- of the institute the members of the board of education of the Provo pity schools, W. Monroe Paxman, Walter Adams, John W. Farren Ole E. Oleson, Jr., and Mrs. C. E, Maw, will address the teachers, "Mrs. Elsie C: Carroll, head of the girls of the high school, will deliver an address ofi the profes; sional conduct of teachers. . I IV J " i, - Ten-minu- tes 1 -- - 1 ft wv: :v " ; STEEL MEN MEETING HELD grade teachers will be under the di rection of Miss Emma Brown, su the Young university pervisor training school and the teachers of jt the third, III ' Damage to the extent of (5000 - Small boys and matches are the was don e Sunday afternoon when cause of the- - fire,, according to two barns belonging to Ellis Huff Chief Reed Boshard. Two ' boys, and Charles Madsen of Lakeview three and five years of age, one were destroyed by fire. The dam- - from .each one of the families, LAgel Is covered by, partial iJnsur- - were playing with matches In a ' r ance. ' , calf pen in' the Huff barn. A match The homes of tbe families were was dropped In the straw and' in a ' also threatened but were saved few minutes the entire bajU was of the Provo enveloped in smoke. How he boys through the efforts ' fire department, who responded, to got out of the barn uninjured is the call. The Jarge engine i the nothing short of a miracle, accorddepartment was at the scene; of ing to those who saw ithe fire. ih the afterthe fire from The alarm was sent In by P. W. noon until after 10:3fr o'clock in Madsen who lives about a mile from the . Huff andMadsen homes. the night pumping water. ' i Mr. Huff lost besides the barn, According to Mr. Madsen when he 25 tons of hay, two Work harnesses, first saw any Indication, of" fire, two wagons and different kinds of smoke was pouring from the top of ' ' farm implements. the Huff bariW later contained the flames completely enveloped The Madsen "barn across into about 20 tons of hay, a buggy and the barn and had shot, harness and farm implements, all the Madsen barn. of which was devoured by the fire. ."Had he wind not .changed A garage was also destroyed.' shortly ttert the fire started," said Mf. and Mrs." Madsen were "at Mft M,acl8en-,fJ'iwould have been Strawberry lake when the fire impossible for us to have saved my imbroke out. They were notified brother Charles.' home. The flames mediately By telephone and .made the trip hornOn, three hours. Mr. house when the wind changed and and Mrs. Huff were also, away threw the flames In another direcfrom the union meeting at College tion. A tree standing close to the fro mtbe union meeting, at Collegel house was destroyed , by the tire, hail whicn they naa been attena-Ing- . ' v (Continued on Page Two.) . institute to.be held byJbePtovo city schools Thursday and Friday of this week has been arranged by 7MiU- ph Fn hp - I ft I I1 I llf IlUUil ; " , ; -- ' semi-offici- sources: 8rv!a.', FRANCISCO, CalffSept International News SAN SHANGHAI,' Sept. 10 (By International News Scr. The following list of American victims in the Japan;, disaster was received here today from Japane. ice.) v scores of ' seven destroyers and injured wrecked today marks the greatest loss in a single' disaster to States navy iff peace times. In an almost impenetrable blanket of fog, destroyers Delphi, Young,: 3. P. Lee, Nicholas, Fuller, Chauncey and Woodbudy, in single fire formation, piled up on the treacherous rocks off Pedernales point, two. miles from the Point Arguello lighthouse in Santa Bar bara county. All seven destroyers are a contingent of the eleventh Ten bodies have been squadron. recovered, two of which have been identified as R. A. Conroy, fire man, firse class, also of the Delphi. The names of other victims bave Cials of the twelfth' naval district here. The recofered bodies have been snt to Sau Diego. . . - T. v v. Kisen Kalsha . - ' S. Kootoky, Toyo Leon Van Der Polder. lO.Twenty-twoTdead- d , - taptain Kilvert; of the "steamer Captain and Mrs. Swarm. : passenger kgent. Steer Navigator. ' . A. Robertson.- . L. II. Fardel, superintendent of public schools. ' - - : ' The first list of "earthquake dead in Japan includes tl name of. A. Robertson as among those Who died in the terr ble disaster that broken over Japan last week., The International News Service, in its first listing the American dead in Japan, did not includejhe Americc homes of the victims- 'And Uie I.N. S. at noon Jtoday cou! not tell if A. Robertson was from Utah. The service cou'. not be certain that "A." was the man's only, jnitial. Hilton A.- Robertson, of Springville, is head of the L. I S. mission work in Japan. ' He and Mrs. Robertson we: known to be in Japan at the time of the earthquake. ' At 2 o'cIocklhirafternoonThe-Heral- d again telephone to the I, N.voperatof at Salt Lake-City- , but he had r, ceived no further cable information regarding the first li: He did say that I. N; S. would immedaitely cable for verif ic: ". tion. - ... i interviews' With Springville people this afte Telephonic noon did not reveal any identifying response. Bishop Ma; cock said he had heard last week that all of the Mormon mi. sionaries in Japan were safe. He said that President Grar had so notified him. No otbervward, apparently ;has bee I , - I ! Thirteen seriously injured Are in hospitals in Santa Barbara.. A special train carrying over 500 officers and enlisted survivorsj men, are en route to Sau Diego. Th;taslfi of rescuing survivors from rocks and cliffs in the vfcln-lt- y of the "graveyard . of ships' received. j . 'V-- . was7T;ompletedxla8t""nIght after listed r is no A. . .that' While,there certainly Robertson, heroic work on the part of the res an earthquake victim, is H.; A Robertson-- , of SDrinsrvilk cuers, many among them oemg officers and enlisted men of the 4 there is . fear that'such is the ase. The I. N. S- operato Whom had today admitted that in cablino ihr initialn "TT. A nno n .destroyers iiUtia'te-miK- hl to ,h0-1-the "been have he but not was at a' , dropped, mfafrafttway this"-ha'been done. . .,T ; ; it was officiaiiy' MnouVced - at certain that twelfth naval district headquarters Investigation ofirevious lists of Americans In Japg today that several of the destroy- - do not show MV RobertSoriS Excepting llrandZ jirSJXi Springville.: The name is rather unusual, no' w - fourthfifth anL sixth grades will be under the direstion of Miss Mary Ollerton, primary grade supervisor of the Provo city schools. Principal' L. B. Harmon'' of the Provo high school will preside over PROVO TODAY - d 1, I session of the a cldse.second to the the departmental Plans, said to he "of utmost importance relative to the and senior high' school Mt. Wilson expedition, the Univer- - junior " of the plants of .the ColunibjSteel corpoi-atio4i- t teachers. operation large slty of Virginia sent out. even held lronton-.-wA social be to di3C0Bsecr prlrately today at a luncfteon' at Friday number of scientists headed by r "is being' planned by the teach V Hotel Roberts. Professor S. A Mitchel, who estab- ing The definite lished his equipment on the base- ers' organization. were corat steel' the 'officials of tho Present meeting social has not as ball grounds at Fort Rosecrans, program for the And men Provo business and Springville-Thof hold be been leading made It may poration up. near Point Loma. Expensive pre yet at one of the lake resorts, probably lunpheon was held ' at the invitation of the steel corporatparations also were made by the Geneva .a ionScripps Biological Institute" atLar re will be at their The teachers Jolla for a study of the total eclipse. F. Rains vice I president of the company, presented to wnen spective buildings saturaay the work there will be organized the business men of the two communities the plans on which for the coming year, is at present working. .':' e ?3110' - ' noursced.. The Fuller has a Hat of, fact adds cause to the fear that the earthquake victim maJ . JV ucjiot- - w Biai ujai u buu , DC tllO Of 1 1I1X VtUC Illilll, pounaea 10 pieces, aangcr 01 oeing as are also- the Nicholas and S. P. Lee. The Woodbury has a list of 40 degrees, while the Young Is- aground on her beam 'ends, and s submerged.. The Chauncey is wedged" between rocks, v and is upright TAmong the Provo men present at the luncheon were above water of navy and other craft .TF. Pierpont, Walter Adams, O. A. Spear, Arthur N. Tay- areSrores standing by the wrecked desE- - S. Hinckley lor, Dr. Franklin S. Harris, Dr. tt-Merrill, In an effort- - to recover TWO INJURED IN troyers " George Maycock of Provo won S. H. Belmont. .and victims. The salvage other Surprising how well H'Oliywoft possible BE FLOWER CITY the free for all road race at the movie stars are known to Prov of the work under is supervision was Springville represented by Bishop George Maycock, H. T. Reynolds, C. R. Jones, M. O. Packard, Myron E- - Cran-dal- i, Admiral S. E. W. Klttelle, who ar- Richfield county fair Friday, Sep - people! rived on the. scene of, .the. disaster Member 7th mere wore eigne ! . AUTO ACGIDENT Jr., and Seymour L. Mendenhall. auoara me lenaer jvjeivuie. - . x cars entered In this race, , from , Hardly had the Sunday Herat The most beautiful asters grown Following the meeting, most1 of those attending the The revrrbration of the terrible Richfield to Monroe, a dlFtance of carrier begun their rounds yeste in the U. S. A, are grown in Provo. I luncheon impact against the rocks of the about tweivo miles; Mr. Maycock day when the first answer In tl left for the plant site at Ironton. of is Walter .And the grower Cox, destroyers," which wns was driving his .Towett touring car contest came A as to who misunderstanding the West drive.'audible to the remainder of lli'i and was some four minutes ahead In Seattle. summer Crosble. 24S South Fir had the right of way caused an acKv.elyii -thorn saved the above' statements - followed of 11, vessels of the car which took Becond place. squadron And so on until it came to Direc--Westl ame to Tho Herald., off I MEETS a cident- oti the corner ef University FACULTY the visit to Provo from a similar fate. The. division Mr. Maycock happening to be at tor Lowry Nelson who gave an ac- was with her coupon- neatly fille early on Kan Francisco from their en of route party "Chicago tdurists, the fair entered therrivce bnCaiise and First North street. Sunday count of a wonderful physical prob- to San when (ho accident oc- he believed his Jewett was ldea!l7 stud the young ludy would bave wt way to southern California. They afternoon in which a car operated Diego versus lem hard rubber of heated b drove' past Mr. Cox's place on the were said built for abroad contetit, and went that first prire, a curred. 'Tim by Mrs. W. Lester Manguui ran of HooverVbest. chndy;. right thu rocks, ncountercd In the desert to have roon destroyers a spaed in with seven other drivers. at drive, saw,, the,' flowery yard and into a Ford driven by"C. B. Hanson traveling i while 'iiiaf traveling in a Ford. there, but" one of the nam ' of 20 knots nn hour. . paused In their transcontinental of Ophir. Mr. Maycokc's faith In the Jewett and , was not the name of one of the pU Having b'e&rd the wise onest the was . flight. well founded With Mr. Hanson In his car were In showed the ture stars shown In the Sund: faculty settled down to the busiThe 'pause persuaded them to his wife,' Mrs. Norma' Hanson, and finish' when the Jewett crossed the Herald. Each of the fifteen new members ness of next year, the optimism of Evelyn had better .1 leave their automobile and- - spend his , finish line four minutes In front of ) Miss Elizabeth of the B. Y. U. faculty was Intro- the members almost eclipsing that STEEL CITY GETS iagaln. a time with the flowers. Mr. Cox Davis of Salt Lake City.' In the duced to and' welcomed by the of the the second ca"r. I came many other coupon! speakers quoted. showed them the asters, a group accident Mr. Hanson sustained sev- other members. at the first faculty "I had absolutely no trouble wit'V ' Then ull of them being signd Registration begins on Saturday, practically of a hundred varlties of (lowers eral cuts on the arm from flying session of the institution, held at tiild my Jewett,"- - Mr. Maycock and will continue on Monday and by feminine names, proving, moi - car he erows about his home. " Miss Davis a small cut 10 a. m. Monday. " race. after .the and. 'Theskimmed glass, Tuesday. likely, that Provo girls an SYSTEM along like a bird. JvWas sorry the than "Never before have I seen such- - between the eyes, while Then came reports of members women know more about "mov beautiful asters," a Chicago woman was not Injured. They were who have been on leaves of absecond man couldn't give me a bet- stars- - than Provo men and boys d exclaimed. "We thought we would taken tolheAird hospital- - where sence. ter contest, fori could have made The contest The first was Dr. Carl F. FIRE STATION PROGRESSING. closes late Tuesdr Steel C'ty will have water within faster time.'"' see wonderful flowers In southern their wounds were bandaged. - ; Eyring who has for fifteen months niKJit, after the last showing H. Ray, W. to two California, but if their - flowers 'Mavcock weeks, according Mr. Jewnt: sustained nonin his Mrs7Mangum bought been at the Institute of Technology bf the Steel City Invest-men- t this spring from the Utah dtMM- -, "Hollywood" at the Columbia the! equal these we will be satisfied." juries. v , at aPsadene, Calif. The doctor adThe foundation for the new fire president ler. The Herald today reprints u 'rMr.' Cox says that hardly--a day "Theansen car-w- as company, tors Motor of Jewetts, the coming mitted that 'be had acaulred the station Is the coupon ahd' ptcturesso that mail "Our water system wllT be fin- company, of Provo. Superior passes that some tourist party north on University avenue while California habit, and began telling forms for the concrete having others may get Into "the Contest. does not stop and spend delightful Mrs. Mangum was driving west on ready for use in ten days," t ; what a wonderful Institution the In- been erected today. According to ished, Coupons should be clipped fro moments la his flowers Mr. Ray ald. "Then we can mind . , First North, streets According to stitute was, and what splendid pro-- Chief . Boshard the ORDERS UNFILLED, STEEL Of the The Herald, the names of the pi pouring can see no better way to ad the story told the police 3ir. Han- feasors not .only. all-oSteel City but jply: had. He he had DtnMk iimlltoM tn K ri i nwnn next ' spoke espe concrete will begin within the tiA , n wil' OWW.i vertise our. city and county" thanf sen, both'cars came to S standstill me nign lanos 01 rrovo una jiniie-Viile- --t . niim:u.m,,nn.ii uivu "' ".. oi one proiessor, a uerman fewrdaysT' l cially robersthe bo K our coiipou8lgned aif hydrant-pwilwitn too." W NE YORK. Sohtr yards by beautifying on the corner to allow the other Jew, who The old station has almost been placed near the countyyinfirmary, Unlta States Steel corporation to addressed solhai ihe winherm Mr.Cox. declared. ."If car to pas. Then they both started but whom spoke English perfectly, flowers,'-- ' not Doctor Eyring could razed and the', bricks have been That-wl- H unfilled 4onii aga - on be located, and then you may tu every home was surrounded with at Ue same time and before Mrs. at first understand. The doctor hauled to the site of the new stac. As It Is now little or no August 31 at 5,414,663 tons against j the coupon Id at the Columbia thti flowers therels passing tourists would Mangum could stop the car had didn't explain why. tlon to be used In the Inside waals leave Provo with the picture of it struck the Ford. Neither car is forr the infirmary b.yiu.YM tons on July 31 last ana ter or at The lierald office protection Prof. M. Wllford Poulson, psyYou'll find the lou'pon on ahothj as a flower city. They'd tell about said to have traveled more than flre." 5,950,105 tons on 'Aug'jHt 31, 1912. against chologist, who has been at Chicago, of today's Herald. comInvestment page beautiful Provo for years to come. five or ten miles an hour. Steel The City. PEACH HARVEST ON. followed in Eyrlng's California todVy-- asked the county comFEVER. OF EPIDEMIC pany The , Ford was badly damaged spirit, and wished It to be undermission for a franchise to convey and was taken to a garage.- The stood that the Chicago of . today FROM CALIFORN RETURNS and Sell water. It was thought cerWASHINGTON', Mangum car was slightly damaged, was noted for something besides Sept 10 To - Utah in would be add to the horrors of tho devastaThe fruit franchise such shipping that tain the stock Yards; it was also a great Glenn Rav. son of W. H. Ray, is now on in full swing, granted. Application, to the state tion In the Japanese earttimmV. center of music, art, and educa-Uo- county from Los Angel' turned disvarious the also and has been Provo fruits commission utilities an epidemic of fever has broken Calif. Sunday , IRELAND) IN LEAQUE. ' from Los ' are at same tricts made prjrsent swarming company. by the out in Toklo, according to tuivrcui Prof. A. Madsen had studied to Sku Francisco and then geles arwho a superf ruit "Our company has spent great to th state department today from Tnternstlonal News Service. music at London, Paris, Rome, and with buyers Ogden last week. of deal of money bringing water to Ambassador Wood. . GEN5VA,. Sept 10. The league Berlin. the vising the packing and .loading this announced Haclng or of nations assembly today unani Steel the elevations the City," peaches. higher professor was clearly nonplussed. Moxt of the shipping comes from Ml Ray said. "We have had a EARTHQUAKE IN INDIA. mougly electedIreland to member He hardly knew which of the clUes Provo Bench where the peaches ... ' Until furtqer notice. The. Herald ship. Urge force of men busy all sum- - FOUR MILLION SUBSCRIBED. was music center. the great ti.tftrnatlnitat Ww SorVior. Amor. management will take out in stock Prof. E. H. Bastmond was in love are loaded onthe Orera railroad, 10.-- Mor 'LONDON, Sept 10. Fifty ' M sanu-tui- u of the Invest WASHINGTON, the Steel 8ept. said It at market price one-haPleasant is urove, City with Seattle, the home of great Springville, QUAKE REFUGEES RETURN. , sons were reported killed ana maj auuscr";7i bmn soil also to water 14,000,000 bai than will ment total amount of the coat of adverheavy are' company andyluberta artists, and where California was shippers.' the Columbia Steel corporation for to the $5,000,000 fund of th Amn. houses destroyed by an earthquat tising of all assessment notices and almost unheard of.' eastern BofJ relief work la at Mymtnsingh. . According to prominent' growers the use of workers In the corpora lean Red Cross-fo- r notice of sales of delinquent stock. International News Service. tt. Place your legal advertisement in Prof. Herald Clark supported the beak of the peach harvest will tion's plant At the present tlmel Japan and it Is expected tiiul ma i said a dispatch from CalcutU KOBE, Japan, Sept 10. Three The Herald and sell atock by id American destroyers arrived here Professor Eastmond, quoting Markbe on within the neit few days, the steel company has A large total will be reached before nlh-- ' afternoon. The shock was reit the quake centered r ' ; 4pln-.L.from Yokohama today with 300 Twain that the - most wonderful and. should be over in another two crew of boys carrying water for fall, ted Cross officials declared CalcutU but ; the My menslngu district this afternoon. their workmen. y American quake refugees on board, winter, he bad ever spent wasoue or uiree wee. " e il ' three-quarter- . - . J. Bartlett, Salt Lake, chairman; James B. Tucker, Provo; Henrv Riurceri. Price. v 1923 national convention ET A. Llttlefleld, Ogden, chairman; ' John E. Booth, Spanish Fork; Fred U. JoEberhardt, Bingham Caeyon." seph D. Hard of Salt Lake traa reap- , pointed as Utah representative up-on the Eleventh district rehabilitation committee. ( , . Americanlsm-C- seconds. ill tilUM the-compa- Darrel T. Lane, commander of the department of. Utah of , the American Legion(has his forces line-u- p and read for JrorJ- - Sincertbo conyentlon in Price he has been working, with the depart? merit adjutant, Kirke M.- Decker) arranging a plan- of compaign and' selecting committees for tha work of the state. Final selections of these committees was- - announced Saturday. Mr. Lane . also van- nounces tat the excutive committee has approved of three officers whom he bad appointed in the de- These ar Kirke M. partment Decker, department ad'uant; Otto A WeUley of Richmond, historian; Can-yo- Fred Eberhardt of Bingham " " " chaplain. ' ' " Personnel of the commiUees Is announced as follows: - --- rFinance ' Frank WJemIng, Provo, chairman; John E. Holden, Salt Uke; W. W. Andersan, Logan -- .Frank P. Stewart, Salt Lake; D. T. and M. . Decker, "vdepartmeflt ; Kirke members of adjuant, are ' this committee under the state constitution.. 1924 - department convention John E. Booth.' Spanish Fork, chairman; Joseph Nelson, Spanish Fork; Jesse Huner, Provo; Worthy B. Davis, Salem; Ben Roe, Pay son; Glen W. Coffman, Springville; Thomaa Powers, Lehl. , Nathaniel Jackson, Membership Salt Lake, chairman. V. K. Saxton, PublicIty-'-Charl' 'Kaysvlile, chairman; George M. Harris. Provo: JR. L. Olson, Dan S. McQuarrle and Gordon Wlrick, all of Salt Lake; C. H. Smurthwaite, " OOeden. Ensenadav Kwe Taliforniar 3 minutes 34 seconds. San Clemente Island, 3 min: utes 30 secondsr- Point Conception, 3 minutes 2 the Jeachers' The program for LUIU llciy Latcc View Sunday K iLL ! . clIIU MITT . Jngqints: Firo Doslroys Two rnn Tnn HERE ARE POINTS 1ROM ' WHICH SUN'S ECLIPSE WAS SEEN. The total eclipse of the sun was seen today from .the follow.. Point Loma, 3 minutes. Catalina Island, 2 minutes. Mill -- ' llorald-liollywoo- WW r HERS 1 d five-poun- d sister-in-law- - ITER Mrs.-Hanso- - . , . . il I T 40.h - days-reporte-d- i -- - Advertising at - ''.' v.. lf ... 1 : |