oc-plain-dealer 1923-09-04
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HIGH SCHOOL BOY
ACCIDENT VICTIM
Several accidents took place on Sunday and Labor Day in Orange-co.
Sails Sands, Fullerton U. H. S. student, received lacerations and bruises about the head and arms when the steering wheel of his Chevrolet sedan broke near Buena Park and he hit a telephone pole. The windshield and hood wedge demolished He was treated at a private house.
An American Auto Tours bus while going toward Laguna Beach and a car with five passengers collided between Irvine and Tustin late last night and the five were injured, one of the women being knocked unconscious. They were treated at the Community Hospital, Santa Ana, where they refused to give their names. The woman victim they took with them. They were on the way to Santa Ana from San Diego.
Several other accidents took place at the south end of the county, including many minor ones.
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Holland and daughters Marjorie and Ellen Ruth motored to the mountains Saturday evening to remain until after Labor Day.
GREAT FIRE IN TOKIO
HAS BURNED ITSEIF OUT
(Continued from Page 1)
habitation was hazardous. Refugees, to whom the official residence of Prince Regent Hirohito was thrown open, abandoned the imposing structure. The opening of the White House of Japan violated precedent.
No information concerning the safety of the American diplomatic corps at the United States embassy at Tokio has been received. Apprehension is felt for the safety of its members:
The captain of the Japanese liner Shinyo Maru wirelessed from Nagoya that this city was "practically destroyed." The population of Nagoya was in excess of half a million.
Martial law is in strict enforcement in both Yokohama and Tokio. Numerous shootings have been reported.
The government of Japan has been established temporarily at Osaka. Numerous valuable governmental manuscripts were destroyed in Tokio.
American circles here this afternoon are apprehensive of the fate of Congressman Ackerman of New Jersey, who is known to have been visiting the stricken area. Professor Henry Fairchild Osborne, of the American Museum of Natural History of New York City, also was a
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Details of Deaths of Japanese Princes
OSAKA, Japan, Sept. 4.—Details of the deaths of two princes of the imperial family reached here today.
Prince Shimidzu is reported to have been crushed to death at Oise when the building he was in toppled over by Saturday's terrible earthquake.
Prince Hirotada, according to advises here, was killed when Sasakota tunnel collapsed. The train in which Hirotada was a passenger was passing through the tunnel at the instant the full force of the earthquake shock hit Japan.
Quake Bulletins
ABOARD STEAMER PRESIDENT PIERCE, ENROUTE TO KOBE, Sept. 4.—(Via Radio to INS)—United States Consul General Cunningham at Shanghai and Consulate Inspector Johnson are en route on this vessel to Yokohama and Tokio. Their mission is to endeavor to learn the fate of the American diplomatic representatives at the embassy in Tokyo, and render assistance to American refugees.
The Shanghai consul officials expressed doubt as to whether they could reach Tokio, but stated they were prepared for emergencies. Kobe is 375 miles from Tokio.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—The state department tonight took steps to ascertain the whereabouts and the welfare of the thousands of Americans who may have been victims of the Tokio earthquake disaster.
LONDON, Sept. 4.—Among the missing Americans in Japan are Dr. and Mrs. McCullaug Mrs. E. B. MacMillan and a Rockefeller Hospital nurse named Dalsey, according to a Peking dispatch to the Evening News.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 4.—The
LONDON, Sept. 4.—Among the missing Americans in Japan are Dr. and Mrs. McCullang Mrs. E. B. MacMillan and a Rockefeller Hospital nurse named Dalsey, according to a Peking dispatch to the Evening News.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 4.—The trans-Pacific liner Korea Maru of the Toyo Kisen Kaisha is safe in Yokohama harbor with 2500 refugees on board according to local headquarters of the company.
The scheduled sailing for San Francisco has been cancelled and the ship has been ordered to render all available assistance to the earthquake devastated region.
tourist in the devastated district.
Professor Osborne arrived in Tokio last Friday, the day preceding the disaster. No word has been received from either of these Americans.
The scarcity of food is feared to have resulted in consequent disease. To forestall any possibility of plague, the dead of the stricken cities have been piled into heaps and cremated. Funeral services by score of religious dignitaries were held at each funeral pyre.
The destruction of the Ichigaya prison released its entire body of 5,500 convicts.
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