The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 20, 1917, Page 1

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Put your skates away, folis ake tod according to the weat a chance to trot out sing him There won't be any skating on ¢t ro umbrella Says: “Tonight and Sunday ARAN — ~ nanan ee partly cloudy 1 THE ONLY PAPER IN, SEATTLE “THAT “‘DARES" TO PRINT THE NEWS and an Temperature at noon, 36 SI VOLUME ATTLE, WASH,, SATURDAY, JAN, 20, 1917 ONE CENT ox“ tuaisn Ant FIREMAN CRUSHED TO DEATH a. Eight Others Hurt as Roof of TheatreCaves | in During Fire Fight Battalion Chief Fred G. Giilham died under half a ton of ruins and eight firemen were injured when the roof of the Grand the- atre caved in while they were fighting flames there at 6:30 a. m. Saturday. The injured are: Laurence Brunson, 810 W. 63rd, pipeman No. 1, minor bruises, city hospital. Indictments i in! Where. Veteran an Fire Fighter Met Dest Booze Cases | -AreDelayed ie — } Major indictments resulting from the federal probe of liquor syndicate operations were not expected Saturday. Instead, it was predicted that the investi- gation would continue next week. The grand jurors resumed their session on how to pro WASHING prief but He Was Operator Lee Gordon, another police o cer, who was stationed at t tral station telephone switchboard Much of the time when the boo wer Saturday morning, prepared to hear the stories of police officers and employes of the Donald McGinley, 916 W. 64th, pipeman No. 10, minor bruises, ty h ital. ‘light on details of the operations here last ar ee fall. ee ac, Al B. Colburn, Hotel Hawthorn, minor injuries, driver No. 1 chemical, city hospital. faeee ane durore for seven al agg ¥ —T s chest, Providence hospital. A pts ve ve ; SERVICE BRIEF; —"F George A. Boyd, 4025 Whitman ave., pipeman No. 10, frac- ee ne, Arthur A. Shaughnessy, 6016 Hillman place, engine Co. No. 1, taken home. smoke. The charred interior of the theatre, heaped with smoking tim- blast, was another witness \lieved to have been rescued. The grand jur scheduled t¢ | Gilham lost his life just after he had directed his men to carry County. 6h afadiog Dep Chapiain Fragier, Dewey '® ; ma ack; anid toppled down™backw: Billingsleys, who were expected to throw Otto Rooney, 743 N. 78th, fractured right arm, city hospital. [> Police Sergt. Guy Carleton, who / “ . Bee rere om hand, ready to xo DEWEY FUNERAL is : s \ i Charles A. Hull, 3800 Thistle st., pipeman No. 10, crushed has b a ; PEGA acest tn bis tured leg, Providence hospital. — John Loughran, 702 Union st., station No. 10, overcome by bers, was still being combed at 10 a. m. All the injured are be- ging syndicates going ful > {ine aenimarerpncaiititieasiell “ , ae Fe } é ae hose onte, phe. roof. He was standing in the gallery. Other fire- uty Sheriffs alley. Royd and Mad = : . stepped bi ard—to- fighting his fSagehip e of Manila fen, must yet be heard They Rave been on hand at the federal building for three days, waiting to he called Minor Charges Upper picture ‘snows how ne Dalcony. ° . ‘ + root of the Grand theatre crashed | A moment later, the roof caved in, burying him. When f gown. burying Battalion Chief Fred the veteran’s feet had been burned. He was rushed ‘to the city G. Githam Saturday morning. He was killed and eight other firemen hospital. Physicians there said he had been dead for sever were injured. . Below is photograph of Chief Gi. minutes. Dh aft tng Coa a aia The theatre building, located at 217 Cherry st., was gutted partment more than 24 years Eleven more minor { seven of which were sec returned by the jurors reported to Judge Neterer at 5 p.m ‘riday Mipiss ibe tetleve. to deni| Precio by the flames. The walls and stage alone stood. with bootleggers who sold liquo t without paying ment tax indictments char; Dominic Detere. dt. Suntyoshi with on a small » the special go The four ope ed Willa Bir Yoho Pearso: > SIGHT RAIDER er picking a e Inspectors, workir yt e e ion picture operation room Just what the loss on the thea- tire mar |tre was has not been determined. . $55, doors according to the fire mar s. The gallery, inspect offer Their bail was aced at $ ach consisted of a brief bale and roof can be replaced, SIG nave exch been arrested b oo oC se BY H. D, ROBERTSON t was estimated cost of $5,000. Eke police for violating the dry or. a Dewey's faves U. P. Staff Correspondent The owners carried $25,000 insur po jolating th # fay (Copyright, 1917, by United Pre: ance on the building and $2,000 on dinance te On - the furni Early RIO. DI or { car traffic on Third ave, was ked fer an hour on account of the fire. Hundreds of people were kept back by a line of , h police, when the word was cireu- t ave tonight, recovered all their/lated that a number of firemen Hotel Guests Scared belongings (were buried in the theatre, Guests In the Rector hotel, at No Recess N JANEIRO, Jan i} " Speed up the @4 when the grand jury decid a te i sit Saturday and Mo instead wntil Tuesday is the custom with ater atits” ““""| Q5-GENT PIECES 4 W. H. Pielow dicted with the @ before the grand by = soon Nj £ § i $ nsfer man in Third and «Cherry st., were ngsleys, went lee 1 the house alarm wa y Friday after sounded by Night Clerk Arth Pielow’s stor fupport many vealed by the Billingsley followed by Charles Edmonds, tt “ie, FIRE AT PORTLAND chauffeur who worked first for t | at — Pillingsieys and later for Margeft 5 pt ms had sped f | PORTLAND, Jan, 20.—Fire [hel when t were hot competitors in ther hing for the sea terror They wer which swept the Ross hotel at {from the hea the wh traffic SCHOONER ORCAS TO - Pernambuco — repo a of | get out down | 6 a. m, today killed three men, Damage $50,000 Sergt. Guy Carleton c " —~ two British auxili cruiser the stairs, slightly burned four others and | The third victim's body was een summoned to the federa LA NC ED ees Evidence of the pune e hote the the totally destroyed the three ‘ound on the top floor, s Building for the last seven ¢ BE U H tillous observance of ry rule of , story frame building. : his room door. He had suffo- Was expected to final war and international law tn all ( c firemer n the T dead are A. Burl of Kelso, | cated After the fire departmeht captures was accumulating t ell be heard outside|Wash.; Ernest Marquette of Port-|arrived an old man appeared in an lazing theatre. Two firemen |land, and Tom ¢ S8 un-|upper window, with flames just be were orched al-|hind him recognition Frank He seemed about to jump when a 1 arm |ladder was placed against the build+ on the roof when the flames the jurors Saturda TACOMA Jan, 20.—The auxil-} y accu , = {Sse DOWN CITY MARKET . |to be launched at high t hn v 1 ill purchase all gooda to be sold VESSEL SEND lby a pe to a winde n al t the a ie stalls. | tor hotel to ve themsel } | wh i t PASS BOND ISSUE) srvinkaili. Gina’ ; from | and ere in g from |in id he climbed down, ates mae t a the ghee te Counc Hesketh voted favor. the intense heat a window The damage is about $50,000, caer the vessel | w wh unciiman Thor | Breaking out in a lower hall- - mance committe of the city cor WARNING GIVEN TO tailer, wainst it at th The Alaska building, west of Lal | swept up the stairs, cutting off ‘ail a Grand, was undamaged i r f escape pass a | o The idea of a municipal market,| HALIFAX, N fat, 20,—Tiis-| “saramnen. bad always considered| Nine men and two women made! nied ALLIED SHIPPERS ° ct ene ns i tn ren it tea cle oh perth Me ‘vam ae ; Maen * , rd 9 sg t . | the most ; hazardous bulla ngs in} windows, 4 WASHINGTON Jan. 20.—The - hi and n Me 0 station, atl the ntown zone velonged | 7 i r I ea { NEW YORK, J e firet known instanc fason, of tl poltti eal science de- Cape Race received such signals, re-| trown estate. It v € s yore aa ADVERTISING MANAGER'S } i Mf the United State tment of the state ity, \jayed by the Standard Oil tar ents _" norning: ‘thi chants tunlly consid er the unive men m & John D. Archbol . d OAILY TALK nt bid na John house When found thei » rules committee decide 4 ne ercial ‘ idy of the plan upon suggestion, It was believed es Aig oval see aa rad : ~ committee dectiee aa ; entable the jof the Central Labor Council here, steamer. Scandinavic . tN aia) Ja chain pie Bean ies ban i doped, athe alt » wanted a solution to the high bound from Norfolk to Christiania,! Goon be ae 1 ev ey Hrehoi pa — | dead for Arizona and spend the week on the Bat Wing ranch. You can do it by readit “Bat Wing THEATRES ||| HOW PAULHAMUS MADE PUYALLUP VALLEY | pei Sie! stationed at Fire Third ave, and Pine He was one of the best me the city ever h Mayor Gill said when he heard the new | n years, And it means a great many “more|with the problem of markets and Flag Lowered “A Man Who Made a Valley Prosper” is the caption of an vt ie little | thing dealing with waste prod-|iad found no solution, The valley| A few minutes later 2 pg Ps fs article in the American Maga- ear they | ucts, transportation problenm, new | wes dotted with berry patches, and | the ne county-city bul Bowles, the next zine of February, telling of the we of berries tleta, settling di ons, creat the local market was glutted, Th dowt alf mast novel-a-week in The years of age and Githam w q ris family at 408 30th ed with ¢ profits. could raise the berries, but th ded a man to show them how to harmony, and maki The Man on Job » of land scarcely and 17 miles long, accomplishments in the Puyal lup valley of W. H. Paulhamus, Star. of Sumner, Wash., farmer, or alle which Hea | The mar’who does this job, and) ™ rkhet a crop which deteriorates | ’ 3. He is survived by his wife, a] It’s the story of a ganizer and former president Rainier who has built up what Is probably | 0 raptdly | son years old, and a daughter g oo abinciaman of the state senate. A picture marketing @ million-dollar |the Most succesatul oqoperative Builds Up Markets | aged | nervy young I asterner of Paulhamus and the farmers’ rry crop a man’s job. It 1 organization in the United Pawhamius saw the need of real | The Jlamoen at one stage of con: | who followed the girl co-operative store accompanies distributing carloads of 1m W. H. Pawhamus. co-operation among the growers |agration were roaring thruout the i 4 p the story berries before they | ind Puyallup Frait| when he became president, and he| interior, from the space occupied | he loy ed to her home MORE THAN 60,000 COPIES The article, written by Ray te, and doing it in Growers’ a tion had been in| made it popular when he showed] by the baleony and theatre in the West and won DAILY B. Penney, follows that the arket ia not ° I ré before |them what it nt in aetual ¢ From Motion Picture her. But it was a The F alba v in Plerce pplied at any one point, and the awlhamu became its president, | returne Whenever the directors That was what made many of t . si county, western Washington, 18 prices hold firm all aloug the Iine.d12 yours ago. it bad struggled! (Continued on page 5) firemen believe it started frou) tough job (at first). *

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