The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 31, 1922, Page 14

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: ia | THE SEATTLE STAR : “Save Salmon Industry!” To Be Slogan at » PI wan Oregon Poll C harles Turner Opens Campaign for N. omination Leader in Everett's Phone Fight Becomes Candidate 1" Zaid Got Pee BE GREAT EVENT PORTLAND, Aw Jazz Bands, Dancing, Sport the salmon industry! ts the watchword of a campaign which " of All Kinds Promised Labor's fete at the University of is being conducted thruout Ore- Monday |Ma gon in the Interest of a constitu. tional amendment on which the people of the state will vote next November, prohibiting the use of traps, wheels and seines in the 3 Columbia and controtung the op- eration of state fish hatcheries, Pighting the amendment are the big cannery interests—which are killing the goose with the golden eggs by trapping the salmon with wheels at the gate- way to the spawning gre Fighting for the measure are the most far-sighted people, who see that unless a stop is put to the unlimited slaughter of salmon, Washington Stadium next be | pleasure from 11 a, m. to 11 p. one continuous round of m., } Charles A. Turner, clty commis with the rogram fo arranged that! | pres . | stoner of Everett, and a veteran of Me! the Spanish and world wars, who ts)‘ seeking the republican nomination as bour Seattle folks can drop in any | for an hour or two and have a royal j good time, according to the program | committee. Jace fans are promised something | extra special in the way of music} }for their street dancing, T, HM. (Dad) | Wagner's 25-piece band being pro | vided for the dancing at night. ‘Th [street dancing will begin about 2 DP. m. and last until the supper hour the entire industry will soon be | aad then begin again immediately wiped out. after the manned band concert at In a series of articles on “The| 7:30 p.m. and last until 11 p.m. ry of the Salmon,” appearing in| ollowers of aquatic sports and log | Portland News, Fred 1, Boalt | rolling enth sare going to see Points out that in 1876 the Columbia | the sp t contests of thelr kind Fiver salmon pack was 450,000 cases; | ever staged on the Pac coast, it is that tn 1921 it was nd that/said, The log was selected by the the extimate for 1922 is 00. And, |committee yesterday, being donated | Ire adds, the 1876 pack was all Royal |by President FE. H. Brett of the Stet. | Chinook, king of salmon, while the|son & Post Lumber Co., 3300 What- 3921 pack contained only 250,000) com a It was hauled to the Todd anes of Chinook, the balance being | Drydock», » here it was placed in a Made up of inferior fish jlathe to be turned to a true cylinder “It must be remembered,” he goes! 13 feet long and 18 inches in diam on, “that ten times the gear was em- jeter. It will be sandpapered to give | Ployed in 1931 than was used in| it speed in the water. The log will) 1876. be mounted on pivots on a truck and | “It must be remembered that [displayed in Saturday's Labor day | there was no fall fishing in [advance guard parade thru the bust-| those days. ness section, several log rollers p “And it mast be renrembered | demonstrating the sport. Charles A. Turner that there was no fishing in Mins Myrtle Fredericks will have/ second district, epoke at a meeting 1876 above Rainier. Today Seu- | charge of the first ald stations to be | in Everett upon national issues now fert fishes at the very gate to [established about the stadium to! pefore the people. Turner is running the spawning grounds. lcare for children in case of accident. | as an independent republican, Tur “Fishing in the Columbia tn 1876/ There will be @ staff of competent | ner has been a powerful figure in the Stopped at tidewater. It should stop) trained nurses and physicians on {fight against the telechronometer there now. Fishing stops at tide-|duty all day, and until the kiddies/ang the Puget Sound Telephones Co water in every great salmon river) leave for home Monday night | of Everett, which has been waged by Th midd | wan ran¢ led fm the agg ane Peg single excep- —— —————«-} Everett citizens for the past few tion of the lumbia. j months, | “In 1876 the ‘high’ boat was) couver, Surely, 12) miles of wring fight before the Amertean “Buckskin = Charli That s,| fishing grow Foom enough. seople today is for progressive prin Deterioration sets in the instant the salmon reach fresh water. Once the fish have run the 125- mile gauntlet and reached fresh water, them go on to the spawning grounds to rear their young in peace. If Seufert and others want to continue in the business, let them take their chances with the cannery men caught more Chinook in that year than any other fisherman im the river. He caught 10,000 fish, Weighing 125 tons. He was paid/ 25 cents a fish or $2,500 for the ciples In government, as opposed to | the old-tine political gangster,” he jsaid. “The precepts and leadership | |of Theodore Roosevelt have been | thrown aside, while the Old Guard politician, taking advantage of the people in the peridd following the war, has seized control and hax been | working the nation for his own bene | tt | INDUSTRY run. “He caught these fish with a gill net which Senfert despises. “The big years on the Columbia ‘Were 1883, when the pack was 629,- 400, and 1895, when the pack was) in the lower river. 634,696 cases. Since then the gen-| “To permit Seufert to catch fish at NF eral tendeucy has been downward. /ing very gate to the spawning| Ot ROTECTED ae despite the efforts of the state! cround is eo patently foolish that it hy totes rabies ponereee has ce our hatcheries, maintained at public ex-| |... He de | Umber and shingle industry and our it to keep up the supply. jien't worth arguing sarge © wy. faFmers without tarift protection nee en eee nevitle cam natch | Oriental labor in British Columbia ts Ma en een the helaht of a| fee t© ship lumber products, duty Fe ee eee ork: aakle-deep in roe, | fee to the United States, while Chi eon Hagen See s *| nese eggs and other farm products |which the pregnant fish can no 100-/ i) Aine enter into competition wi ger contain. |our farmers. 3 believe proper repre: | “In no great salmon river in the | sentation in congress could prevent world—with the single exception ot this state of affairs, On the other have two or|the Columbia—ts fishing’ allowed) hand, manufacturing interests in the ‘succession, the |*2ove tidewater. East arc given not only every taritt | no man under-| “No stationary gear at all, any-| protection needed, but much that is F eas in the lower these days. The) compara. series on the z ? g i i it | stands avoiding the Oregon shore.| Where in the river! Give the fish a | not fieedod, ax Is shown by the abnor- ‘Then there may be a reverasi of chance, The gill net with Its large) mal proposed duties on practically | the canners getting |Meshes catches the big fish. The| everything turned out by factories in - 4 immature fish should be permitted |to grow. “More Royal Chinook. ess tullies. the Bastern states. “A Japanese exclusion law should | be passed at once to protect Pacific ‘Washington can- I the lower river # i #0, with canners look envy upon Seu-| Bonneville produces too many tullies, |coast Americans in their homes and | fert, ensconsed in a strategic posi-/an inferior fish. The world market/employment. The present Immigra tion at the entrance of the Nar. | demands Chinooks. }tion act totally falls to do so, A rows where the salmon must enter) “More spring salmon. Lenn fall | just soldiers’ compensation or bonus | his wheels. {salmon. The spring salmon is large bill should also be passed. It has “In their hearts the lower {and fat. Salmon buyers judge sal been too long delayed, j fiver canners would enjoy see- (mon pretty much as milk distribu.) “Furthermore, the government | Ing Seufert ousted from his (tors judge milk—by its fat. The | should take steps at once to nee that) place at the gate to the spawn- [spring salmon contains 20 per cent) there Is some reasonable relation be ing grounds. But they fear him, (fat; the fall fish, only 5. }tween the drastic reduction which his wealth and his influence, eee jWageearners have been forced to! “It is found—as it will be, eventually—after a few years that God, relieved of the ne- cessity of fighting the traps, seines and wheels, can take care of the salmon supply without man’s assistance, we can use the | to pay the cost of his family’s living hatchery for the propagation of “What Americans need tods |atand in wages, and the price those | me wage-earners have to pay for! he necessaries of lifes Neither wusiness men, farmers nor labor can | promper while the working man re ceives a wage below that ‘Aecesmary | j “Stationary gear—traps, and wheels—are destroying the sal- mon faster than God at the natural spawning grounds, aided by man at the Bonneville and other hatcheries, can propagate them. oe trout. what our country tleeds today, is «| “The trout streams within | little lees attention to the problema) easy distance of Portland are jof Europe, Asia and other places fished out. Restocking these [and a little more attention to the “No fishing above tidewater— streams would attract wealthy [needs of the common, ordinary say, the confluence of the Co- sportsmen from the East mi =| American citizen, his wife and chil. lumbia and the Sandy, near Van- would be a good investment. \ dren.” | eaten eam ela Alea onnesanaenentn oe “a THE BON MARCHE Barcain BASEMENT There Are Twelve Thriving Departments in the Bargain Basement, Where Merchandise Is Bargain Priced! Just Unpacked! New All-Wool Slip-Over Sweaters bi $1.79 Two Pants—Double Wear! BOYS’ SCHOOL SUITS $7.45, $8.45, $9.45, $9.75 Pride is excusable in a boy when he has a sult like these! Coats with fine alpaca and Venetian lining, belted; panta full Jined, Sturdy woolens in gray, green and brown; all-wool and wool mixtures. Beit of self material and patent buckle on the $9.75 suits, Sizes % to 17, in all prices, Bo good we wish there were twice as many! A surprise in loosely purled Sweat- ers, with corded belts and long sleeves. = i Daintiest of colors—~ 7 a fp Bray, avy, brown, Such Comfort! eand, hello, honey- Women’s Comfort $ dew and flesh. Sizes 3 95 36 to 44. seereses bad Black kid ther with turned soles, in blucher and bal style. High and low heels, with rubber heels. Soft leather, Some with one-piece Sizes 4 to 8 toe, Trimmed Hats $3.89 Velvet, paon velvet and velveteen, values as attractive as their coior- fogs! All manner of \ shapes and trimmingr—~ a becoming shape for every face. Less Than Wholesale! Children’s School Oxfords ...... 95c heavy-sole Play Oxfords, A cleanup in se with broad. comfortable toes. No natis to hurt kiddies’ feet. Sizes 6 to 8 and 8% to 10. TWO ARE KILLED chine Is Struck by Elec- | tric Train SALEM, Aug. 91 Frank Redding, companion in an automobile, injured no seriously representative to congress from the | freight train struck thelr car at a crossing near here late Tuesday aft: | ernoon | crew and died before the train reach AUTO CRASH ilamook, Ore, was instant and Edward Arrance, his that hing a hospital, when a north nd he died before Oregon Electric railway he automobile, die of the t squarely In the ka when struck hurled about 20 feet against a raph pole and demolished. Red. | ‘a body wan badly, mutilated, Ar. | © was picked up by the train alem & SN <> CS Untrimmed Shapes $2.98 Made of Lyons velvet—both erect pile and paon. Such beautiful new colorings of pheasant, sand, nut brown, American Beauty and plenty of black—excellent values. Untrimmed Shapes $3.95 Of shirred velvets with soft French crowns—in new poke, roll-off-the-face style, in black, Copen, French blue, grape, henna. WILL COAL CRISIS HERE COME TO There's a coal shortage in England, too. Here you see children at Leicester fishing for coal |* in the canal at a point where it is lost while barges are loaded. counterpart in the United States this fall if the mine strike continues. When Untrimmed Millinery Makes Its Autumn Debut It is clad in a gay array of coloring—in shapes so soft and becoming THIS? ET ||MYSTERY PLA TO ENTER RAG | | Super-Speed Craft Repe in England BY WILLIAM RK. KUHN® ROYDON c, Aug, myste rplane reported covering four tm | expected to be the sensation ef lround © Sept. | which 20 crack British pilots | entered today The plane, sald to be J entirely new in the realms of ) constructed in seer It will ea by © c | | | fous af | miles a wiand derby han | Brist | Uwins, fam | The derby king's and is rnc 0 miles It is a dicap affair with " caren pee | ranging high speed ich an the mystery is reported to be, to Grant an and cross-country p. This situation may find its] ‘ah buses and at especially low pricings Large Felt Hat Shapes Many prefer felts—they’re here in large, stylish shapes—in purple, brown, sand and yellow—at $3.95 and $4.95. Trimmings to Go on the Hats —Quills in all colors, 25¢ to O5¢. —Pheasant Bands at 75¢ to 05¢. ~—Biot in all colors, at 75¢. —Novelty Wings for autumn wear, 65¢. ~-Novelty Feather Ornaments, 75¢, 95¢ and $1.25. —Clipped Ostrich Pompons for only 75¢. —Glycerined Ostrich Trimmings, 50¢, 75¢, OSe. ~—Stripped Coque Pompons at 95¢. Also many pew fancy ornaments, both large and small, including Persian novelties. THIRD FLOOR—THE PON Untrimmed Shapes $4.95 Softer and with more of a hand-made look than in years, of Lyons velvet —in stunning blacks and fashionable colors, MARCHE For Making School Dresses 32-Inch Ginghams 20c Yd. 1,500 yarda, in plain and checked patterns—pink, blue, helio, red and tan—lengths to 20 yards, Black Sateen 19c a Yard Fine for making bloomers and aprons—1,800 yards, heavy quality, 30 inches wide, lengths to 6 yards, Printed Cretonnes 121c Yard 2,000 yards—27 inches wide, suitable for comforter covering or drapes—nenat floral patterns and good colors, THIRD FLOOR-—THE BON MARCHB Inexpensive Home Wares Clothes Baskets at 98c Fine quality Belgian Baskets, good size, at 980, “Kerr Mason dar Cov- ers—all sizes for Mason Jars—Z4¢ dozen. Glass-top Fruit Jars— complete with rubbers— quart size, $1.25. Teapots 69¢ Each English earthenware; Assorted #izes, at a reas onable price, Egg Beaters at 17c Full size Dover atyle Egg Beat ers—strong and durable, UNION 8T. BASEMENT Clothes You'll Jersey Jackets Reduced to $2.95 There is excellent jersey in these jackets, which come in beige, tan, brown, French blue and bright red. A very few of them are sleeveless, all have patch pockets, string belts, and in the back there are cluster ticks or pleats. Women’s Prunella Wool Skirts $4.95 Women know Prunella Cloth Skirts by their good reputation—these are no exception to the rule—good material, colors, style and workmanship are here. They are in blue, brown and black, with contrasting stripes, box pleated and belted. SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE The Bon Marché Need for Your Labor Day Outing SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE ; 4 Children’s Cotton Bathing Suits Reduced to Women's Odd Coats rf Girls’ Cotton Swimming Suits in navy, with a red binding. m Forest Khaki ie Sizes 6 to 12 only. Half Price ou SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE ~ ar Real Suit News for Real Boys! Boys’ 2-Knicker Suits $9.85 A splendid Bon Marche example of sturdy woolens made into snappy suits for boys. Coats mohair lined; 2 pairs knickers for double wear; full lined with taped seams. Start him off right in one of these, as well dressed as his chums. Crompton Corduroy Knickers $3.25 A bear for wear! Best quality for all-weather wear—made in Seattle. With double knees—$3,50, Boys’ Blouses, fast colors, at Knit Ties, 50¢, 65¢, $1.00. 95¢. School Caps in all school col- ors; felt or knit style—at Popular Rubber Belts, 50¢. 50¢. BOYS' SHOP—-UPPER MAIN *LOOR—THE BON MARCHE Fine for Early School Wear Girls’ Jersey Jackets $2.95 Reduced Friday to Made of splendid quality all-wool jersey, full Tuxedo style, with two pockets, criss-cross belt In green, navy and brown—sizes 6 to 12 on GIRLS’ SHOP—SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE You'll find many bargains along The Main Aisle The Buy-Way of the Bon Marche UPPER MAIN FLOOR--THE BON PIKE STREET—SKCOND AVENUZ—UNION STREET MARCHE

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