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8925. ire e 9 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1928 tHE SEATTLE STAR : PAGE 8 REFUGEES ARE YOUNG FORGER | HERES MORE ABOUT CHICAGO POLICE [WILL CONFER |Americans Develon i ea ma ; helices tec lie , WiPWEh, Pineapple Industry a have been CALIFORNIA FIRES BIGH DEGREE) ane 2 on ‘. 4 : killed in the fire they could) petter'n springs hotel, In the Bo-| ; \wathered here for the ceremony of Some Go East; Some Await!J ud ge Witholds Sentence! not contirm those reports in any lnee wan saved, but 20 o¢|Pair Murdered in Auto on| sain’ ing the 33d degree on 76 can 1 Word From Friends in Russel Case 1 Tbs atidanh: acide roed'leteyeae te Crowded Street anc. say canetariaeh are Botua With the } of hospitable resi Teo Russell, 19, University of| which was reported to have been| sorts and cottag in the Sonoma] CHICAGO, Sept, 18—Hundreds of] president Harding 11d have Gents of Seattle, the Red Cross and) atichigan student, who waa arrested |Attempted in one or two inatanc ley were wiped out |detectives and policemen ranged the| been present had he lived. Gen ot harit the des: | neve neve eal {before daylight | Agua Caliente rings was saved : ; sanhunt | Leonard M. Wood, governor general ts ea gay, hr eet Pee AA sea tr wre aati ty tytn wat manon|ar ,hgoeorsee & NELSON who w 1h Sund OF akering @ gover fired, according to rts at head-| Fire fighters, by a hard battle, |under the personal supervision of! bie to te his post t er F f bel r 1 Was late quart but no one injured. | prevented the © fre enveloping | Mayor William Dever ar uit! Among th her ere 4 wey AVENUE J INE STREE’ ra t by ederat grand jury YM on tudent organ Guerneville, noted Ruswian river re-lof the “t war’ which flamed|'fhomas, playwright n FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Tuosd of lentered a plea berore Fed. | tl and the Red Cross combined | sort, and saved the county redwood |jnto life last night and took a tol) | Kenned tor and ¢ c : *leral Judge Noterer in|! the work of relieving the home-|park Socated there. A number oflof two | Spidell, Famou & and many ¢ m 7 ume Nomes on the outskirts of| ‘Ten au eta are in jail and more | Arthur Tompk mu ] arenes tet ma oe | \ pdement| 'h tageter ot nearest oh egterpant eet Cxer ron aunt anaes | ~=Oozy New Bath Robes Four: of t - r 38 M, today showed 30 persons still | The fire burned on the ridgenorth| Georgia Meeghar tatler, president of the Statler Ho t cared for at oe 7 Ye wir jof Rio Nido, another popular Rus ger were shot to de tels Co 7, Abe wi P Tornital 28 would’ enter @ Northwest ¢ er e | epee ecg for, but wot Usted Jelan r a Pub ear” wee tarned deta 1 Tanlaeeed rie The 4 gree in the highest of For Chilly Autumn Mornings, , Hotel W © and prepare himself for the} Six students who had been | beck from Rio Nido itself Jat in their automobile the Scottish Rite. It is conferred profession, confined in the university in | Thus far it has been tmpossib!e|the traffic officer. to for ® to the order or communi Following hig arrest here, his pa firmary were badly injured. to estimate the property damage.|tiow of traffic, Death ty. Leon M. Abbott, Boston, grand SPECIAL t# rushed to Seattle from Detroit Scores were treated for minor © loos of life has been reported. |trom another machi ommander of the supreme council ns NAN effort to ve his release.) Injuries, so many that no count Six fires burning in the forest} uy behind the two victim as to preside They sold thelr 5 rty the was kept jand brush land of Sonoma county |sienal, a volley of t | pegs BF Michigan city to raise suffi bail]! The homes of Berkeley were | Yesterday ned headway throuout |voivers and slugs fi d-oft | wer nembern of what authoritle son. Upon arriving here, they found | today, w hundreds slept in unt |*¢ total of 10,000 men were COM-/ihy men. ‘They alumped down.| dicate, Membera of rival beer had insufficient funds to lber-| versity bulldnigs. | Kort fire fighters, It was NOL lane slayern drove up alongside and| syndicate are blamed by the police z ate him to aasitsant | Approximately 1,090 college irla, | HNtll 10 a. m. today that the last Of fnoured another volley into. tho| - EW Bath Robes of excel- » here, with | wear zs kitche aprons, imod | he fires seemed controlled | iner podiow, here a 2,424 spoke 2 . ; ad. wad Kel With: Gc coaah tee ree | ab tires ie the boneton aller [Fea ica cans saisy | ty Oe eat eo wae *~™ lent quality blanket cloth, seed and the boy given his tempo-| this morning, 4 00 others had seas ee Hille: nen} au shot to death in 0} 1,624, Asia 957, Kurope and |) in soft, fleecy finish and at- — Berghe, aun had) Wiecat Wi oon. The three victims| Africa 276 tractive patterns of conserva- n. and that | With the summer resorts and farms: tive design and coloring. HERE’S MORE ABOUT Berkeley dresenton a remark. | Started Sunday ht and gained In the coat style pictured, FISH able picture this morning, The | headway rapidly thruout yesterda the collar and cuffs finished a8 i sity had burned so fiercely, de eax Saag 18 FRED with silk cord and with cord . r veloping such intense heat, that N RAFAEL, Cal, Sept, F saat cexeicart lee STARTS ON PAGE 1 Haris Goma lly tramion of the’. |repastifieek: Wutch have “coset Gn to hold fullness correctly. was prac ch building glowed the remains of a big bonfire. fishermen with} Men, women, girls and boys, with x in only t-blackened s, moved anned| among the debris in the dawn | The fire fighters destroyed homes be — distin: to swim up the stream until the! guished, Some of the homeless rains } and are collecting| who returned to the scenes had thousands at the mouth of the/ difficulty in pleking out their Y ry e 1 domiciles. recom all fish} The MAI devestated district the/ tically leveled, Eac! in turn id} like L FLYERS FORCED DOW na nits tanued by the! xo Forced down at Rete hatton, M who at ) results| ments of the rose citles had been answering calla to hundreds of ~ in-) fires. in any cuted ac fisher ared Monday. ing In an ef " 5 spector « ea | The Oakland fire department an Pee OA cbuven Gdattle aed that OULD: BAM MAREE CAOUUY <- lewured go calle te a6 Jet aggin adhe Soham “OUTSIDE THREE-MILE LIMIT One of these, wt by the cities cf the Ea | He also recommended abolition of] at gales blowing, got bey Re ee | the tation of aaimon caught! of the thousands who hel Paradise Inn Now by ndent fishermen beye It, and was subdued « the i limit. “These ft use of dynamite. Closed for Season | a: too far and are kept] the university rallied toy TACOMA, 18.—With Rainier | too long before they reach the can-| struction of their campus nal park formally closed for or} — When the flames were finally pas ss who visit Long-| 24 human foc in} brought under control, after nn be entertained at} Puret Sound,” dark, it was estimated that near- thie } will remain open| The absen e salmon In| ly 1,000 buildings, mostly homes, pias lormal service thruout the| Puget & 1 during the season of] had been destroyed, making the winter. The road to the National | 1917 was lained by Shaw and) fire the greatest disaster to visit Park inn at Longmie also will be | hi* explanation gives an insight into] San Prancisco bay region since kept open thruout the winter, it ix | ‘th habite of the nervous and sen-| the great earthquake and fire of announced. Paradise inn and the| itive sockeye, 1906. Fifty square blocks were roads to Paradise inn were closed| “A stent silde occurred tn the] razed, leaving only smoke black- Sunday, | Frazer river in 1913. The sockeye] ened chimneys to show where about | | ditlon now stands, the! tho brush fires until midnight, after ae fishermen cannot be blamed for|the disaster to the residential dis-| 1 to reach} Stching all they can. If the catch/ trict had occurred, were called In— noon. The two, | *Xceeds the capacity of the canner-/ all but about 1,000 left on guard Ss are cl Ws fearful. Canners| All during yesterday fire depart- ad, Min it cated at Bay | refuse to spawn in any but spring: }fed and exceedingly cold lakes. Their favorite spawning ‘habitat is houses used to stand, The fire hagard hae not yet been completely done away with. For. Gas Prices in New in the small bodies of water near [the source “of the Frazer. When York Cut One Cent | NEW YORK, Sept. 1%3—Further|they encountered the slide fn the|being so badly dumaged that da cuts in gasoline prices were put into| stream. they refused to spawn inimny paw before the services are effect today by the Standard Of! Co muddy water and died by thou-| brought back to normal. of New York, following a cut by Gulf | sands. The river banks were lined) “As daylight came people beean R s. The tank wagon prices in| with the bodies of the sockeye. Be-| drifting back smouldering fires aot Cres are raging in several coun ties of the section, communicath to New York and New England was re-|ing a fouryear fish, there was/which o few hours before had been duced 1 cent to 18%%e. The Texas| practically no run of that species| their homes—homes filled with rare company already has reduced its/ in 19 Shaw explained Antiques, objects of art and pricelens price 1 cent a gallon in territory cov-| CLOSED SEASON WILL ered by the Standard Oil Co. of New | MEAN BIG RUN IN 1 They braved the «#t®l amoking York. | The salmon run of 1925 In the/ruins In hopes of salvaging some: omens | humphack species will be the direct | thing of value Veteran Captain days, which cloned Septe nber 15, ac-| burned district Yoaded with mahog. |cording to Shaw. The escapement | any furniture worth hundreds of dol The funeral of Captain William |i. run and the escapement has|hind it rolled an auto of a make ran navigator of Se-| hoon exceedingly good, he says |costing many thousands and in the Approximately 93 per cent of the | tonneau was a sewing machine , was to be held Tue from the Bleitz} libraries Ss result of the closed season of 10] A scavenger wagon drove thru the Is Buried Today | oni these 10 days will determine | lars which someone had saved. Be Santa Anna, Cal.,| | mii ters: come mature fish, he estimates, The | bile's owner, ndertaking Parlors. | fish on thelr way to the spawn An elredly man of distingulshed Captain Reed commanded the! grounds are captured in state fish-| appearance walked down the street Tampico, and was recognized as on¢/eq and taken to the hatcheries.| apparently all that was left of his foremost men in shipping|Tney are kept in water at the|home and probably a refic rich in lex of the Northwest. He i) proper temperature and when the| memories if not an antique of great ived by a son, W. H. Reed.}fish have hatched and reached the | value. » and Charies Reed, both of a brother, le. in the} One woman came to relief. head. quarters loaded down with phono- ph records, which were all she r 1 Fire Chief Sidney Rose and a squad of police made a survey of the scene this morning and report- ed they believed the damage would fun above the $5,000,000 mark, ex- proper size are liberated streams and swim to sea. Milk, eggs, green vegetables, her- rings and oatmeal ou as a dict, in theory. drink to It's estimated there are 15,000,000 | automobiles in the world, 12,000,000 of them in America. clusive of the contents of the houses, Rate said the average value of | $8,000. Fifty automobiles were reported to police to have been burned and police believe three times this num- jber must have been lost Rose said he considered 500 as too low a figure on the number jot buildings burned and that he jthought it would run nearer to 1,000, ° The burned area is roughly bounded by Hearst ave. on the |south, Oxford st. on the west, tho city limits on the north and cast | Among the homeless are 1,500 i |students of the University of Call. |fornia, today’s figures showed. Many stories of persons who have lost their lives were coming to the authorities thru- out the morning. None of these has been confirmed and no bodies have been found. J. Kigan reported he saw a man burned to death in a house on Keith ave. Student guards say that an aged woman refused to leave her home on Arch st. when it was dynamited, Police Sergeant Frank Swayn de- clared he saw the roof of a house collapse with a man standing on it. Another report to police was that four university students died try- ing to save thelr fraternity house, Paul Cadman, dean of men at the university, said he was positive an aged man and a woman died when they returned to their burn- ing house in search of possessions, As the morning wore on, others drifted towards the burned district and tried to salvage bits of books from the ashes, but seldom with suc cess, At least 22 professors, membora of the University of California faculty, lot their homes and practically all within them in yesterday's fire, Among thowe of the faculty who were made homeless were: Professor H, KR. Hatfield, dean of faculty. Benjamin Ide Tadvecte eeereavedeveewererue’ Ghirardell is Wd ”~ Put your breakfast drink on a business basis Ask yourself,“ What am I getting out of it—nerves or nutriment?” Ghir- ardelli’s Ground Chocolate pays its way in health—and more! And a mighty fine tasting drink in the bargain! iD) GHIRARDELLI’S GROUND CHOCOLATE TeReVETTeeeeTeUceeeURenceceeeeeneeeeeoetepes’ a of ————— Wheeler, president the | | eggs taken by the hatchery men be-|sole possession left to the automo-| operating out of| traps, their eggs are extract-| with a pair of andirons in his hands, | P eres traps, homes destroyed was approximately | |area 18 miles Jong ne milo wide in Marin county, were reported out of control today | The town of Woodacre wan prac tleally Thirty Only wiped out three five houses were destroyed. aro left standing. . every vestige of vegotat out, ording to Fi . Russian river resorts, were con the outakirt le and & number of scattered cottages thru the hilts The settlement of Markham was | wiped out. see t. 18.—~The popular & resort, near Napa, wos burned during the night by a forest | NAPA, Cal. Johannest Webber, acting dean of college of agriculture. Professor J, Lowenberg, professor Of logic. The home of Ralph P. former controller at the university, wan destroyed. The fire started on a ranch tn Wid hills, according to investigators. The story told by the owners of the ranch was that the wind blew a high tension wire from its tower fasten ings. The cable, writhing in dry, ex tremely inflammable grass, started | the flames destined to do untold dam lage. |_ The same xwift wind drove the flames at a startling rate toward the rim of the Berkeley valley, then swooped down upon 500 homes. | Flames leaped from house to house as fast ax the occupants could evacu ate them, HERE’S MORE ABOUT SINCLAIR STARTS ON PAGE 1 | among | Che the visitors when Sheriff er appeared with the warrants PAIR TRIED TO | DODGE CAMERA MEN While newspaper men assembled outside the apartment with cameras, | Chester went to the Conner flat and |served the warrants, An hour psed, during which, Chester ad later, plans were seri for dodging the reporters, Finding their exit blocked, the party appeared, Mrs. Sinclair wear. ing vy blue veil, heavy coat buttoned tightly, and a hat which jhid her features. She closely fol | lowed her husband tn a dash for the waiting auto, and the car slid for ward on its journey to South Bend, Pacific county, Friends of the Sinclairs admitted Tuesday that Senator Sinclair and his wife were bitterly disappointed at the “double-crossing” adminis t@fed by the won, Myron Sinclair, who is charged with wrecking the bank. The parents, according to thelr friends, knew nothing of the $49,000 shortage of the bank's ae. counts until the crash, It was freely predicted by some that Myron had been playing the stock market. Sheriff Chester de- clared that Myron had told the bank examiner he “had fooled the exam. Iners for five years, and it was no trick to fool his father.” Myron took all the blame and went to pris. on, Chester said. LAWYERS Rv FOR FRIENDSHIP Mrs, Sinclair and her husband are specifically charged with acceptin deposits from Urho Johnson and J. Hartje after they knew the bank was insolvent, three days before the crash, Johnson, it is charged, gave Mrs, Sinclair $659 in one deposit, She helyed her husband and son in the bank at times, it was explained, Sheriff Chester said that both Senator Sinclair and his wife would remain in custody when they ar rived at South Bend until bond was arranged for. Sinclair, Tuesday, said that he was destitute, and that his lawyers were serving him for the sake of friendship only, and would not receive any financial reward as the Sinclairs were penniless. Some fears for the safety of the couple was expressed as they were leaving, as it in know that feeling in Pacific county Is high against them there, particularly among the fishermen and other depositors who Jost much in deposits in the wreck- ed Institution, i ahh Ai Wy In the area from Lacan valley to| in the district ° | SANTA ROSA, Cal., Sept. 18.—| Fires which threatened to sweep erneville, Rio Nido and Monte trolled this morning, according to telephone reports received here | |shortly before noon. v burned about 20 cottages & NELSON | FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWISIARS STORE 1,000 Yards of 44-inch | “Indian Head” i] SPECIAL 33¢@ YARD In Biscuit with Rose or French Blue, Pink and Gray, Tan and Blue, Gray and Blue, Copenhagen and Tan, Tan with Navy or Brown. 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