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MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOLUME XXIII. NUMBER 41. SEWARD, ALASKA, SATURDAY, February 18, 1928. PRICE TEN CENTS HUNDRED PEOPLE SWEPT INTO GOLDEN GALE SWEEPING HARBOR FOR. CEO THE PASSENGER LADEN PROW UNDER WAVES SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 18, (/P) - At least eight persons are still inis «iug alter police and rescuers check ed all reports in an effort to ascer tain the number of casualties in the accident to the ferry boat Peralta, from whose decks, an unknown mini her of passengers were swept in»o to return to their homes. The number of passengers swept believed to have been on the boat t st night when the passenger laden pfow dipped into the bay, .had failed to return to their hames. The numbed of passengers swept into the bay is still undetermined an ! investigators are without means in checking estimates. Passengers, who plunged overt • * wer* at least 100. •Che official list showed 17 had been rescued. What caused the submerging of the forward part of the boat as it oped along toward Oakland during the evening rush is still undetermin ed. As to the original six persons repotted missing whether or not they had returned home at night is not known. A systematic search of the bay failed to reveal any trace of bodies. Although the ferry was not filled to capacity which is 4,000, e • large crowd was on board Many of these had gathered on the lower forward deck when suddenly the for ward deck of the huge ferry gave a sudden lurch downward and scopes of passengers, in the bow, found them t*dves submerged and washed over board. Pandemonium broke loose among tUe others because they thought the ferry was going down. Women knelt on the decks and prayed while the men attacked the lockers filled with life preservers. The air was filled with the cries of those struggling in. the water and the screams of women aod children on the decks. The Peraltas crew was ordered to * 'e life boats as the ferry slowly settled back to an even keel. The ferry Hayward, which was pas sing th scene, launched life boats] did the naval training station, at float Island, a few hundred yards from the scene. The choppy waters were strewn with coats, hats, and bits of wreckage. The rapidly falling twilight handicapped the rescuers. TO ENTER DOG DERBY RUBY, Feb. 18, (A>)—Joe Sticgman, of Nulato, and Walter Nollner, of Gal ena, have left for Fairbanks with two dog teams which they will enter the dog races at Fairbanks, on March 15. PILOT IS KILLED III ! j MID AIR BT BOMB , — MACON, Geogia, Feb. 18, (/p)-— It'c pilot killed in mid-air in a pre mature explosion of an aerial bomb, an airplane, entered in the South eastern Air Derby, crashed down in to the main business thoroughfare | killing the other occupant and per haps fatally injuring one, a pedes t’-ian, and inflicting slighf hurts to a score or more. THREE HOUSES FULL INTO I I SUBWAY PROPS SLIP AND BROWNSTONE , HOUSE, FASHIONABLE SORT j LATE YEARS. FALL NEW YORK, Feb. 18. </P)—Three h* own .-Tone houses jf the, a nT tiia I * H J ] :ash; enable in j*. A'o • - in' 19th century, plunged 40 feet into a ■subway excavation,, burying b*!f a dozen men. Only one was kill.1! Twenty men were tunneling un der houses, cutting out space for the j station of the new municipal subway, n.idm- construction, when props slip ped and the houses hurled down. WANTS RELATIONS BROKEN PARIS, Feb. 18, (/P)—A Haves dis-1 I patch from Budapest, Hungary; says the Christian Social party has asked the government to break diplomatic! relations with Mexico because of the religious persecutions there. BIG STEP PHOT i J PARIS, Feb. 18. {#>)—'The discovery!. of the long sought for process of tak- •, : i ing and reproducing natural color ( motion pictures has been claimed by the French scientist, Rudolph Bisthon. Details of the invention are still vig orously guarded but never-the-less it! is understood that the keystone of the invention is an ingenious combination of colored screens. FORWARD III OGRAPHY IS IDE ! WINCHESTER, Mass., Feb. 18. —Henry M. Havean, Boston architect, who was one of those technically in dicted in connection with the collapse of the Pickwick night club here in which 55 lives were lost in 1925, took his life by inhaling illuminating gas at his home here. Friends say that his mind had become affected over the indictment. 4 1 r •V a r a e HEME MEMBER AT PAN CONFERENCE WAS INSTRUCTED TO SIGN WITH! RESERVATIONS PROJECTED CLAUSES HAVANA, Feb. 18. (/P)—Honorioi Pueyrredon, Ambassador to Wash ington and President of the Argon tine delegation to the-Pan American; Conference, has refused to withdraw. His resignation from both posts is disclosed. , I When the telegrams |are made pub.! ic, and the cable he sent liis govern ment, revealed that the resignations were submitted Tuesday following! receipts on instructions to sign with reservations on the dotted line, even if the convention did not contain th 1 clause looking toward removal of tariff barriers on which he had in sisted. RESIGNATION ACCEPTED BUENOS AIRES, Feb. 18, (£>) v The Argentine has a.* ; o'•. t°i the resignation f Eou,’i* ppeyrredor, Ambassador to Washing ton, and also President o: the Argen tine delegation to the Pan American conference at Havana SEATTLE, Feb. 18. (/P)—The S. S.! Alameda, of the A. S. S. Co., sailed at i ) o’clock carrying 111 passengers. The Seward listing includes: Ed Carlson, CTarl Nelson, H. Sundberg, Mrs. Hur-^ ey, Chas. Lechner, Wm. Cook, L. V. ’ Stanley, A. B. Johnson, JJ. N. Nichol- j son, Carl Weisse, Mr. and Mrs. E.: Swetmann, J. L. Freeman, Wm. F.! Jarrison, Elsie Roy, John Helm, Mrs. Williams, J. S. Dillan, Geo. L. Jenk ns, A. Singleton, J. Johnson, W. A.: Iriffin, Olaf Larson, C. R. West, F. fones and three steerage. 1EFEKDIN6 HIS MOTHER BOY KILLS OFFICER WITH SINGLE SHOT: I PORTOLA, Calif., Feb. 18, (£>)—' a defense of his mother, John SchaL: ,ster, aged 16, drew a gun on an of icer and shot him dead. Deputy Jheriff William A. Stevenson, aged ■ 5, of Pulmas County, was .the victim. \ i I ’he boy entered the room to see his.c aother and Stevenson quarreling. He \ rent to his room, got his revolver, 1 nd returned to the scene of the quar- ‘ el. At last Stevenson drew a gun C nd the boy fired one shot which kill- C d the officer instantly. e I STEM FILES BRIEF ASKING FOR DISMISSAL WASHINGTON, Feb. '18, (£>)• Arguing for dismissal of the writ of abeas corpus obtained by Robert W Stewart, chairman of the Standard Oil company of Indiana, the govern ment filed a brief in the district court asserting the Senate, in order ing Stewart’s arrest, was not inflict ing punishment but adopting means to force him to follow its lawful course. NOEL WIEN ST NOME OEUVED FOII WEEK KOTZEBUE REGION __ i j NOME, Feb. IS. (/P)—Noel Wien re.' turned to Nome after being delayed: for more than a week by storms on his northern trip to Kotzebue. Wien, with three passengers, had been forced down by stormy weather and bSTOTiStr bT'Tvroken communication ines he and his passengers were thot lost until his return. He immediately left with mail and Four passengers for Fairbanks. He ex pects to return as soon as possible with mail and take more passengers o Fairbanks. BOMB WRECKS HOME YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Feb. 18, (^P) —Mayor T. Roy Gordon, of Campbell, his wife and three children, narrowly sscaped death when a bomb wrecked their home. Gordon has been fight ing a bootlegging ring. MESSES THREATENED i FOLSOM PRISON CASE SACRAMENTO, Feb. 18. (AP)— rhreats have been made against the Sb-te witnesses in the trial of the six Folsom Prison convicts who are moused of murder in connection vith the Thanksgiving Day break for ibertv in which the lives of 13 were ost. Guards have been placed about he convict informers ’ following re ceipt of the death notes. CHICAGO, Feb. IS. (AP)—A list of 10 books published in the United States for inclusion in the world list f notable books of 1926 contained no < fork of fiction. “On trail of Ancient i lay” by Roy Chapman Andrews and ] The Great God Brown”, by Eugene < I’Neill and “Abraham Lincoln,” by 1 lari Sandberg were among thos chos- 1 n. 1 1C IDENTIFIED AS BODY OF MAN TWICE BURIED AT SEA HENRY FROEUCH VENTURA, Feb. IS. (ZP)—-The body lound on the beach and believed to have been that of a missing Dole flight aviator, has been identified as that of Henry Froelicb, of Honobi'i? who twice had been buried at sea. Deputy sheriffs identified the •». mains by a necktie which was the on ly article of cubing left, and ey three scars. According to records c the sheriffs office Froelich died at sea enroute from Havana to Ilonobi lu. Relatives had ordered the remains to be again buried at sea and on June 19, the body, encased in an airtight coffin, was dowered into the sea. On®June 20 the casket was pick ed up afloat. On June 25. it was again confirm! to the 'sea wrapped in a h-aul:et and weighed Sown heavily. The latter burial took place nine miles off-shore. IS GRANTED DIVORCE PARIS, Feb. 18. (/P)—Mrs. Elizabeth De Selding Day was granted a divorce from Henry Mason Day, vice presi dent of the Sinclair Exploitation Co., on grounds of abandonment. SOCIETY BUD WEDS PARIS, Feb. 18.8 (Jp)—Miss Mar garet McMullin, daughter of the late Frank McMullin, was married to Alex ander Robertson, Edinburgh lawyer. BABY PLANE HOPS CROYDEN, England, Feb. 18,(i5>)— Bert Kinkier, British flier, has hopped off in a baby plane on a flight to Australia. He intends to make his first stop at Rome. Hinkler and a British aviator last November at tempted a non stop flight to India but were forced down in South Poland. WANTS DAUGHTER NOW NEW YORK, Feb. 18. (fP)—A suit has been started by Consuelo Flower ton for the custody of her daughter. Mis Flowerton is the divorced wife of Dick Fock, Dutch musician. She claims that the divorce was invalid be cause it was obtained thru a woman’s control over her by means of Christ ian Science. YUKON BEING HELD OVER It was decided this afternoon to hold :he S. S. Yukon over until Monday in jrder to make connections with the rain from the Interior, which is leld back by storm conditions. How ever, if it is learned before Monday hat the train is further delayed, the fukon will probably sail South at any ime, from midnight tonight, on.