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GEN. HUERTA ON HIS WAY TO MEXICAN BORDER ALASKA--WHAT IT MEANS TO US The Seattle Star | DEVELOPMENT BAL SEALE SLI OF COUNTRYTO HELP SEATTLE. siness Men Tell How the “Opening Up of Alaska | Right” Means Prosperity 7 for This City. Alaska! IGHT EDITION Uneettied; probably showers = TIDES AT SRATILE we iid VOLUME 18, NO. 104, SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1915 ONE CENT — Path ate AND Sit po mes tat fhe bias pms twa NKWs STANDS, Be ¢ PIHOW GERMAN SOLDIERS FIGHT|Beleve He Bulgarian Plans New Called to Revolution the Colors ®= ROME, June 26.—"Bulgaria’s participation in the war is con sidered inevitable,” the Saloni ka correspondent of the Tribuna sald today in @ dispatch to his | paper. julgarians in Salonika and Kavala have been called to the colors.” The Four Stages of a Charge on the Enemy's Trenches. Special Photographs, Ex- clusive to The Seattle Star From Germany! Taken by Staff Photographer Durborough, Who Is Touring Germany in an Automobile to Get Pictures Showing How a Nation Fares When Encircled by a Ring of Fire and Steel AMARILLO Tex. June 26.— Gen, Huerta, deposed Mexican dictator, Is reported to be an route here over the Rock ts land. El Paso is said to be Huerta’s apparent destination. ! All Bulgarians in Italy were | : ag mee ait ¢ i ‘ ee ties. Os | ted Sale ‘tiene The mere magic word itself suggests a staggering WASHINGTON June 26.—Re seives in readiness to Join the (array of - possibilities. porta th a number of Mexican. Smee eS RONEN ENED. Alaska, the last great frontier, is as yet such af | federal leaders are gathering at El : |Paso, Tex. with a view of over | unknown quantity that any attempt to comprehend vu a tabdlisht A - * i weal all> stig «| LUNDIN WINS IN her greatness is as futile as an attempt to scale the | the old regime Carranzista circles here today | | PASSES THRU KANSAS CITY | KANSAS CITY, June 26.— | Where is Gen. Victeriano Huer- ite. y Overnight, Alaska has come to us from the unm- 7 I Since the days of the first mad gold rush, suit Saturday in bis campaign to|., ave 5 ving f under the red-light abatement w, ons e snr m sta - or Z s This question was agitating (for jmmoral practioss permitted pied snd ns vies Ora iy Ha cities. We have se je 5 lig jagure natn eed jon the premises mature into modern, orderly little ci o ; en | Jud, Gila i uperior court, » ero ark cha Ss a he carries tickets to El Paso. | nanistt doe a decir aor court. her emerge from dark chaos of strife and lawlessness Huerta told newspapermen, at 711 Weller st, owned Into a territory with better laws, in many respects, then ae - ee eee fis nite we of the States can boast. that he does not intend to go [sold and taxing $300 against the In less than a generation it has been our privilege pe Moxiee—vet. property ‘o witness the birth of a new race; a race proud of its ~ jcountry; a race quick to take offense at any slight cast upon its commonwealth; and a race the like of. which the _ RED-LIGHT CASE i" Prosecutor Lundin won his firet| known. Onewsereen antoasesse A5iee and are close to the enemy's trenches. up a pillow of earth behind which they can lie until they are reinforced, when the final rush can be made. harging colu mn. These men have succesfully passed thru the hail of bullets ‘They are trying to dig OLD MAN, IS | E JOHN D. | (Continued on Page 18) —— ‘SEATTLE CAFES ARE TURNED. INTO ICE CREAM PARLORS H Hoity, toity, folks! }from a resort of women, wine and ee | | New. we're going to have |song into « ball of, virtue—an ia . 5 “1° ! in ice cream parlors. cream parlor, confectionery # Boalt Describes Aged Multimillion- took exactly two dayn it Sala now The Avenue, and is open for business. Pretty Girls Wiil Serve It cost C. L. Gutheil, the man- out of existence as a cafe be- cause the city council refused ' aire Who Is Here With Com-' merce Commissioners. to renew its license, has re- opened as an elaborately equip- wot in genet ey" af cream ager, many thousands of dollars, * | soda, soft drinks, lig! junc’ he says, to rehabilitate the place. BY FRED L. BOALT ; San Francisco last April. It has) etc, AND THERE'S A BAL! |Pretty girls are serving pf the + The Honorable Cheng-Heun | Visited 24 American cities and 198| ROOM MAINTAINED AS A tables. | Industrial plants and mercantile in-| stitutions. | cee } In San Francisco, most of the 16 | commissioners abandoned Oriental | dress for Occidental. The Honor. jable Chang selected a derby hat ee RESTA LEADS IN AUTO RACE Movies and entertainers, and an orchestra of five pieces, will be heard and seen in daily programs from 11 am. to 12 pm At present, at least, there will be no | dancing. “We are mighty thankful that we were forced out of the saloon busi ness,” declared Manager Guthell. Patrons at the old Scenic, it is planned, may arise from the tables and fox trot at their pleasure. An orchestra will play from 3 to 5 each a SIDE ISSUE, And today the old Angelus cafe, 1424 First ave. is transformed was very weary, but He woul not retire flow. For something was about to happen which the Honor. able Chang wanted to witness —a strange, dramatic, tragic event. . Crawiing en masse on the jat A giant fir was about to fal! —8 proud, sturdy giant of a fir which had lorded it over the forest for close onto 2,000 So he was appareled when yes- terday the spectal train, on the last leg of its 11,000-mife journey, came | jto Eagle Gorge and the Page Lum-| | ber Co.'s mill. It wae a fair-cized tree when America was dlecovered. b: The derby sat snug over his; e columbua wh, |eare. The raincoat did not quite| adi afternoon and from 8 to 12 in the was Iaughed at because he ssid bide his pantaloons of robin’s-egg | EEDWAY, Chica evenings, the world was not fiat, but Dive. Incongruons? When you are| 26—Speeding about the If the city council won't let folks round. { & mandarin and worth $60,000,000, bin er 5 er coon ‘ dance in regular cafes, they're go | , ifie if j ity | miles an our, Darius ing to dance somewhere, reasons it was a Lag Mighod when Jesus i Ag neongrulty does not Resta, driving a Peugeot. car, Mis, Tames Shute, provetaton: aan ; was leading in the 500-mile tt might a9 well'be'S i hout to fi It He puffed gingerly at a black bd might as e in an ice cream Maoued Pre daa coy bod - life Cigar with a gilt band, and gazed| face at the end of the first 200 parlor as anywhere else. giill flowed in its trunk and|&t the fir thra smoked goggles. The ile® today. | If a thirsty public wants drinks mighty arms. But for this it was|tTe® was sawn nearly thru, The By leading the field at the | with its dances, let ‘em take soft | a Teter tt will be sawn into ines wore being driven in. Only| double, century mark, Resta drinks ‘ Strips, and of the strips a home the sound of the blows of the| we dae ba m Prof. McCormick in Charge . will be made sledges broke the silence of the! Reate'a y < eased tov tes Prof, Frank McCormick, who has For 2,000 years the tree had forest. Pte distance was 97.8 miles; Cooper danced at the Empress, Seattle and” lived in idieness, sapping Mother tell {in a Stutz, was second; Porperato, other theatres, and conducted © © (Marth of her strength in order that | The top swayed. Slowly at first,| tiv oN ont eem, third: Grant, classes at the Hippodrome, during then more and more quickly, the tree began to fall. Lesser trees in the path of its descent bent and| his stay in Seattle, will be amuse- ment director of the establishment, % With Miss Evelyn Prince, he will Mt might grow strong. Now it must Serve a useful purpose Sunbeam, fourth, and also ina H in a Maxwell, fifth. ; Rickenbarcker, wi ag q Resta dropped back after win: snapped beneath its weight. The| M i A big man, in a mackinaw coat, cae teemties. | The eiast tay {Ming hie spectal prize by leading sive exhibtions daily of the newest to the interpreter: “As it Ooostrate, ita life ended, its useful.| at the 200-mile mark and Porpe dances. that tree is worth $200." Dromtants. eal | rato forged into the lead Miss Prince, MeCormick has interpreter translated the TREE Gao” al tthe wien in He was hurling his big English coyly permitted it to become known, and the Honorable Chang the maekinaw coat, “is 2,000 |Car along at an average of 96.42 is an Eastern society woman who nodded. eare old,” r 4 when 240 miles were completed. has had much training in aesthetic They call him “the Jobn D.| TN rable Chidliia “re dancing (whatever that is), but who Rockefeller of China.” He is worth é never before has danced profes $60,000,000 | ceived the Intelligence thought- | afternoon bvetitS fully. “China,” he said, at length, “was old when that tree was A banquet was tendered them at the Milwaukee hotel by the Chi nese Chamber of Commerce, Goon The Amusement Pavilion, as the new Scenic will be known, is te open Monday. In San Francisco he bought a letter of credit for $200,000 because he would need “pocket money.” @rawsraren ENTERPRISE Asin rs 0 a young.” host. Governor Lister and Mayor Third stage of the charge. trenches, waiting for the word to leap our anu “rorwar ae hopght a” Seehehrot watebey With a longnaiied forefin- Dip, Chinese consul, being the |—————————— ———_— brooches and other trifles to send| 9ef: he touched a sapling grow. Gij|_ w among the guests of; | Re eaiede at bose. Ing at his feet. “When this | honor. Still, the {tem was interesting that one, t The commissionera Saturday } “Its diameter,” said the man in China will still be young morning inspected the Schwager. the mackinaw c ‘Ie 10 feet at + on the train, he sald: | Nettleton mills, the Colman creo | will sleep for half an | soting plant and the Fisher flouring mille. The afternoon program con sists of a trip on Elliott bay on the the ase, it 1s 300 feet high, and It contains 30,000 feet of lumber ga The Honorable Chang made men BOY OVER BLAZE The members of the commis tal notes for future reference. ee steamer Iroquoin, a visit to the plant | i io ad nla becky otis of the Seattle Construction & Dry| Charged with burning the hands| The Honorable Chang had al se wi ” M® | Dock Co, and an ascent of thelof his b-yearold son, Winton, by | right to be tired. For one thing, He fell cop instantly, He | Smith building observation tower.| holding them over blazing paper, to| he is 74 years old. He has had a busy Mfe. He has organized 12 great companies. He has held responsible governmental of fices. He witnessed the death of the old China, the birth of tHe new When the Manchu dynasty fell, he cut off bis queue and devoted him self to the upbuilding of the Re public of China with the same zeal which he gave to the upbuilding of his 12 companies It is tiring, when one Js old, to give up old customs, institutions and habits of thought, for new Then the covernment appointed him head of the honorary commer. dies commission which landed in CHINESE BUSINESS MEN SEE SEATTLE After visiting the Page Lumber Co.'s mili near Eagle Gorge, and the plants of the Pacific Coast Con densed Milk Co. at Kent and the Seattle Car & Foundry Co. at Ren ton, the honorary commercial com- missioners of the republic of China, headed by Cheng-Haun Chang, ar rived in Seattle at o'clock Friday ‘testified he had The visitors will be banqueted at the Hotel Washington Saturday night The tour is being conducted un der the auspices of the Associated Chambers of Commerce of the Pa cifle Coast CAN'T LOSE US! BATH TUB CASE HERE, TOO Mrs. Ethel Smith got a divorce from Charles Smith in Judge Mack intosh’s court Saturday, when she held her in the bathtub and choked her. correct his habit of taking money to apend for candy, Alfred Arias, a cook, 35, of 320 Ninth ave., is lodg-| ed in the city Jail here today It'is said Arias has so frightfully | burned his baby's palms that they will be permanently scarred. Mrs. Arias says ber son recently found a quarter lying on the floor! of a grocery near by, which he pick ed up and spent for “all-day suck-| ers.” | At first they scolded Winton. | ‘Then they locked him up in a room. | It is alleged, Arias bethought If of the burning punishment i » father is held in defaut off 0 bail, § Fourth stage. The reserves, back of all, waiting to take the Places of the killed and wounded