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” » VOLUME 19. SEATTLE, WASH WOUNDED TROOPER, IN EXCLUSIVE | INTIMATE IDEA OF TRAGIC FIGHT THOUGHTS FLY FAST AS DEATH LURKS ON EVERY SIDE, HE SAYS eneented to write the eccow “pattle tn northern Meatco for correspondent of cial reports of this battle have been very meager—what real Te caveiry, and how they ‘Tete story by Trooper Marrts te mand only real document to describe this.—! By SAM H. HARRIS - Member of Troop C, Tenth Cavalry, and Survivor of the Battle of Carrizal by the Newspaper Enterprise Association) N. Mex., July 3—I am going to carry the! | memory of the fight at Carrizal with me as long as I live,| and I reckon that will be some time because the wound in| an shoulder is getting along fine now. It doesn’t make any| mce what I do or what I try to think about, | am alway BUT NOT THE WAY I : the awful fight at Carrizal MONDAY, JULY 3 1916, THERE WAS A LITTLE GIRL | IN FRANCE WHO WROTE TO ARTICLE IN THE STAR. GIVES AN SOLDIER SHE DIDN'T KNO NS ANP be By ‘een Glass ! read a story, the other day, about a girl in Par who wanted perately to do something to help the men in the trenches who are fighting for France She had very little time and very little money, She found out the name of one soldier and she wrote him a letter, She told him all about Paris, ali its latest life and newsiness; all about the weather and the new gowns in the windows on the Rue de la Paix She told him who was rid ing in the Bois and gave hin condensations of the world’s news as it had seeped into Paris, She told him every thing and nothing—just the hundred irrevelant things that two people from tl same place talk about when they meet The soldier answered the letter and begged for more. It was fiction, of course and romance, but it wasn't the romance that carried the there » our train pulled out, yesterday morning, and we feel so out of it My family writes-—I've had two letters today, But they most ly tell me they mim me al ready, that | must write them often, and that there 4s nothing new at home Now, I am «imply aching to know what the longshore men are doing, whether there have been any more liquor raids, if it's as rain th js it is here, and what is on at the movies. Don't you see?” I saw—quite distinct The families of the boys have too much that’s per sonal to say, too much that's prompted by love and lone liness, to remember that newspapers will not follow the soldiers South Then, of course, there are those who do not have fam {lies to write to them. ee These boys of ours are go- ONE CENT “ALLIES POUND ON TO VICTORY THE STAR TODAY PRINTS THE FIRST PHOTO. te OF CARRIZAL SURVIVORS. AND AN IN ORGE SPILLED RAID on ATIONAL ERVIEW WITH ONE OF THEM fORGE SPIL. RAIN, ON vA 1, THE STAR HAS, THRU ITS MEMBERSHIP IN THE GUARDSMEN EVERY DAY THEY ‘RE IN CAMP, {EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION. THE AND WOULDN'T GIVE THEM SUNSHINE ON THEIR BEET SERVIC “Figs np te ve LAST DAY. “TONIGHT AND TUESDAY, UNSET- REST SERVICE ON THE M EXICAN BORDER OF 1 5 4 \ ; ANY NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE. TODAY'S PAPER THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS ae RUMERAY? tie WaeonnD Te ee IS ANUNDANT PROOF OF THIS a SSDAY,” HE WHEEZEL ¢-Survivor Gives Graphic Description ot Carrizal Battle SECOND LINE OF TRENCHES TAKEN BY ED. L. KEEN Un LONDON, July the allied armies are pushing lands of developing world. the Somme The fighting not only is growing more intense, with the arrival of German reserves, but threatens to spread along the whole of the 110-mile front, from the Somme to the sea. British artillery has been pounding the German line if intense Flanders, with the most Rotterdam dispatch today heard along the rs have joined rumble may been monite whose London the be in even Berlin dispatches to the United Press expressed the belief that the British will deliver their most powerful stroke further 3.—Under a blazing July sun, on across the rolling farm in what is rapidly into the greatest battle in the history of the region today, The sound of ships’ Flanders mighty fire, for 48 hours, guns Supposedly coast heard across the said British symphony of artill channel in has Scalp hag piper oa a Seabee a) { to Mexico to fight HAS BEEN WRITTEN ABOUT IN THE NEWSPAPERS.| a ee eer gear e coakt north of Flanders I may not be able to write about Carrizal that way or the see that is ours as much as The gun fire on the Flanders way that battles were described in the red history book I used 1 went’te Amertean take _theira continued thruout, yesterday “ os ef thon out cessatio a to study in Elizabethtown, back in Kentucky, where I came} a Monday There are lots of tho: Rear ong Doerr ies He . < < ly is he men had been there ho are left who want des aispe from. But | wil! try to tell you here what it actually is to live} fer only ene day, and then perately to help, and who Tremendous Cannonading thru a fight in whic h you know that the chances are ten to one} aiveady the biggest thing in have very little time or No such tremendous cannonad a : that your death is only a matter of a few minutes cainp wae wWheh the mall money ng for such long period without ’ came in There are a hundred a break has been heard since th ‘ ALL FACE DEATH BRAVELY POLICE SAW UP M snan,, aenn.ocy. | “Wheaten niing to atatak «. A| test coast: baktle: nearly: CHR Vae® | r —e ago ; DEATH—that is what you want to happen to the dirty! mans Mere bi ge ges pe alle were oer guaadi The fighting on the 26-mile a ntm t y oul H devils that are all around you—SO IT WON'T HAPPEN al ccna ths, hewn tor bb t0aila bo tan Cho was front, over which the British snd ; 2 ~ are riving eas’ . al h | BAR FIXTURES whom there was nothing not here and wished he Sena: ord as Te tee temares | ere wasn't one of us who was thinking about death that eee were Lille railway is costing huge! @ay when we rode in column fours toward Carrizal, and then 1 talked to ® private in Why not find the name of po cape a Walked tn Woche Nib- ; ail some bo 4 his > all of a sudden there it was—DEATH RIGHT OUT IN] soda water that contained a re yo rg gg gy B odpagg need German Loss 20,000 |» Be Oe a, ee FRONT OF US! | markable “kick, sald to have been . No estimate of the British or Save Money 5! | Sepiiece: Seos-e A j much already?” | asked him. each week would make the PR Ti ne oye Pres Boos og 2 IEATH to the" right of ust yy “or weetiw aX tho We bad “Morquitoes and heat more . + |tain boy,” aged 56, va the Antlers don, but the German losses in the} AVOIDED PAYIN . ‘0 the left of us , jam, 320. U: been away fro! — a ane st 26 ho said to have ex. For a short time DEATH wasn't behind us. | the demolition of the ber and fix ply. “We all feel t so = surely some of us have time In the village of Dompierre] But not a man attempted to get away by the one }tures by the police dry squad. much must have happened for letter writing alone 0 German dead were| ; (Continued on page 5) Grant formerly worked as bar-| VUES ih iisntiastansde ain aninianiandara dian nenibmnimaiendn counted after three French ig tender when the Antlers was a ‘ — iments had fought their way in loon in 1915. He booked at : _ | with bayonets and bombs. |oretimminary to appointing & SU-|Kollce headquarters as a soda | WHERE SUPER-DRIVE Germans Counter |preme commander for the three de fountuir clerk, and admitted to i es Prisoners said many of the dead partments $300 cash bail OF ALES IS WAGED! Git sen eos by shell fire Gen. Leonard Wood, now com-| Patrolmen Harvey, Peterson * Siltte the inteniny eitek’ Sean jmanding the Eastern departmont.| and Kendall made a search of the The artillery’s curtain fire made| has asked a position commensurate | place, finding some liquor. Chief! possible to effect their rescue with his rank, and {t is possible he Heckingham ordered the fixtures,| Trooper Sam H. Harris, survivor The German counter attacks are | will be the man selecte including the long bar and back. of the battle of Carrizai, before Eished hourly growing more vigorous and if — ete agi Pisgah gy OI e Hospital at Columbus, CHICAGO, July 3—Mise Jean ave checked and bent back the| onwa he proprietor. chardsen, $8. of Houstot British left: wh advanced rap-| two weeks ago and | "Ow Mentos. ‘MaPris, whe le ban-| Richardsca, 2 oe ie idly into the village of Serre when | 38 464 PERMITS FOR vi & the dry | daged, is standing beside a medical Committed suicide tods pean Re Agape ae gs Me U ding in court. ' officer. paved first floor of the | ing . f 4 h center north ple in the ostoffice She fel is making slow : . law, 38,464 permits for liquor crushed jter attack have been granted, county an Miss Richardson, it was said ghoulers Fighting Is Desperate or ages d ‘s record “ 0! s disappointed in love. Her s of Albert, where the ex Mrs. Hetty Green Bs tetas wee wasdio ana. shin éraexiat veri GAINS SECOND LINE TRENCHES | fay "wan wealthy trem "British right. Tinks | NEV 4 eign office today was unable to|} June permits nearly doubled | Cw| | the French | th bie ee ee hop di me © baa make any definite statement as] those of May, 11,717 being ts» bat OREGON MILITIA IN we. gle is going on. Driv t of La|ty Green, known as the “richest @ ols le ‘ricour Mamet Co! woman SZ when Gen. Carranza’s reply to the J sed during last month PARIS, July 3—In a “brie |that of about 39,000 German troops bec son A iecatianban, abe (Ger: |¢s nor a a en pote nm he ey ori | Nant attack that threw the defendtie « the sector of front var| CAMP AT SAN DIEGO wereore S Neauae with aisaaraen' > h wre we ac Friday {t was stated upor par: | eronne, nearly 3 forming 31 ation | Mrs. ~Gre 0 ; Germans back on a wide front, = | . important highway lines of | ently reliable authority that "59 oo French troops last. night cap attalions, s tte red terrible losse q | \ | lcommunication which imperil both | 83rd year, had been ill for several ply was eee, oe ne tured the village of Herbe. ("4 were badly disorganized ) SAN DIEGO, Ju A full reg sid . Baupme and Peronne. |weeks, It was rumored a week live y ow jouth of As eres oF ch t 00 of ne sce gts re Me . bite court, advancing <é.withia five &e uth f Assevilleres, the Fr 1 h} ment, more than officers and) | “| | South of the Somme the French|ago that she suffered a stroke of mas was made that t the note would miles of the heart of Peronne, [tee ieee on the sor th bank p>] page diva’ wicly gag alg Dente Raya | | pla themselyes within a bare) epoplexy in March. probably be ready Monday night READY T0 TAKE one of the immediate objectiv: the ‘eae re ae holy "Gliae aod ‘a encamped near fen Diego, ‘The | leeven iiiles of Peronne by the cap. Col. E. H.R. Green, her Sune Des format io of the allied offensive. one-balf niles Seen Wale” eae ee a te ture of Dompierre, rize and], wit v era. vont. tntorinett a wen The advance was made on a [one-half miles southwest 10) tajion, including companies A, B,| | $F Dover | Becquincourt left the house at 1:30 this after that the final draft would not be| tensicaeae’ tan bout | Peronn € and D, which came yesterday on | | femnae whee ha’ meen noon, but it was understood ne made for several days | ; North of Estrees village, be-|q special train | | Carinae, NON. Sheeree would ‘retara We". ‘oleae President Wilson's speech before eee iit wept forward from|tween Estrees and Assevilleres } | Germans waiting nervously | Would ret at 3 o'clock, when the National Press club in New! bor = ce eee et edr tha| the French made important gains RS ae igouts for the bdlow| funeral arrangements might be spatche portin ie reaucot decree a * | capturing prisoners heavy | about to com ade. s. ireen Valted States oppoee cer Gath Mex MOBILIZATION CAMP, |lage of Ansevilleres. The combats perch le on,” ae ne Oflicia | . | They lighted | “Partment which had been fit feo, convince Mexican leaders that| American Lake, July 3—Four |south of the Somme were entirely Most of the prisoners captured AVAILABLE IN U. S. prae ie | ont in order to catch|"P for private offices. the chances of war have been great-| troop trains will carry the Sec agg rh * French, the watliy our for on Saturday and ) | |sight of the fitst line of advane:| the past few weeks four ly lessened. ond regiment of Washington in- init stated today Pete |Sunday are exceedingly young.” WASHINGTON, July 3—Ther AMIENS SPeronne ing British infantry : : | trained nurses had been attending Carranza and his staff visited uring Sunday evening and Sun-| ‘he French alone have now ad-| are 91,000,000 able-bodied men in the| | ' é { The German soldiers, hugging | ner disguised as seamstresses, als 4 cneant’ | tantry toward the Mexican bor- [day night the French artillery Oc-|-anreg thelr positions wo a trora (art 21000 : their, trenches under the steady a drilling grounds where volunteers) ; anced their 5 D a front] tnited States between the ages of tho Col. Green and his mother were being trained Sunday, and re| der Tuesday cupled on a five-kilometer front] of ten miles extending from the|is and 45, uccording to a report to Sasser ] *ovuihee toresnt of shells thet poured: Orr | onyiician, id! se, belay . | | 0 sec position Germa q 1d. 45, acco! Cans ‘eal rote letters home and physician did elie ‘ viewed @ patriotic demonstration,| — Altho the offi acting un- Holy i" roll gs ab Fc outskirts of Hardecourt north of | gay by the census bureau as to the | ———————“___—~ mand Rene ee pea rey vith: | wectdn ahs {Vesa eae prove saris Beaded by choruses singing “War,| der instructions from the war | yooq and up to Assevilleres, Be-|intee imag: © Dont south of E®|nation's resources in men of mili cet wedog Enis that the totanaie lane : B : einer ta , ood and up to rees villa : out bd ‘ lc pr gadhen bear e Sunday, and) department, are not permitted |tween these two points during the! French critics, while entertain. | ary fitness - The map shows where the allies! 1. of the bombardment meant the| Hetty Howland Robinson Greem there uae no anti-American dem.| ‘% dlecuse the tination of} |rourse of a brilliant encounter the!ing no hopes of an immediate have just started their long ex-|crders to attack would come short-|was a woman with a purpose, She onstrations. the contingent, the men are con- | French carried Herbecourt village.| piercing of the German front pected super-offensive. ly after dawn aspired to be the richest woman im fident that it will ‘be Calexico | Toward Awre the region of} point out that the allied gains FIGHTS FOR LICENSE The heavy black line shows the Th « ys bemasia S ve the world. Her love for piling up Delay in getting train equip-|Dancourt, the Desloges wood was! have been made on a much larger Guinn trent in Riakes whieh txt e Britis! rves beg m-| dollars dominated the thought and SION OVER, U. Ss. ment on the ground caused the 1 of the enemy by French|tront than marked the beginning : , ited |DeING assaulted all the way from dawn, while. the, arth on of her entire career. Sh6 jement in the troop move-| grenade reconnatssance jof the crown prince's attack on| HR. G. Stephens, a drugeint Mon.| YPres—No. 1—to the Somme river | [1k sullen’ bins By st epee ve up society, quarreled with her is WILLING TO WAIT r nen ; t was plann 4 o8 art the The official statement Indicated! Verdun [a , pL Ris cS ARaoratpernee eta peeon tie See ae catitish | ‘amily, antagonized her business ms infantry toward the border Mon - ————|day, asking for 4 prohibiting and Frenc oplanes beg soc lived miserly > | London reports that the emash 7 jates, liv y, made mon- ag NASHINGTON, July day afternoon |the state board of pharmacy from |. sive Mee atine may cause the) 2s the air, disappearing in the /ey and ialked religion. She died @ “For the moment” the U. &. | - ireyokiog ty ue brig % cot for} Germans to shift their forces from) 10 yet OER eS ey tremendously wealthy woman, but green, acer | TQ MEET MONDAY Lite as eg honing, ot orl vardanee nee We aitaneay |, "h. ter to ata came |e even woman (te ae Carranza to answer its de |July 12, of charges that he fold] vith the allied attack in France, dere soe gener aoe cee ee Mrs. Green's fortune exceeded mands for a statement as to Organizations and individuals jHangy tHegally hens declares! the Italians began a big drive} went stumbling on thru the cha-| $10,000,000. How much it exceeds ind pronron sd on 7 Hgeeoe sage interested in helping the Red Cross {Raeee pane ita npaph pe of vio against the Austrians. pa ah ehtaee that had ones |ed that is not now known, Both ons. je state de- | workers care for families depend liating the dry law, and that the otic mass of th a Ce} Mrs. Marshall Field and Mrs. Bi partment announced this today. | tha ‘e Cada 7 Jrevocation of his license will rob been concrete armored German} iio ian possens greate bes Wee fect that 1 Hg ju. | ent upon National Guardsmen who * ! ; ’ ; URET ND licanbhe Harriman pos greater wealth he fact that Lansing has made |), ! him of his means of livelihood enches page ; Abree have gone with the colors are : d than that. Neither of the lastname © effort to extract an answer - CAPT OWN Al The French moved forward at : , ® of Commerce Monday afternoon | fortunes. Mrs. Green added more ibemador Asredondo to. spect ANT STATION AT U LOSE IT RIGHT BACK at 2 than $90,000,000 to the $10,000,000 Rat iacis, was’ interpreted "as|® GAIN HIGHER POINT 1 ougt ’ wife, Grace, was at least | sen | her parents left her. Before she meaning that this government has Duvall thought his wif race, k had secret assurances that Car GIVES HIM HORSE 000 miles away The establishment of a mining} PARIS, July German troops| QRITISH HEADQUARTERS IN [80t the $10,000,000, she had built runza will adjust the situation, if Jand metallurgical experiment sta-|early this morning tured the/pRANCE, July 3.—Pressing on|UP quite a comfortable fortune of given tin Lieut. A. W. MeMorris, regimental! howing he little even a detective may know tion for the bureau of mines at the|Damloup work northeast of Ver-| cast of Albert, British troops have | er own from the nucleus of a $26 Aiud tant of the Second Waahineton F bit | University of Washington was urg-/dun during a violent attack, but] occupied a higher position near |S@¥ings account deposited to her fant was presented Bak an ed in a telegram sent Saturday to| Were Immediately driven out by alin strongly fortified position of | credit by her father. REE COMMAND orse by A. F. Coats, of t Duvall svdat. ts. Pai the secretary of the interior by the French counter attack, it was offt:}iricourt, which was taken from| No one ever questioned that Het- f ; , ne German attack was precec | R ed 1 oman finescler.. As ainnaeee Monda in the d The number of prise totais | Woman nck uch she as — Grace stayed behind—on the farm in Maryland wi CONVENE HERE lea b an at night bombardment. | 4 poo reigned supreme for 50 of her WASHINGTON, Jul ne war Ll I e onslaught be; o'clock S0.0dd yeare? She 4 < department today announced a di-|MUNITION STOCK FALLS till she beat her husband across the Atlantic and the enemy penetr the po ; od 7 She was Hetty How 4 led 4 4 and Robinson, of New Bedford, vision of the Southern department; NeW YORK, Jul Munition and was really the first to see that box of gold-tipped vr shaual. convention of : thel cine he ie ae rattan een of Nee Oren Moe oe Mass., where she was born Nox! fn three sections, under the com-| stocks were weak at the opening cigarets, in the smoke of which is enveloped a good Waabineten Btat ifenieal enndclk fata gels “ghey ene bp ea oe | 43 eh nial ny mage fl aaén ®" | vember 21, 1833. Her parents were or jen, Funston sen © 06 due oO dine slo oO ‘ 2 ” 7 r hy server ere | Gg Np anc i me: SEKENAL® fOr. Coron hy BRST ONS | of ¢ vey England re] cl een ct £ ™ ent n, Gen, Perst today ie os armies ns hoes deal of the mystery of “The Blue Lights,” the novel- tion will be held in Seattle trom diately ejected them from the | the Ninth Ward Republican club } f old New England stock, tracing The readjustment is said to beliollowing the allied offensive, a-week beginning in The Star today, on page 4, July 12 to 14 works, Monday night. (Continued on Page 6.)