The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 14, 1919, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

en a I H E S E A I I L E S I A R SECOND SECTION PAGES 18 TO 24 GIGANTIC ASSAULT OPENED ‘SORE’ AT VERDUN Hun Armies Broken by the Allies SAY RED CHIEFS ENFORCE LAWS, LESLIEMURDER ENAMORED WIFE MAN IS KILLED at the Somme, Says Ludendorff| SKIP WITHCASH SAYS GOVERNOR STILL MYSTERY GETS SPANKING BY MOTOR CAR Allied critics from time to time the Somme front was close te Dee mearreled wih the Ire tak Ga'kad"es ao ct How he rooted up the aysem) Raids in Spokane Are Being’ Hart Calls for Prosecution of Did Woman Inspire Shoot- Admiration for American Garage Proprietor Released 7 cols British strategy which led to the of deep dugouts and insisted that onti r . ‘ . an? ” ihe 5 Ee re nae en tan | Seda: enctph ‘ty making the’ || S “ne Suevets sad indioted that Continued | Seditious Agitators ing of Young Man? Officer Punished After Accident q 1, 1916, continuing into the au German Ines perilousty thin else anew to shoot rather than to use SPOKANE, ‘Nov. 14—Whil tine | - taumn. The allies frankly entered where, He also found be must hand grenades ly told by Landen: || SPOKANE, Nov. 14-—While police) Or. yNtPrA, vernor| A woman, who may have inspired| LONDON, Nov. 14.—Riecause } Succumbing to injuries received at upon a campaign of attrition. train his mon in new tacties an dorff tomorrow, He realized the "in onay Ea a es te nd) Louis F, Mart today son & jealous adversary to shoot and kill | wife ught American officers r Fifth ave. and Lenora st. at 716 From the British high command reor the whole front. ‘This superior manpower of the allies ~ we in town, lead: | sheriff and prosecutor of each ¢ BL 14 Lenlie Kent t resting th ' j t a? ' J : : ors have encaped with the funds of |; , at “Mother” Wilson's road < ” ; : : por amen Hayes, 40, shipyard came often the remark: “We are problem had been too big for the would overwhelm the Germans | {)" (Ave one rate in the st for omy ° \ here to kill Germans until me of the Falkenhayn type. unless they could find defensive siniata te rey ol Ging (© COM: | vigorous prosecution of all I Algona W lay morning 1) man ob worker, died in the city hospital two y enough are killed to make possi Characteristically Ludendorff let means more effective. He then 3 : 7 and seditious agitators. ought by deputy » . iffs Wr panked ‘ times | hours later. ble a big advance No place ts nothing stand in the way of get began developing the machine |) James oo out on bail from! At the mame time he addrenned «| °#! — waa t +a ao Save | 9 perme ngeters, The story came! jfayes was struck by @ machine better than this.” ting military results. gun tactics which figured 90 ee Teree iabertaon, Fred | epecial communication to the prose: | ttentive to several women, and is} out tr ndaft police court, where | aeiven by E, G, Brace, proprietor Of How well they accomplished He also frankly reveals his largely againet the allies and the || Kennedy. James Rittenhouse, Harry | cutors of Pierce, King and Spokane | ld to have been sopping at the | the tiser was fined $ the Master garage, £384 Seesnd aan their task is set forth frankly by opinion of the continued fighting Americans in the later stages of pyr r pea Beat all alleged | counties, urging action to suppres | ee eee rh ap he ‘ tted having sent a letter, pecasagiin Ladendorf. He found, when he at Verdun, whieh “remained an the war, and put under way the || brinted by the os are be | weditious publications under the Pe tesa ian Ay is th clue|in which she said: Brace, who was arrested and re took command of the whole, that open, wasting sore.” system of open defense based on » Hogee et cane Seat to ey stil! are | *7BAicaliam bill pasned by the lant W hak Taalis aueweek’t ae wm 1 met an American officer who| leased on his personal recognition, conerete maching gun nests or " bag nt Fe | icgislature. | ven Laaiic answered a rap on the| was awfully interesting. There are | 4a, ---- para s jin hiding in the city | lemtalatur |rendhouse door early Wedneniay | hundreds in Cardiff more interesting |\1°cared % the poles the secidens “ ” With more than 100 alleged I Replying to demands for & #pe- | morning, he wan shot foth-|than the Britieh. They are fine, | W&8 @ue to a rain-covered windshield, MY THOUGHTS AND ACTIONS |W. W. strained thru the police net | Cia! session of the inginature toler” Wilson and John Erick ant | mart, & : Hayes lived with his mother, Mem, My tion required, first essentials for 4M | late last night, raids are continuing | Pa stringent laws aimed at the | jitney ¢ - were t . . bs Whe need iaes “ “2 oN. 77 2 By Gen. Eric Von Ludendorff effective use of artillery, had to 60] early today far 60 are held in| l W. W. Governor Hart anid: “We | ‘they know nothing of the murderer dete 4 Hayes, at 363 N. 71h mm —E erenaer a ee er esta’ ae Nor and Brothers At choke Teeeeea |hand in hand with a more resolute | jail | have laws on the statute books am-!and it is believed revenge “a Cet eer nnn Around an Amer-| Hayen recelved a fractared right leg, Copyrightet ireat Pirtta y son a any and the Le handling of the artillery action by As fast as police detachmenta| Pie to do these things.” |robbery was the motive. lace near Cardiff, The photoar oa a fractured right wrist and internal ane caereel on Beak the corps staffs and by better shoot | @amp batches of alleged 1. W. W Leslie's body was remo Thurs-| was taken by her sister injuries, } ng by means of aerial observation | into the central station they are sort day from the county morgue to Kent 4 oo = - | oor . At practically the same time H. P, Rnticiicna nd many ¢ iy - pee met ed « at examined by three separate Oregon Legioners for ened, at th ; nenee t rat LEWISTON OU L W. W.° | Madden was struck by a machine 5 the flelt/on them atiflfurther for our offen ng ery aatiog: enous j sete of inv «ators and either jatled mother and st ather r. and Mr LEWISTON, Idaho, ‘ov. 14 driven by J. C. McKay, 112 Columbia, tent 1 T paid sive in the southwest Reccontty “hagees by dtvistode In oF released with a stern warning to] ‘ Urge Death Law Pee eee cont Members of Winchester post, Amer-| st. at Westlake ave. and Virginis he west We traveled; On the Som ne nes new: on yw recive oO * from | stay away from y. hangouts, | PORTLAND, Or, Nov “4 vrs t night rounded >| st ade « , the v avele: , the enemy's power: | ON authority Se tale Wire Ghani tee eae my tg Tee ; Lee ight rounded us Madden suffered a fractured leg, d evitle a al head-|ful artillery, assisted by excellent m aged yesterday | Aroused over e Centralia mas RAILWAY MEETING TO BE ame 1. W. W. organizer.|a possible fractured left wrist and i quarters had t her. | aeroplane observations, and fed with| This view met, of course, with op at night nacre, members of the Americar POSTPONED Blinn w his choice of getting | possible internal injuries. : 7h to Cam dquarters of|enormous supplies of ammunition, | Postion: It gradually came to 7 "| 1. W. W. lumber strike headquar.| Legion in Portland have inrtigated) Owing to the “condition of the out of tows once or of receiving| Madden was taken to the city ham : Grown Prince re had kept down our own fire and de tized as the only sound one, Every) tera in the Great Northern hotel was/a movement to restore capital pun-| public mind” it was announced Fri |a ¢ of tar and feathers. pital, where it is said his chances far The crown pris stroyed our artillery. The defense of | UVi0n4! commander was to have 8 | twice raided, the bag being 13 ment in Oregon ay that the meeting of the Railwa He was allowed to inspects long | recovery are good. A wet windshiehf las cer wes , our infantry had become so flabby |{D0Cia! high artillery officer for the | ‘The matter will be considered at| Men's Welfare league scheduled for | and efficient looking rope was also the cause for this accident, q@ompany of the famo that the massed attacks of the en vecuon and control of this rm | Italy has 600,000 women textile|a mecting of the local post, which! Sunday will be postponed until He's wearing ont shoe leather! McKay was arrested on an opem @ he was some such arrangement | workorn lwill be held ton later date. rapidl o storm battalion formes omy <r succeeded. No! ¥ @id\had made itself felt very deeply dated Wi be held tonight ater dat apid harge and released upon $200 bedi, hhono: et naret sur morale suffer, but tr tio first time gone sa detachment paste ‘Wate A iitled. ond wound pap ze DISCIPLINE | full storming rigout, with the od, we lost a large number of pris i a Guhessta which bad proved. o¢|oners and much material Artillery and aircraft were to co | @xtracrdinarily, so wonderfully use The most pressing demands of Operate re closely, The man | * ful. We had not had them in the these officers were for an increase of Would have to develop a liking for} ’ east. artillery, ammunition, alreraft and by fyapene Pty os han ie The prince tly | balloons, ax well as larger and more UP In ir, with a chance bi a ee SS tment of fresh divisions NOHO and a mention in Army Or br Please! at the abandonment of the punctual a @ttacks on Verdun. a re he had | and other troc to make poasible a @@™ Was decidingty more exicting | ‘ L nd wonderful than ranging for the | Bing and earnestly desired. He dis-| better system of reliefs. The break- ™ | 4 other matters also, and men-|ing off of the attack on Verdun made | *ftillery. Comprehension of the great | . importance of artillery-ranging work | d to me his desire for peace; |!t easier to satisfy their wishes; but " oily todah } Did not explain how this wasieven there we had to reckon in the,“ only gradually inculcated, | As a fighting tmatrument for use rtained entente future with considerable wastage, if Be 8 be obtained nten a Pato partie pate troops, alrplan 4 ee) In Charie 1 m ay On. Snow a jay such a systematic role| e * ‘saw the ‘ ‘hens ions. It wns possible that the pees | : % Fren woukl thems os make an uid in 191 and more past : fers. The division enera ra oo Cee 1918; but as early aa the! a ers into two groups, a attack from the fortress, the Somme the enemy's | cennace ae Pless 804 / HAD TO LEAVE | scending very low, played| bs @harleville, had proved very incom | WEAK SPOTS our Infantry by machine Wenient in every way, The et Verdun Jned an open wasting | f¥" fire, not so much by cauning Beeenone an@ teleerap sore. It would have been better to | heavy casuaities, aa by making the i Geould ve pelea to b withdraw our positions out of the | ‘Toop feel that they had been div 1 Alert oe por . et: | center area. [covered in placer which heretofore | ‘ cetyl gpg Boo At thmt time I had not a thoro|they had thought afforded safe s h was not a conven! lace. |STASP of the local difficulties of the | Cover as not ten Verdun fighting. After the Somine,| Thix feeling of apprehension was t Whe German troops in France and tne fortreas still required the most|*® strong at first that rifles and| jum had to bear the burden of | consideration, but in spite of that the | Machine guns were often not put to/ <a] War in its most merciless form. | pigrn army would have to #urrender tat use for which they would have ae BBd one's anxiety to be ceographical- |, derable amount of artillery | beem most effective, ae Wy near them was natural enough. jana aircraft. | GIVES GLORY TO oo (pee rt Yo howe 6 The other armies would have to a be pac hg mi COmpelied to remain at Pleas, as the ass Gnaee wieiiioate. Shall Ke Eierations tn Romania required that| Senta ten ny ead toneas tmn Blane one ot sate, tnitanitry to the would have to hold longer fronts and | deciding factor in every battle. I ive should keep close touch with Gen-| and release d: na, artillery, ®! was in the infantry myself and wae Sep! von Conrad tn Teschen. General! crag; and balloons for the battle! pody and soul an infantryman | : Beedquarters were, therefore, moved | front. Weak spots would naturally!ieig my sons to join the infantry ye the east, and established in Pless,| resuit: but we should have to put UP) They did so, but, as happened to go : Kattowitz and other towns with this, if we intended te hold OD | many of our young men, the free 3 The conference in Cambrai took /tne somme. That was imperative. | dom of the air drew them from the} [Pisce on the morning of the ith.\as no rear lines had been prepared. |tronches. But the fine saying of the : a violent struggle was proceed: General headquarters could at last|olq “Directions for Infantry Exer on the Somme. We were all cout on a few new divisions, which | cise” wil we 4 oi by thet tercinte clae” will always remain true in war jected jerrible COM-| were gradually got ready |"The infantry bears the heaviest | ‘ ‘Met. | Conditions om the battle front a* burden of a battle and requires the! oR OF ARMIES regards artillery and air strength greatest sacrifice; so also it promises | BS IAS NECESSARY were bound gradually ‘ the greatest renown.” | i ‘The western front was not at this|‘* more rapid reinfc | Heavy, indeed, is the burden of the | time well organized. The constitu Are omg ed began to have ‘t:|infantry in this ag in other wars. 7 Hon of the armies into army groupa| OMY the,questions of munitions gave|They have to endure the heaviest a had not been carried far enough yet. US? for anxi I had al-| bombardments of the enemy, lying ie, The army group of Crown Prince |fedy drawn heavily gn other fronts. | quietly in dirt and mud, in damp and Ag Rtupprecht had been created as a HOPED TO REST cold, hungry and thirsty, or huddled Fesult of the August Somme fight THE MEN ~ betes bag and cellars, they ; fag. It included the Sixth army be| 1¢ appeared possible, thanas to this| "Ut “walt the overpowering ae <a fore Arras, which the crown prince \better supply of divisions, that Fup. oe ot agaptap — pve afb ed himee: a Itherto commanded, | nrecht’s army group would gradually | ‘2°F shelte co « Gnd the two other armies also en-|be relieved of the neceasity of living -evaml a rine to meet the/ aged. the First and Second, under |trom hand to mouth. It was then to|““gugy ak BOT as : General Fritz von Below and von|be hoped that a proper system of a i Laer bead atieits pall ured only when discipline has pre-| putting in and taking out of dl) pared the way, and when deep | he army group of the German | visions in sequence would result. 1] love of the Fatherland and an in > fown prince was of earlier origin: had to attach the greatest import re agp mn ree ‘ae ey pete | Mt consisted of the Third army near iance to th in consideration of the wns Wiser So aveak od But the AS . - a Helms, the Fitth at Verdun, led by | internal organization of the army| ne Biry | Odes woah ein ya UR Big Upstairs store is the the crown prince himself, and the and in the interests of the men, as Ee ee dee ae M f ticul, h lemy detachments A and B in Al-|supply, both for men and horses, was | "°%* f having served the Fatherland parses A pl Theat asian erg ii ply, both for men and horses, was | hon | savine sure : " : ace and Lorraine oufteying poder srg od ggnony renin — are in quest of the best materials 4 Not forming part of amy army! After general headquarters had ouns Viekaey oat Gh te ake and the latest styles that money # @roup was the Fourth army, under | given help in the matter, I firmly in vill buy. ’ Wield Marshal Duke Albrecht of| sisted that units should be mixed| 7h0* who have stayed at home can wietete Wurtemberg, on the right wing of/up Until then thie had not been «a cage - er — —And all of them are doubly . the army. and the Seventh army.|poesible owing to fores of cireum.|Orten. Te eel tla’ eines dnat pleased, because they know when Goabeah te op . n : at bow thel y enc : P ~ onaad swe -General von Schubert. | stances. This special arrangement| foe talk buying one of our classy Suits or tween the two army groups. At aia not get rid of the necessity of Overcoats they tting the best 4 first we decided to make no change | continually relieving wornout di-|/ PRAISE FOR ercoats they are getting the best in these arrangements, beyond put-| visions by others |OTHER ARMS the American Clothing Market af- we ting the Seventh army in tho Crown| "4 very easential, and, infeed, tfft-| 1, soneaising achievements Pe fords, besides saving $10 by buying § a Prince Rupprecht’s group, and short- | onit and responsible task of my oper : in our big upstairs store. BS: ly afterwards forming @ special army 9+ lepartment . ne ee ee eee slincaerngt: E Group under the German crown| visions always ready which could in. |UEtt lke the infantry; the pio ° J . visions always reac co} : prince, yore eee wittahle ter the | Reer#, the dismounted cavatryman, : Fhiere were now only three great | mecistely be made available for theltne ‘felatelegraphist have equal Portland an i omine Je. ‘The condition of the|t° yet . Sections taking orders direct from troops had to be accurately gauged, |MOTy | TO all of mame the fine sem Store, @eneral headquarters, The whole |so that we could arrange for their ae eae Raleigh Gale reorganization of the west front removal from a quiet front for ser |” = deities thins: * 6 wefan . ig . ; epuld not be undertaken until there|viem on more oF fenportant a00-1 «ots osc the ther come af thet Building : | Was & pause in the fighting. tors battle line. | sah es . | 4 f ttl | service accomplished. They all had|/ FEARED FOR The reinforcements which were re-|fr same appreciation and Prva IGHTI? OWF leased for the battle could not be|..° “ame appreciation — | FI POWER 1 for the batt ud not be| general headquarters. The airman, ‘The loas of ground up to date ap |#ent up to the front line in rotation. | 14, shares the feeling of victory, the . ; Peared to me of little importance in| The railways were Jeep satisfaction of knowing — TE 4 to np cesboh ' dee sfaction of ni m that so Wi iteelf. We could stand that; but the — in Dp ed ad t even in the alr a man has his worth. ALTERATIONS FREE. . question how this, and the progres: | fic ben Las aooeghangea But he was not subject to the disin- | FIT GUARANTEED. sive falling off of our fighting power, \normou aber ——! tegrating influences of battle ‘ @€ which it was symptomatic, was to : . colle Aeong Ea bite ps Pe ‘The artillery had to endure the be pre ated was of { nse rag lia Ryprvagh borage se Feet | same strain as the infant The | Arca e l A iiey Stn of oes 4 In that time all our calculations |10nKe" the war lasted, the higher | g. SEA ha tor know whether oor tas. |MmEbt. 00 wpett by enemy oncoatess | Vek [omase became, in Gesenee as in s, ak bel views were still sound. The |22d new demands might have to be| Slack. It became increasingly clear Second Avenue. SU Whs' ain:daep-moatter the second | Mth, Teet tay te thee hands of fate,| Ott Sey were ihe keystone of the (Over The Rhodes Co.) wes second to mention the enemy, For the | battle and the mains y of the front. | aitreme dif All the same, the artillery need | iers i ead omtnt everything had been done| . | Ss s e Opinions nuch In strates! | yin the 1 ot cirenmmatanees | Mt fight with the infantryman over Largest Clothiers in the Northwest | al and tactical ay in { he ong Ncaatiad mene’ that sentence in the regulations, He 4 economic questions. Tt {a just m Roe | would certainly be right if he con- ficult to carry conviction. The xymp-| 4AD TO aid tested the suggestion that the in. toms are recognized, but the under. eee ecponynge fantry is the queen of arms. It was are the subject of con-| In the province of tactics it by some error that this statement i circumatences a |Decoency 22 Fosters the suprem had found its way into an artillery ater. The army |Of the aggressive function of the ar | training manual, ‘There ix no queen | or of, 1ewae y ins By jestroy’ | of arms, ‘They all have equal right . me, and war made ne ad oo pond 4 yt the Hie. Je all — equally . More anes necessary. It is impossible to get on | My mental picture of the fighting "Che? ; et bar had) without one of st Verdun pad om tthe Gomme ad ta | coe iecteo nt acts dak acrerunition, sisal painted a shade darker in view) "pry iD Buns and ammunition | The barrage had come to be reeard-| Senators Honor é Just heard. The only | .4 universal panacea, The In | 4 1 y o ruins pt 4 . | in’ ; Fillet in it was the heroism of our! tantry insisted on it, but unfortu-| Martin’s Memory an men, who had suffered to) nately it had come to confuse many| WASHINGTON, D. C, N the extreme limit of human endur-| jung theories. A bart be atl oa AS 7TON, » Nov, lar} ‘ ance for the sake of the Fatherland.| wai! in theory, but in prateice only|=2® stood adjourned today 5 1 can not repeat all the moving sto | too often it collapses under the storm | Ut of respect to the late Senator : Fries of the battle which I heard. of the enemy's “destruction fire Martin, Virginia, whose funeral will r) ; GERMAN GUNS Our infantry, which had come to! SILENCED br otiasrerse if Stoned t i ie be held at his home in Charlottes: | ~ c ve . : I began to realize what a task the| tection, were far too inclined to for-| Vil!® this afternoon. Many senators | i 4 field marshal and I had undertaken|get that they had to defend them-| left to attend the funeral ‘THE LEVA ORs 4 in our new spheres, and what a bur-| selves by their personal efforts. Meantime, both sides declared a @ ij Gen we should lay on the leaders ‘Lhe Increase in the number of the | 24. hour truce in the peace treaty P and troops in” the west if we drew guns and the amount of ammuni-! fight. a y 4 / Mi cus ae hia : ‘

Other pages from this issue: