-'xmmn Pk, i rkjb&smi w. wyfjMSit; 'yflJ mm tft" i few- is&ra. HP f f w ! t-t -. - "A- ft; h,- at I It htorit&tfribfaMdteM && RMANS LOSE AS TURGOS PRESS CHARGE fcUhlfe, .Nov. IS. f.r .-fcefeai f the Germans itt their opera- tWrw afeafnst the Allies In the vicinity of Irafcy-ie-val, on the north bank ot the t ialsne.la announced In an official French fr-UtemeaL Issued here this afternoon. It Estates' that WcilnfKrlrti- w rtarb4 W it kYetVu4aeence of activity on the part of derfflari artillery forces on tha Belgian - front but that there was no attack by P" "tha Infantry V The FrtnCh positions In the Anjonne forest, -It declares, have been maintained. " 'The' official communique follows: ' At the north the day of yesterday - 'waa marked by a recrudescence of ii,fi.,t.etlvlty on tho part of the enemy' J-5 'and-the" Ly. There was no attack Ip'njr Infantry. . . . . CaUNTlSn-ATTACK DIUVES FOE. Between tha Olse and tho Alsno, th operations arOund Trncy-Le-Val 1 havo terminated very favorably for f . , our troops. It must bo remembered i . that wo look that vIIIsro a few days ago. Day before yesterday tHo Germans attempted to recapture It, . after- having taken our first trenches. They advanced as far aa the central crossroads or that locality, but a vigorous counter-attack by our Al reriah contingent threw the enemy a" it l , back, took from him all tho ground that we had lost and Inflicted, heavy ,, losses upon him. , In tho Arsonne we hare main tained our position. On the reit of j -the front there 'Is nothing to r'eport. This Is the first official announcement that has been Issued statlnff "that the Jufcos wero on the battle front alone , , theAlsne. Aa they have been sent to jj.pdlrits Where the lighting was fiercest, 'Jt.ft btlleved hero by the military ex- Herts- that there has been a terrific con tfpjnct wfthln tho last few daya on the klfarth bank of the Alsne. FIGHT OF LONG DUnATl'pN. 'J '; On November 13 the French officially .Announced that the AIIIcb had taken pos-c-esslon. of Tracy-Le-Val, with the erfcep " tlon of, a cemetery to the northeast of ...ALLIES' SURPRISE ATTACK CAPTURES ; ' - -. 'i'. . LONDON, Nov. 19., X ' correspondent, telegraphing from a iii.'JW'nt ' n northern, France, says that a IM.detachmciit of British soldiers and French marines have captured Schoore fri West Flanders, driving out tho Ocr jtjhiarj defenders with severe loss. Tart al of ithe British troops advanced along tho "'only roadway by which, tho town could 'fio approached, while tho marines and other British soldiers crossed the Inun cn dated district on rafts and flatbottomed " boats, delivering a surprise attack upon tha Germans' rear. t; Tho . Germans being thus surprised while 'holding back the attacking force '" on the highway with machine guns, turned and fled, leaving guns, nmmuni-' "'tlon and other1 stores behind. .,, . ' Floods let loose When the dikes of tho KAISEk'S ADVANCE HALTED. TO CLOSE GAPS IN DYKES BERLIN. Nov". 19. temporarily halted In their Though campaign to gain tho French coast by fhs floods caused by tho cutting of dykes 'in tho Yser Valley, the Germans are.' meeting this emergency as they have tnet others, with forces provided for Just, such an, occasion. ,' Bodies of engineers numbering ,"000 man have' been taken to the Dlxmude front durlnghe last week and are engaged n closing the' gaps In the dykca' and constructing pontoon bridges op which tnfantry can' cross the inundated ' country- CAVALBY SURPRISES BRITISH. ' "'Brief details' of- a heroic exploit by a company of German cavalry wero ce celved here today. The soldiers swam their horses for a mile through "the Icy water at night and took by surprise a body of English troops guarding a posi tion near Dlxmude. Though astonished by ho sudden appearance of the German troopers, the British soldiers fought des perately to hold their position. They -ware Anally driven out, and the Germans' have "dug themselves In" at that point and nxo holding it against every attack. Whllo the floods aro Interfering with operations alont; the front from the coast .CAPTURE OF BATDM IS EXPECTED; TURKS SEIZE EGYPTIAN POST Sultan's Forces Press To ward Russian Black Sea Port British I-ands - Pierced 75 Miles. CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. tt. It Iff offlclally announced that Turkish troops aro nearlng tho Russian port of Batum and that the, capture of that m jarUnt town U Imminent. In the Bgyptlan campaign Turkish troops have occupied Kalatulnahl. IS milt beyond tho Egyptian frontier, the official 'ataUmeat today announced. ;'.' PETROGRAD. ov. . TJie Turkish, destroyers have appeared fester Sullna and aro reported actually te fcavjuontortd tho Sullna arm of tho Du(Wb delta with the object of getting lftto ewnwunlcatlon with representatives o; Austria and Germany, or possibly iBM$y s a srot$t against tfie overn ne of tho Panubo dlta. Tib iUUUja aim of tho dslta. with othar mouths of tba paaube, u under the pubUo w ft- BWKMW, a4 prtMtMt by a rU f tfaalHs frees tt dowi to tfaat of Io- ' JMmsi, as rtsult of tbla action, has git uHfam put tnreadaldo en whether It rm tfatut f44w wttfe tf areaaay and it ally Ttttkay. o whether K will maintain: its ow Wt aafport t. right of tba fbila is t4 lwpe- In tho latter ti;f Turkish wiWp. attempting to ut!Ua tia wtcii waxarway running ttuwttrit Buaaaiaa territory as a Iujm for arw' sait HuU, wtil b sna aast tetrnt tth. mA iriigm iB tUs ssr ttrrr te ssr HP : WHOM ' - i 1 si !P" I 1 - & Hte' JSVBKIKG ON AISNE tha village. This waft six days ago, and fighting has probably been In progress in that seetlbn for that many day. As tha French statement says that ths fighting has ended favorably for the Al lies, they have evidently driven th Ger mans from their positions In and about tho cemetery. An unconfirmed rumor reached here to day thdt the Germans have evacuated Lille. That town, the MDort says, Is now I, occupied by tho British. There Is rto con- nrmation or this report. GBRMAtt mmtBAT rntCDtCTED. German attacks with Infantry In West Flanders have become much less vio lent, according to advices reaching here from the north today, and French mill tary experts are now predicting that the Invaders along tho Ostena-Dlxmnde-Tpres line will son have to retire. Any offensive movement by the Allies In that region, however, would meet with the same obstacles which have hampered the operations of the Germans, Tho deep mud left by recent storms In tho fields and upon the highways and the floods north of Dlxmude would render ah advance by tho British, French and Belgians a difficult matter. Tney woum find It almost Impossible tp move their heavy guhs forward mrougn mo iiuhK trilres nnd across the stretch of water north and south of the Yser Canal nnd the Yser- niver. Tn connection with the renewal of war ship activity off the Belgian coast, where tho French and British men of war are bombarding the Germans, the following story comes through from Dunkirk: "The Germans noticed that the fire from English ships spared houses on the sea front at Mlddlekerke, Thereupon, the In vaders took up quarters In the houses. TWs fact became known to the British, who concentrated the fire of flvo war ships upon tho buildings, demolishing them, Tho German loss Is estimated at i;oo." It Is reported from Furnes that trans ports o"f tho Germans In western Flan ders have been moved back and that the Invaders havo extensively mined the road wavs. According' to' Information from tho same source, the British have been able, after terrific exertions, to move their heaviest guns to tho front and they aro now cannonading the German lines. FLEMISH TOWN Tser Canal wero dynamited In B'laium ftaye caused Intenso suffering la the'Brlt Ish and Belgian troops as well ns to the Germans. Tho latter, plunging forward In attacks wherever tho water Is shal low, have forced the allied troops also to advance In order to withstand tho efforts to take their positions. At some points the opposing soldiers have fought hand-to-hand battles with the water to their knees. Great numbers of troops have been Incapacitated by rheumatism and kindred ailments, ac cording to wounded British ofllcers who have arrived from the front. That the furious German attacks will be maintained forborne time Is Indicated by Information received by tho Wnr Office today. This was to the effect that lnrge bodies of German troops, who had hither to been held In north Flanders, wero being transported rapidly to the Dlxmude and Ypres fronts. This Information was gained by tho British nnd French aeroplane- scouts. to Tpres, tho German troops are strength ening their positions from Tpres to Arras and farther south. ALLIES LINE HAMMERED. West of St. Quentln and Roye they havo gained ground. It is announced here, by continually hammering away at the Allies' line. This has been bent at several places, but no smashing attack on any one posi tion has been made, as piercing of the enemy's front In this region would havo no Important result, whllo tho French and British troops maintain their posi tions on the Ypres-Armentleres front Large guns Just turned out and fully tesfed at tho Ktupp works havo been transported to the neighborhood of Arras by way of Alx-Ia-Chappelle and Liege. The Frankfurter Zeltung says: "Our losses undoubtedly are very heavy In Flanders, but the country need not be disquieted by the arrest of the German advance on a great part of the vast battle front. It Is true that the enemy Is' defending himself valiantly and ob stinately In northern France and Belgium. Nevertheless our troops have advanced a little. Those among us feeling discourag ed because of the slowness of our progress should remember that we are making war entirely by now methods. "Formerly fortresses required months of besieging while battles in the open country lasted only a few hours. Now It is just the contrary," on tho southern coast of the Black Bea, was shelled Tuesday by a Russian fleet. An official statement by the General Staff of the Russian navy says: "Early Tuesday morning the Russian Black Sea fleet, which had been cruising off Treblzond, steamed close to the town, bombarded tho harbor and barracks and set on Are buildings along the coast. "No Turkish ships were sighted off the coast." PARIS, Nov. 10.-The following dltpatch has been received by a news agency from Urmia, Persia; "The Kurds everywhere aro giving way before tho Russian troops, against whom they dare to make anly desultory attacks. That part of the Kurd forces Which tho Russians defeated previously at Tergeven have retired to Schallblnan, where they aro reforming." RUSSIANS TAKE TURKISH TOWN ON THE EUPHRATES Pressure of Ottoman Troops Increas ing on Caucasian Front, PETBOGRAP, Nov. 19.-Tho capture of Tutach. on Important Turkish town In the yalley of the Euphrates, lx announced in an official report received from the Russian Governor General at Tldls. It said: ''On tha Caucasian front the Turkish troops are Inoreaslng in numbers near Batum, where several fights have oc curred In the Oltl Tschal River valley. "A Russian column has defeated the Turks In the direction of Brzerum. There havo been numerous skirmishes in which the enemy was repulsed. Tha Russians have Decupled Tutach, on the BuphraUs, The situation elsewhere is unchanged," RADIUM FOR WOUNDED an.nmi.Mpiu i i. Jims. Carle Organizes Belief Service for Battlefields. PARIS, Nov. 11 Umt. Curie, who, w)tti -her husband, discovered radium, has suggftsfad the usa of automots containing radWirapak ajvarsttu on the baUtsfleld. asd has en&i4 mh. a By ta us of this flW aMMUatua bul let turn haw feMhd asut MtaaMsd Imb fe bjgMpt fit JPmi'Mt. m SSSs : MBIT 1 m '-a&i y-rsaE aSrsEEr -'jeep LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, THtJBSDAY, NOVEMBER NEW GERMAN DRIVE GAINS GROUND LOST . IN WARSAW FLIGHT Great Battle Rages in Poland Along 70-milc Front. Petrograd Admits Kaiser's Marked Advances. BERLIN, Nov. 1. Driving its way forward Into north western Tolend, between the Vistula and Warlhe Rivers, the German army has changed its retreat of a week ago into an advance, and by a determined counter offcnslvo has regained about one-third of tho ground lost In the recent retreat from Warsaw to the Prussian frontier. Along a. 70-tnllo front the Germans are cttemptlng completely to crush the Rus slan offenslvo directed against Thorn nnd fosen. The Russians are making a de termined effort to cheek what may de velop Into another dash upon Warsaw. An official communication, Issued by Oeneral Headquarters today, says! "New battles havo developed In Poland In tho region north of Lodz, but no de cision yet has been reached. i,'TS.I,A0U,lcait of eoldau th8 enemy has been fOrced to retreat In tho direction ,, "aw"-. nPn the extreme western J1 K a strong Russian cavalry force, wh oh we defeated on NovembeV 10 nnd through Tllkallen." PETROGRAD, Nov. 19. Admission Is made. In official statements of the Importance of the new German ad vance. Tho statement is as follows: "Between the Vistula and the Wartha our advance guards In an engagement with the Germans, who took tho offensive, fell back In tho direction of tho River Bsura. The enemy succeeded In gaining a footing In the region of Lentchltza (Lenczyca) and Orloff, throwing out ad vance guards In Inc direction of Plontek." (Lentchltt Is 15 miles south of Kutno, which tho Germans occupied several days ajre.) Additional advices are to the effect that the General Staff anticipates no difficulty In checking the forward movement of tho German nrmy, which Is at Its strongest In this section. The mnrked ndvances are explained as duo to the numerical superiority of tho Teuton troops rushed into Poland from Thorn nnd the withdrawal of the Rus sian forces to ground moro favorablo for waging a great battle. AUSTRIAN RETREAT MOVE OF STRATEGY, CONSUL SAYS Explains Becent Operations in Poland as a Play for Position. Tho retrograde movement of the Ger-man-AustrO'Hungarlan forces of the last few days was not a retreat after a lost battlo. but merely a strategical move, according to a statement made today by George von Grlvlclc, Austro-Hungar-tan Consul General In Philadelphia and lieutenant colonel in the Austro-Hungar-lan army, in which he discusses the re cent operations of tho Austrian army. The Russians greatly outnumbered the Germans and Austro-Hungarlans, ho says., anil' this necessitated a retreat In order to gain time and not expose tho forces of the Kaiser and Francis Joseph to the danger pf a defeat. In the other theatres of tho war in which tha Austrlans aro engaged the Consul General states that, according to the latest official dispatches received by him from his Government in Vienna, the Austrian forces aro everywhere meeting with success. Tho statement made by Mr. Grlvlclc Is as follows: "According to the latest official Infor mation, the German, Austrian and Hun garian forces In tho Russian theatre of war are concentrating In new positions. The Russians are following them slowly. The fortress of Przemysl Is again under siege. The retrograde movement of our forces during the last weeks is not a retreat after a lost battle, but Is a stra tegical movement In order to gain time and not to expose our forces to the dan ger of a defeat, which might be caused by tho numerically greater forces of tho enemy. "Tho operations of the Austro-IIungar-Ian army in Bervla are progressing very favorably. Our fifth and sixth armies have repulsed the whole Servian army every time It offered resistance and have already reached on the 12th InBt. the territory of BanJanI west of Valjevo. "The Montenegrin forces, which were repulsed to Montenegro, have been now attacked In the Krlvosje region near Grahovov. "The bombardment of Cattaro has been discontinued after the French battery on tho Mount Lovcen had been silenced by our coast and naval artillery." RAIDER KARLSRUHE DASHES AT VICTIMS FROM BRAZIL BASE Mystery of Supplies Cleared by Captain of Captured Merchantman, Who Tells of Cruiser's Decoy Scheme, The mystery surrounding the source of supplies of the German cruiser Karlsruhe, terror of tho Soutlj Atlantic, has been solved. The warship has established a base of supplies on Rocas Island, off the coast of Brazil, according to Captain Noel Pitcher, master pf tho British steamship Inoranl, wblch was captured by the speedy cruiser. Captain Pilcher declares that the Karls ruhe has stored more than 15.090 tons of coal and ship supplies on Rocas Island They were taken from tho IT merchant men which she captured during Beptem ber and October. When the cruiser creeps out on her raiding expeditions, Captain Pilcher said, she is accompanied by two Of her captives which are used as decoys. Thtse vessels signal passing steamship's and, by supplying them with misinforma tion guide them Into the cruiser's path. The Officers of the cruiser, according to Captain Pilcher, have secured a copy of the British code book wblch has been ! sued for communication between mr ehantmen and British warships, and this makes the task of the decoys simple. The cruiser is welt informed as to the movements of various steamships and the oharaatsr of their cargoes. Captain Pitcher said, a fact which shows that slU is in wireless onsuBtcatln with totit tk. Untied States and South Auur ieaa oouUi. Tha captain of Uw oMm im Cmi fttflMr ffeu k a iay tate wle b was cat4 mI ib aaawr ussai bsue aMBsSMi aist. t&r" Ufe7isr JStSi ssr mwm wxmmmmrwr i , - , jx Mrwmim&tJrm&sa&gnBmmminkMmi.3nwm p-""i 'MM I " mi ij fTniiiiliM r imntirnrtetrt i n,fniiiltHBM8sMmisSMlsT GERMAN AIR SCOUT FLIES OVER PETROGRAD FORTRESS Views Defenses of KroneUdt, Which Protects Czar's Capital. AMSTERDAM, NdV. 19. A German army aviator has made a successful flight over Kronstndt, the prin cipal Russian military and naval baset according to a statement published In the Frankfurter Zellung. Kronstadt Is n fortress built on an Island at tho head of tho Gulf of Finland and Is but M' miles west of Petrograd. Its naval and commercial' dock yards aro protected by heavy fortifications. On the opposite Side of the channel, but 360 yards distant. Is the sister fortress of kronstoL OCEANIC CAPTAIN ON TRIAL British Probe Loss of Ship Off Scot tlsh Coast. LONDON, Nov. 19.-The court-martial of Lieutenant David Blair, navigation officer of tho former Whlto Star liner Oceanic, began yesterday at Devonport. He Is charged with having caused tho toss of the vessel by negligence. Tho Oceanic, converted Into an armed cruiser, ran ashore on the coast of Scot land September 8. All her ofllcers and crew were saved. WAR MOVES OF WEEK SHOW DOUBLE GERMAN OBJECTIVE Operations in West Indicate Desire to Frighten England by Threatening Coast Military Advantage Subverted to Political Expediency. By HILA1BE BEILOO PARIS. Nov. 19. The most striking characteristic of tho campaign In Krance-that which seems to differentiate It from every other-Is that tho critical situations havo never devel oped. They havo never matured. The)' havo never led to n decision. Nevertheless ono Is tempted to say that, with (1) tho violence of the struggle, (2) tho large reinforcements Involved upon tho German side, and (3) the concentra ting nl nn rvntnt the situation On tllO Belgium frontier does look nearer a de cision now than any wo havo had before. Tho Germans have concentrated now forces. Among other better troops .they aro using boys much younger and men much older than the Allies have yet put Into tho Held; and tho action during the last fortnight near Ypres nnd to tho north between Lllio and La Bassce, proves they ore depending upon superior numbers. Now let us estimate the elements which may lead us to expect In thlH "eld suc cess or failure upon cither side. The first of these elements Is the sepa ration of objectives which, I do not say the German commanders, but certainly tho German Government, has Imposed upon the German forces. Some one, clearly, has presented an ad vanxA oinnr- dir must from Ostcnu to ward Calais as one of tbe objects to be obtained by the German army. Clearly some other person has proposed another effort (and very Vigorously maintained It) south and west of the-town; of Lille. Tho two may be co-ordinated by some agreement. But the two objectives do pot come from one head. Now see what this duplication of ob jective means. From tho little town of La Basseo to the sea at NIeuport (which lino Is the general frontier of the allied roslstence) Is not less than miles. Following the sinuosities of the battlo line, It Is n good deal over EO miles. POUNDING THE WEAKEST LINK. In a strugglo of a lino of 10 against a line of 10 there Is not likely to be a decision unless two of tho 10 rush at one point to get through or turn round by one side to catch tho opponent in flank. You do not tear a hole In your oppo nent's line by striking It everywhere with equal force. To tear n hole you must concentrate upon some supposedly weak link in the chain. A'nd the German army being what It Is. possessing the tradition, doctrine and efficiency in practice which wo know, we are equally bound to find some ex planation for this divergence of objective; this attack of the enemy; not alone In front of Lille, but at both these distant points. If tho Germans massed all the men they could spare for their "bolt" In front of Lille and hurled them against the point of La Bassee, and If by so doing they toro a hole through the al lied lino there, they would achieve a re sult largo In proportion to their success. If they poured through In great numbers and very rapidly, they would probably cut oft that great body of their enemies which Alls up the remaining SO-mtle line between Lille and the sea. But even If they failed to cut off that northern group, with Its hundreds of thousands of men. even If they failed to take them pris oners and destroy them as a military force, they would, even In case of that Incomplete success, compel this advanced northern portion to fall back very quickly. They would "uncover,'" as the phrase goes, all the sea-coast well past Dunkirk to tho neighborhood of Calais. To win In the Lille region by using there, at the La Bassee point, all the men they have free, would be. In Itself, to win Calais. One would have thought that the heav iest "bolt" the Germans could afford to gather would have been shot at the centre S J .....! l'P"' "iii v fi iSVv? mm$ $ One Carat Yeu roar buy one of these flery 1 carat diamond rings at IIS with tba abtolat as luasee that you paid ?1 1-1 ) for It than Ua standard, retail prlc. Add to. oar price of tit tho blsh Import doty lrld on cat diamonds i tha Jobber's and retail ietr- rnu, ana you Juire the prleo you Te to pay U It were not for I. Prtts would A Boss, who sell you these diamond dlrett from, their cutting loom. In justice to your ?tru pkUook. bay your dlaaood direct rom u, the diamond cutters. Oar startling Diamond durante refunds full purchat pile Hrtuln. one year le 10i. Writ for our famoaa IlUmood and Watch Bulletin. Mall orders nlied. 1 ACT f tfrnmtmsim 1 ft mMM IAHKS WU AUSTRIANS CHECK CZAR IN GALICIA; MOVE ON SERBS 3000 Russians Captured, Vienna Officially Announces. VIENNA, Nov. 19. An official report from tho Austrian General Staff announces the capture of 3000 Russians In Gallcla, and states that tho operations asal" th Servians are proceeding with great success. The re port follows: "The continued operations of the allied armies In Russian Poland and Gallcla are dpveloplng conditions that aro highly fa vorablO to our troops. Near Grebow (In Gallcla north of Rzeszow, and about 80 miles east Of Cracqw), a strong Russian cavalry force wa dispersed by our ar.tll- Jery and we captured 3000 prisoners. "The Russian advance toward tha Car pathians is of ho Importance at present. Our troops occupy positions that are or great strength. "In Sefvla our advance toward Belgrade continues. Wo have Captured" many guns and great quantities of supplies." INSISTS BEUTEIt IS DEAD PARIS, Nov. 19. The Figaro prints fur ther confirmation of the death of Colonel von Reuter, of Zabern fame. In a letter from a French priest, who says that ho himself carried off tho body bf tho Colonel from a battlefield In Alsace. The Colonel, the priest -says, had been bayoneted. of the Nleuport-La Bassee lino only, be cause success there would, as a necessary consequence, Involve tho abandonment of the seacoast between NIeuport and Calais. Why, then, has this diversion of forces taken place? Why have the Germans struck not orily west of Lllio against La Bassee, where success would automatical ly have uncovered tho seacoast, but also along that seacoast Itself? Tho nnswtr must bo political. There Is no other answer. Somo ono In contact of Oermnn affairs has said; "If wo can occupy the scaconst quickly we shall have a certain political effect which we much desire, nnd which an ultimate success furthfr south will not subserve." Some one else, moro military, has said; "I re gret this waste of men upon a political object. Our only chance of breaking the enemy's line is to go for the main point west of Lille. I Insist upon having, at any rate, great- masses of men ,for that main point (the neighborhood of Lille). Use what you think you can spare to the noilh." WhcrcUppn a compromise has been ef fected between the politician and the sOldler. The former first look large rein forcements for his attempt along the co-ast; the latter had reinforcements, also large, not as largo as he could havo wished, for his effort in front of Lille. But as tho politician Is master, the at tack along the sea coast has used up most of the men, and Is attracting to It self, by Its very lack of success, moro and more forces from the south. Tho seizure of the English Channel op posite Dover has In this war strategic value.; but that value Is quite out of pro portion to the sacrifice of life It has al ready Involved. ''Bernard Shaw's ihe town, and Arnold Bennett, the English novelist, in a cable di's-: patch to yesterday's Public Ledger made this reference to ,v j . i George Bernard Shaw's "Common Sense About the War" Sunday's Public "s Mnr pupn "RprnrmrrJi'c -nrA-nnA-lmn cerning war have excited the civilised world more than the,t?,v ; J mocking, merciless charges of England's caustic philojo-i'' ' pher. A storm of protests has gone up, though even Arnold ''"'. Bennett, in replying to the Shavian arguments, pays tribute to their extraordinary value as literature. .-,. ? Next Sunday's contribution by Shaw deals with ' ' . "Recruiting and Terms S '-6 ' ' It is animated with the, same dash, fervor and disregard of consequences that marked the first article in the sen'esf . -It is an impassioned demand for justice to the British recruit and his-;'fapoi!y and an imperious call to labor to assert' its .power ;ini51itiqs jh the present national crisis. Vk ! Next Sunday's Public f wwrlllI'TTMia .-.jyTjg 3u wR&jiL. 1914. MRS. FREDERIC C. PENFIELD MRS. PPNFIELD WINS UNIQUE HONOR IN AUSTRIAN CROSS Phlladelphlan rlrst Recipient Out sldo Royal Family. BERLIN, Nov. 13. Emperor Francis Joseph han conferred upon Mrs. Frederic C. Pchflcld, wlfo of tho American Ambassador at Vienna, tho Grand Cross of tho Order of Eliza beth, In recognition of her efforts for the welfare of Austrian soldiers. Austrian newspapers emphasize the dis tinction of this decoration which, for tho first time, Is now conferred upon a woman not connected with the Imperial family. Mrs. Frederic C. Pcnfleld has frequently been described as tho second richest woman of America. Bho Is tho daugh ter of tho late William Welghtman, a manufacturing chemist of Philadelphia, who left her a large fortune. This Is not tho first foreign honor that has been conferred upon Mrs. Pcnfleld. In 1MO the Popo conferred tho tltlo of Marchioness upon her In recognition of her widespread clmrltles. At tho tlmo of her marriage to Mr. Pcnfleld tho Popo sent her a chain with a crucifix of gold. Ambnssador Pcnfleld was recently hon ored by the Austrian Emperor, who con ferred upon him the Star of tho Red Cross Order. TURKS SINK RUSSIAN SHIP ATHENS, Nov. 13. A Turkish armed merchant steamship has captured a Rus sian steamship near Slnope. The crew wns taken off and tho vessel sunk. The members of tho crew were landed and paraded through the streets of Constan tinople to Impress the populace. r edaoaeMccc MeMMM9NC'Mjk Undo Henrr may know Aak g ss 19, ! ' ' 111 III m 'M k ; ' -mif m S tIm nHvt 1 'Common Sense About the War' is the'talk bf- it deserves to be. One of its greatest values is"'1' '- its' courage, for tn it Shaw says many things no one else'wquld . have dared to say. . It contains the most magnificent, brilliant dnd convincing common sense that could possibly be uttered. Hence everybody should read it, though everybody will not be capable of appreciating the most-pro J found parts of it." . ' the remarkable article now running in Place.Yqjur Qrfar Tgday for y laiajfjieMmi'i, iiiii. PRUSSIAN MfflE RAGING AT SOLDAU, AS CZAR ADVANCES Four Days' Terrific Fight Advantage to Russian In vasion, Petrograd Says. Foe Driven Back, Berlin Announces. ,, PETROGRAP, Nov. 1. A dispatch from tho front describes A furious baltlo at Soldau, which waa taken last week, but where the German. array continues vigorous resistance to the ad vance on. tho great fortlflod centre of Oraudenz. The dispatch stales. "A terrific battlo of unexampled Vlo lence has been proceeding for four days nround Soldau. Tho cannonading baa been maintained night and day. Tho Rus sians nre endeavoring' at any cost to avenge their former check at Soldau and are throwing themselves at the Germans with Indescribable fury. Thty have car ried position after position by assault. In spite of the Infernalflre of the Germins. "In spite of tho torrential rains, -which rave turned the ground Into .a quagmire, the Russians are advancing toward, tha interior of Germany. They have captured 10 big cannon, none of them damaged." Tho official statement covering this field of operations Is. as follows! "In East Prussia our tro.ops continue to make progress and fighting is. going on near tho Gumblnncn-Angerburg. front, which tho enemy Is defending. "In the trenches, which wo captured near Varschlaghen, tho enemy abandoned more than 300 dead". Among tho offlccra whom we took, prisoners hero was. an artillery officer sent to the Infantry be cause of a lack of officers for that branch. "On tho front along tho Mazudlan Lakes our' troops reached tho wl'ro en tanglements of tho .enemy's position and forced them. "On tho front between Czenstochowa nnd Cracow wo have attacked Important forces of tho enemy, detachments of which operating nt Lodovltzo were routed. "In Gallcla wo have occupied success ively" tho passes over the Carpathians. BLANK'S MINCE PIES PUMPKIN PIES ICE CREAM ICES MERINGUES ThanicagMnp Noon Auto Suburban Delivery Thanksgiving Dinner-r-.11 to 3 $1.00' ' 1024-26 Chestnut St. JVione Filbert ttsi r:M H ' ,"i ::: rlr1!ii - ifi - vno ..-" s, h; of Peace' Leter Led get m I ss,PISIHMsWpyilss tkMJiL : '.mm$miimtmm-mmam