Bessr r I EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, " ' " PHi 1 mqtda Y) SEPTEMBER 28, 1914. GERMANS TRAIN HEAVY GUNS ON ANTWERP TO CRUSH BELGIAN FLANKING ASSAULTS'! foothold either In St. Quentln or in the territory Immediately to the north be tween the armies of General von Kluk and Von Uoehm has failed. As It Is considered essential that the German line bo broken there, additional rein forcements are being sent, and the bat tle continues without interruption day nnd night. Sir John French, the British field marshal, commanding the British forces, Is catling upon War Secretary Kitchener for moro men. If the Allied line could bo reinforced with 100.000 fresh men at this juncture It U be lieved that the battle would see Its conclusion within AS hours. That the Kaiser personally It direct ing the offensive movements of the German army In Franco was the be lief expressed today at the hoaduqar tcrs of General Galllenl, French Mili tary Governor of Paris. Evidence that the Government holds the same opinion Is contained In the following sentence of the oftlcial statement issued last night: These (German) attacks were made with a uniformity which denote In structions from the highest command to seek the solution of the battle." Thus it would seem, for the time being, the German Emperor has as sumed the task of his General Staff. That the losses arc growing heavier, due to the tncrcase.1 ferocity of the nt tacks. Is shown by the greater numbers of wounded that are being brought from the battle ground. Especially heavy aro the losses on the Olse. Alsne and Somme Ktvers, where the French are trying to encircle General von Kluk's army and are meeting with violent counter attacks. It is impossible to estimate the stag gering loss of life that has resulted in the present contllct, but it is unoffi cially estimated that the Germans have lost 200,000 men in killed, wounded a'.id captured since they Invaded France. The desperate olforts of the Germans to smash the allied line indicates that they are endeavoring to conclude the engagement before England can send another urmy to reinforce the Allies. It Is reported front the front that an epidemic of typhoid fever has broken out in the German army and that thou sands of soldiers are in the army hos pitals suffering from this disease or from measles or dysentery. The troops, worn to the point of exhaustion by the continuous fighting and marching, fell easy victims to disease when subjected to the Inclement weather which has been prevailing'. The battle continues to rage day and night When the soldi rs are not under rifle fire, they aro fating the hall trom machine guns. When they are not in machine gun range, they aro under bombardment from artillery and howit zers. Some of the troops have I under Are continuously for more than 3(10 hours, and the only sleep they have been able to get Is snatched in the trenches while artillery i" crashing around them and bullets an; humming j overhead Both sides have all thur forces en gaged. The only means of strengthen ing weak points on the battle line Is by moving troops from some other point of tho front. It seems Inevitable one or tho other of tho armies must break under tho terrific strain. This week, the third of the fighting, surely will see tho tide of victory swing to one side or the other. At tho eastern end of the battle front, vv here, It Is generally believed, the Ger mans havo managed to secure a foot hold on tho west side of the Mouse, south of Verdun, tho Invaders are struggling most vigorously to swing their line to tho northwest and thus fonn a complete circle of steel around Verdun nnd Its forts. Still farther to the west along tho Alsne and up tho Olse there is con stant fighting. Tho bloodiest struggle, however, Is taking place In the triangle formed by the townfi of Hlbecourt, Bapaume nnd Illrson. Wounded soldiers from tho front de clare that the people at large can have no conception of the tremendous naturo of the war operations. The meagre of ficial bulletins convey only a feeble Idea of tho vastness and violence of tho struggle. The strain of this modern fighting Is something never known before, and this conflict probably will go down In history ns tho longest battle known to mankind. At every point where the hostile lines are within seven miles of each othei. tho troops are under continual fire Pome times troops lie In their wet, cold muddy trenches for days under fire from an enemy that cannot be seen. The enemv's right wing is not only strongly intrenched. It is stated, but he has constructed almost impregnable barricades of barbed wire, saplings and iron bars Intertwined with tho trees growing In the road and at the sides of the fields. These are all commanded not only by field artillery, but by rapid fire guns and can be attacked by the Allies under cover of darkness only. The International public has an Im perfect Idea of the colossal nature of tho operations. The vast number of men engaged, the tremendous area of the operations, the fierceness of tho attacks and counter .attacks, the ter rific bombardments and the reckless dash and bravery are not realized; tho exhaustion of tho troops; the suffering from wet, cold weather and lack of provisions are not fully appreciated. This greatest battle in the world's history Is being carried on by veterans who are hungry and emaciated Most of them are feeling the effect, In one way or another, from two weeks of fierce fighting, coming on the top of a 200-mllo march The itraln of being under fire constantly, with the mighty guns of Germany's heaviest ordnanca ringing In their ears, has completed changed the nature of the men. They are hardened to blood and carnage and the danger o' iVath, which is al wavs at hand, is an inconslderaf trifle armies nV . OT . wwves, "JfiS rTx.. ;--' ' fg RWS TO MON 7S M. OA1WAS fOBOOCMif V ! A J AMIENS, 5vvRmyR1i OY.' IdejTj . 'i a ol , h 1.8$ A1 v-r TMr-rSfe" WtWEMTtSf ffi '' .' -.iteffiW i J& J f. N J- V S"5 VAVtHCOVRT XLJs fy I1 " ' " ' The new German battle line in the a-jutheast, near the Verdun-Toul line of forts, runs from St. Mihiel, where they crossed the Meusc, past Dompiene, reoccupied by the French, to the northwest 'f Pont-a-Mousson. In the centre the French have repulsed their offensive at Berru, near Rhcims, regained Berry-au-Bac, north of the Alsne, and while von Kluk has pushed in near Noyon, and Ribecourt, over the Oise, the French claim to have made gains along the Oise, north of the Aisne and near the Somme, and even north of it in the St. Quentin, Peronne, Bapaume region. GERMANS HOLD POINT WEST OF MEUSE, BERLIN STATES Bnnux. sen :s. While ' 11 maintaining tho position that thero havo been no really decisive changes at any part of tiw liS.mlle battle lino, tho report of the German General Staff today is a trifle more op timistic than anything Issued since the battle of the Alsne began. It stated that thero have been dis tinct gains by the German centre, which has driven the enemy back with man line It ofllcially is stated that at no point has liu been successful, whI at a number t points the German- have " ivnncid their lines. Attempts on the part o' tho Belgians to make a. successful sortie from Ant werp hav been frustratc-l and many prisoners and an armored car Uuv been taken. Th olllclal statement follows "The offennlvo movement of "'ir heavy losses. Tho armies operating j troops continues without severe checii through Varennes na- succeeded in , Heavy lorsos havo been Indicted upon j the onemy by our bayonet churges and they have had to bring up their re serves to strengthen their lines. "At tho eastern end" of the battle line, our artillery has silenced part f the forts on the Ver4un-Toul Uno and v havo sue. ded in crossing tho ii'-um-The passage u bclns sharply resisted "In t' centra we continue to jhUii, despite the er mi's heavy artillery Ire, which is nu' hu.vins better aim. "On tho wet we hove held all the ground we gained, though tho onemy has rectived large reinforcements and is making counter attacks These, however, havo been repulsed-" forcing the French back on Clermont-en-Airo and o.i Si Jlennehould and now held the mat . highways ana the rail road lines in that vicinity On tho igfcts of the M we the Oer mans continue to maintair tlHir -td-vantago and ore in strength on tht west bank of the river. The bombard ment of tho TV ts soi t Ver dun continues with percei tlble success, according to the General tt . the German right it is seated that the fighting Is of the i. ,t bitter char a tcr. with the enemy plainly throwing all of his avi.i' ilo force into the fight Jn th effort to break through the Gr- MONS BURNING, IS REPORT THAT THRILLS GREAT BRITAIN MJXDON. Sept 1 Sixteen days of fighting, f- urteen in the battle of the Aisne and two in a rear guard action, have failed to brm deceive victory to either side in France Thin was officially admitted at the War Office today, coupled with the Btatement, however, that all of the ad vantage remains with the Allies While the censorship U more strict than at any time since the opening of hostilities, it Is explained that there are certain eviaencetjfeepeeially on the cMmv teftf that w Germans -e u irmiiiniiiHlMi iniimi ii weakening The Allies have been heav ily reinforced and are subjecting tho forces of Von lSoehm and Von Kluk to uern pressure along the line from Sols. ns north to Mans. In this connection a, report tele graphed from Qstend that Mons was burning create! a sensation here to day It is at Mens that General von Boehm established his headquarters when he started south from Brussels n 1th the main army that was operating in Belgium. Ills army was assigned to prevent Von Kluk being outflanked by the French army, operating frpm the northwest, presumably Boulogne, where it had been gathered to support a new Biltlsh force, tho details of which are still withheld from tho public. If It is truo that Mons actually is Miming, it may mean that tho British I'lench armies are in stiong force and huve raided the German communica tlcns far north of tho point whero up to the present any fighting has been reported The English people aro plac- q great ho- s on this report but it Is not confirmed from any source that carries official weight, nnd Ostend for the last few davs has been n most un reliable rumor factory. Moie significant than anything else, however, ate the clrcumstnntlal reports received hero from Belgium fources that an epidemic of typhoid and allied diseases has broken out In the ranks of the Gorman aimy. and that their horses ate suffering from glanders. BRITISH TAKE GUNS AFTER CHARGES ON FIRE-SWEPT BRIDGE JAPANESE DEFEAT GERMANS IN LONG KIAO-CHAU BATTLE Concealed German Batteries Make Huge Gaps in Lines, But Bayonet Wins Skirmish. PATHS, Sept 2S. In tho recent fighting on the Aisne, where the British managed to socuru a foothold on the northern clde nfter a ter rible struggle, the British Guard Hoops These reports came from so many achieved a glorious fcut of arms. Tlicy Tokio Reports Fortress at Tsing-Tao on Point of Surrender Kaiser' Forces Abandon Mines. sources that thy nre generally cred ited. The worst cases are in tho vallej of th Dendu Itlver, near Teirmnde, vv'ierr It Is rcr-orted TOO men have i' rndy dud of tyrhold and other Infec tious d'i aes. T''" milifrv exports siv th-' dlsoas" irt bo tvrf,ul at this time now- that the war h h bren in wfiks The rivers of Belgium and Truncp have bef n utilized by both sides to gt tid of dead men whero there va mi tun" to bury thi-m. Then tho cold raliib. wi.ieh have now piovailcd Tor more thun two wpeks, hav added to Ui- dim ulty of gathf-rlng the wounded M-iny bodies remain unburled. putrefy ing In the water sheds of '" - rlvrs The' sutff ring of tho wounded as tho r su't r he weather conditions is frnr fjl Thoip who cannot drag them selves t'i plncts of shelter simply die vhei-'- thev fa'l. as rneumonln fol'nws in nrfrlv ovcry Instnnco. In ad iiMmj wrundf t"1 ordinnrllv would le c'nn now get mini with mud, and Infection fo"nw as o matter of course. In tMs rFpot It is stated that tho Germans have suffered far moie than thf Brltli-b or Trench, who havo main tained tbir fit Id hospitals at full strength nnd h ivr ruMied their wu mi ni well bit" the south Immediately nfter first aid has In en applied TOKIO, Sept. 28. It is otlleially announced that the Japanese have defeated the Germans It a stubborn buttle lasting II hours on the outsklits of Tslng-tjo, fieat of tho gov- i eminent of the German based poasesulon were thrown across a pontoon bililge I of Kiao-Cbau, China. ZEPPEUNS ROMBERG MWY CITIES. INCLUDING PARIS Aged M-n in French Cltv nnd Three Belgian Soldiers Killed. PABIS Sept IT A airman aeroplane llfcw over Paris yesterday and droppud five bombs. One fell at i lie intern ctlon of the Avcnuo du Trotadero and tho Rue I'revclnet. only a blocK from the American Umbassy, at & Huo d i'halllot, killing a man and ertpplins a 'hild Three landed in dif ferent streets in the Trocidero nua.ter, i tlc uher man Americans have their homes, and the fifth fell into the liuis du iiologne Only ten minute before tho bomb fell In the Avenue du Trocadera Mr. Herrlek, the An.c-rnjo Ambassador, had motored past the pot An aged laer and Ills oung grarul dauhur, ivalkltif hand-inband a'ong the avenue, were struek down by frag ments of the explodng bomb. The aged man vtas dtcapitated ad his body was terribly riddled, while the little gill lay bes.de his body with both her legs prac tlially ieered utovo the knee Zeiiliei.nu visited Wart.,m ami six Bel gian tottn alo, 41 cord ns to reports re eelved here Three so.dlers were- killed at Antueip, and llu ma luii. iii.it ;uiu i over Alost Ghent, D nzv, .Mini.bek and ftollorfhem in Uel.-ium. fatally injured one man. which a)I)ers bad constructed under tire, out no sooner had they reached the- up per bank than thu German nitillciy, which occupied a coneealed position, opened fire and the shrapnel besan bun.t inc nmoiiK the- Hoop?. B fo-o tho British troops lay a strutch IirofiTf'Hs iRl't i of open countrj about u mile wide At j Itc edge was a patch of woods which oMonded to the top of somn hlllc, on tho erest of w'lleh tho German aitillery vtib i In action. Thi oidT w-ns Given to eharno ' and. with tho Soots Givh leatllni,'. the Hritisli ehared uealnst the Germans Thft MttacUois iiiunni;(d to avoid the barbed wire rntaiiKl'iuents. but they bod to fae a blasting llro white cross InK tho open strntoh. Tho Get man sheiu, bursting wlta drad'y regularity, ffll on every part of the Ilritlhli lines. Juit beforo reaching the forest the German machine nuns wro turned on tho liritlah. With fixed haoti!tb the Kuards swept forward le-avini; loni; trail of dead and wounded In their wake. Shouting their battle iy they tell upon the German position Lmjonetlnc tho ijunnors Within less than 10 mluutei of hand-to-hand ftKht-Int- the Ilritiiib eaptured six curis. While tho British wero charirmB, tho heav est of the nuns weio smashing anay at tho pontoon bridge and toon it was destroyed When the British eaptured the six guns they were comi e.Ied to retro for re. lnfortcmenth The pootojii bridge was repaired, but sunn the German artillery uga'n splintered It Then aviators wore ibe to locate tho hidden batteries of the ii dden Geiman guns and they were soon u.lemed Great flocks of earrlo i birds hover over the battlefields where many corpees He. unbailed These vultures have bueoinu mi unturned to tho roar of the artillery and are not frightened away from their rue.omc feasting of the thundei of tlu -uns. J'rivato Moss, of tho rir'ttab Bursars, who is In a hospital hero te Is of crawl ing across tho woods und fields, after bo uus shot, until bo eamu to a big ehatcau upon which Amt-ruan and Bed Cross llas eie liylr.g 1 crawled Inside where I found one of big danemg rooms fixed up liko a Jia-j - Mfc.j I MOUNTED WOMEN TO FIGHT Russian Sportswoman Gets Permis sion to Organize Regiment. PKTOOOHAU, ept M Permluion to lecruit a regiment of mounted women for service against the German has been asked of the Koverpment'' by Mine. Yurleva. a well-known sportswoman. hoEpital,' said Mots, "and helped myself to some bandages. "Sly wound bad been caused by a rlflo bullet and. liko many such wounds, had been partly cauterized by the bullet. I b.-ilt-ve that the chateau was ownd b ..n Amerlean I a'ned C Mitchell De-new I was might) thankful for the shelter, out Kish that Mi liepow had left the larder more greatly filled than It was " A detachment of German soldiers had ridden up to the ehiteau hile Mss was biding in a room In the plate, but they soon rode away without doln any damage. Mos th nks that they were Im sreseed b the American Hag I The Japanese cnsualtb s so far as ascer tained are given as, thieo kllle-d and 12 I woui dod. The German casualties are said i to be H12. Accoiding to the titatemont, tho fight began on September M. German gun boats bombaidcd the positions of the Japanese troop". Japanese aeroplanes proved effeetlve in leconnoltilng rxpidl tlnns and ntc reported to have escaped unharmed. Tho morale of tho Geiman defending" force at Kluo-Chau Is on the wane, It Is reported here, pome of thu soldiers have deseited, escaping by loud or sea. Through them It Is learned that, de ep! tc tho deteimlmitlon of thu Governor of Klao-Chau to light to the last, the party whleh advocates timely surrender 19 nsgeitlng lt&olf. It has lound Its do fenders even among high olllclnls of the army. Some of theso advocates of sut lendir hav been shot, whllo many havo been s-nt to tho first line of defenpe The- Geiman flying machine" huvo been damaged and can no longer se-tvo a use ful purpone. The food supply ts cut off I by the stilet blockade of the Japanese navy and U ilally dimlnluhlng Whatever ' is replenished comes only thiough tho smuggling of I'hiiicsa Junks Tin, Kimnlv ' of materials for tho making of bread (s aim biopped consequently the output is greatly restricted. Scurvy Is gradually Increasing As tho British troops havo landed and joined thu Japanese army, it id expeeted that the general assault on tho fortreta will toon commence. I'BKI.V. fnpt 23. It Is barnrd from, Wtl-hslen, in Khan tuns ti'at h Kttond detachment of Japan ese troops arrived thr m -undown on .Saturday with 15 cart loads of ammunition oud supplies Other troopn ! a va- t'd wtht along the tallwav and n . l ungtse, c hero tin- Gi rmans flooded th l mines before their depaittuo. All the Chinese mu eis fled Tho American mlrs'an Is crowded with women of nil elas&es from th city mid country districts. The ure wild by tlu iorjopondciit at Wel-ifilen to fear both the Japanese and the Chinese soldiers, IJNimv, gent 27 All agency dispatch from I'vkln says it is cilllelally nnuoiir.ced there tlmt Pel ho was oecupled cm September W by a umall J ipineso detuebmont, which re pulsed W German. RUSSIAN CRUISER WRECKED Oleg, With Contingent of 573, Suf fers Disaster Off Finland. STOCKHOLM, bei.t 28 The Husslan cruisei oleg is reported to have been wrt-tked off the .uat of Finland ac -eord ng to tho captain of a Swedish ship aiming from IkUuigfors The Oleg was In Asiatic waters during tho Russo-Japanese war She was laid down In 1901 and bad a displacement of 695. Her Crew number 673. RUSSIAN "STEAM ROLLER" CRUSHES FOES IN GALICIA Austrian Third Line of De fense Routed as Czar's Troops Reach Tarnow and Seize Carpathian Passes. BRITISH BURN GERMAN TOWN ON ISLAND OF YAP Warships Bombard Lti, in Caroline Group W:i-e!eb- Wrecked. MANII. Sent 2 llrltl.'h vv trMiipa have botnl. irdtd the town of I..il on tlu- li-l.nul of Vap In tho Caroline group. de-trod the German wireles station there and burned the town, according to reports received here through Ueruiun tources JAPAN GUARDS COAL SUPPLY MANILA Stpt 2K The Japanese Gov ernment baa Instructed Jupaucvo coal dealers In Manila not to sell coal with out receiving a bond for twice Us valuu and to Insist upon a Consular Inspection. Its action was caused by reports that German vessels have been loading tcoal here to supply German war vessels Jft)he Pacific: Pm'IlOGItAI), Hept. 2S. The Austrian tioops have been routed fiom theli third lino of defense In Gallcla. The ltu'slani are approaching Tarnow. only GO miles fiom Cuicow, and have also captuied Uizok and riavtana, Hungarian town on tho southern Mope of the C.11 pnthtan Mountains. They have captured the town ot 1'remysl at tho point of their bujouets, but tho garrisons of home of tho forts theio continue to bold out. This news is given In .1 statement Issued by the Gem rat .Staff loduy. It shows that tho Itussl.in ste-am roller is progressing with amazing rapidity and that only a btili" defen-e at Ciucow and along thu lino from f.ieio to Thorn, Hunt Prussia, can prevent tho I'.usidnn tumles from being well on tlulr way to Heilln vvtlhin a very short time The Genual Ptaff is lu-shiug the uiiiij for. in id with all pi s hlble haute, hoping to avoid a winter cam paign for tho capture of the German cap! tab Tho Hussions nr lodav in foico at Tarnow. Although they aie uiiible to move with the gieat I'pud Minn 11 In the early days of tho Gallclau 01 uratloiiM, In eatise of tho swollen ilvr and marshy condition of tho territory through which tho nrniy is ndvanc-lng. the Itussian forces 1110 declared in today's War Ollleo report to be making steady progress Tho Itusslans are moving Meadl'y for ward In four sepa a'o moveinenti. The bombardment of I'rzeniysl continues with ono of tho main forts alteaily reported ob occupied by tho Kussbiiis It Ii stated hero that tho rtusslans havo again taken it number of guns and thnt tho Cossacks aro cutting to pieces tho rnr guard of tho retreating Auitilans. Through tho p.ias nt Uzsok troops are pouring upon the plains of Hungary to btrlke tho Vusttlanu In tho ic ir and e-i t oft communication between Kusuheiu and Cracow. At I'jtsok ami Sxnvtana. vvh 1 h lies neir thu hourco of tin iiver I'ng the Italians e.iptured tin, ty guns, i'Ai prisoners, many rupld-llreiH nnd laige tuai titles of ammunition ami suppl'es l'nrt of the forces under O "rierul Von Coliad at Prztmysl succeeded In tutting thciit way thiough the Itimsian lines west of that fortress in an attempted re treat, but they were purud by Inrge forces of CoPNicks and suffered terrible lotses. la).- tho olllc-ial repoit Home of the Austrian U(cedeil In reaching Jaulow and jo nlng otUir forees there but they lost every gun tbut they at tempted to take with them ALLIES' ADRIATIC FLEET REPULSED, SAYS VIENNA Ctttaio Forts Inflict Heavy Damage nnd Toice Wlthtltawal, MI.NSA. Feut ii Tho Trench and linn h w unships that attempted to bomh.ud Cutiuio have suf fered heavy damages nd been forcca t withdraw, according to n dispute li re ceived from Lieutenant I'ic-ld Muishut Navak, commander of tho Austrian troups In Dalmatla. He stales thnt little damage wa douo to the liularo foils by lu ullj, , Uec-tn the, but ti a, when th enemy sailed ua heavy tnu ke nus lUmg fiom I vo -hl a nilicatlng that llu-y buel Uc.u kit on lire. the Austrian licet has betn concentrated at Tola and will soon nail to giv-tt battle to the allltel llect lotrtto fuicoa of troops also have been gathered there Thom.-ii the belief irtvalls heie that Italy u-lll mulntaln h, 1 iirutialit ittn oi.-iuutluii is beini, t.iKt-11 tu ,i v.iii a sulittn la vaaloli This is tho ieta- 11 im tne con centratloit ot ti.'.i at Tuia It is ann mnred that spoitedlc attempts by the Huu-sians to get through the Hun garian pauses hava been it pulsed and that the campaign against Servla Is pro ceedlng succostully. GERMAN SHRAPNEL ' SHELLS TERMONDE ' AND NEARBY TOWS j Belgians Retire in Good Order Under Withering- Fire Artillery Spares Oinrrlip; 1 ies. FROM CHAHLES HUDSON TEHMONDE, Hept 5?. ioo oiuy uuiiio on in ueigium on Salur. i u.iy ua soucn 01 xcimonele, whore th ut"""" neneu 1110 HClglatls. f .00 i e.gians ,lc.d their BrounJ tenaciously tinder a beaw. wn..n...... t " "" unction fi llro and then retired steadily throwhrti ..uUSI .uwaru icrmoiidc, comnlatinsi their lotlremcnt at midday. Two hun. I drcd shrapnel shells felt in tho villas, I reached Tcrmondo nt 10 o'clock Sat. unlay morning nnd paced through th. 1 .meee.eu cowii, into which tho acrtnaiij " occasionally sent a howitzer shell. 1 I proceeded toward Audcgm at 10-a I o'clock nnd watched tho German gun. tiei s achieve their object of shattering ' tho tower of tho church nt Audegn On. 1 moment the spire was shrouded In whllo . smoke, the next moment It had dlsau- lu".!.0 B "0l"'"ff but a dec"P A mile and a quarter this side of Au. 1 degm tho Uelglnns faced about at i o clock, when reinforcements h,, ! nrrlvo. An armored motnrene. r... V mounted gendarmes nnd 0110 or two ex. ' iiiovllinn'r"y' b0W cycllsls ventu-cd Into 'l Following these I reached tho farina lo or Audcgm. Hero tho motor caught six Germans napping-. Its mitrailleuse rf lealt faithfully with them at n distance' of 500 yards. 11 It appeared that tho Gorman forces '' contented themselves with approaching j? the outskirts of Audcgm This Informa-1' tlon. given by a pcupant, was connrmed f by tho fact that the pockets of dead ' Belgians lying thero bad been cut out '' and nil their valuables taken. This both " Grant, Dalley and I saw. ' ; ii SHOTS FILL, STREETS. enc roau tniougli tho village wai - strewn thick with shrapnel. I picked up j n double handful In less than M yardj. ,i Tho German gunners bad evidently so- n cured tho tango to an Inch. It Is mar-" vclolis that tho Belgians escaped so lightly. Hardly had tho Geimans disappeared than many villagers began to appear ' cautiously In the streets, collecting frag- meiits of shell and shrapnel balls They ( were a phlegmatic as tho Belgian , soldiers, who uro imperturbablo In all ' circumstances. Poon after the motor car and Its mltralllLU.se had talked sharply to the Germans, the llelg'ans made an advance ' In forco on tho right A regiment of J lancers galloped through a Held to a ' position west of Wespelaars It was -suppuitod ns quickly as possible by In- fantry, while an Infantry attack, sup- ' ported by aitillery, developed against T Wespelaars ltself. Tho range was very short and the bat ' tory thoroughly searched tho village, ' cniefully avoiding tho rather fine church ' towering over the cluster of little houses. We could bear tho crash of shrapnel on tho ted tiled roofs. For n few- minutes Wespelaars disappeared, then reappeared momenta! Ily In the whito clouds of smoke. In tho face of the terrific ball the Ger man resistance was feeble, but behind Wcstpclaurs was a thick woodland hiding Lubbeko fiom view, l.cbbeko was known to bo Mrongly occupied by tho Germans. Sunset, too, was approaching. Content, apparently, with the ground they had won, which was no Inconsider able area, tho Belgians left tho Germans undisturbed, to send an occasional shell Into Termondc. FEATl'RES Or FIGHTING Two distinct features of tho flghtlnf weio impressive to tho spectator Thu contest was amost exclusively b shrapnel. The Germans attained a tern, porary success by Its uso and the Del glans won their victory by Its aid nlflcs played a small purt in tho all-day con. Illet The other feature was tho uncanny sIIcikc Fiom the moment tho Belgians eenstd re ti eating to tho time their at tack opened on Wetpelaar it was almost, disconcerting, although It was an osreo's ablo nsation fiom ono vlowpolnt. ' As a consertuenco of tho lack of ambu-( lances, tho thice motorcars nnd tho news paper i-orirspondent presont were able to under consldeiable assistance to the Beb giuii wounded. On ur leturu to Antwerp wo learned that tho Belgians bad retaken Alost, 15 miles w'st and n llttlo north of Druttels, nt the point of the bayonet and with great gallantry. This wus u seilous blow- to tlw Got mans nnd similar successes appear along the whole Helglau lino. BOSNIANS JOIN SERB FORCE AS ADVANCE NEARS CAPITAL 300,000 Austrlnns Repulsed In Heavy Fighting Along Drina. N'li-H, Scivla, Sept -'S , In an official statement lulled toda tin Servian Gov ei nine nt claims to have oa arothor decisive VlctoiJ along tin i'riii illvor over aui.o-ej Aubtilan Tho advunctt against Saiujevo, the cen if the asass nation of Aicliduki I 1 il Feidlnnnd. heir to the Aiintilnn th one. 0111I his wile, la contiinuug sue, 1 i-s-full. the liove-rnniont sajt. 1 hi illl i -Sl ' "1 .aid llonteiii-grin armies have nacliea Itome-nla plateau, about .'0 mihs .jst ui Sarajevo. JIanv male Inhabitants of i..siua ' tilan territory arc Joining th. v,,,w',' army of Invasion, be.-ause ,.f 1 '' '" lelatloiiMlip with the .S'levn -i' The bombardment of lielnu.le 1 '" ' ties, with dunago to th. pi " '" Austilans teom to have c". nirav their llro against the mvul ichidn" Tlu rtevlans have lost imun "" battle In thu mountain pusi' (.'Uio- of Kurpanl. The olllclal statement k.iv "Tlie liulttlo began tome time .u, "" a front estiiulluv tluoiit.li Zv.nnh ' zuitsa. Mitrovltw and .Sh.ion- '- ' a ui ATitb a elecUive Seivlan vUloi ' Austriuns. WlW uro rc'reutln, ' ' ' " miiia The eni-m lias att. inpi- 1 l"" 1 u C 1. ...... It. ll 1 11.1. .J lliv eioei e jji veu i,k... .--..., "Thu aiivutice: suaid of ih Si l n.i w. h ittr, e..tuj ni.ittbin. oil -- Imve leaulud tho plaieau of K" J Th- whole tuoiniani popui m c 111 ng 1 i.r advance with 1 lb SKiiit IIumiiuii iiicii ale enii-tiiib sn nnn to att BELGIANS llTTAWA Out Sept 21 -l'a icli Jj send V0'. as its Initiul contri 't""l ' aid of the war sufferers in Vr cl "" , . money will bo turned over t t" fund, and may be increased later, frtFTfflwnwaBaBaffl . -r i--" fc mbmtJtMiatJiAdmm inlifffifiiintirte i.Mmiet! tmmdmtmmttmkmimmmm ffiIT-riT"'-E ht- - --