fStfBtWwvV wwwmwMwwflpwWMJiwBiWippwsmP .fll EVENING LEDGElPHIIiADELPHIA SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, Mi. u y .a fip ,3 ' M i ft1 i : V, i 'i P h j Ii t v it ., ,' I 'i i U r: h ALLIES IMPERILED BY Continued (mm bate One mans to form a Junction of the army of Met with thnt of tho German Crown rFrlnce, which was pushed southeastward from the Argonno district, but the French wero able to prevent this. The French realize that the forts de fendlns Verdun could not stand before the mighty runs of the German army, despite tho fact that the works are the stronpest In France. Consequently the French are making desperate efforts to prevent the Germans from getting a foothold within artillery range of these W orks. Some of the outer works already have ffillcn, but the Germans are beyond range of the Inner and more Important fort resses. Tint section of the beautiful valley of the Mouse Is a desolate, blackened waste. Hamlets and magnificent country estates aro In ruins: forts have been burned or raked nlth shell (Ire; farms havo been ALLIES' LEFT IN PERIL, BERLIN ANNOUNCES BEHUN, Oct. 24. . Elx hundred thousand fresh troops havo reinforced the German armies along the Franco-Belgian front It Is the Inten tion of the German General Staff to force the conflict thero to a conclusion as quick ly as possible and all available forces are being brought Into action to break the Allies' lines. ' It was announced early today that the ' German forces had made gains In the i fighting between I.llle and Arra, and that they had driven a wedge toward Lens and La Bassee (respectively 16 and 13 miles southwest of Lltle) that threatens to cut off the troops forming tho extreme left wing of the Allies. , "The battle between N'leuport and Dlx mude," tho statement continues, "Is still raging violently Our artillery has been brought Into action and Is shelling the j enemy heavily. The Allied troops havo made a number of bayonet charges, but I tho German lines havo been maintained I at all Important points. I "Zeppelin airships are co-operating with ' our troops and are proving Invaluablo In giving the location of the enemy. "Our troops farther east are drawing more closely around Verdun. The fight ing there Is most severe, the Germans engaging the enemy In hand-to-hand I combats as we advance. The sorties i ZEPPELINS MAKE ATTACK ON FLEET, LONDON HEARS IONDOr. Oct. 21. Reports from half a dozen sources de claro that German aircraft, at least one Zeppelin and several armored aeroplane are attempting to disable or Hlnk the units of the combined squadrons of moni tors off the French nnd Belgian coast. Rumors that some warships havo been disabled are without official confirmation The Geiman fleet is also showing signs of activity. It Is reported that scout cruisets have been sighted operating from Heligoland, while Holland points report thnt all of the crews have been recalled to the big warships anchored In Wllhelm shaven and Kiel harbor under tho guns of the forts Tho battle in northern Belgium has wervcd Inland from the coast. The de a, MUTINY HAMPERS MISSION OF MERCY OF RED CROSS SHIP i; Three of Crew in Irons v When Vessel Docks in .' ' New York Defective En- ! gines Delayed Voyage. i NEW YORK. Oct. 24.-The American "mercy ship," the Red Cross, arrived back from her trip to war ports today with three of her mixed American crew In Irons, held under mutiny charges and with refugees aboard her bearing a re markable story of riots and disorders aboard the vessel. The "strictly American crew" aboard the vessel, of whites and Negroes, gave trouble- soon after the ship left New York a month ago. Many had obtained liquor. Some of the engine room em ployes threw wrenches and other Imple ments overboard. A party of Negroes broke Into the pantry and stole all the chickens there. The Are fighting and re frigerating apparatus was put out of order. Pitched battles on the vessel's deck between factions of the crew were frequent. The master-at-arms was as saulted by two of the crew while the Red Cross was at Rotterdam. On the Red Cross were 143 adults, 13 children and one Infant, all fugitives from the war zone. The bad cundltlon of the machinery of the. Red Cross probably will be, made the subject of an investigation by the Red Cross Society. The Red Cross, formerly the transatlan tic liner Hamburg, sailed from New York on September 13, carrying surgeons, nurses and medical supplies for the soldiers Hounded in the European war Her east ern trip was seriously delayed through many Imperfections In machinery. On the western trip she left Rotterdam on October 12. taking 12 full days to com plete the voyage. GERMANS, FEARING ARREST, APPEAL TO U. S. CONSUL Activity of London Authorities Causes Consternation Among Aliens. LONDON, Oct 24. In consequence, of the activity of the authorities In arresting all Germans of military age. Robert P Skinner, Amer ican Consul General, who Is with the embassy to look after German Interests, Is besieged by Germans who desire to avoid arrest. In nearly all cases It is impossible for the Consul to take any aatlon a to Germans and Austrian sub let to arrest if the local regulations require it. Though expresslnr general satisfaction with the result of the police crusad against Germans in England, tho Eve- X nlas News says it feels that ths higher- ? V " aUn nm'M being skipped. Orave. a Evening News makes the further Tenderer "h tht German employment agencies lamdenf ar, aiigwed to select the servants ir the d yed th English officers' mess V"av S wl n t.traialmr camps. GERMAN RUSH devastated; vineyards have been torn up. The countryside Is dotted with old and new earthworks and redoubts, and de serted houses mark the hlghwajs. Ithclms has been blasted nnd blackened by lire and shrapnel There I scarcely a building In the magnificent city which docs not bear the pock mark of shells. Nearly all the residents havo lied The streets are filled with debris, dead car casses of horses nnd here and there a human corpse Hungry dogs skulk through the ruins. There Is a sickening smell that rises like a miasma from tho dreary ruins. The Clcrtnuns along their centre, north west and east of Hhelms. arc allowed no ret from the steady pressure of the French It Is true that the French nto not trjlng to advance, owing to the de bacle of death which would Inevitably result In attempts to take the strong German works, no matter whether these attempts were successful or not. made by the French troops In their at tempts to check our advance have been repulsed with heavy losses. ' t'nofWcial reports state that Hmpcror Itllam and the German General Staff have established their headquarters at Mezlerea ion the Meusc Itlver In France, a few miles from the historic field of s?o dap), but the War Office mnlntalus Its ciistoninry reticence as to the iiheie abouts of the Knlscr. Other reports, unconfirmed at the War Office, say that the fortrcs of Belfort Is being succesfully bombarded nnd that tho southern defenses of that city have been taken. These reports are not gen erally credited In well-informed circles, but they have caused great enthusiasm among the populace which remembers that Belfort was the last French strong hold to yield In the Franco-Prussian Wnr The German newspapers nro unanimous In denouncing the action of the British Government In closing tho Suez Cannl to ships of nations at war with Knglnnd They assert that the Suez Canal agree ment provides that the waterway shall be open to merchantmen nnd warships of all nations cither In peace or war. The Tageblatt declares that this Brit ish notion Is only another revelation of "the manner In which England falls to carry out her agreements." It also hints that this will be remembered In the day of reckoning that will follow tho Geiman triumph feat of the German lolumn which at tempted to pus-h to Dunkirk and the losses suffered at Mlddelkerke and Xiou port from the guns of the English and French war vessels hac ended tho ef fort at a final turning movement around the Allies' left on the north. The fighting now Is believed to be 23 or SO miles back from the sea. Tho Allies, who now hold both Routers nnd I'ourtrnI, hav driven the Kaiser's troops fiom the Intervening territory and are advancing along the general lines of the River L,vs and the rallioad from Dunkirk to Ghent. A dispatch from Sluls iIYEcluzi. in Zeeland, says that heavy cannon tiring Is head from acioss the Belgian border this morning In the direction of Hcloo, half wa hetwoen Bruges and Ghent. The cannonading Is apparentlv closer to the border than It was vesterdav RUSSIANS PRESSING DEFEATED GERMANS BACK TO FRONTIERS Rout on Vistula Opens Way for Resumption of Forward Movements Against East Prussia and Silesia. PETROGRAD. Oct 21. The War Office today declared that the defeated German armies In Poland were atlll being driven back by the victorious Russian army Their losses are increari inglv large. Whole battalions havo been captured and many heavy cannon token. It Is Btnted that the entire route of the retreat Is littered with abandoned suns equipment, transports and dead and wounded Germans Th Russians have crossed th Vistula In force. It la believed here that the present operation marks another attempt on the part of the Russian army to start its general forward movement against the first line of the German frontier defense!. This cannot be carried into effect until a final decision Is reached in the battle now In progress In Gallcln, where the Austrlans, heavily reinforced by German and Hungarian troops, are assaulting the Russian positions with great violence Reinforcements have been sent to this portion of the line and every effort Is being made to crush the Austrian of fensive. More than t.IO.OOO Russians, Germans and Austrlans are now believed to be engaged along the irregular battle front extending from the Baltic Fea to south ern Gallcla No decision has yet been reached in this battle t" determine whether the Russian army will bo able to Invade Silesia and advance on Berlin before- the heavy snows of winter causa a halt In operations According to a dispatch received by the Novne Vremya from its correspondent with the Russian army, the Germans lost 60,0X) killed, wounded and prisoners In their attempt to cross the Vistula at Ivan gurod and in tho subsequent fighting west of that fortress when the Russians took the offensive and pursued the retreating Germans "The slaughter of the Germans was sickening," says the correspondent "Timo after time they charged forward in their attempt to capture the bridge, and aach time they were mowed down by the Rus sian artillery The Saxon troops led the German advance, and greater bravery has never been shown on tho battlefield than they revealed " Thu Bouts Gazette's correspondent with the army of General Rroussiloff sends the following "A battle has been In progress for eight days along the line from Sambor to Przemysl and Jaroglaw and north ward along the River San to the Vis tula. The Austrlans have been making fierce attacks, but these have been re pulsed. "The situation In general Is favorable for the Russians. The troops that gar risoned Jaroelaw after its capture were driven out by the Austrlans, but Gen eral BroufsllofT sent heavy reinforcement there and tho town was recaptured by tho Russians." COL. GREY SENT TO PKISON LONDON, Oct. U - Word has been re ceived that Colonel Grev tother of tho Drttlsh Foreign Secretai sir Edw.uU Grey, who was captund ai Paronne. when a British aeroplane was brought down by the Germans, has been sent to a prisoners' camp at Darmstadt, tast of the Rhine. AUSTRIANS STRIKE AT IVANGOROD; MOVE FORCES INTO POLAND Vienna Reports Defeat of Two Russian Divisons on Home Soil arid Repulse of Invaders in Galicia. VIENNA, Oct. 21. Defeat of two Russian divisions nt Ivangorod nnd the capture of more than 4600 prisoners by the Austrlnns are an nounced In an ofllclnl statement Issued hero today. The Austrian monitor Tcmes, which has been aiding In the operations ngnlnat the Servians, has been sunk by a mine in the Save River. "Our heavy artillery was especially active yesterday In the battle south of Przemysl," tan the statement, "and to day severe lighting developed on the banks of tho lower San, where, at several points, we allowed tho enemy to cross the river. Theso Russian torces havo now been etrongly nttnekert by our troops and pressed against the river. "At f.agor ("outhweit of Przemysl) wo onplureil more than 1(0 Russians. "Part of our troops suddenly appeared bcfirn Ivnncorod nnd defeated two Rus sian divisions We raptured 36X) pris oners one standard nnd 15 machine guns. GERMAN OUTPOSTS LACK PROVISIONS, BRITISH DECLARE Kaiser Commissariat Inade quate, Official Press Bu reau Slates, But Praises In vaders' Valor. IJNDON, Oct. 21 "The Rrltlsh troops nro inspired by the fnct that they are advancing, and that tho enemy Is giving way," says an of ficial nanntlve on the operations in Trance, Issued by the Government Press Bureau toda. This Is a continuation of the eyu witness stoty dated October 17, the first part of which was issued yester day. "Despite the severe fighting and the wet weather," sa.vs the story, "the troops are ht. The f.ict that we are advancing stead ily, and that the enemy is giving wnj has pro.ed most welcome and Ins-plrlng for those who experienced weoks of monotony In the trenches, whole they had to tndure continuous losseB." That the German commissariat Is fall ing to feed the Kaiser's forces properly is Indicated by the following statement in tho narrative: "Prisoners state their advanced troops are shnit of food and aro exhausted fiom continual outpost duty." As to commissary conditions In the British army, It Is stated there Is nu lack of good food. The repoit pays tribute to the fighting qualities, of the Germans, saying: "Mnn of the troops opposing us have hid only two months' service. Somf mm t.tnte that these men will not ex pose themselves In the trenches; never theless the enem on the front is nght ln.1 well nnd sk!l!full nnd Is showing considerable powers of endurance" The narrative then goes on to say: "The inhabitants of a small town wo recentlv occupied state that a large force of German civalrv was recently billeted In tho place, but letlred rapidly on the nights of October l'i and 14. They had CO) wounded and SS of these soldiers, who were In serious condition, were left be hind. Our troops found a letter in a building showing that tho Germans, con s'sting of Bavaiian cavalry, had occu pied the place for eight dayH. They did pot burn the town, but otherwise be haved in n way which merits the worst that could be said about them. "The Germans generally contrive, to re move their wounded and often bury their dead befor they ictlro from a position. "Wo found a number of the German cavalry patrols wearing Belgian uniforms. This lraetlce cannot be excused on the ground that tuc Gerriam ,-t k tmifnitrs of their own. it is undoubted. y a ruse. "On W-dnesdny a Instilo ncroplano was brought down b rifle and gun lire. Trie observer In the aeroplaim woro an Iron Cross, which, he said, hnd been bestowed upon him because he was the first to drop a bomb upon Antwerp. "Tho tendency of the Germans to rely upon their spl mild war materials with whlrh they have been so amply provided, rather than upon tho employment of masses of men, iwomes more marked," tho report says. "Thero nre now indica tions, Jiowever, that their supply of ma terials is. not inexhaustible as was at first thought The German forces aro by no megns what they were when fighting first began " The following incident of the battle Is reeited ' When a battery of German artillery was retiring ii British officer noticed ,i wire hdnging elose to the trunk of a tree Looking upward he sow a German scout seated amongst tho blanches. Both the Englishman nnd the German tired at each other simultaneously. Tho German fell from the tree, alighting upon the Eng lishman's head Tho British officer wns stunned and when he revived he found that the shot from the German's rifle had carried away the peak of his cap and that his uniform was saturated with the German's blood " AUSTRIAN MONITOR SUNK BY MINE IN RIVER SAVE Returning From Successful Action Temes Meets Disaster. VIENNA. Oct. ;i It Is now admitted that 33 members of the crew were lost when the Austrian river monitor Temes struck a mine in the Save River and sank The Turnes was 183 feet long, with a dls placement of 113 tonb, and her light draught, four feet, made her particularly valuable for river operations She was built In 1604 and was equipped with two 4 7-lneh guns forward and one 4.7 howitzer aft. as well us two machine guns. A cording to reports received here the Temts was, returning from a successful action d trains-1 the Servians when she struck the mine GERMAN AIRMAN OVER PARIS Souries Away, However, at Fire From Forts. PARIS on 21 -A German aeroplane new over the northern suburbs of Paris today but was fired upon by the forU gouthean of St Denis. It sped away toward the northwest, WAR OPERATIONS OF DAY FIND FOES IN DEADLOCK Two Campaigns in France, Each an 'Offensive, Show Gain and Setback of Contending Forces Winter Will Aid Czar's Movements in Russia. By J. W. T. MASON NEW YORK, Oct. 24 Tho conflicts In northern France nnd Belgium represent two distinct movements. In the Belgian area tho Gonuana nro fighting an offen sive battle, whllo tho Allies nro on tho defensive) In northern Franco tho Allies are trying to develop an offensive, while the Germans are resisting defensively. Tho Belgian bnttto Is not necessarily connected with tho military developments south of the French boundary, between Llllo nnd Arrns. Tho objcctlvo of tho German attack In Bolglum is the occu pation of tho Franco-Belgian 'coast, which commands tho crossings to England. Tho objcctlvo of tho German defense In north Franco Is tho protection of their nytln lines of supply running from Cologne nnd Alx-ln-Chapello through southern Bel gium nnd on, to tho southern battle front along tho Alsne. The Allies can check tho first German objective ns long as they prevent any nppreoiablo southern extension of tho battle lino now found In the vicinity of Ostend. The second German objective, however, Is not harmed If the Allies' efforts along the Llllo-Arras front result only In holding tho Germans to their present positions. Moderate advances by tho Allies In the neighborhood of Ostend nro of far less consequence to them than modernte ad vances from Arras, because Ostend Is a long distance from tho enemy's com munication. Similarly tho seizure of a few miles of additional territory by the Germans about Llllo and Arras Is of sec ondary Importance to tho Kaiser's strategy, compared with nn advance from Ostend, because tho Lille-Arras front Is so far from tho coast. What Infornntlon the contending forces havo Issued suggests that the Allies havo had to glvo a little ground about Llllo, whllo the Germans havo been driven bnck from the North Sea coast line. Thnt Is, each side has been unable to push for- vvaid Its offensive while the counter of-j tensive ot uotn nns neon moderately successful. These circumstances suggest an even match nnd mny Imply a repeti tion of the Indecisive icsults along tho Alsne. By AN ARMY EXPERT In addition to the active offensive of the united Russian armies against the Aiistro-German Invaders of Poland, the latter must cope with various strategic disadvantages, due to the bad roads, the persistent lnlns of this season, the al most Intolerable cold of the rapidly ap proaching winter, mid the inadequatb rail way facilities. The territory In which tho Kaiser's force la operating Is virtually Impassable for cavalry, and the defective transportation retards the conveyance of heavy artillery to the scene of action. Already the fortnight's battle along tho Vistula from Warsaw to Sandomlr has revealed tenacity nnd ability on the part ICE-CUTTING TUG PLANNED TO KEEP OPEN RUSSIAN PORT New Craft Arrives for Use in Arch angel Harbor. ARCHANGEL. Russia, Oct 21 The ice breaking tug Eail Gray, bought by Rus sia from tho Canadian Government for use In keeping this harbor freo of Ice has arrived. Archangel Is ordinarily closed to navi gation hv November 1. With tho uoe of the Ice breaker It Is believed that Rus sia's port on tho north villi bo available for navigation until after December 1. RUSSIAN ATTACKS REPULSED ON EAST PRUSSIAN FRONTIER Machine Guns Captured nt Augu3 towo, Berlin States. BERLIN. Oct. 21. Tho War Office has Issued the follow ing statement covering the East Prussia Poland campaign' "In the eastern theatre Rubslan attacks In tho region of Augustowo havo been repultod. Several machlno guns have been t.iken." Theio Is no deflnitii Information from the southeastern quaitcr, according to the ofllclnl statement. NOW Hudson 6 Seats 4 Price . o, b, IMMEDIATE Gomery-Schwartz Motor Car Co. 253-259 N, Broad Street FILBERT 2164 of the Russians as well as the dlfTlcult nature of tho country to be traversed. The mistake which Napoleon made con cerning tho Czar Alexander and his Rus sians In 1812 Is not likely to bo repeated by the German Emperor or his General Stnfr, yet It may be that they have so far Imitated the master tactician na to underrate the tenacity of tho Russian and misread the character of the Pole. Napoleon held out to the Polish people, who chafed at Russian rule, dnwllng ple nties of a free, self-governing Poland, nnd so swelled the ranks of his grand army before the disastrous advance upon Mos cow wn3 begun. It was from Napoleon that tho Toles received their first lesson In the nnclent Imperial game which Is best Illustrated by tho modern slang term of "the double cross." The Polos have, become distrustful of promises of foreign help, particularly since tho crushing of their revolt In 1S8I, and remember with resentment tho hos tile attitude of Russia at thnt time. While the passive hostility of the In habitants may not materially affect the armies of the Knlser when all Is going well with them and their continuity of front Is being maintained by tho suc cess of their offensive, woe betide them In adversity. Delay on the part of the Russians In pushing forward after gaining decided ad vantages along their tremendous battle front has been criticised widely. Slnco the dlnstcr nt Tannenbcrg, when a part of General Samsonoff's army was de stroyed the Russians have not encoun tered any serious reverse In arms. Yet, although tho situation docs not closely resemble that In the western theatre of operations, where the two fronts nre rep resented by formidable parallel lines of field works, there has been no decisive advance by either side. By this time Russian mobilization must be complete, and the numerical strength of the Russian army arrayed against tho Austro-Oerman forces should be enor mous. Yet, why have they not advanced beyond the vast stretches of marshland nnd morass which cover miles of the ter ritory lying before them In Poland and East Trussla? It Is not likely that, following the par tial repetition of Napoleon's tactls by the Germans, the Russians are counter ing with a partial demonstration of the traditional strategy of 18127 That the Germans aro manifestly less constituted to bravo tho rigors of Buch a winter as grips the contested territory than nre the Russians, who are accus tomed to life In the zero snows, Is ob vious. While Teutonic energy Is being devoted In the forthcoming winter campaign, therefore, to preserving tho health of their suffering troops In the field and erecting adequate shelters to shield from tho elements those men who aro not In the snow filled trenches, one may look for n repetition of the raids upon Napoleon's retreating rear guard of a little more than a century ago. The toll will be taken by the rugged, weather Im mune, mounted troops of the Slberlnn corps. Time, indeed, has been the strongest ally opposed to the Germans. To time will be added winter. U. S. DESTROYERS TO CONVOY GERMAN LINER TO BOSTON Kronprinzessin Cecilie Will Leave Bar Hnrbor Next Week. WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. The North German Lloyd steamship Kronprinzessin Ceclllo will bo moved from Bar Harbor, Maine, to Boston, under con voy of two American torpedo destroyers the latter part of next week Decision to this effect was reached at a conference between Acting Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt, Captain Polak, of the Kronprinzessin Cecllle, nnd Judge Bedele, of Newark. N .7., counselor lot the North German Lloyd Line. GERMAN RETREAT GENERAL IN POLAND, PARIS DECLARES Kaiser's Forces in Retirement From Warsaw, Ivangorod and Sandomlr. PARIS. Oct. 24 The War Department here has Issued the following statement concerning opera- I nuns in me ousiern wnr zone: The Germans nre retreating to the south of Warsaw as well as the west of Ivan gorod and from Nova Alexandria. "Sanguinary conflicts continue In Ga llcla. ,' "On the front of Sandomlerz-Przemyal the Russians have taken 2000 Austrian prisoners." HERE - 40 Coupe Persons, $2150 Detroit DELIVERIES RACE 2177 CZAR TO FREE AUSTRIAN CAPTIVES OF LATIN DESCENT But Men From Trieste and Trentino Must Remain in Italy. ROME, Oct. 21. It Is announced that Russia has for mally offered to liberate and send to Italy nil Austrian soldiers of Italian na tionality, especially thbso from the Trieste and Trent districts, who have been taken prisoners In tho Gallelan fighting. All that Is asked Is that Italy agrees that these soldiers bo retained In Italian territory nnd not permitted to return to Austria until the end of itho wnr. Tho announcement of Russia's offer to return tho captured soldiers of these two Austrian provinces Is interpreted by the Italian press generally ns Russia's official recognition of Italy's claims to these provinces. It Is believed here that In the plan for the settlement of tho war these provinces will go to Italy for tho maintenance of neutrality nnd refusal to fight on tho side of Germany and Austria. GERMANS DEMOLISH PIER ON COAST, GUARDS STATE Heavy Firing Reported in Direction of Ostetul. AMSTERDAM, Oct. 21. Reports received this morning from the frontier between Holland and Belgium eay that at 7 o'clock last evening the sound of a heavy explosion was heard from Zcebruggc, a summer rcBort town on the Belgian const about 15 miles northeast of Ostend and but seven miles from the Dutch border. Tho electric lights on the big recrea tion pier were Immediately extinguished. An hour Inter a second heavy explosion occurred, The Dutch coast guards be lieve tho pier was blown up by tho Ger mans. Heavy gun flro In the direction of Ost end Is reported. Not only nre the Germans finally leav ing Antwerp, but tho wives of Germans officers In Brussels have been ordered to loavo tho city within 48 hours. DESPAIRS OF SUBMARINE British Admiralty Announces List of Crew of E-3. LONDON, Oct. 21. The British submarine E-3, which a Ber lin dispatch stntes was sunk In tho North Sea on October 18 by German warships, was given up for lost today by tho Ad miralty. Tho Government Press Bttieau Issued a list of the men on board the submarine, which cnrrled three lieutenants and 25 sailors. A British lieutenant has nlso been drowned at Duala, West Afilca. STEAMSHIP SUNK BY MINE Norweigan Craft Reported Wrecked. Crew Is Saved. LONDON, Oct. 21 A dispatch from Am sterdam states that the Norwegian steam ship Hclmlund, from Amsterdam to Eng land, has been sunk, piesuniably by a mine. 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PETROGRAD, Oct SI Many of tho soldiers who were wautid in me iiKuurm arounu Warsaw ana ."" ..,. ...v wuiU mm ne Jtaiser .? nctunlly on the battle line and th.. .4 narrowly escaped capture, Their storieii? while circumstantial, nro now confirm by the Wnr Ofllce, which permits uj) publication, and adds that It hai "i ceivea no report regarding it from Ufli commnnder-ln-chlef at tho front. tuaJ fact that n German general, whose niitjf Is withheld, but who Is one of the jJii vorlto members of tho Kaiser's i.l actually was captured Inclines oOIcfklil hero to believe that the Kaiser really WaS at the front. -m The story told hero Is that tho Kahf?'! mm ilia Hum naci pusneti rorward whl the Germans were npproachlng Wani! ntlnn nt liln lianiMi tltt . . . vlJ , ....... . ...c .,i,, auuory, ot winch W; Is markedly proud. A Russian avlatiJ ' repoited the presence of ofllcers of an I parent high rank far nearer tho front i than the ordinary dictates of caution ami ' fltrntpirv enlled Tnr. Af u .,.., .. RueRianR were fnlllmr hn,.L ... .i.. - . . ' previously selected for giving battle, a' uiviaiun ul cavairy was ordered to chargi the point whore the ofllcers had been oWi' served. They broko through the German outer lino but a eecond ring of aerman e troops, led by their ofllcers In front, dei. 1 ijuiuicij- imi. mo iimrgint; norsemen with. uib uuyuHuu unu wifir rapiu-nrers, Iht Russian charge was momentarily checked unu uu ui uiu uuicers wiin one exception Jumped Into their automobiles and n. enned. The oxcnntlnn wna !, . ,-. .. , .. ...Iu .,, tsvneiai who was captured. The Kaiser. Russlanj aver, was one oi mo group which et capetl. GERMANS LEAVING ANTWERP Officers' Wives Iteported Warned to i Depart at Once. ) LONDON, Oct. 21. A Reutcr dispatch from Amsterdam says that a message. from Flushing confirms the report that the German forces aro leaving Antwerp and declares that wives of the German olTlcers at Brussels have been ordered to leave that city within 48 hours. iHPTElL PKIWilS ATLANTIC CJTT N.J . IN AUTUMN I'rovldM a charm of lumfort an tata amldat characteristic environ ment that has established it a u Ideal seashore home. Directly on the ocean front. deadly (300. IVALTEtt J. 11UZ1IV. It makes absolutely no difference what -SBLnKlJ ( II I, I 1 I, I, I UU ( I X. 1IUII 1 1 v7 1 1 1 k I 1VV1'UII T VI LI II vziaa ), M other device makes n deposit freo tnal offer 'nil rlnn't nnv ,u n en, it m j -on Yok jiX f I Umi-if&n ..& . .