mm r5r H? wm ' v fgfety1 ''i?mfrm.uiEP'imM w BTEHJtNa LflDGEBPHILADELPffIA4 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1914. QH9 v iy?Kr jBBEBJKii SnKEfltbnf jlsjyiiEioM) HP-' 11 GUNS SHELL FRENCH LINES ON AISNE '6 closing- in upon lack supplies, and four or more Japanese warships are also reported in pursuit of the Kaiser's ships. ' BATTLE OF THE RAILWAYS IN POLAND K LINES ON AISNE Shelled by heavy guns v?-- ,4 t tAnlS. Dun. 1 R ITrffHetl tnnnm nUnw !. A I 1 ... 7r-' .. u.uiih ,1,13 W3iiu IIUVO Ji lunom Domoarciment heirnlan centre, It Is omclally re- din Wst Flanders and north ot , iimi mvaaers- artillery has also k active. 'heri was no German Infantry attack Belgium freslcrday, but attack nnd Uerattack are reported from the Ar- 4 oRlclat communique follows: fa Belgium tho day of November M rAahinrkcd by rather heavy cannon des, Tho German (nfnntry made no attack. I The enemy eontlhues to show a ery (marked activity to the north of Arras. ft. tha rtBlon ot tht A'n thro has I Been a continuous cannonade along I th6 front, L Jn tho Argonne the fighting contln 1 tied -without causing any modification t In the general situation V In the Woevre and In the Vossea jthere la nothing to report. I KINCF OEOnOE VISITS TTtOOPS. Tho visit of King fjeorgo to tho British roopa In France Is having a very cn fraglng crfect. Tlie spirits of the Eng fSraldtcrs have been raised by tho Sfico of their monarch so near tho l-J line, and In the base hospitals King further endeared himself by ting kind words to tho nounded. J aeorgo has expressed to Field sal Sir John French his warm op tion of the gallantry shown by his 'H action. The English King de " 'all claretl that It was one of tha proudest momenta of his life when he could mingle with men who fought so bravely for their native land. King George had a rough passage across tho channel, but looked well and nt after nis arrival within the lines. He was met by his eldest son. the Irlnco of Wales, and together they visited a number of hospitals. Part of tho time the throb of mo far away cannonade sounded dullv In tho distance as tho King paid ht.i round of visits. The last time that an Kncllsh Klnc appeared upon tho Held of battle was In tho war of the Austrian succession In 1713, wlifn King aeorgo II commanded tho Bugll-.li, Hanoverian and Hessian troops at the battle of Deltlngen against tho French Thli visit Is In strango con trast With the Visit of Klntr Oeorsn II The former monarch appeared upon a field where hid armies were lighting against tho Frenchi King George V comes ns an ally of tha ltcnch. DUEI OF ARMORED Tit A INS A telegram from Fumes sas that Ger man nnd British armored trains fought a spectacular duel near Ypres. Tho Brit ish artillery had the advantage In range and tho German train was smashed From a. Dutch source it la reported that some of tho German soldiers at the front have mutinied. It Is leportcd that tho Germans have begun to retire from before Dlemude, but this report lacks confirmation. 'litere has been an outbreak of Uphold fever In Belgium It Ins spread from Iho Gcrpnan camp to the civilian popula tion Tho weather In northern Tranco and west Flanders remains cold, but at other points in France It Is much warmer. M I I I l li iiiiiiiiiiii MiMiii mhhwiiiiuj. iiiim ul ,, Minimi i-MimiiuM n m l?sr1,v.7Er. -TV. ,i0L.vVwi,.i . V ftJrrocT. 84 I H". "VVV 'VI" ""-4. 1M1L.4S- HBJ V"V U M9 ' "sul ."VtllWI S- - W I U SN?vvi.. J rv s i n" her q 25T" gpCaXr KasAn o THOUSAND RUSSIANS SLAIN IN CROSSING CARPATHIANS Austrian War Office Reports Check to Invasion of Hungary. VIENNA, Dec. . One thousand Busslans haVo Men killed and wounded And 1500 taken pris oners In a battle at Homonna, Hun gary, It was ortlclally mnounced todsj, "The Bueslan troopa at Hotnonna were- surrounded by the Austrian and decisively beaten," the War Ofllco alale- ment says. (Homonna Is on the western side of tho Carpathians. The Russian troops nt that point had penetrated a mountain pass). The War Office further states that the enemy has been beaten nt Suvobor, where 12M rtien were captured and II machine guns were taken. 3 ALLIED WARSHIPS CLOSE IN0H FOES IN SOUTH ATLANTIC British and Japanese Fleet Off South America; Ger mans Nearby Great Bat Believed Imminent. o im c s r, The German invasion of Russia swept 125 miles across Poland to the line of Warsaw and the Vistula i VJ?,?,? A, A at0Ve.) on October 24. The Russian counter attack drove the Germans nearly 100 m les back to the line shown above B B B on November 10. Now the armies of 5,000,000 men are righting on the middle line C C C. :AND katsf.r t nriTrTn DEADLY GRIP IN POLAND in LONDON. Dec. 1 icGcrman official statements 'Vindication that the Gcr- ia'olnnd arc Intact nnd that nl now locked In a terrific P'tlngt over what virtually jfront of too miles. Fcjreo points of contact from fcaposlttons south or Plock, :z and Lpdz and southeast oljhe armies hao gradually i n tho great force during the ' J';ver, and the developments" ? clearly Indicate that y tiv X tha reports were overly tlmlstlc. f of prv Seneral L 5erburg"s army, which -JMiConuT ,"jely of conscripts of tot year'vVr1.,Iua now been reinforced. With tho r"".r at the eastern front. It belleved U supreme effort Is about to made to hurl the Hussion offensive ejt upon Warsaw. Eery confidence Is yhere that the Russians now hold tho Vantage, but Jt la realized that the v't Jn t-aaUrr Iheatre Is far from , ' .i , . . , a decision When the big battle Is flnallv fought nnd the result and details are learned It Is believed It will prove to be tho most sanguinary conflict ot the war Its Influence upon tho entlro situation will a'so be of the greatest Importance Some military experts believe that the Germans aro now marking time In the west, awaiting the outcome of General von HIndenburg'n conflict with the Rus sians. Defeat In the east, it Is be lieved, would be followed by tho Imme diate retirement of the Germans to their second line of defenses in Belgium The Kaiser would then hfl rnmnintpi- n ii.a defensive on both fronts. Tho departure of the King for the front and hla visit to the troops Is be lieved to foreshadow an early offensive movement by the Allies It Is realized that such a movement will not bo at tempted until Generals Joffre and French aro convinced that the strength of the Germans has reached a low ebb In their vain efforts to reach the coast. The German nttack has now lost a greater part of Its force and, with fresh Trench and British troops constant!! arriving. V'"B ,or lne -allies to strike Is be lieved to be rapidly approaching. DEATH GRAPPLE IN POLAND BOUND TO BE E)ECISIVE "Buttle of Railroads" Cannot be Fight to Draw, Says t Expert Armies so Placed That Great Victory Will Fall to One of Vast Forces. SH TROOPS SWEEP BRITISH AVIATORS DROP a fARD; NOW NEAR BATUM is Blocked in Effort to Land Troops, Is Jteport "ONSTANTINOPLE. Dec 1. Jan troops marching through c Valley toward Batum ate ad- jucceasfully, according to the jmrnunlcatlofos from field head. '"re then about seven miles . nlatum. An attempt on the Pf isslans ta disembark troops ' Tiart of the Tchonik River has M trate). ,ifl, AT POLISH FRONT, EERS ARMY, BERLIN SAYS an Advantage Beported In Bnd-scale Fighting- at Xodz. BERLIN, Dec. 1. ourney of Emperor 'William to the t front has caused a feeling of n throughout the country. It Is --thjit the presence of the Kaiser I llurahal von HIndenburgs head 4k irl'llcatea that all Is going well !fftur against Russia and that the p troops In the eastern arena will ftjeijprts from the eastern front to- fjr mo position ot ine uerman : continues to Improve They have ded In Intrenching themselves of. (fy and tha Russian offensive con to hammer at the German line Success, I of General -von Hlndenburg jsil Mackensen hava been rein Md wjrd of the Oerman offensive been resumed Is expected mo- BOMBS IN GHENT RAID German Generals in Flanders Calling for BInforcements THE HAGUE, Dec. I Seven German soldiers were wounded In Ghent during bomb. dropping opera tions by two British aviators jesterday, according to a telegram received here today. The same message declared that the German generals on the firing line in Flanders are continually calling for more men. Tvo hundred and fifty thousand reinforcements left Ghent for the Tser on Monday r?t IUL.O fANS RETIRE 15 MIL t DIXMUDE. IS REPORT fecrfce In Belgium Suspended, Japapers Suppressed, t&M, Dec J The Germans frw tl)e front at DIxmudo a 15 kilometres, according to the ifitot the Vas Dias. h to th Telsraaf from Bros Lthat the Germans are refusing MMMrU for travelers In any 1 train service In Belgium t and all newspapers have tied, even those published. In Sa prsbijbla reason for the rt la iwiiavea to o tnat the re. keeping ncret all measures totg taitn in cennsctlon with , oh t& wmw front yi nwii "in .j r'wjrt m"m RUSSIANS AT CRACOW TURN DEFENDERS' WING ON SOUTH Investment of City Begun by Heavy Bombardment. PETROGRAD. Dec. 1. Success at Cracow Is reported by the official Army Messenger, which states: "All of our operations in Oallcla aro ending successfully for us. Wo continue to push the Austrian army In the direc tion of Cracow. In spite of the Intense cold, which Is delaying our offensive, we are advancing victoriously. "Several of our contingents already are abreast of Cracow, the defenders of which ara being turned on the south side The morale of our troops Is excellent " A correspondent writes that the Rus sians are bombarding the farts with their heavy siege guns and that one of the suburbs of the city is reported to be In flames. By HILAIBE BEIXOC PARIS, Dec 1 The. great battlo In Rus sian Toland Is a railroad battle. If ever there has been one In history. AVhtch of the two elements will provall the Russian superiority numbers, at least 3,000,000 men, or the Austro-Gcrman su periority in mobility, which Is equivalent to more than their 2,000.000 men-is' still undecided after five weeks' continuous fighting CAN BE NO DRAWN BATTLE. I have nlroadj said there cannot be a drnwn battle hero as there has been In Trance, owing to the nature of the coun tij and the numbers engaged The de cisive area ot the whole European war Is now in South Poland The battle there, since the third week ot October, haB had three distinct phases. First, tlia great advance of tho Ger man nrmle3 In force to tho front of War saw, and -their attempt to take the Polish capital and to cross the, ,.m(dil!o Vistula nivcr at mo points marKcd A A A A on the above map. Setond, the repulse of the German In vaders on the whole Vistula front from Warsaw to Sandmolr. The German left Hank was obviously turned at or north of Warsaw and the entire army com pelled to retreat. A glance at tho map, showing the railroad communications, will show w hy and how The .Russians bent back the German left flank and when the Germans lost control of the WarBaw-Lodz railroad they lost their communication of ammunition and supplies. GERMAN RETREAT MASTERLY. They had no choice except to tetreat. Her colleagues, the Austrians.. south of Sondnmir and along the River San, were compelled to fall back, too. The Ger man retreat wa In good order, managed with great skill, but apparently the or der for the Austrians to retire as a wholp from the Vistula and the Sa;n to gether was either not given, or, If plv?n, not obeyed, because a week later the Russians, having obtained possession ot the railway from Ivangorod through Klelce and Radon, cut off tho rear guard of the retreating Austrian army nt Klelce, capturing several thousand prisoners and many machine guns. Part ot the Aus trian army was compelled to cross the Vistula River southward In the direc tion of the arrows O C C, while the main army, probably 800,000 men, used the rail way fiom Klelce back to the German frontier. AUSTRIAN'S HELD ON TOO LONG. It was precisely because the Austrians had hung on to Sandomlr too long that the capture of this place by the Rus sians became of such importance. Ihe Russian advance towards Cracow, the gateway to Germany's prosperous Indus trial section of Silesia, was then pressed with great vigor On November 15, the entire Austro-Gcrman battle line had been pushed back to some such front as Is Indicated upon the map by the broken line marked B B B, stretching from the nelghboihood of Ploeschen on the Ger man frontier to tho Carpathian Moun tains. Tho German advance across Poland. about 123 niik3. and the Austro-German retreat, nearly ICO miles from the line of the Vistula and Wursaw, was accom plished in three weeks. But It had left dangerously far to the eastward along the river San the remain der of the Austrian forces which should havo kept In line with this retreat. With the effect of that too prolonged delay along the San (River I will deal In a mo ment. The Russian official reports do not claim the capture of many prisoners or guns, so tho German retreat must have been orderly nnd Inexpensive, that Is to say, managea with success. AUSTRIANS DISOBEYED ORDERS. But the failure of the Austrians to obey orders or to co-operate properly with their German allies, exposed Cracow to nttack It is all Important to the Ger mans to keep tho Russian Invasion out of ftilesla. It Is equally Important for the Russians to achieve that Invasion, be cause the occupation of Silesia by tho Invaders- will mean the first serious moral blow Inflicted upon the security of prop erty and the Industrial life of modern Germany. It will strangle a province essentlil to the economic support of mod ern Germany. That la why the Russians massed the weight of their troops against the Ger man right wing, weakened by lack of proper Austrian support. But tho Rus sians" main bodies wero marching on the all-Important point shaded In the mnp, Silesia, the Germans brought heavy rein forcements from tho west by the main railroad through Katish They 'attacked with great vigor when tho railroad landed their troops. Why did tho Germans do this' Tlrst, to relieve tho pressure ngalnst Cracow, and second, because of tho strategic pol icy which modern Germanv Invnrlablv pursues In war. Even whcio she has In ferior numbers, Germany always at tempts to turn an enemy's flank rather than to pierce bis centre It Is a part of that powerful routine the following of which has been In history usually the strength, but In certain fatal moments, the. ruin of Trussla With fewer men than Rutsla on the whole battle line, German sent her best troops In such numbers along the Kallsz Zdunskawola-Lodz Railroad that she compelled tho Russian centre to fall back, and with It tho right wing ns far north as Thorn The Russians were driven as far back a Lodz beforo they could concentrate sufficient troops along tho Warsaw Rail road to stop the German advance. ALLIED FLEET SIGHTED OFF LOWER CALIFORNIA Japanese and British Warships Pa trol Pacific Coast, SAN PRANCISCO, Dec. I.-Three Japa nese warships, one British warsljlp nnd two .Tnpanoso colliers were sighted off Magdalena Ray, Lower California, Mon da, by the American freighter Artec, now In port here from Iqulque, Chill. Tho British light cruiser Newcastle, a clster ship of tho Glasgow, and tho Japa nese cruiser Idsumo, both of which have long been patrolling tho Pacific coast, wero recognized, but another Jnpnneso cruiser nnd a .Inpanese battleship were unfamiliar to tho Aztec's officers Frobably these vessels wero tho battle ship lflzen and the cruiser Asama, which coaled nnd left Honolulu as soon na'tjic German gunboat Geler was Interned there Tho understanding In the Jnpnneso 'col ciiy In the Islands was Hint tho'lllzcn nnd Asama wero bound for tho feouth American west coast. WAR NAMES FOR BABE Chiefs of Allies Insplro Proud Par ents at Christening. PARIS, Dec 1. The first "war name" conferred upon a French baby Is "Raymound Georgo Albert Nicholas Joffro Pourtalcs " The Infant Bon of Countess Pourtalcs was so chris tened today. President Poincare, King Georgo V, King Albert of Belgium, Czar Nicholas and General Joseph Joffro nro commem orated In the Infant's name. MONTEVIDEO, Dec. 1 A squadron of German war vessels Is at the mouth of tho River Plnta, and a battls with n British or Japanese equad roh 14, expected momentarily. Apparently the Geimnns, under Admiral von Spe, who defeated tho British squad ron off Jhe Chilian coast tn ffovembcr 1, sending Hear Admiral Christopher Crnd ock and ils flagship, tho dbod Hope, and the cruiser Monmouth to tho bottom, hava escaped frmn tho pursuing Japanese In the Pacific and havo passed ttuough tho Straits of Magellan and reached the South Atlantic. A powerful British fleet was sighted sev eral dajn ai(o off the Brazilian coast, steaming southward, and it was known that It had boen sent to form part of a trap with tho Jnpancso for tho Ocrmnn squadron. That tho Gorman vessels nro lying off this port nnd that thcli supplies are al most depleted was confirmed today by the British Btcnmshlp Voltaire, bound for New York. Tho Voltaire Intercepted wireless messages being exchanged by four Ger man warships off tho Uruguayan coast These messages, tho Voltalro offlccis said, spoko of supplies required Fear ing to proceed farther along the const, tlm Voltalro put In at Rio Janeiro unit wilt remain In Rio until, she Is assured that danger Is past. This wok! from the Voltaire caused the. British and French consuls hero and nt Buenos Ayres to hold In port nil mer chant vessels fljlng their flags There Is strong reason to bellovo that a Japanese squadron Is pursuing tho Ger mans nnd that with tho British they will pnrticlpnto in tho great sea battle now expected. Tho French merchantman AN gcrlne, which has arrived nt Rio de Janeiro, reports having passed four large war vessels, which she believed to bo Japanese The Algerlne gained tho Im pression that tho Japanese were In pur suit of a fugitivo German squadron Leather Goods For Xmas Gifts Brief Cases. Trunks. Suit Cases. Limousine Cases. Hand Bags. 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