pyv' "-If" '. kl"" 'RANK SIMONDSGENERAL RTOEWOFTHEfTrST fenjiyrwht. 101ft. by the New York Tribune.) the purpose of this review Is to sum- nBriztf briefly the main military phases It... iMj. .Aaw iY ftia wnr Tn An iUij ef tne in" - - .- - -- ...... uls, perhaps, simplest to accept mo unity fta'plled by the three major campaigns, gaje of Germany agnltvit France, of BisSla against Austria nnd, finally, of Vfnmny against Russia, which Is still 3ns forward. A fourth division may be fe . tu tlM dllnmnti1 itffAPtstltrna n 4 its. fflUnll HI .hmih ..... . ,, HI l Slllts In tho west, bo far unsuccessful in He larger view, at the Dardanelles, and Blithe fields now Invaded by Italy, where fgulrt the results are as yet without Teal Imtanlnjf. JJie effort will bo maue nere to show hat was In the minds of tho high com ttu) of tho armies mailing the several y3j for decision, the extent of tho suc- ij or failure, anu mo causes, or so Tar they are yet set lonn in any oinciai , unofficial but trustworthy comment. gve for the battle of tho Mnrne, which tn far, the one clearly decisive cn- fpemcrit of tho whole war, little atten tion will ou paiu iu individual engage ijoftts. Tins review closes wun tne news ontalned in tho press of Sunday, July 25. l. GF.RMANY AGAINST FRANCE. lie (list phaso of tho world war was fihprehonded In a tremendous effort ot ra'wholo Ocrman military establishment. fjsye for perhaps 250,000 troops sent to )SJJ dock tho first Russian columns In east, to crusn rrcnen military power, Ci Paris, remove tho French as a fnc- Tor-ln tho present war, achlovo a decision exactly similar to mat won in tne nco-FruBslan war and obtain it in tno KlfniB time It was of prime Importanco tcffwln quickly, becauso there was a. per- jict realization in uerun tnni iiusirm llhTngary could not permanently deal with fls Hurslan armies singie-nanuca. since the French frontier from Luxcm- Ifttit to Switzerland was fortllled strongly, German military chiefs recognized that It ?ould not bo forced without delays mat Slight make tt possible for Russia to d1tios of Austria boforo Franco had fcien put out. Accordingly, the Invasion ofiiFrance by. way of Belgium was de cided Upon, and at icubi j.uw.uw men XlXfm nnnr In three armies through Bel gian territory, while three more ot about equal strength were employed through Luxemburg, Lorralno and Alsace. r-ln thinking of tho first campaign It Is Iwell to remember nlwuys that tho Ger Ifamnit had but two things In mind, to de stroy French armies uttorly, and to do (this within tho flrBt six weeks of, tho war. iTlie capturo of forts, cities, the success Iri "Incidental engagemonts, was of no real meaning If tho great decision wns not to be had. The German strategy aimed at annihilation, expected to achieve It and conducted tho operation with a disregard for all expense of life and equipment which fores only conceivable as the prlco of a supremo success. Conversely, the solo problem of the French In this same period was to Keep their armies in being, save Paris .and es cape the annihilation planned by their treat foe. To rneet thq German ava lahcho they had a little' moro than half as many troops, with' British support, which wire, howevor, insignificant In numbers. (The" French were also handicapped by the fact that their mobilization wus based upon the assumption that Germany would come through Alsace-Lorraine iinu mi through neutral Belgium, and plans of mobilization could not be changed, after Itihad begun. Thus It was necessary for jranco to ojsecuto a campioio rctunra fratlon of her armies after tho campaign Md opened. But It Is necessary to recau t that the slncle necessity for tho Aench was to survlvo tho first avalanche. This was Joffre b problem, as that ot von Uoltke'B was to annihilate tho French. rOn' these torms It la possible to estimate pretty exactly tho results of this first campaign, the greatest tho world had ever seen In numbers, in the alzo of bat s tleficlds nnd In tho losses that were suf fered by all contestants. THB BELGIAN PHASE (AUGUST 4-22). The first shots on the Belgian frontier were fired on August 4. Tho next day German troops reached the forts of Liege. Tho army was commanded by gGencral von Emmlch and numbered gabout 30,000 picked troops. Despite the contemporary impression, the Belgian re elstnnce. while heroic, waa wholly Inef fective. Llege was occupied on August 7. For a week the Belgian commander. ienernl Leman, held ono or two of the forts west of the Mouse, but these were destroyed by the first shots of the Ger man heavy artillery on August 14 or 15, 1 In the meantime Germa'n mobilization was completed, concentration took place and on August 15 the German masses were settlnz out on their dash to Paris. All this time there had been steady sklr- misning between the field forces of the Belgians and the screen of German cav alry which was preparing the way for the cpnupg ot tne armies. These skirmisnes were magnified Into battles by Brussels reports, but were of no real Importance end ended in the comnlete demoraliza tion of the Belgian army. pOnce the German advance was begun It swept irresistibly forward. One force under von Kluck moved straight on Brussels; a second, under von Buelow, Tossed the Mouse at Huy and advanced upon Namur, and a third came through the Ardennes and struck at the line of jhe Meuso above Namur. Brussels fell pn August 20, the Belgian army fled to Antwerp and the German army, having passed the canltal. started south far Paris. The Belgian phase ended on Eugust 22 with the abrupt fait of Namur ispa the opening battles between the German armies and the Anglo-French forces of the north. FRENCH DISABTER (AUGUST 4-1S), I-Whlle the Germans were coming rough Belgium the French had at tempted to Invade Alsace-Lorraine, had eeil 8llr?fSRfn1 nt thA ntnrt. anil then Ifceavlly beaten east of Met and driven disorder into French territory aoout ifanoy. A second French offensive across bs uieusa into .ueigian ruxemourg nuu with another defeat. At the mo ot when the German forces of the fth struck the allied armies along the nbre and the Mouse from Mons to vet. the French armies from Bwltzer- id to the Belgian frontier were retreat' : in disorder meet the German advance through Slum, the French and British took ST stand In the angle between the Die and the Eambre ItlverB. The DO- ittoii was naturally strong, but was feed upon the Belgian fortress of Na- pr. to the utter amazement of tne grid, Namur fell within a few hours. IS British .about Mons were struck In pt and flank by overwhelming forces I the French were driven out of their JUans west and south of Namur. onenlns battles of Mons and Char- l were between some 300.(0) allied ops ana 7W.0W Germans, uawi pat- were broken off before they reached Ntecltdon, both were allied defeats and MY opened the way t the possible de- iicuon of the wnote awea iqroes in north at the moment that the French In the east were retreating alter Ing been routed. GREAT RETREAT (AUGUST - SEPTEMBER. 6). Aueuat SI the German armies were f full pursuit of the Allies from Swltzer- W the irtwure. Toe great jwa?oi now whether von Kluck could qe- the British army on the extreme interfuse between Parte and toe ellKd bitulefrout. eut off tne re- atine a uitea and roll them up la such envelopment us he4 won the war of For tti AUlee the single effort ws mni Btb . t.u ..A, i3it Anuth In M. Doiat j --T- ... 'HO ... wv . w v fti Sl.ty , . .s iini tul d hue 'u ': ' j ui. . , .r ln,tili 1W UI-CU- .,, EVENING iCSPGBB-PHlCAD.BLPHIA, SATURDAY. TOTJT 31 fln!?P.l'i .e8,eftp.e5 ony by "treating day jlnlht '08thvlly In men and equip m.mhUJinn.?lly eacaPl r fighting a armi i re?uf Unrd batlle8' Th0 F"nh .; Sri.i.the,.r. "att' "treated will. S-i j dllbrfton and were never In great danger. w hter!Jbcr th. Prcnch a"d British in h - 5,ore ,h Ilno ,rom the Vosgcs I0"'' wa8 of Paris, but all northern 8,.was ow ln ""'"an hands and &?" Oerman army was assailing tho AinJl4 WM. M0. lo.nKer PoIW for tho Allies to rotreat without abandoning ill. ' aMd t'loQermans, still on schedule ! A wr6 w.llh,n KlgM ot th9 oter forts of the French capital. BATTLE OF THE MAnNE (SEPTEM BER 710). At the opening of this great battle the French held a line from Paris to Verdun, curving deeply to the south. On this line JofTro had been concentrating his forces since the opening defeats. Now tho Ger mans wero in turn threatened with en velopment from Paris and from Verdun, and about Paris a new French nrmy had been collected, which energetically struck east upon von Kluck's flank. But the decisive point In tho Battle of the Mama wob about La Fcro Chttropo nolso, nnd the first heavy blow was struck hero by General Foch. On September 9 the whola French lino, after two weeks of steady retreat, suddenly struck back, fleiGatpfl tllA flArmnna In n tilliin nf rifle engagements and drove all the Gcr ....... uiuitco nuifi jjuriiiiiie io ingny uock In a complete defeat which amounted to a rout at certain points. At tho mo ment when Berlin was waiting to hear of the fall of Patls nil the German armies were In retreat. France was not to bo overwhelmed. In this battlo more than n.OOO.ftflil Wra AtitrntAi3 1, ! M.y..A not leas than 500.000 and tho battlo front waa noany zoo miles long. ON THE A1SNE (SEPTEMBER 13 OCTOBER 0). In the onenlnc davs of the aeconrt utnk In September thero was hope in Allied oapltalB that tho Gormans might bo driven out of France, but It proved vain. Between tho Manic and the Alsno tho Germans rallied. Tho fall of Mnubcuge freed a German army which came south nnd reinforced von Kluck. Allied advance wns stopped nt this stream nnd ln tho next few days tho Germans established a line from the Olso nt Noyon to tho Ar gonne. All Allied efforts to drlvo them failed. The French then made a desperate ef fort to turn the Germans out by attack ing tncir right nahk nnd turning it, com ing In about St. Qucntln. But this failed, and in a few mora dnys tho line had be gun to mount toward Belgium, each Gen eral Staff meeting the other's efforts with new battalions. Meantime the Germans directed their attention townrd making their position In Belgium secure by be sieging Antwerp, which fell after a to days' slego on October 9. Just before this surrender tho British had been taken out of their trenches along tho Alsne nnd sent north to fill tho gap between the French battlo lino and tho sen. Their objective was Antwerp, but the fall of this town ruined their plans, and. they were again left to face an overwhelming attack by now German armies, supported only by the beaten Belgian nrmy, which had escaped from Antwerp and come south through Ostend to the Yser River, north of Dunkirk. BATTLES OF FLANDERS (OCTOBER 21, NOVEMBER 16). German effort to crush Franco had failed. There remained tho chance of capturing tho Channel ports Calais. Bau logne and Dunkirk; straightening the western front and shortening It, prepar ing tho wny for submarino and Zeppelin campaigns against England and com , plotlng tho conquest of Belgium. Accordingly, vnst new rorccs were sent into the lino between Lille and Ostend and a general German advance ln masses was begun against the thin lino of British and Belgian troops on this front. A month of desperate lighting followed. Tho Belgians, heavily attacked, Just managed to cling to the Yser line, after opening tho sluices and flooding tho region. The British held Ypres de spite a CO per cent, loss and against threo or four times their number. The struggle waa over by November 15. In sum, then, the first German offen sive was decisively beaten at the Marne. France was neither destroyed nor seri ously crippled. Her losses In captured and killed and wounded combined, prob ably equaled those of tho Germans, who, oh the attacking force, lost heavily. Not less than a million men wero put out In this opening phase. But at tho end the Germans had won only a few thousand square miles of territory In Franco, they had failed to talte Paris or the Channel ports and they could no longer afford to neglect the Russian menace. From No vember 16 to July 25 tho western cam paign from the German side has been de fensive, save for local attacks. It has become a mere war of trenches. II. RUSSIA AGAINST AUSTRIA. Russian mobilization being slower than German, Berlin had calculated that It would be at least six weeks before Ger many need fear any attack upon the east, since the Austrian arrqlcs might be ex pected to hold back the first udvanccs of tho Russians. The Russian problem was to dispose of Austria before Germany could' get back from her great campaign ln France. Thus all tho efforts of Rus sian high command wore at first directed against Austria. But the opening suc cesses of Germany in Franco led to the appeal for Russian Intervention against Germany, which modified both German and Russian plans and not Impossibly contributed to the ultimate failure of both. In examining the Russian operations, therefore, it Is necessary to think both of the great movement against Austria and the subsidiary operations against Ger many, first offensive and later defensive, When Germany began to help her stricken ally. In tho opening days of the warthe Aus trlans sent their main forces to Gallcla and attempted to Invade Poland from Gallcla with one force, while holding the Gallclan front east of ; Lemberg with another. Their operations were handi capped by the terrible defeat they suffered almost at the outset of the war at the hands of the Servians along the Jedar and by the additional fact that some of the beat Austrian troops and most of their heavy artillery were borrowed by the Germans for their operations In France and Belgium. TANNENBERG (SEPTEMBER 1). While Russian and Austrian mobiliza tion was still Incomplete the allied disas ters In the west drove Paris and London to ask Petrograd to Invade East Prussia to compel Germany to recall troops from France. Accordingly, two Russian armies, one from Warsaw, the other from the Nlemen, were sent into East .Prussia. Both won Initial successes, and the Nle nien array, havtfig defeated the Germans at Gumblnneu, approached Koenlgsberf But the second, having- reached Alien stein, was enveloped by Hlndenburg In the swamp districts, forced Into the marshes ad praetleally annihilated. More than 100.009 troops were put out in this flght, and the second Russian army es caped only by rapi4 retreat. The disaster of Tanninberg took pttce on September 1. H was a defeat "feed Imr in proportions 4ny achievement of Na Iioleon. but it unquestionably contributed to the success of the Allies at the Marne, sinoe the Germans were japelled to re cairtroope frn te west and divert re taforceweaU. In & operations East ZUlIu devastated and the refugees fled as far as Berlin. On the other hand. Russia lost one of JU best armies end an Calculable amount of artillery and mu imoBS. It was an expensle saorince. LBUBERO (SEPTEMBER 1) u.,t the East PiuMl" oiwratlun was only a mluo. Ucident The .ni Kuian fe had itrdi eutwi aalli tiam ' Ui s l U- "4""iut ",I iltiu- Germany Has But Failed AHr.1,i,i1.d luy ind routed the main iJmi,I ", orivmg them through Lemberg and as far na Jaroslav in utter lmmJ? . thoua,ld f Ptlsoncrs and w 5P. Bto0', of nmmunltlon. A slml aLiVu0 0,vcr,t00k the army which tho Austrlang had sent north ngalnst Lublin. i tif' w,llle,h Germans were falling pLv!- r Bra,u,lo,H ort for a decision In France, the Russians were achieving "W appeared to be a real decision bIi" ln 0nllcla' Coupled with the Servian victory at tho Jedar, the Lorn berg disaster socmed to promise the speedy disintegration of tho hetero geneous Austrian armies. With her trench hopes turned to ashes, Germany had now to face east to savo her ally. THE FIRST WARSAW DRIVE (OCTO BER MO). German nttempt to save Austria took the shape of a sudden drlvo nt Warsaw, through central Poland. Russia had rnado two great efforts, tho chief en deavor directed against Austria, which had succeeded, tho second against l!ast Prussia, which had failed, But In doing this she had left Ccntrnl Poland bnre of troops, and Gcrmnny now struck straight through the Unguarded centre nt War saw In an attempt to selzo this great fortress town beforo Russia could get back from Gallcla a sufficient force to check tho thrust. This drlvo began In tho first days ot October, wns directed by Hlndenburg nnd nlmost Bucccodcd. German troops nctti nllv reached thn nuhurh,, nt .,.. --j its fnll was expected. But Russian ro- imuicoinems nrnvea in time, tlic German flank was turned and a speedy retreat wu ui'ccrHury. vvnnout any rpal battlo tho Germans swiftly and succinctly flowed back across their own frontiers. Mnmnntnrll,. l.rtntiUr,... ...... t.. a achieved their purpose In relieving the Austrlnns. Tho Russians, having sent corps to Warsaw, wero compelled to re- tut nt tllMt s1 . ... it cm uuiiinu mu oan. i-rzemysi, wnicn had been besieged, was relieved, nnd for tho moment Austria wns saved. As an example ot daring and successful strategy the first drive at Warsaw, although It failed to tako the city, cannot be praised too highly. LODZ (NOVEMBER 19) The pnuso In the Gallclan campaign, however, proved only momentary. While the Germans were retreating from War saw, tho Russians rcnowed their of fensive, rccrosscd tho Snn, reinvested Przcmysl, pentrntcd to the suburbs cf Cracow and npproached and oven passed the Carpathian barrier, sending Cossack raiders over Into Hungary. A new effort to save Austria was Inevitable, Tho second effort wns far moro con siderable. It began In the early days of November and was made by a great Ger man army, many corps being recalled from tho west, where tho battles of Flan ders were ending and the wholo campaign falling to trench wpr. Russian forces, pursuing tho Germans retreating from Warsaw, had approached tho Posen and Slllclan frontiers and wero across the Wartha. Hlndenburg now gathered up his armies, which were fac ing UIU IIUBOIUUB WC31 Ul lilO 1YUIW1U, German Proposition to Sub mit Questions in Contro versy to Tribunal Not Officially Received at Washington. WASHINGTON, July 3LThe United States undoubtedly would reject a prop osition to refer such questions -as tho German-American controversy over the LusltAPla to The Hague. It was said in well-Informed elrules here today. A press dispateh from Berlin Intimated that such an offer might be rode. Secre tary Lansing said not even a hint of the kind had come from anomeaJ source. jlo would not say how It would be re garded If It came. Subordinate officials said, however, tbt they already knew sueh matters were not of the arbitral type. The AdilplUaUoi' response to th Brttuili aote on the order in eouuell and STmMe latter exBMterf early nt wSfc-will be prow. It was stated. OWetelTOTldefttly beUeved they knew what the British would say. though they wuW not discus It. s,id were uadeifrtood Z rEvrPrepred their reply, ttaUveJy, ev-win Wane of the oosSS note cetary Lawsta? having stated, that theuSted 8ttM is cnwroed only with IL1 ovTneieWp of a WP vfeUA seeks American regW and not wtth tfce nft dltT of persona from who the owners bwrow woney. the ComaMim Pe ITrWt was eipected to graut registry geXtely U. vessel blottrins to the 'rueac. Transatlantic- Cvmpmny. said fa 0e WvU.d b Uruu -ni SCENES IN THE ABANDONED CAPITAL OF POLAND it c wnmnRWTfifT fc 1 , HAGUE ARBITRATION $$? & '"' tf '".C IN LUSITANIA CASE Jt ' : 1 ' J$ . 4A.S J. :-.!- & Jul) 1 fuUi. l.W- Best of First Year of War to Achieve Objectives By FRANK H. SIMONDS moved then, rapidly over tho strategic railroads to the north and sent them In upon the Russian flank In n desperate effort to out the Russians off from War saw, envelop them nhd either surround them Or drlvo them south away from the railroads. Again the Germans almost succeeded. At one tlmo they actually Interposed be tween the Russians and their base, cut ting the railroad, northeast of Lods. For days a desperate struggle went on about Lodz. In the end, after suffering terrific losses, the Russians wero saved by rein forcements brought from Warsaw, and wero able to get back behind the Bzura Rawka Jllvcrs west of Warsaw and thero to repulse all German attacks. By De cember .1 the front ln this sector hnd becomo fixed on lines it was to hold until July. PRZEMY8L AND THE CARPATHIANS (DECEMBER TO MAY). Once moro tho Russian anrilcs ln Gall cla had been compelled to retire ln con sequence of a Germnn offensive In Po land, But this tlmo they camo hack only to Tnrnow and took up a strong posi tion behind the DunaJecrBlahi Rivers. Henceforth their main effort was di rected at farcing the passes of tho Car pnthlans and breaking into tho Hunga rian Plnln. To do this It was essential to reduce the fortress of Przemysl, which commands tho main railways and roads of Gallcla. From January 1 to May 1 tho Gallclan cnmpnlgn was marked by a slow but steady ndvnnco of the Russians toward and through the mountains, halted frequently by deBperato Austro German offensives, for German troops and officers were now sent to Btlffen the shaken Hapsburg forces. Austrian resistance was materially strengthened also by tho recall ot threo corps which had been dispatched to Scrvla to share in tho Invasion of that kingdom. This Invasion had passed Belgrado and seemed about to crush Scr vla, when tho recall of Austrian troops made possible a now Servian offensive, nnd tho Austrian Invading forces were terribly beaten ln tho tlrst days of De cember about Vallovo and driven out of the kingdom. Przemysl fell on Mnrch 22, and Immedi ately thereafter Russia mndo her final bid for a decision In tho East. The sur render had eliminated 125,000 Austrian troops -and freed many moro Russians. In tho opening days of April tho wholo Russian battlo lino along the Carpathi ans swept forward. For four weeks tho fighting wob terrific and tho progress favorable to the Russians. But by May 1 they wero brought to a complete halt, having still failed to enter tho Hungarian Plnln., Their hopo of a decision had also failed. They had been unabla to crush Austria, ns Germany had failed to crush France. It was now tlmo for a new German effort. To complete tho rovlow of events ln the cost It Is ncccsary to mention tho great German victory ln tho Mnzurlnn Lnkos region on February 10. which terminated a Russian countor-offenslve In East Prus sia, designed to relievo Russian armies In Palnnd nnd Gallcla by recalling Ger man troops. A huso number of prisoners JiHim UU, WIIIJIIIIl, I ag.gtWPWP-r." i i. I . u i-- ' ' " . ,m " ' The urjner nicture sfeoWB the market place of Wawaw, which h ,inA ?yJry, L L. thfi notwlace rotronted before the on- as s&i papera learned tod4y frov their core HtondenU in B"-Uo tbw the Qermexi Q4 -eminent wishes to wibroK to the u Tribunal the queuou of epeUoa t'-" AuieiWWi Ue l"-t Ul. the Luaitiau. U w reirfMWJ ou i.MBii ...lao.u, u.t Uis Os-an Jftiiuu sjihi l l- YEaoF THE were claimed by tho Germans, who once more demonstrated their complete su periority to the Russians In the field. 1H.-GERMANY AGAINST RUSSIA. All hopo of a decision in the west ended with the repulse of the Germans In Flan dors in November; ln fact, it had prac tically terminated when the beaten Ger man masses hnd . retreated from the Mnrne. Germany had undertaken to dH poso of Franco at one blow, nnd France had escaped. Belgium and the Industrial regions of northeastern Franco remained In Gorman hands, a rich prize, protected by the Bttong defensive lines which the Gorman nrmlw) held from Switzerland to the sea. But thero was no longer any prospect llrat a now Germnn' offensive could reach Paris or crush the Allies. On tho other hand, It might still be pos sible to win the wnr If Russia could bo eliminated. If Germany, whlla holding all of her western conquests, could dispose of Russia ns bIio had hoped to dlsposo of Franco, thero was still tlmo to win a great triumph, mako peace on terms which would bo wholly advantageous, lr not ob favorable ns had been hoped for In August, 1911. While tho world was talking of a spring drlvo of the Allies, Germany was steadily preparing for a great offensive of the combined Austro-Gcrman forces, which should relievo the Itustsan menace to Hungary, cloar Gallcla, tnko Warsaw nnd, If possible, crush Russian military power bo completely that Russsln would ask for pcaco or ccobo to bo a factor for many montls. Tho long series of Fronch offensives In tho west ln tho lato winter and spring had demonstrated that tho German lines would hold. The failure of the British to get up Kitchener's million or to pro vldo tho ammunition noceasary for a suc cessful ndvance offered tho new chance. In April Germany turned her attention to Russia with tho same purpose and the sama possibilities that led to the earlier odcnslvo against France. GALICIA (MAY AND JUNE). At tho opening of tho great German of fensive against Russia the armies of the Czar ln Gallcla wero In tho Carpathians, their flank toward Germany protected by strong defensive works behind the Dun-njec-Blala Rivers. V Tho first operation was directed against this flank, which was suddenly struck by a hugo army under Mackcnscn provided, with nn enormous artillery train. In a few days tho entire front crumpled up, uncovorlng tho rear of the armies In tho Carpathians. Along tho Dunajeo tho Rus sians Buffered a real disaster, losing thou sands of prisoners. In the first stages of their retreat moro thousands woro cap tured, nnd tho whole Carpathian army was threatened ln front by tho Austrian nrmlcs coming from Hungary, In flank and rear by tho German troops coming east in Gallcla. Efforts to stand at the Wlslok, tho San nnd nt Grodck Lakes failed. Although the Russian resistance steadily stiffened, the German advance could not be checked, Jaroslav, Przcmysl and finally Lemberg were recaptured and tho Rus sians wero driven north into Poland and 1 L!,1 J "1 " ' ?Vtfv-.-x&mi&& .wljfW RuMian churcb ready sounded the United t Gov ernment upun tne ojMti. n4 ta be lieved that the numerous confereaosa fcvrlln Jfch, week betweeu Awertos A kweudfi Crard and otflfctai uf t Qw- (kvcl ,ii .-:tbli. Ve Ao , 1915; GREAT EUROPEAN WAR east toward the Bessambian ffantlsr. All but a thin ship of dallcla was feeo quired, after having been occupied by Russia since September. Russian disaster was explained by th lack of ammunition nnd by" the greAt superiority of German Artillery. Prob ably tHls explains tho rapidity of the debacle, but the Russians were clearly outnumbered, outgeneraled and out fought TUB THIRD DRIVE AT WARSAW (JULY) Once Gallcla was cleared the full ex tent of German purpose was revealed. Glance at the map and It will be seen that Russian Poland extends Into German nnd Austrian territory, which grips It something like ft pair of Jaws. Warsaw, the westernmost fortress ot the Russian defensive line, 1b outflanked by German East Prussian territory and by Austrian Gallclan districts. Very shortly It became clear that the plan of the Austro-Gcrman commanders wns to attack Warsaw In front, along the familiar RawkaBzura front and at the same timo to attack the defenslvo lines that covered the railroads from Kiev, Moscow and Petrograd to the Pol ish capital. If these lines In the rear fell before Warsaw was evacuated all tho Russians west of the closing Jaws would bo cut off, surrounded, ultimately cap tured: tho ffrftflter tiart: nt TtusAlAn mill tnry strength would bo eliminated. V If Warsaw were evacuated In time the Russian front , would ba thrown back from the Vistula to tho Bug, tho Austro Germnn allies would gain n tromendously strong defensive line, having conquered most Of Polnnd, and they might expect that Russia would seek peace, or at 'least be compelled to conduct a relatively harmless dofenstve operation far within her own territory for many months. The main object was, of course, to dis pose of the Russian armies by enveloping and capturing them. This would ln alt probability mean a decision; but short of this, If the Russian armies were com pletoly routed, with Austrian and Ger man terrltorylfrecd of Invaders, with vic torious German armies standing ln Bel glum, Poland and northern France, Ger many might expoct to hear from her foes somo proposals for peace, which would bej baseu on tho tun recognition ot ner con--quest nnd achievements, These lines were written with tho fate of Warsaw still ln doubt. The Austrian nnd German Jaws are still closing stead ily behind Warsaw, but the Russian re sistance Is desperate and so far sustained. At tho moment Oermany Is as near to a decision, aa sho was In Franco In Sep tember of last year. ' But If tho Russian armies hold, as tho French did at tho Marne, or escape, ns they did in the great retreat, Germany will miss tho great decision, If sho takes Warsaw. IV. ALLIED OFFENSIVES, Tho first campaign ln tho, west ended with tho battles ot Flanders' on Novem ber 15. It left the allied armies victor ious, to the extent that they had parried tho great German design to dlsposo of France. It left them holding lines which hnd endured tho shock of terrlflo attack, but It left them shattered and to some oxtent disorganized. Tho first British expeditionary army had disappeared ln casualties. France had lost at least three-quarters of a million ot men. It was necessary to reorganize all tho al lied armies to attempt to overtake the Germans, whoso preparation nnd fore sight had almost won them tho decision. Once this reorganization wns Achieved and preparation began to go forward t was necossary to attempt offensive oper ations not nlono to get tho Germans' out of Franco, where their hold upon the mineral and Industrial districts was enp nlinir tho French, but also to rellovo tho pressure upon Russia, and thus assist tho crcat Russian 'offensive In Gallcla, These nttomptB strotch from January to July nnd are, with one exception, an un lnterniDted series of local successes, yet wholly barren of any but tho smallest local advantngc. Great no is tno place they have occupied In tho news of re cont months, tremendous as have been tho losses to tho forces ongaged, they havo left the battlo lines hardly changed and require no detailed examination. FRENCH OFFENSIVES (JANUARY TO JULY). Tho main effort in the west has, of course been made by the' French. In tho Inst six months a sustained attack haa been made In each sector. Thus In Jan uary the first offensive broke out north of the Alsne' nnd east of Solsaons. Local advances were mndo, but a flood carried away tho Alsne bridges, and tho French wero obliged to evacuate not only the ground gained, but the ground held by the British In the early days of tho gen eral Allied advance after the battlo ot tho Marno. This was tho one corapleto failure. ' In February n new effort was made In Alsace, and French troops broke out of tho Thur Valley below Than and touched tho Alsatian Plain. Their advance was checked within sight of Muelhausen, and they were crowded back to the hills. The operation terminated with real gain to the French, but they failed utterly to gain a foothold on the plain. A third effort In Champagne led to much more severe fighting and to terrific losses on both Bides. Not less than half a mil lion men fought for nearly a month on tho narrow front between Rhelms and the Argonne, the French striving to get hold of the railroad which- supplied the German front west of Vouzlers. Slight progress and actual failure to attain the object marked this effort. A fourth ven ture about St. Mlhlel brought back only insignificant profits. The most successful French advance as made in May, north of Arras, and re- was made in way, north or Arras, ana re- suited In the capture of the Lorette ( Germans thpy proved Inferior troops, uc helghts and a number of villages west of Msful only In defensive lines. The final Lens. But once more the main objective disaster and retreat from Gallola were was not attained. The city of Lns did flu0 j jarge part to the failure of tht' not fall and the German lines, thinned I tUppiies or ammunition and their lao or to reinforce the eastern armies, wero neavy artillery- But It is necessary to not broken. In fact, tne uermans were, apie to orania a iAiuiiic(uiii,iieive m, win back considerable lost ground. These, various offensives cost the French not less than 7M.0OO In casualties and achieved no material advantage, necessary as they were. BRITISH FAILURE (NOVEMBER TO JULY). As to the llrltlsh efforts since the bat tles of Flanders, they may be compre hended in the simple statement that the British army has been unable to accom plish any serious offensive result since the middle of last November. The single am bitious bid for success at Neuvs Chapelle ln March ended In a terribly expensive local victory, but the gain here wa off set by loss of trenches in the second bat tie of Ypres In April. A determined ef fort to. support the Frenoh operations about Arras failed completely because at lack of ammunition. Since March the British, now number ing perhaps half million, have hsld their ground with Utile but trench fight ing, in which their losses have been heavy. Net ls than 500.000 DrllUh have now been klljed. wounded, or captured tn now been killed, wounaefl or cepturea mi f iAV"' n5 tto eiirtlv souataew th, western field. But the tallure of $5ffiJ&rffiX vS ft Government U provide awwunltten bJIS Saaror evea ky halted, and still beUs up. f.R.tu. All talk of a ""'- - - -..- ., tun Droved mere moonenin. ana (nere remains some doubt as to whether the British will be able U undertake any serious offensive before next spring. THB UARDANJSU.KB (JFMBKIMRY WP JULY. -Three irumtance produced tne allied . J..l..n. In illlffl f!..l!KllHtln.UllA ""'L u rtijr.tAhttlliua. Ttlrknir'a n- oy ivnseHt tn- -w .--- -.- - H tiaue ! war tn November liad closed Ru4.' Bhtok & yo Whiter was eUK up the Aretw nd Racine parts. Bliiii 'Or WU4C4j .L4 pTkta. This wa th ehtef drewwf aSub. turWh troone were MbMU0 n otve ist Kypt mhleh lrftt end British ptvr &t ih very ky,eai. ot the IswerieJ 1 1 Flu!!,, in. fall i i ,.at.l8ttopi aa 6tJorf W Cii-1 1 lllMW Jut" ... .. . Ml- ,iJ: i ilriiii 11 11 i The nrtt alterw' vM ms bf ,rt AngtoFMm.fi rteelaftijitiiwiH Um ftw Trie operation WwsfT a rni , a v mftrked by lnitfiil- tf&erjiwees, atxj wp completely cheeked try the etnWfte u" three battleoblp? tin Mt&th "Wnt mttnt critic had fffretotd R4 now penedj H had ttgafft beer Am"titfctd that a hvvai &peUnn of tht eort mm--out the helfi At landing rart i-viin mft uccAod. U was neeesaty to bav r courso to a new expMluoh; thn Twite were warned in advance at what eomlng and Mllert prestige tn the ihrt kan wae severely ehattefd. OH the other hand, Italteh partieipailsn hastened and Turkeys attack upon B) ended. A month later nn AngtaTrohcti 4tW dltlonary army wa landed tin Uie 3Ul pol peninsula, after an png&fwnwit which brought heavy casualties Id f6 Invaders. For many week the the land forces were unable to muk ndvance. The support of the fleet hindered by the operations of a German "prjinrlne, h!o!l Scored on two mere battleships, only in recent wk bs there been progress by tho Allien, and they havo not yet reached tho first per manent position of the Turke. Whether the Dardanelles expedition fi wise or foolish, a point much debatl. it is plain that It has been badly hihrtag-fi has so for failed to make any Mrimts progress, and that tho ultimate capture of Constantinople Is still open to queaUon. On the other hahd. it Is necessary to rec ognize that the failure of aerminlfcto take Warsaw, or even in taking WariS to capture tho Russian armies, if foUc-wtsa by tho faR or Constantinople, WDUltr mean that tho Gorman attempt to dispone of Rusxia had terminated, for once the Dardanelles aro forced Russia win be able to munition and equip her rn!tU0n, who aro only waiting for arm. Iw fall of Constantinople will necessarily ettl the attitude ot the Balkans, certainly bring Oreeco Into tho antl-Gormnn line, and probably Rumania. Allied defoat, on the contrary, will mean, If not n disaster, an Irremediable repulse. At Ihe cloyo pt tho first year Wnrsiw nnd Constantinople aro tho critical points In the situation. ITALIAN OPERATIONS (MAY 23- JULY 23). Italy declared war upon Austrls on May a. Tho nature of her frontier. hemmed In by the Auatnnrt mountains from the Isonzo to Switzerland, hor northern provinces open to attack from the fortified places Cf the Austrian 5,yrol mado It Inevitable that her efforts for many months woula be confined to eu tompta to clear her own frontiers at iho Austrlans and close the gateways lead ing to her own regions nnd held, by her foes. Such offensives no she could Un dertake in addition would naturally bo directed at Trieste and the Italian-speak, Ing districts cast ot her frontiers, At tho close of two months of war Italy Is still striving to penetrate Into the Trentino about the fortress ot Trent, to cut tho railroad lines serving tSxtt Aus trian Tyrol by the Fustcrthal, ?o sur round and reduce the whole Tyrolean sa lient south of tho Brenner Pass, So far sho has made slight and unimportant pro gress, and Is still outside tho first tines of Austrian defenso In tho Adlgo Valley, along the Pusterthal and south of the Stclvlo. Between the Julian AIPs and the seo, ?n tho front from Tolmlno to Nabreolnaj tallan troops have ln several planes passed tho Isonzo, have token Montfal cone nnd Gradlsco. and are now pressing ln upon Gorlila. Hero Italian troops have encountered the first line ot Austrian defenses, and have for many days been encaced In a. severe and cxDenslVe con flict It Is not yet clear whether Jha-s- Itnllrmn have made tho uroirrcsn Ibsli-UU letlna claim; If they have, then the fnll of .Gorlzla and th0 capture of Trieste are at hand. But It ,1s -well to recall hat these suc cesses will pot have any serious effect upon Austrian defense, nnd Iho road to Vienna will still remain barred by many forts and mountains, , while. Until the Trentino salient Is reduced, Italy Will Al ways have to fear a German offensive from tho Brenner. As yet, then, the Ital ian campaign has but begun, and the dif ficulties of the territory make It tmluVly that Italy can exorcise any great Influ ence upon tho whole combat for mhut weelts to come, certainly sne nnjr .no been able to force tli Austrlans toatl their masses from- tho Warsaw drive. SUMMARY. Of the four major efforts described above, the flrat, the German attack on. Franco, failed to dispose of France, Its Initial successes wcj-o duo ta tho viola tion of the Belgian frontier, nnd when the French army had been recoocenttaf'' It outfought the German, heavily de feated It, but in ItB- turn failed to force the Germans out f -a, largo district of northern France, which had heen occu pied In the dash from Belgium. The French achievement waa tyholly unexpected to the Germans and remains' an enduring monument both to' FieneJi soldiers and to French command. In tide campaign the British part was slight untl the battle of Flanders, but here the Brit ish won A remarkable triumph-' against great qdds and saved the Channel ports German failure was not due to bad gen eralship or Incidental mistakes: it wet duo to the amazing1 French rally and to the fact that what had been attempted was beyond the capacity even of Ger mans. But the nearness to victory teems to have Justified the risk taken. The- Russian offensive failed fcecatwe t the ability of the Germans to reinforce their ally- Whenever the Russians had only the Austrlans to deal with they w j were on the point of crushing nil A tr)gn military strength. But against i Invarlnqly successiui, mm " yi;iu-" us lrin military strength. Hut against ins i no!nt out that it was tno uermans wno finally defeated the great RusMsn effort to crush Austria. Of the allied offensive In the West !ii need bo said. The simple fact seem W b that the Sreneh fljfhtlns ha eluwr, the extreme difficulty of making a successful advanoei the Germans have stmply du thfrnselves.lntp northern Vnmrr, an are abmip supply the men and ammuutu.n to itnthafiy Offensive. The great neM ..i the PrUfcJoee and the com-omtant failure offc'Brltieb to get up tmm or feed thejr i?M espWn failure In this field, and there I no preeent pium.e of a change. 0rrn defense hew h been as brilliantly successful as tl oper ations against Rueeie. Of the fourth major campaign, thM ...-.at Ttuula. It ts only poesttle to av 1 that Jt V t"i 8la f0'W8Jfd. '"", u,ll! eeaaful as was the advance on Perta be fore the battle of the Warn. It t chiefly noteworthy w as dewonatnuJiuf the enormous rewnreee ot Germany in men and rflurdttaw. toil? ta erilr ,.- ,W 1 Bees, jwmww' VnnAt eMS M1 G?THF. S- 4Utntoyt ebility u, n.L . i-bpVw rm Jrew dlpt--t i ft 17f3 t W ptW-i uf r' i- -seems to h b iumfi al -. . sUee of ny nally a.- ,. . i . .n eMu H"'y r.i!B4wi lt.M: dlsr n nu" modify ths (jdMnl i ,)e-iAlton thai the war -Ul -&rh t. uoe or t yefa JK.r.ally, ti ' ' k iMte w la1 ihe'i.iituary jp' 'iS i && s 4"1 ttUdJH -'t, --"' nun, ikty bae ia4 in . to IMI-nf. lsi ji-.'-I - ....1,1. h"'? Bfe - HSf Vi - 1 T-. . tJ. J 1m. r 3 ft -- iir m , H 1 . J. V-s . . -.. v. ,,ikl, mm elan.! u- KfisT..30BSroi4 Ktf' 3 " .jf-"i'W'itf-.-. -.V '-