ARMY 0F 200,000 ENVELOPED| Gen. Dankl's Forces, Caught in Their Retreat To- Wards Hungary, A 'despatch from. London says: It is reported from Petrograd that an Austrial army retreating in Gali-' cia has been caught between two Russian armies and must surrender or accept certain defeat in battle. The supposition here is thatthe | imperiled force is the command of Gen. Dank!, which retreated up the | Vistula from Ivangorod and New) Alexandra after the collapse of the | Austro-German invasion. -- Instead | of co-operating with the Germans | good their retreat southward across | me in a withdrawal to Cracow and Czenstochowa, the Austrians ap- pear to have followed their own course in:an attempt to withdraw rapidly across Western Galicia and ape through the passes of the Sar pathians into Hungary. [Must Surrender The news is partial confirmation of the report transmitted by .co respondents in Petrograd that as was a quarrel between Gen. Dankl and the German commander, Gen. von Binders, due to the cal- lousness of rmans = forcing | the eee Ra to accept the perils and hardships of a rear ' while the Germans themselves con- served men Apparently the Austrians made the upper Visthla, but were. net swift enough to escape a turning movement by Russian cavalry which crossed the Vistula from South-west Poland and swerved eastward while a supporting force followed the J Austrians from the north, QUEEN PAID: VISIT 10 WOUNDED MEN Gladdened Ilearts of Soldiers with Gifts: of Pipes and Clothing. A despatch from London says: Queen Mary paid a visit to Paign- ton, in Devonshire, in order to in- spect the American Woman's Hos* pital, where some 200 wounded sol- diers from the front are being tend- Accompanied by Lady Arthur Paget, Lady Randolph and Mrs. Lewis Harcourt, members of the Hospital Committee, and her per- sonal suite, the Queen left Lon- don and remained in the hospital for more than two hours, which were passed in visiting the wards, talking to the patients, and distri-| buting among them personal pre- sents of pipes, shirts, cigarettes and warm mufflers. The Queen, who was shown round the wards by Dr. Howard N. Beale and other American members of tho staff, which is entirely American, and consists of two American Red Cross units of six surgeons and 24 nurses, was greatly struck by the efficiency displayed, which is en- tirely due to American effort, the whole sum needed for the support of the hospital being contributed by Americans. ee ESCAPED AS AS FIREMEN. ier Ten Officers of the Kaiser Wilhelm Break Parole. A despatch to the Exchange Tele- gore Company of London from s Palmas, Canary Islands, says that ten officers from the North German Lloyd steamer Kaiser Wil- helm der Grosse, which was de- stroyed early in the war by the Bri- tish cruiser Highflyer, who were on ae have made their escape ina tech steamer,- disguised as fire- men, The men had. been lodged on a German steamer moored in the harbor at Las Palmas. esi . Loss of Monmouth "Presumed." A despatch from London says: The Admiralty published the names of 52 officers and warrant officers who were aboard the British crui- ser Good Hope when it was sunk with the cruiser Monmouth by the German squadron off the coast of Chile. The names include that of Rear-Admiral Sir Christopher Cra k, commander of the British ships. The Monmouth had aboard 42 officers. The captain of the Good Hope was Philip Trancklin. The captain of the Monmouth was Frank Brandt. 16 Admiralty anno unces that in the absence of further inf, r- mation the loss of the Monmouth is now "'officially presumed.' No man ever did evil to anther without doing a greater evi! to him- self. EMDEN PARTY STILL AT LARGE Three Officers and Forty Men, with Four Guns, Escaped in Schooners, N.S. W., here has received setae, of te fight in which A despatch | sh Sydne ayeeey ys: The i the German cruiser Emden was put ore. Forty men with three offi- cers and four maxims were landed in fifteen minutes, and the landing | party smashed the wireless instru- nts and the engines of the plant. In the meantime the Australian eruiser Sydney was' sizhted on horizon and the Emden immediate- ly put out to sea,-leavi ibe the land- ing party, both boats and men, be- hind. The Emden started the fir- ing, her practice. at first being ex- cellent, but afterwards it fell off. She lost two funnels and took fire at' the stern within an hour, while the Sydney was scareely touched. The landing party, having com- manceered two months' supplies, left on schooners belonging to the owner of the islands. It appears that the presence of the Emden was ma' known to. Sydney by wireles: ..cm the East- fern Cable Company's staff on Co- cos Island. , . FEAR FAMINE IN GOATS. French Animals are Being Fed toy British Indian Soldiers. German Crown Prince's Mother-in- Law Has Renounced Germany. The Grand Duchess Anastasia of Mecklenbourg-Schwerin, movher-in- law of the Crown Prince Frederick William, has renounced her Ger- man nationality and resumed the nationality of her birth, which is Russian. Hereafter she will be known as dl pe Duchess Mika- levitsch. thé. CZar's 'cousin and sister [re the Grand Duke Nich- pies jand Michal. She hee jeinen| thousand. r beau es the use of the wounded so'diers. Pe ANTI-BRITISH PAPERS. Order-in-Council Makes it a Crimi- nal Offence to Possess Them, A despatch from Ottawa says: The order-in-Council, making it a criminal offence to circulate or pos- sess seditious anti-British and Ger- man papers, which are coming into Canada from American cities, will 7 rigidly enforced. The matter is © be taken up by the Postmaster- General, and special officers ap- pointed to enforce the law. The penalty is $5,000, or two yeurs' im- risonment. 'There is said to be veavy circulation of such papers in Montreal. SPREADS TO CHILDREN. Several Liying Near Infected Cat- tle Found with Sore Mouths. A despatch from Providence, R.I. ays: Fear that the foot an mouth disease had spread to human eings was expressed by Federal and State authorities. Four chil- dren of a Providence man who owned infected cattle were found sages in their mouths. A en who had taken care of the cows had the most pro- nounced symptoms, The children have been examined by several doc- tors, but the nature of the disease has not been determined definitely. SOONER THAN SURRENDER - Ship Went Down and Those on Board Cheered and Sang the National Anthem A despatch from Perel Says + 'A graphic account has been re- ceived here of the end of the Rus- sian transport Pruth, which the Russians sank sooner than surren- der her to the Turkish cruiser Goe- ben. When calied upon to surren- der her captain headed the Pruth for the shore, opened the valves and blew a hole in the bottom of the yesso!. Lieut. Ragowsky perished | while attempting to fire a second charge of explosives . Part of the crew got off in boats, while the others jumped into the water and were picked up by the Turkish ships. The ship's chaplain and a hand- fulof men were left aboard. As the ship went down the chaplain was seen on deck giving his blessing to the men; who remained about him, cheering and singing the national anthem. To Visit Indians on Firing Line A dcapateh from London says: rn public says the famous general ing into-the war zone "to see 2 x r Field Marshal Lord Roberts ofl ¢ the fatien troops. Lerd Roberts \Randahar is going to Franye. The| was born in Cawnpore, India, ofiial gaonouncement making this} éighty-two years ago, @/ 120. A despatch from New York says: AdviceS reaching here to the effect that the British Government is feed- ing its Indian troops in the field on French goats are worrying glove importers in this country. There promises to be a shortage in goat skins for glove manufacture, not be- cause the Indian troops éat the en- tire goat, but because they are using the skins as mats to lie on in the trenches. To make sure that by no chance should the meat served offend the religious scruples of the Hindus, the British eo eal has been serving goat m he iukomnadion is that the In- dian troops are consuming between ve and six thousand carcases a day, or five. hundred dozen old goats. Assuming that the war lasts only six months, a most conserva- tive assumption, these BepOre. will ety estruction of the goats Wedskin to be a shortage in Watch kidskins. - ----------_k____ Turks Sent to Fort Henry. Bound for Fort Henry as prison-, ers of war a train load of Turks Pp nals from Brant This was the first occasion that any citizens the Ottoman Empire have been placed in custody, and the arrival of the train in Toronto created a great deal of interest. The train was composed of two coaches and a naggage car, which was filled with the effects of the prisoners. The total number of Turks arrested was A full company of the local militia was placed in charge of the prisoners, and while ten men were = upon the platforms with ded rifles as guards the remain- der were seated in the coaches be- tween their charges. ---- kk _____.. A REBELLION Food Demanded, The human body will stand a lot of abuse, but sometimes it will sure- ly rebel 'and demand proper food in place of the pasty, starchy, greasy -- on which it has been made Then is the time to try Grape- Nuts, the most scientific and per- fect food in the world. A woman writes: "Three years ago I was very i. with catarrh . the stomach and was given up to die by one doctor. I laid in bed four months and my sto was so weak that I could not keep down medicine or hardly any kind of food and was so weak and emaci- ated after four months of this star- vation that my daughter could easily lift me from bed and put me y stomach -was, it accepted, relished and digested Grape-Nuts without any difficulty the first time that wonderful food was tri "T am now strong and in better health than for a great many years and am gra Y growing still stronger. I rely on Grape-Nuts for much of the nourishment that I get. The results have certainly been wonderful in my case and prove that no stomach is so weak it will not digest Grape-Nu "My baby got fat - from 'feeding on Grape-Nuts. I was afraid I would have to stop giving the food to him, but I guess it is a healthy fat for hts health is just perfect,"' ame given by Canadian Postum W ie Ont. gs. for the famous little hor. "The Road to Well- ville."' "There's a Reaadie Af Ever read tha above letter. A_new on; 'out of commission. The Emden ar- | rived at Cocos Island and sent' armed launches towing two boats' through the Toronto termi-' ca | ae | yf 'THE a SEA" | TU3K ARMY IN GOOD SHAPE MUST BE RECKONED WITH IN THE PRESENT WAR. So Says a War Correspondent-- Have Huge Forces to Draw From. The Turkish army has been train- ed by German officers, but the navy has been bui!t up largely on the ad- vice of British and American offi- cers. Turkey, it is said, can put at least 750,000 trained men in the field, but only a portion of the to- tal effort in arms could be deliver- ed at one time orin one place. The navy is made up of about Meas men; and it is not But ' wer: + | influence of the Tork may "prove Ey yery important James F. Archibald, @ war corres? pondent in fifteen campaigns, writ- ing in World's Work, recently said : Turk as a Soldier. "Turkey must be seriously con- sidered in this conflict. Her arms might' easily be the balance of ower. 'There is no better fighting 'orce in the world to-day than the Turks. I saw a hundred thousand Turks mobilized in Albania during: war, with as little trouble as would move a brigade--magnificent. fata]- ists, armed and equipped in the most modern manner. These men went down to defeat before an in- ferior people and an inferior force, beaten, not by the arms of the enemy, but by politics at home. A few weeks ago I saw these same Turks in Constantinople. They again had their old spirit--their | ; equipment was even better, and the useless domains of their empire, which had been a drain on rem, , had been cut off. A new party is in the revolution before the Balkan |p) DE WETS FORCES DEFEATED Enemy in German South-West Africa Uses Dum-' Dum Bullets in Conflict With Loyalists A despatch from London: says 'An official despatch from Lieut.- Co]. Dirk Vandeventer concerning the defeat of a force of Germans and Boer rebels at Zandfontein, near the southern border of Ger- man south-west Africa, has been received. According to the report, the Union forces inflicted a loss of 120 killed or wounded and captured 25 men. The Union loss was 12 men killed and 11 wounded. "Our officers and men who were killed,' the report says, "with some exceptions, were shot with dum-dum bullets, and suffered ace frightful wounds.' 'he news was weceived from Pre- toria to-day that the rebel general, Chris. Muller, was captured in a farmhouse, where he thad hidden after being wounded. He is a pr soner in Pretoria An official Pretoria despatch -re- ceived by Reuter's says that Gen. Louis Botha came into contact with the rebel General de Wet's com- mando 24 miles east of Winburg, Orange River Colony, after a forced night march. The rebels were se- verely defeated, 250 being taken prisoners. BUCKNAM PASHA, Admiral Ransford D. Bucknam, : wae is In Nova cotia, who no in supreme command of the Turkish favy, which is operating against Russia. II., who was deposed by the unani- mous vote of the National Assem- y. Turkey pe territory in "Eu- rope as a result of the Bajkan wars. Her Asiatic possessions are Asia Minor, Armeniaz and Kurdistan, Mesopotamia and Syria, and Yemen and Hedjas in Arabia. Turks, Greeks and Albanians, it is esti- population of European Turkey. Asiatic Turkey there are also large numbers of Turks, about 7,000,000 Arabs and many Greeks, Ku s, Oircassians, Armenians, etc. The Turks are nowhere found in a solid mass, but they are scat- tered over almost the: entire Bal- power, and the Turkey of to-day must be reckoned with in this strug- gle, both in arms and in diplomacy. here is no better infantry in the world than the Turkish infantry ; : their abstemious habits, their na- tional temperance, which is a part of their faith, puts them among the best foot soldiers of the world.' Turkish Pessessions. Mahomed V., Sultan of Turkey, born in 1844, was proclaimed Sul- tan on April 27, 1909, in succession to his elder brother, Abdul Hamid kans, and even in Bosnia and Her- zegovina. Nowhere are they more numerous than in Northern Bul- garia, where there is a strong Tar- tar strain among them. Retrieved Losses. Turkey suffered overwhelming losses in the YWirst Balkan war, an this was reflected in the general political situation at the opening of 1913, when the Union and Progress party ousted the Cabinet. Con- spiracies continued, and in June the Grand Vizier was murdered and a Greatest A despatch from London says: The Official Press Bureau issued e following statement: "The operations-during the last few' days have consisted mainly of fighting to ihe north of the Lys, where the points of interest were at first on the line of Ho sllebecke, Wytschaete and Messines. There have also been severe encounters on the line from Zanvoorde to Frelinzhein. ; "The character of the fighting has been one of frequent and vigor- ous infantry attacks rom the Ger- mans. accompanied by heavy shell fire, alternating with equally vigor- ous counter-attacks, the general re- sult being the maintenance of our line, not without considerable losses on our side, but with still heavier appears from time ey are _enuins, true, dnd subs ot y= a interaat losses on the other. Six machine] to 3 WEEKS RAIN OF SHELLS Defence of Ypres Will Rank as One of History's position, which projects like a bas- poured successive waves of infantry against it, only to see them bre ak Episodes guns and over one hundred prison- ers were taken by us in one day. 1e German artillery fire was practicaily a continual bombard- ment, intended to pulverize the de- ence preparatory to the, advance of the infantry, In the centre the struggle has been at Ypres, the de- fence of which will certainly be reckoned in history as one of the most striking epicodes of the Bri- tish army. "For more than three weeks the tion into the enemy's lines, has been held under a rain of shells which has hardly ceased by day or night. During this time the enemy has | new Cabinet formed. Takin : Etat oe) of Tsing-tau, é Germaggconcession. | Chan, China, 'sent ng ad- vantage of the outbreak of hostili- ties between Bulgaria and her for-' mer allies, Turkey reoccupied and retains Adrianople and a goodly slice of territory she had. lost in, the war. NO IRON GROSS FOR THIS GOVERNOR Admits That Artillery at Tsing-tan\ Was Completely Overcome by Japanese, "A despatch from Berlin says: © ital a telegram to the German Emperor through 'the | Japanese Legation at Pekin, in which he eays: "After cthaneil g all efforts, the fortress, which od stormed, was broken through in the centre and fell. The fortress and town were badly damaged by the fire from the howitzers and a strong bombard- ment from the sea, "Our artillery was completely overcome. The losses have hot yet. been ascertained, but, in view of. the heavy fire, are less than we ex-} pected." A GEN ERAL'S S BA AGG AGE. The Amount Has Nothing To Do} . With a Man's Ability. It may be laid down as a military; axiom that a general's ability is| not measured by the amount of bag-| gage the takes to war. It is said that when General Sir John French embarked to take com- mand of the British forces now: senting with the French against] - the Germans in Northern France;| all the baggage he took 'was con-| tained in a single suit case. _Contrariwise, when Napoleon, , Emperor of F rance, left Paris in 1870 to take command cf the armies which he said, were going straight to Berlin, he took along 48 trunks, besides a most volumin- ous kitchen and bedroom equip- age. The Germans got every scrap of it allat Sedan. His son, the Prince Imperial, escaned from Se- dan and the beleague"ise Germana with his personal effects, whic ate fill- ed a special train of Vite < j | to pleces, one after the other,"' FAMOUS INVALID PORT 'The Turner Ce. Limited Torcato "Buy it for Purity's sake" --It builds up nerves and tissues. Makes you strong.