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) | AUSTRIANS CLAIM ty DECISIVEVICTORY QVERCZARS ARMY Officially Report That Their Forces, With Germans, Have Repulsed Russians, NEW BATTLE LINES. Petrograd, However, Says Heavy Rains Alone Retard Their Progress in Galicia. ‘VIENNA, Oot. 7(via Amsterdam and Chiet of the General Staff, out in this city to-day: @: The sudden advance of the and-Austrian forces in Rus- Poland seems to have completely the Russians. Although moved strong forces from Gal- @ the north, they were repulsed driven back across the Vistula allies, while making an effort ‘the river in the direction of ‘Our troops captured « bridge held €y the Russians near Sandomir. “Ta Galicia we are advancing in ac- erdance with our plans. “In the vicinity of Tarnovereg we conte’ © division of Russian in- firetilet AUSTRIANS CLAIM TO BE ViC- TORIOUS EVERYWHERE. Tt ie officially announced that the Russians invading Galicia to besiege the Cracow fortifications, have been line of the Tetaken Nowy Sandee (Neu Sandee) on the southern Galician railway line, just of the Donajec Rt and ure still in possession of Tare now. The Russians bave made several @asaults in force on the Austrian po- gitions in the vicinity of Tarnow, but im every instance it is stated they have been repulsed. The battle line in Galicia now ex- tends from the Vistula River just morth of Sexcucin, along the line of railroad that parallels the Donajec, connecting the northern and southern Galician lines, The Russians have attempted to advance with two entire armien along the northern and south- : lines, but vd Sect bese defeated im every attempt y have made to break through the Austrian front. The Austrians are now on the of- fensive and will endeavor decisively to defeat the Russians and thus raise the siege of Preemys!. DECLARE RUSSIANS ARE DANGER ON FLANK. ‘The Russians will soon be in danger of a flank attack the German in- vasion of Russian Poland from the neighborhood of Bendsia is con- tinuing. ‘The above despatch received from ‘Vienna to-day by way of Rome flatly contradicts the Russian claims that they had occupied Tarnow and were about to cross the Donujec River for the purpose of isolating Cracow. PETROGRAD, Oct. 7.—Practically no news comes from the Bast Prus- alan frontier, where the Russian 4 armies have been reported as driv- tng the Germans back on their first fortified line, It is ted, however, that the Germans have again been heavily reinforced and that pr bd the Russian forces is of necessity . The Russ! now hold the original German line extending from Lyck to Wirballen. campaign in Galicia has again been retarded by heavy rains, which has made the movement of transports @ desperate task. The Southern Ga! olan army continues to make pro; the foothills of the C pathians. The President of the Russian In- ants’ Association, elosing of eign Minister said Russia, Great Erit- ain nee were continuing ef- Dardanelles re- + opened to commerce, The Russky Slovo publishes a des- toh from a corresponilent at the p ovsory siving briet details of the bat- emen [iver. He says suffered enormous in of bodies of Ger- idiers lie on the left bank of e r, the correspondent declares, INDON, Oct. 7 (Associated Press), —Tt im officially announced from the Amsterdam correapondent the Reuter Telegram Company. ‘The Russians retreated. The battle came to an end near Kriesfulva . with complete victory for the Aus- » . ROME, Oct, 7 'Central News Cable) pa 4 ‘ ‘Real Love Between a Man and Wom- { ie an Ie a Bond That Springe From Fy High Ideals.”’ jPormer “Werk Ie the One Great Blessing ' That the Divine Power Who Rules Amelle Rives, Noted Novelist, Says: “My Idea Seeking my definition: “Real love detween a man and a The foregoing ie the definition given by the Princess Troubetakoy (for: merly Amelie Rives), recently re- turned to America for a protracted visit, to work, she says. While a re- Porter for The Evening World was awaiting her coming in the reception room of her suite in the Hotel Wol- cott she entered noiseleesly, paused, and then—— “Where is the Prince?” she asked. “He was to be here some time ago.” Then discovering an intruder in the Foom #he gazed querulously at him by fern-like lashes, The “intruder” dropped his eyes, He soon picked them up, however, and picking up courage along with them, gased with undisguised admiration at the Prin- cess, Who gained fame many years ago by writing "The Quick or the Dead,” and since has piled literary power and prestige on the name of Troubets- koy by such novels as “World's End” and “Shadows of Flames.” “Where is the Prince?” repeated the Princess. The reporter, not hav- ing ‘een accustomed to associate with titled company, began to feel wobbly. Finally he stammered that he didn’t know where the Prince was, at which, in an exquisitely modulated tone, she wanted to know how the party of the second part chanced to be there. When he had explained that he wes there just to have a chat with ‘the Princess and her husband, Pring Pierre Troubetskoy, @ portrait painter, she sald: “But where is the Prince?” 1 eup- pose he is taking @ walk.” Then she seated just as novel heroines are supposed to be seated, aud continued: “I shall be delighted to have a chat with you. It seems so good to be here in America and her an Ameri- can talking—you are an American, area't you? Ah, I thought eo. It seems so good to be here in America, although I mies my many dear friends in England, Now, please feel perfectly at home and ask any question that may come to your mind.” NOT ACCUSTOMED TO PRIN- CESSES. The reporter thereupon confessed frankly that he never before had ad- dressed a princess. He also ¢x- pressed great curiosity to know how princesses were addressed by ordi- nary mortals. “Simply as ‘Princes: reply, That made mattera easter, especially as the Princess nospitably smiled her amusement. “Princess,” said the reporter con- fidingly, as if he were talking to a southern colonel, “why did you and the Prince come over here?” “Oh,” was the somewhat startled reply, with a shrug of the shoulders, “to work. The Prince will paint por- traits. I shall write, I really came —A despatch from Nish declares that several thousand Austrians were an- nihilated yesterday by Serbs as thev were crossing the Sava near Shabatz. An official statement in Vienna, whioh evidently refers to the same engagement, says Serbs rounded Austrian patrola and mas- an. despatch ort from 8 \t_ Przem- ysl, the Austrian fortress, fifty-one miles west of Lemberg, is being bom- barded by Russian heavy artillery, ‘The damago is considerable. “All efforts of the Austrian field forces to assist the fort have been unsuccess- ful gnd their troops have retreated to Viottlavek, Miseries of Tortures of Indigestion Constipation . Evils of Impure Blood Quickly and Safely. Removed by | EX-LAX The Chocolate Laxative | Ex-Lax Saves Pain and Suffering; makes people | healthy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. Ex-Lex is quarenteed to be efficient, gentle, harmless. Vigan oop Me aa t ‘0.106 Bes Wak Prove This: Try Ht Te-Diy—AM Drugglets. the Universe Bestowe on Mortale to Keep Them Happy Agreeable One; Imagine a Person Huge Room Filled With Carbonic Acid Gas, With Shuffling, Over- heated Persons.”’ “True love? Ah, what te it? Who can define it? I shall try. Here ts Mgh Ideals. It ia tike a wonderful comradeship roised to the n'th power.” with eyes of deep-hued violet, shaded | ; if gracefully, relaxingly, | was the) ra 2 of a Ballroom Ie Not an Physical Exercise in a woman is a bond that springs from nere to rest, but I have been work- ing, because I can't bear being tdle. Work is the one great blessing that the Divine Power who rules the unl- verse bestgws on mortals to keep them ha: So I love to work. However, simply could not work regularly, as most persons employed at salaries do, “I write when I am in the mood, and in that mood I find the greatest pleasure, My characters seem to be at my side talking to me, some of them entreating, others threatening or cajoling me. It is intense pleasure.” “But your youthful appearance— how do you keep it with all your work?" said the reporter, remember- ccording to “Who's Who in the Princess il, at in the re- ception room of her suite she did not look a day over twenty. There were no wrinkles in her face, which actually seemed to be that of a debutante. “T also work to retain my health,” she replied. “It is outdoor exercise— horseback riding, walking, tennis. Do I dance? Never. My idea of a ball- room is not an agreeable one. Imagine & person seeking physical exercise in a huge room filled with carbonic acid T am not a physt the tangor the ‘so-called ‘Realtation, the one-step ‘and other Gances: ‘do not said: “The Germans don't give us much time for letter writing. This one appeal to me unless performed by ex- perts. Then they are graceful, just as ballet dancing is graceful.” THINKS HE’LL PROVE INTER- ESTING. The Princess 7) character of j-and-Hyde” she has po in the first: instal- ment of “Shadows of Flames.” “He will prove intensely interest- ing,” she said. “At one moment he is Cectl, a sort of husband, m and at another high- considerate. How many men there are of that type! And how they puaszie their wives, sweethearts, sisters or mothers, One cannot des- | Pise them.” She then gave the defi- nition of “true love” quoted at the be- ginning. “There also is a strong element of mysticism in the story,” continued the Princess. “It is there because it reflects modern feeling. People ev- erywhere—and in America partiou- larly—seem to be struggling to reach the truth—and they seem to be near at truth. You have a play on Broadway now which deals with that struggle. And everywhere the old spirit of puritanism is exerting itself —not to persecute real witches, but to drive spiritual witchery out of mod- ern philosophy, “What people want is the truth. But—oh, the horror of it in Europe! They were reaching the zenith of civ- iiization when they plunged them- selves to the nadir—to the mire of brutality, This war—it turns me sick to think of the slaughter. It is worse than cannibalism, because the canni- bal—— I shi idea by sayin meretful an the ‘civilized’ soldier. And yet they call it patriotism.” ———————EE HIGH TEMPERED COUPLE SHOOED OUT OF COURT Husband Had Told Wife Broke Jardiniere Over His Head and She Gripped Him. The efforts of John Heagney, a clerk in the Auditing Department, and his wife Anna Vincent Heagney, to conduct their own arguments be- fore Justice Brady in the Supreme Court in the Bronx in a habeas cor- pus proceeding put the court in an uproar to-day and caused the Justice to shoo the amateur lawyers out of court to cool their wrath. | Hoagney wanted a writ of habeas| corpus to recover from Mrs. Heag- | ney their three-year-old baby, He said bis wife broke a jardiniere over his bead. “There was also a tobacco jar," he continued, “but I did not save the! pieces.” He had the pieces of the jar- diniere with him. “She is a wild woman, your honor and her mother is Re better than she-—" “Beece. , and before the court officers could prevent: had her bands gripped | in her husband's hatr and collar, ‘The two were torn apart. Justice Brady said it was evident that both were high tempered and would not be injured by a period of advice and contemplation, Been tall AUTO BEHEADS CHAUFFEUR. Bedy of Truck Drops o Neck as He Makes Ri: WORCESTER, Maas,, Oct. 7.—Herbert B, Cowden, twenty-five years old, em- ployed as chauffeur on an auto truck for coal delivery, was decapitated to- day when the heavy body of tl ir A Ee ey Fo Taking 'repaire to the elevating geal. Man's uel ver an VENING WORL K | eign-bullt vessels, with an 4 PPPS EDDDLOLDE SD HEDOEEDISEOSER IOI GS al PPT TEES 98 FPTSSB IS FESIPEIOSED: 0092056-000000000656605000000006 In an appeal from one French tioned the following as acceptable gifts: Tobacco, matches, chocolate, pep- permints, acid drops, cards and pencils. Lance Corporal Northcroft, of the South Cornwalls, writing to his wife, has been stopped six times because the beggars crept too close and I had to go out and chase them off with the bayonet before settling down again.” “Tommy Atkins” is a -hundred years old. en wasasked about | has contained the formula, “Private T. “Thomas Atkins, his mar! the signature, in particulars required. Even the thieves are showing patriotism, for official reports show that @ man in whom the baser emotions | there has been a reduction of 40 per cent. in crime in the County of Lon- don since war started. Charles Richter committed suicide in London because children teased his daughter about his German nationality. Five thousand German prison land are prevented from escaping by a sea filled with” man-eating sharks, according to officers on the freighter Delphic, hore from New Zealand. Austrian subjects who make “careless” remarks on the military eltua- tion are given three years’ imprisonment, with fast days every week. Unole Sam is serving 2,000 free garians in London. tingent fund. During thirty-seven days’ fighting, German army chaplains have been with the troops and held services and preached sermons {n the trenches. The big North German Lioyd st wa veil over the| &t Bar Harbor, Me., under a United States court libel, must oe taken from cannibal is more/¢he harbor before winter or she will be destroyed by ice, and if she ts ‘taken out she may be captured by British war vessels waiting for her, Camille Satnt-Bacns, the French composer, says it 1s now as impossible for Frenchmen to listen to Wagner's operas as “it would be to applaud a singer who had in A retired British naval officer do not come out and fight they may be caught ina freeze this winter, and then the British cavalry can capture them. French husears cap- tured a Dutch fleet that way in 1794, D WEDNESDAY, ootobee incess Troubetzkoy Defines True Love As Comradeship Raised to the Nth Power IS THE BELIEF OF _ MANFROM FRONT wp, colored handkerchiefs, boracic powder, playing Expenses are paid from the Austro-Hungarian Con-| een Pr PO POOSSEHE FF HOESTREH Ee OE White House, master, t infantry regiment the soldiers men- Since 1814 every army form kins,” and for many years bore a guide to the soldier filling ae lie ne mle clared. France; on ers of war on an island off Auck- he sald, “wel only answer meals a week to Austrians and Hun- 1 eamship Kronprinsessin Cecilie, held pathetic.” i what he saw jured one's mother.” suggests that if the German shina used to be. the air, moat of the RUSTEM BEY, GOING AWAY. I$ TO RETURN SOME DAY Turkish Ambassador, Sailing on Stampalia, Says He Has Not Resigned. “I have not been recalled by my Government, nor have I resigned as Ambassador from Turkey to this country. I have nothing to add to the interview given by me at Washington and havo nothing to withdraw, 1 ain going to Constantinople for weeks and will return to Washington etill as Ambassado: ‘This is what A. Rustem Bey, Turk- ish Ambasyador to America, had to say before sailing at noon to-day on the Italian Stampalia, He is hound for Ni nd hopes to reach Constantin steamer from that port. © are no steamers, he will go overland. “I did not gall on the Santa Anna yesterday,” he said, “becau detained here by business, I antici- pate no difficulty In getting home. am certain that Turkey will not go tu war. It is not to her advantage to do ¢ Ambassador was asked if there wasn't some fear that the abrogation of foreign concessions would lead to in- ternal disorders and massacres. The Ambassador drew himself up haugh- tily, ———— Sixty Ships Under American Flag, WASHINGTON, Oct, 7.~—Sixty fo: eregate of 288,781 rome tons, have been ad- mitted to the American registry, ac- 7 n few! was | | much by th cording to an oficial announcement to-night by the Department of Com- merce. Fifty-four of the vessels! previously sailed under the British flag, Four German. vessels and two Belgian ships complete the It said in conclu in every ite FIGS—First Importation of New Crop... /SARDINES... NAL } + Imported Boneless——In Pure Ol EGGS—Selected Fresh...........0005 CHICKENS-—Fresh Killed Milk Fatted—Very Tend ‘On sale Friday and Saturday o; fotlo Butler of Columbia, bons, the faculty of ¢ University here, W. Brown Scott of | the ex-Secretary, the Carnegie Fqundation, and others. “When I left Havre on Sept. 2’ Col. Hayes sald to-day, “the allies | fore hontiliti bt were fearful that they would not be | progressing in orderly fashion able to penetrate to the German line through the enormous mass of Bead men and horses on the battlefields, |1 which unfortunately the combatants do not seem to heed about burying, | PCanants. 7, 1914. TWO YEARS’ WAR ‘GERMANS FEAR GOO WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 -Dead men and horses, heaped up by thousands, Iie on the extended hattlefielde of the Aisne, Col. Webb C. Hayes, U, 8. A, aon of former Presi- al baths By scree Son aber: [dure by Gustav Voelker of No. 73) ing the terrific world war. He brought to President Wilson « personal mes- fags from the acting Burgomaster of Louvain, he said, after visiting the Col. Hayes Tells of Unburied Dead Men and Horses by Thousands. (United Col. ‘The message, which was scribbled In penefl on a piece of rough white paper, by Alfred Nerninex, the Acting Burgo- Alfred Nerninex, Professor of the University of Louvain and Acting Burgomaster of Louvain, begs to let his friends know that he ts all right and ts trying to eave what In left of the town. Appended to this mensage are « few notations showing that there was “burning and shooting” in the olty ’ on Aug. 3. Then follows a itst of [Commerce ani names to whom the message should fo, which include President Wilson, | followed the Burgomaster's former professor at Princeton: Senator Root, Prest-/atter the declaration of war and, #0 dent Lowell of Harvard, President! Mr, Nagel asserted, had suffered no | Cardinal Gib- Catholic I can't imagine how they could pass |the Germans, from the Kaiser's MMi through these fields, The odor is ter- rible, and the idea of climbing over | Something magnificent. the bodies must be revolting even to soldiers driven by the stress of war.” |{mpressed especially by the fact that Col. Hayes was on the firing line. He visited the sacked city of Louvain the guest of Germans in an| defense of tivir country armored car. He has been tn Aix-/@ human being in all Germany who la-Chapelle to see the havoo of war| Ime not bohind the Kaiser he there; and has seen some of the fighting in the historio Aisne struggte. | dignity and self-control “It fo a sausage grinder, od . “On one side are the French ‘and allies apparently willing to eac- rifice their Jast man in defense of | country. The natives went about the. he de- the other are the Ger- IT can alon, Col, Hayes declared: “The battle front these days Is far different from what a bat! time, sion. m mans seemingly prodigal millions of men and money and/| and that | of their Col. Hayes predicted a two years’ war. “There can be put one outcome, but !t will be a long time endi: “England wo! fight really until spring.” “What about the alleged atrocities in Belgium?" he was asked, war is hell, thi ‘t begin to about the sive you. really tragio part of the whole war is Belgium. Its people are wonderful folk—clean, decent, respectable. What this nation should do is to concen- trate its efforts on alding ¢he women and children of Belgium. This help for hospitals {s not so much needed, but the fate of these people is really The The Colonel declared peace talk at this time is useless. “We must ker Pp hands off at this point,” he declared. “We can do no good. We shull merely stir up trou- ble for ourselves.” Asked for a brief Serine of battle liny, “Does any one wish to slaughter house a second time?” he | Ib. basket MAPLE SYRUP—Pure Sap—ct. bot., .48; pt. bot, . Large tin ive Oil | PEAS—Noreca Early June—New Pack... .Large tin HAMS—Elm City—8 to 12 pounds—Mild Smoke . . Ib. -Doz. front ‘There are few men to be ecen, and, practically, no guns, All nesaled, Shrapnel fites through and burats, That In the hand fighting bayoneta are used French, while Turcos use knives.” “Shall you go back?” the Colonel oon on and to the visit @ Acker, Merrall & Condit EST. Company 1820 Quality and economy AND NOTHING ELSE! ATRENGH LEGEND {Passenger Arriving on the Ryndam Read It on Battlefield. | | “Germans fear God and nothing else," | ‘This war the epitaph printed and tacked on a board at the head of & jong trench of German dead, which | wan read on the battlefield of Saar-| turned to’ Paris Moffat street, Brooklyn. Voelker, | “ached army who is an American citizen and who was visitin: latives in Alsace-Lor- raine at the outbreak of the war, was) & passenger aboard the Holland- America line steamship Ryndam, tn port to-day from Rotterdam, “Many of those killed in battle! were unburied when my cousin, Lieut. Oscar Jung of the Flying Corps, took me over the battlefield in an auto-| mobile,” sald Voelker. ‘The Germane had fought the French under ove! whelming odds and had beaten them, coeded aty force. methods wounded, for Thora of the Fatherland who fell—| a and they were many—-had only this, by Gen. Gallieni, Miliary Governed: stern epitaph to mark their grave.” | Charles Nagel, capital. The Labor; Mra, Nagel and their five daughters were passen- | gers aboard the Ryndam. They bad unique venture of @ sight-seeing tour through Germany officials inconvenience inct- | In’ the big citt or unpleasant deaux Germany,” said there was hardly ny surface aspect of war. ee. rants were all open and serving pa- trons at pri the same as those be- were suspend President and hi iness seemed to be Peopl appeared quietly confident. In the country all the crops were being gar- nered by women, old men and boya. aw several wealthy women working in the flelds side by side with the “The unanimity of sentiment among inters to the meanest farmhand, is i belleve that war was a challenge launch against the nation’s existence, [ was|OUt what had the Germans did not want war; that any one who tulked with them could jee. But when war was declared in|and accompal ‘here was not immo: into his t and “I never saw such an exhibition of ry by the Ge ple during rman peop! jurin; the days of mobilisation when. fore| wrecune hin to elgners were running around half- daft in an effort to get out of the | | task of arming and sending men for- ward awittly and methodically. Every mother in Germany has but one wish, that all of her sons may e their places in the line Miss Edna Warnecke of No. 268 Ga field place, Brooklyn, saw four Rus- be fit to Cassel. the hospital there forty G diers whonxe eyes had been gouged J - sixteen lopped off by Alfred Herts, the Metropol! was sure all would be able to get to time for the opening oft tan. PARK & TILFORD’S These are the Four Popular Life Sizes ve Nobles Oat Stor 360. Finest Clear Havana Porfectos Ge. Leslie J. Tompkins iatrator of the e Nordica Young, who has brought ceedings in the Surrogate’ cover the whereabouti property, succeeded to-da: become ry turtle pin the lat together the ends of a fur neck IS BACK FROM VST TOTHE FROM Poincare Calls on Gen, Jofl and Sir John French’ on Battle Line, A PARIS, Oct. 7.—-President Pot accompanied by Premier Viviant Minister of War Millerand, haw | Bordeaux to the line of battle, The President and headquarters ‘They spent several with Gen. Joffre, Commander of the French forres, and then to the British head@ they called upon Sir. John French, @ Commander of the British ot On Tiesday they went out tho forces in the field and were the commissary, hospital and departments and i; the This morning the party, accom ‘aris, visied the Paris fortit former Secretary of and the intrenched camp near dented | capital in to be returned to Paria mediately although they are that It can be moved back #0 800m a the present battle ends, q The President brought trom ix cCapturea |atandards and this led in the Inval le cacinet will to Bordeaux to-morrow. Se NORDICA’S PIN FOUND.) { Romayne Simm. It ls in, the possession yne Simmons, her former sald the care by ther of George W. Nordica’s husband. glad to turn over the porary administrator {i obtained an order fros Is in the famous brand of perfect aroma KEY WEST CIGARS Allmada in Band pected transportation his trip bis Mi that temporary on le of Mme. Lilian Court to Ry of certain of of a dt ainger used to. of Bri ries Young, ‘He said he In tot Mr. the German anmy | afternoon Stose CEYLON TEA . White Rese Coffee, 3 Pound Ting, |