OCR Text |
Show GERMANS SHIFT TROOPS ON THE EASTERN FRONT BERIjTN", Feb. 6, via wireless to Say-ville. Say-ville. News dispatches received in Berlin Ber-lin from Budapest, Hungary, Epeak of an extensive shifting of troops, by the Russians in east Gallcta and in Bukowina, Buko-wina, with the evident Intention of maintaining main-taining the partB of these provinces occupied oc-cupied by them, even at the expense of giving- ground elsewhere. A number of Russians who were captured in Buko- wtna said they had been cent to that region from the vicinity of the Austrian fortress of Przemysl. Another dispatch from Ungvar, In northeastern Hungary, tells of a severe defeat suffered by the Russians on the so-called Lupkow saddle, to the north of the Zemplin country. Germans and Austro-Hungarians joined in this engagement engage-ment against the Russians. A great lack of provisions prevails In Warsaw, according to advices received by the Frankfurter Zeitung. Some million rubles worth of provisions, a message to this newspaper says, has arrived at Archangel, Arch-angel, destined for the Polish capital, but it is impossible to say when the food can be delivered. , . |