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Show SERBS WON VALJEVO BY SURPRISE ATTACK Austviaus, Routed by Their Ot,vu Guns, Fled in Great Panic. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) VALJEVO, Serbia, Feb. ".The Serbian Ser-bian reoccupation of Vnljevo, which marked the end of the third Austrian invasion of Serbia, was accomplished without extensive lighting in the immediate im-mediate vicinity of the town. The Aus-trians, Aus-trians, it is true, had prepared elaborately elabor-ately for the defense of Val.ievo, and their aitillery guarded all the usual approaches. But tho Serbians presented only a small decoy squad at tho main roads, sending their principal forces around the hills by footpaths and secret routes to the rear aud flank of the Austrian positions. They took the Austrians completely by surprise, after scattering a rearguard rear-guard of Hungarians quietly by tho bayonet. The town's defenders, attacked from both front and rear, abandoned trenches aud fled. Ketreat turned to rout when . the Serbians turned on them their own cannon from the heiglit3, shelling the Austrian rear guard in its flight and killing a hundred hun-dred of them at. one spot as t..i) rounded the top of a hill just outside the town. The entry of tho Serbian army was not imposing. The. men were too much in earnest for much display or hilarity. Some of the old proration got out faded flags and hung them aloft in welcome, and there was a committee of old men. representing tho municipality, to receive the general and welcome the returning soldiers, but in the main the entry resembled the return to a bereaved be-reaved bouse after a funeral. The dead lav everywhere, Serbian as well as Austrian, Aus-trian, and as for the wounded it was many davs before they had all been gathered 'up from the fields and hills of tho countryside aud placed under surgeoDs' care. , Along the roads there was plenty to indicate the collapse of the invaders' plans. Countless cans of food and pieces of discarded or broken equipment equip-ment lay in the wheel tracks, and here and there could be seen tho gleam of a uuifortu, almost complete.- concealed by the mud. At the entrance to the town was a great heap of broken artillery, ar-tillery, ammunition, provisions, bag-sage bag-sage and personal effects, which the Austrians' plan to burn had been foiled bv the pressure of the oncoming enemy. The Serbians advanced too hastily to bring up much of their own artillery, but they had no difficulty in manning the Austrian batteries which they had cantured guns, hotses and ammunition wagons. The use of these Austrian guns against their late owners added the last incentive to the hasty departure of the invaders, for the Austrian infantry easilv recognized the shots fired toward them" from their own guns, not only by the position of the batteries, but also by the characteristic reddish purple smoke of the Austrian powder. |