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Show IB ON I HIT Gazette p Have Made Strategical ir Months. u,-c-v p G"mus;n , -1- ' b;' ... R. i- " . - I b ,j( pvins to th u unmistak-Lm unmistak-Lm witt a for-Lyes for-Lyes which will till thfi" tim to L SeMil Kuiiky -., brMtkiag the :. r.-Mi Jkftier cbsappoint- Btkf VUua salient c Siest achieve K irj wr is , put. L emcm left tie withdraws! L, ud it will be (ft German armies Lrs'; opportunity ! I n-i scale their hr. :.:::. 7? ,:!- td mm tr,rs: pi thoawfeds Ls dtmt tbey will j pri every foot of ' ntrrnj and Moa- ic-e nd Odessa. r- bve struggled a K its in the north Ita. Trfpess. ia the aep an ere on ft !.r;ge k :zi :fa K enld storm it ne St tie whole rivei ft u: at the same ' wz Raseian i fit lake com: try i I iLcsk, and thus ik Attack. J livins. ba an 3 a b grip remains ) I y - s.c to -a - ELffeetive prog-- prog-- - :ecDa.-g. ne in&A and a deej er o wld zan the - of being 3eri-: 3eri-: m Dvinsk and the s '-? lower I--ir.a roian wtil objective, jaaugh to weaken ' jfley win. f0r ail (Jn first bout posy, tj-eceral voo P Gheeked and putfrtesy north . tie state of pthe enemy not r- "---ontinues to fn General Ivan- :oe fifiH Rumanian frontier, a eirategical crescent with horns is threatening to envelop the enemy- We now se signs of a reverse there, forming alowly aa our allies hold flrrn on the wings I retire alowly at the center. The long Russian crescent is beginning to menace faintly the ultimate ulti-mate outflanking of the Germans. T.at is wh Von Hindenburg must make prodigious exertions to capture ,Ivlnsk at any cost; a deeper advance at .the center, eves if the Russians permitted permit-ted it. would be still more dangerous to the invaders themselves unles Ruszky an! IranofT be dealt with on the flanks. BaBtan Situation. As to Bulgaria, even the worst cannot now be so serious as two months ago. We hope until the last hour that the worst event can be avoided. If not. there will be a final and swift rear- I rangemsnt of the plans of the allies. They have complete control of the Aegean Aege-an coast and a sufficient margin of men and guns for dealing with any emrgency in that quarter if only their plans are guided by tnie insight. Of Rumania It were better to say nothing. Qreeoe is now more favorably placed and Venrzelos will have opportunities for his genius such as no other conceivable turn of events Tt:W have afforded him. j In no case will the quadruple allianr I allow Serbia to go down. If the Balkans I are tndeo to become the fiercest cock-I cock-I pit of the war. we can only express the ' profound hope almost a prayer that ! the king and his government at Sofia mav ask themselves whether they may not" be as fatally misled as In 1513 by the I superficial monetary appearances of the I situation. gp'S as this has S r;C"r 5Je e'nee the f begtnr.ing of Austrian s hav ( P nothing hs t.v5 kPPning- or. --ken, but Un- Uiacgie all down Jjtenerio the |