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Show wSHvOr TTvwns, Second News Section AUTOMOBILES iUiCUUiU' iCiJ 11 Second News Section TO " MINES, MARKETS, CLASSIFIED ADS J1L SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1915 Germans I JT3 GffilTlg 7 in Particular Arc nccrcrn Accused of Keeping Up Food Prices. . ri'iin?r Iriar r rtm nf pii5 l r. i r f:inrsl t J ' , p.- - rif i'- - , sv ty a ,T' fa air-- .t i r r-- C 'tit. ' fr J f i J TI at r m ir k tu. t i l i r I ! t'Alirti) ! l'.??-t: fit t . I t r m rt f ft 3 r-- - t A'-- , a h jr " a r i etr! w '!; rk tT i f r .t - f ' ' t t i f irn r tf (ft: !;'- - t i ? - s t p - ? t i '. f- - r n T ".f-- t I 1 P ! i r- r ft mi t f v -- f .4 flT - - i f - r i : -- if j f"" : rn:' n "I wf ? t : vf t ! ' - t f t r, n f " f . ri' t.ft r ' 'i i tf ; r tf ,:: to M; ft r 3. f m ?."" n ig p. ' K ' f - fn w. ; i r 't If 't a ' i ftl r i t ' n.f wa Pf Trtr f ?i "'. r-- f r.c. r ; 10 pf-M-M-- l n-.- ! 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Im- - lfni order tkni aaie. fa IIp- nd ml mm mmmm limp to lift-- , aaltta lnfea mmmm mt I m tpt-a- i Ip e f radllwt t of sreiaNde. pnd Intra aa lf af bud lbe. attp f hem ft ata bad I ttetM there. Ilal tf vmm t ded dy rmm i hen the pl i ln nmtia thl hod itelaed ktl In I fell rtllh nhal after frl( nethlt tawparaklf ai w-- wotitnilnc In Franee of nb-sen- MNlll. oi'l"! offlauchter p.irna-fr-ir"i;.er hax Kent. Mlvi ,ri'. if'-Nil- l. m t:ln 1 1 in rllpf work In Ilan-.- . rn.ifipfl Frari"' for s.ui norlhffit n in uni'k in P,r XV C Vk hr . ce. 1 t 'SAVIOR OF NANCY' LOSES 3 SONS; IS JOFFRE'S RIGHT - HAND MAN Pride at Victory Achieved at Marne Is Chastened by Personal Sorrow. J I HE rASTKLXAU of p KNKKAL French staff, known as J" ffre's ri?ht-hai- man. hl fl-rrli- fl.-e- s 11.' Heneral Joffrp rp". inc-ti- e In ar il rerent th rran rie: i: on th western front as well m tn that r.f th Mat ne over a year ha been flt. d tstlnau ami bv isro n rtihrr m f .i victory been bnuKht t trreater irson.il cost. one of his in the fiKhtlng that precedeil ion f a killed eeconil that cf th iUrnf.Ina the ArlOi" batll winter andof list his third th lat week Septtmber. de Otstelnau, nn. s was niortallv wounded All tl.re wem ynuiiif men who hatl The news nf.; et attained thir prim. on was first of th th nf :p;th I ro iKht tie had after th io Kfnpr.il !,:ullv resisted the ureal German on th Lorraine frontier, which aiiack vt as dejcne,l to end in the capture of Nan v. It was his first jcrent victory in anrl tfioii;i he is now railed ,"" to honor Is mingledhjvloftbor Nin bitter gall of personal torfits-- . son. who hs The third and jounarest fallen. wa still a studnt In the just Km! l'n tehn if. unere officers for p hsil. il branches of th t army, s artlllerv and cavalry, are re-- p vrr l. th v ar trok out. He Bereaved Chieftain Credited With Large Share of Credit for Recent Gains. after the emperor and his army had been lost at Sedan. These new armies gained several partial victories over the Germans, but with Paris lost there was sue for peace. Young nothing to do buttook In the fights Castelnau later partwho were raisthe communists, against rebellion in Paris. li; w-it- when been at the t who h t.nlv sr: .o h u boy. ir. In all rerects he I In the t'nlt-- 1 ill Wii what would be cfreshman. Ilefor a rollewe States h h had time to be decorated li,l with the eros of the legion of honor. War. In Th eerier! h!ms;f was also a of 10 when t? last war with rnk out In li.'. To year (hfnsny ft the Jesuit t'otlesre of frr I,1 tlAftrlel to enter th military school In 1914. the In a; M. vr. hut wore all Klvn rommls-ln- t jotme Inrelets and the armv .tnil strategy were learned In actual m'liiarv f and leboka practice Ir steUl of fromwas another of--of cture, tlenral Jnf fr who became thou your. stripling nvirnlsh: in th's lays.of Gen. 'it The t'femwtur promotion . i lac the itay CAStrlt iti"j cls" when of Wlssenburg. of tbn battle . .t-wr by the Iruslan invdel Tlit Z' new itatcneu oiurers troips. Ttt had been the met In the courtyard. custom at t. t vr. anti ineiu incy "Th Promotion promotion. nf ti etblr It Is an Ideal that hasi;hln" been unrcliied ever alrce. but the ifen- l'rtPd'nilin puh-lietjteft- fjtefi . r . v ant ; - . . a a. a. nap-lip- -. Defender of nnpj-- . After the war he continued his studies at the war college, or Fcole de la Guerre, where the French 1885 he was officers are trained. In higher made colonel in the Seventeenth army eoi ps as a staff officer and eleven later lie was nut on the years armv staff. There he directed general the organization fou. mobilization for three and then became commander of yearsThirty-seventh the at Nancy, a part of the notedregiment "iron division." There he. learned the territory of Lorthe him in raine, which helped Germans at bay a year ago.keeping It is fairwas ly certain that the kaiser himself fall retinue for the triwaiting withso ahefinecould of make a Nancy, In umphal entry, but the city is still the hands of the French and Its defenses make it teem safe for the rest of the war. a Catholic, it is supposed that hisBeing promotion was much hampered by the church and state conflict that raged in Franc during the early years of the the reaction that present century and set In against Catholics after the been reDreyfus persecutions had him. vealed may have hindered It was not until ten years later, in 1006. that de Castelnau became a general. He was first given command of the Twenty-fourt- h brigade at Sedan then the Seventh at Soissons and anl three years later he- became a general of a division at Cliaumont. It was in 1913, when General Joffre was doing his great work of reorganization, that General Castelnau was called to Paris to be the chief of the choice that staff. It was this general some not because of caused surprise, lack of ability, but bethe causeappointee's of his religi&n. General Joffre not being a churchman himself. ' The selection showed the new spirit General Joffre In the French army. cares not what a man's personal religion may be and General Castelnau has been his close friend and adviser ever since. - hf tk Least Two More Soldiers Will Enter Field Million When Arms Arrive. SO DECLARES AN AMERICAN Mining Engineer Back in London Says Muscovites Are Enjoying Boom. ONDON, Dec. 11 "Russia Is now- nral who Is now so active at General Joffre's side hopes to realize It now. Th month after his promotion he was in the fire at the battle of Torsay and after that ho took part In the camformed paign of the new and hastily which were formed th urinlca of Lolre. - suffering only for want of rifles and when she is properly supplied at least 2,000,000 additional soldiers will be thrown into the field with result which only next spring's campaign can tell." This is the opinion of a prominent American mining engineer, who ha just returned to London after spending six months in the Russian empire, mainly in Siberia, where he is the chief engineer of an important group of mines. Describing conditions in Russia, he said: "The depression which prevailed outside Russia during the great German drive through Poland was never really duplicated in that country. Domestic troubles existed as always, but the people have made their power felt as never before and the only that could cause revolution now thing would be the conclusion of an unfavor able peace with the central powers. "The people of Russia are enjoying something in the nature of a boom and the cost of living of the Russian peasant, who does not require luxuries, ha rot appreciably increased. The Russian peasant is not an imaginative individual and the losses suffered in the war retreat were unbelievably small when the magnitued of the fighting is taken into consider ation. Even the generally admitted shortage of rifle, the wastage of which has been unprecedented, is not causing the Russians much concern, as the staff has realized that the rifle used by infantry Is no: an effective arm. The Russian army is now well supplied with heavy guns an munitions and the infantry is bein': supplied with thousands of machine guns. In attacking, the Russian Ininvariably detaches fantry man almost the bayonet from his rifle and uses ii as a knife when he leaps into the GerOB L man trenches. He has even been known to discard both rifle and bayonet, relying on a club to win a trench. Women In Soldiers' Garb. Y EXPERT "For the greater part of the war we have used Austrian prisoners as miners in our mines, but lately we have been . L. bragg berVing in Flan - jment prisoners' labor bureau. Thete Germans in me main are ansoiuiety unfit ,for hard labor, most of them beders; Associate Killed in men with gray beards, whilo ing oldare of the student class, many others Gallipoli by Sniper. of thjm wearing glasses with thick lenses. A staff officer who is closely with the prisoners' bureau connected 11. L. Dec. W. Lieut. London, me that for some time on the told Bragg, who jointly with his father, Dvinsk the Russians have been Trof. W. II.; Bragg, F. R. S., has re- capturingfront from 100 to 200 women ceived the Nobel prize for physics, is weekly. These were all In German uniform and were apparently serving serving with the British fcrces in as soldiers. The Flanders as an artillery expert. "In Petrograd I entered the recently third scientist who was associated with the two in their resarches into crystals opened museum of atrocities, but thfl end Henry J. M. Mosseley, was horrors there were too much killed by a sniper's bullet in Gallipoli. for me displayed and feeling deadly ill I was Professor Bragg and his son won compelled to leave the place without certain medals their by following up was complete display, but I Ausdiscoveries in the formation of crys- seeing the a German allowed to bring to Kngland an tals made by Professor Lave, won the Nobel trian rifle cartridge loaded with an scientist, who inhimself developed physics prize an 1914. He bullet, which is really a minis a phenome- explosive the theory that shell iature shrapnel explodes non similar to a ray of light, but pro- when a little plugger that at the tip it duced by wave lengths many thousand driven In by contact with a human times smaller than the inconceivably target. small waves associated with light. "In the Scandinavian countries nothand his son hit upon Professor which ing W7as talked about except the food a method ofBragg by investigation the knowledge as to how shortage in Germany and some conthey obtained in crystals are arranged. atoms of this was given to me by "To our astonishment," he said, "it firmation ono who a Dane, represents in Berlin comof crysupset all the old set theories American of the packing tallography and many other ideas as panies. biggest This Dane declared that the well." In this work the pair were assisted fat allowance had been reduced from who was the son of eleven to seven ounces a person daily by young Moseley, the late Prof. A. N. M. aMoseley of Ox- and he stated that the German workcertain point ing population would have a difficult ford. Starting from of Laves researches into the diffrac- time the winter on this getting throughThis in their passage through tion of Dane also told allowance. reduced of crystals, the three, in the words the it3 me that England was supplying Professor Bragg, "opened up vistas food." with in is which inconceivable." of Germany prisoners significance I PIZEW1R mm. X-ra- X-r- X-ra- ay ys ing ll-jch- n tkMtl alc.4pe Irnlra.! Imtm t -- - P: ma tk! ale i - wolMini. N h.i rparhil . tPtntt-rt- 1 th th-r-i- ed : mt rm mm . r dc-fni- f- k !l-- fr t 0mMm k o-t- il i 1 . rTfM'n-jt:- t rlt tr'ltti.rft ritiMlMi) lki. mmt0 t c-e- Inxv (. the I'olir'-(I'truinj. Mtnrt PHi'inn r. ":'-- - nf 1 mrmmmU. i nn4r4 fl tkepi. n or r.f .viirp'n I't-ioof hrl- t ?.-- mm rn 1 !- H'tpplyirtic m.iv - of t vr.t. ' In l'.rll'- i t t th t'A :;.I sin x t t i i ! Wn hn for m.: f. furt)r nnl h i cpr,f.i f ( '.Hi ! to t flltrihit-t ,it It nf tho r'''"1? f,tr. jtr.t Il;e. v.ftrtny oTTn" Tha ife' rr't' t of ftU nv.vll- itin &r f h irP cnrtfol oer It iii- . Ik tm I m of th i:tfh- - of fr r'fl tlj!ti'Ie 0tm ff ! t,i:.i Mi,r. f finm; th- . rkr t i Tr'!" T? - ttk ml ( ? n- . 100. t lrlf rt t ft t mt4trrln'.f ho. inalrMS hold el lt lMilnll Ptlf Mtrb tti Mm. mtlnl rnnil ti'.wttt tt kp t,tlM ketr mttmU. rt ltt yn. )p tMw km erj!tp4 tie ltel r wwitdrtj. rtel pPtt, t0 rt l.fftnmi tnnfmPil t4 tW Itrtkt. l'Ul of Ik defender. te dr.kp lf t0 ft00 eltrr tprr4 t0 elpiMS rtf mmnnomm tte t t h of a rt4r. k.alnl frtt r trwmm tfetr tet "l ' eeMr o." mt ra l UOMO t,nr..ton. I'ee. per 'ARISE, DEAD MEN,' CRIES FRENCH OFFICER, AND AIDED ONLY BY FEW INJURED, REPELS GERMAN ATTACK It r all-- T to " f. I- K'jt-el-.m-- -- nf rtJ v , -- v e lintero from an t up- ho il l r r rovernn',r wounl! are ! ft f i:. 'm.. l.o'r.!--ni. hut the and p.. j rt.. whe p erl'ti!. ft r.il ta IhAt H'erl t;p.v. intr. ri;.r.i'l In a lew to work t lo l'-- -. S"V i t 1 ti-- - division, anilIt ws ile- .!;' v ' sn-l- In m e-- ' WtfkiS Prt-n- ! ;.,". ir?, n Jfiftof. . r!ncl inliltnrv Kf) p! j"j f. ; I - .f-.ri-- t ?T trp-"Pl- t T V. ; f P P ; jr-- lt : ti t T p-- "The - T r '1 i t:- ' r--t PI t 1: 1 itu a w urn whi t nsWes - t n. t h ft 'E nf r n kI f t T f.P tr. fpP r Th'f f ? TP r f fr P. i -- j ;f ffl--- ' :v ur'nt . ? t."- tn rp-- iP-''- - t ; wff Jjn nf r" . C3 the str'Jns ruirf) an c.pen for ition of nl p putotti city, wltho-i- t r.aturi1 i :h fr.ai.I apparently Ti:rkJf"; tron-- .. The e UtofUl eonplua' mn--with the cheeri t a t rr p t tlat ". valuahle now been CAmp.-jiGha badly ing i rr ? r i 1 pi f , ' . T - j( ,:; p p : i i- p-- 'f - i i t f p s a ft" wi . p P IteUef. ttr.p retll f n (, frt'nf'f nffl.n.--f c. pfi n t f '' t t 'iM ft f ftfr. rf '; .. r f.ti t r tf r t ,i sifiT',"l 0 tvrtl ft ft J, p.wti" p. .. v ' t p r n f t f,,- ' iri- - 1 - ; ' A nvin!,r trr-r- f' .. f j r'l Pi nr If - f n f'T?"tf n" f t f - V f" W t r fv - n in nifict Ifncth. ! r r " io r r-- l i ? th It it ! ( Pp fi nf wi?er corfirnur.lcatlon t ft I ;v !. 4 T if i jfla-cle- p-- a riln- - ri! i K " Tt kr l rnak1 t-- with tb - ifr. U' ' -- rr-tlni- frl .f afff Vtiiho-i- i t nffr If ,1m f rfi !t .!!! r r" nf I T tf prr! " wnrir. I tf-'- " " S p - i i n t' i as-cessi- on t t ;. r." (; ' n ti a ' f j.tic --- T. I i pro nw-- t f an rrly rcnetl of the on ncdAJ. "Aitho ish I'.ritlnh reinforcements ore lo h ftt har.l. we think the l;ievelmtut mke up It mind to wnlt for a con f'temMs time before the mln-Aof Ite-- a1 are li?hte.l by the r.rltl"h troor." th Tim1 fays, nnd lo cfitlcSjte the conduct of the procet CAfr.raicn. asking why n attempt was ; to capture the city lit the enl tl ' i t- : r f t - p . Up at tii r ' " - t- -' v ! tf n p f cam-pvls- n. X htth tftr lt rr;;:'n r r :r. Tf t. tt f, ' e It Vf"tf t to Ilelief Aiintrfnna Mnhnrnjnh of henvlug orery l,ed Kapnrthaln lloiiii- - to Cele- I'uriM for I'unjuh In be Tro i'lnnuril Their I ne W nr. lo C"ae of brate Silver Jubilee. Switzerland, Uec. 11. The I'aris, Dec. 11. After an unusually Italian troops have had Fome extraor- Ions absence of nine months from his In their mountain Indian dominions, the Maharajah of dinary warfare mirprle3. Rays a against the Austrian!5, is Jagatjit Singh InBahadur, of the Gasiette Kapurthala. 5pplai correspondent Pun-Ja- b his to celebrate Paris de Liit'eatinf, who lias been at the leaving home the silver jubilee of his Italian front. The paper says: 'They have found at resular Intervals fromr. to ruling powers. He has only the Slelvlo pass to the Adamello from a trip through all returned a distance of about sixtyr miles, a lately of the United States, Including a parts eri of 'huts' for lodin-Alpine visit to the San, Francisco exposition, tourifts on and near the peaks. These Associated Press cor'huts have turned thr-out to be built on and he askedto the say how greatly lie was walls of the huts respondent floors and eemntwith by the moral and material progsheets of steel sufficiently struck llnd thick to turn bullets, llach 'hut' has ress of America since his first visit accommodations for twenty persona. It there some ten or a dozen years back. The Maharajah excused himself from rare to find twenty Is extrtmly in the hlRh regions, giving an opinion on the effect of the Alpinists togethersize of the huts nor war on the natives of India. "But genhut neither the he said, "I do not speaking," their number eeemM to have attracted think erally there is any danger or rebellion fvw Italian Alpinists btcaii.o suspicion the Germans have of the Tyrol. in India, though e o up Into that been trying to stir up disloyalty and Krtcli of tnese armoredpart lodgliiK" is machine Runs. The ap- disaffection in Kapurthala and ether by ar so difficult and exposed places." proaches that It would seem as though a couple Kapurthala is one of the five Sikh of machine gunfi and a dozen men could states of the Punjab under British pro hold a hut nKnlnst a regiment, but the tectlon. It has an area of 600 square and supplies the maharajah with Italians have found ways of overcom- amiles revenue of Where there are glaciers about $150,000 yearly. The ing s in maharajah Is the husband of one wife, the Alpinists cut narrow tren.-heand aradually work their way an Indian princess. He has four sons the up. protected from rifle and machine and a daughter. One of the sons is Kim fire, to where they can rush a acting as ruler during his father's hut." another Is a magistrate in KaWinter snows are already a n r In purthala, a third is at the front as en the lesions and It Is not un- interpreter with General French's staff hih that hoth sides will he reduced and the fourth Is traveling with the likely to Inaction durlncr the hard wlnior in maharajah. The daughter is receiving the Tyrol, Inbut military operations will her education in Paris. the low countries at the lonllnue and his state are rep The A'lrlatlc and perhaps resentedmaharajah hnal of th in the war by a regiment cf farther south should the Italians send about 2000 men. sent under sealed or jin expeditionary force ncros iho Adri- ders to East Africa, where it has Pi atic to operate below Trieste. ready given a good account of itself. r!nt city. In their editorials thp London papers over the Krit ofrllxappolntnirnt rnr"" rh'tk mi. th" MsOjiotp ffffp which tl.ey aJmit precludes any 'Tl. ftn-- hy aI Turkish i"v afa ; t (lfmar,., tiiilr so tfii i or to tak lh an- - retrrit f In h .ilioni 1 l of un- - p"rfl!;rr.. r,'?" f "CtU rr ; :4t ' ! ! n NB flrr' i"tl v it tf Pnr; m; t t rrtlrif-- i it f t J!. at t' f fi A ft At ? .1 Jot-T,?;- T i. - ?i n irjin tt - hf f;? n "V I , ' v f p t r ffl'IT.f. rr- - ff f 'At , f r X " i Ifr ?:..--!: r "f I on-- ' r;rf, y f !- tv r , K f,,-r)i- ft l f . - t 1 - f j r- s! t li nf, ? Map shoeing field of operations of British expeditionary force in valley of Mesopotamia; Gen. Sir John Nixon. ONDoN, Dec. 11. The trIitin.iry fore r-.?.-S!FIARMORED HUTSIPLEASED WITH AMERICA Nixnn, wt,i, h marc r5T f,v,!. p t ?rr !;!- t f At ppr. I V ft! fif" f f c f i ' !; C I ?I f for . f - f' "v 'i ? i; r f IV 1 t ni t: " f W rr. n any vt'l v I f t f' in p ' r ft t?'"- ' i t 5 T wj r F . !if, n. "v i ?t.-(i'.- p i' ! t ! ! ! i n! it ? ff fr t; !i 5' 5 ; -- rf wU r " t ; - P T r,pt ffMt - Wlf ! 1 tJio tin't-rn-- i; r t ' .t ."i k I f ' i" aTS i a o t " v. - ft t? r I ! I - c r, r t" f ft. t'f j N? ! rS n 't " !: hnr r war; tifr. " to kr.E?"; rmlii trftf: rf .1 " ' v ; - ft; y -- tt-'- r r - ' j. " f f o ! a - , t it t t r f n J ri - I f riirr:;i " ; t t Ki t t--V t - r - . t t; i ft ! ucn faT' . 'I'll be r.! -'l i- s t r C r ; t t t r r r t.rik a 1 t- ' ' 4 ! II war . In-ntt- r rjn f ' rr ' 5 t , p t0 t t f sf i . f '' f f P nrt Vln4r sn t nTv tht rnr'? 1t: nf Tip ! rriit "'" f with . . W ; n or r I i th Pron if r,tifj'hri I . r r'T.n-!- I ti.f nifSiM irtti.tr f - :;;!; i r'J.s ,t ik .lt i':r i U rt m in. f.Ttir ? If 4 nf n-- ' r t ;w-- v. at v tool, which consists of atrenching small wooden handle not quite two feet long and a detachable iron cross-piec- e with a pick at one end and a sharp, narrow at the spade other. Men cling to their intrenching tools when they have had to discard nearly every other article of equipment. A man without an entool feels that he is of trenching less value as a soldier than rather if he had no uniform. this little pick and spade Without must lie out in the open after an he advance instead of scraping for himself a little., mound for cover. When there is movement in the lines most ofany the intrenching work is done with these little tools. It Is only when a position has been solidlyor won and is to be occupied Jess permanently that large moie are brought picks up and put into use. Tre infantryman needs no urging to dig. it becomes the merest instinct to realize that his life depends on providing himself with proper cover. And this instinct is strorg enough to conquer even the desire for overpowering which comes at the close of a sleep day's hard fighting and whichlong at makes even the consumpnightfall tion of food seem superfluous. Frethe tired infantryman, after quently ten of twelve hours of must struggle from dusk fighting, to midwith his intrenching tools; night not till his cover is snug and sound does the soldier dare to curl himself up in his pit and take the coveted forty winks in preparation for the counterattack which is almost certain to come before dusk. A soldier's letter tells about a British regiment that boasted they did not dig. "It was a very gallant regiment." he writes, "with a share in the battle honors of large Britain's past wars. They had charged at Balaclava ; they had fought in everv corner of the globe. But they had not been taught to dig; it was beneath them. They were nominally a cavalry regiment, with a cavalry foolish ideas of caste. regiment's "And here is what happened to them far from Mons. The had been rushed into a gap regiment to cover the flank of an infantry brigade. Because thev were dismounted, an infantry officer offered them some friendly advice, urging them to themselves with some kind provide of cover. But they laughed, took the position, and lay down In the open. 'We don't dig, they boasted proudly. Poora gallant fellows ten minutes later battery found them and sprayed them off the face of the earth, as the little are cleaned off a rose "bush bugs by the gardener's spray." J&r, t h tf if tMn 1 - t. .t ri-- t 1 ; - i f TZis ? if . i rn .f k -. - - - p S'i f f ? as rV j- I w. m;tir r t. s !"' I' u 1 11. - Th ;" KIRK. France. Dec. to his rifle, every soldier D UNNext values most of all his in Aj ith th rvrfo rf rtT. ; r fr"'n iS'ii'M. rtt ti iTrif"? a rratnruy In t iwa rf t wr it fr- Utf Vt-tnrE.- r . jin if !!? fr-- nt: ft V r u' titers;, f t t; y I trt rt - t r 1 j T , rHifi 4f f e ri np f'-:.- tr,tt rr Pi!'r f fon. :.. m" fo-M- . BAGDAD It f,ifr th !. f'.tri.-u:- r rf rUan rr r ti rrosr;:. If lift!l i M"f rr,.! rf'r'.il X r- h Rifles At t4t' f i I of rnfttk th c vr. th If- - tt nitwtf't IX mhrtw rr-("r"l- t-- rt. bUmo, ; y .f t: T c f ef"P ?vt tin 1 e-- with I of J P KCKorv " of r rrntl- t rr..r.-..- ! i e ' - - 2'5I - h- Klrrtmf V. f', ttfrji ;ift tr i ft t e ft J "rt c ) fif r il ft f cf i 1 rrt ?lt m.n, r 't n p ; n t n-iT- irfI ml rhl! !crv atn Tf:. war Iofl f lr a-- - iU , Kltrh- - in' wf.o h rl!r.sr to f ; Uv. T: f'r Season i;-f-,- r. ; i! f-i- Expected to Bring Relief, but Game Is Found to Be Scarce. B rn i r, trft tt. t Lr.V5-N- ussta hort of Next to His Rifle. Every Soldier Values Most of All His Miniature Pick. - RISE OF BUTTER CHECKED Rabbit UP S BAGDAD TPOM Smacked Kaiser's Face. p-- L HOP:. OWN ST Intrenching Becomes Inveterate Habit m Western Battle Line One Girl Thought It Came About Because King Edward D eaters M BPITISH DPIVCN BACK TPOM MESOPOTAMIA Humorous Answers Given by Children of England on War I ANCIENT FRENCH CITY OF ROUEN TRANSFORMED BY OCCUPATION TO COMMUNITY SEEMINGLY BRITISH I I I Itouen, France, Ilee. 11. Five o'clock tea, smoked fish, roasf beef, boxbeef, marmalade, pickles, Tommy Atkins matthcw, cricket, golf, corned ing and the Salvation Army have no completed the Anglicizing of Itouen that himself would acarcely recogrnixe it. Itlcbard the Since the serond week of the war the Mreeta have been full of khaki and from that time on the English lanruase nan encroached until French it rarely heard excepting in the cafe. from which Tommy Atkins is excluded by oredr of the general. Even the official communique in more Eng-lis- h than French in Itouen. Ask a newsboy for a paper and ahe will inquire f Times f" Here and there a boy has French paper. Dally Mailf Telegraph If anyone has a' building or an apartment to let lie advertises It In I.ng-lisand It Is promptly taken. The censor forbids mention of the number, and discretion allows nothing more than the hint that there are enough or them to make a town of 120,009 French population appear to be English. "Here we take English money" is announced In some places, unnecfor English copper and silver circulate quite asoffreely as the essarily, the "occupaFrench money. Freely is the word, for In the earl3- - days tion" the English were accused of "throwing money out of the window." were heavy, but gradually the people of Iloucn have Their learnedexpenditures the war office pays liberally. It Is not without counting. that though Tommv Atkins' relations with the French population have become familiar if not cordial. He did many things In thehave beginning to raise diffifound many ways of corps culties, but the men of the expeditionary of them saved the bulk of the first Impressions. Two hundredfire dispelling and were thanked in official contents of a big warehouse destroyed by the district. On Sunday afterorders by the French general commanding noon many a "Tommy" may be seen showing the camp to a French famof younger members. He is not always sober ily, generally taking charge and he Is so and is often overgallant, Kitchener'sIs orders notwithstanding, magnified several times, but while conspicuous that every peccadillo conducts himself so as for a "terrible charmer," Tommy passing race and Is regarded as generally a "jolly good to rlo credit to the Anglo-Saxo- n fellow." with the Salvation The Young Men's Christian association, Its are the old headquarters Tommy straight. keepInstead Army, is trying to of girls and liquors there are now hygiene "Folles Hergere," where drinks and high moralofliterature.and repose The organization plensure In the British camp astonishes the French people. There is a circus tent requisitioned for the troops, acrobatic performances and shooting galwhere there are moving nietures, exercise their marksmanship on the silhouette where the soldiers leries, of a German soldier as a target. l.lou-beart- ed h, ing ' |