OCR Text |
Show ' GERMANY'S "MASS OF MANEUVER" j 1) N T i2 Own cf AusTRo-ccwaw I Jl I IfclO rrri)x)ry lit JS53 THjomrn against wca v lift jUCOlV f&P&y l('L VJI AHO BALTIC ISLANDS lS. ' SEWCMBCM9IT (' BERLIN-. s,.-'' I Wttf&kT IIILAUSTRO-CIWWJ MASS V -M v il ?2VC,1kV Wni A6WKJT ITALY fl J I I P B'i-S "i . LAUTK)"CtMAM MAM I J v VSkfwft 'v,-. ' of i.tANtrm.t diow. iL awu. J&s7ixa Hl;:SS-w v '"l UMM MUMAMIA IR ' AUGUST HI7 The German "mass of maneuver," that is, the mobile army, detached from the everyday task of defending the long entrenched lines, is here shown swinging from Roumania to Riga and Riga to the Italian frontier. It is not implied that the actual units were in each case the same, but the impulse from headquartere has moved, with available troops, to the points indicated. The Franco-British "mass of maneuvers," formed suddenly to assist Italy is also indicated . |