REMAKING SERBIAN ARMY WONDERFUL PATIENCE COMMANDER'S WACHWORD WAR ZONE OBSERVATIONS SOLDIERS SAY TRENCHES HELL-HOLES GERMAN PRISON CAMPS ARE MODEL SERBIAN ARMY QUICK TO RECOVER FROM A ' MASHING "DEFEAT" f j Character of People and Aid From French and British Are Also Factors. FLEE FROM THE INVADERS cores Dropped on wayside During Ittmtj Loaf Httrt Breaking Marches Forced Upon Kan. Salonikl, July S. (I. N. 8.) Tne way In which the Serbian army hua bean reconstituted la one of the mira cles of the war. Seven months ago lit , would hardly have been said to exist. It waa worn out with fighting againat enormoui odds and the retreat through Albania had reduced It to a dis ordered maaa of famished and dis- spirited men, without a chance, one would have aald, of ever pulling thein elvea together and taking the field again. Yet today, when Generals Sarrall and Milne were the guests at a festival of one of the moat famous Herblin regiments, the burly vigorous men that marched past them with even, swing ing step, and afterwards sang their ongs and danced their national rianciH were splendid examples of the pea sant soldier at his best. Their discipline was excellent, their high spirits undeniable; and the.e were the very men who came through Al bania laat winter, leaving thousand Of their comrades dying of sheer ex bauatlon by the way. Serbian Character Praised. The credit of It falls chiefly to the courage and resiliency of the SerhiRn :haracter, but without t tie help brought by the French and Rrltlsh missions li would have been Impossible for tl:: Serbian army to come Into existence again as such. The first and most imperative neces- Uy when the invasion awept the Herb Ian army atill fighting out of Its own territory Intorocky, foodies, and ho, tile mountainous Albania was to mee the Serbians with food and save them from absolute starvation. These sup piles of food had to be gathered at Brlndlsl and run the gauntlet of trie Austrian fleet In the Adriatic befoit they even reached Albania And then thera remained the hard task of gel j ting them inland over roads so bad that nething but the roughest tracks In the highlands can be compared with them. Officers and men of the RrifiMh ' trmy service corps were aent to Medua, Durraio, and Avlona to organise this service along the line of the Serbian . .retreat. rood Depots- Plactd. So exhausted and dispirited wera they that it waa necessary to place food depot at Intervals along the ' coast as as to enable them to con tinue; their Journey. Between 60,000 , and $0,000 men had struggled through from Bcrbia to Scutari. Day after day they had marched by goat-tracks over precipitous mountains in heavy rain and anow, often literally with no food for days together. Kvery few yards ft man would sink down in the snow . to die and only the strongest came through. ' A party of British officers was sent out at the end of November, and of these an advance party rushed on to meet the Serbian general staff at Scutari, while the rest established . their headquarters at Rome and a base . for food supplies at Brlndsi. But for their endeavors. It is difficult to see now the Serbians could have done any- thing but collapse and die of sheer hunger at Scutari. Bread cost J2.50 to $4 a loaf. Some of the men went lx days without tasting food. March Is Difficult. At considerable risk from mines, the Italian navy insured the transport of food to Medua, but it was pot possible to embark the Serbians trlere, as the Austrian fleet lay at Cattaro, close by, and might at any moment make a sor tie. So the weary Serbians had to be roused again for another heart break ing march southward to Durazzo through dangerous marshes and In con'. Itant apprehension of an Albanian or ft Bulgarian attack. It was another Tearful Journey, during which hun dreds died of dysentery. At Durazzo. ij nly part of the army could be taken pn board ship, and the rest had yet another seven days' march to Avlona. From Avlona the French quickly hipped the Serbians to Corfu. But even at Corfu their troubles were not aver. The 80.000 troops who had marched from Scutari had been in- ' 2r 60 000 who "ad come , straight from Klbaasa into Avlona and the difficulties of feeding and lodging such an army In the island were very , treat. The landing of troops began - In wretched weather, and the men went - n dying of dysentery and exhaustion : lor weeks afterward. Icaoh Work Performed. ,. , Roads and Jetties had to be built. Slothing; had to come from France and England, rifles were shipped and horses and machine guns. 1 Then the Serbians were transported to Salonlkl through seas, where they were awaltted by submarines which were even sighted from shore by the ' Serbian troops at drill. The Serbian camps stretch for miles . In a beautiful setting on a green plain. , flanked by a black mountain and shin ing sea. It is not only an army you see When you visit them, hut n.tinn That Is the one melancholy thing about .- this Serbian force that it should be all that is left of the manhood and , vigor, bodily and Intellectual, of so gauant a people. Some English Towns In Desperate Plight Pear of Bombardment steeps Ylaltors V Prom East Coast Points and Plsb. lag Industry Declines. .London. July 8. (I. N. 8.) Owing to the' war the picturesque East Coast summer resort towns of England are li desperate plight. No visitors go there because of the fear of bombard ment by the Germans and for other reasons, and the fishing trade and other activities nave dwindled. Mem bers from the districts where these towns are located have appealed to par liament for relief and tho government is about to take action to remedy mat ter x - Swiss People Protest Export of Bread Newspaper Declare That Public Will Pat Stop to Practice XT Government Does Jf ot Eaforoe Embargo. Berne, July S. (I. N.S.) the Swiss papers are protesting violently against the export of foodstuffs to Austria Hungary and Germany. These exports were prohibited by the federal council several months ago, but they still con tinue. The St. Gallener Tageblatt says: "Under the (pretext that flour, is be coming more and more scarce, our bak ers have again raised the price of bread. Along the Austrian frontier frontier Swiss citizens are turned away from the bakeries, while tons of bread are taken across certain bridges to Austria, where higher prices are paid. Meat, butter and cheese are also continually taken out of the country in large quantities. If the government does not see fit to enforce its embargo, the people wilt take the matter into their own hands and see to It that no more food is carried across the border while our men, women and children suffer from want" Top Picture Ulustratlnjc immensity of number of men engaged in fight at Verdun. So far as eye can reach is a maas of human fight ing machines. In this corps there are 40,000 men, or about l-lOO of the total number of men engaged. Bottom Group of members of Russian Duma which recently visited England. Seated on the extreme right is Professor AUUnkoff, the leader of the Liberal larty In the duma. Seated in center with arms folded is Speaker Lo wither of the British house of commons, and seated next to him on right of picture is Baron Rosen, formerly Russian ambassador to Washington. The vice president of the duma, M. Propopotoff, is seated fourth from left, and next to him on right of the picture is Count Benkendorff, Russian ambassador at the Court of St, James. SOLDIERS ARE TIRED OF LIFE IN TRENCHES, CALLED HELL HOLES Letters Are Found on the Germans Taken Prisoners Near Verdun. London, July 8. (I. N. S.) H. Warren Allen, special representative of the British press with the French rmv. sends some extracts from let ters written by Herman soiaiers De fore Verdun and taken from their rockets when the writers were cap tured. Many complain of the great slaughter of men. From a letter written by Lieutenant Klllgen of the Sixth reserve Infantry regiment and intended for dispatch to another lieutenant belonging to the 202nd reserve regiment: "April S You can form some Idea of our position from the fact that all our officers have been renewed. The losses of the regiment are high, for Its position on the plateau of Vaux is simply disgusting. Our battalions re lieve one another, but our positions when in reserve or resting, receive, with few exceptions, as many shells as the first line." From a letter dated 'April 11, writ ten by a private soldier, named Shro dtr of the Eightieth Infantry regiment. "We are absolutely In a hell hole here. The artillery fires night and day. I never Imagined It would he like this. If only this wretched war would come to an end. No reasonable man can justify such a butchery of men. Though we have not been long in the firing line we have all had enough of It, and are longing for peace. We should like to send to the front all these gentlemen who caused the war and who profit from it. If we had done this we should have had peace long ago." From a letter written by a soldier named Schmole of the 201th reserve regiment, dated April 15: "You can't Imagine how tired wears of life sometimes. We are made to toll In every possible way. There is no rest until one falls on his nose in the mud. How absurd what they write In the newspapers seem. Our beloved soldiers! If you knew what they have to suffer, to say nothing of having their lives worried out of them, they would not serve us up such lies. Yes terday the weather was still abomi nable, and we were again wet to the bone. Then we were asked why we were not singing, so, in all our misery, we had to sing." A - nAstcard written bv a snlritar named Keltsch of the Third rrenadter regiment of landstrum, to his son. Frits dated April 30: "Since Good Friday I have been be fore Verdun. It is terrible. We are in holes on the slopes of a mountain, and we scarcely dare put out ot' noses. The bombardment is Inces sant: sometimes it is too awful for Vords. It seems as if the mountain was collapsing. If I escape altve I shall remember this Easter. Our kitchens are two hours to the rear. There Is not a drop of water nets." Japanfs Shipping Progress Now Active Company Working Under OoTermneat Subsidy MftkM Bapld Strides; Pas. eager Traffic Is Xeavy. Tokyo, July If. The demand for passenger accommodations on the lin ers plying between Japan and America continues to be unprecedented. The Toyo Klsen Kaisha has pur chased the former Pacific Mail liner's Korea and Siberia to replace the Chiyo Mam which ran aground at Hongkong a few weeks ago. The vendors are the Atlantal-a Transport Company and the ("price is put at 11.000,000 gold. Further evidence of Japan s snip ping progress is seen in the position of the subsidised lines, the Nippon Yusen Kaisha. which celebrates its thirtieth birthday in September next. When it was started the concern was only en gaged in coastal shipping. It is now the eighth largest shipping concern in the world, with a fleet of 102 vessels (480.000 tons) and a staff.of 760 em ployes on shore and 6000 afloat. No foreigner can hold shares. The imper- j lal family Is interested In the company. I Patience and More Patience Watchword Of English Commander in "Great Push" Sir Douglas Haig Is Soldier Without Illusions, Who Sees With Soldier's Logic ; Scotch by Birth and Canny by Nature. By Frederick Palmer. British Headquarters; France, July 8. (I. N. S.) No military leader is more averse to publicity or works more silently than Sir Douglas Haig, the British commander-in-chief in France. To those who were Importu nate for the offensive his answer was patience and yet again patience, while ' the new munition factories began to' produce and he continued his building. His generals say that he never tells (hem his plans; only what they are to do. Probably not one man out of ten of the million or more under his com mand would recognize him if they saw him. Not given to reviews or any kind of display, this quiet and studious Scotsman was the choice of the pro gressive, practical, driving element of the army as the one fit by equipment, training and experience, to succeed Sir John French. At o, he is nine years younger than Sir John and 10 years younger than Joffre or Von Hinden burg. Of the men of command rank in the British army in August, 1914, he and Sir William Robertson another man who had risen from the ranks and is now chief of staff in London were the two who were appraised by the generation of officers who had devel oped since South Africa as having pre pared themselves for the direction of large bodies of troops on the scale of continental warfare. They were not the magnetic, dashing leader type, but organisers. West Throogn Tongs School. Going out in command of the first army of the British expeditionary force. Sir Douglas had 17 months' ex perience Mons, Ypres and Loos of the warfare of the western front, which ail agree is the toughest school any soldier has ever known. There was no doubt who commanded the first army. It was Haig. He was no figurehead, for the work of an able chief of staff. London gossip did not bandy his name about; he was not a personality to the public, though he waa to the army. When anyone asked at the front who was the best man to take Sir John'a place the answer was almost Invariably. "Haig." He had not cap tured the army's imagination, but Us reason. The tribute was one to brains. A wisp of a flag and two sentries designate the entrance to the chateau smaller than that occupied by many division generals which is the head quarters of the commander In chief I The only occupants of the chateau besides Sir-Douglas are his private sec- i retary ana nis aiaes, wno are "crocas. tbe army word or officers who have been wounded and are not fit for the physical exposure of the trenches. In other words, if a youngster wishes to become an aide he must hae fought and then have the decision of a doctor that he cannot stand living in the cellar-like dugouts,. Xturt Keep Appolntmeatn. - The hour of any anointment is exact to the minute, and whoever baa one at this chateau Is expected to be thereon the minute, general headquarters time. There is little ceremony. Life at that small chateau has a real soldierly sim plicity. At luncheon the soldier serv ant places the food on the sideboard and everyone takes his plate and helps himself. Few guests come. Sir Doug, laa keeps his time to himself for his work and his own choice of recreation. One of his aides receives the caller, and a minute later the man with iron- gray air and mustache, sturdy, athletic i of build, slightly above medium height, ! who comes into the hall, could not be miataken. whether in or out of unl-1 form, for anything but a soldier. though something about the well-chiseled, regular features aiso suggests the scholar. "Oxford and Sandhurst and India." said one of his admirers, "and hard work at a desk when be was not tak ing exercise in the open air, best de scribe him.'' In one of the rooms on the ground floor the walls are hung with maps, including a series which have been crowded on a roller. Any portion of tbe front in all its details may be re ferred to in a moment. In tue center of the room is a desk, and against the wall a table with more maps and draw, tngs and some of those strange photo graphs from aeroplanes, of grayish lines of trench systems in a dusky field of shell and mine craters, which make one, think of the dead world of the moon. Xalg- Zs Alwaya "Calef." The staff always refer tohim as "the chief." There is something impersonal about it, and yet personal, for he is ab solutely the chief. There Is no sugges tion of any commission system in the command of the British army these days. Like General Joffre, he sleeps long hours. A rested mind is a clear mind for responsibilities. Like Von Hinden burg, be never reads fiction. When reading has not to do with bis -profession, he reads serious books and month lies and quarterlies. Even during the battle of Ypres. when it was touch-and-go with disaster, k-e slept as soundly as Joffre during the battle of tbe Marne. At a crisis of the retreat from Mons he remarked as quietly as if he were giving a direction to an aide "We shall have to hold on here for a while if we all die for it." I hand. There is never any fustian about The famous one-armed Hungarian these modern scientific soldier organ-' pianist. Count Gaxa Zichy, might be Uers.. Again during the retreat, when mentioned bere. Having lost his right a certain general became somewhat de- arm in a hunting accident, he succeeded moralized. Sir Douglas took him by the ' in making himself such a brilliant pi arm and walked up and down with bim anist that Liszt and Hanslick were In silence until he was over hie fit of j amazed, and another admirer declared: nerves on that terrible August day. "Zichy does not play one-banded he Those who work with bim know that plays four-handed." his sign of anger is a prolonged si-1 Count Zichy. now an old man, recent lence ot a telling kind. He has a tern- j y played in Berlin to an audience cen per, but does not let it get past hisl8istlng of soldiers who have lost their lips, they say. He has. too, a keen j arms fighting for Germany. He never sense of humor with a Scotch flavor, plays in public except for charity. , The impression he leaves on, a caller j The lord provost of Glasgow has just is that of a leader without Illusions; a inaugurated a fund: to establish and en soldler Who sees with a soldier's logic, dow a 'Scottish hospital for limbless wbo is not afraid to be patient. - j soldiers and sailors. J FEATS BUILT IN FACTORY Hands Made That Almost Equal the Work of Nature in Cleverness, London, July 8. (I. N S.) Soldiers who have lost an arm in the war are doing some amazing feats. Indeed, with the artificial limbs now offered. 11 " "UBS1U" lor a Ptraev"m Dlan; to aImost equal;nature. Queen Mary auxiliary hospital at Roehampton is exclusively for disabled - J M 1 soldiers and sailors. The king and queen recently visited this institution, founded by Mrs. Gwynne Holdford, and were deeply impressed. At one of the benches the king saw a Tommy working, and found that, al though he had lost an arm and leg at Armentleres, he is now able to do use ful work. With a special clip taking the place of a dummy right hand, be used a variety of tools under the king's Inspection, and afterward took a match from a box and lighted it with dexterity and ease. "Can you shake hands?" asked tbe queen of an armless private of the First West Ontario regiment. - 'Try me, your majesty," promptly replied the Canadian. The queen shook j hands with him, laughing merrily at me convincing grip oi we amiiciaj 1 hand. Professor Laverau recently showed the French Academy of Sciences a re markable substitute for a missing arm invented by Professor Auber. The arm, hand and fingers are of aluminum and very light With a glove on It, It Is almost impossible to perceive tbe limb' la artificial. Certain movements of the thorax acting on fine steel wires give to tbe hand and arm almost all tbe movements of : the natural limb. Mutilated soldiers equipped with this deVlee played .the violin, made ciga rettes and gave out change for a bank note belore the academy. , A pupil of the London School of Art ' went to the front early in the war and lost the use of his right hand. He has , now taught himself to draw with bis ! left hand, and his work is considered ! as good as he ever did with his right MAIMED GRFA MBS English Lad Promoted At 17 After Continual Baptism of Fire Young Fellow Who Ran Away Times and Blown Up By W. S. Forrest. , Ixndon. July 8. (U. P.) Scads of thrills enough to make the wildect dreams of a movie hero pale to insig nificance have been packed Into the yOunff life of Lieutenant Clifford Probert. aged 17. The full story came today from Blaenavon, Wales, Probert's native village. Daring deeds under fire. promoUoi from the ranks, awarded the L). S. 0 wounded 22 times, blown up while- on a hospital ship and lapse of memory are a few of the youthful soldier's expei iences. Before the war young Probert operated a haulage engine in a coul mine and was the assistant chief boy scout of the district. In September, 1914, he joined the army by misrepresenting bis tie to a recruiting sergeant. He told the ser geant he waa 18 when he was only 1j. His parents objected to his militarism so he changed his name to William Gordon Williams. At hill 60 in northern France, the youthful soldier received his baptl&.n of fire. He also went to the hospital for 12 weeks with two wounds in the head and two In the legs. Some time after he had rejoined his regiment, the colonel, commanding, de cided that a distant tower was being used as an enemy observation posu The colonel chose two men to cut'the wires that connected the tower with enemy batteries. The men chosen were Lieutenant Murphy and Williams (Probert). After crawling I'OO yards through darkness, in the direction of the tower. Murphy was shot through the head. Probert crawled forward and event ually arrived. He dug in the ground around the tower for an hour with his hands before he discovered the wires. There were 17, which meant that 17 German batteries were being in formed of the accuracy of their file on the British positions. Probert tried to snip the wires with his pocket knife. The me tall c sound produced, however, made the operation danger ous and he searched his Red Cross packet for vaseline. Smearing the oil on the wires, he spent several hours in noiselessly cut- Italian Deserters Have Gruelling Time Tares Xeaab Swiss Tillage is Deplor able Condition After Climbing a Hlgn Mountain. Berne, July 8. (I. N. S. Three Italian deserters recently arrived t the Swiss village of Lourtier. in the canton of Vaud, in a deplorable con dition. Tbe men had escaped from the training camp in Geneva just as they were about to ba sent to the front. After many dangers and hardships they reached the Italian frontier vil lage of Blonaa in the Val Pellino. From there thev started to climb over the mountains, which are over J 10,000 feet high. When they left Bionaz they had only a small pice of brea1 j and they suffered greatly from the I cold In the high altitude. Wnen they j reached Lourtier their shoes and stock ings 'had fallen from their feet and they were so weak that they had to be sent to a hospital. German Crops Will Be Good, Is Report Starrest Prospects Bail to Be fcxoaUeat Thronghont Empire, Especially in th Southern States. Berlin. July 8. (I. N. S.) dffictal reports just published show that tbe harvest prospects are excellent throughout the empire, and especially so in the southern statea Baden, Al sace, Wurtemberg and Bavaria will have at least SO per cent more barley, rye and wheat than last year, and in Prussia. ' Saxony, Hesse and the other northern states the,, crops also prom ise to be above the average. As a result of the rainy weather dur. ing May, there will be an abundance 6f hay. Tbe condition of the orchards and vineyards is satisfactory, and ex perts calculate that the apple harvest will exceed that of last year by 2.00,- 000 barrels. The Black Forest and the Odenwald will furnish enormous quan- 1 titles of berries. to Lieutenancy to War Has Been Wounded 22 While in Hospital Ship. ting all 17 and then crawled tediously back to the British trenci.es. It was on September 25. the start of the big British offensive, that the young trooper again got into action, His regiment charged. A handful reached the third line Cicrman trenches. Probert was one of the handful. A shell exploded nearby and threw him into the air. Dazed and suffering from shock he arose and charged again but came under the fire of a ma chine gun and fell with five bulltt wounds in his abdomen, both hips He died and his head badly battered. He lay In the open, without attention, for two days before stretcher bearers came along. Probert hovered between life anJ death in a base hospital for weeks Youth and vitality finally conquered until he had sufficiently recovered strength to be sent to Kngland. Subsequently, with other wounded men, he was taken to Boulogne and placed aboard the hospital ship Angli". The Anglta was half way across tne English channel en route to Folkestone when she was mined. The explosion occurred just as a nurse was raising Probert's head to see the coast of England. The nurse and an orderly carried Probert, cot and all, to the main deck and, telling him to hold on tight, slid bim into the sea. A rescuing de stroyer picked him up before he had swallowed too much sea water. Eventually he arrived in an English hospital. Here he was awarded the medal of the Distinguished Service Order for gallantry and apprised of his promotion to a lieutenancy. Weeks later Probert was well enough to be discharged from the hospital. But he had not gone long before some thing seemed to snap in his brain and wipe away his memory. The young officer finally was found in London, wandering. Someone recog nized him from his photograph pub lished in a London newspaper. It was not until he caught sight of familiar scenes in his native village that Probert regained his memory. He hopes to rajoin his regiment in another month. "I want to get bark Into the scrap before it is all over." Probert Is telling his townsmen up in Blaenavon. Wales. Fortune Teller Sees Early End of War Highly Sdooated Japanese Womaa Makes Prediction by Beading Signs of tbe Zodiac. Tokyo. July I. (I. N. 8.) The Jap anese method of fortune telling by reading the signs of the sodlao is still practiced by educated, per sons. The lata. Prince Ito never took an important decision until he had consulted bis fortune teller. A highly educated Japanese woman living In Tokyo and married to an European of good standing was asked by some American friends if her method would tell when the war would end. She made her calculations carefully and an nounced that fighting would cease be tween the eighth snd ninth moons this year, but that the treaty of peace would not be actually signed until the second moon of 1917. This amounts to a prediction that there will be no great battles after tbe end of August or beginning of Septem ber and that the belligerents will Ini tiate peace talk which, will materialise into a settlement by February of next year. Combine Formed by ijig nye uompames Berlin, July S. Seven of the largest aniline dye factories of Germany have formed, a combine or trust. 'They in tend to work their plants throughout the war in order to pile np large stocks which are to be exported as soon as peace ia restored. At home the trust Intends to sell Its products at the highest prices permit ted by the government, while In for eign countries tbe prices' are to be re duced to the lowest possible level until the dye Industries which have been started during the war in the bellig erent and neutral countries and are sttn In their infancy shall be destroyed everywhere. The trust is willing to spend 110.000,000 to reestablish tbe German dye monopoly. , ' P CAMPS-ARE AS BY SWISS LECTURER Germans Give Enemies Cap tured Every Attention That Is Possible, SOME ARE EMPLOYED Susslans Orerlook Slothing la Lias of rood Cooks of Wide Bsperleaea la Charge of Kitchens. ' Basle. July 8. I. N. S ) The Ger man prison camps were praised as . models in a lecture here by Dr. Paul. rrtunrrii, t-miii in inc viiiimi corps of the Swiss army, who went to Germany in April as a member of the sanitary commission appointed of the Swiss government at the request -of the allies and visited every camp in the country, lie said: "The German prison ramps are built In exactly the same manner as the training camps for German troops . Ths barracks of the prisoners consist of small buildings which contain a stove snd two or three big mattres ses. Only In a few cases did 1 find, more than 10 men In one room. All of the buildings are kept scrupulous ly clean and present a neat appeal -ance. The interior decoration of the barracks Is left to the taste of the inhabitants who have made some of their quarters qulis cozy and evea artistic. Not too much can be sal! In praise of the sanitary arrange ments. Many Oood Sntertalaers. "In every camp special buildings have been erected for religious serv ices, theatrical performances and con certs. - Among the French prisoners there gre many Kood amateur actors and musicians. The English pit- oners care more for football and other sports than for histrionic art and music, but they alxo have brass bands and sometimes arrange vaudeville per formances. "The kitchens are exemplary. . An old German non-commissioned officer acts as 'chef for every oompsny or Dattauon or prisoners ana is assistea by a number of French soldiers, some of whom are professional cooks. All food Is prepared carefully and fur-, nlshcd In sufficient quantities. Some." times Ihe prisoners even get luxuries, which are bought with the money ob tained for the sain of waste to the farmers for their plas. "While the French and English prisoners do not eat everythlna that Is furnished to them, the Russians always have an enormous appetlts, and devour any food they ran get. The Frenchmen and Britishers re ceive many dellca-len from home and, of course prefer them to the coarser t fare of the camp, but this is not" alwaya Rood fur them, because they ', otten suffer from stomach and intes tinal troubles. Books Are Paralahsd. In the libraries of the ramp the prisoners get books In their own lan- .,. guages and they are -"Permitted to . write two letters snd four postal cards V every month. "The employment conditions ate also highly satisfactory. For a lafg'; number of the prisoners there is work . enough In the camps. Others are aent '' to nearby farms under the escort Of t Landstrum troops every morning and return to the camp In the evening. Many of the prisoners, mostly Rus sians, are assigned to farmers fat ' from the camps and remain there " unguarded for several weeks. .They enjoy full liberty and only in rare cases attempt to escape. A large number of French soldiers are em ployed in factories. The Frenchmen are splendid mechanics and the de mand for them is great. ! "With the colored prisoners, Hln- dus, Turcos, Senegalese, Negroes and - Maoris little can be diine. Most of them are entirely unfit for any work r and the remainder are Indescribably lasy. The Englishmen in many case refuse to work, becaase they consider manual labor below the dignity of a British soldier. , The measures taken for the pre? ventlon of epldemk-s are thorough. Newly arrived prisoners are Isolated for four to six weeks. On the day of their arrival they are cleaned of all vermin and vaccinated and their clothing- la dlsmfected. During their terms of isolation they hsve to take ' three baths weekly. Some of tbe Russians object to being cleaned so often and have to be scrubbed f orol--biy. . Sail Inspection Bifid. The sanitary service In tbe camps ia organised in military fashion." Every morning and evening, at roll call, the prisoners are inspected by physicians. If they complain about -their health, they are minutely aa -anilned and sent to tbe camp. bospU tals, which are models In every way. Prisoners wbo die are burled With . military honors. The commander and . the German officer of tbe oamp aj , waya march behind the coffin of the dead enemy to the small prison ceme- ? tery where a squad of Landstrum '. troops fires a salute over the grave. ine camps for officers have, f course, more comfortable barrack t than those for private soldiers. Each ? of the neatly furnished little houses " serves as quarters for four to five prisoners. The officers sre permitted -v tn t a V a lonr walks lln, imi guard and dally receive not only beer -and wine, but also limited quantitla of whiskey. The. latter is saved up -by some of the Russians until they -have enough to get drunk." More Than 3000 in : Single Production Soma of racoons Oarmaa Aetors Take Part la Ores test Theatrical Br eat Tr Arrajtged- Berlln, July t. The greatest theatrl- , cat production ever arranged brought tens of thousands of people to ths sta dium tn the Grunewald on five con-' secutlve days. On a stage 660 feet wide and 410 feet deep, "Wallenatetn'a Camp" by Schiller, and one act of; Richard Wagner's "Melsterslngsr" were produced for the benefit of tha, German war sufferers. More than 3000 persons took part in , tha performance and the principal parts , were in the hands of famous German actors and opera singers. Boms of, them came directly from the front. The performances netted nearly. Siaa. 000 for the general relief fund. , RISON PRAISED MODELS 1