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I ENEMY'S HEAVY LOSSES IN…

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Rhannu

I ENEMY'S HEAVY LOSSES IN UNSUC- I CESSFUL ATTACK. The Press Bureau have issued the follow- ing messa ge from Eye-Witness." Present with General Headquarters in France, "Eye- Witness tells of the desperate attack on the British lines near La Bassee, how the enemy came on five times, only to be re- pulsed with heavy looses. On Saturday, January 23, on the left, good results were obtained hy our artillery, whole stretches of parapet in the German trenche6 being swept away. On the rig-ht, in the neighl>ourhood of La Bassee Canal, our trench mortars landed several bombs in a German gap. Our guns also forcod n observation balloon to descend and drove (1ff two German aeroplanes. A new type of machin-e approached our lines. Its novel shape evidently misled the German gunner, for on its return they opened fire on it until it signalled its identity by star-lights. MET THE ENEMY WITH COLD STEEL. I Sunday was fine, and there was a con tinued fall in the level of the River Lys, which a few days ago had risen to the maxi- mum height it has attained this winter. There was considerable artillery activity sooth of La Bassee Canal. On the right -centre one of our shells blew up a German magazine. On Monday, the 2oth, the comparative quiet of the p,t few days wr.s broken by a sudden assumption of the offensive on the part of the euemv. Early in the morning the German artil- lery opened a heavy fire upon the right of our line and the area behind it. This bom- bardment was evidently the prelude to an attack in force, and our guns replied by shelling La Bassee and the railway tri- angle. At 8 a.m. the German launched an assault against the British and French on the south of the canal, and at one point penetrated ouf lire. Al»out the same time they also attacked heavily our troops in Givenchy, north of the canal, and, parsing over our front trendies, temporarily gained a foothold in the place. But as their infan- try surged forward through the village our men met them with cold steel, killing 100 with the bayonet. FIVE TIMES REPULSED. I Fighting then proceeded for some hours at close quarters, but by noon we had reoceu- -pied the whole of our original trenches round the village. The Germans s howed the utmost determination in this quarter, de- livering no fewer than five attacks on tha north-east corner of Givenchv. In these their losses were very heavy, several scat- tered bodies which had succeeded in pene- trating our line being killed practically to a man. Our casualties in this part of the fight -were comparatively light. Meanwhile, on the south of the canal, the struggle was fiercely contested throughout the day. The Germans advancing along the main road were caught by the fire of our machine guns and left the ground littered with dead bodies to the estimated number of three hundred, and as they came along the railway embankment were also subjected to machine-gun fire, and suffered greatly; but, as has been said, they managed to penetrate • our line at one point. By a counter-attack, however, undertaken at one a.m., in co- operation with the French, the Allies drove them back. Though we did not win back our original* position, we established our- selves in a fresh line close behind it. ENEMY'S HEAVY LOSSES. I A great part of the area where this fight- ing took place consists of brickfields. where both si(W. fought hand to hand. During the day we captured fifty-three prisoners, in- cluding two officers. The total casualties of the German? are reported to have amounted to considerably over 1,000 in their effort against our line. Against the French, also, to the south of us their attacks were re- pulsed with slaughter. They showed considerable activity at mnnv other points on our front. Thcv subjected our right centre to a heavy bombardment by trench mortars and artillery, and also made an attack in some strength on the French east of YpreR in the neighbourhood of Zonncbeke. Here they were repulsvd with ease, in an abortive attempt at a surprise, leaving 30D dead bodies hanging on their .wire entanglements. y REAL BRITISH PLUCK. I In Givenchy village the fighting was of a most desperate nature, being in many in- stances at close quarters. Our men in many cases fought with bayonets in their hands, and even knocked out many Germans with their fist. A story is told of one man who broke into a house held by eight Germans, bayoneted four and captured the rest, while he continued to sudt at a clay pipe. On the whole, it may be said that January 25 was a bad day for the enemv in this portion of their line. They paid very dearly for the one small gain in ground they achieved. ORGANISED PILLAGING. I Tuesday, the 2oth, was quiet, except for artillery fire at ditfere.it points along our line. The evidence as to the methods and be- haviour of the enemy which is obtained from inhabitants inul necessarily be ac- cepted with caution, but there are certain reports which appear to be corroborated from various sources of information. One of these is that in many of the districts occupied by the Germans pillagino, is car- ried out on an organised system, the houses being ransacked and their contents loaded on to trains and sent to GIrmaiiy. Another is that men of military age have been seized and sent to Germany, and that civilians in many cases have been forcibly employed in military labour. LOOKING AFTER SOLDIERS' GRAVES. j The care that has been taken of British Koldiers' graves by the inhabitants in this part of the country has already been noted but it is net only in Flanders that we arc indebted to them for this service. Officers -who have travelled along the French lines and across the districts traversed by citr Army in the retirement and advance to the Aisne bear witness to the touching endea- vours of the French peasants to tend and beautify the la6t resting-places of their Allies, it being apparently a point of honour with them to bestow as much care on them as on thce-e of their own dead. When it is remembered that ruin and misery have been caused to the country-folk in the track of the invaders, the fact that they should have the time and energy to rise above their own suffering in order to bestow this attention upon our dead is all the more remarkable. Over these graves, which were hastily dug and on which no record was placed originally, wooden crosses have been erected bearing the simple in- scription, "Soldat anglais.' Often a khaki cap is hung on the cross, and the grass mound is beautified with cut flowers or arti- ficial wreaths.

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