SSAGE (Poem) 357
By Beatrice Barry
AN INTERVIEW ON THE WAR WITH HENRY JAMES 358
By Preston Lockwood
A TALK WITH BELGIUM'S GOVERNOR 363
By Edward Lyall Fox
A CHARGE IN THE DARK (Poem) 365
By O.C.A. Child
A NEW POLAND 366
By Gustave Herve
"WITH THE HONORS OF WAR" 368
By Wythe Williams
GENERAL FOCH, THE MAN OF YPRES 373
THE UNREMEMBERED DEAD (Poem) 377
By Ella A. Fanning
CANADA AND BRITAIN'S WAR UNION 378
By Edward W. Thomson
ENGLAND (Poem) 384
By John E. Dolson
AMERICAN AID OF FRANCE 385
By Eugene Brieux
A FAREWELL (Poem) 387
By Edna Mead
STORIES OF FRENCH COURAGE 388
By Edwin L. Shuman
A TROOPER'S SOLILOQUY (Poem) 392
By O.C.A. Child
AMERICAN UNFRIENDLINESS 393
By Maximilian Harden
ENDOWED WITH A NOBLE FIRE OF BLOOD 395
By A. Kouprine
CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 396
THE DAY (Poem) 408
By Henry Chappell
[Illustration: COMMANDER THIERICHENS
Commander of the German commerce-raider Prinz Eitel Friedrich, which
sank the American sailing ship William P. Frye.]
[Illustration: THE GRAND DUCHESS OF LUXEMBURG
Whose little State was first occupied by the German forces.
(Photo from George Grantham Bain.)]
The New York Times
CURRENT HISTORY
A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
THE EUROPEAN WAR
MAY, 1915
General Sir John French's Own Story
The Costly Victory of Neuve Chapelle
_LONDON, April 14.--Field Marshal Sir John French, commander of the
British expeditionary forces on the Continent, reports the British
losses in the three days' fighting at Neuve Chapelle last month, as
follows: Killed, 190 officers, 2,337 men; wounded, 359 officers, 8,174
other ranks; missing, 23 officers, 1,728 men; total casualties, 12
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