GERMANY'S HUGE LOSSES.
FIRST MONTH'S CASUALTIES OVER HUNDRED THOUSAND. Copenhagen, September 30. The thirty-fifth German casualty list shows:—Officers. 60 killed. 190 wounded, and 7 missing; men, 991 killed, 3450 wounded, i4SS missing. The list to date includes »*$ pages, each of three columns, comprising 117,000 casualties, to the beginning of September. These lists include the losses on the Marne, Aisne, and Russian frontier.
The latest list reveals the fact that a loss of 200 men p«>r regiment is common. TII2 60th Regiment of Infantry lost 3-2 officers and non--oms.. >S2 men killed, and 296 officers and men grounded or missing.
THE KAISER'S SONS. TWO BACK FROM FRONT. Rome, September 30. A Berlin message states that Prince Oscar has been invalided owing to heart trouble. Prince Joachim was -wounded, hut is now convalescent. The Kaiser's other sons are at the front. The reported death of Prince Adalbert 1? denied in Berlin.
IGNORED THE CENSOR. FRENCH PAR€R SUSPENDED. Paris. September 30. The newspaper L'Homme Libre,, owned by M. Clemenceau, a former Prime Minister of France, has been temporarily suspended for refusing to recognise the censor.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LI, Issue 15729, 2 October 1914, Page 6
Word Count
182GERMANY'S HUGE LOSSES. New Zealand Herald, Volume LI, Issue 15729, 2 October 1914, Page 6
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