* t. / w-H -,' * #,'•; * "W.1*" ^ #5 ' •& •* « r ,'i, 1 i.is;;';' v?w»:••:« Cv ••••'•'••• '•> .;'••;•'**: ,'r "' • 1THENKY PLAINOEALER. BTHENRV, tT,fc. '• • -'-•'v • - -W • • '* • mrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmdtmmmm^mmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmmammmmm - -. ' ; ' " ' ' ' . i .. " ' I. . 1 . ^1 "I - ' - "" - '-"•' - • .' _"± •'. £>** '£-'V - •'. #7V' %•":• "« & r • GERMAN TROOPS RESTIN6 AFTER BATTLE OF VISE m mmmma&Bsmasm NAVAL OFFICER SAYS SEA FIGHT WAS.NOT BATTLE, BUT E ;v.| , ||; Vise was occupied by the German army on its, way to the Investment of Liege, but only after severe fighting* &ff?V- •£'• V rfchli photograph «u taken Immediately after the battle, when the kaiser's warriors were resting. St?!- <.'v '•' •' 'f.'v.: ' Si? mwtm m. FRENCH CAPITAL INOW OFFICIALLY :1'% AT BORDEAUX • >: ' • * ^ .'* V-^Y l '"• . df Government Changed As %,; Impetuous Advance of Ger- ̂ mans Continues. PREPARE FOR DEFENSE t; Elation Apparently Realizes That dty _ f. Is In Grave Danfler Ambassador ftZ. Herrick Will Romain--Report «f German Victories In the East. "' The president and members of .ffke government and all embassies of the allied nations left Wednesday for Bordeaux, where they will remain ^taring hostilities. v ; The removal of the government was explained in a proclamation by the ininister of the interior, who said the military authorities had decided the fortifications of Paris, while not cer tain to be attacked, undoubtedly would vbe the pivotal point of the field opera tions of the opposing armies. :: Preparations for a complete defense of Paris are going on apace. Several gates of the city were closed to traffic and a large force of men is building supplementary works of defense, r VAmbassador Herrick, who has taken .. Charge of the archives and embassies Of all the belligerent powers, will re- main in Paris with First Secretary Blies and the second recretary. The United States will be represented in Bordeaux by John W. Garrett, United States ambassador to Argentina, who left with the government, accompa nied by Third Secretary Sulzeton. berg, losing more than one hundred thousand men and 67 cannon. The oc cupation of the City of Lemberg was said to be imminent. If all indications do not fall, the of ficial report from the Russian capital continues, the Russians will be defi nitely victorious and as a result the roads to Vienna and Berlin will be open to the Russian armies. The fighting wason a gigantic scale, 800,000 Russians being engaged against 600,000 Austrians. .-.v. ' - German Army Close to Paris. London.--The German army on Fri- fcy was reported within thirty-two miles of the fortifications of Paris. Its legions, although sorely worn by con stant fighting, swept forward with a force that the allies have been unable t ' j * to check and the Valley of the Somme ; Jifcs been abandoned to them. |L| ' \ r- , - La Fere was taken after a fierce hi '} ' «to»bat. Amiens has fallen following 11^ ^yj*- three days' battle. fV French Issue Statement. ' W - I n a n o f f i c i a l s t a t e m e n t t h e Paris ^(ar office says: s^. "There has been no contact with the German forces in the region near Com- (•Vy jjlegne and Senlis since Wednesday. : Precautions have been taken to stop -vv »ny offensive movement of the enemy. '--w "Measures also have been taken to >. V' jr°vide for the pursuit of German aeroplanes, especially those of the % armored type, which will be prevented f from flying over Paris. "The situation in the northeast is ^U'Ae same." Compiegne is 45 miles and Senlis 32 miles northeast of Paris, and they ap pear to mark the points nearest the *dty to which the German advance (^Ufdi have approached. M Canada Fears Invasion. Ottawa, Ont--In consequence of m jjp^JWwwt which reached Ottawa, that a ' 'Ifeody of 7,000 armed Germans were in p,-> - .< . Buffalo ready to invade Canada, Col- r ^nel Hu6hes, minister of militia, left western Ontario. However, the re port is not regarded very seriously by the colonel himself. Home Hears of Russ Success, - < T l o m e . -- T h e R u s s i a n e m b a s s y has f * T" lieen notified that the Austrians were mS" •' overwhelmingly defeated near Lem Win Seven Days' Battle. London,--Report is that after a- seven days' battle the Russian forces have succeeded in seizing the fortifica tions near Lemberg, capital of Galicia, and routed a strong force of Austriaas. The Austriane fled in disorder, aban doning many pieces of artillery. The Russian forces are investing Koenigsberg. This information was given out Thursday by the Russian general staff, which also frankly confesses to the disaster of two army corps, including the loes of tliree generals, in the southern part of east Prussia. Victory Near Lustchoff. The general staff also announces that the Austrian Fifteenth division was completely routed near Lustchoff on August 28, and that 100 officers and 4,000 soldiers were taken prisoners. The official statement adde that the commander of the Austrian division, the commander of a brigade, and the phief of staff of the division were killed. Qf the 4,000 men made prison*' ers, 600 had been wounded. The Russians also captured 20 guns and the flag of the 8ixty-fifth Austrian regiment. German Advance Continues. London.--Brief messages received here Thursday indicate the German army in the north of France is fight ing its way step by step toward Paris. An official dispatch from Paris says that German cavalry marching on the forest of Compeigne were defeated by English troops, who took ten cannon. This same dispatch admits that an other German cavalry force has pushed as far as the Soissons:Anizy-Le Cateau line. Telle ef Allies' Victory. Emigrants in Paris from Crepy-en- Valois, in the department of Olse, 23 miles southeast of Compeigne, report that the Germans were crushed near there and that piles of bodies were ly ing yard high. A sergeant wounded near Compeigne, declares he saw the annihilation of an entire German divi sion by the French artillery. Another report says 12,000 Germans were lost in the battle. The messages indicate a further' marked advance of the Germans. Pre vious reports had them fighting at La Fere, in the department of Aine, about seventy miles from Paris. Compeigne is little more than forty miles from Paris, in the department of Oise, which is just north of the department of the Seine, in which Paris is located. Fighting All Along Line. The official press bureau in London^ on Thursday issued the following statement: "Continuous fighting has been in progress all along almost the whole line of battle. The British cavalry en gaged with distinction the cavalry of the enemy and brushed them back captured ten guns. "The French army has continued the offensive and gained ground in the Lorraine district." The great fortresses of Belfort ha^e been attacked, according to a dispatch to the Standard from Geneva, by a great force of German artillery, and after three days of the most deseprate onslaught the fortress was still hold ing out. This is the first news that Belfort itself was under attack, and the«news from Paris indicates the French right has retired behind the fortress under cover of its guns. Crown Prince Is Beaten? A belated official report from Paris asserts that the army of the German crown prince, which attacked the cen ter of the line of defense, has been de feated. It Is reported that, worn to exhaus tion by many days of continuous marching and by their appalling losses, the Germans, under orders of the kaiser, concentrated all their strength to crush the left wing of the army of the allies. The allies' lines were strongly re- enforced and reserve forces stationed behind the British and French troops In the positions they have assumed to halt the German advance. German Advance Goes On, London.--Once more the army of the allies, wavering under the German at tack on the extreme left, retired to the south and southwest, and the' kaiser's legions were another step nearer to Parle. This movement, according to infor mation reaching this city Wednesday, as has been the case with similar ones almost dally recently, was ttye re sult of the smashing turning move ment of the German army, and the al lies decided not to accept b^tle uri- der unfavorable conditions. Report of Check False. The official statement gives flat con tradiction to a report from Paris the day before that the German advance had been checked. In addition a Paris dispatch quoted a chauffeur attached to the French general Btaff as saying: "The German plvfence has been checked by their terrible losses dur ing the last few days. They even asked an armistice to bury their dead." French Official Statement. The official statement issued from the French war office is as follows: "On our left wing, as a result oft the turning movement of the German army and in order not to accept battle under unfavorable conditions, our troops retired toward the south and southwest. 1 -"In the region of Rethel our forces have arrested the enemy momentarily. In the center and on the right the sit uation remains unchanged." Russian Capital's Name Changed. London.--A dispatch to the Reuter Telegram company from St. Peters burg says that by Imperial order the city of St. Petersburg, capital of the Russian empire since 1712, will hence forth be known as Petrograd. This change eliminates the Teuton construc tion in the name. Hide Progress of Battle. The military authorities here and in Paris have been more reticent in th« last 24 hours than at any time sinfce the invasion of France was begun. "The Anglo-French army corps have had to give ground, but nowhere have they been broken through," is the only statement given out at the French em bassy here. Based on this same statement, mili tary experts in France maintain that the position of the allied armies is good. They point out that the Germans have attempted a. movement which, if it fails, will leave them in a danger ous position with their troops ex hausted. All Will Help Red Cross ' ~ Washington:--The entire machinery -of the anti-suffrage organization has been ordered'to support the American P:A"fc®d Cross work in Europe. Sewing :•-&'..machines are being installed in place Of typewriters and volunteers will pre- , pare bandages, garments and other $I"V |f,^:v*eQuiBltions for the victims of war. ||p" Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge, president of W* ' W'f' • '-the National Association Opposed to 'su : • Woman Suffrage, recently issued a general appeal, to every state associa- • r Britain Begins to Realize Was* tion requesting thent_lo_liSft the full- strength of their^ organization to aid the Red Cross. The first response ca.m.$ Fri4ay. At a regular meeting of the New "ork State association its executive commit tee voted to give, uja the mass meeting in New York city against suffrage ar ranged for October and substitute for It a "Rose day," on which pink roses, the official insignia of .the antls, will be sold to raise fjinds. Japan Asks $28,000,000. Tokyo.--Announcement is made that the government will ask thft diet for an appropriation of 56,000,000 yen (about $28,000,000) for a war fund and 10,000,000 yen ($5,000,000) with which to build destroyers. The Chinese minister to Japan made emphatic denial of the report that he had protested to the Japanese foreign office concerning Japanese miliary movement in China directed against the Gerlman leased territory of Kiau- chau. Speaking in this connection the min ister said that the relations between China and Japan had never been more cordial. London.--A dispatch to the Reuter Telegram company from St. Peters burg says that by imperial order the city of St. Petersburg, capital of the Russian empire since 1712, will hence forth be known as Petrograd. New French Capital Established. Bordeaux, France, Sept. 4, via Paris, Sept. 4.--President Poineare and the members of the French cabinet ar rived here and were greeted by im mense and cheering crowds. They have established headquarters for the government. :W \>$ London.--Calm, methodical, undem- V*-' ! j^'i irastrative Britain, slow to arouse, is j|.XKBetting into a passion which is carry- w " ^ lng the nation to a point of deathless *5,^:-'•^^{determination to defeat the Germans. ';f'--'jrhe gloriously gallant fight that the ggv. "^.^^mall British force has been making §h>' ' ^ " to stem the German flood toward Paris )uts touched this country's imagina tion, aroused the martial spirit And galled forth a rush to the colors. Hitherto the country has not seemed to realize fully the portent of events across the channel, and, as in the South African war, It's taken a bit of pounding of their own forces to bring the people to the point of patriotic anger which the situation demanded. . Now they have reached that point. r The recruiting during the last three days probably has been greater than during the previous fortnight. Fri day the recruiting stations were over- Paris Bourse to Remain Closed. Paris, Sept.' 4.--it was announced that the Paris bourse, which was closed on Wednesday, would remain closed indefinitely. whelmed, hundreds standing outside in waiting lines. It was reported that 50,000 have been accepted during the last three days. It's a glorious up» rising of the whole nation, which has come tq fully realize the war. With (this condition, prevailng, Lord Kitchener will find it possible to send a steady flow of freBh men to the front. The removal of the French government to Bordeaux receives general am>roval here, and is consid ered the Ipgical step, under the dr cumstanc London.--A graphic description of the naval engagement off Helgoland, in which British vessels feank five Ger man ships and killed 900 men, has reached here in a letter to relatives from a young lieutenant who was on one of the British torpedo boat de stroyers. It reads: "As to our fight off Heligoland, I think the home papers ar.e magnify ing what really was but an affair of outposts. We destroyers went in and lured the enemy out and had lots, of excitement. The big fellows then came up and afforded some excellent target practice, and we were very glad to see them come; but you ought not to con- aider that we had a fight, because it was a massacre, not a fight. Just a Case of Bombardment. "There was superb generalship and overwhelming forces on the spot, but there was really nothing for them to do except to shoot the enemy, even as pa shoots pheasants. "Have you ever noticed a dog rush in on ft flock of sheep and scatter them? He goes for the nearest and barks and goes so much faster than the flock that it bunches up with its companions. The dog then barks at another and the sheep spread out fan- wise, BO in front of the dog there is a semi-circle of sheep and behind him none. Tells of the Battle. "That was much what we did at 7 a. m. on August 28. The sheep were the German torpedo craft, which fell back on the limits of our range and tried;to lure us within the fire of the Helgoland forts. But a cruiser then came out and engaged our Arethusa and they had a real heart to heart talk, while we looked on, and a few of us tried to shoot at the enemy, too, though it was beyond our distance. "We were getting nearer Helgoland all the time. There was a thick mist and I'expected every minute to find the forts on the island bombarding us, so the Arethusa presently drew off, aftW landing at; least one good shell on the enemy. The enemy gave every bit as good as he got there. "We then reformed, but a strong de stroyer belonging to the submarines got chased, and the Arethusa and Fearless went back to look after it. We presently heard a hot action astern, so the captain in command of the flotilla turned us around and we went back to help. But they had driven the enemy off and on our arrival told us to 'form up' on the Arethusa. Crufaer Fires on Ships. c "When we had partly formed and were very much bunched together, making a fin^r target, suddenly out of the mist' arrived five or six shells from a point hot 150 yards away. We gazed at whence they came and again five or six stabs of fire pierced the tog, and we made out a four funneled German cruiser of the Breslau class. "Those stabs were its guns going off. We waited 15 seconds and the shots and noise of its guns arrived pretty well from 50 yards away. Its next salvo of shots went above us, and I ducked as they whirred overhead like a covey of fast partridges. "You would suppose our captain had done this sort of thing all his life. He went full speed ahead at once, upon the first salvo, to string the bunch out and thus offer less target. The com modore from the Arethusa made a sig nal to us to attack with torpedoes. So we swung round at right angles and charged full speed at the enemy like an hussar attack. Catches Debris. From Shells. "Our boat got away at the start mag nificently and led the field, so all the enemy's firing was aimed at us for the next ten minutes, when we got so close that debris from their shells fell on board. Then we altered our course and so threw them out in their reckoning of our Bpeed and they had all their work to do over again. 'Humanly speaking, our captain by twisting and turning at psychological moments saved us. Actually, I feel that we were in God's keeping that day. After ten minutes we got near enough to fire our torpedo. Then we turned back to "the Arethusa. . Next our follower arrived Just where we had been and fired Its torpedo, and of course the enemy fired at It instead of us. What a blessed relief. "After the destroyers came the Fearless, and it stayed on the scene. Soon we found it was engaging a three funneler, the Mainz, so off we started again, now for the Mainz, the situa tion being that the crippled Arethusa was too tubby to do anything but be defended by us, its children. Draw Fire of the Enemy. "Scarcely, however, had we started, when, from out of the mistt and across our front, in furious pursuit came the first cruiser squadron of the town class, the Birmingham, and each unit a match for three like the Mainz. As we looked and - reduced speed they opened fire, and the clear bang-hang ST. PETERSBURG NOW IS CALLED PETROGRAD Petrograd.--The name St. Peters-, burg, to designate the Russian capi tal, Is no more. An imperial decree makes it known that in the future the capital'is to be called Petrograd. This change had been in the air for some time. The German sounding name of the city had long been a strange anomaly, and with the outbreak of the war there TEACH RECRUITS TO SHOOT, SAYS KITCHENER London.--Field Marshal Earl Kitch ener', In his instructions to officers en gaged in getting his second army into condition, for active service, shattered all precedents set by military red tape by Issuing the following order: "Never mind whether they know anything about drill. It does not mat- iter if they don't know their right foot from their loft. Teach them tew to of their gttna Just like a ctiottaf drink. "To see a real big four funneler spouting flame, whieh flame denoted shells starting, and those shells not at us but for us, was the most cheerful thing possible. Once we were in safe ty, I hated it. We had Just been hav ing our own imaginations stimulated on the subject of shells striking. Now, a few minutes later, to see an other ship not three miles away, re duced to a piteous mass of unrecog- nizabillty, wreathed in black fumes from which fl&rod out angry gusts of fire like Vesuvius in eruption, as an unending stream of hundred pound shells burst on board It, JuBt pointed the moral and showed us what might have been. Says Mainz Acted Gallatitly. "The Mainz waa immensely gallant. The last I 3aw of it it was absolutely wrecked. It was a fuming inferno. But it had one gun forward and one aft still spitting forth fury and defiance like a wild cat "Then we went west, while they went east. Just a bit later we heard the thunder of the enemy's guns for a space. Then fell silence, and we knew that was all. "The most romantic, dramatio and piquant episode«4hat modern war can ever show came ne*t. The Defender, having sunk an enemy, lowered a whaler to pick up its swimming sur vivors. Before the whaler got back, an enemy's cruiser came up and chased the Defender, which thus had to abandon its small boat. Up Pops a Submarine. "Imagine their feelings,,alone in an open boat without food, 25 miles from the nearest land, and that land an enemy's fortress, with nothing but fog and foeq around them, and then sud denly a swirl alongside, and up, if you please, hops his Britannic majesty's submarine E-4, opens its conning tower, takes them all on board, shuts up again, dives and brings them home, 250 miles. , "Is not that magnificent? No novel ist would dare face the critics with an episode like that, except, perhaps, Jules Verne, and yet here it is, and all true." England in Anger. Calm, methodical, undemonstrative Britain, slow to arouse, is getting into a passion which is carrying the nation to a point of deathless determination to defeat the Germans. The gloriously gallant fight that the small British force has been' making to stem the German flood towards Paris has touched this country's imagination, aroused the martial spirit and called forth a rush to the colors. Hitherto the country has pot seemed to realize fully the portent of events across the channel and, as in the South African - war, it's taken a bit of pounding of their own forces to bring the people to the point of patri otic anger which the situation de manded. Now they have reached that point. Stormed by Recruits. The recruiting stations were over whelmed, hundreds standing outside in waiting lines. It was reported that 50,000 have been accepted during the last three days. It's a glorious upris ing of the whole nation, which has come to fully realize the necessity of not only clearing the seas of the ene mies' ships, but helping the allies on land as well. With this condition prevailing, Lord Kitchener will find it possible to send a steady flow, of fresh men to the front. The removal of the French government to Bordeaux received gen eral approval here, and is considered the logical step under the circum stances. Devotion of Peeresses. The following letter, signed by five women of title, is addressed to the press: v "The undersigned have all got near relations serving with the colors. Most of them have got near relations who have borne and are bearing a part in the gallant and sanguinary battle which the British army is fighting against heavy odds on the northeast frontier of France. "We know not what their fate has been or yet may be; but if it is their fortune to die for their country, we shall not show our Borrow as for those who come, to a less glorious end. A white band around the arm will mark both our loss and our grief; but it will do more; it will express the pride we feel in knowing that those who are nearest to us and dearest have given up their lives in their country's cause." London Hears That Division Commanded by the Crown Frinoe Is Routed. uk 7- - GENERAL PAU MAKES REPORf Rhodes 8cholare Join Army. Ottawa, Ont.--All the Rhodes schol ars from Canada and most of the Rhodes scholars from other parts of the world who are now at Oxford have enlieted for service with the British' forces, cfj was a widespread demand that it be altered. • Among the Slav alternatives pro* posed were Petregorod, Petrovsk, Pet-^ roff and Sviato Peerovsk. The appellation actualljr^selected is by no means novel in its use. There was a time when old-fashtoned people pretty generally spoke of Petrograd and not of St. Petersburg. The name now officially adopted for the capital is also applied to it In the works of Pushkin, Lermootoff, Alfxel, Joist,q1 and Nekrasoff. shoot and do it quickly." So persistently has he hammered away at the idea that all energies must be bent to the one task of providing Immediately an efficient fighting ma chine that he finally has awakened the war officials. In mobilizing the first 500,000 men those eager to enlist often were forced to travel many miles to reach the nearest recruiting office, and then had to go through an appalling lot of for malities before they could enter the •»rrtee.K • -.-or;' .. * •. 7 British War Office fcjaa No Official Confirmation of Report--Russians Adrians Engsft'jfi - f.. Big Battle.' - v;: London, Sept. 9.--The Imperial guard of the German army has been annihilated and there is a possibility that Crown Prince Frederick Wilhelm has been slain by the .British in an en gagement at Precy Sur Oise, accord ing to a Boulogne dispatch to the Cen tral News. News of the engagement was Con tained in a telegram from General Pau which said that the British troops under command of Sir John French and the French under General D'Amade had met with a signal suc cess in an important engagement. Ac cording to the telegram the allies were drawn across a north line with the center at Precy on the right and were successful on both wings. The im perial guard, General Pau said, was annihilated by the British troops after they had refused a demand that they surrender. The crown prince is re ported to have been in their midst. Precy is about twenty-seven miles' north of Paris. Although the British war office has as yet received no official confirmation of the news, it is regarded as confirm atory of the earlier dispatches which announced that the allies had suc ceeded in piercing the German center. Precy is a town on the Oise river about twenty-five miles north of Paris, about ten miles almost straight west from Senlis and about five miles' north and east of Beaumont. It is given only on the most enlarged detail maps and only as Precy, but the Sur-Oise in Pau'sV dispatch serves as a further identification. IH ALL OUR HP# NEIGHBORHOOD Hww In Hardly A Who Does Not Rely Upon ytj; Lydia E, Pinkham't Veg- etable Compound. ' " ̂ Princeton,111.--"I had inflammation, h«rd headaches in the back of my neck '><•% and a weakness all;̂ .*£y|. caused by female trouble, and I took'"' Lydia E. Pinkham'a ^ Vegetable Com-,' 'ffound with such ex- y-Kt cellent results that I' ̂ am now feeling fine. £ publish my letter. There Is scarcely a neighbor around me who does not use your medicine. "--Mrs. J. F. JoHNSoft, R. No. 4, Box 30, Prince ton, Illinois. Experience of m Nurse*. Poland, N.Y.--"In my experienced * mtesn I certainly think Lydia E. Pink- hana's^ Vegetable Compound is a great medicine. I wish all women with fe male troubles would take it I took it when passing through the Change of Life with great results and I always re commend the Compound to all my pa tients if 1 know of their condition in time. I will gladly do all I can to help others to know of this great medicine." --Mrs. HORACE NEWMAN, Poland, Her* Irimer Co., N. Y. If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. If you want special advice write Iijdia E. Pink ham Medicine Crflw* (confidential) Lynn, Mass. W Petrograd, via London, Sept 9.--A battle which, if it results in victory for the Russian arms, will mean the over throw of the Austrian army and the opening of a road through to Berlin, is now in progress. It may be several days before a definite result will be reached. The rigor of tfle censorship precludes the divulging of the location of the engagement. Some thirty divisions of Austrian! at$ several German army corps con front the Russian army, which is in great strength. Przemysl, a strong fortress 50 miles west of Lemberg and the last Austrian stronghold in Galicia, is being gradually invested by the Russians and an assault is expect ed at any hour unless the Austrian commander signifies his intention to surrender Przemysl's fall will clear the way for the advance of the Russians west ward and will permit them to effect a Junction with the Russian army on the East Prussian frontier. . Germans Expect Boers to Help Them. London, Sept. 9.--That the Germans In southwest Africa, where there are 30,000 German troops, have been stor ing guns and ammunition for some time preparing for military action has been made known to the British. It is said the Germans believed the Boers would aid them. Although the Germans proceeded with great secrecy, the British officials have been fully informed concerning their action and know the number of arms in their possession and their military dispositions. With populous territory on two sides of German Southwest Africa and with adequate military forces at hand, Great Britain is said to be well prepared for the situation. It is generally believed here that it soon will seek to take con- trol of all German territpry in Africa. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER FILLS. Purely vegetable ---act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache , Dizzi ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature CARTERS ITTLE PARKfcft'6 HAIR BALSAM A toilet prep&r&tton of merlk Helps to eradicate d&ndroff. I For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded H&ir* 50c. and £1.00 n r. rirnc-cHot-*. FOR WEAK SORE EYES RETORT THAT CARRIER STING Ogrpplain of China's Action. Peking, Sept. 9.--Protesting to the foreign office against its note of Sep tember 3, addressed to the diplomatic representatives in Peking, and refer ring to the transgression of Chinese neutrality by the landing of Japanese troops at Lungkow, Baron von Malt- zan, the German charge d'affaires, de clared that Germany would hold China responsible for permitting Japanese and British soldiers to cross its terri tory. British Take Prixes in Orient. Shanghai, Sept. 9.--Hongkong re ports the arrival there of a number of prizes, including the American stesim- er Hanamet and the German steamers Paklat, Frisia and Rajaburi. .The prize crew of the Paklat held the German engineers at work for three days at the point Of revolvers and frustrated an attempt to disable the engines. 1 British Lose Warship. Lfcndon, England, Seyt. 9.--It is learned on reliable authority that Capt. Francis M. Leake and 50 of the crew of the British cruiser Pathfinder, sunk on the North sea by a mine, have been suved. The others of the crew of 266 have not been accounted for. The destruction of the Pathfinder oc curred about four o'clock in the after noon at a point ten miles northeast of Saint Abb's Head, Scotland. While it was patroling the coast the cruiser struck a mine, which explodec near its magazine. Hear of Fifth English Army. Paris, Sept. 9.---Reports that the English have landed another army at Ostend, believed to be the fifth army which has been sent across the chan nel, gave rise to the hope here that this British force in conjunction with the Russian brigades that have been landed in the north at a point which it is not permitted to disclose, will be able to strike the German army in the rear and thus bend the Invaders' line toward the allies' front. This, it la thought, will effectually trap the 8ummer Girl Quick to Notice Vulner* able Point In the Armor of Her Adversary. In a .discussion of the divorce eill Judge Matthew L. Hendrick said at a dinner in Cleveland: "The truth about most divorce* la that both parties are io blame. One party is never all good end the other never all bad--both are to blame--and that fact, of course, makes philoso phizing and generalization difficult , "For the Average pair of divorces are like the two pretty summer girls at Atlantic City. These two pretty summer girls were quarreling. " 'Well, anyhow,' said the first girl, 'I don't sit round till all hours with , the boys playing poker.' "The second girl glanced at her conh- panion's transparent blouse and skirt, the very latest transparent blouse and skirt from Paris, the kind of blouse and skirt which are more popular than ever among the young and beautiful, despite the furious protests of 40,00j£> elderly clubwomen. Then, still star ing at that blouse and skirt, the sec ond girl entered this quiet defense; * 'You show only your hand la poker.' * * PIMPLES ON HEAD ITCHED Tell City, Ind.--"My baby's head waa covered with sores and the top' waa a solid scab. It began with pim ples and he would scratch his head until it would bleed and then scab over and keep spreading. He would claw his head and fret, it Itched and burned so and I was afraid he would never have any hair on top of his head again. "• friend recommended Cutlcura goap and Ointment to ma I asked our family doctor and he said. 'Yes, go right ahead and use them.' We got one cake of Cutlcura Soap and one box of Cutlcura Ointment and they healed him from the first In a few days his head did not seem to itch or bother him in the least and before we had used one set he was healed and he has a fine growth of hair.** (Signed) Mrs. Rosa M. Hanks, Jan. 26, 1914. . Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free.with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post- eard "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Bostoa.**-»"Ady«. Not a Real Stop. "Do you, stop at the Goldorf hotel ?" "No, I merely slow up because I see the board's against me.'" Love In a cottage may be all right; provided It gets three square meals a day. CI mm a Granulated Eyellis. mreto5HB,D6jt.i<i Wind •" quickly relieved by Marine EyeBeSKdy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle Msriae Eye Selvein Tubes25c.For Book of IbeEjref reessli Druggists or Murine Eye Reaedy C«.. Clucaie Eyes CHICAGO. NO. 37-1914. v*,-" •_