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maJjX YOI ?<SF.IaF OF ???5 LAXATIVE HABIT iju ?Jpeto? "?"? t?*n yrxi fjiit tkr - *?-* c(,_.r- ? .- : for cotv gipsti? ". !" Nujol. . ,i- - -! hiMcart ,not ?-.i.? Tasteless, ? >.:.?-. ;>a.'t??aj* 9mm a\ ? *' ? ' **r ?Xl cyAN I CO. rr?-r> TWttwnv *** ''"*' Icraer arpo OF SVDAN HURT IN CHAMPAGNE FIGHT pr.-ch Centra! Marchand Stri oasly Wooiidi d at Front. ?irti ?S9\ ' ' ' ?Tm' .. who has WHS ? T ? ve on H s Cjettri. "'? " ?T'J,V' *?s-*i1. w-*s ?" the French I Krcrch I Fin. two tet'i* ?"? ' 'nrtdnr ?flL i" ? ? A - ??? gSJ. W'?,'<" ' "' ' Ert7\ ..., Ute, ?? irehand I i the j fast- <?* with i food ?je?. ? Marchand - - - I from the ? nk of . ? - ? present i- : ?rfiV.er ; ?? - '7, 1914, have been ? r 7 rom a TRIBUNE ARTICLE DISCUSSED IN LONDON The Tim.? \miricans Are Looking to Future. ? '.-.?." Times" de ?.;.- to Frank The Tribune - policy re . arfar?, it .-'s chief any inten 0? his con prediction ?rill ul ? "W* ?':-.-. " ? prediction. ?tat it ? i , come - 'in u i '??Anted rt'ty" 7- ? ? i to dis? till tk? t .m democ I jrope: ~W hat ? a rie* ? T.ciple' u '?'.trpre-- '?. mocraey be be the ? ?i .d ?trug ? ? r.o mure ? -,%* ir? |a< ? ???r'tani to ai r? ask ?J '???i?? -? rab?? from ?. about il char ? ??-. do well, ?if na -*??? grea:- ? BRISTOL CHAN7TEL CLOSED ^?f German Subm?. **t 9} th ? - ?Bristol, kai ?2IL?* ^'* ?)r y&t at Gtrr ' nui : ' ?'? Uidor. ri?e? Cause* Or ?? ernment. Navigation In - trance *o the ? port ted by the her notice, ? the nes. ? i ? ad in a i.-. U)4 State . Skin VIENNA ISSUES FORMAL RECALL ! OF DR. DUMBA Austrian Ambassador Asks for Safe Conduct? Gets Passports. CAN CROSS OCFAN WITHOUT HINDRANCE State Department Will Now Take Up Case of Captain von Papen. Tti? sprtamm Haw?? i Washington, Sopt 28 Dr. Constan? tin T. ?lumha. A - '?assndor to the i'r.'.terl State?, I ?*? been formally reca'.'.e.'. by tho Vienna govern: Th.? ?ras made I h y Act f a es ??'eh fron*, A Penftcld In Viei * ? ai venation with Austrian officials. A record of thi? conversation was to Har?n Hurlan and verified 1 efors issdor Pen :rld, t. rtmsnt ???'. it a COO?; WSI at once sent to Dr. D issy at , for his ii Aftei ." this record Dr. Dumb? -, h ossaga to tl I 'epart ? nsk.r.g sat*?? conduct I ? tourage. Acl ng Secretary Polk conferred Si n:\ early hour th s morning with Colvills Hnrc'.ay, charge. d'affaires at the British i'mbassy, und was assured th-*.: Dr. Durnba, Um?, Duraba, ''ir? inrieroni household and their seventy trunks could cross the Atlantic in safety, so far as Great Britain and France were eoneer* I>r. Dumba'i passport*? accordingly hrive beer, forwarded to h m, and the incident is now considered t To Take a Long Rl -t. Dr. Pumba is now free to return to his fatherland, whore he hopes to enjoy a much needed rost from the in? tricate and perilous undertakings that have marked the la**7er par: of his stay here. He will go to bis country place near Vienna and pass u few months In complete rustical The Austrian government made no .n note do? ing Dr. Dumba's recall, but Am? bassador Penfteld was assured person t Austrian Foreign Minister, that the objection? able arabaasadi : sen ordered home, end that "the recall is, as a matter of course, final." The Foreign Minister even went fur? ther, and intimated that he had no alternative but to comply with the American demand, as he recognized the right of the United States to take such action with respect to any ambassador whose presence pn et | to v able. Therefore, the American demand is complied with, the laws of interna? tional etiquette are full ? tried patience tion. Captain von Papen Discussed, With the Pumba case at last out of the war, the State De] ready to take up the ease Captain von Papen, the military attach? of the Ger? man Embassy, ar.u d? of his usefulness a? a diplomatie rep? resentative of his government here. A careful examinai the papers in the lot taken from Archibald re? veals Captain von Papen'? activities in a decidedly unfavorable li| His explanation and that of certain of his compatriots of what he meant by "Idiotic Yanl satisfactory to * ? Department. Then, too, it will be interesting to in? quire how far j i explaining to Dr. Dumba the ad? of pro? moting strikes in mu*. I?r. ba and Captain von Papen, has ?? Secretary Polk for an op portui lain how he ha] to be invoh ed pected at the State .' I soon. The rest of the papers which he car? ried arr:ve<! here to-?; ?? being examined. Offioiali are curious as to what it contained in one of these, which, unfortunately, is written in a secret code and may never be deci Return8 to Italy Under Ban. ?a. Sept. 2>v Although he previ? ously had been expelled from Italy he cause he was ui ? being a spy, Henry years old. has returned from Paris to Italy. He was arreste i at San Remo ' '1 he taki ? under ? Hurt at Football. Boy of 11 Dies. Austin. Tex.. Sept 28 Floyd Rol? lins, eleven year? old. died to-Hny as h result of an ii received last Fri? day in a football scrimmage. A blood ? e????1 In his head burst. 8. Altaran $c (La. ORIENTAL RUGS In \trcrc |zeg ?!!/ unusua' guiases ere a fctture ? ? i -:-.--. stock ?n the Oriental Rug fe . -??-e-/;. Satisfaction ?s therefore assured in meeting virtually a"' demar 8P*c:_. -gg. ^Afanan & Co. unreservedly guarantee t?ie faring qualities of every rug offered In the ^ptrtmer.t. ? Rare antique oriental rug?s <*Ur*' .nable authenticity are offere-i at Prices ra-rgirrg 5rom $2,50000 to 5115,000.0? (Orienta! Rug Department* Pll K>r) ?Ftftll Auf nur - iSauiBxm Xtrrnur Balkans Resent Allied Overtures to Bulgaria Negotiations Interpreted ill Sofia as Moaning Its Coun? try Is All-Important to Anti-German Combination ?Firmer Attitude Toward King I rrdinand Urged. By GORDON OOBDON-SMfTH. Rome, Sept. 10. The ene tapie ? conversation and speculation in polit >*jal circle? In Rome in the attitude ar ;. ef Bulgaria v-'-? on? can Ignoi Important r?le whieh Bul?gar ? n? the present moment in tr <ns. If the Sofia government d? cides t.? throw in it.? lot \? Quadrupllee and march its army o | ?"onsfarit'.nopl?, the Turkish ' tnken between the Allied armies on th Gallipoli Peninsula, a Bulgarian nt'.-n? at Tehatalja Hnd a Russian nttac from th? pen, will certainly he capture Tvlth'n a few weeks (if the fir?= t m?.vr ment. If, however. Bulgaria hetrays th 1 join? forces w tral Powers, the position of Serb! will 1 > cril .! in Ihe ex? reme. A? tacked In fronl by the A . armies arid In the rear hy ?he BulgSl ians, tha unfortunate little kingdom1 ?rill probably be sealed. Once Ii posa? m of Serbia and with Bulgarl; for th? Pow? ra to rush a I undrei . men or more to Con I ? I ? : ' '.'. ??nid th< n rcct railway ? rati? ? he Tin kiah capital, German] ? and war n j in ur Under Much circumstances the whole result of th? m would b? ed and the opening of the Strait: ! would he further off than ever. In view of this the (?uadrupllce hn? ' left no stone unturned to erili ' i garla in its cause, and has approa?-he.! .\. Greece and Rumania with ??? ' view of Inducing the??- states to make '. SUCh teri ? ressions to I'.ul . pana as will cnu<=e her to taki ? With the Allie??. t.reece I)lntrn?t* rtulRarla. It would, however, be id!?? to deny that the proposals of the Quadruplice have heen far fror, well received by the Balkan States and have creat? ? ! .: eri.ess I have, in the las'. had occasion to d Balkan situation with statesmen nnd tl who know it well, anil in every Case except, naturally, Bulga rtre unanimous ii ? ? sctloi ol the Quadrup! ???;. I n ??: forgiven what they regard . perfidious attack by Bui?.. 1913, they have n complete and utter ris, and are con that it is her ambition to make herself the preponderant stats in the I peninsula. The opposition of the Greeks to the ! surrender of Kavala, Drama and Xeres Is extreme. These arc. they nrj-ue, purely Greek towns. The only reason for their ?demands that the Bulgi can put forward is thut they want them, and want them badly, ' " tl not unnaturally, seems an I rearon to the Greeks. Bulgnna, they , already possesses n seaport in aghatch. The Bulgarians plain it is a poor harbor; the Greeks reply that thu is their own fault, as l.i,ve done nothing to impr ? The drvam of a Bulgaria with an out? let on lour seas, so popular ll excitea nothing but distrust in the other ? ' The opposition of Ferb-.a is equally strong. The proposal that .?he cede ter ? In Macedonia, on a prnm!?e to b ited when the (Juadri ? i ?. ?di - up the vanquished Austrli to Serbiani '.lie immediate sacrlftc itleal rer.'mpensi Serb der that their Interest "ii I ? il ready been ??<? ... ? ?, ? , n tbi ' ' Tcmeivar i ? umania, and now, aftc ting on the ?id the Al i ?ward is I yet furl her sacrifice! ? ?" which, they d? ' ' bed them in the back in 1911 ready to ?!o so again o ? Resent Offers to Sofia. '?ilk-?- . ? consider that I ? policy toward Bulgaria the Quad on a false route. Ther.? wa ty, they declare, for the A] tiofor mplore it maint tin, the; " Bulgarian demands. The; that with her usua duplicity i playing fast an? body. A month ago the received a loan o v. m. Au?tro-(,ermai banki , No one can be s< ?? as io imagine that at the pr<-s ? : Wolilf I ? y had a mosl : pro quo. Then, wbill ating an en r a. M. RezoiT, the no* ? rman Bulgarian Mia* and Hakki I'acha, the r to i.'-rmany, both i.? a I urco-Hulgarian treaty ha? . : Conatantlnople neither coa deny. This, the other Balkan point out, is a fresh example ol ? ius methodi of Bulgarian Suggest Another Remedy. argument against th?' iscrlflce which the (Cuadruplico calls make to Bulgaria is ? the policy followed by the Aille? the ly solution. They declare that Bulgaria is led tc belie ' alone holds to the situation. But this point out is not the fact. If the tead of wasting time at Sofia, sn alliance with Greece and lund 250,000 men a' Sa furnish an eq'ial ? ? wi u'.'i then be re ? ding herself ? ( Quad ruplice could e II on Bulgaria to take i, rcumstances her neutrality could no longer be per? lt' she declared for the cen? tral powi i - i itory would a* once he invaded and the march on rom the land side be? gun. ? you would see," said the Bal? kan statesman who pointed out the of this -solution to me, would hasten to corne ? de of the All.es for fear of losing everything. If, instead of im? ploring the aid of B ligarla and offer . sorts of it other peo the t^uadruplice had ? 1 a firm and energetic attitude, Bulgarian army would have been Mibiiized on the side of the The .i ?.r?fi.rfc'0 policy.of the has only encouraged the Bul s io play a game of 'bluff' which trous conse ?luences for all concerned." BULGARIA WARNED OF WAR PENALTY ? mtlnoe?. from pa?e 1 Austria-Hungary to precipitate the j European war, with the result t) . ? ompletely subordinr. Germany and dependent upon her. "Turkey, whose interests would have ' been preserved if she had remained neutral, has been gratuitousiv forced ermany into this war, and is now being subordinated and made dep? on ?lerrnany in order to real ta G? I manj - oni and influence from 7?i Bat?..-?d. Ruin in German Domination. "In the same way it would naturallv he Germany's policy so to use any of the Balkan States, with the inevitable result that that state eventually would be subordinated to her, and that, though territorial gains ?nicht be prom sed, she would l??se her inde pendenc? "This is directlv contrary to policy of the Allies, which is to further ii i of the Balkan States without a.? the n.d? pendenee of any of them." Meanwhile, the Allies' victory in ? ?Cham.?ague has not been without its effect in the Halkan capitals, while one result, according to a Reuter dispatch from Athens, hua been to postpone th?> projected Austro-German attack on ?Serbia. Greek preparations have not esaened, despite the pacific ut? terance" of the Bulgarian Minister at Athena. !'. Igaria likewise has been proceed-i ing more cautiously, and, according to iidv ces from Berlin, has decided to limit her mobilizatrn to divisions along I the Rumanian frontier. Report Serbian Minister Leaving. Budapest new.papers report that :hs Serbian Ministtir at Sofia, Toholak Ant tch, has called upon Premier Rado alavoff of Rulgar.a and notified him of h.s departure on leave of abaenee. owing to ill health. The Premier told the Serbian Minister that len\e of ah sence had been granted to Bulgarian consuls in Macedonia. Judging from the comment from Ber ; lin and tne activity of the semi-official Overseas News Bureau, Germany is be : g to feel that the Bulgarian busi? ness, like other pieces of Wilhelm strasse diplomacy, has been badly handled. Hope is again being expressed of a possible agreement with Rumania . an?l an. amicable arrangement of the Greek-Bulgarian difficulties. Count Andrassy, former Premier of Hungary, says in the "Tageblatt" that Rumanian neutral'ty can he expected. , "If Rumania should join the Entente i Allies," says Count Andrassy, "and ! they should win, Russia would be mas i ter of the Balkans, which would mean that Rumania would become a Russian i dependency. The Central powers ap ! prec?ate the position in which Rumania I Is placed, and do not desire her as? sistance." The official "Ind?pendance Rou manine," of Bucharest, according to another Overseas dispatch, savs that no change in Rumania's policy is prob? able. Other Rumanian papers say that military action at the present is out of the question. Berlin Discounts Greek Action. Greek mobilization is discounted bv Berlin papers, which express the opin? ion that it is merely to preserve neu? trality. Special emphasis is placed on the reported agreement of Greece and Bulgaria on a neutral zone of i yards through Macedonia, and upon the assurance given to Serbia that Greece would resist the landing of any foreign j troops on her terrltorv. I The suggestion of a neutral zone, ac cording to the Overseas News Agency, was made by members of the Greek ', who acted :n concert with Ki:,g Constantino. The agency says: "Bulgaria agreed, and there is no doubt tha' t dy to yield to Greek wishi rrbian ter ritoriei of Doiran and Gevgeti. This means that the attempts of the En ? ave been frus I "English and French officers hsve -, Sal?nica In order to prepare for the landing of Anglo-French troops, time being, is deter? mined to maintain neutrality even In the face of the threat to land troops." TEUTONS IN EAST CONCENTRATING AGAINST DVINSK Efforts to Distract Rus? sians' Attention Else? where Prove Futile. GOOD TRENCH WORK NEUTRALIZES LOSS Munitions Now Reaching Czar's Armies In Adequate Quantities ?Oermans Report Advances. Petrograd, Sept. 2H. The Busslans have made gains over an extent which ordinarily would b? regarded a? con? siderable, bat they are not allowing their attention to be distracted from Dvinsk, which the Germans continue to attack with e. ? .? Small German gains in th? last fighting ?ere neutralized by rp'.' trench work during the night follow-, Ing, by which the Kussians were able < to face their adversaries in the morn- | Ing with a strong front. The numbers of dead on the field attested the ousness of the German lossei The iiermnn operations in the .; tion of Riga are regarded hen si demonstrations intended to interfere, with the reinforcement of the Russian positiooi at Dvinsk with troops from the Riga region. Markensen IIId In Marshes. Except for Field Marshal von Ifae kensen, who Is held in the Pripet marshes, all the German general.-? re? port advances. Even General von I.lng singen, whose army wut. rather roughly handled by the Russians in Volhynia, having, with the aid of strong rein? forcements, been able to take the ini? tiative again. In addition to recaptur? ing Lutsk he has crossed the Styr River below that fortress. In Galicia the Russian General Ivanoff is still holding the Austrian* back and is himself gaining ground The general impression El the latest reports Is that the Ru? are fighting brilliantly, steadily and confidently, and that ammunition is now being delivered in adequate quan? tities, while tho Germans apparently lack the force to execute their ?weep? ing plans. The authorities li? i ?? direct attention to certain details in the ro poits as indicating that the German efforts are becom. . "lie. RUSSIAN OFFICIAL. The War Office statement issued to? day says: Army group of Field Marshal von Hindenburg: Opposing forces which were pushed back yesterday on the southwestern front of Dvin-k at? tempted to make a stand in a posi? tion situated more to the rear. The* were attacked and repulsed. South of Lake Dristiata a cavalry sngage ment is taking place. The operations by the army of General von Eichhorn in the battle of Vilna. which led to the enemy's being repulsed across the Lake Ma? rooz-Smorgon-Wirichuew i'ma. . ?*"?: ? ulted in the capture of a total of seventy officers, 21,908 meri, three cannon, seventy-two machine guns and large quantities of bag which the enemy was forced to leave behind. An inventory of this booty could r.ot be taken until now, be? cause of our quick advance. The figures previously reportoed ar?' not included in those gievn here South of Smorgon our attack is mak? ing progress. Northeast of ?Vsch new we have broken through enemy positions. On this occasion twenty four officers and 8300 men were taken prisoners and nine machine guns captured. Army group of Prince Leopold of Bavaria: The bridgeheads east of Baronovichi are now in our posses? sion after a battle for thenta, Prison? ers to the number of 360 were cap? tured. Army group of Field Marshal von Macker sen: The situation Is un eharp.' !. array gToup of General vo I.lnsii gen hai forced its way acroi the Styr below Lutak. Inder pre* suie ..f ?his success the Russians ar In full retreat north of Dubno alon the entire front. A later statement says: In the regions of Riga and Dvlnsl ???? i no material chnrige in th Situation. The artillery tire in th Dvinsk region has not slackened, am the fighting continu?e with the sam. fierren. ??? a? previously. We ? 'I an enemy offen elve in the S'a roto be River valley, ii the region of Vileika. In the region of the railway south east .if (><miana the ?iermans sue Ceeded In carrying the ?Tillage of I,as tornntze, from which, however, w subsequently ?ii?-lo?tgeil them Stab born enemy attacks nave begun agaii at this point. At many (.?ace* th. enemy still shows extra?irdinary ar tiller) act rit On a sector contain ing a tingle regiment in this regio: there w?'i-.< thrown yesterday n? fewer than J0,0 ?? projectiles fron heavy guns, battle is being fought ir the region of I itvy. a rillago south east. ? i Railway. South of and or the Galieian front the enemy hai '?pene.i an attack at many place? will eoneid? rabie forre?. At th? for?!* ol the Styr in the Kolki region, many engagements have occurred w-.th enemy ile-achment.?. After a stub? born bayonet fight we occupied trenches in the village of Yorobievka, northwest of Tarnopol. In the region of the village of Marianka, southwest of Tarnopol( the uue'xpeoted appear? ance on their Hank of a small Rus? sian detachment threw a (ierman battalion into panic. AMERICAN PRfJCTOR DIED A FRENCH HERO Lieut. Leguy, of Johns Hopkins, Killed In Courageous Charge Against German Trench. [Bt TeVfrtph ??? Ttit Trlhiui? ) Baltimore, Sept. 2f?.?Dr. Edward C. Armstrong, head of the French depart? ment of Johns Hopkins University, has Just received word of the death of Lieutenant Dr. Raymond Lejruy, who was an Instructor at the university when war was declared and who left Immediately for the front. On account of his courageoue death Lieutenant Leguy has ben honored with an official commendation In the French army report. The following ac? count of his death was furnished by members of his regiment: "LI utenant Leguy was chosen to lend a squad in a dangerous attack. He planned the attack with admirable calm, himself placing sacks of Band against the wall of the trench to serve as steps by which the soldiers could more quickly Issue from it "When the signal for the charge was given our lines were being swept by ennnon and machino gun fire, and it seemed certain death to show your heail above the parapet. Lieutenant Le? guy climbed to the slope and calmly left the tr ch, with drawn sabre. Stimulated by his example, his men fol? lowed him unhesitatingly, ami all dis? appeared in a cloud of smoke. "A single soldier returned a few moments later, falling senseless into the trench. Lieutenant Leguy followed and called for twenty volunteers to re? new the effort. They responded at pnce, and he started off In the lead, Shouting: 'Forward, boys, for the sake of France!' "The storm of balls mowed down the second squad as It had the first Lieu ? ?Leguy and two or three soldiers only reached tho German trench. Ha tired his revolver, while the men threw bombs, but after a short struggle he ?ruck by a fragment of shell and fell, mortally wounded. He still had the strength to drag himrelf back to his trench, and, having informed his ?a? tain of his belief that the Germana were about to attack us, he cried 'Vi e la France!' and breathed his last." ?? * - Bids to Build Warships In. Washington, Sept. 28.- Bl?is for six? teen new submarines, five seagoing cruisers and elevan of the cor.? fenac type, ?ill be opened at the Navy ? on Thursday, S.-nrember ; he boats were authorized by the laat Congress._ The dull throbbing roar of the guns in Flanders comes to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at his Sussex home where the quiet country life has taken on a military at? mosphere which he de scrihes vividly in M Merry England in War Time" in this week's Colli ?y*ecotm ier's THI NATIONAL WIHIT WARST0CKS1??AKE FURTHER GAINS Hold the High Marks They Took Monday and Capture More. BALDWIN LOCOMOTIVE LEADS DAY'S ADVANCE Touches 150 In Last Hour, a Gain of 70 Points in a Week. Bsldwln Locomotive, for the second consecutive day, furnished the fire? works yesterday In a stock market ses? sion that surpassed in activity the rec? ord of the last four years, established on Monday. Total sales for the ?luv ??mounted to IJtMJSOO shares, compared with more than l,i'54,:.00 the previous day. Baldwin, which sold at hardly more than M about a week ago, touched l?O's during the last hour, and s few minutes Inter dropped to 123, finally closing nt 128, an advance of 14l? points over Monday's last sale and nearly 50 points shove the price of a week ego. At high price the stock showed a ga:n of more than 70 points in a week. Floor traders attributed the wild ri-.o to 150 and th o equally violent reac'ion to a rush to cover by interests who had gone short of the stock. The movements in Baldwin had an unsettling effect on the rest of the list, and the setback in the last hour caused violent reactions in other war special? ties. Befoie the close an upward swing got under way again, and by :i o'clock the previous losses in some issues had been mace up. In others, however, selling pressure continued, and clos? ing prices were ijot only well under the high prices of thu morning, but showed losses for the day. I The extraordinary movements in Baldwin revived rumors of a contest for control, and when the stock hit 150 talk was started of a corner in the stock. The best information available to account for the spectacular rise was that insiders who had sold out at lower prices were trying to buy back In the belief that substantial benefits will accrue to the stockholders in the ab? sorption of the cumnany's munitions plant, known as the Eddystone Manu? facturing Company. While the war specialties were soar? ing to hitherto untouched heights be? fore the later reaction set In, reports were rife of mergers of steel com? panies which not only mentioned the Moivale property, just taken over by William E. Corey and his associates, as a nucleus, but other companies as ?veil. Interests close to Mr. Corey placed little credence in the rumors that the Baldwin, the Cambria Steel Company jfranJUln Simon- S? Co. Fifth Ave., N. Y. Pf en's Shoe Shop 4 West 38th St SI PAB 11 E -HOP A S'ep from fifth Aztn.ua Men's Franklin 5.00 Shoes All Styles and Leathers ftaiUtlin Simon 8? Co? Fifth Ave., N. Y. Php* Furnishing Shop 16 West 38th St. SEPARATE SHOP A ?>t*p from Fifth Ainnus Men's Shirts Exclusive Shirtings of tine qiiallry Crepe aod Muir?s. Made expr?s and confined tu franklin Siman, 6? Co. 1.75 and the Pennsylvsnis Steel Company 1 would be merged with the Midvale property into a giant combination for the manufacture of war munitions. VITALIAS CARGO SEIZED Britain Thro*?? Products on Norwegian Ship Into I'rize Court, ? ISla t.> T!:? Tribune | London, Sept 28. The cargo of pack ers' products on the Norwegian stcamar Vitalia was thrown into prize court to? day. The decision caused considerable stir prise and irritation in American ( here. Although the ship has been de? tained nearly ten ?lays, it was re? I .is eaitl ??he would be a lowed to proceed, as the cargo was consigned to the Netherlands Overs.-is Trait Tho official statement is that tho cargo mu.H go to prize court, becau?e there was a large amount of fat and oils aboard which the trust had not ordered. Sir Samuel Evans's recent decision makes it almost certain that tho cargo will be condemned. CZAR RULES BRITISH SHIPS England's Submarine**? in Baltic Ind.r Orders of Russians. London. Sept. 28.?The silence of the Admiralty in regard to the wi ^ British sibmarinei in the Baltic as explained in the House of Commons to-?Jay by Thomas Macnamara, I'iniu cial Secretary of the Admiralty. Mr Macnamara ?aid that the loti I la was under the orders of the Russian com? mander in chief. "The House will realize that much gal ant and successful work Is b.'i .?{ done by these vessel?.," Mr. Macnamnra said, "but the responsibility of decid? ing what shall be made public ot their proceedings in the Baltic niuat rutt with the Russian Admiralty. "Commander Noel Lawrence Is the officer who was decorated by the Rus? sian government for the successful tor-. Chinese Get Steamer Order. Copenhagen, Sent. 2*?. ? For the tV?t time In history Chinese shipbui' ?i are competitors of the European ?. ? A steamship company of lifimmn, Norway, has ordered three steamers in China, to be delivered In 191-*. and 191". This order is due to the unusual nrc??iire on th" home yards s j^ ?ar*. i^ ??? juj NATURAL CIGARETTES Have enjoyed over 20 years of continued popu? larity because of the excellence of their pure Turk? ish Tobacco, selected and blendedunderthe personal super? vision of SGHINASI BROTHERS n : Poidm \it\]ji -HP ?v-/ y a?? h? -? RATURAI CIGARETTES ?W Are as good as any 25c Cigar? ettes, and better than many* Their enormous ?-#??a ? ^- sv.tt^ M sales have been ^P^ggii^^l y due solely to their "?%< $ m q??lity9 and not == to any artificial salesmanshlpa __________________________ ? ?ML_?^,?^^^-__ I oCHINAul ._______k t____B *etBSa\ oSr tnSB^ ***P?*3?. ..- ?<* ? ,t. *.?*?*?? a*-.vsn__. CIGARC'i1 ^?S BROTHERS PI AIM ^on ^ie^r rePlltati?n through ai*M *$*% I LAIH ///(/r goodness and kept it ;?%,?:_-, i OR FOR nnnvTin through sticking to the same _4%""?<: LUtUV 111 .s/r//fr/r//r/ of PERFECTION, M^ffi