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IffiHW! A Weak, Nervous Sufferer Restored to Health by Ly dk E. Pinkham's Veg- .iV^^ Jr,* "•sO'Y Kasota, Mian. —"I am glad to say that Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound has dona mon for me than anything-else, and I had tha beat phyal 1 dan her*. I was ao 1 weak and nervosa that I ooald not da I my work sod aaf I fated with pains lav I down in my right I aide for a year or |more. Itoaklydla 1E. PInkhamfa Vege table Compound, aad now I feel like a different penon. I believe then la nothing Ike Lydia B. Pinkham's Vega 'tablo Omapooad for weak woman and young gbu, and I would bo glad If I eoold inftaeoce anyone to toy the medi cine, for I knew it will do all and orach mora than itfadafaaed to do." Mrs. Cuuu FRAKU, R. F. D. MO. 1, Maple crest Item, Kaaota, Minn. Wcnsa who aaffar from those dia ti* aaing Ma panuUar to their aex ahoald be convinced of tha ability of Lydia ML Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound to re store tbafrbaaltb bjr and toothful taaUnianlaia wa are eon etantly pnbHshiag la the newspapers. sssss^sssssissss^: mad Mdih strict ooofldtoM. DESCRIPTION WAS ALL RIGHT Nat Jaat What donaa Waa Looking ft* Brawn Surely Had W Told the Truth. JU Brswa landed an tha platform ha ran fan Mt lata Jwm. Joaaa, and why such Bays the many genuine ta cat eoma frolt bafora I Traitr Jest tha thing! Now abe'a tun o« Jape in that carriage. I toft iae pear lathe conker," Is aad stated •aarehlag ealdbe left a lae paar I, asaa .. /**Mi itvtmtoariar.'my looked aad,aaw* young CM- R*ye of Hamer. doraeathtbe mat cloud lit e( ta|*or eecape aow-. aad two flirt'iwgaaata, brought woaadel to Paria, are reported aasay •m* that Ihaap did kaow exactly |wi«*s tha battle waa.tmt theyhad pm "tsttlag atQopenhagaa." fThsr probably peant Oompelga*, bat "7, I, n*PSHSBtgaioptotareoaaiW two man 4' read tag tkalr• reepectlve aewapapere to theaad, and tbe* txchanr t**3s Figaro t# a nans, sad absorb- tUTbad read la the drat. s**ns r**taa Ma abadea lot: fun eVen shadow of trouble rbelwvaaatMMisliMtoap^ 1 'v' .i*aw- that from ts aaddaats J^O'rv wiji. 1 WIN THREE BRITISH CRUI8ERS GC DOWN IN NORTH 8EA—ARE SUNK BY SUBMARINES. MANY SURVIVORS PICKED UP Veaaels Arriving at Different Port* with Hundreds Taken from Water at Scene of Battle—Number of Dead Bodies Alao Brought In. K'ralarn N«wApip«r I'nlon News Mrrlce. l^ondon, Sept. 22.—A dispatch re ceived here from the Hook or Holland the Dutch steamer Titon has arrived there, bringing twenty British Wounded and some dead, picked up in the North sea The Titon reported that the disas ter occurred at 7:30 o'clock this morn* Ing. The Titon picked up 114 sur vivors, most of whom were trans ferred to British torpedo boats. 8urvlvors at Harwich. Harwich, Eng.. Sept. (28.—It is com puted here that 700 men from the British cruisers Aboukir, Cressy and Hogue were saved. Thirty uninjured officers, survivors of the three sunken warships, Arrived here tonight. They had been rescued from the water and wore improvised clothing. Eighty other survivors were landed at Parkestom quay, three miles west of Harwich. Two Submarines Sunk. Ymuiden, Holland, via London, Sept. 22.—Two of five German subma rines which attacked and sank the British cruisers Aboukir, Cressy and Hogue, were sent tp the bottom by the British ships, acibordtng to sur vivors from the cruisers who arrived here this evening. Daad and Woundad Aboard. Amsterdam, via London, Sept. 22.— Tha steamer Flores arrived at Ymui den tonight with 287 survivors from tha British cruisers sunk by the Ger man submarines. One dead, aad a few wounded were also aboard. •avara Laaa ta Brttlah. iAMtdon, Sept. 2S.--The destruction of the three crutaera, Aboukir. Hogue and Crasay, by an attack of Ave Ger man submarines in the North sea, is tha severest loss the British navy has sustained during the wat*. British cruisers and torpedo boata came quickly to tha aaalataaoe of the doom ad vassals, and. it is reported, sank two of the German submarines, while three othara escaped. The three %rulaer8 carried more thsa &009 man, but no eatlmate baa yqt bean made of the number saved or lpat Tha fate of the cruisar Path* flndar, sunk recently in the North sea by a torpedo, proved how quickly a •hip may be sent to tha 'bottoni by aa under water attack, and it la there (bra believed that tha loss of life la bound to be heavy., Tha ateamer Floras took 287 sur vivors of the sunken ships into the Dutch port of Ymuiden last nlghl The. ateamer Titan picked up 114 Tha Oarmaa polloy of kaeptag the Oarman batUa fleet in harbor and at tamptlag to pfok off British ahips one by one thua far bas resulted in the loss of three ll^0p-ton erulaers, tha Pathflader of 9,000 ions aad two small craft dettroyed by m|aea. ,v 0i.. 4 8,pt ^QMasB'attatti ta thalr eaiHara terri- 1 3 7. fi FERCE BATTLE LASTS I aoma of whom afterwards died. The! eoace^tfng infantry attacks too much fatally wooadad ware kept on board tha *wmet, while the othara ware transferred to Britlah mea of war. Tha Lowaatoft, another British craft,. rafeeaad:a good nambor 9° *w»d h*8 WW 1 fourteenth. Trom the twelfth to the »£ah thl Gigantic Conflict as the Allies At tempt to Hurl Back the In vading Armies. CARNAGE HAS BEEN AWFUL Really a Sarles of Attacks and Re pulaaa That Have Gone on Along Front of Ona Hundred and Fifty Mllaa—Bravery Amounting ta Fana tlaiam Has Baan Shawn by Both Sldaa. From the Battle Front, via Paris, Sept. *2.—The eevanth day of tha bat tle of the Alane has ended with the Germans.and allies intrenched in prac tically tha same positions tUey- feeM for tha laat two daya. Artillery duels such aa never have baan aaaa before are bring carried on with tha hopa of compelling the evac uation of the atnmgly held posltioaa, wlth oocaaional successes to the oppos ing sides, while the infantry, in the face of a galling lire, have charged right up to the guns, only to make thalr opponenta give way slightly, or to be repulsed with- great lossea. The Germane took the allies' trancbaa on the river to the north of Solssona after hard fighting. A coun ter-attack was executed by the allies and the trenchea were rewon. The fighting may go on for daya yet, bat sooner or later one side must find |he continual fall ol shells and the dis- —ar ir*" awaa vt.ouviM «IUU IU0 Qlg* tor them, and, leaving a strong rear guard, will draw back It la now poaslble to give the first details of the terrific battle of the Alane—the greatest battle in the fais tory of the world. It is a story of a deadly duel of big guns, of furious attacks, of terrific counternittacks, of hand-to-hand clashea and bayonet charges aad of frightful carnage. rv-" Ifr'.lS a story of a succession of 7* ,*** tha momaat as a news on ona part of the line and now on the »tharf hour irftar hour, for every hour jaa#gr fiva Oartaan submarine boata. of the twenty-four, day after day and batUes, which have been fought now mo™ln«v HKIMt admiralty, the attack of the urmiaa had been fighting a rear-auard Itttla, plungpra aurpasaed any naval ^tloa. precipitated when maaduvara of tha pmeat war. Of battle to their allied pursuja la Africa tha British rapdaad a utile bMune Ieae^?S2i S«%^e •f heights td the north of Jibma. Tba fighting waa sustalaad with d«M!*'*a!aMta«sa during att of tha conteitlng •avary foot! of the way la a aapremi aodaawt to Mid their posltf«M «aMI «^joycemdati" opald•• ariWi.:'- tha., ofthe Briilahoper as my ta d*dm«HKt iwt'i vPa'^tha nraaoa Sa^' lafM la Mitt ta '-•M.jMaMMl i* haia- 1 -M %ld «», Wjf HOT 8PRINGS WEEKLY STAR: HOT SPRINGS. SOUTH DAKOTA. the fourteenth, the rival flJjrtit of the. fifteenth, they ttrasBthdnad. aad ^iMmiaenoedtheir formidable the.. Fimdr^ad. '""WSlS&fazW#- **U»ialafi. of tha rival Itea of K0ENI6SBERG, BESIEGED BY THE RUSSIANS Koenigsberg, East Prussia, one of the strongest fortified citieB in Germany, which the Russians are reported to have Invested. ing Teutons, until toward dawn the men of both sides were ready to drop from Bheer exhaustion. Just before daybreak the Germans threw all their remaining strength and energy into one final charge, tbat was conducted with all the vim and cour age that could be expected of fresh troops. They charged like madmen—like fa natics who knew nothing of the fear of death. But they were rolled back again, and to their enormous losses of the night was added another long roll of dead and wounded. It was as if this was their one chance of salvation, and all the desperation and all the reso lution at tbeir command was thrown into it. Hardly had they recovered from this final grand sortie when the allies fol lowed with a vigorous counter-attack in an eifort to catch the Germans off their balance. In tbis tbe allies were partly successful, for tbey gained ground slightly. On the morning of the seventeenth fighting again was resumed with the desperation that rivaled that of the big night attack. At the end of the day it appeared that the' Germans had been forced to retire about seven miles. During the fighting, which lasted all day and into the night, the Germans lost 600 prisoners, aside from the dead and wounded, which could aot be computed, and a number of rapid fire guns. Darkness made the operations ex tremely difficult, as the use of search lights by the rival commanders was refrained from, owing to the danger ot exposing their positions. Hand-to-hand fighting, in which the bayonet was used extensively, result ing in terrible losses, marked the com bat as one of tbe most furious ever fought. The progress of the battle indicated that the rival supreme commanders are going to leave a decision pf the gigantic conflict to the big guns. .The struggle is BO titanic that mere nu merical strength, even when that Btrength is counted in the millions, has proved itself inadequate to force the issue to a decisive result. Puts German Loaa at 45,000. G. F. Stewart, correspondent of the London Daily News, telegraphs from Rotterdam: "I learn from a private but absolutely reliable source that dur ing the last fortnight the Germans have been losing in killed, grounded and missing an average of 3,200 men per day. This represents a loss of roughly 45,000 men, of whom it is esti mated 14,000 were killed." Termonde Almost Wholly Destroyed. The Germans completed the destruc tion of Termonde (Dendermonde). The communal offices were bombard ed and are in rulna. The cburch ati|l' stands though Its tower ia damaged. The hospital waa spared, but all other public buildings and houaea were de stroyed. No Proposals for Peaee Great Britain has received no pro posale tor peace from ^Germany or Austria, according to a message re oeived by Sir Cecil Spring-Riee. Brit lsh ambaasador at Washington, irom 8lr Edward Grey. The British war office lamed anoth er eaaaalty llat., wbldi showed that EMttab officers ara still faiHag In ferge numbers on ihe battlefield. Thouaawds ofBetgUma A telegram to the Loadoh Obaarver a correspondent at Antwarp aaya: ,l "The autboriUeft ar» pea otodal cakualty liat at tha 4t Me«a and am informed .. ahow that nd fawar than 17.SM JM glai^aoldlera waro klHed la be t»«a 1s:a ldgb'jiaitb ,(att^aia«2| to tia ."-K* army' .StSmS" mfc Msssw* an: coming from more distant regions and will reach the front in October. It 1b said Russia will soon have 7.000. 000 men on the move. Britain Out $166,500,000 Calculations based on official re turns show that the cost to Britain of 43 days of war, continuing from August l, when disbursements began, has been about $166,500,000, or at the rate of $3,870,000 per day. Announce Fall of Maubeuge. Berlin has officially announced that tbe fall of Maubeuge took place on September 9, with 400 guns and 40,000 prisoners. Three Nations May Join War. Dispatches from Europe received in official quarters at Washington contain information indicating that the great struggle in the eastern hemisphere is entering upon a new and much more serious phase. Italy has decided to join the fray on the side of the allies at the moment dedmed most opportune for striking a decisive blow and in preparation for the movement is rapidly mobilising its army. Turkish officials are in Berlin ne gotiating the terms upon which the Ottoman empire will throw ita support to Germany and Austria. Roumania has given an official're ply to Turkey, which lndicatea tbat it Is likely to get into the fight on the side of the triple entente. Battle on the Ocean. There haa not been a gun fired In the North sea for daya, ao far aa the Brit ish public knows, but the admiralty iBBUed bulletins of important encoun ters in far off Waters. Suoceaaea and misfortunes were both chronicled im partially. Tbe German protected cruiser Koe nigsberg caught tbe British light cruiB er Pegasus overhauling its machinery In Zanzibpr harbor and attacked and completely disabled it. The British lost heavily and tbe Koenigsberg waa able to steam away. The British loss is given at 25 killed and 80 wounded. The German cruiser Emden cap tured six British merchant steamers in the Bay of Bengal in six days and sank five of them. The Emden reap peared at Rangoon, possibly having taken part in other exploits, as yet not known. On the British side of the score was the sinking ot a German merchant cruiser, believed to have been the Cap Trafalgar, by the former Cunard liner Carmania. The Britlah loss was small—nine killed and 26 wpunded. The German loss is unknown, but the aurvlvors were rescued. German Loaeee Are Heavy. A casualty list, made up largely of the losses .Of a few regiments, waa made public In Berlin. Of the 6,126 caaualtles reported, 3,876 of them fall to 16 battallpna of eight regiments. The One Hundred and Thirty-first reg iment reported 1,141 casualties. Six of Its officers were killed and 23 wound ed. The Qne Hpndred and Thirty-aeo ond Infantry reported 32 offlcera and 561 men killed, wounded or mlaalng. The Tenth Grenadiers ^lost 20 offlcera and 820 men, and one battalion of .the Onfe Hundred and Fifty-seventh try had eight, officers kilted aad five woanded. is Ulater Volunteere Knlfet The London Iteming Post, corre epondeat at Belfaat wlrea: "Tha flow of recrutta from the Ulster voIunteer foref to thraew alpy oMttlaiwd laai week, tbe.t9tal for two waaka np to laat'jalgbt being In rooad dgBNa avdr ame thouaand. Brtfaat naturally con tnboted.the largar portion recraiu fram .flha «lty aambering aboat fiJOO." Kaeetane ^dvaaee In fUillela. I» a dtopatah to London Tim aoutaaaoateitai A MINISTER'S WIFE Always Mrs. O. F. McHargrue, 147 W. Stla Bt„ Jacksonville, Florida, writes: "I had catarrh and throat trouble. Three bottles of Peruna cured me. As a minister's wife I come in con tact with all classes of people, and shall always speak a good wo*d for Peruna. I have given triat bottles to a few friends. Wishing you abun dant success. I remain, "yours truly.'1 PARADISE FOR THE ARTIST^ Devotees of the Brush Are Accorded Accommodations .Without Price at Inn at Capri. Capri, beautiful in itself as a winter resort, offers an irresistible invitation to artists, since it has an inn where anyone, by painting a picture on the wall can get free board. To the lovely Island of Capri, with its, perennial summer, Its blue grotto, and its lemon groves, came, some fifty years ago, a ruined artist. He opened an inn, and died rich. In his will, leaving the inn to his heirs, he made these conditions: "The charge per day, two bottles of red Capri wine included, is never to be more than six francs. "If any artist Is too poor to pay he shall paint a picture upon some wall space, receiving all the accommoda tion accorded to those paying tbe high est price. "If any German artist shall come to the inn be shall be accommodated, and shall receive the amount of bis fare to Germany upon hla promising never to return to Italy." The inn is conducted today on these conditions. Its walls are covered with paintings. Now and then a German gets bis fare home. ",t- Fighting the White Plague. Adequate hospital facilities for the: 35,000 residents of Ohio who are suf fering from tuberculosis baa been de cided upon by the prevention of tu^ber culoaia and officials of the atate board of health. It la proposed to create 12 hospital districts of from four six counties each, wherein campaigns "will be inaugurated for the erection of "dis trict tuberculosis hopItaJp to be (main tained Jointly by the co-operating counties. Through the ejection of these 13 district hospitals, supplementing the present sanitaria, antituberculosis workers believe tbat the 35,000 vic tims wtll be adequately cared for, and that the people of the atate will be ao welt protected through this hospi talisation that eventually Ohio's death rate of 7,000 per year will be reduced materially. Her Memory All Right Mrs. Geddes had a new maid, and ahe found it necessary to repeat her instructions several times before Nora obeyed them. The mistress bad told her repeatedly at^out the finger-bowls, aqd one day, when there were guests were again forgotten. "Now Nora," said Mra. Geddea, ex tremely exercised over the omission, "this Is the sixih time I've had to tell you abobt the finger-bowls. Didn't the woman you last worked for have them on the table?" "No, mum," replied Nora, "her friend* always washed theiT hands before they cum." Many a woman regrets that ahe' dldnt change her mind befora she changed her amae. -W*| -f Abuse some one and we always find an appreciative audience. 5* Z, 'A I Ita Tendiaoy. '$} "Mayme baa a very open counte nance, hasn't ishef" "Yea, and-one that la very bard to. abut up. «5!:5k allfsfe 1 Mt tma