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THE ATUANTIO0EAN a ‘ ter “Rival of the Emden in Preyingon Eng: land’s Commerce Destroys Ships. Having 60,000 Tonnage, and ij Captures 400 MeninCrews. | LONDON, Oct. 23 [Associated Press].—A despatch fram | \ Feneriffe, Canary Islands, to the Daily Mail, under.date of * Thursday, reports that the German cruiser Karlsruhe has } The news was taken to Teneriffe by the German steamer 1 Ceoteld, which arrived with the crew of the British steamers Iguassu, Farn, ish City, Pruth, Condor and sunk by the Karlsruhe. Branch, Highland -Hepe,. Indrani, Rio Niceto, Maria de Larrinaga, Cervantes, Corn- Lynrowan, all ‘of which were The Crefeld was accompanied into port’ by the. German steamers Patagonia, Ria Negro and Asuncion. A later message states that over four hundred men the crew are prisoners. , trade, iy smaller sister ship, the Emden, eral British cruisers. Bince then the Karlsruhe bi commerce, An official statement sald she had sunk seven British Y commission early in 19) ‘KINGOF BELGIANS ‘LEADS ARMY UNDER _ BUNS OF GERMAN Urged to Leave Front, He Says: “My Place Is on Fighting Line.” By William Phillip Simms. HAZEBROUCK, Northern France (via Havre), Oct. 23.—“My skin is of | ne more value to my country than is My place ie on the fighting \e. ‘That was the reply of King Albert of Beigium to the importunities of his persona! staff, who urged him to leave the front, It was my privilege yes- DRINK MORE WATER IF KONEYS BOTHER, Eat Less Meat and Take Salts for Backache or Bladder Trouble. id in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggial ache, and feel like lumps of lead. Hine beeom: + the bladder is irri- tated, and lief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clo, them flush off the body's or you'll be i from backache, stomach gets pou and you feel rh tic twinges when the we=iher is bad. OU Teas teat, drink lots of wate eo get from any pharmacist four ounces Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful ter before Mf ney rei tick headache, poy meek to cles jor generations to cl ond stimulate them also to newtralise th: 1 it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, cangot in- jure; makes delightful effervescent * fithis-water drink which everyone should take now and then te keep the kidneys and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who belleve im overcoming kidney trouble whi \[teonly trouble.—Advt, . . ‘The Karlsruhe first came into notice, at the outbreak of the war, when she appeared in the vicinity of Sandy Hook, apparently ‘in wait for British merchantmen leaving New York. For\a:few days the British shipping hugged their piers, and then came news that the Karlsruhe had ben driven away on the approach of sev- f » The Karlsruhe is « comparatt: Bhe hi of the fastest warships afloat. Her speed has enabled her thus far ‘ to elude the British pursuit: Her main armament eonsists of : twelve 4.1-inch guns and she carri -| Was the saddest that ‘The ships were mostly engaged in the South American and their total tonnage is about 60,000. ‘The crulser Karlsruhe, of « triffe lees'than 6,000-tons, hee had ' in this war a career as eventful in the. Atlantic-as. that-of-her. in the Indian Ovean. On Aug. 9 the Karleruhe appeared in the harbor of San Juan, Porto Rico, where she coaled and then again took to the seas. Soon after it was learned that the Karisra fight at sea with the British cruisers Suffolk and Bristol. It appears that the British cruisers came unexpectedly upon the Karlsruhe while she was coaling from the German. steamer Kronprins Wilhelm. The cruisers engaged in a running fight. while the Kronprinz Wilhelm, through her. superior speed, easily escaped. The Karlsruhe also eluded her pursuers, and an uncon- firmed report had it that she damaged the Bristol. a4 been in a running appeared in several West Indian’ Ports for coal after preying, in various southern .seas, on British it, given out in Berlin on Oct. 8, steamers in the Atlantic. ly new, ship, having gone into speed of 27 knots, being ‘one crew of 373 men. terday to see His Majesty in action at {name deleted by censor}, . Fighting with the remnants of his little army to defend the last little strip of his native land still held by his own troops, he is still _unterrified and unconquered. Garbed in the field uniform of a Gen- eral, he is constantly encouraging his men at every point. The Belgian general staff admits that the German attack in’ south. western Belgium is the most violent of the present war. The Germa had plainly planned to sweep rig! through the southwestern end of Belgium and to take Dunkirk with a rush, They would have succeeded if it had not been for King Albert and the remnants of his little army. | Driven from Antwerp by an over- whelming German force, compelled to evacuate Ostend to prevent bein, | driven into the water or made pris- oners of war, they m: their final stand In the vicinity of Nieuport; The Bel is were fighting with their backs against the wall. They fought like demons. Outnumbered at all times and with artillery greatly inferior to that of the enemy, they have refused to acknowledge defeat at any point. Kivery German assault has been repulsed with great lous. The King passes up and down the line of his army, Sometimes he uses an automobile. At other times he is on foot. - Addressing his cheering soldiers he uses the familiar “thee” jand “thou”, usually reserved for members of the same family. He is comforter to the wounded, cheerer to tho ,downhearted, ‘ As the King moved to his head- quarters following the repulse of t! Germans Re \las cheered everywhere. He was wet to the skin from the drizzling rain that had, been falling for hours. His uniform was covered with caked mud. His hands and face were streaked with clay, His appearance was in remarkable contrast to when I last saw him in Paris just before he became King. ‘Then he was boyishly enthusiastic and @ smile was constantly on his lips. To-day, as he looked back at the firing lime and at the little territory yet left to him, I gased on. But it was inspiring in its sorrow an* it was apparent why his men ak suld love him now, in the gunpits, (ur more than when he was in the trip ever palace. In the distan thunder of the guns could be plainly heard, It punc- tuated the Ing made by his no fear in r the de- , | Yastation of his country, for the death of so many of his subjects, but he re- mains confident that in the end Bel- sium will be restored to her place among nations. JAPS REPORT CAPTURE OF GERMAN DESTROYER NEAR KIAOCHOW BAY. paQnron. bg i ah Geepnien from rh 4 ie Eompsny reports that tute. alles’ wire lured a Gorme whlch from Kieschow Bay?” oF ot ef Change + ras avanine wos, FRIDAY, OOTOBER 8 ere’s a Way to Solve Put Your Hubby anc ;Housekeeping From a Duet of Maid and Mistress or a Solo to a Chorus, Is Advice of : Josephine Story, Authoress Who Has Tried It juccessfully. ese = . who lives between ‘The firat move in housekeeping ‘| without’ a servant is to make house- keeping & chorus, instead of a duet on the part of the latter. “The one /promise my, men folks extorted from wan that if I found myself get- ginning of her experiment. maid left at the beginning of a sum- mer vedation, and her husband, her two, song and herself decided that in- stead, of the painful search for a new servant they would try dividin: up the household duties amo: The lack of proper tools Mrs, themeeives. The husband, having ®|Cooer has ‘und to be one of the vacation, became gardener and out-| greatest handicaps of the house- door man; the elder son took care| keeper. of the floors and windows; the younger "boy was waiter and dish- washer, while the lady of the house cook. the initial discovery of tts lady of the house was the truth In- berent in. the wise. New England ad- vice “to lot your head save your heets.” “ “My first move was te wateh aliver, in fact ev did net contribute the artistic er material con ef the family, vanished inte the limbo ef discarded things, The result of my clearance was a . . Marguerite Mooers Marshall. » There need be no “servant problem" in the life of the able-bodied woman who; hag no email cAlldren. ‘Why? Because there need be no servant. ‘Thet, is the eseence of the hopeful and helpful doctrine expounded by g Josephine Story in her recently published book, “For | the Comfort of the Family.” It's bound to be of inter- “eat to every woman anxious for the comfort of her own family an@ weary of trying to maintain that comfort through the casual mintstrations of Bridget or Gretchen or Olga. And Josephine Story, who, when she isn't ‘an author, is the mistress of a charming home, offers @ fine iarge supply of definite practice in place of the airy theories so often spun by the domestic economist kitchenette and a trunk. sense of restful spaciousness in the heuse and a magical increase in leisure moments, “My next step was to substitute betwaen maid and mistress or @ 8010! paper for the linen doilles used on Then I invested val doilies to use bestos mats, under hot ‘plat- ting, overtired I was to confess,” #814} ters, and some large rqund ones with Mrs. Cooper'In explanation of tho be-|q lacey edge upon which to unmould Her/a jelly, mousse or parfait. As mine would have been the task of laun- dering the linen doiljes, think what trength and substitutin ; the polished ta! in @ dozen lar over an amount of. time, energy I saved by paper.” A DAB OF POWDER NOW AND THEN IN THE KITCHEN. “The white enamelled my pantry, wnere « vuvk, hol erred, jars, labelled. The cook books tholr washable slip covers of wh linen are in a glass inclosed shelf Fastened se- curely to that same. shelf is a specta- cle case, and on top of the shelf is a| ‘The! | well sharpened knives, the fork# | gisnig , within easy reach. card index box for recipes. and spoons which are used in cook. ing are separated und kept In paste- board box covers on a convenient shelf, An office stool stands in the} {pantry and another before kitchen s'ak. “Over the sink hangs @ mirror FRENCH NAVY JOINS | IN SHELLING FOE | ONCHANNEL COAST Air Craft and Both the Land: and Sea Forces in the Great Battle. LONDON, Oct. 23 [Associated Press), —Vensela from the Frencn navy, hav- ing crept around the coast, are to-day standing by the British which are hurling sheils landward be- tween Ostend and Nieuport, on the Belgia necast. Aircraft and warships are aiding Simultaneously in the movements of the land forces, ‘The Germans are hurrying forward fresh troops and heavy guns, the lat- ter to make reply to the damagig fire from the ships, A despatch from Dunkirk, France, to the Chronicle says: “Seven hundred German dead have been buried near Nieuport, Belgium, as a result of the fierce fighting there. The total German casualties in tye channel cogst fignting is esti- mated at 10,000. “Thirty thousand Germans who had monitors entrenched themselves between On- | tend and Nieuport retired to Ostend, leaving behind a great quantity of equipment. “It ls reported that during the Brit- ish fleet's bombardment of the G man line the Germans lost a convoy eight miles long, which was wrecked | #008 Meal Just nis by shells." A despatch to the Times from Rot-j tion whien i terdam, dated Thursday, says: “Information from several quarters In to the effect that nearly thousand Germans crossed into Dute! territory off New Zealand to-day anc that they will be convoyed to North Hollund for internement.’ News agency reports from Flushe Ing say that Gen. von Tripp and all his staff were killed near Middelkerke ‘ ddelkerke | dtternoon and yet have regaled the By aes the Shen witch the Garman jfaily with a hot, savory mutton wtew | ; 4 headquarters staff occupled. por ay i X“Gespatch trom Havre to the Dally he food laboratory has be- ‘Telegraph at the have regal Yaer River and are prepared to move forward in purault of the Germans Helgians Don’t Let Your Stomach | Trouble You When you fee! miserabie, run down, tongue and frequent headaches it je a sure sign that your stomach, liver | land bowels are not in order and need a good, thorough cleansing at once | "EX-LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate yous system in a natural, healthy manner, without pain or -Lax will relieve your bowels of the undigested waste- matter, and in several hours your head will be clear and your eyes will sparkle. One 0c box of Ex-Lax is wii cleanse ariping. Get it at your drug store to-day. e d ahelves of no un- necessary or imperfect utensil," she “The cereals are in glass in the) two | y' 4d the right bank of the | Servant Problem: the Children to Wo MOTHER 15 QUEEN OR THE WITCHEN rk! Tay tafe He Ca REMOVING i f ‘The YOUNG Boy TAKES CARS OP TAS il i \ and on the shelf below there is @ bottle of soothing cream for the hands, a face chameis and Why leave the kitchen oi fe 00 b t fh and been refully wi ight |) fore allow! let acces: and pre- having each eontability?™” the calmly | member of the family share in the queried. housework. “But there are some sorts of house- | work which leave one too discouraged to powder one's nose,” I protested, “For instance, dishwashing. Have you discovered any way of simplifying “The co-operative housework ¢: ent has worked to a charm, Mra. Cooper. “The labor and the cost of living have bee: duced without sacrificing tien of life.” , * of it ur family to work and wi that process, for the wervuntiess PUL ON; Mention aff the alata ee dome? —_—— —— “No more skilful device to kill in- terest in housework was ever con- trived than that drudgery, washing dishes,” she agreed. “The Youngest , Member, to whose lot had fale this Portion of our co-operative hounse- | work, did his share faithfully, but with such a pathetic lack of enthu- slasm that I set about simplifying his tavk, greasy pans, y out of sight. | You can have no idea until you try thom what time paper plates ;{ save. Paper cups have proved a boon in which to serve cool, re- freshing drinks And you put the ter supper if and scalded, but unwiped, (dishes In « drainer, covering them with @ fresh towel, you will find them dry and clean tn the morning. OME DISCOVERIES IN THE KIT-| CHEN LABORATORY. “L consider my kitchen a laboratory, | wherein I expe t" continued Mrs, | Cooper. “I the courage to da und try new combinations lifts cou ing out of the slough of monotony. | Yet every woman who is her own cook dreads the feenny ot revolt ‘which swee;s over ner woen, use d, she confronts the roblem of supp “Here was un elticlency propos: died my unagination | To wssure myself of leisure tau Fafternoon 4 must accemplinn the tear | (of preparing supper in the inorning. it did not requ the puck- a*vrow thought hi item that I had giv | bridge in less enlight } made the fireiens covker work for me, Had it not been for that comfort of | | the servantiess T could not have mo- tored all one crisp, bri *« autumn come the most popular room in t Both bovs, in antici- tripe into the w have a bad tasie in the mouth, coated is enough to convince you, Wc, 25¢ and 50c. —————————— os) "265 |'215 595 Player Plane we STORY & CLARK PIANO CO:, 12 and 14 West 324 New York (&. w.es) : valigs. Newark, 101 Haley $8. BROKAW BROTHERS MENS & BOYS’ CLOTHING HATS & FURNISHINGS Your bay’s clothing education begins the moment you bring him into our store. He learns — as tholisands of men- have: learned—the merit of our fab- rics, the value of. skilled work- manship, the necessity of sturdy construction, the ideals of style, the harmony of patterns, the’ benefits of service, and the im- portance of receiving the great- est possible clothes-value for the amount expended. , Astor BLOC lace ourth Avenue : ON! poor K FROM BROADWAY .—— SUBWAY AT: TO IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED, A WORED “WANT” AD. WILL GO AND GET IT, The Artuckle firm originally selected Yuban for the personal use of members of the firm; to serve guests and to send out as a gift coffee to friends and busi- Ness associates. You, too, will find it so good you will want to serve it on the most important occasions, yet so inexpensive you will begin using it daily.