ry r- and mew have lydia e pinkharas f
TRANSCRIPT
I
CRYSTAL RIVER NEWS CRYSTAL RIVER FLORIDA
S
I
f
V
ANOTHER BRITISH
CRUISER IS
Girman Submarine Torpedoed a British
Cruiser In North
400 Men Lost
UPRISING IN SOUTH
Against Great Britain Believed ToUnder Fears
German Invasion
There were no Important develop-
ments in the European war during thepast week While there was a great
activity In the two theatersof war no deslslve victories were won
or even any definite advantage gainedA German submarine succeeded In
sinking another British cruiser with400 men on board For a time the uprising In British South Africa againstGreat Britain took on a serious aspectbut General Botha the British leadernow believes ho has the situation wellin hand
The progress of the allies againstthe Germans Inthe north of Francealong the Belgian harder has beennecessarily slow but recent dispatchesfrom London and Parts state that advances have been made In someplaces along the great battle linewhich extends more than one hundred
and fifty miles the allies have push
ed the Germans across the Belgianborder In the campaign betweenGermans and the Russians In the eastthere has been much fighting but thereports coming from Berlin Viennaand from Petrograd have been so con-
flicting that definite knowledge of theresults is impossible-
At the present time Englandself is proving the center of attractionFollowing the fall of Antwerp the Ger-
man forces pushed towards Ostend-on the Belgian coast As Ostend isonly 65 miles from Dover and 115
miles from London England is alarmed over the possibility of German inyaslon However it appears that theproblem of extending his lines beforethe allies to the coast in order thatthere would bo no flank for the allied ruiiJssw a presenttime than d possible invasion of England
The Belgians who have suffered untold hardships since the great armiesof German began pushing their waythrough the little country are nowfleeing from their native land to Hoi
land and England For weeks theand children and men who
were not able to fight have beenfrom place to place Their homes
have been destroyed and thousandsof them faced starvation From Liegethey fled to Brussels and from Brus-
sels to Antwerp Here It was thoughtthey have surely found a safe havenof refuge but the powerful siege gunsof the Germans battered down thewalls of the forts and once more thepopulace fled this time to OatendHardly had they arrived at the coastcity than they were terrorized withthe news that the Germans were com-
ing There was nothing for them todo but flee to England and Holland
King Albert and his Belgian armyhas been lost sight of following thefall of Antwerp and their presentwhereabouts Is a mystery It has beenannounced that the government of theBelgians has been moved to HavreFrance where the entire royal courtof Belgium Is now cofnfortnbly ijuar-
teretl Recent reports state that theBelgian queen is sharing the hardshipsof her husband at the head of thearmy but the dispatch falls to saywhere the army Is at the present time
In China there appears to have beena lull in the fighting between the Germans and the Japs atThere has been little news iccelvedfrom this theater of war Italy remainsneutral and a recent announcementfrom Rome states that Italy will makeno hostile move unless they are compolled to do so toprotect their countryfrom an enemy Turkey Is still brlstling but JIOB tailed to declare warPersistent reports that Portugal hasdeclared war against Germany havebeen received through Rome but noofficial announcement to this effectlias been given out
German Fort Found In LondonLondon The police have found at
Willesden a suburb to the northwest-of London building occupied by Ger-
mans with foundations and roof ofheavy concrete They arrested twentytwo Germans on the premises Thepremises were being used by C G
Roebcr a music publisher as-
a factory The site of this factory atcommands several important
railroad Junctions The Paris premlaos of this firm were blown uprecently on orjlers of the French gov-
ernment
lj J-I
j
SUNKt r-
ft
ControlEngland
J
I
0
l
1
101
tgreat deal of the
1
women
r
t
i r
trfl
i
Jt J
1
1
tXti t
t
same
Jrrf
k t Jjp 1r
t J Y-
i
J
Sea Estimated
A r AFRICA
i Be-
t
hdeal ot
k
l
I
i
AT
kIw
the-
Mr
he-
rdr
i
t
troops t the1 iilbre
w
n
driv-en
1
y
w
rI
l
l
2
aJr
rt
t
w-
3sw Klao Chow
tip
t
h P
1 t
tir4 emu
4O German
w b
kr
¬
¬
¬
¬
>
¬
¬
><
>
>
>
<
>
°
+
ADVANCE OF THE ALLIES
L
I
A
Another British Warship SunkLondon Another thrust from the
German submarine service hiss robbed the British navy of the cruiserHawke and has raised the tally ofBritish warships sunk by the Germans-
to seven must be added thevirtual destruction of the cruiser Pe-
gasus by a German warship at Zan-
zibarThe Huwkeia cruiser of 7350 tons
under of Capt Hugh W1J
llama was sunk in the North sea theof six other victims of Ger-
manaim on the of the Ger-
man gunner sayeil s r
was attacked but silO escapedThe exact complement aboard the
Hawke has not been announced butinordinary times the men numbered CBO
As she was built several yearsIs probable her crew was not upthe complement Accordingone report she had only 400 aboardWhatever the number only 52 menwere saved and there was not a sin-
gle commissioned officer among themThe cruiser Amphlon Pathfinder
Abouklr Cressy Hogue Pegasus andHawke and the torpedo gunboatSpeedy make up the British list oflosses In warships in the first tenweeks of the war Against this theBritish admiralty claims four Ger-
man cruisers two torpedo boat de-
stroyers one torpedo boat three submarines and eight armed commercialdestroyers
Omitting the armed merchantmenthe aggregate warship tonnage loss toEngland Is much greater than that toGermany
Horsemen Swim Swift River
From the Battle Front rlnfnntry andcavalry have been doing more
timing the last few days than forseveral weeks
Two thousand French cuirassiershave distinguished themselves by adaring feat In swimming the river Lyswhere It flows deep and swift Theycompletely outwitted the Germanswho wore awaiting them on the otherside with machine guns and heavy artlllery
The French horsemen made a longdetour during the night One Manswam the river with a rope thendragged over a cable which he attached to a tree The others holding therope crossed singly with their horsesthrough the swirling1 waters
Arrived on the opposite bank theFrench drew up in line and chargedthe German flank at Merville drivingthe enemy back and opening the wayfor the passage over the river of adivision of allied which later occupied
Servlan Princes Are WoundedVosslche Zelfung of
Berlin reports that Crown Pfhco Alexander of Senla hasbeen slightlywounded and that his brother PrinceGeorge of Serviar has been mortallyhurt in the fighting against Austrians
Russian Prince KilledPetrograd Prince Oleg son of
Grand Duke Constantine died of thewounds received in action An officialdispatch from Petrograd said PrinceOleg had been acavairy engagement at the front
torpedoes-
Bad
ship th thcails tor that tooi
oto
LondonTho
wound d d flng
f
To this
Haw sl
ago it
light-
ingI
Infantry
4R
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
>
Seeking Homes For War OrphansWashington Miss Natalia Pearson
a beautiful young English girl now vis-
iting In New York has set on foot amovement to find homes in Americafor the children made orphans by theterrible war which is devastating Europe
While she is organizing an associa-tion in Europe to care for the littleones until they con be totheir new homes in America an Amer
Is being formed bylira H F Tuck of New York withthe aid of Miss Pearsons vast wealth-to extend its brandies Into variousstates and municipalities to dohomeplating work
The immigration laws of the Unitedmay haVe toibo moalBe iJiorae
what to authorize the societyThere Is nol a prohibit
lion ogaiwst the passage an alienbeing paid by any person or as-
sociation was to prevent-the importation of contract labor
The work of Miss Pearson will beabsolutely neutral Each person inAmerica who is willing to take anorphan child into his home will beasked to state whether he prefers anEnglish French German Belgian orRussian boy or girl His ability tQ carefor such orphan and provide it a proper home will be carefully investigatedby the local branches of the homeplacing society
Boers Rallying To BothaCopt Town South a re
suit of Colonel Marltz rebellion in thenorthwest of the Cape provinces GenLouis Botha premier of the Union ofSouth Africa and commander of thetroops of the Union is taking the fieldearlier than he originally intended toGeneral Botha is placing himself atthe head of several strong Dutch componies organized on the old burgherline which are affiliated with regi-ments trained by the Union defenseforce
Commandants field cornets andburghers who served under GeneralBotha in the South African war arerallying to his call irrespective oftheir political feeling to fight along-side the English In defense of theempire against which they were inarms twelve years ago Tills facthashad a marked effect on wnvererfi whoare now flecking to General Bothasstandard
Germans Repulsed at WarsawParis A Havas agency dispatch
from Petrograd pays that word Isthere from Warsaw that the
population of the city s returning andthe banks are resuming business A
battle Is being fought about thirtymiles from Warsaw
The Germans endeavored to takethe heights about seven miles fromthe town but were repulsed
Germans Claim Foe RoutedBerlin The general staff of the
German army announces that ln thebeginning a strong garrison defendedAntwerp with great energy but thatafter the attack by German ipfantrtyand marine divisions this defendersfled lft full rout Among the Antwerpgarrison was one British marine bri-
gade complete collapse bf theAngloBelgian defense of Antwerp wasshown by the fact that no military
beto treat concerning surrender6-Uie city
lean organization
O
AfrlcaAs
h
1
1r
die
statesto-t carry-
out
otherThe object
re-
ceived
authority could foundthe
iw tilt y
J-
ti AJ
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
<
GERMANS RETREAT
BEFORE BRITISH
LoKdoii RtjMrts Kaisers Mew Have Been
Drivtn lack Thirty Miles
iy Tke Allies
GERMAN DESTROYERS SUNK
By British Off The Coast Of HollandAntiGerman Riots Occur-
In London
London The official press bureauissued the following announcement
The British troops have made goodprogressed in the last four Inthe northern area the allies have driv-en the enemy back more than thirtymiles
The Bordeaux correspondent of TheTimes in a dispatch says
Opinion here continues satisfiedwith the military position According-to popular expression General Joffreis thrusting the enemy out of doorswithout any unnecessary fuss
It is apparent from the officialcommunications that tile enemy Is be-
ing superbly held along the immensefront The enemys attempt to envelopthe allies between Lille and the seahas failed The Germans visibly arepreparing to retreat by fortifying aline between Namur and Mctz and asecond line with a base at AlrlaChappelle
Two Important successes in the bat-tle for Dunkirk and Calais for the pos-
session of which the Germans orestriving are credited to the allies inthe official communication Issued inParis
The French are said to haveAraentlereB an important rail
way junction on the Belgian frontiernorthwest of Lllle and to have re-
pulsed an attempt of the Germans tpcross tile river Yeer which flowsthrough that little corner of WestFlanders which is all of Belgium thatremains in Belgian hands That wouldmean a check to the German
Dunkirk by the coast routeThe Wench also are said to have
pushed farther the Germanarmy which is advancing along theBelgian frontier to the coast
The battle culminated in Armentferefl again coming underFrench
t i
veelc ovvjiig io Its JmJorjUface B arailway center Besides Jt is on theroad to LllJft wjiiat the Germans stillhold despite reports to the contraryThe battle with fighting which gradually developed Into ageneral battle Indicates that theFrench are advancing in force towardLille
attempt-to reach
ln J 1 e lVec
JntiagQ JtQwn a85z aiuJl Iv s al
n d
reocc-upied
back still
which
ilaicbbitlSnhopRbeer
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
Four German SunkBritish has ac
counted for four more German destroyere which were engaged and sunk oftthe Dutch coast by a British cruiserand four torpedo boat destroyers
According to au announcement madeby the secretary of the British admiralty the British vessels In the actionwere the light cruiser Undaunted andthe torpedo boat destroyers LanceLennon Legion and Loyal
The admiralty announces that theBritish lots In the engagement ort theDutch coast in which four Germantorpedo boat were sunkwas one officer and four men wound-ed The damage o the British destroyers was slight The anuounceInept adds
There are thirtyone flermanof war
The sinking of warshipsmakes six torpedo boat destroyerssent to tip bottom by Brhlah gunfire since the beginning of the warand seven counting the torpedo boatdestroyer sunk by tilt submarine 139
The score in navat operationscounting converted merchantmen
each as the Kaiser Wilhelm der Groseoand the Cap Trafalgar now favors thetillies which have sunk one Austrianand six German cruisers and sevenGerman torpedo beat destroyers whilethere have been unconfirmed reports-of the sinking of several Austrian
in the Adriatic seaThe Geimans have sunk eight Brit-
ish and one Russian cruiser whileAustria has lost a by ac-
cident The Ruselans also claim tohave sunk two German submarinesbut this Germans deny
Ship Sail Despite ProtestLos Angeles White Merit
tner British consul hcrc made nn un-availing protect to United States cus-
toms officials against the sailing ofthe steamer Manatlan with a cargowhich was alleged to bo contrabandof war and intended tor the Germancruiser Leipzig Mortimer asked thatthe vessel be dented clearance papersbut John B Elliott collector of cus-
toms said that ns the cargo was con-
signed to neutral Mexican ports becould not withhold clearance
sailed howeven
LondonThe
tour
the
CalC
The-
ta atlan
1
navy
sur-
vivorsthe
with-out
de-stroyers
submarine
I
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
¬
<
>
>
+
A NURSE TAKES
DOCTORS ADVICE
And is Restored to HealthLydia E Pinkharas V f
Compound
Ohio Because of tbiaJIgnorance of how to care for myselfWhen Into fromtaking cold when going to school I snf
month I bad severewhich always meant layoff from workfor two to four days from the time Iwas 16 years old
I went to Kansas to live with my Ha-
ter and while there doctor told me ofthe Pinkham remedies did not usethem then as my faith in patent medicines was limited After my sister diedI came home to Ohio to lira and thathas been my home for the last 18 years
The Change ofLife came when I was47 years old and about this sawnay physical condition plainly described
began using Lydia E Pinkham0etablo Compound and I cannot tell youor any one the it gave me in thefirst three months It put mo rightwhere I need not lay off every monthand during the last 18 years I have notpaid out two dollarsbeen blest with excellent health for awowoman of my age and I can thank LydiaELPinkhamsVegetable
Since the Change of Life Is over 1
selfsupporting I cannot over-estimate health Ihave now earned a comfortable littlehome and Ihave recommended the Compound tomany with results as
take before and after child-birth Miss EVELYN ADEUA STOWART Euphemia Ohio
If want special kite write toLydia E Co COB
Mass Your letterwilltad answered fcy
Him FreshHe Im not earning my saltShe Thats unfortunate when yea
need salt so badly
NEVER HAD A CHTIXAfter TaUar KttXIR BABEX-
HJtn doctor care
and a W Jid dTUed 6 try KMJah-
KchUlMncelt
llxir M-
wpjijit art merely fte-
dH arq i
1fered from adisplacement and each
U
huH
m one of ThenVt g
to a and Jiaye
have been a nurse
ibe opened reM
aRl held In strict eeBl1 r-
T1oug t
f
with 0tame Tw tr8Ie c i
C
I iJ tEWNklaJtt DiDO Ii
Parcel vt1
t e iU
ry
womanhood and
nausea
11
time I
I
add being
a-
woaaa
little years old dcbIhle fev rmoet to o
under btacouriaged
dIir 3r-
C selntingAUd
prepW glgeel N4s IIIAaeomsb
4
¬
¬
¬
>
<
<
<
°
µ+
+
The CauseTea nod coffee offeri
backache headache rheumatic ln dlH-zlnew tired feeltnr dlJurbtdurinationneia Tho constant use of oralcohollo drink veryapt tokidney and weak kidney need promptbelp to avert all danierof flrowyor fatal Drlgbfi Avoid theof itlmulanti drink more waterrest fresh air and exercla To tone andatrenethen the tired Kidney1 ueKidney most auccenful aa4highly recommended kidney remedy
A Georgia CAMT J Taylor
E Church St Sanderivllle Qa tayiV
kidney andMadder withdull nagging
Some day I vcouldnt do myhousework Iildn y itcretlona Uunnatural and gve ftme no end of annoy tJ fi
tried Seventhreraedlei butout relief until Itook Doan KidneyIllli Two boiercured me und what li better 1 havePutt no ilgn of kidney complaint sinceI am now
Doan at Any Store 54e Ba-
I BUFfALONYi
The Wretchednessof ConstipationC-an overcomeCARTERS LITTLEUVER PILLS
Purely vegetableact and
gently on theCure
Head-acheness and IndIgestionSMAM PILL fRKX-
Geeuine must bear Signature
m1TTIIEIVERFILLS
HAIR BALSAMtoilet prtputtlon of intrll
rFadedHaMbaadtLHatDrenli-
taACHU
sriiiln cer
td o JJ
71
i
rD atl t
Sir
or
The
apse I doctored
ctD 0A N J IUD h
c
4
her 40 thdt tUty tS
ti
tc
v
I rslea duu1111ffColDr 1
fAfl P kiA ort
FlitDrTtIOtlASItGItUN
EYE P f Jll ioI
j
tL
itjI
J0 c
Ic
r
Laid Bnotice
s
and narcotic S
starchpie
J
h
Petarsa
8torpr
back-ache
were
r
stillnut
a
FOsTER MIL8uRNco y
a
IThTCflC
Ihv
SMALL DOSE
nip
0 n-TTRFATEPttiaallygtteaeitek
t tb eg enure lieInlalol6 da Trtaltreatmentsent
LitHGrusskMjuIs0MisiltIIid-
h J-a
>>
¬
<>
>
<
+
+
<
+
+
+