FIRST BATTLE FOUGHT BIG LINER SEEKS King Albert Takes Troops — Barbarities German Commander Proclamation To People. Command Of Charged. Issues jrussels, via Paris.—Several sand dead and wounded is the toll paid | by the German Army of the Meuse for | its attack on Liege. The Belgians made a heroic repulsing the ans after heavy and | continuous fighting The fortified defense, | Gern position of Liege had to support the general shock of the] German attack. The Belgian forts re sisted the advance fiercely and did not | suffer. One Belgian squadron attack ed and drove back six German squad rons, Belgian troops fought like lions. first detachment of Uhlans the country was cut to & group of ten commandin the German side seven the first hour. Eight hundred are being transfer Liege, where they The Germ The Qut of g officers on killed in pieces, were wounded Germans | red to the city will cared for. tted repressions fown | of | be ans commi against the civil popula of Vise, eight miles burning t! ity and of the residents tion of the northeast 12 ( shooting German General Appealed To People lefore battle Emmich, army of the ing people: “To troops frontier ready been who, disgu automobiles to avoid a conflict between { have always allies. Remember the your country’s “But we must The destruction of bridges railroads must be acts, | Meuse will not you. We wish tack those who attack us i that Belgian populat have to suffer the hor will pay will of f have deepest “Your show vent your into the the General von commarl German Met y prociamation 0 »t follow sigian Germ igian neutral violated by Fr ised, entered t Our greatest been friends Water armies helped independ German ence have free passage tunnels or as \n army of th called upon to fight road to at guarante ion will no We and our soldiers best considered hostile hope the Germa be for an onan an open the t rors of war for provisions ss show themselves to be the riends of a people for whom we the greatest esteem and the sympathy and pri ide nes you that it is your country f ors of war.’ IN COMMAND hort KITCHENER Premier Asquith Will Ask For $500,000 More. eld Marshal Earl Kiteh appointed Secretary of London.—Fi ener has State Earl succeed Viscount of the to take president board Premier Asquith announced that the British government would ask an- other credit of $500.000.000 Premier Asquith in the House of Commons, after giving a summary of the war news already published, said that the Belgian government had in vited the co-operation of the Fren troops with the Belgian army and had given orders to the Belgian provincial government not to regard the move ments of the French troops as a viola tion of the frontier been War hamp was appointed Morley as pr council and Walter Run the of John B of local for Jeatic to esident iciman irns as government place the for GERMAN STEAMER SUNK. | Luise, Liner, Koenigin Hamburg. American | Sent Down. London.—It was officially announced | that the British cruiser Amphion has | sunk the Hamburg-American Line steamer Koenigin Luise, which had been fitted out for mine laying Passenger Ship. New York.-—The Koenigin Luise, ac-! cording to Hamburg-American Line | officials here, was a small passenger ship of 2.000 tons registered, which for several years had been in service fron Hamburg to the summer resorts on the German coast. of about 30. she was la Hambuig. CRUISER PANTHER SUNK. French Fleet Off Algiers Destroys Ger. man Warship. London. — A dispatch to the Chronicle from Paris says that after bombarding the Algerian town of Bona, the German cruisers Goeben, Breslau and Panther were caught by British and French squadrons which had been awaiting them, The French warships captured the Goeben and Breslau and sunk the Was Small Panther. Message Sent To Kaiser Before Cable Was Cut, But To Make Sure That He Gets It Wireless Will Be Tried. President the Washington Wilson formally offered services of United States Government to the war the sire now or at conflict to dis He any future time in the ‘uss terms of peace tendered what “good offices.” principle, would is technically if ac followed ntatives of wil the play the of Ww hich, De of represe cepted by a conference +) . eo UTror th Europe would powers of in ch role mediator Under which all The Hague Europea i are SiN convention nati atories, 1S exce] ervia nation is permitted time aven international offices I of to tender her good NE powers Form Of Offer Given. Acting under the terms convent the William of Hague on cabled Emperor udden 4 reed BRITONS SEIZE GERMAN SHIP, Bark Sailed From New York Cargo Of Case Oil England A British seized the German bark New York July The Perkeo flew the the first time less than a month ago From the time she was built, in 1%01, until a day or so before she sailed from New York last month she was a British vessel, her name being the Brilliant and her owners being a firm of London Her new own ers were Lacisz & Hamburg With y iover wa rails warship Jerkeo, which 18 for Hamburg fia yf German r importers Co. 100,000 VOLUNTEER IN CANADA Meets Quick Response. Ottawa. Hu Ontario Col Samuel ghes, Minister of Militia, announced 20,000. men for services abroad. Men are to report to the officer command. in each district. Colonel Hughes from more than 100,050 men. A Singer's Appeal. Ernestine opera - Mme grand Chicago. ~ mann-Heink, Schu- singer, assistance to get out of Germany. The German singer, American, went to Beyreuth to sing ug a divorce dn Chicago from William Rapp, Jr. HOLD WOMAN AS SPY. Of Norwegian Fortresses. Stockholm. —~ Word was received here of the arrest at Oestersund, in North Sweden, of an Austrian woman, who 1s accused of being a apy in the service of Russia. Her name ia Julia Kos, and she Is said to have traveled throughout Norway on horseback. Photographs of the Norwegian fort resses and maps were found in her possags an. ’ go of Gold and Many Pas- sengers, in Safety. TURNED BACK { Cruisers of Powers at War—Too Rich a Prize to Be Overlooked— Had to Sail Through Fog Without Lights. Bar Harbor, Me.—The K ein Cecelie of the North German Lloyd line, with a cargo of $11,000,000 and full list of passengers, arrived safely in the harbor here, having crept in under cover of fog and night, and dropped anchor. The liner, her stacks painted to resemble an English warship, porthole blanketed to cover the ii returned to America after being halted in midocean by wireless messages stating that capture by English or French warships was probable She feared to put in at New York or ton, Capt. Charles Pelack desperate run through cape capture. black every ghts, Bos. made a fog to es the Was an Eventful following written for Haggard Voyage. The of age account was the Chil Sewell iar EImMopoiitan who was a The 1.454 £060 passenger Kronprinzessi passengers {1 nm Re wid gilver of New Y + harbor at ten ng of to ork 1 morn all was £* herbourg war jority being English some lation happen of ¢ and BCAre WAS on, of her firstcabin and German specu as to clared wii Persons fami i can war precedent leaving clared by rt were in prize courts A Say Voyage, bute speculation sh yecame ae Atl voyage th trip across ne a dance each ana Ger n Pa the smok! hope to of the diffi The w knots the first day eather was FOO the third king re utes past ter startled bs ship was being tu some gors were rned arou unced discovers to be laughed 103+ 94 A020 ann ly At the huge face at Captain king room Ik a appeared to Pol He Hittle n ack entered carried ore erect: si his his be a little more se than usual he rious “Gentlemen.’ sald, “1 want an announgement to make. War has broken out between England, France, Russia and Germany, and we are going back America We have plenty of coal and | think we will get back safely. | want the gen. tlemen to assist me in allaying fears of the women.” News a Shock. uttered a sound for what be a very long time 1 was seated at a table with an English. man, a Bavarian and a Greek The Bavarian, a kindly faced gentleman of perhapa fifty, was the first to break the silence. He arose; we all arose: he grasped each by the hand, the Englishman last, and as he grasped the Englishman's hand he sald, very intensely, “I am sorry, very sorry. Afterward It was learned that he was Major General Kristof Kiefeber, retired, of the German army The Englishman makes his living selling After the captain left the smoking room an American ap it were not possible to buy the ship, here your attention i have to the No seemed one to That the passengers, her $11,500,000 of gold and silver con- there any COST OF WAR IN DOLLARS A——_————— Admitting Possibility of Struggle Last. Ing Five Years It Would Mean One Hundred Billion Dollars. Poston.—-A leading financier counts the cost of a general European war as follows: Iconoclasm beyond all belief and ravages of the most heinous propor tions await the world in the impend- ing war in Burope. Inviting as is the incentive to dwell upon the social to enil “ and French warships down the American coast what were the And so it went No one could answer, but the tions were asked over and over again. But what of the bridge? What golng on there? The ship was 8 mouth when she She would have reached that port Sunday night or Monday morning The problem confronting Captain Po- lack was to get his load of gold and souis back to America with out being overhauled by a French or English warship. There was an- swer from England, it {8 true, he did not know It. Couldn't Use Wireless. could not afford to messages because he could interce coming out of the admonished him told him that Fre vessels were chances of slipping ques was 50 miles out of Ply. turned back no but He send would pL. Every message air Sayville careful; they to be nch and already talkin the Kronprin- with her gold on board. Friday night he considered himself reasonably safe He steered far the north, out of the beaten path took po further precautions the usual Marconi ne« omitted and lunch passenger f« printed the would be turned ot Lo but Saturday sWEDADEr Was Sac 3 that it ar and tha the table at und a notice electric lights that night in order to irentity from passing vessels, we must be content There were conceal with oll amps re make of with tha sent the no deck matiers the lHghts. To worse from the standpoint yo was to broug passengers, ! urday for the for king of the He best 5D boat pee it a dense capiall along at thse gh make throu weather gers were speculat! ¢ Or Tt headed ng debated ndicated wireleas ipt to make had to make fragments of information as he c« grab from the | first came to knowe air his mind, but then he He favored a less ard of Bar Har but he was not water thereabouts And Ledyard Blair of Blair | New York Mr. Blair's Blair, has a summer A of course, had he rt i he f here enters C bankers, father, D. C at Bar Harbor their yacht in that he knows as well as he does in uratively speaking, Mr took the helm Heads for Bar Harbor. Wea were headed for Bar Harbor, but the information was confined to the bridge We folk below were not even told to pack our luggage hose who stayed awake could tell that something was in the wind We were taking soundings every little while Evidently we were running into some place that we were not quite sure of The fog was thick, and the fog horn was crying out every minute. Then daylight, and the fog lifted Mra. Howard Hinkle of Cincinnati and her daughter were awakened by the unusual doings. She got up and peered out of a porthole. She could gee land “1 do wish we would land at Bar Harbor,” she sald to her daughter. Mrs. Hinkle has a cottage at Bar Har era, me led ofter the sons had sai these waters his way around Wall Ledyard and fo there Fig- Blair street She took another look. around about seemed familiar. “Why, it is Bar Harbor,” she exclaimed. curse of the strife if extended over Europe, the cold calculator of results in figures is content to point the moral of the condition by naming the war in the terse descriptive. A Twenty billion-dollar War. This {a the conservative estimate of a general war, the kind of war that is now impending. Should the strug. gle last five years one hundred billions of dollars would be needed for the cost. wn — Miko. WILSON LAID T0 AEST Funeral Services at the White House Were Private. CABINET AS PALLBEARERS Remains to Rest Where President's Wife Spent Many Of her Girlhood Days—Services Meld in East Room. Washington, D. C for Mrs. Woodrow President noon at 2 in a few happy Funeral services wil held the son, wife of the Monday after White Ho where were o'clock at 186 the historic East Room, but ARO of her daughter Sayr re months she marriage Francis B Tuesday where Mrs, W girthood days and father The witnessed ( Jos to The interme Was afternoon at ilson and where are buried Ret t vices a the private, but were Cabinet Sylvester who ms McAdoo i 31,000 SHIPS ON ALL WATERS. World's Carrying Power Twenty Years } i ah.yvear period foreigr to $4,225.00 American JO GOD TOO ITALY WITH WILSON Heartily Approfes Of Mediation Ofer and Will Give Him Its Support Rome (via London President Wil. son's offer of mediation in the Europe an conflict is warmly ived by the talian government and will be heartily supported should the opportunity offer ‘or its application. The offer of medi ion by President Wilson has produced an rece excellent effec Washington China, through her sgation here, has approved President Wilson's action in extending good of compose the European war through mediation or arbitration. This approval was expressed to Secretary Bryan today by Minister Kal Fu Shah Hees to velopments In East Mazatlan, Mexico The Japanese cruiser Idzuma is coaling at Manzanillo, Ee EN RE rl GERMAN POSSESSION SEIZED. British Ganture Port Lome, On the African Gold Coast. London. —A British force on the Gold Const, West Africa, has seized Port Lome, German Toholand. The seizure of Port Lome was made on instructions from the British Colonial Office. No resistance was offered by the Germans, who simultaneously surrendered Southern Toholand to a distance of 76 miles from the coast / CUTICURA SOAP And Cuticura Oint They afford complete satis faction to all : them for a « scalp, good hair, white hands en $ 1 1 WHNo rely 1 i. iar Si 1 i “a Nia 1 up Jia " i iy i a3 nd ail Samples Free by Mail ER'S HAIR “BALSAM 1 preqwr L pe 1 ere in 2 For Restor] ny f Colo wr med Beauty to Kiray s or F —— Hair, Boe. wud § rug ROCK COULDN'T FEAZE HI¥ sunded OY irighman Who “Couldn't We Do the Cooking You avoid fussing over a hot stove— Save time and energy— Have a'dish that will please the home folks! A package of Post Toasties and some cream or good milk —sometimes with berries or fruit— A breakfast, lunch or supper Fit for a King! i Ee To ts com cooked and toasted— Ready to eat from the package— Sold by Grocers.