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Show Have Your Old Jexvelry Made Over Into New Pieces... rr-& 'fY'"1"" 4pW"Ni 4 f: .T ' aafcwse AMERICA W1L,L WIN WAR, DE. CLARES HOOVER, BECAUSE OF SUPERIOR RESOURCES. , f i your orders LOYAL TROOPS COMPELLED TO BEFORE GROUND GIVE . . i It is perfectly safe' to send fey mdll. BOYDPARK STRONGER FORCES. POUNOCO IQfiit Voluntary Household Economy and Organization In Advance of of Legislation Insures Final Success for the Allies. v Washington. French Troops in the Aisne Region Have Turned in Vicious Counterattacks Against the Army of the German Crown Prince. America will win the 50 srlevdid ill H'fu. Vw. . 1 Preparing for (how time" lu the American In France. 2 1rof. Hiram Bingham of Yule, noted explorer and educator, who heads the dlvNiou of military cuinp aeronautics achool of ttn aviation section, signal corjis, 3 A monument erected at Verdun to the unknown heroes of the One Hundred and Twelfth French Infantry, who fought flo nravel there. 4 Alrn Uionuis W. (Jrejfory, wife of the attorney ueneral in the costume of the food administration. . IN I DEPENDiNciDAY t ELE BRATI 0 N IN hur-russe- rru. Rand TarTs Independence day ceremonies in the Invalldes at Paris, when the flag of the Americans who have fought in the Foreign legion of France was handed to General Niox to by placed In the chapel. Left to right are General Niox mirul Lacaze, General Pershing, President Poincare and Ambassador Sharp. At the right an American soldier Is Wen talking with u wounded lsillu. Ad-bee- n Much is said about the comp iranve-lunimportant part played bv 0ld )5teel in the present war. The follow-ln- g passage from the article on Sur gery. Military, In the Nexv Interna-tionEncyclopedia, would seem to that conditions had not changed much Id that respect since the d y al the enemy. Evidently the preparations for the blood and iron policy of the government against the dissaffected troops shortly will he put Into full force, for Minister of War Kerensky is on his way to the Russian headquarters, there t6 confer with the military leaders to formulate plans to stay the retreat und compel the troops to stand and face the foe as the Russians in the southern Carpathian region are doing. Down along tills latter front theltussians, aided by the Rumalnians, coiftinue to force the Teutonic allies to cede ground, especially In the upper Put mi valley. French troops In the Aisne region have turned in vicious counter-attack- s against the army of the German crown prince, put down an offensive It had started between Hurtehise and lai Bovelle, and made good gains against It all along the line. Several attacks by the Germans in the Verdun sector were repulsed. The progress In Flanders for more than a week continues unabated. , Iti the air the machines of Great Britain and Germany are carrying out maneuvers never before seen. As an indication of the intensity of these aerial combats, thirty German airplanes were accounted for In the latest .Ightlng, In addition to two observation balloons. The British war office admits that thirteen of the royal air squadron failed to return to- their bases. The German war office asserts, British plaues however, that thirty-fivwere shot down. Franco-Prussia- n war; also that the Dur--ln- g fragments and subterranean mines. FACE DEATH TO AID WOUNDED i Surgeons, Ambulance Men and Nurses 1 Display GreaL Bravery In Work on the Firing Line. One of the splendid pages of this In letters of gold on the scroll of what physicians, ambulance men and nurses hnve done. .Lieut. Harold Peat, a Canadian who has seen two years of service on the French front, told audiences In Indianapolis that 974 cent of the wounded men are saved, and many of them are made so com- -' pletely fl$ that they can return to the firing line. It Is not alone because of the perfection of surgery that this re-suit Is possible. It Is more because of the bravery and the sacrifice of surgeons and their helpers. In the early stages of the war, when wars history will be written PITTED AGAINST WOMEN n -- j ! pH v biitltlOilimjlnAdu v UuIncy.Mass Is the first municipality in that unteio tackle the" fiMdproIdem farmer to consumer market, opcned ln the historic Adnms academy grounds. Housewives iuutwithapraftical comelo the market to buy their supplies ami nothing will be delivered. Each farmer will pay a rental of 20 cents on Wednesday and 30 ceuts on, Saturday for Ids space. Carry your own basket Is now the slogan of the citizens of Quincy. -- -- womens battalion arrived In Petro-gra- d Sunday, leaving their commauder, Vera Rutclikareff, and Marya Skryd-lof- f, a daughter of Admiral Skrydloff, former commander of the Baltic fleet and minister of marine, in a hospital the dressing stations and the temporary hospitals, were farther removed from the front, and out of, the range of enemy guns, physicians observed that a large number of soldiers were dying who, with immediate attention, could have been saved. Many of them , bled to death before they reached the dressing stations. There was only one thing to be done. The surgeons and their assistants, guided only by a sense of the high duty of their calling, did .y es' that Jhing.-- j They moved forxx-artabllshlng dressing stations in and Immediately behind the lines and In some instances erecting their hospitals within range of the enemy Are. at Vltebek. Interviewed HOSPITAL TRANSFERRED KERENSKY TO SOLDIERS TO PERSHING the women ,said It was reported that of the 200 of the command who reached the front only fifty remained. Twenty were killed, eight were taken prisoner and all the rest were wounded. EIGHT PERISH IN FOREST . FIRE. Teams Trapped in Lumber Camp When Fire Breaks Out. Ferule, B. C. Eight men are known to have perished and a number are missiug In a fire that swept the Spruce River valley, fifteen miles northeast of here, Sunday jifternoon. Sixty-odmen and about twenty teams were trapped In a camn of the Ok Lumber company, situated In a blind valley, and their flight oxer the mouutaiu was most difficult. s, , d u to-lea- v c couriers. The derision to close the frontiers is due to a desire to shut our suspects and undesirables who are flocking Into Itusslu, uml to prevent the criminals departure of many gpley-'annot at large whom the" government desires to arrest. Mother Follows to Grave Deformed Babe Doctor Refused to Save. Chicago. The death of Baby Bollinger, the hopelessly deformed infant, whose life a physician refused to save-i- n November. lrr,, fs believed 'to hnxe been resiof!sii,ie the death July 2j of Mrs. .Anna Bollinger, the babys mother. After the babys death. said Allen Prtilllnger-niy--wiffell into' settledT melancholy and wasted away, If ever a. woman died of u broken heart, she did. fr France Goes Scot Free. l0ring the week ending midnight July 22 not a single French vessel, either over or under KXKt tons,-walost. Six French merchantmen "were a t f a (kedti l ls Ti c c.s sf u y I ui lug" that time by submarines. s e "" SCRAPS. Belgians to Come to Oregon. "iT1TTreh'r oug lib Holland Mwn for co- 9ulsa The ThrnrvriF" To r ee Tbe- bi rireri- fdrw'tn Ihut of Pirn Cathedral, which is ofiuiRriU'b factories working for the land j f to Oregon from fe t in height. It was conndeted in "crx Ice : today there are lonization purjHses, It1 is aunouncm) by 15W. A natixe tree of South Amcrit a, . jho est n representative of a l.elglau col uni in cannonball tree, bears round, woody Canada-h- as the largest-forzation concern. the .world. It Is In the Labrador and fpdt xxhich (htsely resembles baseHudson Bay district, and is, roughly, balls. Premier Kerensky addressing the Tetanus Bacilli in Court Plaster. xxord Jewry miles. occurs The 1,700 1,000 several by Russian soldiers, xxhom he Is so desCourt plaster said to Washington. of gulls have worked all times in the Ajawriirypha and New Tes- perately strixing to recall to their duty Thousands La vp been distributed by German sym- t Inter for the health department 'f tament. but only once in the Old Tes- to Russia and civilization. Kerensky, pathizers hat! been found on chemical Green Bay, Vls disposing of the tament (Daniel 3:13). The saute x ho has been given dictatorial poxxers, analysis by the department of justice waste from fisheries at the rate of a word Is (Nowhere rendered Jm:nh and hurried to the front in 'Galicia to tty to contain tetanus germs. Samples wagon-loaIn three minutes. Judea hex !v the rout of hi to i U))t were obtained from different sections. w-n- T - -- mil f e i -- d . JShicagoansSwettering; Chicago Sunday was the hottest day of the .year In Chicago, the thermometer registering (Hi degrees lie--t ween 3 and 4 orhnk Sunday afternoon. No prostrations were reported up to a late hour at night. Fell Under Train. Puna. 111. The mangliHl body of an unknown man was found early Sunday morning along the right of way of the Chicago A Eastern Illinois railway at, the city limits of Pnnn. Both le- -s were cut off at the hips. New Mine Sweeping 'Device. A mine sweeping device, calculated to pick up and safely bring to surface of any mines that may be In the path a to vessels, is now being attached number of ships proceeding through the waters of the war zone. It la attached to the boxvs and when let down a netted projection extends dozen or more feet on either side of the ship. If a mine is encountered, is picked up and brought to the surface at a safe distance from the ves' sel. 1 SUCCUMBS TO' GRIEF." Baris. CnriWftThd11S3WI'!Tcf-'- ' . Franco-Prussla- Russian Heroines Surprised at Finding Amazons Among Prisoners. When the Russian Petrogrnd. womens battalion, known officially as the Command of Death, went Into action against the Germans near Smer-goJuly 25, they captured a number of women from whom It was learned for the first time that German women ulso were fighting on the buttlefront In western Russia. Ten wounded heroines of the Escape Petrogrnd. The prolMoual government, lu view of the existing has issued a decree closing until August the frontiers of Buj-sI13, Inclusive, both for persons deslr-- ' ing to euter and these wishing The u ly ele tlons-wl- ll be persons hobllug tbplo-matldiplomatic passjmrts and ugeerigWrTa general classes of wounds remain essentially the same. "Shrapnel wounds are like those of the old round leaden musket halls, because of their low velocity they are more frequently lodged In wounds than are rifle bullets. Shell wounds, as & class, are much less frequent, but far more severe than shrapnel wounds. Shell fragments cause complete destruction near the bursting point, but effect less damage In more distant zones. Both shrapnel and shell wounds are usually Infected, because the missiles carry Into the wounds pieces' of clothing and other foreign matter. The danger of Infection Is much Increased because of the greater extent of laceration. Wounds by bayonet, saber and lance occur so Infrequently as to be of minor Interest n the war there were only GOQ wounds by cold steel among 98,000 ' wounded. Grenades, thrown by hand, rifle and trench mortar, a revival in late wars of an earlier practice, recently have been used to a conspicuous extent In Flanders and France. Their wounds differ In no material particular from those of shell - WOMEN - , Auto Co, s.i, La,. t ganger of Infection, Men and 1 ? e Plan to Shut Out Suspects and Prevent 1 s w Shrapnel and Shell Fragments Cau$e Greatest Trouble Owing to Greater s, -- RUSSIAN FRONTIER CLOSED. ' all-Do- . FEW WOUNDS BY CG10STEEir" their recalcitrant former hrothcrs-ln-urmwhose main effort continues to he to get out of striking distance of V UTAH ENTERS DRY COLUMN. circum-btance- CARS Old -- al Leaders Say Prohibition Will Bring an Era of Prosperity. Lake Salt City. The slate of Ftnh went Into the dry column on August 1. The saloon now exists only In memory, Business men are confident that Instead of u periodjf depnwsion as the result of the banishment of John Barleycorn, prosperity will come along With prohibition. Much of the saloon property has already been rented for other business ventures, and many of those engaged In the liquor traffic Lave entered uhor. fields of endeavor. Bankers, In close touch with every phase of business life,' declare Jhoy feel no mlsghlngs for the future, hut, on the other hand, are certain pro-bit ion would he ltm;Hrinl. se4 cirs-Buto $900. t)on2!s$2M Outran! coadiflon-asterms r njtmin Write for deu led nrht tttm. Used Car Dept., 1 1 self-deni- Log f,rY BARGAINS IN USED -- y OFjmLhY SAIT tOO MAIN STRICT of apHaving retreated where from 0U miles proximately of Itussla, man Iron the Kerensky, concurried them in Ins personally the in present ducted drive early mouth, the Russian army on the center of the line in east Galicia is agaiti t mill sl(l(i.sTif .I i ill 11 il'M a 0 Mil i.s still being followed by Husiatjn, and the forces of the Teutonic allies. Likewise the armies to the n.Trtli and south continue to fall hack before the enemy. Wherever the faithful troops attempt to give buttle they are' by nunferlcully stronger forces of the Teutons and compelled to give ground, receiving no assistance from Herbert Hoover dtylared lu a statement Saturday, iicriuiM of Rs superior resources and through the ahll-Itof the American peojde to orgunic. The success, already evident, of the nation's voluntary food rntioervntlou effort, Mr. Hoover said, points to n w-a- Tlmi victory. Germany nccnmftlished less In this direction In twelve months, wdd Mr; Hoover, than our people have In four. The only need of legislation and authority Is to curb those who would profit by this voluntary movement. More than two million women, Mr. Hoover announced, have enrolled as members of (he food administration and pledged themselves to follow Its directions us to saving food within the household. Within sixty nays, he snld, many more millions will have become, ' members. . Success Question of Resources. No one can rightly he gloomy-ov- er the outcome for the American people In thfs war, said Mr. Hoover, Success iu lids war Is a question of resources uud the will and ability of the people to organize themselves to use them rightly and to endure. Many thinking Americans and the whole world has been watching anxiously the last four months In the fear that democratic America could not organize to meet autocratic Germany. Germany baa been confident that It could not be done, Contrary, proof Is Immediately at our door and our people have already demonstrated their ubillty to mobilize, organize, endure and prepare voluntarily and efficiently In many directions and Uhui a' mere word of Inspiration, aside fronythe remarkable assemblage of our urniy and finances. We entered the war four months ago and It was announced by the pres- Ident that one of the great problems of the war would he food. There has ho consequential national or lo-cal legislation, yet the greatest spun- taneous volunteer effort ever made In history has not only provided us wit! a larger stock of food supply as a result of patriotic planting In every quarter, but waste Is being eliminated out of every truck and cranny of our homes und of our Industries, and this Is being done without compulsion of the law, hut by spontaneous effort und of the people. Our present proscts Indicate an Increase of production of cereals by 850,000,000 bushels. Literally millions of new gardens have been planted or extended everywhere. We have the largest supply of vegetables ever In our history. MAKERS. Where They Make Anchors. The anchor does not at up-to-da- te all resemble Its familiar predecessor,, but is fitted with ball and socket joints Instead of having a shank, and Is made of a very strong cast steel. Mot of the anchors made in the United States Chesterr-Th- e . come, from the vicinity of b? anchor, which Is supposed to ten weighs the largest in the world, tons. -r s K XU Efforts Grubbs claims that he has always worked hard without being appred ated. Maybe hes like a singer with a voice. The harder he works, the worse he sounds. Inside Information. First Bank Director Our cashic has dropped half a million lu tn street. Second Bank Director How do yJ know? First Bank Director Im his broker- - OjftvP t. |