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WAR WONT END | U-BOAT MENACE German Official Says it Will Still Threaten England — HERO IN 2 WARS | | | e ie to the énémy, bullets entting allabont | Bank of Germany {6 adyertisihg in him, and signalled firingdirections to| the newspapers to beseech the ‘public the cruiser Dolphin.’ By iny to’ hand in gold and jewels for re}. 2 i f: BUY W. 8, 8. plenishment of the’‘bank's gold re- GERMANY BEGS FOR serve. It is declared the sacrifice is GOLD AND JEWELRY. | urgently required, x * . (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) 5 Sr es Sa Amsterdam, July 31—The Imperial Tribune Wanc Ade Bring Reauite. von: SOME POINTERS ON LIFE SAVING FIVE HILLION FOR RELIEF OF __ DROUTHREGION Farmers of Stricken Sections in North Dakota Will Share in the Fund First Aid Methods in Resuscitat ing 2 Drowning Person It is as essential for the bather to know how to resusitatea drowning person as it is to know how to get him out of the water. Getting a drowning person from water beyond his depth is usually a question of the swimming strength and endurance of the rescuer combined with his ability to. grasp the various situations which may confront him and act accordingly. Few definite rules can be laid-down for this, as differerit conditions govern the actions of the rescuer. 4 bi The rescuer must, of course, avoid being dragged down by the drowning person, and may be compelled to use force in avoiding the frenzied clutchings of the endangered person: x ey xe . (By Newspaper. Enterprise Ass'n.) Berne, . Switzerland, July 31.—The | submadine menace will not be a, thing of the past even when peace treaties are signett/andiarmies are ‘demobiliz- ed. Germany will still keep her U- boat, forcas intact,.ready to -bejaunch- ed forth at any moment at thé order. of the junkers, | ~ These weré the statements of: Prof, Hermann Legy, said to be a repre- sentative of the German admiralty, at a notable gathering in Munich. Speaking of the posstbility of a trade War: after ithe present war, the Professor said; “Though there may be no <official hoycott of German goods, England will, neverthelags, endeavor to’ injure German trade ‘fn all posstble.-ways. Against this, there is only one rem- edy. The submarine danger must be hung ‘perpetually over Great Britain like the’ sword, of Damocles, to de- prive her effectually of all inclination to assume an attitude detrimental'to German international trade. “Great Britain cannc: spare the men or the money to transform herself ipto an agricultural land able to support herself. It. would be foolhardy ‘for j her to run into a new war when Ger- nian submarines would cut’ off her sources of supply. “Under such eonditions -the ,threat € so of another submarine war. -would be a < enough to keep the British empire nee: = This le the Cap complaisant “towards German wishes and.-would enable Germany. to. pro- : . Try the good taste of CERVA today. ; + , LEMP manuracturers ST. LOUIS/ am — BANK WORKING OUT PLAN "The final triumph in soft drinks, Has the good wholesome taste-ot bops. 2 Sparkling, bubbling — absolutely pure. “Ask for it today and have it served at your meals.. : , Minneapolis, ‘Minn., July 31.—Farm- ers of western Nétth Dakota and Mon- tana, whose crops were injured, will be sure to receive adequate financial help soon, bankers said today, follow- ing a Washington announcement that President -Wilson will place $5,000,000 at the disposal of the treasury depart- ment for the purpose. . Curtis L. Mosher, assistant reserve agent of the Federal Reserve bank, who has heen working out-details of ~a plan recently announced by Govern- or Wold for helping the western farm- ers, said that the matter is now be- fore Washington. $3 Acre to Be Loaned. The interest shown by President Wilson is further and important rec- ognition of the necessities of the cage, Mr. Mosher said, but is entirely aside from and disassociated with the plans of the federal bank. President Wilson, it was announced. purposes making relief moves through the Federal Land bank, St. Paul, to be loaned to farmers at the rate of. $3 ar | ‘acre, in sume not greater than $10 to $450, according to amount of land held and the necessities of the indi- vidual cases. Bank Has Relief Plan. Mr. Mosher said the federal bank plan is somewhat different bu like the ‘other aims at getting sitet to Jahier quite without credit, whose maintain- ance as producers for next year’s crop FRENCH CITIES ARE GROWING is desirable and can be etioctet by | ik Gt a financial relief sufficient to tide them through the winter and give them : ' \ beams Hisam are something to start ithe: L91S "crop wita. E migration. ~ —_— rirwrtrerg ae statistics ane ae i PATRIOTIC GREEK MAKES tions-of the secondary cities and towns READY 0 FIGHT BOCHES of, France, completed before the exo- 7 dus from Paris began, show an extraor- : inary iicréase witg chiefly to the Spokane, Wash. — James L. immigration of foreign and colonial Dorgan, a subject of Greece, is workmen employed in ‘munition and in a training camp preparing to other factories, fight for Uncle Sam against the Marsefltes, with about 600,000 Inhab- Germans, Four years ago he ; Itants when the war began. has now & came here frow Athens with only population of ‘more than 1,000,000, a-slight knowledge of the Eng- | With the magy*_refugees «from the lish’ language. In these four | towns about Paris, evacuated. because years he was graduated ftom the | of.the German-advance. and with some public schools “and the high of. the population’ ét* Paris which’ flew school,. While attending , school >he worked in a newspaper office : and accumulated $600. He also Just Think W hat 22,022 Miles. Gute i z Serg. Major John Henry Quick, of the U. S. marines, who has’ been cited for bravery by General Persh- ing. for taking a truck load of ammu- nition into Bouresches, near Chateau Thierry, over a road swept by artti- lery and machine gun fire, was a hero of thé war of 1898.He was award- edthe*Congressional ‘medal of \honor for his conduct in fighting at Cusco Cuba, in -June, 1898, . Quick stood against the sky on a hill-with his back SSS A fot health, i Order a cqseat Stdtuegste ate 4 y can fact atall pares are 60) jtect her trade. effectively. ty we ss. ~ MISSOURI VALLEY GROCER “COMPANY : Mandan, N. D,-) , BaLToqoar, Mo. Gteak Teach — Gfor 35¢ 3 for 20¢ ¢ Distributors After getting the body to shore grasp it around the waist and compress, as showr in the above picture, raising the body as far as possible with the | head hanging downward. This will cause water from the lungs and stomach | to run from the mouth and nose. Raise and lower the body several times. inevéased its population from, 580,000 fi Ge tn'740,000, without ‘including additional Pa y; thousands inthe’suburbs. Bordeaux's x . o mt “More Miles on Tires’ | Population; basi sen, from. 261.678 :to You:haye read of course, ‘that the ‘life’? 325,000, andthe. :subtrban parishes aviation motor is150 flying hours. have grown, from: $8,520: to 120.855. Hah irc eat Z ene Havre: has: increased: from 186,159 to 159,000 ‘withou ing the: garrison of*"30,000" torét ‘and * 80,000 ‘ ref- ugees, mostly. Bel ns. Maxwell GRANDDAD IS : STILL © YOUNG : Readily. ‘Accepted @ In, Engl neers’ Corps In’United Stated Army, = - : Cars S-Passenger Car»: 6 02) Roadster. . see OD 5-Passenger, with All-Weather Top ° | 3° Road with All-Weather Top. 0 5-Pase. Sedan - + 178 ¢Pase' Town Car = 1278 AN pricest.o & Detroit _ Wire wheels lar egeipuncet nie ph ret oe _ And:you must-know that ga aviation motor repre- tetrad highést- development of: gasoline engine SAILORS EAT SEAWEED Victims of Hun Submarine Drift Eleven Days. ; f°, Must be—to withstand such. ‘strains for sb long— “ :* "for. When’ you : considér all’ ‘the’ condition: “that otor 4 150 flying. hours constitutes. a ‘terrific: feat’ of Wee \ ‘ $ é roe Figured in miles-at the rate of speed our own Lib- erty motor has shown—144 miles per hour—it is 21,600 miles, ‘ cae: Crew of Norwegian Vesgel Picked Up iin Midocean in Pitiful Condition. - Spokane, Wasb.—When James A House- of. Clinton, Mont., bade his friends goodby and started to War af- ter he enlisted, he had to kiss a round of grandchildren, along with the other relatives he ‘left behind. Mr. House has'a son’in service ‘and thrée ‘daugh- ters in thelrown ‘homes, and. yet ‘14 possessed of the Ebi and phystcal? qualifications ‘that made him eligible for a place in. Uncle Sam’s army and An Atlantic Port—he Norwegian Turn the body on the stomach and compress the sides. This will force steamer Augvald, 2,098 tons, bound) the remaining water from the lungs and produce artificial respiration. Re- from @ French port for Baltimore, has | peat this operation several times, fallen @ victim to a German subma- i rine. A transatlantic liner brought the news of the sinking of the Augvald in midocean and also landed 11 members of the crew of 27 men. Three of the crew were drowned and the remaining 18 are unaccounted for. The rescued men were picked up by the liner after having drifted help- lessly for 11. days, subsisting most of that time on seaweed and rainwater wrung from their clothing or caught in their caps. They were in an ex- hausted condition when picked up, but by careful nursing on board the lHuer they had fairly recovered when’ they reached here. According to the crew the steamer ‘was stopped by shell fire, the crew or- dered into two boats and the ship was sunk with bombs. Captain Egge of the Augvald left the ship with 12 men in his boat and it became separated from the other Nfeboat containing 14 of the crew. For two days the\latter boat drifted about and was then upset in a storm. Three of the men were swept, away and the others managed to right the boat and bale it out. They lost all their food and fresh water and even their oars were gone. Drifting helplessly, the men began to suffer for want of food and water. | Seaweed was eagerly snatched up and chewed and every device they could think of was resorted to to catch ratn- water, There was a succession of rain- storms and the men were almost con- tinually drenched. Day after day went by and finally the rescue ship came ever the horizon and the exhausted and starving men were soon safely on the deck of the liner and given every comfort. And in order to; sustain jts load in the air that - motor is working to capacity all the time. r Now consider ‘the performance of that Maxwell motor which, in 44 consecutive days and nights: Was .readiiy accepted‘for the engineers’ ee ae oa wi eae Teplacement company when he offered | pevecy 21-022 salesl . himself to’ the Missoula recruiting of- 2 Se hea: ie Tt is.a strange fact but.true—as any metallurgist will demonstrate for you—that a motor,’ like @ man or an horse, will dg better with a rest:from time to time. H $850 for a Tree. Edinburg. Ind.—The W. T. Thompson Veneer: company here has just boasht from Wabashi ‘college at Crawfordsville a walnut treé:for which it paid $050, The tree ison’ the mpus, which is+ made up in part of native forest growths. , Its body. will be cut into alr- plane, stock, while the stump: willbe made into veneer for/plano cases: \W. ‘f. Thompson, head of the ‘local “com: pany, suy he regards ‘the tree as ‘the Anest. of ite kind Jn Indiana, -; AUY W. 8,8. “ Sour stomach, clogged up bowels, pimples, blackheads,. foul. breath -are evils. of.constipation. Ht days and nights upset the stomach—you become constipated, peevish, eross. Don’t suf fer, Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will. purity. your. stomach, clean: your powelss restore your appetite. Bres- lows. - For motors and the metals of which thi remade, , are also subject to'‘fatigue.”” mn we apt So the crucial part of that test was in its constant Tunning—not a moment's relief allowed from the se heat to -cylinders or the motion ce reciprocating z ‘WESTERN‘SALES COMPANY , _Bismarck,N. D Our records show’ many cases where, according to Owners’ statements, motor cars have gone 100,000 miles—150,000 and even 200,000 miles. a But we don’t cdnsider those cases exceptional, Turn the body on the back, grasp the wrists and press against thé lower chest at the diaphragm, working them up and:down. This produces artificial respiration. In case a pulmoter. is not available these methods will-be‘found adequate, except’ in extreme cases, Any Maxwell motor car will live to do. if oiled and given reasonable ° oe et BUY W.S &.- ee: _ Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. And we are frank ‘to. concede thakes of cars can show similar mileages—for,:as indicated above, intermittent service’ with reste between, is what the car is intended todo, it some other Piano Playing. | ; No instrument has such a vast Ht | In some parts of Mexico “air‘plants” eratare, us rich and voluminous, 18 | abound. These curious growths, are the pane, and more people are teach | never attached to the soil. in any way, ing and studying It than any other | put rely for their moisture on tle: ate instrument, The reason that, in spit One - kind, _knéwn as of its popularity, there are only few | vd's Beard’ (Tillandsia usneo- who play it well and artistically 18 | fdes), attaches , itself “to. telephone that the majority of people consider | Wires, Very often the growth becomes Piano playing mre as a means Of) 9 positive nuisance, and it Is’ neces- amusement and a pleasant: diversion | sary.to send men to clear it away. The . than as a medium with, which it is) «gnahiard’s Beard” has) no” proper Patience, kindness, generosity, hu- possible to. produce the, deepest | ioe LR ae fees millity, courtesy, unselfishness, good ings and the highest in art. \ Ne a Eel ase ae ar en temper, guilelessness, sincerity—these Cah came j Mass of green gray th make up the supreme gift. the stature Seay. | World. Air Plants. That is normal service. . . But to withstand the terrific fatigue involved in that 44 consecutive days and nights “non-stop” test; and to coves, with four pastehgers, © 22,027 miles; and, doing that, to average on _. Of gasoline too—that car aust | A Many Qualities Needed. ! deliciously flavo toasted “just right,” You will like them —they..re- BUY W. 8, $.———"* of the perfect man, You will observe that all are in relation to life, in rela- tion to the known today and the near tomorrow, and not: the unknown etern- ity—Montreal Herald. Garbage ‘Utilization. Hogs canbe made ‘to, utilize much | eatable material which would other | wise be wasted, according to a state- | ment issued by the Connecticut Agrie cultural college. The report calls at- tention to the saving accomplished in| Minnenpolis, where between~ $50,000 and $60,000 is saved annually-by using swine to consume the garbage of the city instead ‘of burning it. Whereas Minneapolis formerly’: operated its garbage disposal at a loss, the city now receives $1.26 per ton for its gar if bage as hog feed. Silent Clock. A .new. clock -has been invented silent. driven by an electric battery, and a which is absolutely drop of mercury) moving end in a vacuum tube to take con- tacts, replaces the usual capement. NOTICE Beginning. Aug. 1 the phone number call for Jos. Schneider’s grocery will be No: 36.. Mr. Sc number was 51. BUY W. 8, §,———— L a see ‘Trade supplied by tho Armour Grain, Company Chi cage Retramber, Atmour's Oats cook in 10 to 1 ticking es- 15, wieastes ¢ from end to store hneider’s: old | =