Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 13 Nov 1914, p. 6

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THE LAKE SHORE NEWS. FRIDAY. MQVEMBBK It. tfM. . An American Professor on the European APPLIGATIOM eheeadiei BEST FOR UWHS This Application Should Not Be Made Until After Frosts Have Stopped Growth of Grass. Hamburg Ball. BooeOToei prof--or at university of Berlin far lflS-ltUL as public aa article on the war. This article was reprinted in toe i*ewg at Bremen. Germany, on St pelted to submit Germany will re-establlsb trade ties. Betides, I by war toU from was made at the of Mr. A. H. Bowman by Dr. Gowda* Laughlin, instructor In German at Evanston academy. The article is ad follows; "In urgent self-defense, with a clear moral strength, are simply conscience and clean hands do « ^ The attitude of the peopla draw the sword.' spoke the German been a revelation. It the tut PLACE IT IN HEAPS Fine Ground Bone or Bone Mea! Is Best Substitute, Say the Experts. To stimulate the growth of a lawtt and to improve Its appearance for the following spring, no better treatment can be recommended than the appli- cation of properly rotted manure In the late fall, according to the United States department of agriculture's specialist. Thia application should not be made until after the frosts have Etoppod the growth of the grass. Ten to twenty two-horse loads should be applied to tho acre, according as the soil Is more or less rich. It is moist important. that the manure should be thoroughly rotted before application id that oil, weed seeds are killed; otherwise damage dene by weeds will more than offset the fertilizing value of the applica- tion. Manure . really needs careful handling before it la suited for spreading over the lawn. Unless it ft properly "composited" It may havo moat of Its valuable constftuontH de- atroyed by improper handling To "compost" manure properly it should be treated as follows: ->> ^ mow to Pile It. Pile all manure in heaps with alter- nate layers of sod or other litter. Keep it wet enough so it wilt not burn. Lft it stand a whole year through summer and winter, forking It over two. cr three times during the year. It will then be ready for use on the lawns and danger from weed seeds will be minimized. Many people object to tho use of manure at all, not only because of the danger from weed seeds, but be- cause of tt« - unsightly and insanitary appearance. These will undoubtedly prefer to Use something else, and the most economical substitute is finely ground bone or bone meal. This should be applied at the rate of from WWi pounds to one ton per acre, ac- cording aa the ground is more or less rich. It should cost between $25 and |30 a ton. With the hone meal, it Is desirable to use double the quantity of wood suites. These ashes contain consider- eble lime in a very desirab?e form, an well as other Valuable elements. How- kaiser deeply moved, mid sWaty in Germany Joyfully shouted, "" tor every German knows how Kaiser my,elf, havo seen. WUhelm and his counselora hare thousands of soldiers. sought, untiringly, year in and year teas 8tream was passing byr without out. to check the stream of un- baring beard an oath or profane word scrupulous slander under Ix»rd North, or without having seen ev< cliffe in England and of the sseassf aoldler. Mere and there, there waa boulevard criers in Paris, and to foe-; grim humor. There waa singing, hands ware grasped with a hearty "God be you for the Fatherland." There was much praying sad often one felt the earnest, resolute frame of mind which possessed every Individual, whan he pictured to himself the limitless pos- sibilities, of such a struggle for the tor good relations with both bora. : ,■-., *■ .. Thai Germany wished gad peace for her scientific develop- ment, every ode knows who is familiar in the slightest degree with the inner Ufe of Germany. Even young offi- cers, who are a certain peril ia that country, for young people tike to show, highest good ever, they ure apt to bo more or less what they are able to do, know In Germany only too wen what the war signifies and how great is the risk of evoking It needlessly. It has been the most yearning wish of the kateer to live and die as a kaiser. He has read German history thoroughly and wanted finally to pro- cure only calm for Germany, tor Ger- many baa no natural borders, hat la hemmed In between the barbarity and brutality of the Russian kingdom on the one aide and limitless vanity and presumption of the Parisian popu- lace on the other. But Germany haw acquired science aa a bride. Her trade and her war-like appearances are not Incidental appearances, but are scientific productions like he? dic- tionaries, her universities and liar culture. Business grew up. The most beautiful ships which the world had aver seen were her pride and bar legitimate Joy. England's national Jealousy accompanied vtvrt forward atop and England's unfitness refused to submit Itself to the Iron discipline which is peculiar to the German. It Is utter folly to maintain that Austria and Germany maliciously aft* kindled this terrible world war. Neither wanted war, bat Kussla'a barbariouB "upper ten" needed It to order to provoke revolution wherever possible. England's blind counselors wanted it in order still to maintain the upper hand and to down the labor party and in order to satisfy the base misdeed of a contemptuous, malicious aa hnaost erttjetoas ttat hoe fen by the critics of at tenet l«*tt daily which hi the taw Pasted past far-- fbjejnjfei am g#> takably the fact at of trained writers, whoae Isaatoesa to to see. compare and crittoiae plays tor the benefit of tatty believe that Bud Ftther"* now y^--»tiy.fr--«»« cartoon ensiled mas Ttoftgste ssadert caea- edy by Mr. Owe HU1. is the one and only real musical comedy hat of « worid of theatricals. Public interest to Plaber-s dally cartoons baa never msgansrem smmwai nsanaj pr**, fagged during the tear year* It baa atoa «b» stagebws ««r 4stt. ft m beanrsamh^lasaorothanathoussnd cosaea te the Victoria commeaok, of the moat prominent pabftoattens la; flaaisy atsOsea, Maw. IS, to stay #£% fhernaatry. His two clever character! week, Don't mlas It is good advice. *ans*s""a"«wps"ew*is*«ss^ 'W^aBa1! toey rearaasau aethw to ■■JSP: sjaaw at a gem la ta* aaasu ot a «-■■■« arose wtta a amaw to real fife. "atett aad .Jeff la H^Z. te the title of the M Waring .£1 Gas Hill ha. prepared at the coal* **«antog now the ot national dafmairr bito great wave of tho national Scarcely will there be a hearth that w ill not shard the sorrow aad horror of Immortal remembrances which are bound indissolubly with the soldier's grave. .The German mother, wife end sister bate all war. Have they not been compelled for years to weep hitter tears over numberless graves, in which He toe beat, the ■•bleat aad the dearest, because their fathers, their husbands and sons wanted to be free, and the Fatherland waa their greatest possession? Bat now the German wives without tears give their husbands, fathers, brothers sons to the war, tor when now Germany places her sword with honor in the sheath no worid congress will rob her of her reward and no sham pretext of "equilibrium in Europe" will enable England to steal the chestnuts which others have brought out of the Ire, And these German women will be able to sleep peacefully to the Arm consciousness that peace, which baa cost so much, lies to the strong band of German brothers and sons. Tn this world straggle, little, dirty, semi-barbaric Servla has almost been forgotten. Her misdeeds, however, are only pretext for Russia and England. For years flervla has carried on a non- sensical, cowardly Incitement against Austria. She baa wanted to clothe her selfish final alma with the magnifi- cent name "Panslevism." Russia has always assisted this movement, halt openly, half secretly. Finally came, also, the murder of the sueoesapr to class in England. Instead of concern- ^ AuatrUo ^n*: BOt M ^ m tag herself about the extreme necee- ^ ft faBatlCf bat M tm> ^.^ & a elty of the education of the average MlnWmrbarous conspiracy, and Atta- fifift*1..1^ TOltog claM •CCOTnmo'! trie's cup of bitterness was fuB, It dated tself to>the unscrupulous land wouW bave B, lfle<| Wvolatlon to ?T" ^ beC*°"r to*,4b"ge'£m Vienna if Austria had demanded no of the reactionary university I»»^ Ltonem«nt The BervUn mm de. to Oxford and Cambridge And then , %^ ^ ., war mBmwrtr. one stupidly wonders why Germany; baa obtained so much? Instead of beginning a noble competition to edu- cation and service, the so-called "lib- eral" government has continued the to shoulder with all parties. They sacrifice their their homes, their leaders for the eoa Thay vowed to the kaiser to until death tor the rigbteoue The kaiser gait them forth, not to fight for him. bst with bin, tot ft* at at the front with bis six sons, and these ■<«« streggle not in a safe In the rear, but they toad their brave eoidtore where tod danger la tbe great- est on land and sea. Two princes, relatives of the kaiser, havo already fallen, and princo and count, baron and peasant struggle together with cheerful devotion. Every one who has experienced the days of preparation and of limitless airain has had the reeling that ha wad present at a holy ■scramaaf lb these days there was no load tough- ing on the streets, tbe air rtbrated with common tension and every one sought an opportunity to serve his country. One heard In every church and on tho street "Em festc Burg 1st unser Gott" Men who. perhaps, since their childhood had not prayed, assem- bled round the field chaplain aad tang the mighty old German hymns with all their might. Old men brought out their uniforms- their swords were polished and the fighters from Woertb, Meto and Sedan felt young again.' Every woman found some- thing which she bad to do and calmly went to her task. Money la not given oat needlessly, but there Is no want Provisions haTe not beeome desstr, to sstoeesss9«?wa cheaper. The the ssUsV tommjBj, IVl gil wueav vpbv will toad JAt» C. Hall. New Tork, at tho University lti5-l»i€. Oua- to you. Vomsn4aub Aadltortam, Church St The Better Thing. O tolling bands of mortals! wearied fast, traveling ye " you must come forth on i uous hilltop, and but a little way further, against the setting sun, decry the spires of El Dorado. Little do ye know your own blessedness; for to travel hopefully la a bettor thing than to arrive, and the true success Is to labor,--Robert L. Stevenson. ......__i__Iterwlnw Regret---------'--! If | bad to Uf say Ufa over again, I would hard made a rale to read some poetry and listen to some music at least once a every week, for per- haps the parts of my brain now atro- phied would thus have been kept alive through use. The lose of these tastes is a loss of happiness, gad may possibly he Injurious to the Intellect, and more probably to the moral char- acter, by enfeebling the emotional part of our nature.--Charles Darwin. They Are tlmitlsss. Truth and honesty eat a limit to oar efforts which Impudence gad hypoc- risy easily overleap.--Hailitt ■•MUTT AND dggfcIHffXtCO*" "The real hit of the show world" Is a very broad assertion. If it were msde by Gus Hill, the sole owner aad manager of "Mutt and Jeff," it would undoubtedly be set down as due to an exaggerated egotism, but coming from tbe critic aa one of the most Impor- tant and largest circulated news- papers in the eastern country, It must lieeeisajrny imvo weight with the thea- publlc. The expression to and Servia prepared to defend the assassins aa patriotic martyrs. Aus- tria, following Berlin's advice, grant- ed all of Russia's just demands. No one in Austria wanted to unchain g with somo ftuccen*. by lying and political i rmnisns. to isolate Ger- j many. Ia vain and with a heart K*l"** W»h-l=: asd Zl selors hoped to the <ery test that BngUod would be able to contract friendship and re-establish worid p«>. • For mouths the army had knb*/k«dge ot England'* plans of mak- i tag an advance with Franco through, 1 Belgium agalnBt the Rhenish coal i lands. At the time of the wrttlug of ' these lines the German army waa storming th, place where the official Staff knew England had stored her ammunition Tho matutaiulus . r Mfcifttutu itott costly. --.Ordinarily muriate nf yotash wouftfr he found more economical than wood ashes, although the |>otasb does not contain the ,lm-.- ,l'!:?c!: th« other feiv tlltztr Imparts to the soil. On account of the European, war. the potash may prove more difficult to obtain than the wood ashes. Only one-tenth the quan- tity Of potash should be used as of bone meal. May Be Mixed. The potash may be sown a.-|>u<atciy or mixed with the bone meal, as de -sired. Tbe same Is true of wood aftbes if these are used instead of potash. All applications should be made, before the grouud freezes »«er mabently for the winter as otherwise the fertilizer may be largely washed from the soil before it has a chance to become incorporated with it In regions where cottonseed nio«i may be obtained at a price not over f25 per ton, it may be used natisfac torily In the place of the ground bone Tankage and fish scrap* are even richer tn Important elements Mian ground bone, but are frequently i.i bad mechanical condition for btmd.tng (that is. tiny contain hah or other foreign coarse matter) ineir bad odor also makes them objectionable Att .Prepared Sheep manure Is an excel " dressing. Aa it has been aterll by drying and rendered odorless,; ■HKere not the objections to it that | there might be to ordinary manure. > Its one drawback la expunsiveuess. Ta Protect Worn Places. If there are any psrts or the lawu • which wilt he tramped over when they >re pur frozen, and especially when show Is melting there, these tarts Should be. protected to prevent per deeplcable and shortsighted poUcy of waf OQ a<JcoUnt f ^ m|irdef Edward VII. and has sought even That didn't suit Ruwia, however, England and Russia began a coa< splracy and* lying, in which Servia ** J | goon sumaosed them. Th«t tbj» Wna> jllsh press should demonstrate Itself {as base and giving to lying Is lament- [able in tbe extreme. Again and again thas even Mr. Asqulth given aasur- iance that England was acting alone j and had no secret alliances. At that j very moment they knew In Berlin that i she lied, for her military plane are I said to have been already tbe sub- . Ject of olOHe investigation of the offi- I cial staff. The Russian esar and his j ministers cave their so-called word of < honor that they would not mobilise, and It. was known In Berlin that they trality Is only a aiiatu pretext The „e(j for thclr beCret orders are said official etaff knew that France b, fore. to naV« cveu then been upon the the war was actually ready to take j tabie of the official staff. tbe field, but the good hearted kaiser j e ,„ lo bQ u,ed Sh<J ba„ ^ never wanted to believe that England h waf fw wh|ch Bnc bag was playing false. Germany waa no enthUa|aanj Sho wU1 Da%e to p., ready to apart. Fram^ and Belgium if h to„8 mht wU| ,t,. cru,h^ ^ England would remain neutral. Eng , Dleed||JK Md ,u ^dUUm will have to endure tbe criticism of defeated and ! betrayed Belgium. Germany, and ee- ' peclally Kaiser Wllhelm. yearned to ; spare France and Delgrutn Every- I where one luani. •'Poor, beautiful j Pranc*-! Why wae ahi- so blind!" The war will be carried on against France Two Auto Deliveries Daily\ 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. The Season's Latest For Jmt lM/tTH the*advent of cooler weathe ** their appearcmce in all the The manufa turer who provides us wit a limited qui ntity qf these very desiral fabrics; they re ta in every resvect just $1.00. fmiiiiiiiiinimiiniiiii ■ land's refusal to submit to this propo-1 ! sltion Is just euch an Insane fully aa j j was Lord North's war against the I American colonies or as the Crimean <»r the Boer war. But this time the ; fruits of crime win be far more fatal, are like skill- fully trained fighters who resist rapa- cious ruin. France Ib already aa good as beaten, her center Is broken, and her famous fortresses, upon which She counts so much, will be crushed like egg shells by the mod-.-ru Ger- man projectiles, of whoso power tbe world has never dtvamed. And she has scrupulously repeated every blunder of 1S70. Russia Is tn a hopeless position. That she will lose Poland seems as- sured and her humiliation la only a without Hatred, but England's eternal shame will be that she has closed an unholy alliance with the ill-smelling carrion-vultures, which in Russia lacerate the poor peasantry and that she drags ta tbe dust ever)' Ideal for wbich she has ever struggled. Russia wanted war because she thought that England's mighty fleet would be able to accomplish everything which she herself waa too weak to do and to- capable of doing. England was so Stupid and base that she thought her aoaa from cutting across. Tramping on tbe turf when It is covered by question of time, and aa soon as Ger- iUpremaey of the world could be abash or snow te aa destructive to a! many is through with France comes leaved by Russia and Franco while the wA as almost anything else. England's turn and then! But beforaitwo were-bringing Germany to rata. i Is hardly necessary to say that i these lines are in America, reported-ghe wilt know later that She baa lost nothing WlU be_gstood by acattortngiby-telegraph, will happen what eTery'h^. t^^e aa wefl as her honorT~Tha peed on the lawn at this i body knows, rity, pity, a thousand atrocious crime of setting Japan aeon. * ' '________.Ptttos*_____________________-----lagalest Germany te east Asia, --^---■■" .'.....~-- , England and Germany could have!evar, an Almighty God wni ^«««r *i Kuitit fSai--~ ~~ 4adtared late a noble Tenteai to ntonlabto to forgive without severe expte- bad mental habit **• ■*•* ** «olture »°d would hare j two. Whether England wlU be pun- im\7 tmt cure and that is B^11 *bl« to •J,8ure lor the *orld: faked by the loss of-world supremacy tsjOMaeif tato good menu! hab- dWltoatloa and peace for Interminable or by severe trials ta India remains Lfcte, persistence ui pe.jj* snee are eU f^oded. A week or a ** wth is not likely to as#co._Kesp) Hut England didn't want it Germany, strengthened by the of Belgium, assured by as vine to j« ■ w Indemnity from France, "tostosd at awwav *lir 4let•l• P^* •• Germany to be aeea, but she will be punished aad ta dramatic fashion, for this deed Is tta blackest sin against Christian- ity, against Japan and against the and raited States aa well as against demi*i r ci r ineaists. red splendidly; the fire cut so ast/^KSure perfect fitting; *re good9 decidedly goodj^nd best of all, they're d Waists are making oughout the country- nsive Waists has sent us de of excellent ■ Before you make or buy any nightwtMr come in and sea -the regular bargaim in sleeping wear--offered by the For Men, Women and Children includes night skirts, eight- g».«vn% pajamas, sleeper*. Meets all retirements for com- fort and health while sleeping. lias fresh air feature* not found el ;f where. Both uigittutmr and price are sure to please. Come see this big taiue jfe*. i*X~ix*ar today* For Outdoor Sleeping Flannel Gowns EN aad CHILDREN With Foot Pockets and Detachable Hoods f/i $1.50, $1.75, $2.00 For Women $1.75 For Children $Ul5f$t.50 practical out-door purposes. Prices are $2.00, S2.2S, $2.75 Vmsaa

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