When low" In liked up in un- M they should I» flumpu‘l on the pain. or hourr null. pilfll up with a mall Amount of autumn. This will hm a compost of the richest kind alter the have» lure mud. The com- you! in «pa-ad thinly in tho rm" when pinnu'u swing crops Hind with an equnl quantity of at“. it makes the but potting mil {or hum phat: III! for na- on flaw" beds. [novel from trees dang the street should unys ht raked up and and by gardeners in Due nrighborhood. and fans: have: {his fly each (all, an whirh to grow the mom. (blink "gamble: 0w. not! COIN Inns-4M1 "an 11-9. lav-m o! I" sort: arr rich in lhr plant («will lhnt plum MM. Ruunl hm or IralmoM in our 0' tho 0ch- ed and but frm'liuvn um! by pr- dru'nt. for it not only enrich†Un- nil hm gin-n m it a (in loan- ll!- hnv which is tied for phnt ("with Gent-n soil:- of Ou- rnvru and poor- kad condition: will show much im- pmmen! nut spring if I quaMity « lam in spam: in am- ml. om gunk-nor: twat I strip of ground in1 Food unmt win Um wnr unlm Hu- hrmrnu (In! pmdm it. And [maint- Uon I- not Inning. my: the New York “log! of Agrirullun‘. Prod-mum! Ind communion [0 War. lA-t'n all hip. The man who wn'u until l-wr to buy {rt-d. Ierlnliur uld mac-Marry, In Htr‘y to my mom mm of law. - but 0w moat “upon-M 'Ifl 0! all in that In may not [M whu he want.- Thr Mfr thing to do I. (a on!" at Plow or npulc lbw gunk" plot thins an. I! will I):- lx-tu-r nmfl. yrur. Watt In norm- manurv but npply Um mm. Inertial {enilnmr lu‘ll spring. - not this full. GOOD ADVICE 0N SOIL IMPROVEMENT Rev. C. Wilming. fommr pastor o! Lille rhun‘h, in doing Y.M.C.A. work in Hyde l’urk Alfmd Cry of Cunp Grunt vmwd his Aunt, Mm. Henry Grunhaun. Wod- Mr. Vnndenburg has recovered from the influenza and Inn taken up his work again m. the cmmery. The girls of the Wriotic Service League took up their work again Tum- day evening at. the home of Ghdyn Honey. They had not Ind : meeting for two Weeks on mum. of the it» Mrs. Jack [“31th And son of Him:- dale visited her pamnts. Mr. 1nd Mm. Chas. Shogcr last Monday. Irving Van Arlington of the (in-m Lakes Training Station, visited the Denney family Saturday. Mrs. Buck and daughter and Miss Hochel of Hinsdale mm: the guests at Mrs. Thou. Sheldon last week. Mr. and Mrs. Prank Brilfls spent. Tuesday evening with their panama,1 Hr. and Mrs. W. 0. Briggs. A. PORTER, Correspondent IEWSY NOTES FINN“ LISLE AND BELMON'I' Mr. Harry Barn-dc named on me ‘ry n! tham for the luv. two Page Two Telephone 152-8-2 Tlu-n- must he mom than a million loan nMilimnl shipping to Eumpc this year. The hm! itrm in the pro- gm of food "worn in ioopoopoo m: of bmthmking flour sud grains mon- Una 400,000,000 bushels. A ml:- ntmtid part of this uvlng will come from the Win!!! deliberate offal-l of one hundred mllllon Ameriun citiâ€" zens, men. women ml children. (Anomaly. this means that each in» dividud must allow lumsrll four had shah of gain instead of the five he mmnwl last year for bread. - Con- sumption of mbstltum (or when! flour is not enough. saving grain mans saving of substitute flour: a: well. Findly etch person must eat his brand "on his comicm.†Rl‘pnru coming daily from all over tho world Mr glvlng olrflnltn Alum llo uu- program of tho United Slut" [Food Admlnlntnllon for vlnullxlna (lu- nrmim of Europe the graph of Ilw Alllal munlrlol and 1M hungry gallons holvind Um hula llm. i It is lmprmlivn "It! with Muâ€.- lmlcl nbmlM rvmomhvr (hm (mu u‘ its manly-r.- nlhor nmunvl llw «lining lublr. In 20â€.â€) homo: din-N will soon luv mm "mm- (Tunis from (M linllrd «Mrs Food Admlfllfll‘lllml. «bowing how food may hr- sysv‘muh rally saw-d for our My: Ind our Allies. Tnu- rmnomy IM pairinllam NI' not in buying \flu-Iy, but also In mak- ing "w lullnt poulbln mm of what in bought. "Finicky' Instr» in food aflrn pm- vml tho mm of many valuablv mn- 1mm. Good food habm I"! An important part 0! (ho panama! hygla-nr and thrift. CMHn-n gm. Inch habits by hnvéng nuiublr Imounu of nuiuhlr loolln arr-val to them and lhvn bring rxpt'rlul In at who! in no. brforr .lwm. ‘ “any inupcnuivu "mu-rial. an mule Attractive ml du- dict an ploany vudml by a wine um :llflrnvm flavoring-L Do not be Ibove noticing whether anything usable is thrown any with the garbage. which always “hown how lhrihily food in cued in a houurhokl. Remember mm. a quart of whok milk l day for each child, to be um as n beverage and in cookery. is no! .00 much. Try to make the dishes served of such Site that there will be enough to satisfy the appetite of the {nmily 3nd no unnecessary table or plate mama UM! cereals (meal, cereal break- fast foods, etc.) freely, taking pain: to prepare them with care and to vary the kind used from day to day if necessary to keep people from tiring‘ i! them. PRACTICE THEE RULES AND BE PATRIOTIC Qm-stiun: Will the continued use of {urtillzm‘s make the soil sour? Answvr: The continued use of fortiâ€" lizors will not of themselves make the soil sour. Fertilizers incwaso crop yields and by so doing larger crops are taken from the land. The large crops use more lime than small crops. in, is perfectly natural (or the sails "under cultivation to become sour bL- cause of increased crop production. It should equally be as natural to add lime would be collected wherever available. One reason some gardeners do not suceeed with comml-rcial fedilizers is lit-cause their soil is lacking in humus. lmuvva add this. urccssury humus to tho soil and make the s'ucccssful use of fertilizers coriain. SOIL FERTILITY QUESTIONS to soil once in four or five years. DOWN ERS GROVE REPORTER, DOW N ERS GROVE, ILLINOIS o! I nm't ready to no tn Germany. The) searched mp (or grenades when they gut me, the three of them. and they took "map out of my bag and out of my nude pocket. But I always carry one tucked Into my pants when I to out here, Just In mm» ofâ€"«ren, anything like this. And when those three Germans ducted It came through my mind a lot \quteker than I can tell It that three dead Germans and man dead American was a lot not. on our atdeoftheconthntlnelna“ "'God! My.‘ I said. horriï¬ed. ‘why did you Go that? Gav. L". to Oct Time. "We", doctor.‘ he said mvely. Ta been to communion this morning Ind I guess I was ready to die. But " 'Scw me get 'em, did you, Doc? he answered. “You. butâ€"J I didn't know what to ny as I tried to dress that frightful 'mmd. '1 got there quickly afterward to there he lay. He MIMI up at me. Yes. he smflrd. though his arm and hit his side had been blown of. ï¬tnethhume-hupramuth German- tht produced one of the contest Nb of demente tour-Age I over I'. Ole of our boys led been captured by three German end he run being led an n they retreated. one on either side of [um um one behind. Suddenly one of cur shells m within a few yin-d: of the party. The three Germans ducked. I thought 3t ï¬rst our boy Ind. But. no. he had reached Into MI hlp pocket. He Chipped a hand grenade dlreetly at his own feet and those of Ms cantor! and the three, Germans were killed. “I followed the win of (no can: MIMI M «Ill ma l- Mn bud. and Item meted m tho opposin- pnnpet won an dead (let-ans. on.- Mr new M In M: m. my bad [otlluouly'bmmemhdmp "ed. 1 timed mo Needing a hen IMMan-hauu nub-lance. But he died four but: In". I (u. M: life was well paid for. “The, (at you bid. M.’ I no“. ultflodm whip Nu. '1'.†can am. Elmo! ho reviled. “But loch lben.’ "l‘d hm mm "on: was - wounded man In In ndnmml "I'm." In an. â€I envied slowly up to 3d Mm. l Marv! Mn Inflow-d hmIMng In IN- mm M the "an". And then 1 round- cd (he cor-nor of (he "with. Tum M at. propped against the MI". "In breath can In tearing pm In with art- m the blood mink-d from bl! chm; for he had been â€to! Ilrvuzh (beluga. Bonn-boy!†nova n1! my life. 0». hr loan um. â€Join m m- mmm- of (Mn have: my not I» mnumwl. nut "Ken, and "min and Kin-n" m mm, at! of Ibom. and many mm. “ï¬lm" Roliehn ny- nmhln: 0! MI own pl- Mntry. But M1 “or!" about mu hm loo. whoa. Ila mu not mllod on (at tho. mum-Inc .t'rlflN. nut to won-d M- llfo - than-and um" on am am (Irv-min. "minions to the (united 0mm. and bayonet. Helicon-m Kellflwr‘l noun chow! an the Irish boy- uf Inl- "shot-m. RM ban or "onion. 8mm: Ito-ton. no» bury. Cambridge um! Chulntown. ‘fou‘hl with the cool mun-In um mm the ï¬n on flunk" lllll unm "mu Landau-'0! In mm" «In, "nw the whites of their "a.“ They show Ihu (hm bornâ€"and man of them \wn mon- boynrâ€"dlrd Ian M lhe from. I am- lmllo calm-Ir Inn. ï¬ghting. doing lholr mlvllru' duty to the In: breath of rth‘ lift. Earn heartbeat of Ibo‘ III-rm!" 1m lhmmml but to am [mm-«~40 mm. Na mo of It:- Nlnm mm. my- lmtmnl Kellohor. without uklng to" and man of Ir my ll": wflh Mm. l let. Simon Ki‘nt‘hPP of the Ninth I“ In 1:â€!- lhv other an. In (ell: the "cry of bin ban. And won of flu "In. he I. cum-r laughing. or turn Involuntuuy (mp out the oomonl of ï¬ll out Ind drug mun-med down [all browned (ht-9km. The Ninth and the ï¬lm-ninth um In limo“ all of It. The man does not can from OMCIII reports. It comes from tho no: or two men. one I due (or In the Ninth and the other 1 chap- lain In the Slltrnlnlh. who now who! they relate. These two have lean many wldlan die. They know who! Driver, and mun-ago Ind cheerfulneu The†two regiments (one used to be the old Ninth Inns-dummy and the other the Fighting Sixty-ninth of low York) were In every bad wrap the American "my has been In. The tale: 0‘ their prowess are just now ï¬ltering back to Pub. They may be told because the censor It headqua- (cn bu now ruled that regiment: ml: be named for thrlr part In such ï¬ght- In‘ no preceded thu on tho [liver Vale. Palmâ€""Will the lrllh ï¬ght?" Tho lame old answer may be mode. They will. n can he made on the rec- ond- ot two famous Irish-American regimen“ in France. It In a record um make: men of Irish blood hold their head: high. It in a record tho: bottom the brlxhtest page or Amerh cu'l moot glorious military annals. Boys of Ninth Massachusetts and Fighting Sixty-ninth of New York Die Fighting With Smiles on “their Lips, but Huns “Pay"â€" Yank. Taken Prisoner by Three Huns, Drops Grev nade and Kills Captors and Sell. STORIES 0F BRAVERY DISPLAYED BY FIGHTING IRISH-AMERIBANS 2.00.00...OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO:i $1,333. “You‘re I captain: I all! to hlm. You’re than CITIHOIIM‘ the boys to report wounds and get them cam! for. You stayed up than two a.†and you never even told me about It: “Honest. chaplain.’ he reviled. ‘I forgot .11 about It. You know we had order- to hang auto that dink: hm. And we were nwfu! busy.†“All the time he'd been sending men out to take can of me he'd Ind that hole In his own chest and the shlrt frown over his big heart with his own blood. “'Weduosdny,’ said I nurse. "Now, let's ope.‘ am the captain. Chaplain. you ‘were up more Mgr- dny. 1 mm have got an on Ion- day! arc-Id u "no cut-In; union and when they got him lulled they started to an cl In clothes. Al they pulled uhhnhmholdm-ML â€that!!! “IMQOMOM with blood. He Md a wound am. that the doctors at tho are-Ila lu- uon ind never Mend. "Why. apt-In: lid the doctor. loot!“ pulled u the casualty us. It dotan't say anything about the chest. When «no you get this one? "New I" u! this In Jun mammary. Mannheim-walla†later and I'd Mum got new"! In my cot when who should they at do" In the cot next to no but Cam!- Eur- Iey “no". u. m bully muted .mthlmm mlethdbï¬l vandal Inn was across Ill own man Ind I knew I fouldn't m co Hm. I m are-M If I waned ml dark rd Nadhdnlhnlutnlmhm an .1 In and fllfll’d but. The} laid the rapt-In Md um mm In am no luck If myth!" bummed. Now "an to (be me at IL I mt "mm chain: but to the-Ir mmmny Manual-Ind. anslmm this Mp nu build got me. I] “Wall. l was up mm at. day and I heard of I wound“! man and and a mu- to one udo. )u-t over "in «In. of mo um Iowan) nu- Gem-n "m I told the “pl-Io N better so to Mm and M rum"! to «Mall . may" a! men to Mp me. I declined and mm- M 00 by mm". mwllng an my Mum. mi undamum a ulmm of mrhlmn nu hind! lh-t would hue ï¬lm] be M l mind on my elbow. "l'rl [one york-p- 50 sud- an I Mm! n mule I. the min behind m0. and lbs-re won two of llnfl'y'n hays. â€them-nulhduth mm." he amines. "The day I [0! "III wound l “a working up rm: (imam llurlcy'u moo-5y. They'd been (M'- n hurt a "III. by I vicious (krmnn human and I'm km on a mm: mm. Md M union to hold It. and [My did. (or (our dun. Who the: Im II they went ahead. “810wa his hand came out; slowly it opened; that boy'- lmnd ntnnaely old md worn with the blood-tuna Ind grime. Slowly it opened Ind there in the binckoned palm (listened I tiny. bright Illvcr cruciï¬x. in run M" Won't Stop Fighting. It‘s Chupluln liuniey who tells the Itory o! the Sixty-ninth. They Met to the chaplain as holding the clerical "Cord for mileage in No flln'l Illld. They can't keep him oi! patrols. Chap- l-ln [Junie] know. the story of mout to! the casualties of the Slurulnth. lie substantiate. the statement that not I III-ll but been killed or wounded by n Germnn bayonet. notwilhutamling the mil-wilt hm o-m'uuntrn-d in pltrlr‘ ed and open bnitlv flame of tho ilvo‘ duh-ions of tho l’nntsinn (Jun!!! It one time Ind another or it: cum-r. Nonl- lm to nu. the l'ruuinn (in-n! divin- ioo can make no such bout. Vatiwr llunle)‘ Buy- the bunk“ time (My have with “milieu in the Hun-ninth II to unite tln-m Itop ï¬ghting when thq'n hit. lie In him-oi! Just mov- oring from a wounded log. “What any I: mar noted the a, vlnms and In American as good dead In Berlin. 80 I let her go! 8t. Innis.â€"â€"Mm than In!) St. Lama“: have undergone surg- Icnl operations In order to qual- 111 for mllltnry and naval nerv- lce since the United Staten en- tered the war. «cording to m- flstla manned In hospital. “And. doc,‘ bu iolco was weaker. ~le youâ€"will you '9“ my mother I hId--l hld thll whenâ€"4 went.‘ “Doc: In aid, ‘ycm know .11 the boys around our Iquare. l with they could know 1 In: game. Undergo Operations to Qualify for Army “Antâ€"any chance for me. doc? he laid. "I didn't tnnwer and he knew. Bl- remnlnlng hand crept beneath mu blood-soaked tunic. zrlpped marking ugh! and stayed them After I mo- ment he spoke nnln. â€He tried to nine bu held um look Iround. “'Never mind. boy. you got that: Ill.’ 1 Insured hlm. ltlnamirelnd nonhuman†bbedlflldent o!_ To In of‘ï¬ul Worth. It Is not an to have turned on "velihood. . . . t «rams Itself should have Marvin-bl. co Inm- gFred Mochelg Prices range from $1.25 to $6.00 _ Mggris Shoe Stqre, 32 â€Ill Mall! 8!. Shoes from the best leading makers. Serviceable, comfortable and good looking. Our Prices make them unmatchable values. Dress and School Shoes Private Ambulance. We Lead in Quality, Quantity, Service and Price. Some 0! on Speciak for his M m for Milady’s Boudoir. Face Creams, Powders, Toilet Water, Perfume, Rouge, Tooth Brushes, etc. at Central Meat Market Phone 27 WWGiéééééééï¬ï¬Ã©Ã©Ã©Ã©Ã©Ã©Ã©m GEORGE L. PHI?“ lulissesflitmhysmmuins. SCHMITT PFEIFER UNDERTAKERS L It: Buy and Night Service. 34 8. Main Sir. Telenl Fresh and Smoked Meats, TOILET ARTICLES ZINDT’S PHARMACY Ila-III" Fresh chclabla and Fruit: to you: ovdcv every day. DOWNIRS GROVE. ILL A full line of dolivcu the ï¬nal 0‘ VII-men adore cum. All the books of the 0†TM were wrmon long More the birth of Christ. some of (horn as much an 1AM yours hnfnro. others from HR) to 1.†years below. and none less than no u 400 yours More. The Gospel. and other books 'of the New Tenn-d mmflm from 33 tomor’mm like? the MRI! of Chfllt. is tn expression of the mend in which the departed one was held. You am sure of obtaining a memorinl of this thamcu-r if you select one from the book of designs 0! varying do- xrees of cost which we are panned to submit to you. THE GOOD TASTE Phone 35- R NAI’EIVILLB. ARTHUR R. BHDELMAN Friday, November 1, 1918 OUIRIN SCHMI‘IT Telephone 282 Lady Attendant WIGBI IN A MONUMENT ILL.