STARTING PUNTS FOR 6ARDEN-S0WING SEED CI 14;* .. r'~ (taadaOflers Health andWeaith and ha* brought coBtentment and hanpineM to thoasands of home seeker* and their finffitt who have settled on her FREE homestead* pr bousb t land at attractivepcfcet. They haveestabUahedtheirown boon and secured proaperity and independenco. In the great »rain-*rowiflg sections at the prairie provinces there is still to be had oa easy terasa FsrtUs UMl at $ IS to $10 aa km --land similar to that which through many rears htt riskicd from 20 to 45 bubal* of wlwat to the acre--oata, barter and flax also in areat abundance, while raising horeaa. cattle, steep atMl booeia eoually profitable. Hundreds of farm* etsi^^Stera Cana£haveraisedcraps in sjrinris season worth more than the whole cort oTtheir UnST Healthful climate, good aefrbbera. churches, '• • V . "V industrioui (ail way They Often Are. The new baby was a source of great Interest to the youngsters in the neighborhood. Although he was only two days old, the pleadings of one little girl Anally won her permission to take "just one little look" at the baby. She tiptoed to the side of the crib and Inspected the child carefolly. Finally she forgot her promise not to talk or make a noise. "My," she exclaimed, "ain't he fullblooded?" Oalr'a Carbollsalve Quickly Relieves and heals burning, Itching and torturing skin diseases. It instantly stops the pain of burns. Heals without scars. 30c and 60c. Ask your drugsrist, or send 80c to The J. W. Cole Co., Rockford. I1L. for a packace.-- Advert lsement. I Total of Nothing. were seven of us lb all, at flinch. One proposed: "Gentlemen, for diversion, suppose we each take a piece of paper and. without consultation, write down aa many benefits of war as we can think of, and then put them together and see what they make. So, being essentially children anyhow, each busied himself with his part of the job and delivered the result to the teller, who proceeded to tally--six blank sheets of paper and one on which bad been written: "Yuh got me, Bill. I can't think no liichuiond Times-Dispatch* - Ml Moving Peril. admit you stepped, «#' ; the gMT* . "Yes, yonr honor." - "Have you any exense or Justification to offer?" "My justification is not in court your honor, but here's her photograph. Take a look at that, then tell me to go and sin no more."--Birmingham Age- Herald. ' . ' P ' - And the Nymph, Oh, Where Was Her From "Messer Marco Pole"--'And over the desert the satyr called to her . - Women who cheapen tbefaselves toon learn that men do not caw'for bargains MAD OVER A MERE TRIFLE Surely Any Man Who Has 8een 8ervill'Will Agree That Cerportt? - Was Unreasonable. A couple of recruits of the latest vintage were discussing the pros and cons of service life at Paris Island. "It ain't so bad," confided one. "Most of It is all right, but it's that blasted relief from guard duty that gets me." "Relief from guard duty!" ejaculated the other. "Man, you're cuckoo! There's nothing to being relieved from guard duty. It's being on guard duty that's tough." "No," maintained the first. "It's the relief. Why. the other day they 'put me on guard duty for two hours, und ft wasn't bad at all just standing around and watching the rest of 'em drilling and knowing that ! dldn'* have to do It myself, hut when the time for relief came the corporal came up and gave me the devil." "What fori*' "Nothing--nothing at all.„ I just couldn't remember where l jfft mj rifle."--The Leatherneck. „,y a !r" -- True Philosophy.' When Ibsen makes one of his char* acters exclaim of the bunting of her house, "It was the loss of the dolls thut mattered," he touched one of the hard facts of life. It Is often easier to bear with fortitude a catastrophe than to endure the loss of things that, though trivial, are Intimate. To surround yourself with little happinesses is one of the great secrets of joyous living, and some of the most fruitful happinesses of all cost nothing; a friendly word, a smile, a generous thought, a trifling but kindly fleed.-- YOUth'a? V ; * . """• t ...» The Only Reliable Guarantee. "But we must have a guarantee against future wars." "It seems to me," replied J. Fuller Gloom, "tluit killing off all the rest of the inhabitants of the earth would make us falrlx safe from attac&*<7> Kansas City Star, *•*"! A reformer who devotes his efforts entirely to sanitation is worth while. w. You wouldn't put on hobbies to run a foot race Then why toad up on handicaps for day's work? A good deal of food, unwisely chosen, does weigh the body down and clog the digestion, and dull the brain. Why pot on the hdbbteff fV; Grape-Nuts is a breakfast or lunchdish for those who want food efficiency, and mind and body efficiency. < Grape-Nuts satisfies and nourishes. H delights the taste. It is ready to serve whenever you are ready to eat And it digests easily, quickly and completely-- laaving no handicap of heaviness and. drowsiness. Grape-Nuts is the food for health and action. there's a Reason" StedebyPc^C^ Company, lac* Battle Sold by good grocen everywhere! . - • , * "Ht . * Mens WATERWAY PUN Harding Meeting Great Lakes Project Is ^ stomach trophies, and MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS lor CHILDREN W1B do for children no family wocid ever be without them. These powders an so and pleasant to take apd so ef fectfre in their action that for 30 years mothers have usmd them and told others about them. Sold bar Druggists everywhere. out SHEET rsvms. -- x -J HOW TO DEVELOP THE BOX PLANTS Transplanting and Nursing, the Key to Success in the Art ^Growing Things. HEAT AND SUNSHINE NEEDED Tender Sheets Require Careful Attention From Time They Come Through Ground Until Planted in the Open. It Is an art to produce from the small vegetable or flower seed strong nnd healthy plants that the owner will be proud of when they are set oat in the open. It Is intensely interesting to note the quick response plants will make to a little attention and nursing. Tomato, cabbage, pepper and other vegetable plants, as well as any of •IM 9H MppipBM • S" transferred in a manner that not the slightest Injury Is done to the tender foots and soon the plant has taken hold in its new home in a manner tlmt will astonish the inexperienced cottage gardener--In fact it is n t uncommon for plants in the moru advanced stage of development to be in blossom or bearing small fruit. Plants such as tomatoes transplanted In the open In this manner should be staked at once--better still, have the stakes In the gronnd before the patches may be seen on the roots and sometimes on the tower pan eC the stems. / HOME GARDEN FLOWERS What to Grow to Beautify Your Home and Lawn. The Berry Box Plants. • the numerous kinds of flowers that are first planted in flats in the basement or placed in an upper floor window where there is heat and sunlight, must have attention. Next to warmth and sunlight in Importance Is sufficient moisture to urge growth. When the plants liuve reached an age when they are large enough to Inremoved from the flat--without Injury to the roots, they should be transplanted to small pots or berry baskets --anything that will hold the soil and a little moisture. Cartons serve this purpose very well. Another transfer of the plant is advisable as the roots became matted --an indication that the basket or j It not large enough. It will be not that a larger container will so be found too small, nnd that an ad ditional repotting will be advantageous, If a larger and healthier plant is desired. Many careful gardeners make at least three transplanting before the plant is set out in the open. By that time it is strong enough to battle the elements with tile possible exception of frost. In setting the plant in the open, by this careful and interesting method of transplanting, the roots intact with the mass of soil dinging, may be Old-Fashioned Posies May Be Relied Upon to Produce; Will Add Beauty to Premises. When making plans for the home vegetable garden all the emphasis should not be pluced upon vegetables, but provision should be made for planting a few flowers as well. Where a cottage and a lawn are included in the general scheme the flowers can qften be arranged around the foundation of the house, or in a bed separating the lawn either from a neighboring property or from the vegetable garden. Old fashioned zinnia, petunia, bachelor's button, cockscomb, scarlet sage, and cosmos are among the most easily cultivated flowers and go a long way toward brightening up the general appearance of the home surroundings. Where space will permit a flower garden consisting of dahlias, asters, canas, roses, gladioli, and various other flowering plants that will add color and beauty to the place, and at the same time furnish cut flowers for the house, is highly desirable. From the standpoint of economy, the plantings around the foundations of the house should, as a rule, be made of permanent low-growing shrubbery, mainly that which grows native In the locality, and the annual flowering plants given a place in connection with The Daisy--The American Legion's Official Flower. the garden proper or in a border. It is urged, however, by the United States Department of Agriculture that more attention be given to improvement of home surroundings, including the care of a good lawn and flowers. USE HOUSE HEAT FOR THE OUTDOOR HOTBED Warmth From Hot-Water Plants May Be Utilized to Grow Plants *! Early Spring. Home gardeners who hnve hot-water heating plants in their dwellings may find it convenient to use this source of heat in S hotbed where plants can be grown ID early spring, garden specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture say. In case this is done a pit should be dug and the walls built of concrete and a raised floor of boards placed in the pit to hold the soli. Heating pipes or radiators are placed beneath this floor. An opening 1 Inch wide should be left around the floor next to the walls for the heat to pass upward Into the bed. The tops of tne walls are fitted with a framework of lumber to support the sash. Owing to the scarcity of manure for beating hotbeds the pipe-heated bed is recommended wherever It can be connected direct to the system which Is employed t« heat the house. LARGE TOMATO PLANTS When extra large tomato plants are desired, the following plan is very satisfactory: Sow seed during February. Trunspiant seedlings in four weeks, spacing two inches apart. Three weeks later transplant four inches apart and three weeks later set in berry baskets or four-inch pots. Such large, stocky plants should contain several flowers and perhaps a few green tomatoes when set .in the field. DO NOT FEED FROZEN FOOD Oreen feed must never be given to chickens when It Is frozen. Of sprouted oats, give one square inch per hen dally. In no case will the greatest care in feeding offset dark, lamp poorly-ventilated quarto's. .. excessive exposure, lack ef exercise or? the u» of scrub stock. .* T; , -v/>- : ; ' taints Heed of Machinery to. Furnish Working Capital to Farmer Easily Mid Qpickly--U. 8. Must ' Meet Present Crisis. Washington, Jan. 25.--Feasibility of the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes water way* project "is unquestioned," President Harding declared before the nathinal agricultural conference. "I have spoken," the' President said, "of the advantage which Europe en- i joys because of Its easy access to the sea, the cheapest and surest transport at ion facility. In our own coun- ' try is presented one of the world's hiost attractive opportunities for extension of the seaways many hundreds of miles Inland. • j "The heart of the continent, with Its vast resources In both agriculture and Industry, would be brought in communication with all the ocean routes by the execution of the St. Lawrence waterways project. To enable oceangoing vessels to have access to all the ports of the Great Lakes would have a most stimulating effect upon the industrial life of the continent's Interior. "The feasibility of the project IR unquestioned, and its? costs, compared with some other great engineering works, would ber small. Disorganized and prostrate, the nations of central Europe are even now setting their hands to the development of a great continental waterway, which, connecting the Rhine and Danube, will bring water transportation from the Black to the North sea, from Mediterranean to the Baltic. ^ "If nationalistic prejudice and economic difficulties can be overcome by Europe they certainly should not be formidable obstacles to an achievement less expensive and giving promise of yet greater advantages to the peoples of North America. Not only would the cost of fVansportatlon be greatly reduced, but a vast population would be brought overnight in immediate touch with the markets of the entire world." Delegates from all sections of the country representing agriculture and industries dependent on It assembled here for the opening of the national conference called to consider the present situation confronting the farmer, and to lay down a permanent sgrlcultural^ rtiey. Development of a thorough code of law and business procedure, with the proper machinery of finance to assure the farmer as generous a supply of working capital on as reasonable terms as Is granted to other Industries, was advocated by President Harding in his address. "An industry," the President said, "more vital than any other, in which nearly half the nation's wealth is invested, can be relied upon for good security and certain returns." Declaring that in the matter of what may be called fixed Investment capital the disadvantage of the farmer so impressed public opinion that the federal farm loan board was established to meet the need. "Compared with other industries,*' he continued, "the wonder is that agriculture, thus deprived of easy access to both investment and accommodation capital, has prospered even so well." Lines on which financial support rf agriculture may be organized, Mr. Harding said, are Suggested in the plan of the federal farm loan board and in the rural finance societies which have been so effective in some European countries. "The co-operative loaning associations of Europe have been effective incentives to united action by farmers," he continued, "and have led them directly Into co-operation in both production and marketing which have contributed greatly to the stabilization and prosperity of agriculture." Whether these organlaztlons are considered as means to buying the farmers' requirements In a cheaper market, the President asserted, or to selling his products in a more remunerative one, "the conclusion in all cases is the same; U is that the farmer is as good a business man as any other if he has the chance." The manufacturer, Mr. Harding said, whose turnover is rapid, finds he can borrow money from the bank on shorttime notes when he needs working capital. and his money will come back to hiiu in time to meet his short-time obligations. On the other hand, he continued, the farmer's turnover is a long one; from a year in most cases to sometimes three years in the cattle industry. wvd fB^slwess LOSSOFSI^ Mothers Bears the Signature '"•i Si Itatact Copy of Wrapper. &OH/y 1 Thirty Years CASTORIA MSTEMPER AMONG HORSES Spohn's Distemper Compoaad At this ttma of yr»- hora«a ar* liable to contract eoatacteaa diseases--DISTEMPER, INFLUENZA, COUOHS aad COLDS. Am a preventive against these, an occasional dose of "HMBV !• marveiously effective. Aa a remedy for cases already MriN>* lac. "SPOHN'S" is equally effective. Qlve it as a preventive^ Don't watt. 60 cents and 11.34 per bottle at dru* stoma. SPOUN H1DICA1 UOHTAMI GOSHKX, TSDtMMh ^ Apropos. "Where are you going?" "Hunting." "For what?" "Money. I'm m the centl"--Judge. Just So. •Wow, there's talk of another trust." "Another yolk." Jud Tunkins Remarks. Jud Tunkins says very few honestly believe all the world loves a lover excepting the slightly prejudice young lady in the case. It is true "the Lord will provided He provides the world. Your ods must be your own. one eleven cigarettes it" ~ Qhne Ritndty Hade to SuitYourlkfte "We have for years aattkvtef I--TURKISH, lor, . I--VUGMA, for I I--BURLEY, far IMMMI We aspad ten Oae Kkvsa--*»*«*•» «T«r fcoaM office. We are proad of their tacceas. Have You IncdThtm? 15*«20 Getters Most Fortunate. Six-year-old Davy drowsed before the fireplace while his parents and Uncle Jim, thinking him safe in dreamland, discussed his Christmas gifts. "Gee." drawled the childish voice from the other side of the room unexpectedly, "I'm mighty glad I'm a getter 'attftfl ft glvffiy" *10 The Dream Superseded "Shakespeare said, 'Ail the a stage.*" "Yes," replied IQss Caysnn*. that was long before the ture and the phonograph vented." Happy the man who knows he tell a funny story; others, tea . Wife Dies in Lake Storm. Port Wing, Wis'., Jan. 25.--Carried| out into the ice-coated waters of Lakel Superior when a severe gale sprang' up, Alfred Peterson, a fisherman of Knife River, Minn., reached here after his wife had perished in the Duck Season Closes Jan. 3), Washington, Jan. 25.--Next Tuesday., January 31, is the last day on which? wild ducks and geese, coots, gallinulestf and Wilson snipe or jacksnipe may be hunted anywhere in the United States under the federal law. Constantino Must Get Out * Athens, Jan. 25.--It is declareff hwe' that it has finally been made clear to King Constantine that normal relations between Greece and other powers cannot t»e fully restored until he retiresin favor of his son. WARNING! Bayei** when youbuy Aspirfek Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you ar$ not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians Over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Pershing Sets Precedent. Washington. Jan. 25.--General shing set an unique precedent here by refusing the award of a distinguished service cross. His reason wa* that the citation was' not saffldentiy meritorious. . Colds Toothach^? Earache Headachf ^ Neuralgii Lumbago ' ^jAccept only "Bayef" package which contains proper directions.^ Sandy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets--Also bottlas of 2< aad 100--Dreggteta, Rheumatism Neuritis Pain, Pain ts a* tnde eC Bajrsc MaaaCtttec* «( -V € V-: ' V - .*<•» v v -