AR—————— tS wie Many people simply melt in sums mer. They can't work or enjoy life. They lack vitality. Ten to one their blood is impoverished, Rich, wholesome blood is the basis of vitality. If you have it, you sturdily withstand summer tem- ratures. But if your lood is poor, loaded with poisons that should be cast out, you are limp and useless in “ghirt- sleeve” weather. Sa —— To avoid this, get from your druggist S.8.8,, the famous vege table blood tonic and alterative. It is just the thing for poor blooded people. After starting 8.88, write us about your con- dition and we will send you expert medical ad- vice free. Address Chief Medical Advisor, 839 Swift Laboratory, "At. lanta, Georgia. rn CURED IN7DAYS IN EVERY CASE WHERE ANTIPLASMA FAILS TO CURE ANTIPLASMA Discovered through the wonderful research werk Medical Officer of the Beer Army Boer Army fiom Malarial inte: During Boer War in Africa ammng the English Mercury, or Habit-Forming Drugs! Absolutely Tasteless . 33) one bottly Incident of Innocent Pleasure That Excited the Admiration of Gap Johnson, ti» innocent pleasure children get out of the coming spring!” Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. “The first right warm day most of my young ‘uns swarmed, as you might say. Wife and ripped out of their under- clothes that she'd sewed ‘em up in last fall, the; hit the path for the creek, scratching cussing mer- rily. “They found there seven or eight of Gabe Giggery's kids, three or four of Jim-Tom Tullery's, a bunch Zeke Yawkey's and several more that no- body could tell whose they were till they got their faces wu Well, then there was a grand raw they all shucked theirseives whirled to - tying each clothes up in hard knots, and about it, such Round and round and over and unded went, till they all fell into the drink and kept right on lamming each other of said took em and and of shed. hoe and other's In if fighting and as that they the creek.”"—Kansas City Star. Pigeon Very Much Alive, One day I found a poor, frozen pigeon, whom I thought to he dying. I took it to our office, without ting the boss know, it gave it water, a few bills, and my rassment when ‘I came back to find that the pigeon, 1 was positive could *not live, flying around the the whole office force, excluding the boss, laughing.-—Exchange. let and fed and Imagine Frank. frank even “Well, tactful.” “In what way?” “He admits he wants all the money he can make; he says in most matters he thinks of himself apd his own ine terest first and he doesn't claim that he was happier when he didn't have a dollar to his name.” he's if he isn't Postponed. “Then you don't care for this fut- urist art,” “No, let enloy it.” The Sin in Cinema, “Have you seen any of those color movies?” "A few off-color ones.” the people of the future Near Bingenl, in Germany, is a fam. ious echo whieh will toss a sound to and fro no less than 70 times, SWAMP-ROOT FOR ! 3 i 3 EARLY POTATOES VERY IMPORTANT Some Essential Points in Grow- ing That Average Gardener Is Apt to Overlook. FOOD SUPPLY MUST BE READY Good, Plump, Disease-Free Seed and Plenty of Fertilizer Are Essential --Keep Bugs Off by Dust. ing or Spraying. {Prepared by the United States Depart. ment of Agriculture.) Irish potatoes are grown In most home gardens, but there are just a few points in the potato-growing game that the home gardener Is likely te overlook which are very Important, First of all, potatoes grow quickly, and their food supply must be all ready and waiting for them in the soll. Sec. ond, they are heavy feeders and want plenty to draw upon. In other words, the soil for Irish potatoes must not only be rich but it must be rich In plant food of certain kinds. Land that was well manured the previous sen- stn, and which contains plenty of or gunic matter is best. The first step in preparing the soil will be to spade or plow it in to a depth of eight or nine inches, then break up the elods, if there be any, and pulverize the soil practically as deep as it is spaded or plowed. How to Use Fertilizer, fertilizers give good Common re- if the fertilizer contains potash, as po- tatoes require more potash than usually present in thie soll, potatoes, and these are generally rath- er rich in potash. How much fertil izer to use will depend upon the fertil- ity of the soll, but as a rule’ eight pounds to each 100 feet of row will be about right. ply the fertilizer Is to make the holes or burrows and drop the pieces of seed cover them with an inch or along the row of the covering the seed. § curable ailments of the kidneys, liver and bladder. i : upon thousands of Swamp-Root makes, friends distressing cases, realized in most cases. healing vegetable compound. drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medic um and large. tato, Best Kind of Seed. ter, are not fit for seed. disease-free potatoes, on which the be used for seed Sed grown _in Maine, New York, Michigan, Wiscon- sample bottle, mention this paper. —Ady. One Hopeful Feature. “full-page sable-ruled advt.,” In a “garment weekly”: “You will share {our deep sorrow at the death of Mr. He was the founder and organ- Izer of the company, which will con- tinue to bear his name. Dye to the discontinuance of business for a w eek, stock of suits and coats which will dispose of at an unusually low { price. This is an epportunity which | you eannot afford to miss.” on BANA ABO His Views. | superiority of mankind,” remarked the | bumptions citizen. i “I don't agree with you” answered | Mr. Grumpson. “I've never visited a {200° but two or three times in my j life, but the thoughts that struck me { was that ali (he animals were attend. | Ing strictly to their own business and {if mankind had less | more consideration for dumb creatures | none of them would have been there” ~Birmingham Age -Herald, The Retort Feminine, Miss Oldun—*Are those men follow. Ing us? Bute—"One of us "Now York Times, scan ——— Death from snakebltes are numer itis ——— Ton much humility ean be pride, RL — makes the worker Grape:Nuts goodness of w is the ected and It feeds body tax upon the eT GARDEN VALUE AIDED BY PERENNIAL CROPS Bush Fruits Should Be Grown Where Space Permits. Asparagus Will Thrive Almost Every. where in Good Soil—Rhubarb Can Be Planted Along Fence Utilize All Space. (Prepared by the United States Depart. ment of Agriculture.) Plantings of perennial fruit and vegetables add to the Interest and value of every home garden. In lo calities where they may be grown, some fruit trees nnd bush fruits should be planted wherever space permits. In addition to the small fruits there are a few permanent vegetables which should not be overlooked. One of these is asparagus, which will thrive almost anywhere, provided it is planted in good soil. A plot of ground 15 to 20 feet square in one corner of the garden will supply all of the asparagus needed by an average family. A few hills of rhubarb In sections | where it will grow can be planted | along the garden fence and furnish | the family supply. The same is true of | horse radish and of a number of the | herbs, Including thyme, tarragon, sage Grapes of the type and variety | suited to the locality should always be | included in the home garden. These | can be grown on an arbor over the - ( kl | [8] | 1B yw N Crops Like These Can Be Raised In Almost Any Garden, walk where they require no extra | space. Four to six vines of the stand. | ard varieties, and one or two of the i southern type In their proper locality, { wili be sufficient. In planning the garden, plant the | perennial things where they will not § interfere with the preparation of the ground and the cultivation of the regu- lar vegetable garden. Place them around the outbulidings, along the will not be In the way. Bulletins tell- | Potatoes Should Be Cut Inte Chunky Pieces With at Least One Eye to a Piece, shipped in by the earlond and then sell them to gardeners in small quan- tities, It takes about ten bushels (G00 pounds) of seed potatoes to plant an One bushel of seed will plant one-tenth of an acre, which Is a space 43 feet wide by 100 feet long. A peck of seed potatoes (10 nde) should plant 360 feet of row, each potato_be- ing cut into chunky pleces having at least one good eye to a plece. Seed potatoes should not be cut une til all ready to plant. Whenever seed potatoes are cut and allowed to stand, the cut surfaces dry out, turn blafk and the seed loses vitaMty very rap- Idly. Scabby or diseased seed pota-| toes should not be used for planting. The variety of potatoes to plant will depend largely upon locality, Irish bler is one of the leading early va- rieties while Rural New Yorker, Early Ohlo, Triumph, Green Mountain, and others ure grown extensively, Plant the locality, but be sure that the seed is free from disease and Is In good, sound condition. Do not plant potatoes too deep. Four.inches is about the proper depth. Leave the surface almost level and seg that there are no clods, stones, or pleces of sod directly over the hills, potatoes are one of the first garden the springtime, and tt Is safe to put the seed in the ground BUSH VELVET Particularly Useful With Cgrn as It | Does Not Make Harvesting a Difficult Problem, Reports from 400 cooperators of the United States Department of Agricul. ture who “ested bush velvet bean In 1920 for the first time are highly commendatory. Three-fourths of those reporting consider the bean a market success, and over half of them believe It to be superior to any other variety, everything taken into con- sideration. Two uses of the bean meet with particularly enthusiastic praise. First, is its use In corn, where its nontwining habit is very desirable, as it does pot pull the corn down and make harvesting difficult as do the twining varieties. Second It is found ideal as a cover and gree: manure crop in citrus orchards, being far superior for this purpose to any other legume yet found. Its use should considerably reduce lie fer tizer bill for citrus orchards, LATE CROP AFTER POTATOES Corn Can Be Planted Between Rows About Two Weeks Before Tubers Are Marvested, In most sections the early potatoes can be followed by a lute crop of sweet corn planted between the rows of po- tatoes about two weeks before the potatoes are dug. Late cabbage plants can be set Between the rows of po- tatoes, then the soll worked about the cabbage plants when the potatoes are dug. Turnipe can bé grown broadcast on the land after early potatoes. Late potatoes, planted about Junesl to 20 in the north and late in July in the south, occupy the ground until frost and produce the main supply for win- BIG VIRTUE OF SANDY SOILS Roots of Plants Pass Through It Read- ily, But It Dries Out Quick] yee ’ Clay Holds Water. The chief virtue of sandy soll is thal the roots of plants can pass through it readily ; its chief fault is that it dries out too quickly. Clay soll holds water well, but It tends to pack and harden. Both types of soll need stable manure | =Iit loosens up clay and helps sand to bold moisture. id 8% Catarrh Catarrh is a local disease greatly Infig. enced by constitutiona conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a Tonic and Blood Purifier, BY cleansing the blood and PRaaine up the EBystem, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allows All Druggists. Circulars free, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohlo, Kiss Their Money Good-By. do not know either the kiss of friend- ship or that of politeness. With them the kiss is reserved. to lovers, to flances or man and wife, important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and sce that it Bears the Signature of , In Use for Over 80 Years. : Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria ———— it All Depends, “Papa, what do you call 4 man who how near he comes to hitting me.” Cigarette To seal In the delicious Burley tobacco flavor. It’s Toasted B® Lrz.0 REALLY FLOWERS OF SPEECH Worth Being Preserved in an Anthology, in the course of his lively lectures examples of Irish peasants’ with the large simplicity, the cadence, the accent of Scriptural speech. The best is the benediction bestowed upon one of the two authors of the fheom- parable “Irish R. M.” by an old wom- anh in Skibbereen: “Bure ye're always laughing! That ye may laugh In the sight of the Glory of Heaven!” The writer once thought of making an an- thology of such wild flowers of way. side speech. He would have included In It some far-traveled sayings. such as that of the freighter in the sikaline districts of Alberta, who said point. Ing with his whip to an intensely blue sayings Ing man's sweat is that same water” end the perfect definition of a ghost implied In the words of a Newfound- land fisherman, “There 1 sees ‘em warming themselves in the moon. Hght™ AT Ta aot Inspiration From Music Curran’s favorite mode of medita. strings, while his imagination, collect. ing Its tones, was opening all its faculties for the coming emergency at the bar—Disgraell, rs frequently register a protest when the pastor desires a vacation. RIC PASTE Kr RT Waster Jo ot Mier Conch y troy both food and re forees these peels nk frome the building for water and fresh ay, il BEADY FORUSE-BETTER THAN TRAPS Directions in 16 in every bax, | Two sizes, Sie and £1.90. Bnough to ki! 6 to 400 sata. i U. 8. Government buys it. i - . EA |_ DELECTRIC id Stomach for 10 Years NOW A DIFFERENT WOMAN Earnestly Praises Eatonle “My wife was a great sufferer from acid stomach for 10 years,” writes HL D. Crippen, “but is a different woman since taking Eatonie™ i Sufferers from acid stomach--let { Eatonic help you also. It quickly takes | up and carries out the excess acidity | and gases and makes the stomach cool and comfortable. You digest easily, get the full strength from your food, feel well and strong, free from bloat ing, belching, food repeating, ete. Big box costs costs only a trifle with your druggist’s guarantee, oe, and $1 00 nt Drocgists, (Z A Piuons Chem. Wks. Putctonne HINDERCORNS neeeres corms. cu fouses, eto, slope ail pais, ensures comfort to the fort, makes walk saer, The by mail or st Lwag Ciste, Misoox na Works, Patchogue BX. _/ | #5 Cash Monthly Divide Giarly n thoroughly sat { particulars write today { 2707 Paeifie Ava, ATI | The Best Investment on Earth i» the earth | Reeif. The Nation's Capital affords the best { real swiale inveslment For information, ad. jOress A H. Ryan, Kellogg Bide, Wash, D.C § — - — | AGENTS for largest non-alecholie extreet | manufacturers 150% Profs Send 10 cents for two sample tubes GLOBE EXTRACT {| WORKS, Brooklyn, NX, ¥, 2541 Atlantic Ave A Few Dollars Capital will finsnce business ‘paying 12.008 or more yeurly Write David C. Hancock, $01 Highl'd, Winsten- 8s em N.C OOM FOR YOUNGER CRITICS They Have a Place in the World and i a Duty That ls Well Worth { Performing. The younger critics, | Broun, are the lineal descendants of that little child In Anderson's fairy tale who, when the emperor was be Ing made a spectacle of and all the | world was being fooled by the sharp | tallor, refused to be quiet and cried | out, “He hasn't got anything on.” These young enthusiasts who have no. posi tions to lose and no diguities to live {4p to go sbout pointing to all our | literary emperors afid calling attention to the seantiness of their attire of i Ereatness, and refuse be silenced by their seandalized or terrified elders Good sense bids us welcome their hon. est gaze at even the sacrosanct per sons, It can't burt anything really fine, and It's shout time we came out of some of our fllusions. William Al len White sized It op about right from the conservative point of view when he said In praising “Main Street”: “Of {course, I'm on the other side of the | fireet myself, but that's just the rea. {son why I Ike this book. It gives us | fellows something to answer.” Heywood EBYe to Decorative Splendors, “Riches have wings” “True,” replied Miss Cayenne, “But [the effect depends on the Intelligence {| with which they are utilized. The | most beautiful ostrich feather is like {ly to look a trifle shabby on the orig. inal bird" | Essentially the same fishes extend i from Florida to Brazil, Po TW A a ET 0, 8 at the 00 200 SO IN so, i | - in, too! to or coffee for ’ and all x. benefi + wholesome t table—tea of ==
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers