8 SEMI-MONTHLY MAGAZINE WHEN you have once tasted Clover Leaves you find yourself looking forward to these dainty sugar wafers rather than to the dessert, ice cream or afternoon tea which they accompany. They are but one of tho irresistible Specialties We'd like to prove their goodness by sending you a SHukSsfl Revelatioa Box FREE containing Clover Leaves and 13 other klnda of bltcult confections. Send uo your name and nddrees with 10c (stamps or coin) for postage and packing, and you'll receive this treat by return mall. JoosE-Wims Biscuit (pMPAtrr Qakmof Surahlm SJUcuUi HI Causeway Stmt Sottas, Mass. DENTS TbotKacKe aw. A -X- 9opsuieuuic Cleanses the cav ity, prevents decay. Used by Millions for past 2B years. All drug More, of by tneU 13 cents. O. 8. DENT & CO. ntrott Mich. - K)Be a Doctor of Mechano-Therapy KUtugltn mating) A else Is.waHIng for you In the ranks or this new profession one oi ths moat elevation: and hiaklvvaid In tho world. Equally, adapted (or tn man ana women, ws tesca you u ty mait or la class. $3,000 to $5,000 a Year . 1 t fanUiuILt ImuU ..war.1. MarurmA i rmwh, yer perieetaa mum oi wtm m mji with eeeenkl lacc.M t ftom. laUae. Chartered bi the gut el IMnoia. tfOWl Wrlu let eomiJ.U lUoatnted sa-eepeetue. lait. FJLmm ml KUTkru, Weet ftoaotek Street Fro r(oBtlT p.on Brat free. I Was Deaf 25 Years I Can Now Hear with tliM twf t, art. delta r drum I wrr tlitm In my can nlibt ami day rorti.be. No on thtra. Writ in and I vrlll tall von a tnii at or how 1 totde.rnd bowl mad mjMlf hear, AaureM Aninciai tar iruin to, OgO.P.WAYs4AdlidBt.TDtroit,Mleh DriHe Mee'Ketoe' far That Protect and Pay Send Sketch et Model lor Search. PATENTS BOOKS, ADVICE and SEARCHES FREE Wateas L Celesus. Patent Lawvcr, WadJnrtoa, D. C How a House and Lot Became a Home and Garden Continued from Page 4 ) row of tomatoes were grown there. While making the asparagus bed we moved tho strawberries over the walk to tho annual garden and kept it there for two years. It was moved back again last fall; every young plant is very healthy, we Ehall let tho old bed bear next season and then fork It under, and plant in it late corn, and perhaps a row of bush llmas. Moving tho strawberry bed was a great Job. You remember our Inheri tance was "a weedy strawberry patch." Wo pulled the biggest weeds In spring and got the first summer thirty-five- quarts from a spaco larger than our present three double-rows. Wo set stakes by the best plants and after bearing (or fruiting) was over, pulled up the undesirable ones. From Making the Asparagus Bed tho selected ones we got moro than two-hundred "pot grown" plants, and started tho bed on the cast side, be tween tho enrly corn, planting them fifteen Inches apart in tho row, and tho rows two feet apart. Tho plants wo arranged In threo rows, as de scribed, to glvo better root room. As soon as tho corn was mature, tho strawberries wcro cultivated vigor ously every week. That first fall all runners woro cut off. Wood ashes and chicken manure wero used for fertilizing. We wero fortunate in having a friend who has chickens and no garden, so onco in a whllo our man brings up all his chicken ma nure to fertilize our strawberries. r"UR first crop from that new bed was about fifty full quarts, raised in about ono-thlrd less spaco than tho old bed occupied. After bearing, they wero fertilized, carefully worked, and admitted tho setting of new plants eight inches apart. Every week we worked them, and pulled out every plant that seemed below par or old, replacing it with a vigorous one. After freezing wo covered them with leaves, putting corn-stalks over all to keep the wind from blowing them away. In the early spring the leaves wero removed by hand and put on our compost heap. They wero given a good working, and tho soil between tho rows was forked under, aftor spreading over them our win ter's wood ashes, and mulched them well. Mulching is most important. I gave away at least twenty quarts of strawberries to friends, canned about ten quarts, and wo ato all wo could with cream, and In short-cake. This year wo had ninety-four quarts, although tho rains did not favor us so much as last year. Thero was ono row in the year-old bed not so flno as the other two, and after taking all tho plants wo wanted, wo had It forked under. Then wo planted bush lima beans, string beans, and spinach. From that plant ing, twelve cents worth of lima-bean seeds, and ten cents worth of beans, wo had a wonderful crop. Our New Zealand spinach mado a row about nino feet long. Our limas yielded abundantly, giving us five big meals, about five quarts hulled, and wo ato tho last of the beans on October twenty-fifth; perfectly delicious and tender, and about ten quarts in all. In making this last berry patch, wo did not raise pot plants. Instead wo prepared tho ground and marked our rows. Then wo took a home made transplanting box and trowel, and dug up tho best young plants carefully whllo tho hired man planted them in the new location. In tho per manent garden where tho now straw berry bed now is, wo had, last year, threo long double rows of celery, threo varieties, all self-blanch. Last spring, March twentieth, we sowed dwarf peas where tho celery had been, in a trench six inches deep and eight wide, threo rows each, being a doublo row. rnese wo hoed carefully at least six times, filling tho soil between the peas and finally pushing tho two closo rows closo together. Wo had ten pecks from theso threo doublo rows. Tho Little Mar vel, was tho best, with Blue Bantam second, and British Wonder third, but not in any shamefaced way! Be tween tho pea rows wo planted for a mid summer crop earliest Catawba corn, and now our strawberry plants are flourishing there, after having had moro than threo bushels of chicken manure worked around them. Wo found that two rows of to matoes gave us all wo needed with our family of six in tho summer, and four In tho winter, to cat tho canned fruit Usually wo plant threo vari eties, to get a difference In ripening time, and flavor, two-and-one-half feet apart, giving us forty plants. Wo tio our tomatoes with soft strings to tho straight trellis. Our trellis Is made with two upright and threo cross bars in small sections, so that it is easily handled. We And this moro satisfactory than any other we havo seen. Last year we had all tho tomatoes wo could eat, canned fifty quarts, and gavo many away, be sides making gallons of green tomato pickle. When harvesting our green toma' toes wo carefully sort them out. Tho perfect largo ones aro wrapped sepa rately irt newspaper and packed lightly In big peach baskets; or bet tcr still if thero is room In tho cold room", put on a shelf. In this way we have tomatoes for salad through tho fall, and last year we had some for Christmas dinner. In our annual garden wo practice rotation of crops. Tho Btrawberry bed being there has been a nuisance part of the time, for it monopolized tho place all tho year! Wo found It not very easy to get an early crop from tho tomato site. Wo did get peas this year between tho tomatoes and tho last flower border. YB always plant ono row of Swiss w chard, Lucullus. It likes a moist location. Year beforo last it was next to tho dahlias and cosmos, whero our threo dozen flno cauliflowers wero last year. Now It Is at tho back of the perennial garden whero our compost heap was previously. We used the back lot last year for a dump heap, and so got in a row of chard, two of beets, and one of young onions, for fall. By keeping tno out side leaves cut before they become tough, wo havo had tender greens until freezing weather. We cover deep with leaves nnd tho first thing from our garden In spring Is a mess of green chard. Wo havo canned it, This offer Is made br tho Lake County Land Owners' Association In order to secure now settlers and to develop tho district We Will Take Your First Crop In Full Payment for the Land Reeardlf of the tlx or vala of th crop, and without any cash paymtnt to us on your part whatMOvr, Wo havo very little money to spend for advertising, but wo know what our land will produce, and wo will give a new settler 10 acres and take his first crop of water melons In full payment for same. This crop can lo produced at small ex ponso andlsmarketed within a fowmonths. Vo tako only the first crop. You can ralso other crops for yourself the same year. Our lands He on either sldo of threo hard roads and two railroads, with 12 stations. In cluding flvo towns ond ono city: they aro high, rolling, woll drained, with beautiful clear water lakes and beautiful homes throughout district; elevation over 100 feet; ideal cllmato and puro drinking water. No better grapefruit or orange land on the continent. Over ono million boxes of fruit shipped from this patt of state last year. Modern packing houses. Our growers make big money out of toma toes, syrup cano, winter vegetables, staplo crops nnd watermelons, which aro shipped In solid train loads: G2 spot cash buyers hero ono day last season. Como now and pick out your land while prices aro low. Our land is selling at 13 an ncto and up on easy terms. Von can havo It planted on sharcsorsctout to grapefruit, which bears In 4 years. A 10-acro grape fruit grovo means an Income for llfo old ago Insurance. For particulars, address Lake County Land Owners' Association Fruilland Park, Florida .Dept. L Owner, not aaenti. It. It. fare refunded to buyer. Your Opportunity" lies where the competition is not so keca end where Ida surrounding cosstry will support yon; there are maiy business openings aloef the tints ei the Uales Pacific intern, alfalfa to'dli. baker, haaken. barber shops, blacksmith thopi. brick yards, canning Itctoriea, cement block facteriet, creameries, drug stares, eleTstors, floor mills, laundries, loraitnre stares, garages, hardware stores, hotels, implement stores, laundries, I ember yards, meat markets, phy sicians, 'restaurants, stores (general), and s great variety el others; wa will the yoa free complete Isfermatioa abont the towns aad surrounding country where opportunities sre numerous; writs today. R. A. SMITH Colaatiatiea and Isduttrlal Acest, Uoion Pacific Railroad Co., Room 28S1 Union Pacific BuBitsg. OMAHA. NEB. iasV'8 VsL "UCintu'' "'' " " Sr H S5 $6 Cheapest on Earth Direct f romFactory to You Never Offered Before Kills High Coat of Living. "t lal" HtUhtar Weadtr,kelds IS etfe Wltk Breeder rBEE I lal" llaukloe Weder,kel4s SO ene-Wltk llreeeer fREE -a la 1" lUUMag Wonder, kolde 00 ecfe-Wttk Breeder fREE Write Iliad Qgite er tumit Wanhnuftr Free Catthfut OlreetrremreoleryCa., II N. Market 81., Chicago, III. WmnotiM, IMtw, BelUe, K. T WmlMt, 61 BueU) St, X. T. CXr r Sample aent FREE with money. Miklna- Book to ov.rybodr, ll.SO llreTO m.Ur nd Completo lUtchlne I hart free wtlheecn Kajro. Hero baton 10 to suor more chick cvr illtjl machine. Kuca auto- fralebt Dr.Did Dric. Get Hook if it lTatehlna Fact HATO IMCUSATOS CO.. IOCS S. 111k Street. Omaaa. HoS. i MONEY IN POULTRY SSS'K i CnilARC. "et winter cite. Keep and OVJUiUO healthy fowle. Bare your chicks. Koj's big lnok telle bow. Describee largeat poultry and pigeon farm. Mailed Iras. P. POY, Boa 80, Pes Molnee. Is. ABLE IDEAS WANTED. Hann faeturera want Owen natenta. Bend for S f rea booka:lnTenilone wanted. etc I get patent or no fee. Manufacturing facilities. RICHARD B.OWEH, 89 Owen Bldg., Washington, P.C. MFOR DIME 1S94 S. Mint. S30 for 1853 SK. no arrnwa. t?SO fur certain 15 Oold. no motto. We pay casta premluma fur alt rare money. Many valuable coins In circulation, net poted. Send So for Illustrated Coin Circular. THC RUUBsATICsMKef !.i.,0tpt.2,rrt aertk.Tes. l-t a nmnnTrn able ids rJX I f. I lecturers want Owen patent. Bend $25 Advertising has endowed literature; your part Is obvious.