li)iti &ifi on i^e (gocaies 



size and made permanently green, so that Kin- 

 nikinick, like the pines it loves and helps, could 

 wear green all the time. 



Whenever I see a place that has been made 

 barren and ugly by the thoughtlessness of man, 

 I like to think of Kinnikinick, for I know it will 

 beautify these places if given a chance to do so. 

 There are on earth millions of acres now almost 

 desert that may some time be changed and beauti- 

 fied by this cheerful, modest plant. Some time 

 many bald and barren places in the Rockies will 

 be plumed with pines, bannered with flowers, 

 have brooks, butterflies, and singing birds, — all 

 of these, and homes, too, around which children 

 will play, — because of the reclaiming work which 

 will be done by charming Kinnikinick. 



