G I R ASO L MAN’S L SPUD 
If someone were to discover a plant “Sport” or if some plant 
breeder could cross sunflowers or corn with potatoes to get a 
plant, the tops of which would make silage and, at the same time, 
produce valuable tubers that would outyield potatoes two or 
three to one, under similar soil and moisture conditions, we would 
hail the result as a wonderful discovery. Girasol will do all this 
and more and yet, it is not NEW for it has been raised in Europe 
for centuries under another name. France alone produced 
1,686,030 long tons in 1928 so our Consul at Paris writes. We 
call this crop Girasol because the name under which it sometimes 
passes is the same as another vegetable entirely different which 
is confusing. The scientific name is Helianthus Tuberosus; it is 
related to both artichokes and sunflowers; it is a native of Ameri¬ 
ca, not Jerusalem or elsewhere. Girasol tubers will outyield 
potatoes two or three to one under similar conditions. Yields of 
10 to 20 tons per acre are common. Girasol tops are about a 
third or half the diameter of sunflower stalks but usually two or 
three feet taller and yield 10 to 22 tons silage per acre. Girasol 
is not injured by freezing. The whole or a part of the crop of 
tubers may be harvested in the Fall or the Spring following. 
Girasol is propagated by tubers only, not from roots and joints 
like quack grass and thistles so it cannot become a serious pest if 
followed with pasture, hay meadow or good cultivated crops. 
A Single Hill of “Girasol" 
WONDERFUL HOG FOOD 
All stock and poultry like Girasol tubers, but perhaps the most profitable use would be as hog feed, 
the hogs doing their own harvesting with no expense. Trials along this line have yielded 744 pounds 
pork gain per acre; this might be considered NET PROFIT. The silage crop would be more th?n enough 
to cover cost of seed, land rental and cultivation expenses. Adding gain to balance, the ration would 
of course help. Every farm should have from one-fourth to one acre of Girasol so that they could turn 
the hogs on it in the fall. It is a big money-maker for hogs. 
Girasol may be eaten raw or cooked, but the inulin in Girasol that replaces starch in most other vegetables need 
not be cooked to bring out its food value. This crop will grow on most any kind of soil but the richer the better 
of course, but it will do better on poor soil than most any other crop. Single tubers often weigh more than a pound 
but the average is smaller and more irregular shape than potatoes. Small tubers, or large ones cut small, do not 
seem to decrease the crop as is the case with potatoes. Choice seed tubers 3 for 40c—6 for 60c—12 for $1.00— 
25 for $1.75—50 for $3.25—100 for $6.00, Delivered to you Prepaid. 
Cob ra o rc bid 
Snake Headed; Flesh Eating Plant 
* 
One of the queerest and most fascinating plants known to man. It resembles 
the hooded cobra of the jungles of India, and is one of the few carnivorous 
plants known to science. 
The plant has no leaves, the stalks are twisted and funnel shape, small at the 
bottom, growing larger with a rounded hood at the top from which hang two 
crimson green appendages which have the appearance of feelers or whiskers, 
is of striking aspect and beautiful in coloring. 
The top of the hood is beautifully mottled by white translucent areas through 
which the interior is lighted. Both hood and appendages bear many honey 
glands, the excretion from which tempts bugs, ants, flies, in fact all kinds of 
insects toward the mouth, an orifice on the underside of the hood, and are lured 
inside the funnel-like stem from which they cannot come back, as the stem is 
lined with innumerable little hairlike prongs all pointing downward; once they 
get below a few of these points they have to continue on downward where the 
victim is absorbed in the digestive fluid or liquid in the bottom of the stem. 
The Cobra Orchid, or Darlingtonia is usually grown as a house plant, in pots 
of sandy soil and leaf mould. It is, however, a perennial which will grow year 
after year out of doors or in backyards, provided it is given a shady position 
and never allowed to become dry. They blossom in the spring, having beautiful 
purple flowers. 
If kept in a room free from all insects, it is advisable once or twice weekly to 
place a few small particles of raw beef, about the size of a grain of wheat, in the 
It Eats Files! orifice for its nourishment; however, if placed where there are other plants, in 
the average room, a sufficient number of insects will be attracted from them. 
It Eats Mosquitoes! making artificial feeding unnecessary. 
Even Raw Meat! 
Plants shipped prepaid, anywhere in the United States, at $1.25 each; 2 for 
$2.00; 3 for $2.75. 
I 32 1 
