HAND MADE Quilts of scraps, $6 
delivered. —Alice Stokes, Rt. 3, Jas- 
per, Georgia. 

—_—______.. 
CRESSIDA, Margaret Perry and Im- 
perator Day Lilies $1.50 per dozen. 
California Crinum Lily bulbs, deep 
rose in color, very rare and beautiful, 
75¢e each, large bulbs, very hardy 
& blooms several times each season. 
Gem, a pale Yellow Day Lily, 25c 
each or $2.50 per dozen. Mikado, yel- 
low Day Lily with brown spots on 
petals, 25c¢ each, $2.50 per dozen. — 
Dwarf Lily Gold Dust $2 per dozen. 
Deep Yellow Iris Golden Yellow Hind 
light blue Iris California Blue at 
$2.50 per doz. Red Spider Lily (Ly- 
coris radiata) at 60c per dozen. — 
Mrs. A.C. Dore, 3139 Holly St., 
Shreveport, Louisiana. 

JARDINIERE Parlor Plants. Chi- 
nese Evergreen, 50c, 25c, 10c each; 
Century plants 15c, 10c, 5¢ each; try 
Collard Plants, real large 114 ft. 50c, 
smaller 25c, 15c, 10c each. Narrow 
leaf and wide leaf Plumed Shrimp 
25¢c, 15c, 10c each. LILIES —Ama- 
ryllis, 4 kinds, large 8 in. bulb 35c; 
Equestress 15¢ each. Hybrid Ama- 
ryllis, large 50c each; 4 yr. old dark, 
velvety red only 40c, 3 yr old 35c, 2 
year old 20c each, 1 year old 10c. 
June seedlings 2 for 5c. These are 
gorgeous. Yellow Oxalis, large 5c 
each, small 12 for 25c. Plants and 
Lilies not prepaid. Will trade for pop 
corn, feathers, ham bacon, lyr, old 
white Brahma rooster, dried apricots 
—peaches or plums, or good grade 
Black Walnuts or Pecans. Mrs. J. P. 
Lynch, Box 96, San Antonio, Florida. 

LATE YELLOW fragrant Narcissus 
bulbs $1 per hundred, postpaid, or 
will swap for other bulbs. Mrs. M. 
Poe, Grannis, Arkansas. 
All liars shall have their part in 
lake which burneth with fire and 
brimstone; which is the second 
death. — Rev. 21:8. 
Wt deme 
This is one of the comforting 
promises of the Bible. Few persons, 
unless they come in personal contact 
to their own loss, can realize the 
economic loss and seveye inconveni- 
ence caused by the masculine atti- 
tude, that itis no sin to lie toa 
woman. 
* of * 
Aunt Molly, my neighbor, with a 
son in the army, wanted her garden 
plowed. She was ready to pay an 
honest price for the work. Three 
different men definitely promised 
her: “I’ll be there and break your 
garden.” Now, in October, her gar- 
den is yet unbroken. 
x & * 
‘A breachy cow broke into my yard 
an damaged some plants. A man 
promised me: ‘“‘I’ll be there Monday 
morning and fix your fence.” I see 
him sitting around town daily, but 
no work here yet. All the women 
with whom I discussed this subject 
can match these incidents, or worse. 
Incidentally, I have had to neglect 
letter writing because the physical 
labor of fence repairing exhausts my 
strength. 
But what is an old woman to do, 
but go ahead herself, when the idle 
men would rather live off the wife’s 
and children’s earnings in summer 
and off-the taxpayers (if he votes 
the straight ticket) in winter, than 
work, 
