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Read SOUTHERN TRADE WINDS, 
that new and different mail order 
magazine, catering to the mail trade, 
hobbyists and swappers. 5c gets a 
sample copy. Your ads should be in 
every issue. Ad rates 3c per word, 
8 times for price of 2.. A 6x9 maga- 
zine that goes places and does things. 
Fred ¢rissom, Pub., Rt. 3, Delhi, La. 


\ tow O GET WHAT YOU WAN?7, 
wonderful booklet, 10c coin and 3c 
stamp. Send tor free iists seif-help, 
psychological and metaphysicai 
books, price 10c and up. Garnet Book 
Service, 347 N. Main St., Wacerbury, 
Connecticut. 

COLORADO Hardy Cacti. Opuntia 
Polyacantha, tlowers yellow, eanry. 
Lave yellow with red center and ye.- — 
low with green cencer. Large plants, 
3 for $1. imedium size 6 fur pl. small 
size 1Z tor $l. 
HARDY Cactus Echinocerus, Hedge- 
hog viriditlorus, smal knobs, prim- 
rose, yellow tlowers. Also nice nouse- 
plant. 
NATIVE Leucocrinum, Sandlily mon- 
tanum, white stars, guarded by glau- 
cous lances. 
LUPINUS Alpestris, 3 in. blue, pur- 
ple flowers. above soft palmate 
foliage. | 
ASTER porteri, perennial, small whi- 
te flowers, along arching stems. 
GOLDEN Road Dwarf, Cat tail, Ear- 
liest native bulb, Prairie Horsetail, 
Mallow, Allysum, Buffalow Grass 
mint, Primrose, Milk-weed, Mailow, 
Your choice, 12 plants $1.00 postpaid. 
Will trade. Please send list. 
HILLSVUE GARDENS 
Route 1, Ft. Lupton, Colorado 
“The wicked borroweth and pay- 
eth not again”. It is possible that 
many who feel themselves to be the 
salt of the earth, but who have been 
careless about returning borrowed 
books and other items may be sur-— 
prised at finding themselves classed 
with the wicked. 
Ry Pons eA est 
It is wise to be particularly care- 
ful to use sterilized soil for Pachse- 
yerias. My mother plant of Pachse- 
Verias clavifclia flourished all winter 
but with warm weather, began to rot 
# the ground level. I cut it off well 
above the diseased part and reset, 
but to no avail. A daughter piant in 
another container is thriving. Mrs. 
Asmus who has a wide experience 
with that class of plants, advises me 
that the trouble probably was due to 
soil infestation. Will try to find room 
for her article next issue. 
bs * *. 
F, Mother plants- of Talinum, dor- 
mant most of the winter, now in full 
bud. Oldest spring seedling, about an 
inch tall. 
* * % 
an . 
‘< Parsley Paramount is very orna- 
mental as well as rich in vitamins, 
and easily transplanted: but the lea- 
ves it carried when moved are al-. 
most sure to die. 
~ 
* fae 
I am pleasantly surprised at the a- 
mount of salad material we can raise’ 
in leaky tubs and dishpans. 
be 
LAURA D. COLE 
Grannis, Arkansas 

