All-America S§ ) 
AND OTHER 
RECOMMENDED NOVELTIES 

MARIGOLD, Flash 
Practical answers to every-day 
questions about home gardening 
culture. Cold frames, with glass sash the window. Lobelia plants can be 
D. D. T. and Aster Yellows 
Though wilt resistant asters solved 
the wilt problem, Aster Yellows are 
still a menace. Now, with D.D.T., we 
can keep off the leaf hopper, the in- 
sect that carries the virus of Yellows 
to the Aster plant. Regular spraying 
or dusting with D.D.T. will leave a 
residue which will kill the leaf hop- 
per when it lights on the plant and 
before it can stab the leaves and pass 
on the virus. So if your Asters have 
been disappointing lately, try again, 
using D.D.T. 
Large Flowered and 
Double Petunias 
These should never be direct seeded 
outdoors, but must be started indoors. 
Use a flat filled with seed-starting 
mixture. Press soil with a brick or 
flat piece of wood to firm it. Wet 
thoroughly. Then broadcast the seed 
on the surface of the soil. Cover en- 
tire flat with a pane of glass and then 
with a sheet of newspaper. Set ina 
warm, dark place at 75° to 85° until 
seed germinates. Then move to a 
sunny window. If flat dries out slight- 
ly before seed sprouts, water carefully 
with an atomizer. Transplant seed- 
lings when second pair of leaves 
forms. Move into the garden after 
danger from frost is past. 
Formula for Pansy Growing 
Pansies are not annuals but near- 
hardy perennials that need special 
and mats for winter protection are 
essential. Soil should be rich: up to 
one-third of soil can be well-rotted 
manure or sifted compost. Sow seed 
in August. Protect frame with shades 
made by tacking muslin or cheese 
cloth over window screens. Thin 
plants to stand 4” x 4”. After first 
frosts, cover with glass and mats, and 
allow to freeze slowly. Remove mats 
in early spring and allow sun to warm 
frame. Move plants into permanent 
position when in full bloom. Keep 
faded flowers picked: they will stop 
plooming if any seeds are allowed to 
form. Growing good Pansies from 
seed is the test of a real gardener. 
Removing Flowers 
The gardener can lengthen the bloom- 
ing season of all annuals and some 
perennials by removing old flowers 
as soon as they fade, and preventing 
the plant from going to seed. Del- 
phiniums and Canterbury Bells will 
usually respond to this treatment by 
producing a second crop of flowers in 
fall. 
Two Interesting House Plants 
The Heavenly Blue Morning Glory 
makes an excellent house plant for 
winter flowering if grown in a sunny 
window. Start new plants in late 
August, using 6” pots (they make 
heavy root growth). They can be 
trained up strings on either side of 
lifted just before frost, cut back, 
potted and will flower indoors in late 
winter. 
Pinching Back 
If sturdy, stocky plants are wanted, 
they will need “pinching back.” When 
five or six pairs of leaves have formed, 
pinch out the top, leaving two or three 
pairs of leaves on the stem. New 
shoots will come where the leaves 
join the stem. Sometimes a second 
pinch can be made, when these new 
shoots in turn have formed four or 
five pairs of leaves, leaving two pairs 
on each. Pinching increases the num- 
ber of flowers, though sometimes it 
decreases their size. Petunias par- 
ticularly need pinching back if they 
are to remain short. Towards the end 
of the flowering season, after Petunias 
have grown long and lanky, they can 
be cut back to within an inch or two 
of the ground and they will throw 
out new growth. If given a light 
feeding of mixed fertilizer, these re- 
juvenated plants will often bloom as 
well as younger plants early in the 
season. 
Flowers in the Vegetable Garden 
To have plenty of cut flowers without 
disturbing your flower borders, plant 
a few rows of flowers along the edge 
of your vegetable ga rden. Or set them 
out between rows of early lettuce or 
radishes, where they can bloom after 
the vegetables have been used. 

