GRIFFITH & TURNER CO., 205 N. PACA ST., BALTIMORE, MP. 11 



PLANTS--ROOTS-TREES 



STRAWBERRY PLANTS 



In early Winter when the ground is frozen, cover the whole 

 with long straw, which sliould be removed from the plant in 

 the spring', but allowed to remain on the ground as a mulch, 

 to keep the berries clean next summer. 



PBEMIEIt — One of the very best of extra early varieties; 

 succeeds on almost all soil (if well drained). Produced in vast 

 quantities, berries of good size, attractive appearance and 

 excellent quality. 



BIG JOE — Mid-season. Large berry and vigorous grower. 



CHESAPEAKIi — Late. Large, firm and productive. 



liXJPTON — Late. Similar to Chesapeake and often growing 

 where Chesapeake will not make a good bed. Attractive and 

 good shipper. 



GANDY — Very late. Large solid fruit. Fertilize liberally. 

 Prices on above — $1.65 per 100. Postag'e 10c per 100 extra. 

 MASTODOir — The supreme Everbearing Strawberry. Price 

 $2.75 per 100. Postag'e 10c per 100 extra. 



ASPARAGUS ROOTS 



Per 1000 

 $12.00 

 10.00 

 10.00 

 10.00 



Per 100 



HART WASHINGTON (Rust-proof) $1.65 



FAI^METTA 1.50 



BARB'S MAMiaOTH 1.50 



CONOVER'S COI.I.OSAI. 1.50 



Postag'e per 100, 10c. extra. 



RHUBARB ROOTS 



20c. Each. Dozen, $2.00. Postage 10c. extra on 1 to 3 roots 



EI^DORADO BLACKBERRIES 



Price, 15c. each; $1.00 per doz. 



SXTTDER 



(Very hardy) 

 If by mail add 10c. 



CURRANTS 



PAY'S PROLIFIC 

 Price, 40c. each.; $4.00 per doz. If by mail add 10c. 



RASPBERRIES 



ST. REGIS — (Red.) Everbearing. 

 CUMBERI. AND — (Black. ) 

 LATHAM — (Red.) 



Price, 15c. each; $1.00 per doz. 



If hy mail add 10c. 



FRUIT TREES 



AFPIiES — 75c. each. 



Yellow Transparent — July. 



Gravenstein — September 

 to October. 



Summer Rambo — Septem- 

 ber to October. 



Stayman's Winesap — 

 Winter. 



Stark's Delicious — Pall. 



Grimes Golden — Fall. 



Jonathan — Fall. 



York Imperial — Winter. 

 CRABAPFLES (Hyslop) — 90c. 

 each. 



CHERRY — Leading* varieties 

 $1.00 each. 



PEARS — $1.00 each. 



Bartlett — Summer. 



Koonce — Summer. 



Kieffer — Winter. 



Seckel — Autumn. 

 PEACHES — 60c. each. 



Elberta — Yellow free- 

 stone. 



Georgia Belle — White 

 Freestone. 



J. H. Hale — Yellow free- 

 stone. 



PLUMS and SHROPSHIRE 



DAMSON — 70c each. 

 QtriNCE — 85c. each. 



GRAPES 



CONCORD (Blue) NIAGARA (White) CACO (Wine Red) 

 Price, 40c. each. If by mail add 10c. 



SHRUBBERY 



BARBERRY THUNBERGI — 2 year transplanted, 15 to 18 

 inches. $1.50 per 10. 



BARBERRY — New Red Leaf Japanese. 15 to 18 inches. 

 35c. each, 10 for $3.00. 



CALIFORNIA PRIVET — 2 year, IS to 24 inches. Price, 80c. 

 for 10, $6.00 per 100. 



ALTHEA — Double rose red, double red, double white, double 

 white with cherry center, 3 to 4 feet. Price, 75c. each. 



FLOWERING ALMOND — Pink. White. 18 to 24 inches. 



FLOWERING PEACH — 4 to 5 feet. $1.00 each. 



HONEYSUCKLE — IS to 24 inches. 30c. each. 



HYDRANGEA — Hills of snow. White. June to August. 2 

 to 3 feet. $1.00 each. 



HYDRANGEA — Panicnlata Grandiflora — Very showy. Au- 

 gust. 2 to 3 feet. $1.00 each. 



LILACS — French budded, in colors of reddish purple, rosy- 

 lilac, rosy-carmine, white. 2 to 3 feet. $1.00 each. 



WEIGELIA — Red-flowering, 3 to 4 feet. 75c. each. (Blooms 

 in July and August.) 



WEIGELIA — Pink-flowering. 3 to 4 feet. 50c. each. (Blooms 

 In June.) 



HARDY VINES 

 AMFELOPSIS VEITCHII or BOSTON IVY — 75c. each. 

 AMPELOFSIS QUINQUEFOLIA — Virginia Creeper. 75c. 



CLEMATIS — White. $1.25 each. Purple. $1.25 each. 

 JASMINE — White. 75c. each. 

 PERIWINKLE — Blue-flowering. 75c. each. 

 WISTERIA — Purple. 75c. each. 



Por Other Varieties of Nursery Stocks, Write for Prices. 



FROST-PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS 



WILL MATURE HEADS TWO TO THREE WEEKS 

 EARLIER THAN YOUR HOME-GROWN PLANTS. 

 Early Jersey Wakefield, Charleston Wakefield, Snccesslon, 

 Early Flat Dutch and Copenhag'en Market. 



These plants are grown in the open field during the fall and 

 winter months, which causes them to make a slow, tough, 

 hardy growth — so hardy that the outer leaves turn to a red- 

 dish brown. They can be shipped to distant points without 

 danger of spoiling, and should be planted in the open ground 

 from four to five weeks earlier than frame plants. 



They will stand a temperature of 10 to 15 degrees above 

 zero without injury. Will do very much better planted early, 

 as they will take root and start to grow as soon as warm 

 weather sets in. 



Orders filled from December 1st -until May 1st. We do not 

 advise planting later than this time. 



Prices by Parcel Post, postage paid. In lots of 100 to 300 

 plants, 40c. per 100 plants; 500 plants for $1.50; 1,000 or more 

 at $2.25 per 1,000 plants. 



Orders are filled by the 100, not 250 or 350. These prices 

 are for even quantities of one variety to package; if you 

 ordered 200 of one variety and 300 of another variety you 

 would pay at the 100 rate. 



Prices by Express, buyer paying express charges. In lots 

 of 1,000 to 3,000 plants at $1.50 per 1,000; 5,000 or more at 

 $1.25 per 1,000. Plants packed for express shipment, 1,000 or 

 2,000 plants of a variety to package, they weigh about 25 

 pounds per thousand plants, packed for shipment. 



TERMS, CASH WITH ORDER, PLEASE 

 No Plants Shipped C. O. D. 



GERMACO HOTKAPS 



Besides protecting the plant from the elements and from 

 insects, "Hotkaps" are worth their cost alone because they 

 aid in maturing crops earlier. That is the all-important thing 

 to the grower, FOR IT MEANS THAT HE CAN BE FIRST 

 TO MARKET AND SO COMMAND A BETTER PRICE FOR 

 HIS CROP. Thus "Hotkaps" far more than pay for them- 

 selves. They represent one of the best investments a farmer 

 can make. Thousands have proved it; thousands more ^rrr 

 discovering it every season. 



Prices 



100 Hotkaps and Garden Setter $2.25 



250 Hotkaps and Garden Setter 3.50 



1,000 Hotkaps, only, per M 9.75 



5,000 Hotkaps, only, per M. 



10,000 Hotkaps, only, per M 



Steel Hotkap Setter and Tamper. 



Garden Setter (paper), each 



Steel Tamper, each 



9.60 

 9.50 

 2.25 

 .50 

 .25 



GATOR-HIDE MULCH PAPER 



WHAT GATOR-HIDE MULCH PAPER IS — 

 HOW IT WORKS 



Gator-Hide Mulch Paper is one of the toughest, strongest, 

 most durable papers made. It is impregnated by a special 

 process with a particular grade of asphaltum which has no 

 harmful effect on soil or plant life. 



Unrolled over the proposed plant beds, and anchored by soil 

 or other available material along the edges, Gator-Hide Mulch 

 Paper imprisons all the moisture in the soil. Its black sur- 

 face catches and retains the sun's heat. This raises the soil's 

 temperature, prevents cooling at night, and promotes continu- 

 ous bacterial activity, liberating night and day nitrous food 

 matter for the plant, producing bigger, better, and earlier 

 crops. 



Planting is done through holes made in the paper, or in the 

 space between two strips of paper rolled out close together. 

 Thus while ample space is provided for the plant, no space is 

 left for weeds, and the nourishment they ordinarily steal from 

 the soil is conserved for the crops you plant. 

 Type A — 18-in. width — 300 linear yards to the roll $3.00 



36-in. width — 300 linear yards to the roll 6.00 



Type B — 18-in. width — 150 linear yards to the roll 3.00 



36-in. width — 150 linear yards to the roll 6.00 



Garden Packag'e 65 



