44 g g GRIFFITH (Q. TURNER CO. g jj 



CHRYSANTHEMUMS 



HARDY POMPONE 



THESE beautiful small-flowered varieties are certain to 

 become popular for outdoor bedding purposes. They are 

 absolutely hardy and produce an abundant profusion of 

 blooms, and the plants lend a coloration to the garden just at 

 a time when other plants have been destroyed by frost and 

 are looking their worst. Frost does not materially affect the 

 flowering, and it will frequently happen that an armful of 

 flowers can be cut after a sharp frost. The collection we offer 

 embraces all the leading colors, and, with but a slight cover- 

 ing of leaves or coarse stable litter during the winter, will 

 take care of themselves after once planted. 

 Carey — Orange. 

 Boston — Bronze Scarlet. 

 Bohemia — Pure Fine Yellow. 

 Cerise Queen — Cerise Pink. 

 Dawn — Daybreak Pink. 

 Errainie — Bright Orange Scarlet. 

 Fred J. — Red Orange. 

 Henrietta — Rose Pink. 

 Hijos — Primrose Pink. 

 Jannett — Orange Edged Scarlet. 

 Julia Lagravere — Crimson. 

 King- Henry — -Large White. 

 Little Pet — Rich Violet Red. 

 Montelair — Red Orange, Yellow Center. 

 Mrs. Porter — Bright Bronze. 

 Peto — Terra Cotta Red. 

 Queen of Bui — Violet Rose. 

 Queen of Whites — Fine Creamy White. 

 Rhoda — Pink Shaded White. 

 It u f us — Crimson Maroon. 

 Salem — Clear Silver Pink. 

 Stratagem — Dark Red Orange. 

 Tennyson — Pure Yellow. 

 Tivoli — White Edged Rose. 

 Price lOe. each; per dozen, 75c.; per 100. $5.00, by express, 

 not prepaid. 



COLEUS 



FIFTEEN CHOICE VARIETIES. 

 10c. each; 75e. per doz.; $4.00 per 100, by express, not prepaid. 



66 



BON OR A." 



Treated with 

 <4 BONORA" 



THESE PLANTS DEMONSTRATE 

 THE RESULTS 

 OBTAINED FROM "BONORA." 



Both were the same Size Before Treatment. 



The new wonderful discovery, good for flowering plants of all kinds,, 

 vegetables, shrubbery, lawns, fruit and shade trees, etc. It contains an 

 abundance of active plant food in a condensed form, and a trial with its 

 consequent results will fully demonstrate its wonderful qualities. It 

 matures a crop two to three weeks earlier, largely increasing the same, 

 greatly improving it in every detail. It is, in fact, to plant life what blood 

 is to human life, and enters the life of the plant as electricity does the 

 wires. It is easily applied; no odor, and gives immediate and lasting 

 results. To vegetable growers BONORA is a veritable boon, as attested 

 to by the high-class endorsements we are daily receiving. A trial will con- 

 vince the most skeptical, and once used you will never be without it. 



Dry form, all size packages, as follows: 



Mailing package, making 5G pints $.30 



Mailing package, making 28 gallons .65 



5-pound package, making 140 gallons 2.50 



10-pound package, making 280 gallons 5.00 



40-pound package, making 1120 gallons 20.06 



100-pound package, making 2800 gallons 42.50 



THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 



NOVEMBER. 4. 



BONORA ON CABBAGES AND FLOWERING- PLANTS. — We have be- 

 fore mentioned the effectiveness of BONORA, a commercial plant food, oil 

 various plants. The makers now claim to have improved it by the additions 

 of a lacking Ingredient, making it a complete fertilizer, without changing 

 its convenient, odorless character. Having at hand some of the new 

 BONORA, we tried it on a dozen late cabbage plants set in poor soil that 

 had ceased growtli and showed no indications of forming heads, and on 50 

 plants of a choice variety of Phlox Drummondi growing thickly in a "flat" 

 or three-inch box of soil. The Phlox plants were showing signs of starva- 

 tion in spindling growth and yellow foliage. Four applications, one week 

 apart, of one part BONORA to 100 of water, were made both to the cab- 

 bages in the garden and the flower plants in the box. The result was 

 renewed growth, visible at end of first week, deep green color of foliage in 

 two weeks in both cases, 11 solid heads of cabbage in the garden and a mass 

 of brilliant bloom covering the crowded Phloxes at this writing, eight 

 weeks after the first application. Both lots of plants were in condition to 

 respond to any good, quiek-actlng fertilizer, but with some experience In han- 

 dling home and commercial manures we have never found anything to equal 

 BONORA for quick and positive effect when additional plant food is plainly 

 needed. 



ALL FRICBS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. 



