East Bridgewater Dahlia Gardens ]. K. Alexander , East Bridgewater , Massachusetts 
Success 
Lawns and 
Shrubbery' 
Flowering plants in 
pots, garden vases, win¬ 
dow boxes, hedges, etc., also 
climbing vines and lawn shrubbery, in 
order to live, thrive and flourish, should be fed 
on a rich and nutritious, readily assimilated and easily 
digested organic plant food, applied at regular intervals. It 
should not be merely a chemical stimulant, but a food that will make plant 
life itself and that will bring forth rich colored, healthy foliage and verdure 
and an abundance of highly colored, well marked and beautiful flowers. 
RED SNAPPER PLANT FOOD 
Red Snapper Plant Food is a wonderfully rich, very nutritious, yet harm¬ 
less fertilizer for plants of this kind. Its effect can be noticed within a few 
days after the first application. Color of foliage becomes a darker green and 
flowers and blossoms take on a beauty of coloring and size beyond all expec¬ 
tations—the wonder and admiration of all who see them. It is made from 
the head bones and nitrogenous cartilage of the South American Red Snap¬ 
per fish, dried under intense heat, mixed with other organic plant foods to 
make a perfectly balanced ration, then ground and bolted in flour mill ma¬ 
chinery into a fine meal. It is thoroughly sterilized, clean and sanitary, to 
be used in the finest homes and conservatories as well as for outside use. 
Put up in 2-lb. cans including an 8-oz. package of Red Snapper Plant Tonic 
which is used to give the plants quicker start. Price, 50 cents, postage ex¬ 
tra. Also put up in 123^-lb. burlap paper-lined sacks, price, $1.50, postage 
extra. In every can and every sack of Red Snapper Plant Food there is 
enclosed a little booklet entitled “House Plants and Flower Gardens— 
Their Care and Culture.” This has fourteen pages of 
general information in regard to raising flowers and shrub¬ 
bery. It is a valuable book and worth 50 cents alone to 
any lover of flowers. It gives full and complete instruc¬ 
tions as to planting, repotting, propagation, watering, 
and care of house plants and flower gardens. 
Address all orders to:— 
J. K. ALEXANDER, 
East Bridgewater, Mass. 
PLANT 
SOAP 
S SULPHUR&Nltff}^ 
s a bath forflow^ 
50 Cents Prepaid. 
188 High Street, Bristol, R. I., 
May 2, 1918. 
Mr. J. K. Alexander, 
East Bridgewater, Mass. 
Dear Sir:—My order for Dahlias, Gladioli, Trit- 
oma, and Cannas was received today in good con¬ 
dition. Please accept my thanks for the extra 
Dahlia. Yours truly, 
JOHN E. ROBINSON. 
/ 
368 Bourgeois St., Montreal, Canada, 
April 3, 1917. 
Mr. Alexander, 
Dear Sir:—Please accept my thanks for prompt 
shipment which came to hand O. K. Will look for 
the balance of order later. 
Again thanking you, I remain, 
Yours truly, 
JACOB DAVIES. 
63 
