HARDY PLANTS 
SHIPPING DATE —All plants will be shipped, when to our 
judgment, danger of frost is over. If ordered with seeds 
or poultry supplies, balance of order will be filled and 
acknowledgment of plant order will be packed in shipment. 
VEGETABLES 
TOMATOES — We can furnish the following varieties:. Break 
O'Day, Earliana, John Baer, Bison, Penn State and Yellow 
Pear. Please give second choice in these as we might be sold 
out of the first selection. Yellow Pear supplied only in 
3 and 4-in. pots. 
Tomato Plants 
Per Doz. Wt. PerDoz. 
Tomatoes—Bench Planted .$ .50. 3 lbs. 
Tomatoes—3-in. Potted . 1.00.12 lbs. 
Tomatoes—4-in. Potted . 1.50.18 lbs. 
PACKING COST: 
Bench Planted, 5c doz. extra; 3-in. Potted, 10c doz. extra 
Note: We do not recommend that 4-in. potted tomatoes 
be shipped by parcel post but only by express collect. 
STRAWBERRIES 
FOR EARLIER 
VEGETABLES & FLOWERS 
CABBAGE 
We grow the following varieties: Golden Acre, Copenha¬ 
gen Market, Danish Ball Heads, Late Flat Dutch and Early 
Jersey Wakefield. 
NOT 
POSTPAID 
POSTPAID 
Per 
Per 
Per 
Per 
Per 
Per 
12 
50 
100 
12 
50 
100 
CABBAGE . 
$0.15 
$0.50 
$1.00 
$0.25 
$0.75 
$1.25 
CAULIFLOWER 
Early Snowball 
.20 
.75 
1.50 
.35 
1.00 
1.75 
CELERY 
Giant Pascal , 
.25 
.85 
1.50 
.40 
1.10 
2.00 
ASPARAGUS ROOTS 
See page 2 for description 
1 doz., 40c, postpaid; 50 for SI.25; 100 for S2.25 
HORSERADISH 
Each, 25c; postpaid, 33c. 
CHIVES 
Hardy perennial plants with a mild onion flavor. Per 
bunch, 15c. 
RHUBARB 
Dan Paynes special. See description on page 12. 
Each, 20c; 6 for $1.00. 
They look good but 
taste better. Enjoy 
juicy mastodon 
strawberries fresh 
from your own berry 
patch. X-L Mastodons 
are the largest and 
best. 
MASTADON —This new variety is the last word in straw¬ 
berry and outranks all predecessors. It is of immense size 
and also a creditable cropper, of choice quality and the 
strongest grower yet developed. 
PROGRESSIVE —A strong, upright grower and great 
drought resister. Fruits abundantly about three months after 
plants are set and continues until after fall. 
PRICES ON ALL STRAWBERRY PLANTS 
25—50c; 50—90c; 100—$1.50; 500—$6.00. Postage, 25—10c; 
50—12c. Please order strawberry plants early, as the length 
of time that we can hold them in the store is limited and 
we disappoint many customers each year. No order for 
less than 25 plants accepted. 
Nick Poncelet sets thousands of plants 
with this setter 
APRIL PLANTING DATES 
1—Good time to plant root crops. 2-3—Good time to plant 
crops that produce yield above ground. 4-5—Fairly good for 
root crops of quick growth. 6-7—-Good for plants that produce 
yield above ground. 8-9—Fruitful sign. Seeds planted now 
germinate quickly. 10-11-12—Unfavorable to plant, good 
time to destroy weeds. 13-14—Unfavorable except for flow¬ 
ers. 15-16-17—Plant now for pulp and roots and a fair 
amount of grain. 18-19—Good time to plant, especially good 
for corn. 20-21—Unfavorable to plant or transplant. 22-23-24 
—Plant now for quick growth of pulp or roots, not especially 
good for grain. 25-26—Seeds planted now liable to ro*. 
27-28-29—Good for plants that produce yield above ground. 
30—Good for vines, stalks and crops that produce yield 
above ground. 
MAY PLANTING DATES 
1—Good for vines, stalks and crops that produce yield 
above ground. 2-3—Not particularly favorable for planting. 
4-5—Good time for all plants that produce yield above 
ground. 6-7—Good sign. Seeds planted now germinate 
quickly. 8-9—Unfavorable for crops. Good time to destroy 
weeds. 10-11-12—Unfavorable except for flowers. 12-14-— 
Plant now for stalk and root growth and fair amount of 
grain. 15-16—Good for all crops, especially good for corn. 
17-18-19—Generally unfavorable. 20-21—Plant now for quick 
growth of pulp and roots but not much grain. 22-23-24— 
Seeds planted now liable to rot. 25-26—Good sign for any 
kind of crops. 27-28—Fairly good for vines and stalks, not 
very good for grain. 29-30-—Fair for root crops. 31—Good to 
plant seeds that produce yield above ground. 
JUNE PLANTING DATES 
1—Good time to plant seeds that produce yield above 
ground. 2-3—Plant now for quick growth and good crops. 
4-5—Unfavorable to plant or transplant but a good time 
to destroy weeds. 6-7-8—Unfavorable for everything except 
flowers. 9-10—Plant now for good pulp growth and consid¬ 
erable amount of grain. 11-12-13—Good sign, especially good 
for corn. 14-15—Unfavorable except for radishes and root 
crops. 16-17-18—-Good for quick growth of pulp and roots, 
not good for grain. 19-20—Seeds planted at this time liable 
to rot. 21-22—Good time for all planting, especially good for 
root crops. 23-24—Fairly good for vines or stalks. 25-26— 
Fairly good for root crops of quick growth. 27-28~Good time 
to plant all crops that produce yield above ground. 29-30— 
Plant now for quick growth and a fair crop. 
JULY PLANTING DATES 
1-2-3—Unfavorable for planting anything except flowers. 
4-5—Plant now for good pu’p and root crops and fair amount 
of grain. 6-7- Plant now for heahhy pulp and root growth 
and fair amount of grain. 8-9-10—Good for all crops, es¬ 
pecially good for corn. 11-12—-Unfavorable time to plant. 
13-14-15—Plant now for rapid pulp and root growth but not 
much grain. 16-17- Seeds planted at this time liable to rot. 
18-19-2Q—Good time for all crops, especially good for roots. 
21-22—Good time to plant only for vines or stalks. 23-24— 
Fairly good for root crops. Quick growth. 25-26—Good for all 
plants that produce yield above ground. 27-28—Plant now 
for quick growth and a good crop. 29-30—Unfavorable time 
to plant. 31—Unfavorable for everything except flowers. 
You can’t grow too many Vegetables for Health’s Sake 
15 
