
BRIGHTEN UP YOUR BEE-YARD 
Special offer for fall planting; our best fall blooming 
honey plants. 
These are well known honey plants known to main- 
tain themselves in proper environment. Set them this 
fall. Just dig the grass away from the spot where you 
plant; water if necessary so that moisture conditions 
will be right; mulch at the time the ground begins to 
freeze the first winter to prevent heaving; keep the 
weeds hoed out from them to get started next spring 
and from then on they should take care of them- 
selves. 
SIMPSON HONEY PLANT or Figwort 
This fall blooming plant is well noted for it’s rich 
store of nectar. The flowers are small and not showy 
but the plant as a whole is interesting and can be 
counted on to be humming with bees. It blooms late 
summer and fall and furnishes weeks of steady work 
for the bees when most other bloom has dried up. 
Grows from three to five feet tall — sun or partial 
-shade. Natural range — Colorado eastward to Maine 
and south to the Gulf. Also West coast. 
GOLDEN HONEY PLANT or Wingstem 
August bloomer, good late source of nectar. Grows 
four to seven feet tall with yellow flowers. Will grow 
in open sun or partial shade — prefers sheltered loca- 
tions. Natural range is fertile soil and woodland bord- 
ers, Iowa, Missouri and eastward. 
NEW ENGLAND ASTER 
This is the most ornamental of the wild asters. It 
grows four to five feet tall and blooms in late fall 
with showy purple flowers. Natural range — Iowa and 
eastward, adaptible to wide range of climate. 
Good strong plants or divisions of these three easy to 
grow, good fall honey plants. 
Prices postpaid: 
ONE EACH OF THE THREE FOR $1.00. 
5 OF ONE KIND FOR $1.00. 
10 OF ONE KIND FOR $1.75. 
5 EACH OF THE THREE FOR $2.75. 
10 EACH OF THE THREE FOR $4.85 
Order now — we will ship after first heavy freeze, 
usually late October. 
