PAGE T\‘_V_O THE nu? I TIMIELY sores on romcs conurcreo wmi Silver Fox Farming ailveau that brought the blu llrice above. mim all fox wit: found a NBC]! “"1; the United States and Great Britain and we would any that the average The Master Rancher. published" by the Department of Fur Bear- ing Animals by Master Feeds. Tor- onto. January n 1'. has ir- rived and is devoted to the ury pelt Mink sale at Montreal. Edited and written by D1’, Beadle Bcwness it has a particu- larly excellent review of the mink sale analysing the reasons why wild mink was sold at 37'... higher than ranch mink and Why buyers want wild mink in preference to ranch mink. Dr. Bownees e patience and ability to 8o into such matters thoroughly and for those who are interested in mink farming we would advise sending for a copy if they have not already received one. We will look for- vrord very eagerly for his Master Rancher No. 2 on the January fox pelt sale. Last week the Montreal Fur Sales iCanada) Ltd. sale of silver fox and mutations held in Mont- real was announced as successful with some advance‘ and a falrly good demand. This week the anadian For Auction Sales Com- pany started selling silver fox on Wednesday with an‘ offering of .; 0.000 pelts in ihe first SBCUOIIIOI the catalogue. 0n "i'liursdfll' 3'71 silver fox show pelts from Ontario ' and Prince Ediward Island and > 9.000 other silvers of the second . l section were on sale and yegiief" day the third section consisting of 0.000 skins was offered. By toe time this reaches you you will ., hive had reports on these in the L‘ Guardian from George A. Call- beck. Manager of the Fur Mar- keting Department, Canadian Na- tional silver Fox Breeders As- sociation. who is attendina’ U19 sale. urns in Janu- ty the same ed sllv when th have that way. Lampson d: River 100x Personally we do not look for much advance in price as the markets in New York seem to be - ' Just holding their own. There the it poorer qualities of silver_fox are ~. practically neglected ano buyers seem to want only the better ;‘ lack of I breeding a grades. No doubt the linings has had its effect as the coat and suit trade would be pre- vented from making up their usual quantities. but the big trouble is me taxes. 200', in the U. S. A. and 2'1" in Canada. Until these are removed 0i‘ at least halved, sil- Til‘ fox auctions will show low prices. Now that parliament is in session at Ottawa and the budget vlll be broukht down. our efforts should be devoted towards having the Hon. Mr. Ilsley either remove the 25”» tax or at least half it. No one finds fault with his handling of his department. He has been an excellent Minister of Finance. but. he has certainly not .1 received good advice with regard . t"- tlic taxing of fur breeders. Fox " firmers are the one people in all ‘ Canada who have gone through 1- the war without a profit or if they 1911. George and in the others i one tc our local they don't want to go in whole- sale for the production of muta- tions. If they do boat rancher: who are tohy mg some very platinums and white also a lot of v rounds them w ra/ther interesting. A that was that gave them four pairs which v being prolific soon built up a nice herd. among them some of the finest silvers in the Cbtlnhry, n. over, was one of these three-quarter e have made a profit it has been by the sale of live foxes or new types or by the production of plat- in quantities or other new pes in quantities. and that has been done at the expense of the E. backbone of their rancbea Right hero we -wa.ut breeders they will be in with indifferent mark- foxes, plat unis and poor SIB. No one knows what will happen e u market opens t V ‘ up again. The people of Great bluish black necks and very bright Britain. Frame and most of the w countrlu of Europe have not seen any silver foxes for sale for five years and there is every probabil- ity that the glamour which sur- ill not have been forgotten and that they will be wanting them. V been educated up to plat- in-ums. pearl platinums and such types and perhaps they will want. the darker Silver types. certainly the three-quarter silvers, must not get too far away from these types even though our mar- kels today do not reflect They How different things are from i918 when World War I ended. In December of that year C. M. Co. held an auction of silver fox pelts and the top price was obtained for a beautiful three-quarter silver from the Seal many others. dropped out in the tough times around i920 to i900. - the that western reduc- will SOWS . things 0i’ l) The story of that company is ary prices of 1028.. 1n December. years ago last fall . . McDonald. Morrison established seven George E. Aultl and Pope Fletcher. a all since deceased. went to Char- les Daltons ranch in Tignlsh to purchase a pair of silver fox pups for breeders. Mr. Dalton told them he regretted that he had nothing ado. to suit them. that the only pair oi pups he had were born in May he never had any success with May pups. However. bought them for $7,000 and the 09X‘? $911118 Billy Jenkins brought established are still continuing to the glad news that- the pair produce good silvers and muta- had a. lit/ter of seven. n5, traded to bring in new blood and ‘ ‘ ’ together with purchased. they l’! Two were tio and produced many of the belt Dalton foxes in Prince County. atraina of “M a m gaiton’: we must not ‘aver-gab the mute one aptain liilia strain. e but remember six of there which the genial Captain. who caane down from Boston every fall tn sell his pelts. showed us prior to selling em to an average of 0125. They were silver ranging from one-eighth half or three-quarters. There was plenty of resiliency to the fur and the color was real Bcod. It may b6 that in those days we were not accustomed to the very clear color which we insist upon having to- not day. that foxes keipt on mother earth. which they usually burrowed into. could be on wire bottoms as they are to- day. But anyhow they were beau- tiful and the picture still remains and can easily be recalled. were boom days indeed and as we look back now at almost the end c ference in prices for our product we vronder what the days of peace will bring, slump or market and greater demand and some rise in so. Ranchlng Company, a Ltd. of Seal River, P. E. I. ‘The ranch manager of that company was William Jenkins, who is still certain number sales of silver fox pelts at up to foxes, but the company itself, like $605 for selected one-half silver skins and up to $000 for selected three-quarter silver skins. That made a total of 14 ranches in the state. thev shipped 97 pairs of foxes to their various ranches in Color- werc two of the most active silvlel: Randall was one of the most ad- He was a Nova Scotlan and had the ability cf putting his views arice per pelt would be in the v init ti taco. The next Sarina. flamb- lm, at C. M. Lamuwn Company's gels in London, waiter S. Grant sold upwurdl of fifty lia for Par Producers. Ltd. C ottetown. It an average of over 0600. was a particular] fine collection. incstig uthr-lele-quariers bu; 63:11:“: ew a vera. They from Tu stock creased with In mentioning good W. Chester S. McLui-e for ypical Bolton's with beautiful It does not seem possible as clear as those kept Those this war and think of the dif- further whether a the a broadening of . .. We hope (Average price at February ion in Montreal was $29.50). price. .. llCt Seventeen years ago the New l; York Auction Comparw reported These rices were 20% above the Janu- . .. .. Seventeen Milligan and new ssociated ranches in Colorado. it In December of 1921 of Messrs. Milligan 6s Morrison L“ "Ema" i“ ‘mmlci “m snared re this wonderful and ihe “by”? amwmfh m" 3°“ fascinating era of our Island's friends Edflar and George have mum-w assed on the ranches which they Seventeen years ago Dr. E. A. ertised men in the fox industry. most‘ magazines carrying rticles by him that were very L,\,‘l,',l\|,';>l Jtliliitiiilifi minim ...,........~....@». readable and merit. The Spring of 192a in livered an addrem to the mom. bets of the Colorado Fox Breede ers Association in Denver. .: .. Seventeen years ago Messrs. Me. Lure 8r. MacKliiiion of Charlotte- town had just returned home from attending the Hudson's Bay com. army's auctions in London where large quantities of silver fox pelts Purchased in Prince Edward Isl- and were sold by that company. Prices were high and a pelt sent over by Edgar Milligan roi- Milli- kan d: Morrison sold for the equiv- alent of $1.260 and sixty pelts sold for an average of £60 or approx- imately $300 each. highest priced pelt sold on that auction was from McLure d: Mac- Kinrion Silver Fox Farms, Ltd, and We have received a letter from our good friend Dr. R. l-I. Mac- Donald of Saskatoon conunenting on the write up of the Frank F‘. Tuplin. He said he found that every effort be made to col- lect all the data that could be ob- tained regarding the early history ter up with B. Graham Rogers. who is writing hope that ‘ere it is too late as much material as possible will be F0! TI/E mnr wit" g s, ‘"1540 m: fi ‘A 5.113201‘)??? ( p; P, iiJ-tfrliiif croft... ail-Flowers your had considerabfe de- The second brought over $000. life o! most interesting and suggested the industry. We took the mat- to his uncle. Fred Rogers in Saint John. aiid we flown, Kent, that measures 5 feet in girth. There is. it observed. nothlnd Very that measurement. tor Pennant. a NOTES -1 must be in where he found a Yew rneasur‘ 56 feet in diameter. though time had wasted it to a hollow shell. with only a few leaves at point. eiit years. says he has seen ‘Yews of 2'1 feet. ish Isles and in Gaul. according to Julius Caesar, and this is cor- roborated by the umerous trunks embedded Ireland. It seems to have been re- garded as a. sacred tree. perhaps an emblem of immortality. owing to its long life, and the durable character of its wood. Almost al- ways. the Yew growing in old church- yards and the argument has aris- en, was the Yew planted there be- cause of its own sanctity. or was the church built near the sacred tree? Abbey, Yorkshire, the trees were there first. the monks and workmen slept in the shelter of’ the Yows while the buildings took shape. Some years ago I visited the Abbey. now in ruins, and inspected the old trees which were still standing but much decayed. Their noble owaier had clone all he could to prolong their lves. led with cement. forked props sulp- ported their decrepit branches, and wire cables or guys Prevent"! 0911' ers from falling. in Caesar's time. Yews are scarce in England now. By a law Edward IV (1400) every English- man was to provide himself with a bow, of his “Yew. , borne". the last-named being now known as labumum. The Yew with its compact. wood. stands at the head of the list and the supply naturally he- caime exhausted first. was passed that 0H8 Sir James Hooker. in rec- l‘ . Yews were abundant in the Brit- in the peat-bogs of ‘W I nowadays, one only finds In the case of Fountains built in 1132. since Their hollows had been fil- Whatever they may have been own height. wych-hazel. ash or aw- hard. and elastic Then a law every shloman BI‘ . handling of the bow; for the arch- I have never heard of’ our -"Am- erican Yew" being poisonous stock, hut it is a well-known fact that the twigs and leaves of the English, Yew. eaten in very small quantities, horses ported. will crop them with im- punity. that sheep and goats are immune to the poison. Turkeys and oth- goultry eat the leaves and fruit out harm. Whilst heard of cattle dying after eat- it ing trimmings from In old ‘ from the sixteenth and seventeenth Centuries. may be seen Yews cut ln/to the shapes of birds and beasts. or globes and other geometrical figures. These are trimmed an- nually to keep them in shape, and t the artifice is known as topiary protested against which was the fashion time. "I. for my part." he says in his Essays. cut out in Juniper (yew?) and oth- er garden stuff; dren." bring my desultorv notes on the Yew tree to a. cl It was, ii’ rn the Rev. Char-es Kinglsley wrote a poem about a hairy oubit. Well. on March 0th. I found one trawling about outside, quite ob- livious to the wintry outlook. This hardy caterpillar. locally known I believe. as a. Woolly densely covered with long, hair. dlspcs tions: fore and aft it was black. while the middle third was brown- ish red. Gan any of my entomo- logical friends tell me what ibis "oubit" feeds on and what moth it ultimately beomes? I have also seen "oublts" clothed in bringing 1n a butt o; Maimny white, but later in the year. heir mua- t0 Eve bit, th the are certain death to and cows. Deer, it is re- v1 and Linnaeus observed The Olly C01 th shtfihtsif. out history. 51 A.D.. t in England a Yew he e. W" gardens du g the Roman Colouia Agrlppfn his wife here The learned Lord Bacon this practice. of his towe "do not like images they be for chil- thls quotation I With 08S. A Ilalry Oubit memory SONGS, who Bear. was erect ed in three equal sec- Wrlte for yellow and VEGETAILE SEEDS ASPARAGUS» ~ Mary Waalriugtou-Pkt. .. 0e BEANS: Yellow 8i Green-Pod (Bush) Davis Wax Golden Wax Pencil-Bod Blltk W8! Bound-Pod Kidney Wax Bountiful Green Pod Teudergreeu Plit i410. 1,410. ' 5e 10o 00a 00a 7 IEANS: Broad, Lima It Pole Broad Windsor; Duuk Burpee’: Imp. Buxla Lima. Scarlet Runner; Pole Kentucky Wonder Wax; Pale A Kentucky Wonder Green-Pod; Pele Pkt. K lb. If lb. 1 lb. 0o 10o 80o 50a BEANS: Yellow Eye (Belt for Baking) ‘,5 lb. 1S0; I lb. 300. IEET: Alwuya Teutler Croabyb Rypflau Detroit Dark Red Early Flat Egyptian Early Wonder Pkt. i ca. K lb. 5e 20c ‘I00 l lb. 5f Ill. I. 1h. I-ll SJI BORECOLE or Kale-PH. . . . . . ..5c BROCCOLl-Pltt. ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5: IRUSSELS SPROUTS-PH. . . . . . .50 CABBAGE: Copenhagen Market; Baily Danish Bullhead; Lute Early Jeraey Wakefield Early Wtuulngutudt Golden Acre; Early Green Awe; Barty Large Late Flat Dutch Penn State Bullhead; Late Pkt. $6 “a. l on. 1,410. 5o 30o 55o 2.00 CARROT: Dauvefa Ialf Mug , PM. Mul- for. l/l lli. Ills. 5o 10o 30o 95c 3.25 CARROT: Chauteaa led Cored Nautaa Coreleaa Pki. lieu. fox. Klb. ilb. 0e 00o 00o 1.10 0.00 CAULIFLOWER: Early Erfurt — Plit. ............ .. Extra Surly Snowball - Pkt. Super Snowball; Early-Put. . 10a CELERY: Golden Self-Blanehlug-Pkt. 10o White Plume-Phi. 10o CORN: Yellow Sweet Golden Bantam Golden Suuahiue Pkt. K lb. l6 lb. i lb. l0 Ila 00o 00o CORN: Hybrid Sweet Golden Crol “ ‘ Spaucroua Pkt. 541b, lg lb. 1 lb. 10c 200 35o 60c CUCUMBER: Early White Spine Improved Long Green National Pickling Straight Eight Pkt. I or. i4 lb. 94 lb. $8 I00 70o Li! HERBS: Summer Savory-Pit. KOHL RABl-Pkf. LEEK-Pkt. ............. ..I..'Qs¢ LETTUCE: Black Seeded Iuipleu; Loose Leaf Grand Rapids; More ha! Ieeburg; Bead New York ll; Bead White Cos or Celery Lettuce; Head Pkt. l or. $4 lb. 0e 00a 70o MELON : Citron (Per Preaerveal-Pkt. Muskmelou; Ilouey Itock-Pkt. .... .. Watermelon; Cole’: Early, Greeu-Pkt. ONION: Early Yellow Globe Yellow Globe Dauvers Plit. l5 or. l 0a. 0e Ila Q ONION: Large Bed Wetlaeralelil White Portugal or Silver Skin Pll- ti ca. l or. Is 8S0 00a ONION SETS: . nu» Dutch-Lb. PARSLEY: Double Curled-Pkt. PARSNIP: Hollow Crewu Improved Pkt. lea. 5i lb. Ilb. 0e 12o m 1.25 PEAS: Early Varieties American Wonder; Dwarf laxfmfu Progreaa; Dwarf Telephone; Dwarf Thomas Laxfou; Dwarf LATE VAIIETIES: Stratagem; Tall Telephone; Tall Plit. ‘A lb. $5 lb. lib. l0 10o I06 30o C 5e .50 Ia I00 5e TCartefs i945 I CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. PUMPKIN: I‘ 'field"'—'Plrt;' t ...._..I4fll‘te Cheese-Pitt. Mammoth or Jumbo-Pitt. Small Sugar ‘(Beat for Plow-Pitt. .. PEPPER: Harrie‘ Earlieat Sweet —Plrt. RADISH: French Breakfast Icicle ‘ Scarlet Globe Scarlet Turnip White Tip Pkt. 5o; 1 ca. I00 SPINACH: Bloomadal Long Standing King of Denmark Pkt. 5o; 1 ox. 10o SQUASH: Bolton Marrow; Golden Hubbard; Green II “ ; Vegetable Marrow. Pkt. 5c; 1 oz. 15c. SWISS CHARD: Giant Lucullua Pkt. l4 ea. l ca. 34 lb. 0e 10o 20o 70o TOMATO: Bonny Beet Earliaua Marglobe Pkl. 54 oz. l or. Se 40c 10o TURNIP: (Garden) Early sl-r Weeka-Pkt. Golden Ball—PkL FLOWER SEEDS ANNUALS . I0 I0 Packet ,AGEBATUM, Blue Cap .......................... “I00 ALYSSUM: lweat WBIIO Carpet of luuw Violet Queau .. ANTIRRIIINUM or SNAPDBAGON Super Majeatle Tall Mixed Blue Ribbon Bedding, Dwarf . ASTII. Gfaut Crqu Mixed Flue Branching Mixed . IALSAM Double Mixed Dwarf .......................... ..l0e CALLIUPSIS, Dwarf Mixed ....... .. CANDYTUFT, 'Fll'l'elt 'Mlxed 100 “JIOQWT ZINNIA CENTAURI-IA or BACIIELOR'S BUTTON Double Mixed COSMOS, Single Mixed CLARIIIA, Double Mixed . ESCIISCIIOLTZIA California Poppy, Flue Mixed GAILLARDIA, Double Mixed GYPSOPIIILA or BABY'S BREATH KOCIIIA or MEXICAN FIRE BUSII LARKSPUB, Gtauf. Imperial Mixed LINUM or SCARLET FLAX LOBELIA, Crystal Palace, Dark Blue MARIGOLD Afrloau Mixed French Dwarf Mixed MIGNONETTE, Odorata. Mixed . MATTIIIOLA, Evening Scented NASTURTIUM Empreal of India. Scarlet Gem, Double Dwarf Golden Gleam-l or. 25o Tull and Dwarf, Mixed-l ox. 25c NICOTIANA, Flowering Tobacco, PANSY Giaut Trluiardeau, Mixed . Masterpiece. Mixed ......... .. PETUNIA Balcony Mixed .. lrbrlda Mixau . PIIDOX. Flue blxad POPPY, Shirley Mixed PODTULACA, Double Mixed urcmua OP casroit on. BEAN SAI-VIA er IOABLIT SAG! SALPIGLOISIS, Mixed .. SOABIOSA er MOUBNIIVG BRIDE Double Tall Mixed SUNFLOWER, Double Dwa SWEET PIAS Burpeeb Giant ltuflletl Mix0ule if I0. 01.00; l ea. 00o Sperueor Type Mlxed K lb. SIM; I ox. 40c TEN WEEK STOCKS Dwarf Double Mixed .......................... .. 10o . 10o .100 . 10o 10o . ioe 10o . 10o . . 10c . 10c 10o . 10o I00 I00 I00 .50 5e I00 .100 ABOUT WADB-ANT Y-Ju the sawing and germination understood WMIO uiauy eauaea for failures that we whk it . that Wu care to auuply varleilea true to name aul of beat quality, It ta hereby mutually that we are not reapouaible for reel loll by u either aa to growth, from auy failure thereof. get exactly the name aervlee and attuatltm when. cam- THE BEST QUALITY SEEDS for loaa or damage Cuatoum-a who purehaae by mall u than who vflt our atora. When ofilfllil lellil llflieteut 0o cover er freight eliargn. We suggest you keep thla list for reference.- a ISLAND . WE HANDLE ONLY (h efaeedathareareaa . m _A quality or kfud, or t F. dictionary glvea 9n- and aays the name rom wool; with rruumwlv. the adiitlou of butt. a thick d. Previous to the your “Oppldum Ubloruui’. the town of a tribe called the Ubil. In that year 11mm founded a colony there. called the euall, in h ppina who waa born . was s Ooionia, then to Cologne, and fin- the Genuaara to Kola-i ht the 0a hedrel, with ring to 511 feet above the-meotreet-level: world. an older saw the beginning of portion necessary to complete the 7 i m YewTruu wulne alxugagrinlwithitteubow o“. vilt w Praueh Port. v” ‘ "- I Emu“ Q» .8010!‘ u“ IIIVODUDII OI IUD- shrub. which on examination 1 pm! . the Yew-tree bow and ‘all: found to be ca» American Yew. cloth-rim nhnflt were "ti; n _ ,*,;=,g,,-,=',-,,,,°,,-*",,,,,-;: ma“... :2" us. 0.2%. -- “r """ m“"..".l"l'°'"...,,’r...'f :":":..*':t.'"'"......"."x..'s s‘: r T"? 5171434537.”? m‘ ggfipw~,_"°,iig puiy,_ "Iaenuieameueermseamweli “h PE‘ ‘M . mtqummt, which gave it the au- the imam at the out of The AuuualMeetlug o e . . l. Potato Grower-w warm“ o‘ l "m?- °“' Y” ‘h’ "m" m“ m” ‘i ’ W‘ etiou for the transaction of general bulineuu wfl] **°"*"°'- "°"°' m“ ‘° “’ " ‘m’ M” M“ “m” °° “°' T“ °°"°' l q ee Square School Bill An h’ “W iliflif“ "y": *- -" tstrisstrflrrtli out .:....'..".... o............. .. t...’ "1"" m" i=1» sh‘... m mgll-ah Yew, Taxueaflldghghe BN3; of aho n h u“ “um”. v IN 0 lttend and like“ bu‘? 2m wit’. fain t0 Itgfblwbw; p. b" Ed " m‘. mid m In“, m“ M‘. n, Th, Wm,“ “m, 7.00 p. ia. Pu e ueatloual Meeting Open t, n“ The Guarding! of Igaarfvh ‘mung; gqhgddlmtlegt from "magi: ‘:2 en, shipper-a and all lutereated.‘ There will be an om, d“ googlglgg‘ 01d. i‘ .9; ‘P .5 a pmulhr fnmm“ m, m, cusslon on any phase ofthe potato industry that may em, up. It ia hoped tohave an up-todato technicolor film m, being prepared, showing various ate tion la Canada. The potato industry ia of vital importance u, m, naturalist and diistorian of former 501W into the 0m! of the bOW . 3 days. hatch lelthgghrecxoiifi omega: ‘ with the left. t Province. It la in your interest to be present at one or both . “m? m’ 91m“ m scoumdg To get back to the Yew-tree. mmhili- » f is derived ravages of this w en e are (or were) ma of Cologne chief city of has a very anci- the and ror Claudius m?» n the Cathedral is a s tomb of tile three “Kings to Orient", the Wile Men of of the Nativity, whose flflmgf to trarltion. were 0f. r. onor of ho Mel/i BBB of "eu- the tallest stands on eqcnetuei, ‘I0 per cent of the in i208. and took year a fresh cent of th copper United Nations is Canada. urieellsta. gee of potato prod“ I‘ 011 P!!!)tingl- One that these have beeacm m if... til DIEM, he. building. ODQIB’ 15d 00' this germ. of '95‘ m” "ml-till 5081106. has survived in: or. churches in 0010016. moat? w containing art-treasures that . not be replaced. In St. PM“ and. of! to contain the bod- of tilt e East Gaspar, a-nd Belahaner or Bealt- ' CANADA'S BIG DOLE About 9S per cent of the nickel. . P9599908. N per cent. o! the sine and mercury, ls per cent o! the lead, and 12.5 pel- by the CHITY CHICK CHICKS Auy penou who would like ta order Chfcka from uie l would like to have their order aa early aa possible, ea- peelally started Chlcka. From u few of the leading Batch- erleaiutflultlarftlluealwuaoulyablatogetilpereeut nf my ordeal filled Iaat your, due to ao ruauy late ordnra. So please give me a ehguee this year by ordering early. A. II. BBYI-NTON, Charlottetown, Box 425. Phone Ne. 200M. ._-_..-_____.._...__. IOO' Price List .100 vcauaua, Royal Bouquet .... .. Double Mixed .. .. seal-l“ Daub]; N0. 1 Mlfllllnlh I116 It! .810 II» . m»: Mammoth me Bed ca: lb. PERENNIALS v Nv- l 4'1"" AQUILEGIA or cotummu, Mixed an Nv- I Malia -- No. l Early Del No. 1 Alfalfa, Variegated No. 1 Sweet, White Bleaaom .. Ne. l Sweet, Yellow Bloaaour CAMPANULA or CANTERBURY BILLS ' Cup and Saucer, Mixed CARNATION. Mixed DELPIIINIUM, Mixed IJIGITAILIS or rox onovx, Mixed .100 TIMOTIY FORGET-ME-NOT, Blue ...................... -100 Ne- l 0-!- IIOLLYHOCK Ne- 8 Purity 1 Single Mixed 5o Double Mixed “grunge Ne. I Timothy 00%; Alalka 17c lb. Na. I ‘Illuelhy 70%; Alike I096 Mammoth I400 loll 109$ .. lb. Cotton Baga with the above. 00o each SELECTED SEED GRAIN, ETC. BAILEY Ne. 1 Imported 8 rowed .. Ne. 1 Imported 0 rowed BUCKWHIAT ' . Ne. 1 Imported “Silverhull” .....ll.'15 bu. . POPPY, Iceland Mixed SWEET PEAS. Perennial Mixed SWEET WILLIAM Double Mixed Scarlet Double . IVALLFLOWEB, Single Mixed EVERLASTINGS ACROCLINIUM. Flue Mixed natromtvsuiu, Double 1mm lmlIuapadodfGelIauVluaKfl-Nbua CLIMBERS xonniia. com: '- oourws. Mixed Varief-lea .................... an m, 1 “mm... _, ____ .344» m. ; MORNING 6W3! Ne. r Hyena, Short Boluh ......... -11.. ‘a. 1 Tall Mixul 11,53 T Heavenly Blue Ne. 1 Iruporled Beeleuued, cu ...... .10 lb. : - oats 1 ‘muusffllgffg FLOWERS J“ us. I Imported Vlcfary- .. an. i PEIBNNIALS. Mixed 0a u“ ~f nun“ B s sowmo ruiru '1“ ' "n lie: .. lb. ' Mixed Named Varieties uaela N" 1 D m" ‘um; ° . °“““°"' “u” m. l Mauluriu ..... .. ........................... ..l0el sum Colua ............................ an Sea. ‘ neon uoora _ N “Wu Mum’! ‘no b“ M11“ WM“ ‘.4 n“ n“ O. I ............ .. ' FIELD aoor srros - armour. IERTILIN PLANT TABLITI (l!) ........................................... tile pkg. GARDENITI PLANT FOOD l lb. pkg. Ila; 8 lb. pkg. "a; 1g l), lllll- SIIEEP MANUI ferfllilQI-IQ IO! pike. caovaa moormanou mourn: am ooammmox CULTUII. SOLD OIL! IN PIG], SUFFICIENT POI I Illa. .......... J00 E WHOLESALE o RETAIL ‘*1! i, l, jug-qua. .......... JIJOD- Nmllautuekylaaltran. .l0¢|5- sot ..- I vaaliv-ll/IrrQ||~|-~aIYIa