sm 



LAW^l OR AS S S EE D 



|lENfS^r« 



GRASS SEED 



^^mmk. 



ia8ES^'--^fe^BS=" 



"SUNNY SOUTH" 



LAWN GRASS SEED. 



Is especiall J' prepared for the South, and 

 contains all the best grasses that are by 

 nature adapted for hot, dr3r situations. In 

 the South Bermuda grass is frequently 

 used, but it remains green only in the sum- 

 mer months, turning brown in winter, but 

 li_v using this mixture, and with some care 



ind attention, an all-the-j-ear-round lawn 

 can be maintained in the Southern States. 

 Price, 35c. qt., $2.00 pk., $7.00 bush, of 20 lbs. 



\lf by mail, add at the rate of §c. qt. for 

 postage. ) 



••My grass, the ' Sunn,vSoutli,' is just as fine as can 

 he. altliougli 1 shoula have pur more seed on. Will put 

 nil the halance oftlie lawn in • Sunny South,' it liaring 

 sT.xiii the liroufilit lietier than any of the others I 

 -..I"-'/ H N KEElhK. ■ihonciasviUe.Ga. 



"SHADY NOOK" LAWN GRASS SEED. 



On nearly all lawns there are unsightly bare spots un 

 der the shade of trees, which have baffled all eSforts to 

 get into grass, but with this mixture there need be no 

 further difficult3'^. It is a combination of fine, dwarf- 

 growing, evergreen varieties, which in their wild or 

 natural state are to be found growing in the woods 

 or other sheltered and shaded spots. Ground that 

 has been densely shaded b3' trees is frequently 

 "sour," and if the drainage is defective it is apt 

 to be covered with moss and coarse bog grasses. 

 In such cases an application of slaked lime, at the 

 rate of one bushel to each thousand square feet, or 

 fortj' bushels to the acre, is an excellent corrective 

 and sweetener, but the moss should be first re- 

 moved by the use of a sharp rake. 



Price, 35c. qt., $2.00 pk., $7.00 bush, of 20 lbs. 



[If by mail, add at the rate of jc. qt. for postage.) 



•■ The 'Shady Nook' Lawn Grass n-as especially satisfactory, and 

 we have taken pleasure in recommending it for similar places, and 

 now order for a friend who has a tine tree in a prominent location 

 on the college ground under which no grass is gro wing." 



Miss ELIZABETH P. LITTLE, Oberlin, Ohio. 

 "Last year you furnished a bushel of 'Shady Nook' Grass Seed which 

 did unusually well in our yard, where we hare many oaks and sugar ma 

 pies. 



Mrs. WM. J. ROBERTSON, Charlottesville, Va. 



"Terrace Sod" Lawn Grass Seed. 



A special mixture of grasses best suited 

 for sowing on terraces, railroad embank- 

 ments and side hills— ^grasses thatproduce 

 strong, spreading roots, thus preventing 

 heavy rains from washing them out; that 

 will withstand drought and exposure, 

 thrive on shallow soils, and at the same 

 time produce a rich, velvet}' green turf 

 throughout the season. There need be no 

 fear of introducing coarse grasses into 

 your lawn by sowing this mixture, for 

 though strong-rooted, the grasses are 

 equally as fine as those used in the "Hen- 

 derson" mixture. 



Price, 3Sc. qt., $2.00 pk., $7.00 bush, of 20 lbs. 

 ( /fby mail, add at the rate of 5c. qt forpostage. ) 

 •■I hare used your 'Henderson' Lawn and Terrace 

 Sod grass seed's on thelaM-ns and banks here with 

 most excellent effect." P. J. DONOBOE. 



Gard'rto M. K. Jessup, Belroir Terrace. Lenox, Mass. 



Besides the LAWN MIXIURESoffebed on this page, we shall at all times be pleased to make up mixtures for special reouiremfnts and situations, Correspondence invited. 



