BUCKBEE'S "FULL OF LIFE" SEEDS, PLANTS AND BULBS. 



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THE BEST HERBS 



Tlie varieties marked willi uii asterisk (*) are pereiuiial, ami wlien onee oblainoil in 

 the garden may be preserved for years with but httle care. 

 Anise — Used for cordials, garnishing and flavoring. Pkt. Sc.; oz. 10c. 



*Balm — Leaves have a fragrant odor. Used tor making a plesaant beverage known as Balm 



Wine al.so for Balm Tea for use in fevers. Pkt. 3c.; oz. 20c. 

 Basil, Sweet— Leaves used for flavoring soups and seusoning dislies. Pkt. 3c.; oz. 16c. 

 Borage — Leaves used for flavoring, and the flowers lurnish bee pasture. Pkt. 3c.; oz. 10c. 

 *Catnip — Leaves and voung shoots used for seasoning, also used as a mild nervine for in- 

 fants. Pkt. 4c.; oz. 30c. 

 ♦Caraway — Seeds used for flavoring bread, pastry, candy, etc. Pkt. 3c.; oz. 7c. 

 Coriander — Used in the manufaeture of liq\ior.s, confectionery, etc. Pkt. 3c.; oz. 6c. 

 Dandelion — Improved Large Leaf — Cultivate for Greens. Ex- 

 tremely early. Verj- prolific. Pkt. 5c.; oz. 40c. evuiiisriissri 

 Dill — .Seeds used as a condiment and also for pickling cucum- flllljHMllwili I 



bers. Pkt. 3c.; oz. 6c. 

 *Fennel, Sweet — Leaves ornamental; are boiled for fish sauce 



Pkt. Sc.; oz. 10c. \M''']\ 

 Fennel, New Florence Celery Rooted — Of delightful, .sweet lla- Ui 

 \or; much preferred to Celery. Pkt. 6c. V \' 



*Hyssop — Is a stimulant, and ii.sed for asthma and chronic ca- 

 tarrh. Pkt. Sc.; oz. 15c. ... , - i n , 

 *Horehound — Leaves used for seasoning and making cough YlrS' li' i il '- i i "i 



medicine. Pkt. Sc.; oz. 15c. 

 *Hop Seed — Pkt. 25c.; oz. $1.50. 



*La vender — An aromal ic and medicinal herb. Pkt. Sc.; oz. 10c. 

 Marjoram, Sweet — Leaves and shoots u.sed for sea.soning. Pkt. 

 Sc.; oz. 10c. 



Pennyroyal — True sort; particularly suited for planting in rock 

 work. Pkt. 5c. 



Poppy, Opium — The plant from which opium is manufactured. 



Pkt. Sc.; oz. 25c. 

 Pot Marigold — A. very pretty and u.seful- plant. Pkt. Sc.; oz. 15c. 

 *Rosemary — Ornamental herb; leaves used for .sea.soniiig. Pkt. 

 Sc.; oz. 20c. 



*Rue — For medicinal purpo.ses; good for colds and croup. Pkt. 

 3c.; oz. 16c. 



Saffron — Used in coloring certain dishes, also for' flavoring. 



Pkt. Sc.; oz. 10c. ' <■■ ■ - •-!.'>! ' 



*Sage — Extensively u.sed for seasoning and dressing. Pkt. Sc.; 



oz. lOc; v.ilb. 35c.; U> lb. 65c.; lb. $1.25. t, 

 Savory, Summer — I,eaves and flowers are used in .flavoring kC.\/ 

 soups. Pitt. Sc.; oz. 10c. ' 

 *Savory, Winter — Leaves and young shoots used in flavoring. Pkt. 5c.; oz. 20c. 

 *Tansy — For medicinal use. Pkt. 4c.; oz. SOc. 



Thyme — Leaved and young shoots used for seasoning. Pkt. 3c.; oz. 20c. 

 Wormwood — Used medicinally; it is also beneticial to poultry. Pkt. Sc.; oz. 20c. 



GIANT BEGGAR WEED a Forage Plant That Never Becomes a Pest. 



Great for forage and as a restorer of land. It is more valuable for fertilizing than either Peas or Clover and 

 equal to them for feeding. When once established it grows every year without further attention. It will not inter- 

 fere with other crops, can be kept under by cultivation, can be eradicated in two years of successive pasturing. Tliis 

 is important, because some forage plants become pests when the land is needed for other crops. The plant is a 

 strong feeder, with deep roots. Like Alfalfa, bringing from the subsoil the dormant fertilizing elements, and will en- 

 rii li the land by its decaying foliage without the expen.se of plowing it under. Land planted with Beggar Weed has 

 improved 330 per cent, in six years. Hogs, horses, cows and mules eat it greedily. Can be pasture land in Summer 



and Fall. Can be sown in the Corn field. Will thrive on nuicii 

 poorer land than mo.st forage crops. More fattening to stock than 

 all other known forage plants. Five pounds of seed for an acre. 

 L>r!ll or sow broadcast in the Spring after frost. 



Postpaid, oz. 10c. ; ' i lb. 25c.; lb. 46c.; 6 lbs. 81.75. 



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BROOM CORN 



Buckbee's Improved Superior Evergreen — The best variety for 

 general cultivation on account of color and (|uality of brush. 

 lUpens early. Grows aluiut eight to ten feet liigh. Brush good 

 length, fine and straight. 



Postpaid, ' .J lb. 10c. ; lb. 25c. By express or freight at buyer's 

 expense, 10 lbs. 60c.; 25 lbs. $1.25; 100 los. $3.76. 



BEANS Buckbee's Electric Tree 



The Most Productive Bean in the World. 



The most productive and heavy crop- 

 ping Bean known, growing nearly two 

 feet high, branching out in all directions, 

 and bearing its pods so high that they 

 seldom touch the ground, enabhng it to 

 stand a wet spell without any injury. All 

 who have lai.sed Beans know that when 

 the pods lie in contact with the ground 

 after ripening a very little rain will ruin 

 the crop, turning the ijocls and Beans 

 black. This is indeed a wonderful crop- 

 per, yielding from .seventy-five to one 

 hundred bushels per acre, average culti- 

 vation, while hundreds of my customers 

 report yields of from forty to sixty bush- 

 els per acre under average cultivation. 

 Plant them two and one-half feet apart, 

 eighteen inches in the row, two to three 

 beans in a hill. As a baking Bean, 

 Buckbee's Electric Tree Is not equaled. 



Postpaid, i2pt.l2c.; pt. 22c.; qt. 35c. 

 (See wholesale prices in quantity, page 4.; 



I CAN SUPPLY ALL YOUR FIELD SEED WANTS. BEST SEED. LOWEST MARKET PRICES ALWAYS. 



