GARDENERS' MAGAZINE. 



December 17, 1898. 



first Announcement after 



Series 



ftiaMp Successful experiments 



RESULTING IN 



w 



i 



n 



i 



Of 



SUPREM 



Importance 



to 



Gardeners 



and 



Agriculturists. 



EFFECTU 



J 



ESTRUCTION 



OF 

 EVERY 



FORM 



FUNGOID 



DISE 



Including Mildew, Sleeping, . Drooping or Flagging, Disease in Tomatoes, Chrysanthemum 



Rust, Potato Disease, Club, etc., combined with the most potent fertilization. 



Tomatoes, 

 Chrysanthem urns, 



Vines, 



Cucumbers, 

 Fruit Trees, 

 Cereals and Grasses 

 Potatoes, 



elons, etc.. 



ARE 



SUBJECT 



FUNGOID 



TO 

 DIS 



To find a Cure for these Fungoid Diseases has baffled the Skill of 



Practical 



en for years 



f T 



r 



and its discovery has crowned all previous 

 scientific researches into the cause and remedy 

 of FUNGOID DISEASES, for each and all 

 of which we claim this new substance to be a 

 certain and absolute cure. 



Arresting the spread of disease in food- 

 producing plants, and at the same time in- 

 creasing their yield or crop, is a subject of 

 vital interest and demands 



MOST SERIOUS CONSIDERATION 



FROM EVERYONE. 



This New Substance has a dual power 



DESTROYING DISEASE GERMS OR 

 SPORES, AND AT THE SAME TIME 

 FERTILIZING PLANT LIFE. 



RECENT NUMEROUS EXPERIMENTS 

 PROVE that the yield or crop is INCREASED 

 FROM 20 to 25 PER CENT, where it is 

 applied. As an instance, the yield of potatoes 

 is about 2^ tons per acre more where it is 

 used, the tubers also are of better quality, 

 being entirely free from disease. These advan- 

 tages are secured at a cost of about 19/- per 

 acre. Similar results are effected upon most 

 of the food-producing plants. 



The value of this combined power of 

 Destruction and Fertilization is of immense 

 importance, and cannot be over-estimated. 



SPECIAL CARRIAGE PAID PRICES IN THE UNITED KINGDOM 



Per cwt., 25/-, 



Half cwt 



/ 



J 



Quarter cwt 



lbs., 5/ 



7 lbs., 3/ 



Ton and upwards. 



This highly concentrated compound should be mixed with from 8 to 10 times its bulk of dry sand, ashes, or 

 applied in the following proportions:—^ cwt. per acre ; Yz lb. per rod (30 X square yards) ; }{ oz. per square yard (superficial). 



road drift, and be 



EXAMPLE FOR A CUCUMBER OR TOMATO HOUSE, 



Each Side. 



Two Sides. 



90 feet long, each bed 3 feet wide, would require 



90 



135 

 135 



11 



V 



J? 



11 



4/* „ 



7) 



• • • 



• • • 



• • • 



• • * 



lb. 



lb. 



■A 



i lb. 2 oz. 



1 



lb. 

 lb. 



i'/ 2 lb. 

 2% lb. 



I. KEEN HOUSE PATHS 



W A L K 



always bz dressed with the Compound, as it is there that spores frequently hibernate. 



48 six inch pots, 



EXAMPLE FOR TOP DRESSING SOIL IN POTS 

 35 seven inch pots, 27 eight inch pots, 21 nine inch pots, or 17 ten inch pots are approximately equal to 



yard, and would therefore require % oz. of the compound. 



Send for Prospectus containing full information, which will be Ready December 15th. 



one square 



SOLE MANUFACTURERS; 



Telegraph : 

 WOOD. 



WOOD GREEN, 



WM. WOOD 



SON 



9 



JAMES L. WOOD, F.R.H.S., 



Managing Director. 



WOOD GREEN, LONDON. 



33 MEDALS, etc., for Excellence of Horticultural Specialities 



T iUphonc 

 TOTTENHAM 



London Published « th« "Gardeners' Maaarine" Office. 4. Ave Maria Lane, E.C., Saturday, December 17, xgo8 . m j _- v be had of every Newsagetst and Bookseller. 



Printed by W. K. and L, Collikg«idg», City Press, 148 and 149, AldrngauStreet, London, E.C. 



