28 
Dupuy & Ferguson, 38 Jacques Cartier Square, Montreal. 
FIELD CARROT 
When ordered to be sent by 
mail i add 5c. per i lb., 8c. per 
J lb., 12c. per lb., and 8c. for 
each additional lb. 
D. & F's. Improved Intermediate White Carrot, Emphatically the Carrot 
for Stock. — One of the very 
best field carrots because of its enormous productiveness and the ease with which it can be harvested. 
Roots about fourteen inches in length, smooth, very heavy at the shoulder but tapering regularly 
to the point; colour creamy white with light green crown. Flesh white, solid, crisp and of excellent 
quality for stock feeding. Per } lb., 45 cts.; l A lb. 80 cts. ; lb., $1.50. 
Large White Vosges. — The root is large and very thick at the shoulder; much shorter than the 
White Belgian and thus more easily harvested; skin and flesh pure white; a wonderful cropper and 
of excellent feeding quality. Per } lb., 45 cts.; Yi lb., 80 cts.- lb., $1.50. 
White Belgian, (Improved). — A well-known variety, of fine quality; most profitable for field 
culture. Per } lb., 45 cts.; V 2 lb., 80 cts.; lb., $1.50. 
Giant Green Top White.— An improved white Belgian. Per \ lb„ 45 cts. ; M lb., 80 cts. ; lb., $1.50. 
Danvers Half Lone StumD. The heaviest cropping red carrot. Per oz., 25 cts.; i lb., 
— 0.5 cts.; ]4 lb., $1.25 lb., $2.00. 
PLEASE NOTE — Prices on seeds below are subject 
to market fluctuations. 
Sunflower, Mammoth Russian. Highly valued as an excellent and cheap food for 
— — ^ — — — — ^— — fowls. It is the best egg-producing food known. 
It can be raised cheaper than corn. Four pounds of seed will plant an acre. Lb., 15 cts. ; 10 lbs., $1.25. 
Horse Beans. The beans are either boiled and fed to horses or ground into meal for cattle, 
and no grain will produce more beef or milk, while the straw is as good as 
Timothy hay for horses. Sow in drills — 30 inches apart — 1)4 bushels per acre, in well manured 
clay land or heavy loam, as possible. 10 lbs., 90 cts.; 100 lbs., $8.00. 
White Kaffir Corn. Makes nutritious food for stock and Poultry. Kaffir Corn in the 
last few years has been generally sown with the Cow Peas, broadcast 
at the rate of a peck of Kaffir Corn to a bushel of Cow Peas per acre. The Kaffir Corn helps to 
hold the Cow Peas up off the ground, thus causes a larger growth of Cow Peas, and both can be 
cut together, making an enormous yielding crop of most nutritious feed. For a forage crop when 
sown by itself. Kaffir Corn should be sown broadcast at the rate of from J to 1 bushel per acre. 
When sown for a forage crop, either by itself or with Cow Peas, the crop should be cut before it is 
headed out. Lb., 10 cts.; 10 lbs., 60 cts. 
Soja or Soy Beans. This valuable legume is attracting more attention each year. Soja 
^— ^— — ^ — Beans is an ideal crop for turning under to improve worn out soils. As 
a fooder crop it should be fed in conjunction with corn in proportion of one part Beans to five of 
Corn so as to reduce the excess of protein in the former.. It should be cut for hay before the stems 
become too woody otherwise the nutritive value of the feed will be endangered. Sow at the rate 
of 2)4 bushel per acre and in drill 30 inches apart. Per lb., 15 cts.; per 10 lbs. $1.00; per 100 lbs., 
$8.00. 
Furnishes a large yield of most nutritious forage, which can 
be fed either green or cured, and will yield 2 or 3 cuttings 
a year, stooling out thicker each time it is cut. It 
grows 10 to 12 feet high. Sow broadcast for forage 
at the rate of 1 to \% bus. per acre. When sown in 
drills sow at the rate of 1 peck per acre in drills 3 \4 to 
4 feet apart. Lb., 10 cts. ; 10 lbs., 85 cts. ; 100 lbs., $7.00. 
DWARF ESSEX RAPE 
Essex rape makes the best of pasturage for cattle, 
calves, sheep and swine. 
Make the soil very fine, and sow 4 to 5 pounds of 
seed broadcast and harrow well in ; of from 1 to 2 pounds 
in drills 24 to 30 inches apart. When in drills keep 
clean at early stages by cultivation. There is danger 
of bloat in cattle and sheep if turned in on crops when 
hungry to eat their fill. 
Per lb., 20 cts.; in lots of 10 lbs., $1.70. 
Early Amber Sorghum. 
COMPLETE CATALOGUE OF 
SPRAMOTOR SPRAYING MACHINES 
FOR THE ASKING. 
MILLET 
Japanese Barnyard. This is best of all the millets, 
; growing fodder of finest quality. 
For feeding green, it may be cut from day to day as needed until 
the seed begins to ripen. During this period it is much relished 
by stock, cattle especially consume it without waste before 
touching green fodder corn, and cows fed on it invariably increase 
in milk. Sow 15 lbs. of seed per acre if broad casted, or if in 
drills, 12 to 18 inches apart, use 10 to 12 lbs. per acre. Price, 
lb., 10 cts.; 10 lbs., 90 cts.; 100 lbs., $8.00. 
Common Millet. — Very early; height, two to three feet. Market 
price, 
German or Golden Millet. — Medium early; height from three 
to five feet; heads closely condensed, spikes, very numerous, seeds 
round, golden yellow, in rough bristly sheaths. Market price. 
Early; height two to three 
feet; abundant foliage and 
slender head; withstands drought and yields well on light soils. 
Per 10 lbs., $1.00; 100 lbs., $8.00. 
Hungarian' Grass Millet. 
VETCHES 
Sand, Winter or Hairy, (Vicia villosa). — A very hardy forage 
plant growing well on soils so poor and sandy that they will 
produce but little clover. Its nitrogen gathering properties make 
it particularly valuable as a soil renewer and enricher but it is 
not recommended for land which is to be cultivated for grain 
crops on account of its tendency to volunteer and persist. The 
plants, when matured, are about forty inches high and if cut 
for forage as soon as full grown and before setting seed, they will 
start up again and furnish even a larger crop than the first. Seed 
round, black and should be sown one to one and one-half bushels 
per acre. Lb., 25 cts. 
Common Vetches or Black Tares. — A perennial pea-like plant 
grown as an annual. Desirable as a foliage plant and valuable 
as a cover-crop for orchards. Culture same as for field peas. 
Sow two bushels per acre. Per bush., $3.50. 
