DUPUY & FERGUSON, 38 JACQUES CARTIER SQUARE, MONTREAL 
FIELD CARROT 
When ordered to be sent by mail, add 5c. per "4 lb., 8c. per l-i lb., 12o. per lb., • 
and 8c. for each additional lb. 
D. & F's. Improved Intermediate White Carrot — Emphatically the 
ii"ran '^Iwh^rvo^tl^?' "rJiJ^?/,?,!? °' enormous productiveness and'ure^asTwfth"^^^! 
l„ A harvesterl. Roots about, fourteen inches ni lens«.h. smooth, very lieavv at the shoulder 
but tapernig regularly to the point: colour creamy white with liRht green crown F esh white, 
solid, crisp and of excellent quality, for stock feeding. Per '4 lb.. 35 cts. ; K lb" 60 cts. lb $1 00 
■Whi?l R,.^.',*fn anM^ n;,';7l3f.i'°.°* 'f*''" ^nd very thick at the shoulder; much shorter than the 
rn!S''o'f&t^%'er|?uTl!tr'^e^ra'^ 
c'^dtmc.^ pirS lb:"Trtl\-7i'lb".'5o'^ctT"l™toIis°' nio^t'P^fltable for rteld 
Ib'^JI 00^"" ^'^'^^■—^'^ improved white Belgian. Per '4 lb.. 35 cts.; lb.. 60 cts.; 
Danvers' Half Lone Stumo. — The heaviest croppins red carrot. Per oz., 20 cts.; 
" *^ 34 lb.. 65 cts., lb.. 12.20. 
PLEASE NOTE — Prices on seeds below are subject to 
Market fluctuations. 
Sunflower, Mammoth Russian. — H'S'ily valued as an excellent and cheap 
„„ ■ J , .food for fowls. It is the best egg-producing 
,f /i"^™ cheaper than corn. Four pounds of seed will plant an acre 
$1.60 (post paid, lb., 35 cts.) 
food known. 
Lb., 25 cts.: 10 lbs 
Horse Beans. — The beans are either boiled and fed to horses or ground into meal for 
gnnri a, Timnth-,, h=„ fS? Wo^" gram wi 1 produce more beef or milk, while the straw is as 
good as 1 imothy hay for horses. Sow m drills— 30 inches apart— 1 'A bushels per acre, in weU- 
manured clay land or heavy loam, as possible. Market price. 
White Kaffir Corn. — M^H*'^ nutritious food for stock and poiUtry. KafBr Corn in 
K-„o,i„o„* <• , '??,'^J.' IS" years has been generally sown with the Cow Peas, 
hP?n« f?, h^M Jhl''^'' o °' ^i'^l' '° ""^hel of Cow Peas per acre. The Kaffir Corn 
h Vv, ^^^^ "P-°^ ground, thus causes a larger growth of Cow Peas, and 
. .-,^^^.Vi„ of tE^^'lT- making an enormous yielding crop of most nutritious food. For a 
t^hn^vS? ,^rT.T'™w^' ^.^"^^ ^"ould be sown broadcast at the rate of from H 
^h„,,M h„ i,Pt K^p^ ^ .. ^hen sown for a forage crop, either by itself or with Cow Peas, the crop 
should be cut before it is headed out. Lb.. 20 cts.; 10 lbs.. $1.25. (By post, lb., 30 cts.) 
Soja or Soy beans. — 7^.'^ valuable legume is attracting more attention each year. 
«„f „„!io A„„f„jj., , ?ea"s is an ideal crop for turning under to improve worn 
nil^S l^ fl „ ^,^°dder crop it should be fed m conjunction with corn in proportion of one part 
hi^ hof^^pryL "2 '■etiu'-e the e.icess 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 endan- 
geied. bow at the rate of 2>^ bushels per acre and in drill "30 inches apart. Market price. 
Early Amber Sorffhum. — .Pumishes a 
<■ . . ... , '"•''S® yeld 
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 1 5< bushels per acre 
When sown in drills sow at the rate of 1 peck 
per acre in drills 3K to 4 feet apart. Lb.. 20 cts ■ 
(post paid, 30 cts.). 
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 3 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.. 25 cts.; in lots of 10 lbs $2 20 
(post paid, lb., 35 cts.) 
COMPLETE CATALOGUE OF SPRAMOTOR SPRAY- 
ING MACHINES FOR THE ASKING 
MILLET 
lananoso RarnvarH This is the best of all the millets. 
Japanese carnyara. growing fodder of finest quail 
ity. 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 esTiecially 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. 
Market price. 
Common Millet. — Very early ; height, two to ttiree feet. Mar- 
ket price. 
German or Golden Millet. — Medium early: height from three 
to five feet; heads closely condensed; spikes vei-y numerous, 
seeds round, golden yellow, in rough, bristly sheatiis. Market 
price. 
.Early; height two to 
three feet: abundant 
foliaee and slender head: withstands drought and yields well 
on light soils. Market price. 
VETCHES 
Sand, Winter or Hairy (Vicia villosa). — A very hardy forage 
plant growing well on soils so poor and sandy that they will 
prorluce but little clover. Its nitrogen-gatliering 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 oh 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., 35 cts. (postpaid, lb., 45 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. Market price. 
Hungarian Grass Millet. 
Special Quotation on Large Quantities 
28 
