4883 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
485 
the jute trust pine.The Fourth 
Annual Fair of the Society of Agriculture 
and Horticulture of Westchester County, will 
be held at White Plains, N. Y. September 23- 
28. Ad articles are entered free of charge. 
E. B. Long, Secretary, White Plains. 
Col. R. P. Pepper, of Frankfort, Ky., sold 
his five-year old horse, Acoyte, by Onward to 
J. S. Corry, of Massillon, Ohio, for $40,000... 
A curious blight has seized upon the maple 
trees lining some of the most exclusive streets 
in Brooklyn, no'ably Quincy Street and Nost- 
rand Avenue. The blight consists of millions 
of caterpillars, which have laid their eggs 
along the under side of the smaller branches 
and caused the leaves to wither. Although 
English sparrows are plentiful, they seem to 
pay but little attention to their fellow pests.. 
.Smith Scudder, living near Plain- 
field, N. J., was killed on Monday afternoon 
by being thrown from his mowing machine 
in front of the knives.State Dairy 
Commissioner Brown had a conference wuh 
the cider-vinegar makers on Tuesday. The 
question discussed was how best to enforce 
compliance with the law passed this year pro¬ 
hibiting the adulteration of vinegaF, more es¬ 
pecially bv the whisky-vinegar makers of the 
Western States, who, it is alleged, sell their 
adulterated productions in this Sta e. It was 
stated the Vinegar Trust, which was composed 
mostly of Western manufacturers, went to 
pieces about three months ago, and since then 
the competition has been so great that little if 
any profit is derived from the vinegar 
industry .. 
The ornithologist of the Department of Agri¬ 
culture has little doubt that the beneficial 
qualities of the Cedar bird, or Cherry bird, 
exceed its injurious ones. It does much good 
by destroying injurious insects .The 
New York Hop Growers’ Association will 
have its annual picnic on Sylvan Beach, Onei¬ 
da Cake, July 27. A Perchercn 
stallion chased a Pennsylvania man in a dog¬ 
cart for three miles, and smashed the cart 
after the man had escaped to a place of safety. 
Secretary Rusk has been presented by Gen. 
Felix Agnus with a milk white p°rcheron 
horse, 17 hands high, which the Secretary 
rode at the party at Gen Agnus’s several 
weeks since. He says he will send the animal 
to his Wisconsin farm .Some days ago 
the State officials of New Jersey notified Sec¬ 
retary Rusk of their intention to raise the 
quarantine against pleuro-pneumonia To 
this the Secretary made a vigorous protest, 
appealing to the State officials to aid the De¬ 
partment in protecting the export cattle trado 
of the country against the ravaga* of the dis¬ 
ease, which is now confined to the territory 
in the immediate vicinity of Jersey City. In 
case the local quarantine is raised, however, 
the Secretary gives notice that he will at 
once establish and enforce national reg¬ 
ulations to effect the desired end. 
fiXarfut lloks. 
the East Africans about Pangani by slaugh¬ 
tering several hundreds of them, after which 
they occupied the deserted place. 
When in 1882, Arabi Pesha, commander 
of the Egyptian forces under Khedive Ish- 
mael, rebelled against the grinding taxation 
imposed upon the peasantry to satisfy the 
enormous interest demanded by the foreign 
capitalists who had recklessly loaned extrava¬ 
gant sums to the spendthrift ruler. England 
and France, whose subjects were the heaviest 
creditors, started jointly to suppress the re¬ 
bellion. The lately established French Re¬ 
public, however, apprehensively withdrew 
just as Alexandria was to be attacked, leav¬ 
ing England to finish the work single-handed. 
England having done the fighting, monopoliz¬ 
ed the advantages, and France has been dis¬ 
gruntled ever since. After the final defeat ot 
Arabi at Tel-el Kebr, and the occupation of 
Egypt by the British, England pledged her¬ 
self to evacuate the country when it could be 
done with safety to the financial interest' of 
the creditors ot the new Khedive and without 
danger from internal or foreign sources. 
Since then France has frequently insisted that 
England should keep her plighted word by 
withdiawing her troops; but the English gov¬ 
ernment. wmcn since Tel el-Kebr has spent 
$200,000,000 in various military expeditions 
there, has never recognized a time when this 
could be done. Like Vustria’s “temporary” 
occupation of Boznia and Herzegovina, Tur¬ 
key’s Adriatic provinces, during the Turko- 
Russian war of 1878, England's temporary oc¬ 
cupation of Egypt, Turkey’s African depen¬ 
dency, was intended to be permanent. 
.Lately the British government made 
arrangements with the R nbschilds to con¬ 
vert $135,000,000of the Egyptian $500,000,000 
debt, drawing five per cent, interest, 
into a four per cent. loan, thereby sav¬ 
ing $800,000 inteiest a year. Tne only gain¬ 
ers would be the wretched, half starved, over¬ 
taxed fellaheen, or peasantry, whose taxes 
would be lighter. All the Treaty Powers ac¬ 
quiesced except France, which insisted that, 
as a preliminary, England should name a par¬ 
ticular date at whnh she would evacuate the 
country. This has blocked the project. The 
French elections are approaching, and a show 
of resistance to Enghsn projects, especially in 
Egypt, is sure to be popular among the vot¬ 
ing masses; hence the fellaheen inus. continue 
to bear tne crushing weignt of their old-time 
burthens. ... .Some weeks ago the suc¬ 
cessor of the Mahdi sent an army of 8,000 fa¬ 
natical dervishes north from his capital, 
Khartoum, with instructions to annihilate the 
Khedive and Queen Victoria unless they em¬ 
braced the true far.h. On their march north¬ 
ward along the Nile, they encountered the 
Egyptian troops uuder Col. Wodehouse and 
other English officers, a week ago, 20 miles 
south of Wady Haifa, the most southern 
point now garrisoned by the Anglo-Egyptian 
troops Of the advancing force 900 were killed I 
and 700 taken prisoners, many dying of thirst, I 
as the Egyptian troop= and gunnoats on the 
Nile kept them away from water. They are 
still pushing north, however, 6,000 strong, 
and English reinforcements are being dis- I 
patched iroui Malta and other near-by garri- I — 
sons to block their way into Lower Egypt. I 
Sir Provo William Parry Wallace, G. C. B. Saturday, July 13, 1889. 
Senior Admiral of the Fleet, is living near The supply of fruits of all kinds in this 
Chichester, England, at the age of 99. He market is abundant, and the quality gener- 
was secoud lieutenant of the Suannon in her ally excellent. The shipments of apples fully 
duel with the Chesapeake in Boston Harbor I equal the dpmand which is only moderate. 
76 years ago, and at the close ot the engage- A variety known as the Hosse from Georgia, 
ment was in command of the frigate because opens up well. Peaches are plentiful, and 
all the senior officers were shutdown in ac- I there is a good demand for the best qualities 
tiou. The capturer or the Chesapeake has I fl t good prices. They come mostly from 
betn bed ridden for 10 years but always I Georgia and California. Pears are abundant. 
cheerful. Some very fine Le Contes from Georgia, and 
Buffalo Bill has been engaged Dy the French Bartletts from California are offered. The 
government to teach 10c cavalry officers to I first car lot of California Bartletts came last 
r.de m the American fashion. The 100 will Saturday, and were held at $4 to $4.50 per 
instruct others. It is sa d that Bill will soon I 40-pound box. Cherries are about out of mar- 
deturone General Bouianger in the affections ket. Plums and apricots are plentiful. 
of the Frencn people. I New York is supplied with the luscious fresh 
lne venerable French-American Dr. Brown- I fruits of California through the California 
Sequaro, 72 years old, and famous during Fruit Union, now in the third year of its ex- 
over 40 yeurs tor his supereunnent sk.ll in I istence. From May 1 to November 1 cherries 
nervous uisorders, told the medical world the I apricots, peaches, plums, pears, nectarines 
other day, thrqugh the Biological Society of and grapes are sent to this market, and owing 
Pans, that after 20 years of close search for to a perfect system of transportation in re- 
some device for sustaining and prolonging I frigerator cars are delivered generally m good 
lile, he had at last round it. He cuts out I condition. The fruit is shipped through by 
certain organs or glands from living annuals, express in six days, and is sold by auction on 
crushes them at once in a mortar m distilled the morning of arrival, so that there is very 
water, and from the mass extracts an essence I little delay in reaching the consumer, 
which he uses as a hypodermic injection. He I The present season opened about June 1 
farsG experimented on feeble animals, with I since which time eight or nine car-loads have 
marvelous success. He then administered two been received and sold, one of the sales being 
injections to himself, and immediately felt 10 a full car-load of cherries. E. L. Goodsell 
years younger while his capacity lor work offers on Monday, next, at auction 803 boxes 
was increased threefold. W hue the best pby- and crates roval apricots, 39 boxes peach 
siciaus here praise Dr.B.-S.’s great skill, tuey plums. 360 boxes Bartlett Pears, 88 boxes 
believe as little in his elixir or life as in per- German Prunes, 132 boxes Purple Duane 
petual motion or the philosopher’s stone. Washington, and Magnum Bonurn Plums. ’ 
, t __ I Prices for these fruits have generally been 
satisfactory excepting for apricots which 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS have been very low. Small fruits are abun- 
| dant aud cheap. Red and black raspberries. 
I blackberries and huckleberries retail for 10 
Saturday, July 13 1889 I ceu * s ^ or best, and lower for other grades, 
&o^ e “CT3Hkr^£!? ItP' d®“d eace as^theyere^arhe^ia *t he C seas o 
charge of the work Mmue8jl ^ wiU have they still form quite an important source of 
miai^Fair of ^ he Burlington" County Agricul- 2 % ply ‘ 0ran * es , ve ^ Plentiful, but 
Tbe Career;'* "“ rt " 
the biate penitentiary of Missis,ippi and will The vegetable market is weak there being 
S2 DianUf8C r P :S heavy TrnvaIsland on.7 a Lde'ate 
o' couoyiXi^y, Ooo'V., 
L,i>i;v mZZ «"c*b*¥S .'I’. *«ry low. 
received it and HenrvCi w • fr p laiut ® 1 I m demand, but poor ones not wanted ; torna- 
a. per rr &^i. T W. 5 WSr,Kr 
sarysM . 1 
The supply of butter far exceeds the de¬ 
mand, and prices are lower in consequence. 
Much good butter is being bought for cold 
storage, but poor grades are not wanted. 
Eggs are well cleaned up, and prices have ad¬ 
vanced accordingly. 
LATEST MARKETS. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York. Saturday, July 13, 1889. 
NIW YORK MARKETS. 
Cotton.— The quotations, according to the American 
classification, are as follows: 
New Orleans. 
Uplands. and Gulf. 
Texas 
Ordinary... . g% 
Strict Ordinary. 3 15-16 
Good Ordinary.9% 
8trtct Good Ordinary.. 10 5-16 
Low Middling.10 18-16 
8trlct Lew Middling... 11 1-16 
Middling.11% 
Good Middling.11% 
Strict Good Middling.. 12 
Middling Fair.12 7-16 
Fair.13 1-16 
STAINED. 
8 3-16 
9% 
10 9-16 
11 1-16 
11 5-16 
11% 
12 
12 % 
12 11-16 
13 5-16 
Good Ordinary.8% I Low Middling ... 9 15-16 
Strict Good Ord. 9 I Middling.10% 
Wool.— Sprlug Texas, 17@2Sc, and Fall do 20»25c; 
Fall California, ll<ai8c, and spring do i8@21; Scoured 
Texas 52-53c; Delaine. J6c; Indiana, 29c; Scoured 
Territory, 5*0; Donskoi, 24%c: XX Ohio, 34c; Scoured 
Colorado, 53c; Australian, 38c. 
Poultry— Chickens, spring, per lb, 12@15c. 
Liv* Fowls, near-by. per B«, 11®-c; town. 
Western, per*. I0%@ll@-c; roosters, per® 6c: tur¬ 
keys. per ft 9310c: ducks, western.per pair, 6030.80c; 
geese, western, per pair, $1 15®*1 40. 
Poultry.—Dressed— Turkeys. dry picked, good to 
choice, per tt>, 10*12o: do do, common to fair. S@9c, 
do, Iced, dry picked, choice, 8®—c. Fowls, western, 
do, choice, 11%®—e; do, nearby, do do, 12®i3c; 
Chicks and Fowls, mixed. 12®.4c; do do do, scalded, 
lU®Uc. Squabs, white, per doz, $3 U0@*8 25 do. dark, 
do, *1 75@*2 00. Chickens PhlladelDhla, dry picked, 
20 * 22c, do Jersey, do, choice, IS®22c do nearby, do 
good 12 » 16c; do Western, do do, 10 ® 16c; do do, iced' 
good to choice 15®i8c. Ducks, spring, choice, per lb' 
14*. 18c; dodo, good, 11814; do Western, good, 10®l4c‘ 
Geese, Western, good, 8®l0c, 
Game.— Golden Plover, per doz. 81 75; Grass do. do- 
81 U0@*l 25; English Snipe, do, do. $2 tO. 
Hops.—S tate, new, beat, 22323c; do. prime, 20-a22c; 
do, low grades, I8@i6c; do do, 1887, 8®9 do do do 
California, common to prime, 14®20c; choice, 20@22c. 
Hay and Straw.— Choice Timothy,90@*-; do good 
do, 75®80c; do medium, 65®70c; shipping, 60@65c; do, 
Clover, mixed, 50@55c. Straw.—No. 1, rye, 65®70c; 
short do 50®55; oat, 40®— c. 
Beans.— Marrows, new. *2 453$ -; new mediums 
choice. <2 45®-; pea, *2 45®*-; red kidney, *3 25; 
white kidneys, choice,2 60®-: foreign, mediums, 135 
@1 55 ; California Lima, *3 60®*—; green peas, 
*1 45®#1 50. 
Nuts.— Peanuts are quiet. Fancy, hand-picked 
quoted at 8®-c, and farmers’ grades at 5@?%c. 
Pecans. 5@7%c. 
FRUIT AND VKGETABLE MARKETS. 
veoetables.— potatoes.— Eastern Shore, per bbl, * 1 .- 
50®*2 00; New, poor to good, u 50c ®*1 25. Old. #1 00® 
*1 25. Norfolk. New, *i 50 -*2 00. Cabbage-New. per 
100, *1 50**2 50. Cucumbers, per crate. S0«40e. 
Squash, per bbl. 75e@*l 50. Tomatoes, per crate, Sue® 
§ 2 50. Onions -New Orleans, per bbl. *2 50 *3 ui, East 
hore, do, #2 25®*2 50. Beaus, string ner crate40®75c. 
Corn, per 100 , 50c®$0 75. Onions, Egyptian, per bag, 
$ 3 00® $3 25. 
Domestic Dried.— Apples, evaporated, new, choice 
to fancy, 5%@6e; do new, common to prime, 3%«5%c; 
sliced, new, 8@3%c. quarters,2%@8%c: chopped. 1W® 
2c; cores aud skins, 1®—c. Cherries, new. 9®l3c. 
Raspberries, new, I7@l9e. Blackberries, 3%@4c. 
Huckleberries. iu®llc. Peaches-Delaware, evapo¬ 
rated, peeled, 10@13c; do do, uupeeled 5®6o; North 
Carolina suu-dried, peeled,6%@8c. plums, 5®5%c. 
PROVISION MARKETS 
New York.—provisions.—port.— New mess.IS 25313 
50, short clear, *14 00316 00 Extra Prime mess. *12 50® 
*— prime do, *12®*12 25 and family mess, *12 75 ®132S. 
BKKF-Indla 'less in tierces, *1231250 Extra Mess, :n 
barrels *6 75-37 00 Packet, *9 50®*’0 00 per bbl, and 
|12®*12 50 In tierces; Plate. *7 50 3 8 00; Family at *11 
—®*14. Hams -*13 50®*14 00, Winter packing. Cut 
Meats.— Quoted 12 lb average.Bellies. 6%®—c: Pickled 
Hams, ll%e; pickled Shoulders 6%®6%c ; Smoked 
shoulders 6%c; do Hams. 12%A12%c Dressed Hog* — 
City, heavy to light 6®6%c. Pigs, «%c. Lard. City 
steam, *6 35: June. *-; July, *6 94, August, *7 03; 
September, *7 11; October. *7 17, South America, 7.6c. 
Boston.—provisions firm aud steady. New Mess, 
Pork, *18 75@*UoO; Old Mess Pork. *13 0l)@*13 25; Ex¬ 
tra Prime, new, *13 00®*13 25. Lard, *S 5o@*9 50. 
Philadelphia. Pa.— provisions.— Potatoes lower; 
Early Rose. 27®30c per bush.: Burbanks and White 
Star , 28®32c ; Hebron, choice. 85®40; New Potatoes. 
Florida, per bbl , *1 75**2 50 Provisions were 
steady. Beep. —City rannly, per bbl. *9 uu®*9 50 ; do, 
packets.*S®8 50; smoked beef,10@10%c: beef bams, *14 
Pork.—M ess, *14 00®*-; do Prime Mess, new, *13 
50: do. family, *15 0o@l5 5o; Hams, smoked, per lb, 
U%@13c do, S. P., eured In tierces, 9%@llc: do 
do. In salt. 10 c; sides, clear ribbed, smoked. —@Sc; 
shoulders, In dry salt and fully cured, 6%@s%c do. do, 
smoked, 7c; Shoulders, pickle cured, 7@i%c; do do 
smoked, 8@8%c; bellies, In pickle, S*s%c ; do 
breakfast bacon, 9^®10c. Lard.— Sternly; Cltv re¬ 
fined. So; do steam. 7®7%e; butchers’ loose, 6% *7. 
Chicago.— Mess Pork.—*11 S5®11 90 Lard.—*6 62®— 
per 100 lbs; Short Rib sides Uoosei, *5 95; dry salted i 
shoulders, boxed, *5 37; short clear sides, boxed, 
$6 25® *6 37. 
DAIRY AND EGG MARKETS. 
N kw V ork.— Butter— New—State audPeuu.best, 16% 
@17. Elgln 4 be8t,18@—: Western.best !6@16%; do prime. 
15%c: do good, 13%’»14; do poor. 12® 13. State, Dairy, 
half-firkins, tubs, best. 17®-c; do do prime. '5@16; 
do do fine, 13 %a> 14%; Welsh tubs, fine, 15 r />—c; dodo, 
good. 13%&14; firkins, best, — @— ; do pilme, — @—c; 
do fine,—@—c. Western mltatlon Creamery, best, 
14<a-; do fine, 12 ® 13; Western dairy, fine, 13 3 —; do 
fair, ll@i2c; do poor. 9® 10c; do factory, fresh, best, 
12%@13, do prime, 11%@12; do good,10® 11; do poor, 8 
@9c. 
Cheese.— State factory, fancy, 8%c ; do do fine, 
—® c; do do. prime. 8@8%c: dodo, fair to good. 
7@i%c; Ohio, flat, prime, 7%@7%c ; do good,-@—c; 
JJ®* good. —@—; Skims, llgnt, 5%@6%c; do medium, 
2@S; do full, l@2e. 
Eggs,— Near-by, fresh, 16®—c; Canadian, 15c 
Southern, 14@15c; Western, best, 15c 
Philadelphia.—butter firm. Pennsylvania cream¬ 
ery extra, at 16@17c: Pennsylvania Prints, extra. 2<c; 
B. C. and N. Y. creamery extra, 17c; W esiern factory 
14@15c; packing butter. ll@12c. Eggs -Were dull; 
Pennsylvania firsts 15@i6c; Western firsts. 14® 15c; 
Cheese dull-steady; demand fair: New York full 
cream, at 9@9%c; Ohio flats choice, 8%c; do. fair to 
prime, 7%® 8c. 
Chicago. III.— Butter. — On the Produce Exchange 
to-daythe butter market was generally firm: Elgin 
creamery. 15%@l6%c. choice Western. 15@i5%c. choice 
dairy. 12@13%c; common to fair, 3@10c. Eggs firm at 
12@12%c. 
GRAIN MARKETS. 
WHEAT.-Sales-Ungraded Winter Red at 86% 
®89%; No. 2 Red afloat. 90%c: No. 2 Milwaukee, c, 
r. and 1 , 88%e; No 2 Red. In store, quoted 88%c: No. 2 
Juiv, 8S@89%C; do August. 8t%®«8%c; do September, 
»t)%@Si%c; do December, 87%<x9o 7-l6c do May. 93%@ 
94%e. Rye —Quiet, fl m and unchanged. Western. 
5l@5.’c; State,5854c. CORN.-Saies-Uugiaded Mixed. 
4*%® 43%c; No. 2 Mixed, 4i%Ca43%c, elevator. 4i%®43 
%c afloat, to arrive aDd spot; No. 2 July, 42%®43%c, 
do September. 43%-<r43%c. do October. 43%®44%e. 
?. ATS „-r No - 27c ; d0 White, 32c; No. 2 . 27%c; do While, 
33®33 %c. No. 1 White, 38c : Mixed Western, 26@30c; 
^ h !i e ,o d0 :, S8 .@ S9c; No - 2 July. -7%@'/7%c; do August, 
27%@28c; do September, 27%"’27%c; do October. 2s%@ 
23%e; do November, 27%c; do White, July, 33c. 
LIVE STOCK MARKETS. 
New-York, Saturday July 13. 1889. 
BEEVES—City Dressed Beef Is haviDg a moderate 
demand at 6c to 7c for ordinary to Prime Native 
Sloes. 
MTLCH COWS-Receipts for the week thus far 81 head 
There is no change In the market, aud the rather light 
arrival' hsve been sold at *30 to *45 per head for com¬ 
mon to good stock, acd trash as low as S20 to *25. 
CALVES.-Buttermilks sold at *2 50@*2 75 per 1001b 
Western Calves at *3 75, and Common toChoice Vea's 
at *4 5o@*5 50. 
Dressed Calves In fair demand at 4@5e for Dreosed 
Buttermilks, 5@7 l-2c lor Country Dressed Veals, and 
6@8 l-2c for City Dressed (few Fancy selling at 9c). 
SHEEP AND LAMBS—Sheep are In rather light sup¬ 
ply, and were very firm, selling at *5@*5 50 for 
Medium to good quality. A few Coarse Jersey Ewes 
brought *4 32 1-2, Lambs were easier, and sale 3 
showed a decline equal toaboot 1 8c per lb. Poorest 
to Best Lambs ranged from 6 1-2 to 7 !-2c. 
Dressed Mutton firm, and selling In the slaughter¬ 
houses at 9® 10c, iu Washington Market at 8@9 i-2c, 
Dressed Lambs weak, with sales lo@ll l-2c best car¬ 
casses bringing 12c). 
HOGS—Nominally steady at $4 60@*5. 
Communications Received for the Week Ending 
July IS, 1889. 
H- M. B.—A. W. S.—J. F, F.—a. B. T.—J. M Y.—J. J. 
T.-H. A. S -G. H. W.-Mrs M. C. A.-C. M. D.-J. D 
B.-C. H. S.-C. E. T.-W. J. B.-E. D.-C. H S.-J. m! 
W.-J. O. B.—O- H. S.-E. S.— A. E. W.—V. L —J. C.— 
J. W. S.-J. C. M—A. H,-J. L, B.- 
|HisrrIla»tou.S ^demising. 
LINSEED OIL MEAL 
For Feeding all Domestic Animals. 
Use, with your other feed, at least 
One-Tliird Linseed Oil Meal. 
Write us for prices and other particulars, and 
mention the Rural New-Yorker. 
DEROIT LI NS c ED OIL COMPANY 
Detroit, Mich. 
POT 
GROWN 
STRAWBERRIES 
Now Is the time to plant to seeure a good erop 
next season. Our plants are Iu the fluest condition. 
Catalogue, containing full directions, mailed free. 
Cl I U/A kin CD 5 DlDDV XT. hts sussesies 
LLLlf ARUCn a OQilm, Rochester, N. Y. 
ROSSIE IRON ORE PAINT. 
Is made from Red Oxide Ore—Is the best and most 
durable Palm for Tin, Irou and Shingle Hoofs. Barns, 
Farm Utensil*, etc.; will not crack or peel, will protect 
roofs from sparks. Samples free. Ask prices of 
KOSS1E IRON ORE PAINT CO., 
Ogdensburg, N. Y. 
WARREN, HARPER & BR0„ 
Fruit and Produce 
COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 
I I O Dock Street, 
PHILADELPHIA, PA. 
Splendid location. Good Salesmen. Prompt Re* 
turns. Reference: Sixth National Bank. 
i 
PILES 
Instant relief. Final cure In 1C 
days and never returns. No 
I punje, no salve, no suppository. 
Sufferers will learn of a simple 
remedy free by addressing 
Tuttle & Co, 7* Nassau Street, New York CitJ 
The Syracuse Nurseries! 
Old and flellalble, 
Are growing tbe I.argeot niul mnsl Complete Assortment ot Nursery **loek iu America, 
lu lffltl)’ JO AFPLb" umi STAN I* A HI) i'K.4 Ks they acknowledge uo competition— qual¬ 
ity considered. Nurscryiueu and Dealers will consult tlicir own iutcrcsts by getting 
prices oa tins Superb Stock betore buying. Special inducements to buyers iu lurge 
quantities. 
SMITHS, POWELL & LAMB, SYRACUSE, N.Y. 
