4^C ASHMANS SEEDS OF QUALITY^ 
BUCKWHEAT 
New Improved Semesan Iiel for Potatoes, 4 oz. 50c, 1 lb. 
$1.75, 5 lbs. $8.00. 
Silver Hull, bu. 50 lbs.$1.10 $1.00 
PRICES ON DUBAY PRODUCTS 
New Improved Ceresan, for oats, barley and wheat, 1 lb. 
75c, 5 lbs. $3.00. New Improved Ceresan costs only 
1% to 2 l-3c per bushel. Unusually effective in con¬ 
trolling STINKING SMUT of wheat, COVERED SMUT 
and STRIPE of barley and oats SMUTS. Usually im¬ 
proves the stand and yield 1 to 5 bushels per acre. 1 
pound treats 32 bushels of wheat, oats or barley. 
New Improved Semesan Jr, for corn, 4 oz. tin -50c, 1 lb. 
$1.50, 5 lbs. $7.00. 
POTATOES 
Improved Early Ohio. 
Early Triumph or Six Weeks. 
Peck Bushel 
. $0.50 $1.70 
.55 1.95 
.50 1.70 
.50 
1.70 
Early Irish Cobbler. 
.50 
1.70 
Harvesting Kherson Oats on the Cashman Farms in Steele County 
OUR GARDEN SECTION 
Every person who has a plot of ground should grow a 
garden this year. There are many reasons, principally I 
might mention Economy, Health, Superior quality of the 
vegetable, and the interest that is reaped from the home 
vegetable plot. There is a flavor and tenderness in home¬ 
grown things not to be had in store vegetables. We are 
listing the well known old reliables that you have grown 
many times with success. We are slow to list many un¬ 
tried vegetables or flowers as experience has shown us 
that it takes a long time to prove a new variety is as good 
as one of the old reliables and much longer still to prove 
that it is better. We must have the best that is obtain¬ 
able. 
SPECIAU OFFER FOR ORDERS RECEIVED BE¬ 
FORE APRIL FIRST—For every retail cash order for 
$2.00 or more for VEGETABLE AND FLOWER SEEDS 
received by us before April first we offer a premium in the 
form of additional goods to the amount of 10% of the 
order. No discount given on orders received after April 
First. We make special prices to Market Gardeners. 
ASPARAGUS 
This is one of the earliest and most delicious of spring 
vegetables. We strongly urge all those who have avail¬ 
able space to put in a bed for their own use. Sow in 
drills twelve inches apart and one inch deep. Cultivate 
well during the summer, thinning the plants to four 
inches apart. The next spring transplant into permanent 
beds. One ounce of seed to fifty feet of drill or five 
pounds to the acre. 
-—Prepaid- 
Pkt. Oz. % lb. 1 lb. 
Washington, rust resisting. $ .05 $ .20 $ .45 $1.25 
BEANS 
CULTURE—Sow the first crop of beans as soon as the 
weather warms up, usually about the tenth of May around 
Owatonna. To have a succession, plant about every two 
weeks through the summer. Late snap Beans are a very 
satisfactory crop and should be more generally planted. 
Rows should be about two feet apart and the beans plant¬ 
ed a few inches apart in the row. The plants up to the 
time of blossoming should have frequent shallow cultiva¬ 
tion. Any damage to the roots by cultivation is likely to 
cause the blossoms to blast, thereby reducing the crop. 
For convenience the A'arieties of garden beans we offer 
have been separated into classes as follows: Bush or 
Snap Beans, Yellow or Wax Podded Varieties, Green 
Podded or Bush Sorts, Dwarf or Bush Lima, Pole Lima, 
Green Podded Pole or Climbing. The low growing wax 
