JAMES J. H. GBEGOBY & SON'' S BE TAIL CATALOGUE. 
71 
SUPERIOR KNIVES 
The English Gardener.” 
A favorite handy knife 
with the gardeners of Eng¬ 
land. Blades of best quality. The cut on right 
represents the exact size. By mail, 50 cts. 
GENERAL PURPOSE KNIFE. . Blades of razor 
steel. I have carried one for years and like it hugely. Cut in 
centre represents exact size. Postpaid to any address on 
receipt of 50 cts. 
BUDDING KNIFE. Cocoa handle, razor-steel blade. 
Cut on the left represents exact size. By mail, 35 cts. 
Leggett’s Paris Green or Dry Powder Gun. 
We catalogue this 
season another imple¬ 
ment for the application 
of Paris green and other 
insecticides, in a dry 
state. There is the same 
general argument for this 
as for the Cyclone Ex¬ 
terminator. It saves the 
handling of great weight 
in useless water, plaster, 
or any other bulky adul¬ 
terant. We have used 
the Leggett Gun on our 
farm the past season and 
find that it works ex¬ 
ceedingly well, being 
very light to carry, is 
not liable to get out of 
gear, and never clogs. 
The various nozzles 
which go with it make it 
adapted for various uses, while the twelve feet of tubes which 
go with each gun will enable one to send the Paris green into 
the tops of average fruit trees. The shape and length of the 
tubes and various nozzles enable one so to direct the insecti¬ 
cides that there is no danger from catching them in the 
breath. Price, including all appliances in above engraving, 
per exp., $7.00. 
DEAKIN’S NEW SYRINGE (Letter H). 
TiPnertli of Barrel 18 in Diameter 1}4 in. 
All brass, 18 inches long, 11-2 inches in diameter. Strong, cheap, 
durable; fills quickly and discharges perfectly. The cheapest all¬ 
brass syringe made. Price, per express at purchaser’s expense, $2.00; 
letter K syringe, a size smaller, $1.50. 
COMBINATION TOOL. 
This tool, in addition tc 
the appliances for cutting 
and setting glass, has also 
attached to it a steel for 
sharpening knives and 
scissors, also a corkscrew; will be mailed, postpaid, for 15 cts. 
•J 
The extensive experiments made at the various agricultural colleges, supplemented a< they have been by prominent fruit growers and 
vegetable raisers all over the United States, have demonstrated the. efficient work done by the Bordeaux and other insect and fungus-killing 
preparations. They have come to stay. The fungicides and insecticides when intelligently applied (send to your agricultural colleges 
for reports giving full directions) prevent rot, mildew, and other diseases in vineyards; potato leaf blight and rot; leaf blight and rust in 
strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, and gooseberries; prevent or greatly check apple-scab, pear and plum leaf blight, peach and plum 
fruit rot, destroy the canker-worm, tent-caterpillar, and codling-moth, and exterminate the various forms of animal life injuring the leaves of 
cabbages, squashes, melons, cucumbers, cur¬ 
rants, and gooseberries. The four imple¬ 
ments we advertise below make an excellent 
spraying outfit. 
THE HYDROSPRAYER 
This style of syringe is the invention of the 
celebrated Dr. Fisher. It does much better 
work with the clear liquids than the various 
styles of force-pumps attached to barrels, 
and the same number of men can do an equal 
amount of work. The peculiar way in which 
the holes are made gives a six-foot spread to 
the spray, which will reach every portion of 
a tree within twenty-five feet of the opera¬ 
tor. The brass syringe to which the nozzle 
is attached has a stroke of fourteen inches. 
It will be found very efficient in the ap¬ 
plication of all of the clear insecticides or 
fungicides to the orchard, grapery, garden, 
and greenhouse. Price of the hydrosprayer, 
including cyclone nozzle, $6.00; without 
cyclone nozzle, $5.0.0; per express at pur¬ 
chaser’s expense. 
