IS YOUR BULB GARDEN 
THE MOLES’ HAPPY HUNTING GROUND? 
Every year scores of our customers write to us wondering what they can do to rid their grounds of 
moles. It is a case of getting rid of them or being deprived of one of the greatest pleasures on earth—that 
of having a fine Tulip garden. 
The same problem has bothered us in our Nurseries in Holland, and was not solved satisfactorily until a 
preparation was compounded that did the work. We call it “Mole-kill” for short. It is a powder which is 
very effective, so effective in fact that if it does not do its work your money will be refunded. 
“Mole-kill” is not dangerous to animals (dogs or cats) which may happen to eat a poisoned mole. 
Keep the product in a safe spot and out of the reach of children. The handling and manipulation are free 
from danger. “Mole-kill” has caused thousands of congratulatory letters to be received by its inventor, 
both from experiment stations and from private gardeners. One bottle is sufficient for destroying at least 
a hundred moles, and is fit for use for six months after opening the bottle. 
DIRECTIONS FOR USING MOLE-KILL 
Choose by preference where the runs branch off. Carefully uncover the run and free it of earth. Take 
a worm of average length, shorten it at both ends by about a quarter of an inch, wipe away the first drop 
of blood, touch each end of the worm with the powder, a small quantity of which has been carefully poured 
on some paper so as not to dirty the contents of the bottle, slip the worm thus prepared into the run and 
close the hole with earth. When your garden has thus been baited, tamp all runs down with the foot or 
rake. If on the following day, there are fresh molehills, the bait must be applied a second time; moles rarely 
travel alone. Keep at it, planting the bait until molehills cease to appear. Price, postpaid, $3. 
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