EATER VARIETY NOW THAN FOR MANY SEASON8. Taffeta^lfcthe Prettiest of Coloring* '-*$$ ••*^epular •• Ever--High 8tai»d- '.. , •••; ing Medici Collar Also V ' ^ . Much Liked. ft ^ • . *• " • B3ren to give a general description , ?Of the new neckwear is difficult, be cause there is such a wide range of ? '•tyles. One might say that the list Wvvttarts with the plain flare collar and ; Onds with a soft vest girdle. So varied length are these accessories that TO PROLONG LIFE OF PLANTS Princess Lace, Ribbon Bow. . tliey may finish with only an ordinary Collar, or they may lengthen until Jhey verge into a soft girdle at tb« waistline. i' Taffeta, as in dresses and coats, Is much in evidence in the latest neck- Wear. It is seen in pompadour weaves With their lovely colorings, as well at In the shaded weaves and solid color*. Taffeta ruches and Medici collars of the same silk will in a measure take the place of the ostrich feather and IB alines neckpieces which have been In favor so long, and which are worn In the early autumn and in the first Warm days of spring when neckpiece* of fur would be too clumsy and warm. One of the most attractive of the taf- feta neckpieces introduced this season consisted of a high standing Medici collar of pompadour silk softened by trills of cream-tinted lace. The taf- feta had a black ground strewn over With large, red roses and green leaves In soft tones. The wide lace frills were placed inside next the neck and (ell over the high standing collar of taiteta, extending in jabot effect down ••ach side of a V front. , There is quite a vogue for waist- ; -Cf>at8 this spring. They are fash ioned from all sorts of material, in cluding taffeta in every shade, pique, ^linen, crepe and net White net com bined with white chiffon taffeta formed tile materials used for one of the ^ smartest vests seen this season, and ' which is shown in the illustration. The body of the vest is made of fine net shirred on the shoulders and again shirred at the bottom into a waistcoat or high girdle which fas tens at the front with three crystal ibpttong. At the assholes of th6 body •Of the veBt, which is nothing more than a slit from shoulder to girdle, there is a narrow plaited frill of net' Abundance of Fresh Air la the Fink N«jpM«lty for Those Kept.fpr - Indoor Adornment, ' - * Many persons are unsucceBsfuT wflJi, house plants because they do not give them enough freeh air. The atmo»r phere of the ordinary living room is both too dry and too warm for the av erage potted plant, and the room is usually kept so tightly closed during the cold months that the air is seldom pure. Plants of all sorts, whether they are raised indoors or outside, most have an abundance of fresh air. Two or three times a day open some of the windows and allow new air to enter the room. Lower one or two windows an inch or more every day when the outside temperature is not very low.' On all mild days in winter throw open all of the doors and windows. You will be surprised at the difference it will make in the vigor, color and gr6wth of the plants when they do have all the good air they need. Good air, good light, good soil and plenty of moisture are the living requirements of all plants. Keep a box of rtch earth in the house for repotting plants, during the winter. Fresh earth added is always j beneficial to plant life. When pre paring, heat the earth to kill worms. If you want sturdy house plants give them plant food. Ammoniated bone meal is a good fertilizer for house plants. Beware of the fancy jardi niere. It is responsible for many de cayed roots. All plants with shiny surfaces can be washed with soapsuds containing a little olive oil. Instead of carrying potted ferns through winter after winter, so that they get worn out, give them an oc casional rest Cut them down close and you will be surprised to see bow they will reward you in the spring by leafing out with renewed vigor. To keep a rubber plant In condition, It must hive plenty of earth, plenty of water and a shower bath once a week. When it has dried, after the bath, wipe the leaves and sponge them with milk. If your palm is infested with scales, wash the leaves in a weak solution of soapsuds. After several washings, at intervals of a few days apart, you will find that the scales will disappear, the palm will look fresh and green, and make a new growth. An occasional bath of this sort will keep it In fine oonditlon. E661SMST STREET m GETS LOST IN GUI DRAINING POULTRY PUNT Depends on Nature of Sell and Cen> tevtesr.sf Plot, and Require* rd, . Careful Study. Has Greater Keeping Qualities and Is Safer Food. FASHIONABLE LINGERIE Tt; Waistcoat of Net and Taffeta. The soft crush collar is of the white taffeta. There are also exquisite lit tle waistcoats formed of pompadour taffeta in light or dark tones to suit the fancy of thewearer. Shadow lace, chiffon, net and crys tal buttons are effectively utilized in tfee development of the popular fichu. These materials are used alone or in ^combination, and any combination seema to be successful if it is cleverly worked out MARY DEAN. Arm Coverings. Sheer long sleeves continue good- FASHIONS AND FADS Check and plaid cotton ratine* are : ift denmnd. * Qlacf and white china frocks are Men in the shops. Both hlsh and low coiffure* are in .. . fashion at present ' There is a revival of cross-stitch in fftifltic needlework. iJv. v clleadB in flaming yellow pink color ' are called tango beads. V , Rice cloth is a sheer eotten^ with and inwoven knotted yarn. / .!•.» Multicolored stripes are aeen even ["• •"'Hi wash silks and crepes. : sEven Turkish towels nowaday* are ? .-iitibroidored on.their end*. * }"• JWhite crystal beads and jet beads 'ittie much used together. Taffeta two and three piece suit* are coming in for spring wear. *\ :"wAn immense tulle scarf to match • tye dress is pretty for evening. %The newest of the high hats have crowns altogether of tulle. Albatross wrappers have trimming* black and wblte stripe*., Colors in silk petticoats are either ;T«ry vivid or very delicate. Wash net i* much made u*e or by the makers of lingerie. This combina tion underbodice and petticoat in the illustration, made of batiste, is edged with a net ruffle, and a narrow plaited frill of net heads the tucked flounce. Blue shoulder straps, a blue band of satin ribbon, to hold the bodice frill t>f lace In place, and a band of blue ribbon, ending irr a bow under the net frill, complete this slip. The under bodice of fleshzpink chiffon, Is much beribboned in pale blue and Is strengthened by a band of wide ma- lines lace about the top. REALLY A FORM OF SANDAL Lace Top 8hoes Highly Desirabl* Ac cessories Worn With Stocking* of a Different 8had*. Lace top shoes sound alluring, don't they? They are really high ehoes, cut in every way like ordinary dress shoes --but the vamp Is of colored satin, the top of linen lace, fitting as snugly as a gaiter. One pair, particularly pretty, showed top and heel of cloth of gold, with top of Plauen lace. Sometimes colored satin and lace colored to match is seen, a combination that Bhows up well when stocking* of a different Bhade are worn beneath. One pair, a Iittle more extreme than the others, ias merely the toe part of satin--the heel of the stocking being allowed to show through the meshes of the lao*. Here lpdeed we come back to the sandal, since nothing could exceed thia 1BM| shoe for transparency. Cheviot 8klrt. Your summer wardrobe will revjuir** at least one separate skirt that does not demand constant laundering. POT this purpose Vogue recommends black and white checked cheviot as well as the new cotton cheviot in Scotch plaids, which is wonderfully smart and effective. Centerpiece Inset*. - , It's rather an unusual but-very pret ty idea to have little filet lace or cluny insets in centerpieces. Sometimes in a whole large centerpiece there is but one small diamond-shaped inset. It is usually placed where the embroidery is most scarce. The diamonds are but tonholed into the centerpiece. Some times on a particularly large center piece there are three insets aborn equal distances apart and about an inch or SQ from the edge, forming a huge triangle. So far the uneven num bers of one and se seem to be most used; the 'two insets being considered perhaps too commonplace and conven tional to be artistic. These insets can be bought In art needle-work stores If the centerpiece to be ornamented with the insets has a cluny edging, the Insets themselves should, ol cou**e, be of cluny. HM 'Must Be ^aHsfuity" Fed v*n<f Wft- tected From Disease If 8he I* E^pecteg, to Do H.er Duty : J. vWhful^;f ^ By J. B. BURROWS, Director Illinois Farmers' Institute. Just now when the fresh egg is one of the greatest luxuries we can have upon our table*, it may not be out of the way to reflect a little upon some of the reasons for its scarcity. Whether we are to consider the egg as fresh or packed, the problem is the same and its solution is well with in the reach of every farmer's wife who is half-way interested in study ing the matter in an intelligent way. The problem then is this: How shall we produce the eggs, of first-class quality that will keep indefinitely? Some have labored under the misap prehension that eggs were eggs, with out taking into consideration the fact that there may be radical differences In freshly laid eggs that materially affect their keeping qualities. Like a good many small consideration* on the farm, poultry has had to shift for itself with the understanding that somehow it will take care of itself, and has seldom been regarded in the proper light of importance with the other branches of farm production, in other words, it has often been neg lected and not handled with even in telligent care. When we remember that egg pro duction, according to the records of our farm flocks of today, is altogether an artificial matter from every etand- point and that the wild hen of the jungle was expected only to lay her neat full of eggs for the express pur' pose of reproducing her kind, we shall understand that the modern hen Is capable of rendering the most efficient service only when she has every care fui attention. If the egg-producing hen i* herself the result of careful selection, hered ity must first of all be considered one •of the potent factors In egg produc tion. All the conclusions of the late experiments point to the fact that "there, is more in the feed than the breed," so, after using the hereditary principle for all it will do, we must naturally employ every means of fur nishing our egg machine with mate rials for making the eggs. Then we must remember that only In the high est state of health can she be expected to do her duty and every inducement must be offered in the way of protec tion against disease. One of the stand ard preparations is the safest insur ance against disease germs of all kinds, on account of its penetrating and enduring qualities. The early pullets and hens that are quite recovered from the effects of moulting (so easily hastened by the use of small feeds of oil meal) are the ones to furniBh the high-priced e^gs at this season. If the egg is to be of the highest quality, it must be the infertile egg, at once the result of breeding, feeding and protection against disease, and this kind of an egg can readily be kept fresh for an Indefinite period. The fertile egg, produced for purposes of incubation, is sometime* unsafe as an article of diet after the first twelve hours with ordinary care. To accom plish the result, by far the most Im portant provision and one so common ly neglected through ignorance, is to sell, kill or confine all male birds a* soon as the hatching season is over. To Clean BfaCfc Lace. Take some boiling hot green tea, hold, the lace over it so that it can be completely steamed, pull it out well with the hand during the process, an/ at once iron it out between paper*. VvJ." ' S; SPREAD MANURE IN SPRING By M. COVERDELL. ,A great many farmers argue that manure must be spread during the winter in order to be of any benefit to the ground the following season. Our experience disproves this argument and goes still a step further, proving that manure spread even in the late spring will greatly Improve the crop that season. Last spring after our corn had beep planted, stray manure and refuse from the feed lots were hauled out and spread over the corn field. Partly a* an experiment we chose a little slope where the ground was thin and grav elly. When the corn came up it soon took on a deeper and healthier hue where the manure had been spread and the growth of the plant was more rapidly promoted than in other portion* of the field. Alqo, this particular spot was al moBt entirely free from weed peets of any kind during the whole season, the manure forming a sort of mulch which smothered out weeds. These favorable conditions were maintained until corn gathering when there was a marked difference in the yield of corn in a certain portion of this field, the difference being several bushels more per acre in favor of the ground on which the manure was spread after planting. % _ V v. By H, A. M'KEfeN^r * Secretary Illinois Farmers' Institute. If the poultry plant is located upon a stronge, retentive clay soil, naturally too wet for the health and comfort of the flocks, It may be advisable to uh- derdraln the land. First of all the poultryman ehould ascertain how and where the surplus water enters his land. Sometimes the water comes by surface or underground fiowage from adjoining land. Ip such case it may be possible to make a trtench across the slopes so a* to cut off this flow' age before it enters the poultry plant and thus render the land of the plant sufficiently dry. An open ditch may answer the purpose or a stone drain three or four feet deep will catch and convey away the superfluous water. Large tile can be used at the bottom of the trench and the space from the tile to the surface may be filled with small stonee or coarse gravel so that any surface or subflowage will be in> tercepted and conveyed to the bottom drain. If the land still remains too wet a system of underdralns becomes necessary. If numerous stones are at himd and it is especially desired to clear the land of them, stone drains may be constructed which will answer the purpose for a number of years. The best drains are made from farm drain tiles and once well laid will last a lifetime. Water stands in almost all eoil*. It la desirable that it should, but the level of the standing water (the wa ter table) should not be too near the surface of the soil. Certainly the wa ter should not stand upon the surface except in the case of the duck pond. It 1B most undesirable to have water stagnate on or in the soil. If the soil is not naturally porouB enough to let the water move away through it we make artificial channels for It three or four feet under the surface. The tiles most used are cylindrical in cross section and about one foot in length. They are made of clay and burned like bricks. They are more or less porous, but admit the water mostly between the joint* where the ends of the sections meet They are made of different sizes. To do thiB work of underdrainag* right it should be carefully and sys tematically planned. Mike the measurements necessary and then draw a map^f the land showing its boundaries and also it* contour, i, e., its varying elevation. This latter is accomplished by draw» Ing lines within the boundaries repre senting given levels above the level of the proposed outlet for the system. The matter may then be studied out on paper during spare hours.* Experiment With Hog*. If hogs are fed exclusively on com, the animal becomes fat and ungainly Mid does not develop properly. The bones are brittle and easily broken. One of the bulletins iBsued by one of the experiment stations took 65 hogs and divided them into lots of five each. Twelve different ration* were used with corn alone In two of them and corn supplemented with some other feed in the ethers. The hogs fed on corn and linseed oil meal and those fed on corn and tankage gained the most Those receiving corn alone were most unsatisfactory.* Water Supply I* Important. The most important and necessaryk requirment for dairy cows is the water supply. The cows should have all the water they want, not too cold, nor too warm, but Just right in every respect. It should be fresh and where the oow* can help themselves. Watering Horses. Don't water horses after feeding, al ways before, so as not to wash undi gested food from the stomach into the Intestines, and cause gripeB. ONIONS FROM THE SEED 8eed onions are of better flavor, and keep longer, and are more profitable to grow than sets, though some fail to grow them in the home garden be cause they are more difficult to keep clean of weeds. The best way to raise onions from seed is by sowing the seed in a bed or cold-frame, early In the season, and transplanting later to the row where they are to grow. A small section of the hotbed will grow 1.0(A) plants till they are the size of quills, or they can be crowded. By that time the ground will be warm, and all seed will have germinated so that the plants may be set in clean ground that has been worked Over to kill all the young weeds. If one lackB for room in the hotbed, the seed may be sown In a sheltered place, an old brush heap, ashbed, or some place where the soil is good. If there is room to sow the seed In drills six inches apart, they may be worked some to keep from growing be fore they are transplanted. When you are ready to transplant them, wet the ground and pull the plants, and then cut off about half the top and slightly tip the roots. Set the plants from two to three inches apart in the row, and in rows fifteen inches apart. If very dry, use water when transplanting, and every one will live. If the soil has been well manured with stable manure, or poultry drop- pingB, and worked over several times before the onions are transplanted to the rows, there will be but few weeds to contend with, and the plant* will not be checked in growth. Onions should be pulled and placed to dry in the shade, when the top* be gin to turn yellow and drop over. Passengers Are Carried All Over town at the Mercy of a "Green" Crew. ON WAY--BUT WHERE? Twenty-aix-7on "Chariot," With It* Crew and Two "Owl" Passenger* Disappear a* Effectually as Cellar Button Under Chiffonier. Chicago.--Think of a street car be* ing lost! Incongruous? Yes, but not Impos sible. It has happened--ft happened just a few nights ago, and in Chicago. A 26-ton Chicago avenue "owl" car, with its crew and two passengers dis appeared as effectually as a collar but ton under a chiffonier. One of the passengers was W. H. Pierce of 616 Latrobe avenue, Austin. The crew was "green." The car company's dispatcher questioned the pair when they left the barn. Did they know the rovte? Of course. Hadn't they been over It once dur ing the two days they were being "broken In?" Surely, they knew. Fate decreed that the right switches should be open for the first mile or two of the trip. The various twists within the loop w«r* made true to form and the two late workers who were passenger* found comfortable positions and had settled down for the first of their "forty winks" when their chariot ap proached Randolph street That was why they did not notice that the car kept right on up Clark street Instead of turning west in Ran dolph street as any well-behaved Chi cago avenue car should have. "End of the line! AU-1 out!" The conductor's raucous shot woke up the two sleeper*. "Wh-what end* Wh-what lineT" queried one, sleepily. "I don't know," answered the fare collector. "But the rails don't go any farther thl* way and we got t' go back." "Back where?" asked the second passenger, now thoroughly awake. "Search me," replied the official, in differently. '"The motorman is run- MULCH THE STRAWBERRIES Mulch the strawberries after the first deep freeze to prevent injury to the plants from alternate freezing and thawing. Freezing in itself does not injure ordinary cultivated plants in the ground, but alternate and sudden freezing does much damage by lifting the plants and breaking roots and rup turing vegetable tissues. A covering of litter will enable them to thaw out gradually that little injury will result. * ALCOHOL--3 PER CENT /Vegetable Preparation for As similating the Food andfteguia- ting fhe Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion,Cheer ful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral NO T > 3 A R C O T I C Arpr •fotdgttSAfnmmam Ampirt* Sttd - ^tx Sftjtnm * fotktlirSatb < Ant j* StaJ . fkfgeraimt - SuttriumUStilm* VirmSj,* . Hwbyrtti f/rmm w • A perfect Remedy forConsHspe- Hon. Sour Slomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. fee Simik Signature of THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW "YORK. \ t C > m o n t h s o l d The Kind You Havd tk 5 Always Bears the ' Signature of -1Tr ~ "Wsjj '.W ilSi For Overfill Thirty Years5®*3 Guaranteed under the Fooda; Exact Copy of Wrapper. ADVISED HIM TO GET BUSY Laborer Resented Interest Shown by Statesman as to the Farmer's Prospective Crop. The earl of Aberdeen, lord lieuten ant, whom Mr. Ben Tillett suggests hanging, iB one of the mildest-man nered and most kindly of men. He takes a great interest in agricul ture, and one evening, while taking a walk in a country district, he paused to watch a laboring man at work in his little garden. Leaning over the fence, his lord ship asked: "Is this good soil?" "Aye," said the laborer dryly. 8everal other questions were an- ewered in the same laconic way, the laborer digging busily all the time. Finally, Lord Aberdeen asked, "What Is your next crop to be?" The laborer paused In his work and looked at his questioner severely. "See here, my mannie," he re marked, "I dinna suppose you ken onything aboot crops. Just you get a bit garden yersel' an' start work on't, an' then ye'Il hae something bet ter tae dae than come botherin' busy folk!"" otca*9 * Avf;#' Greater New York. The population of Greater New York is estimated by the health department at 6,476,966 on January 1, 1914. Ac cording to the same authority the pop ulation or the boroughs 1B as follows: Manhattan, 2,613,060; the Bronx, 612,- 294; Brooklyn, 1,880,713; Queens, 373,- 414; Richmond, 97,515. Not yet, how ever, has Greater New York saught up with London. The British metropolis still leads the big Yankee town by some 2,000,000. A food for sore lungs. Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops. Cure coughs, by relieving the soreness--5c at Drug Stores. r* Promising All Right Bill--Don't you think be has a prom ising voice? Jill--Sure. I heard him say twenty different times he was going to pay his Mil. "The Motorman Is Running This Car, I Qot to Qo Where He Dots!" ning this oar. I got t' go where he does." So back they went, from the end of the Clark street line at'Devon, to the loop. But that was not the end of their wanderings. Four times they circled the city hall and county build ing before the motorman discovered that by turning a switch he could go in another direction. Twice it struck the "stub ends" of lines. Finally the rambler and its passengers came Into port at Clark and Randolph streets. There the dispatcher, no less frantic than the passengers or the crew, took it in charge. He had been telephoning wildly all over the city asking every one bo could raise if he had seen a street car wandering loose. The "greenhorn" orew was not on that owl car the next night Putnam Fadeless Dyes color In oold water. Adv. Constant use will wear a thing out, even the constant use of a friend. Do You Wish to Eigoy the comfort of • clear head, sweet stomach, keen1 appetite and ft good digestion? | WSB Send for free sample to Wright's Indian Vegetable PHI U. 372 Peart Sired. Msv Yaifc LAND0L FREE m.iUiMr . 17 eeaf BE FREE From npertwu baJr. It to macio. Absolutely fectiTo. Liberal samples and fnU unnm b»iwiia«n «t-Drimr to., U4 It. KlHoU An., f Anirc Our 31.50 Beauty Book aad UAUILa DtoPRBBaMrife hi prttariarfc PTSMT A HUGHTM P.OUBLOLC«FR PATENTS "-SiS FOR ALL BYE PAINS Pettits P.ve Salve W. N. u., CHICAGO, NO. 12-1914* A '"Helping Hand" Extended to fhtf Middle Aged Woman -- 'PHjhiKE comes a time in every woman's life when her organism undergoes an important change This is a critical Knod. It ia a time when a woman needs r full health and strength. For your own sake yoa should anticipate this turning Br. Pierce's Favorite Prescription has been recommended for over forty yean as a tonic for women who are about to experience "the I A 8tltch in Tims. Don't forget to fix the fences. A trip around the pasture and field fences now and then will often save trouble, strength and the time of hav ing to drive the cattle back into the pasture. Animals are almost human when it comes to going whpre some one does not want them. Remove the suggestion by not allowihg any sags In the wire or any loose or decayed posts. " Telling Age of Horse. NO one can in every case, because the teeth vary, but aa a rule the age Can be told pretty well up to six or eight years, and after that it can be reckoned pretty closely.* Watch the changes in the teeth of every colt you raise. JBJvery farm animal teaches some lessons too often overlooked. Segregate Newcomers. When new hogs are bought and brought onto a farm where there are other hogs, the new arrivals should be kept apart from the others until all ganger of communicating any dis ease the new ones may have has i passed. CAT COSTS ENGINEER HIS JOB Reverses tocomotive to Dispel the Hoodoo, and Gets Pink Envelope Soon After Alton, III.--Peter Houseman has lost his job as engineer of the Illinois Terminal railroad because a black cat Bped across the track in front of the train. There was no chance of the cat being hit, but Houseman reversed, put on the air brake and made a sud den stop. When the surprised train crew and passengers looked from the windows to find out the trouble they saw the engineer throwing snowballs at an osage hedge tree, wherein was 'perched the black cat. "What are you doing?" inquired the conductor. "That blamed cat ran across the track, and I've got to chase it back again to break the spell," retorted Houseman, as he gathered fresh am munition. Soon he dislodged the cat which fled back across the track. • com pany official wae on the train. House man promptly got a "pink envelope" stating his services were no longer needed. PaiMt Under Wings *CUi«, Bayside, N. J.--By painting the "Un derside of her chicken's wings,' Mrs Lena Sarno trapped Andrew DeifyeCtf. who was held for petit larceny. Thelatestia med ical teUscs is contained fat Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical vMadMaaof It is helpful in the equalization the circulation of the blood and in regulating the action of the bowels. Nervousness and lowspimsdie* Happiness and contentment take their ptoea. Sold in tablet or liquid form by Medicine Dealers--or send SO cents for mursple box HOOSIER BINDER TWINE Direct from Factory Qi/(J Treated for Insects Fully Guaranteed 0/4SB Tested 8c Weighed j Orders for 500 tb«. or more, 2 per cent off-, or good note due Sep. l»t, 1914, without interest. Car lot prices on application. Prices £ o. b. factory. Remit by any form of exchange. Order by letter, or send for blanks. Careful attention to club order*. • • • - E.J. Focirty, 8upt,, Hoosier Twine Mi Us, Wchieafi CHy. Iai Guaranteed Everbearing Strawberries The new everbearing strawberries are now an established commercial success. VVa have over 40 acres set solidly to Suporb, Americus, Perpetual Motion, iVodocliv% Progroaarrd, $1,000 aorta and other new seedlings of our own breeding- We have aft sizes, shapes, colors and flavors of the common strawberries, except that instead of oolp fruiting a few days during regular strawberry time, our Evorbosrora bear a good crvfl during surnmpr and fall of same year set Then the following year at regular sir*** bewy time these Everbearers will prod nee an extra Urge crop and continue fruitiag afl through the summer and fall months. Now is the time to get started with these new berries. People are very food of stra^K berries and we find these luscious Everbearers sell over all other fruits during the suaioai^' and fall months. They ar« very h3rdy and not subject to damage by frosts. Their ' root system enables them to produce fine, large berrit^s during the hot. dry summer weathe^ Get Acquainted Offer. Send U3 10c for mailing expense and we will send to jrou al planting ; t high quality, everiwarieg strawberry plants (worth Si) and ftirtaice them to folic through n>«y and fall months, or money refunded. Catalog with complale history oi those wcodsrful berries, hum j urue lodajr. . r r'.iiV' J THE GARDNER NURSERY COMPANY^ YP QSAG&IOWA '7 Ml &. &