INSECTICIDE—continued.

Lemon Oil Insecticide—A sweet-smelling, milk-white, soapy wash; perfectly safe and harmless to the tenderest foliage and roots. In pints, 1/4; quarts, 2/6; half-gallons, 4/6.

McDougall’s Garden Insecticide Wash—Free from arsenic, copper, and other dangerous poisons. Per pint, 10d.; per quart, 1/5; per gallon, 5/0. Post extra.

Potassium Sulphide—A remedy for mildew and other plant diseases. 8-oz. bottle, 10½d.

Cleaning Fruit Trees in
Winter with Sodalin.

Sodalin (Registered) Antiseptic Winter “Wash”—For cleansing dormant fruit trees, and thus destroying moss, lichen, American blight (woolly aphis), and all hibernating insects which live in the bark in winter. For apples, pears, plums, currants, and all similar fruit trees. This wash must only be used on dormant trees—not on trees in leaf or in advanced or opening bud. Spray well into the bark of the trees, keeping a good pressure on the sprayer-pump. Well wet all stems and twigs. 100-lb. drum, 29/6 (carriage paid); 50-lb. drum, 17/6 (carriage paid); 10-lb. drum, 6/6 (carriage paid); 5-lb. tin, 3/6 (postage 7d. extra); 2½-lb. tin (about), 2/0 (postage 5d. extra); small tin (enamelled), 1/0 (postage 4d. extra).

Soft Soap and Paraffin—In tins, 2 lb., 7½d.; 4 lb., 1/1; 7 lb., 1/9.

Soft Soap and Quassia—A cheap and effective preparation for the destruction of green fly, etc. In tins, 2 lb., 7½d.; 4 lb., 1/1; 7 lb., 1/9.

Slug Death is a complete antidote against slugs, or any species found above ground, and will not injure the most tender vegetation. Tins, 5d., 9d., and 1/7.