HENDERSON’S 
SPECIAL GRASS MIXTURE 
FOR HAY AND PERMANENT PASTURE. 
‘/FARMERand BREEDER \\ 
SHOULD SEND FOR 
HENDERSON'S 
American Farmers’ 
Manual. 
You cannot afford to be without it, 
MAILED FREE 
WHAT OUR CUSTOMERS SAY: 
IN MAINE. 
I did not succeed in getting four tons or more per 
acre, but I did get more than i om anything else, and 
it is splendid hay.—G. M. LMES. 
IN NEW JERSEY. 
The Special Grass Mixtures have been most success- 
Ful, in spite of an unusually trying season. Yielded 
acrop of hay more than ticice as great per acreas 
the timothy, which I sowed alongside at ei same 
time. aes 4 aN. LINDABURY. 
IN IOWA. 
Your Grass Mixture has done exceedingly well, 
especially in this year of drouth. It yielded about 
twice as much as timothy, and cattle seemed to do 
better on it.—_W. WATSON. 
IN NEW YORK. 
Your Permanent Mixture is the finest piece of 
Tass anywhere about here. An old farmer told me 
fast week it would cut digtons to the acre sure. 
—J.M. RIcHARDs. 
IN VERMONT. 
Your Grass Seeds are easily the best of any in the 
market.—F. C. KIMBALL. 
IN RHODE ISLAND. 
The forty-bushel sowing of Permanent Grass Seed 
which I purchased fr om you is to-day the hest field 
of grass in Rhode Island.—BRADFORD NORMAN. 
IN PENNSYLVANIA. 
The green appearance of the field attracted uni- 
versal attention. It has far surpassed clover and 
timothy in the amount it yields.—J. B. CUMMINGS. 
IN VIRGINIA. 
My manager is enthusiastic over your Mixture 
Jor Hay and Permanent Pasture. He claims this 
year hecut 3 tons per acre the first cutting, 134 tons 
the second, and will cut 2 tons the third. 
is a grand sight ; seen nle come for miles around to 
see it.—EDWARD Barney. 
IN CONNECTICUT. 
There is a decided contrast beticeen Timothy and 
your Special Grass Mixture for hay in favor of 
your Mixture, which is the best field of grass I ever 
saw.—O, R. FISHER. 
IN OHIO. 
The Special Grass Mixture has given us the very 
best of satisfaction ; 
rass I ever saw and has given us a lar ge amount of 
hay and pasture per acre.—W. J. HAYES. 
The field | 
it produced the finest piece of | 
We are headquarters for all kinds of 
RECLEANED GRASS SEEDS, 
And have made the subject of Hay and 
Pasture a special study. We invite corre- 
spondence, and will advise the best grasses 
to use and make up special mixtures where 
necessary. 
at 
? all asking gor 
FOR HAY AND PERMANENT PASTURE. 
WILL LAST TWENTY YEARS WITHOUT RENEWAL, 
Consisting of the following varieties: Orchard Grass, Meadow Foxtail, Sheep’s Fescue, 
Rhode Island or Creeping Bent, Hard Fescue, Sweet Scented Vernal (True Perennial), 
Meadow Fescue, English Rye Grass, Italian Rye Grass, Red Top, etc., as recommended in 
our book, “How the Farm Pays,” blended in proportions which, we have found from 
actual use, give the most satisfactory results. 
On ordinary fertile soil 3 bushels of this mixture is sufficient to seed an acre, but where the 
land is poor a larger quantity will be necessary. Taking one soil with another a fair average 
would be 3 bushels to the acre. 
For Hay and Permanent Pasture for Light soils...... 
ofl ni We fe : Bedium salle $2,50 per bushel of 14 Ibs. 
eavy soils. .... 
Orchards and Shady Places.............---....--- = ear lo = = Per une 
Hay only. Specially recommended for large hay crop bi s > 
Will stand close cropping without 100 2.35 : 
Pasture only. 
To these mixtures, intended for either Mowing Lands or Pasture (but which on account of 
their greater weight should be sown separately), are to be added 10 lbs. of Mixed Clovers, com- 
prising White, Mammoth Perennial or Cow Grass, Alsike, Trefoil, etc., but these should only 
be sown in the spring, as they are rather tender in this latitude if sown in the fall. 
FULL DIRECTIONS FOR SOWING ENCLOSED IN EVERY BAG. 
The quantity needed (10 lbs.) of MIXED CLOVERS to sow 
an acre we will sell for $2.00. 
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 
Country Gentleman says: ‘‘ Below the taller grasses was a thick mat of finer kinds, and the close, rich turf 
hid every particle of soil.” 
American Agriculturist says: ‘‘Such mixtures are far superior to Timothy, or ‘Timothy and Clover,’ or 
any one grass, costing but a little more, lasting much longer, and giving frequently more than double the yield.” 
Farm and Home says: ‘‘The enormous yield of nearly four and one-half tons of good hay per acre should 
convince any one that more hay and better pasture can be grown with mixtures than with Timothy and Clover 
alone, as under the very same conditions the latter yielded less than a ton and a half per acre.”’ 
How the Farm Pays says: ‘Farin advance not only of Timothy but of any other Grass we have thus far 
in cultivation.” 
At our Farm one of these Mixtures yielded (first cutting, 5,888 lbs. ; second cutting, 4,320 /bs. per acre) 
a total of 10,208 LBS. CURED HAY PER ACRE, while Timothy growing alongside under 
same conditions yielded only one cutting of 2,400 /bs. per acre. 
At first sight, $7.50 to $10.00 per acre appears to be a high price for the seeding of a pasture, | 
but bear in mind that it isa permanent pasture that we have in view, and nowhere can a per 
manent pasture be laid down properly for a less original outlay than that we name. 
FARM SEEDS WE DO NOT DELIVER FREE. 
