4 HENDERSON’S TESTED FARM SEEDS 
GOLDEN WAVE (Bearded) 
Golden Wave Wheat is considered by many to be the best of the bearded varieties, and there is no 
doubt but that it is thoroughly reliable, and will do well on either rich or poor land. 
Besides being a great cropper, it stools out exceptionally well and stands up under the most trying 
weather conditions. The stalks of Golden Wave are all long, stiff and thick walled, and all heads are 
about the same distance from the ground. It is this characteristic which suggested the name, ‘‘Golden 
Wave’’ which is exactly what it looks like. 
Due to its thick-walled stem and extra stiffness this variety resists rust and fly better than most others, 
and produces uniformly good crops, yields of more than forty bushels per acre are not at all uncommon. 
The heads are of great length, for a bearded variety, and often contain as many as fifty-eight grains. 
The berry is plump, red in color, quite large, and the chaff is amber-brown. Sow 134 bushels per acre. 
Price, $3.00 per bushel of 60 lbs.; 10-bushel lots, $2.90 per bushel. 
LANCASTER 
FULCASTER 
(BEARDED) 
Lancaster Fulcasteris rightly 
one of the most popular bearded 
wheats. It represents the devel- 
opment of many years of careful 
selection of the old variety 
Fuleaster, which over a long 
period of years held first place 
as a big yielding wheat. 
Lascaster-Fuleaster is a re- 
liable yielder, year after year. 
In years when all conditions 
are against successful crops, 
this variety proves its reliability 
by making good average yields 
in spite of adverse conditions. 
There are few varieties that will 
do quite as well on soils of 
average fertility. Farmers who 
have not been successful in 
raising even fair crops of wheat 
on rather thin soils, should grow 
this variety. The change will 
insure them against wheat fail- 
ures, and produce a satisfactory 
crop of straw and a surprising 
crop of grain. 
The grain is of the finest 
quality, a genuine long-berry, 
dark red and hard. An un- 
usual feature peculiar to this 
variety is that on poor soils the 
grain will be of full size. There 
is no wheat grown that is better 
liked by millers. 
The extreme hardiness of 
Lancaster-Fuleaster will carry 
it safely through extreme 
winters. It has a _ vigorous 
constitution that withstands at- 
tacks of insect pests and diseases. 
In the Pennsylvania State 
College Experimental Station’s 
four years tests of seventeen 
lst . varieties of wheat, Lancaster- 
i Fuleaster led all bearded sorts, 
GOLDEN. | yielding on an average sof Fi 
| bushels per acre for the four 
VW A V E a years. 
WHEAT | Lancaster-Fulcaster ripens 
early and produces stiff long 
straw with large hard dark red 
grain. It is well worthy the 
thoroughly re- 
liable on either {|} attention of any wheat grower. 
_| fichorpoorland | Price, $2.75 per bushel of 
: | 60 Ibs.; 10-bushel lots; $2.65 
per bushel. 
