52 
i 
4 i oF 
STOR 
This is a side oat. The true white tartarian. The average weight 
of the grain is 40 lbs. Sow 3 bushels per acre. 
Price, peck, 80c; bushel of 32 Ibs., $2.25; 10-bushel lots, per bushel, 
$2.20; 100-bushel lots, per bushel, $2.15. 
SELECTED 
O A T S VARIETIES 
OF SUPREME QUALITY 
IMPORTANT. A change of Seed Oats is necessary and the seed should 
be renewed at least every second or third year. Oats grown on the same soil 
or in the same neighborhood year after year deteriorate rapidly and soon be- 
come light, chaffy and unprofitable. 
CLYDESDALE, AMERICAN GROWN 
To give Henderson’s Clydesdale a still wider distribution and make 
their value universally known and to enable us to offer them at 2 cost 
within the reach of every farmer, we have them grown specially for us 
and are thoroughly recleaned, extra choice and heavy and are large 
yielders under fair growing conditions. Sow 3 bushels per acre. 
Price, peck, 75c; bushel of 32 Ibs., $1.75; 10-bushel lots, $1.70 per 
bushel; 100-bushel lots, $1.65 per bushel. 
LONG’S WHITE TARTAR 
Vigorous Constitution Immense Yielder Very Early 
The earliest, heaviest and most prolific domestic-grown Side Oat in 
cultivation. It is suitable for all soils; of robust and vigorous con- 
stitution, is remarkably early and an immense cropper; the straw is 
long and stout, stands up well and does not readily lodge or twist. 
The heads measure from 8 to 10% inches, and the kernels are of im- 
mense size, thick, plump and heavy; it is undoubtedly the heaviest 
cropping domestic white Oat ever offered. 
Planted alongside some of the older varieties, it usually yields more 
than double the number of bushels per acre of any of the other sorts; 100 
bushels per acre may be expected of it under good conditions. 
Its extreme earliness, great length and strength of straw, thick, plump 
grains and the heavy yields it is capable of producing give Long’s White 
pa ee i RS gy 
Tartar all the necessary qualifications which go to make an ideal Oat. 
Sow 3 bushels per acre. 
CORNELLIAN 
Small Gray Oat with a very thin hull which gives a high feeding 
value. A heavy yielder, especially in New York State. We have 
a true stock, free from impurities. Sow 3 bushels per acre. 
Price, peck, 80c; bushel of 32 lbs., $2.25; 10-bushel lots, per bushel, 
$2.20; 100-bushel lots, per bushel, $2.15. 
CANADA FIELD PEAS 
There is no crop of greater value than Field Peas. Whether for fodder, in mixture with 
Oats, sown at the rate of 100 Ibs. of Peas and 1 bushel of Oats per acre, or the Peas sown 
alone at the rate of 150 lbs. per acre for plowing under. Peas have the power of extracting 
nitrogen from the air and fixing it in the soil. Sown alone for fodder or in combination with 
Oats for hay, or as a crop to plow under for green manure, they are unsurpassed. 
Price, lb., 30c; 10 Ibs., $2.00; 50 Ibs., $4.50; 100 lbs., $8.00. 
COW PEAS Gs 
Cow Peas are the great leguminous crop of our Southern States, where they 
play the same important role in rotation farming that Clovers and Canada 
Peas do in the North 
Price, peck, 80c; bushel of 32 Ibs., $2.25; 10-bushel. lots, per bushel, 
$2.20; 100-bushel lots, per bushel, $2.15. 
Send for ‘‘Henderson’s Farmers Manual’ (ready February ist) and 
read full descriptions of all farm seeds. 
sean tn aati i na a en to 
Cow Peas are more tender than Canada or Field Peas and should not be sown until Corn- 
planting time. Cow Peas, being of very rapid growth during the warm weather, can be sown 
as late as the middle of July with reasonable assurance of a profitable crop, either for harvest- 
ing or plowing under. 
The early varieties are quite extensively and successfully grown for forage and soiling 
as far north as Massachusetts, but so far north the crop may not ripen seeds. As a soil ren- 
ovator and enricher Cow Peas are very valuable, as they collect nitrogen from the air in large 
quantities and fix it in the soi}, thus adding this expensive element of fertilizer to the land 
without cost, and leaving it richer and in better condition for the future crop. Cow Peas 
grow on all soils from the stiffest clays to porous sands, barren uplands and alluvial bottoms. 
The feeding value is high, whether as green forage, cured hay or silage, being especially rich 
in blood, bone and muscle-forming material. For green-manuring clay land, the crop should 
be turned under green. On sandy soil, already too light, the vines should decay on the surface 
and then be turned under. Sow 100 lbs. per acre. 
BLACK EYE COW PEAS. A popular and productive early sort. Very much in demand. 
Price, lb., 30c; 10 Ibs., $2.00; 50 Ibs., $4.50; 100 Ibs., $8.00. 
NEW ERA COW PEAS. A new, extra-early variety, earlier than the Black Eye, maturing 
in about 60 days, specially adapted for planting north. 
Price, lb., 30c; 10 Ibs., $2.00; 50 Ibs., $4.50; 100 lbs., $8.00. 
Purchaser pays Transportation charges. Prices subject to change without notice 
