HARDY ALFALFA SEED 



ALFALFA 



HAIRY PERUVIAN ALFALFA— Sow 30 pounds 

 per acre, from January to April for Spring 

 and September to November for Fall. With- 

 stands colder weather better than Alfalfa 

 or Lucerne and usually produces a heavier 

 yield of hay. A perennial plant. We 

 highly recommend this variety for hay and 

 pasture. 



Lb. 60c; 5 lbs. $2.50, postpaid. 



COOPER'S CATTLE DIP 



For Eiadicating the Texas Fevei Tick 

 The Safe, Dependable Dip 

 For Killing Lice on Cattle 



Cooper's Cattle Dip is an approved Dip by 

 the Bureau of Animal Industry, U. S. Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture, for the dipping of cattle 

 affected with ticks (Margaropus annulata). It 

 is equally effective for controlling lice on 

 cattle. Most cattlemen prefer it to Coal Tar 

 and other Dips for controlling lice on cattle 

 because results are surer and more depend- 

 able. 



In using Cooper's Cattle Dip you dilute a 

 gallon with 155 gallons of cold water, hard or 

 soft. If is not necessary to heat the water. 

 By using a simple testing device the dipping 

 solution in the vat can be used again and 

 again for many months until it becomes too 

 filthy to use, by adding more water or Dip as 

 may be required to keep the required strength. 

 This saves cleaning the vat after each dipping 

 and also saves Dip. 



Cooper's Cattle Dip is highly concentrated, 

 easy to mix, safe to use, decidedly effective 

 and very economical. Don't foil to use it if 

 you are dipping cattle to eradicate lice or 

 ticks. 



GoL SI. 95; 5 gal. can S9.50, F.O.B. New 

 Orleans. Write for prices on larger quanti- 

 ties. 



THE CYCLONE 

 SEED SOWER 



Saves Labor 

 Saves Seed 



Uneven s e ed 

 Ing is waste- 

 ful. The 



CYCLONE 



will sow 

 many acres 

 per hour, 

 any amount 

 per acre. 

 Does the 

 work qulddy. 



BROADCASTS EVENLY 

 S4.10 each, postpaid 



HAIRY, WINTER or 

 SAND VETCH 



Culture — Plant from August to November or 

 early Spring with small amount of Rye, Oats, 

 Wheat or Barley. Sow 40 lbs. per acre. Makes 

 an excellent hay crop and is very popular 

 throughout the South. A good soil improver. 



STECKLER'S HAIRY, WINTER or SAND VETCH. 

 1 lb. 40c; 5 lbs. SI. 80, postpaid. Write for 

 quantity prices. 



VETCH 



CROW REPELLANT 



It protects your corn plantings by 

 keeping off crows, larks, blackbirds 

 and other corn-puUing birds, as well 

 as moles, woodchucks, squirrels, etc. 

 Does not clog the planter; protects the 

 com from rotting. Not poisonous and 

 will not injure the seed. 



By modi postpaid, 1/2 pint (enough 

 for 1 bushel com) 70c; pint SI. 15. 

 Not postpaid, V2 pint 60c; pint Sl.OO. 



CROTALARIA 

 SPECTABILIS 



World's Best Cover Crop. Build up your 

 soil with this new legume. This new legume 

 produces more humis and more nitrogen per 

 acre than any other crop. It is not a pest and 

 can be easily eradicated and reseeds itself 

 each year under favorable conditions. It is 

 used as a summer cover crop and soil builder 

 in groves, orchards, vineyards, etc. Livestock 

 will not eat it, therefore you will not be 

 tempted to cut it for hay when your ground 

 needs it so badly. This should be planted as 

 soon as danger of frost is past and at a time 

 when there is plenty of moisture in the soil, 

 and can be planted as late as July, either 

 broadcast or drilled. Ten pounds of seed is 

 required per acre for broadcasting and hcdi 

 of that amount if drilled. Grows from 5 to 10 

 feet depending entirely on the locality. 



1 lb. 5,0c; 5 lbs. $2.15, postpaid. Write for 



quantity prices. 



CROTALARIA 



COMMON VETCH — Prefers sandy loam, well 

 drained, but will produce a good crop on 

 most any other soil where water does not 

 stand. Requires 30 to 40 pounds per acre. 

 Seed should be inoculated with Nitragin. 

 Lb. 35c; 5 lbs. SI. 35, postpaid. 



STRAWBERRY SHOOKS 

 or DIRT BANDS 



STRAWBERRY SHOOKS or DIRT BANDS— Egg- 

 plants, muskmelons and early cucumbers 

 pay well if they come early into the market. 

 In order to have them early, it is a good 

 plan to start them in a cold frame in what 

 are called "Dirt Bands." This is a box 4 

 inches square and 4 inches deep, without 

 bottoms. These are placed in a frame and 

 filled with good rich soil, and five or six 

 seeds in each box. When the plants come 

 up, thin them out to one or two in each box. 

 Before using dirt bonds, wet them thorough- 

 ly before handling or they will be apt to 

 break at the grooves, as they are made of 

 thin veneered vrood. 



Sl.OO per 100; S6.50 per 1,000, not prepaid. 

 Tacks for Dirt Bands and Boxes. 

 14 lb. 40c; lb. S1.35, postpaid. 



SEMESAN JR. 



Seed treated with Semesan Jr., is 

 protected against many seedling dis- 

 eases and seed decay which cause 

 missing hills and hills with only one 

 stalk. Fifty-one farm demonstrations 

 in the Com Belt showed that Semesan 

 Jr. increased stands by 5% to 15%. 



12 oz. con 62c. 



STECKLER SEED COMPANY. Inc.. NEW ORLEANS. LOUISIANA 



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