BUCKBEE'S "FULL OF LIFE" SEEDS, PLANTS AND BULBS. 



HEADQUARTERS FOR HORSE CULTIVATORS, ETC. 



BuCKBEfsSR^TE^f^PIRE 

 ' (ULTIVATOR ^ -^^*''LA,N 



Here's a Sample Bargain for only $5.35 Freight ^rExprefs\^'Blfye??E^ for'only $5.35 



SEE: Complete List of all other Desirable Horse Cultivators, Plows, Potato Planters, Etc., .Mailed Free Upon Application. 



ROWN X^^' 



Enrich Lanr^ Until It Becomes a 

 Veritable Gold Mine. 



The Cow Pea was until very recently supposed 

 to be suited only to Southern conditions. Now 

 it has been demonstrated that where suitable 

 varieties are sown the crop can be grown with 

 entire success in the North. The Cow Pea has 

 proved to be one of the greatest fertilizers of the 

 age, andl doubt not that when I make the state- 

 ment that it is richer in fertilizing matter, more 

 lasting, more beneficial, a greater soil improver 

 and a better soil enricher than the fertilizer 

 drawn out from the barnyard, many of my far- 

 mer friends will feel like challenging this state- 

 ment, but nevertheless it is a fact. It will take 

 longer to enrich a thoroughly worn-out piece of 

 land by fertilizer from 'the barnyard than by 

 sowing plenty of Cow Peas and plowing them un- 

 der. You can get two very creditable crops of 

 Cow Peas on the'same piece of land in one season 

 the Spring after frosts are over, broadcast, at the rate of one bushel per acre, or in drills 

 they have attained the height of thirty inches plow them under and sow a second crop, 

 for cattle. The seed, or grain, is ground and used for cattle fodder; the leaves and stalks 

 green. Plant in a thoroughly pulverized soil. If wanted to plow under for manure, sow 

 ith a grain drill in drills a foot apart. If grown for seed, plant three and one-half feet 

 and cultivate thoroughly, using half a bushel of seed per acre. When pastured by swine 

 get nearly ripe; when plowed under as a fertilizer the plowing should be done when the 



by sowing them quite early in 

 twelve inches apart and when 

 It makes a magnificent fodder 

 also make excellent fodder fed 

 one to two bushels per acre w 

 apart and one foot in the row, 

 the crop should be allowed to 

 jilants are in full bloom. 



NEW ERA — Choicest Northern-grown. A particularly good variety for Northern sections. Price, postpaid, i lb. 

 15c.; lb. 25c. By express or freight, at buyer's expense, i bu. 60c.; \ bu. Sl.OO; \ bu. $1.80; bu. $3.50. 



IMPROVED WHIPPOORWILL — Northern grown and acclimated. 

 One of the best and most popular sorts for all climates. Price, post- 

 paid, i lb. 12c.; lb. 20c. By exoress or freight, at buyer's expense, \ bu. 

 40c.; i bu. 75c.; \ bu. SI 40; bu. $2.75. 



BUCKBEE'S EXTRA EARLY PROLIFIC— Choicest Northern grown. 

 Well suited to any soil. Very early and a wonderful yielder. Price, 

 postpaid, \ lb. 15c.; lb. 25c. By express or freight, at buyer's expense, 

 \ bu. 55c.; 1 bu. 95c.; i bu. $1.75; bu. $3.25. 



Australian SALT BUSH 



A Forage Plant for Alkali Soils and 

 Regions Subject to Periodic Drought 



This i>' a most wonderful forage plant, as it will grow freely 

 In arid and alkali lands that will produce no other vegetation, 

 yielding a marvelously liberal foliage which is eagerly eatea 

 by all kinds of stock. It is of creeping habit. From twenty, 

 to thirty tons of green fodder have been harvested from one 

 acre. It has further been proven that after three or four crops 

 have been grown on alkali land the soil is then capable r f pro- 

 ducing any other vegetation. In many sections of the btates 

 this is in itself of priceless value; This'plant has been very ex- 

 tensively tried where .single plants grown on the poorest alkali 

 ground have reached a diameter of sixteen feet in one season. 

 One pound of seed will seed an acre. It grows readily fr<^fn 

 seed, and requires no cultivation. 



Price, postpaid, pkt. 6c.; oz. 16c.; } lb. 35c.; lb. $1.35. 



MORE THAN 100,000 FARMERS USE BUCKBEE'S EVER-RELIABLE OATS FOR SEEDLVG. 



