38 



WM. HENRY MAULE, INC., PHILADELPHIA, PA., 1924 



MAUIE'S FARM AND GEM SEEDS 



FOR SUMMER AND FALL SOWING 



The following varieties of field and 

 Under the heading or in the description 

 best time to sow. We make no charge 



789 Japanese Buckwheat 



A Valuable Grain or Cover Crop 



The best and most profitable variety. Flour is superior to 

 that of any other variety. Ripens in 8 or 10 weeks. Sow % 

 bushel in drills or 1 bushel broadcast to an acre in June or 

 July, north of Virginia; farther south, one month later. 

 Packet, 10 cts.; pound, 30 cts.; 3 pounds, 75 cts., postpaid. 

 Not prepaid, 12 pounds (peck), 75 cts.; 

 bushel of 48 pounds, $2.75. 



831 Thousand Headed Kale 



Excellent Green Food for Fowls or Stock 



Belongs to the Cabbage family. It produces plants growing 

 3 to 4 feet high, covered with large, Cabbage-like leaves in 

 about 45 days. It is a heavy cropper. Animals, especially pigs 

 and sheep, eat it greedily. Hardy, and will thrive on any soil.- 

 Sow in rows or broadcast, using 2 pounds per acre, as late as 

 August north of Virginia; farther south as late as October. 

 Packet, 10 cts.; y 4 pound, 30 cts.; pound, $1.00, postpaid. 



Soy or Soja Beans 



Sow in May or June, using 60 pounds per acre in drills or 

 broadcast. 



784 WilSOn Black The Earliest Soja Beans 



A very satisfactory variety to grow in the northern States 

 where a quick early shell bean or hay variety is desired. 

 Packet, 10 cts.; pound, 35 cts., postpaid. 

 Not prepaid, 15 pounds (peck), $1.50; 

 60 pounds (bushel), $5.50. 



785 Hollybrook Early J&fgSLt 



Makes a quicker growth and matures its crop 2 to 3 weeks 



earlier than Mammoth Yellow Soja. An erect growing plant. 



Packet, 10 cts.; pound, 35 cts., postpaid. 



Not prepaid, 15 pounds (peck), $1.40; 



60 pounds, (bushel) $5.00. 



786 Mammoth Yellow YeuoVsSld 



Mammoth Yellow does equally as well on light or heavy 

 soils, and makes a most desirable land improver. 



Packet, 10 cts.; pound, 35 cts., postpaid. 



Not prepaid, 15 pounds (peck), $1.25; 



60 pounds (bushel), $4.75. 



grain seeds are specially adapted to Summer and Fall sowing, 

 of each variety we give the quantity of seed required and the 

 for bags. 



860 Hairy or Winter Vetch 



Valuable for Hay or Soil Improving 



Extremely hardy and is highly valuable as a Winter cover 

 crop. If sown from September till November it will make 

 excellent forage the following Spring. Forage yield, 1)4, to 4 

 tons per acre. Excellent for dairy stock and for poultry pastur- 

 age. Use \}4, bushels per acre, or 1 bushel of Vetch and J^ 

 bushel of Rye, either north or south. 



Packet, 10 cts. ; pound, 60 cts.; 3 pounds, $1.50, postpaid. 



Not prepaid, 15 pounds (peck), $3.75; 



60 pounds (bushel), $13.50. 



232 Sugar Corn for Green Forage 



Excellent for Dairy Stock 



It is the best ensilage or to be cut and used dry. Both stalks 

 and fodder contain large amounts of saccharine matter which 

 is fattening and relished by stock. Ready to cut in 50 days. 

 Sow north and south of Virginia from May until July in drills 

 2.Y2 to 3 feet apart. Requires 40 to 60 pounds per acre. 

 Packet, 10 cts.; pound, 25 cts., postpaid. 

 Not prepaid, 5 pounds, 60 cts.; 100 pounds, $9.00. 



851 Speltz or Emmer 



Yields More Than Wheat or Barley 



The grain is intermediate between wheat and barley. The 

 chaff adheres to the grain when threshed, and is fed in that 

 condition to stock. It is adapted for milling purposes, as well 

 as for feeding. It grows large crops — 40 to 80 bushels per acre — 

 on comparatively poor soil. It resists drought successfully, 

 and is adapted to Northern latitude. North or south of Virginia 

 sow in the Early Fall, at the rate of two bushels per acre. 

 Packet, 10 cts.; pound, 35 cts.; 3 pounds, $1.00, postpaid. 

 Not prepaid, 10 pounds (peck), 85 cts.; 

 bushel (40 pounds), $2.75. 



788 



Soy or Soja Beans 

 HalltO An Excellent Table Sort 



Make excellent shelled beans for winter, either for the table 

 or stock. 



Packet, 15 cts.; pound, 45 cts., postpaid. 



Not prepaid, 15 pounds (peck), $3.25; 



60 pounds (bushel), $12.00. 



Prices of Farm, Grain, Clover and Crass Seeds on pages 38 to 40 are subject to change without notice 



