STO-ROWN 



IN THE GOLDEN 



GRAIN 



I 



BELT OF THE W OR L PS 



45 



1 ^iliifitwitkllli^'i'^. J 



A field of May's Barly Wonder Wheat. Baigraved from a pliotograpli. 



The Greatest Wheat ever Offered. Most Prolific, Heaviest 

 ■ Stooling, and the Best MiHins: Wheat that Can be Grown. 



Wonder" Should be Sown by Every Farmer in America* 



1 — It's the heaviest yielding- wheat In the world. 2 — It is perfectly hardy and can be grown in any section. 3 — ^It's early and 

 this alone is a valuable point. 4 — It makes the choicest flour and is the best milling wheat we kfiow of. 5 — It will increase your 

 crops and bring you more money per acre than Finy other wheat. 



Oe«f8*S«1itin>ri This, together with Oats and Corn, is the greatest of all the farmer's crops, and no bright, intelligent man 

 ajj'fcB^ll, ^vho wants to make his farm pay looks at the few extra cents that he has to pay for carefully improved 

 seed stock of anj'- kind. Our Early Wonder Wheat is the result of years of testing and experimenting with all the different va- 

 rieties which have been offered the past few years, and out oftlie entire lot this wlieat was selected, and has been improved 

 each season until we now offer it with, the feeling that we have secured wheat which M'ill in time take the place of all other 

 varieties. It has proven to be the most prolific, heaviest stooling and finest milling wheat ever offered, and this is enough to 

 recommend it to any farmer who is a wheat grower. Its being grown for years in the extreme North assures all of its hardi- 

 ness. This, with its heavy yields and its earliness, will make it the most desirable variety for all sections of America. If you 

 want to get a heavy yield and make money this season, you can do it by sowing the Early Wonder Wheats Bonanza Kin^ Oats 

 and Mastadon Com, the tliree heavy cropping,- farm favorites. 



Prices: — Pkt. (3 oz.) 10c, lb. 30c, 4 Ito. $1.00, poistpaid; pic. 50c, hu. $1.60, 10 bu. $15.00. 



n/IInnfkcfk'f-si Mrfc t/^'J Originated at the Minne- 



ITlinneSUia rSU» 103. ^ota state Experimental 

 Farm, and was introdticed by us two years ago. The heads are 

 long, well filled with medium sized, plump kernels. Flour 

 made from this varietj' shows a higher gluten test than most 

 sorts. The straw is medium height, very strong and wiry, 

 ■]ae*<f^er known to lodge or rust. It stools very heavily, produc- 

 ing enormous crops of No. 1 hard. I^b. 25c, postpaid; pit. 50c, 

 bu. ^1.50, 10 bu. f 14.00. 



P<>r1Sa-4*/»A S%1«tA C-^oim improved strain of Blue 



fCUlJ^rCe OlUC Oieill. stem- Yields heavy, not only 

 here at home in the Northwest, where wheat is the main crop, 

 but everywhere and under all conditions. The heads are very 

 large and well filled, the kernel is hard, the plant stools freely, 

 and under ordinary conditions will yield 40 to 50 bushels per 

 acre. Lb. S5c, postpaid; pk. 50c, bu. §1.50, 5 bu. $7.00, 10 bn. 

 $14,00. 



Sflctraf r'fickvi'ran Htf^k Noted for its great' productive- 

 «:7<|.SiVd.LCllcW«tn rilC* tiess, earliness, vigor and free- 

 dom from smut atid all diseases. The kernels are hard and 

 flinty, whereby it is recognized as an A No. 1 milling wheat, 

 adapted to all states where wheat can be grown. L.b. 25e, 

 postpaid; pk. 50c, bu. $1.50, 10 bu. $14.00. 



nacaroni Spring Wheat. 'ii^ro'nf'^SrS^i 



be grown in dry districts, but they must be grown there in 

 order to produce the best quality of grain. Seeded April 26, it 

 was ripe, cut, threshed and in the granary August 6. The 

 shorter the period required for a wheat to grow tlie more val- 

 uable it will be to a. locality subject to summer droughts and 

 hot winds. This wheat gives the best results on new land. 

 Sow at tiie rate of 1% bushels per acre. Xib. 25c, postpaid: pk, 

 40c, bu. $1.50, 10 bu. $14.00. 



Reliable Hlnnesota. S^fhe ^olrr'St 



able and heaviest yielding wheat ever introduced. l,b. 25c, 

 postpaid; pk. 60e, bu. $1.50, 10 bu. $14.00. 



Rye, Spring Dakota Mammoth. Ji'i/e'?^^S 



the fact that it may be used as a catch crop, to sow where 

 winter grain has been a failure. Sow at the same time s'ou 

 do spring wheat, at the rate of IVi bushels per acre. Lb. 25c 

 postpaid; pk- 40c, bu. $1.»5, 10 bu. $13.00. 



Pv<» 'Winter '^^^^ *=^op for dry country 



*VJv;, YTiail^t* ranches. Lb. 25c, postpaid: pk. 40c bu. 

 $1.35, 10 bu. $12.50. 



