BURBANK'S NEW STANDARD GRAINS 
and sometimes seven inches in length. No good wheat yields more [ban 
"Quantity." II is remarkably true to type and yields nearly twice as much 
as the ordinary wheals. "Quantity" is medium early and will prove its 
tremendous yielding abilities in any except the most Northern latitudes. 
Prices This Season 
All Prepaid by Mail or Express 
One-half pound $ 2.75 
One pound 5.00 
Fine pounds 23.00 
Ten pounds h5.00 
Five sample heads 60 
Ten sample heads 1.00 
(About eighty kernels to the head.) 
The New "Super" Wheat of 1917 
"Super" has been tested alongside of sixty-eight of the best wheats 
of the world, and has excelled them all in yield and uniformity; the 
growth is strong, four feet on good ordinary soil, tillers unusually well, 
and on ordinary valley soil, without special cultivation, care or fertilizing, 
this Summer produced at the rale of f orly-nine^(U^k.SS/100 bushels per 
acre, every plant and every kernel uniforuwrlflb t^jy *wheat was originally 
all grown from one single kernel. Even afvpresent prices of ordinary 
wheat for milling purposes it will be readily seen that the crop of each 
acre would purchase an acre of Ihe best wheat land. The quantity now 
on hand is extremely small compared with a most surprising and wholly 
unexpected demand for it; no large lot can be supplied io any one. 
Prices This Season 
All Prepaid by Mail or Express 
One-half pound '....$ 1.60 
One pound 3.00 
Five pounds 10.00 
Ten pounds 18.00 
Five sample heads by mail f i0 
Ten sample heads by mail 70 
(About eighty kernels to the head.) 
How to Greatly Increase the Wheat Crop and How to Make 
the Most of These New Wheats for That Purpose 
In England, Sweden, France, Germany and Italy where it has become 
necessary to use science and skill to make Ihe land produce great crops, 
and where the wheat crop averages more than double our own, the follow- 
ing methods are found to produce the heaviest yields, and the same results 
follow these methods in America: 
Wheat thrives best after beans, corn, potatoes, melons or other culti- 
vated Summer crops, doing especially well everywhere after corn if the 
weeds have been well kept down. The fields to be sown to wheat should 
he disked and harrowed several limes, but not plowed deep; all weeds 
removed and a firm, well-drained, level seed-bed secured; and for Winter 
wheats in the colder states the seed should be drilled or sown early so as 
to become well established before hard Winter freezing. 
