Crops That Wfl^Mak^tt^e^oi^nyFanii 
Clovers and Soy Beans 
Farmer Friends: With your kind permission I'm going to speak right out and tell you some honest facts. Namely: War prices on farm 
grains are gone forever; present prices are entirely too low and will gradually pick up to an average 10 year price before the war. Now 
then to make real money farming some of us must change our methods. Stop selling any grain, begin feeding everything you raise, put your 
crops into live stock, hogs and milk; present price of hogs makes Corn worth 80c to feed. Grow less grain and more Clover, Alfalfa, Soy 
Beans and feed them all. These crops will make you 10 per cent clear profit on any good farm land. 
The 
Camera 
Won't Ue. 
These Are 
Actual 
Photographs 
As You 
SOW 
So Shall 
You 
REAP 
These Are the Kind of Clover Fields that Furnish Condones Purity 
Brand—" Highest Quality Obtainable" 
Soy Beans on every farm will make more money 
Equal to Oil 
Meal in 
feeding 
values, lb. 
for lb. 
any other crop. PW them in all your 
Corn at the rate of one bushel for ten acres. Get a bean attach- 
ment for your corn planter and grow two crops instead of one. If 
you use your Corn for Silo, the Soy will furnish a balance ration, 
equal to Cotton Seed Meal. The Ito San is the best variety accord- 
ing to our experiments. Yields abundant foliage and is completely 
loaded with long fat pods well filled as shown in the picture. This 
variety will fully mature fifty miles north of here. Those who do 
not have Silos can use these to good advantage by planting as stated 
above, husk your Corn and then turn the hogs in to clean up. They 
will get every Soy Bean and vine and every ear of stray Corn, and 
the combination feed is great for them. The great feeding value 
of Soy Beans is not all. They are different from most crops and 
add to fertility of soil rather than take from it. It's a positive fact 
by actual test Corn does fully as well or better with Soys planted 
in it than when planted alone. That's a broad statement and our 
good friend, Mr. Breckenridge, hardly beUeved it until he tried them 
last summer; and when our good County Agent, Mr. Keltner, was 
out there with us in late August he and many others acknowledged 
the fact. By all means try them this season either for Silage, Hogging 
down or drill in for a hay crop. If you drill alone for hay put rows 
36 inches apart and seed I inch apart in the row, using 60 lbs. per 
If you drill in with your Corn use 6 to 7 lbs. per acre. Be 
sure to inoculate all Soy Beans and don't plant until danger of frost 
is over. See opposite side for low prices on quality seed. 
rro SAN 
Soy Beans 
grown from 
C o a d o n's 
"Pure Bred" 
Seed at 
B r e 0 k e n. 
ridge 7arm. 
JuBt rlglit 
for.sllag'e. 
Here You See a Field o( Soy Beans in Drills for Hay or Seed 
