98 Sow 15 lbs. Sweet Clover per acre with all small grain. It's a wonderful fertilizer and hay crpp.._ 
597 Biennial White Blossom Sweet Clover 
Above picture taken August lOtli, shows result of forty- 
aere field sowed with Wliite Kherson Oats in the spring. 
Oats averaged 67 bu. per acre, and now look at the won- 
derful hay crop and pasture, aftording abundance of feed 
from Aug. 1st to December; besides, when turned under 
next spring, you are adding $10.00 worth of Nitrogen and 
humus to every acre. Don't sow a bushel of small grain 
without seeding our Northern Grown White Blossom 
Hulled Sweet Clover with it. Sweet Clover seed lias a 
very hard coating, which requires abundant amount of 
moisture to soften this coat — in fact, more than we 
usually get. Prof. Hughes has manufactured a machine 
known as "Scarifier," which removes this extra heavy 
coat, insuring quicker germination. All our seed is scarified 
and will germinate very rapidly. Do not take chances 
on sowing seed which is not scarified, as the coating is 
so hard many seeds will lay in the groiind a year before 
germinating. Don't take chances on a failure. All our 
seed is scarified and will germinate (|uickly the first year. 
Inoculated or Treated Seed, ^4 lb., 18 cents; lb., 30 cents; 
3 lbs., 80 cents, postpaid. 
HUBAM Sweet Clover 
Annual White Blossom 
Prof. Hughes* Great Discovery. Truly 
Wonderful for an Annual Fertilizer, 
or for Bee-Feed. We Offer the Gen- 
uine Pure Seed 
Huljam Sweet Clover look.s like the biennial listed 
above and grows very similar except tliat it grows four 
times as fast and when seedt-d in early spring- attains a 
growth of 4 to r> feet by September. You can sow this 
wonderful clover on your poorest lands in April, turn it 
under in September and thfn sow to [all grain with the 
assurance of producing a wonderful crop. It is the One 
Best I^and Butlder to bring up poor land in one .season; 
but on account of its rank growth would not advise 
sowing with small grain; neither do we recommend it 
for hay, only as a fertilizer seeded alone. Sow it alone 
on the poorest soil. 10 lbs. per acre, and on your good 
land sow Bit-nnia! White Blossom listed above with all 
small grain 15 lbs. per acre. 
Sow a few pounds of Hubam this year and raise enough 
seed to sow all your poor land next spring. It goe.s to 
seed in September. Order early. Good seed very scarce. 
Ounce, 18 cts.; >/, ll>., .'50 ctK.; >/» lb.. 85 cts.i Hi., $1.50; 3 
IbM., !|S<i.0O, iiostpaid. 
SEE SPECIAL FARM LIST FOR PRICES ON LARGER 
QUANTITIES. 
SWEET CLOVER 
697 White Blossom 
(Melilotus Alba) Biennial 
The Great Inoculator and 
Soil Builder 
Recommended by the Highest 
Agricultural Authorities 
The First Green Feed in the Spring — 
The Last Green Feed in the Fall 
Now_ recognized as the greatest fertilining 
plant in existence. Grows vigorously on the 
very poorest of soil. Planted on tlie thiimest 
of clay soils, where nothing grew, it soon made 
them so fertile that other grasses came and 
sniotheroid it out. It lias been known to so en- 
rich bottom land, whose top soil has been washed 
away, that 75 bushels of corn was again grown 
on it. 
'I'he powers of the plant gather abundance 
of nitrogen from the air, transferring same 
through its many roots and branches into the 
soil, leaving therein great quantities of organic 
matter estimated as high as 20 tons per acre, 
besides placing bacteria in the soil suitable for 
Alfalfa. 
This jS, 
Shows 
an 
Actual 
Photo- 
graph of 
Biennial 
Sweet Clo- 
ver Root 
After First 
Season's 
Growth 
For 
Best 
Results 
Inoculate 
Your Seed 
Before Sowing 
OnlyTakes 
a Few Min- 
utes toTreat 
a Bushel of 
Seed 
Our 
Natural 
Bacteria 
Inoculation 
Works 
Wonders on 
Sweet Clover 
