THEY GROW BETTER ■ THEY YIELD BETTER 
FARM SEEDS, Best Fancy Grades Only 
Prices change up and down with the marliet. WRITE FOR PRESENT PRICES. Always add 65 cts. 
for bags for shipping 
COW PEAS. A great forage crop and soil improver. 
Sow I bushel to the acre in May or June, depending 
altogether whether the soil is warm enough to plant 
them. While called Cow Peas they are really a bean 
and therefore will rot if planted too early. The vines 
may be cut for green feed or cured as hay for winter 
feeding. It makes the best kind of dairy feed. To 
plow down it is a most wonderful soil-improver. 
The Wonderful Cow Peas. Makes the greatest growth 
of all. the plants first make an upright growth then 
spread and vines grow lo to 12 feet long; great for 
turning' under as well as for feed. Matures in about 
90 days. 
Extra-Early Black-Eye Cow Peas. Very early, 
maturing in about 60 days; makes a good growth but 
not so much as the Wonderful. In addition to mak- 
ing a valuable hay crop it is also used extensively for 
table use as a soup Pea. 
SORGHTJM, or SUGAR CANE. Early Amber. Very 
valuable for both green feed and for ensilage. The 
plant is filled with rich sugary sap and this mixed with 
Cow Peas or any other feed is very much liked by all 
stock. Sow I bushel to the acre (i bushel weighs 
so lbs.) broadcast for forage crop, or 12 pounds per 
acre if drilled in or half bushel (25 lbs.) when sown 
with Cow Peas. 
TEXAS SEEDED RIBBON CANE. One of the earli- 
est to mature, grows 10 to 15 feet high and is most 
valuable for forage, ensilage or for syrup. When soil 
and weather conditions are right and with proper 
cultivation, it will make 250 gallons and more per 
acre of the finest syrup. When planting for syrup 
prepare the soil well, sow 12 pounds of seed per acre 
in rows 3 to 3 K feet apart. 
SUDAN GRASS. A wonderful hay producer. Grows 
6 to 7 feet high when grown in rows, less if broad- 
casted. Very easily cured and should be cut when first 
coming into bloom. Sow 20 pounds per acre broad- 
cast, or if drilled in rows, 10 pounds per acre. 
KENTUCKY BLUE GRASS. This is the best of all 
native American grasses best suited for pasture. 
Succeeds everywhere, lasts for years. Seed sown in 
spring or fall over an old pasture will renew it. Sow 
2 bushels to the acre. 
RED TOP, or HERD GRASS. Valuable hay and pas- 
ture grass, hardy, quick growing, and a good variety 
to sow with Kentucky Blue Grass. These two make 
an elegant mixture. Sow 20 pounds of Red Top per 
acre. 
ORCHARD GRASS. One of the be.st for either hay or 
pasture. It stands the closest grazing. Makes a 
quick growth and all stock like it. Grows in shaded 
places and in orchards where other grasses will not 
do so well. Every farmer should sow Orchard Grass 
either in his orchard, pasture, or for hay. Sow 2 
bushels to the acre (14 lbs. to the bus.). 
PERMANENT PASTURE MIXTURE for Uplands 
and for Lowlands. We have a well-balanced pasture- 
producing mixture made up of grasses specially suited 
for uplands and also one for lowlands. Where you 
have a piece of ground you wish to put into perma- 
nent pasture use either one of these high-quality mix- 
tures. Sow 45 pounds, or 3 bushels to the acre; one 
seeding lasts for many years. 
All my grasses are of the very highest quality — 
first grade only. 
The Best Fertilizer 
For Every Soil and Every Crop 
Is Manure If You Can Get Enough 
of It. Then Lime When Needed 
Commercial or manufactured fertilizers are all good in their way. yet we all know that they are in reality a 
substitute for manure. The reason you buy them is because vou do not have on your farm enough manure Now 
why be satisfied with a substitute if you can secure the manure; the market-gardener who must make every acre 
produce its greatest po.ssible crops uses a tremendous amount of manure and it pays him big to do so. It will pay 
you just as handsomely in profits in bigger crops if you use it on your field crops, corn, oats, wheat, etc. The biggest 
crop, bushels per acre, of wheat I ever saw was a field that had a deep, heavy spread of manure. The wheat heads 
were s inches long, the crop 45 bushels to every acre and the owner sold it all for seed to his neighbors. If you want a 
horse to pull his very best, he must have enough to eat; so also if vou want a plant, or a field of plants, to pull a big 
crop out of the soil, you've got to feed them. Poor crops are usually the fault of starvation, they are not half fed. 
Use Wizard Brand Pulverized Sheep Manure 
Because, too, no matter what kind of soil you have, or what its condition. Pulverized Sheep Manure will give 
It what It naturaUy needs; it is Nature's fertilizer, does as Nature intends, and it contains all necessary plant-food 
elements— Nitrogen, Phosphoric Acid and Potash— in combination with organic matter or humus, and it is this 
natural combination that produces the peculiar action and effect in the soil, which can be had only from animal 
manures. By using it. you are making your crops and, at the same time, buUding up your soil and adding hundreds 
of dollars in value to your land. We have sold more than 50 carloads of Wizard Brand Sheep Manure; some customers 
buy full carloads (20 tons), others 10, 5, 2, i ton and less. 
Where does all this come from? There are millions of sheep raised in the West and allowed to graze until 
ready to fatten for market; then they are brought to immense fattening pens and fed on pure grains a certain length 
of time before killing and this pure grain manure is then taken to the plants where it is put in large steel tanks which 
are kept revolving over a heat of 2,000 degrees and it is thus dried and pulverized in these air-tight tanks where it 
absorbs within itself all of its valuable plant food. 
Are there any live weed-seeds in Wizard Brand Pulverized Sheep Manure? Absolutely none, for when it 
passes through a heat of 2,000 degrees there could be no seed of any kind in it that would ever germinate- this great 
heat kills the germ in any .seed. . . ■ s 
For all farm crops, Vegetable crops and flowers it is unequaled. The Pennsylvania State College Experi- 
ments show Sheep Manure to be the most valuable of all manures 
REMEMBER «iere are iini Everything good soon has its imitation, "something just as good." Be 
v¥Si?lD*°s'^^EErill^^^^^^^^ IS GUARA^^EED P§RE PUI,! 
Ton, $43; 1,000 lbs., $22; SOO lbs., $12; 100 lbs., $S; 60 lbs., $1.75; 25 lbs. $1.25 
51 
