Humboldt Beardless Barley 
New 6 -Rowed Club or Beardless Barley. 
VERY EARLY I 
A GREAT STOOLER ! 
ENORflOUS YIELDER ! 
•O'"’ « 
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1 WjjiiliifJ U 
Has Tight Hull 
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Straw is strong and 
stiff and stands up well 
on rich land where 
bearded sorts would go 
down. 
*5^ 
A 
HAS 
VASTLY 
OUTYIELDED 
LEADING 
VARIETIES. 
It has been tested by 
a leading malting firm 
here and pronounced a 
fine malting barley. 
* 5 ^ 
Has Yielded from 50 to 90 fivshels per Acre. 
This variety was produced by crossing a bald hulless variety with leading bearded varieties — result, a bar- 
ley very productive and having the rich nutritious qualities of the bearded kind, but without beards and the hull 
tight. Every barley grower knows how disagreeable barley beards are both in harvesting and for animals eating 
same. These objectionable features are done away with in our Humboldt Beardless Barley. If put in, in good 
season 
Two crops can be raised on the same ground the same year: 
a crop of barley and one of Hungarian or millet hay, by disking the ground as soon as barley is cut and sowing 
millet between the shocks. Just what is needed to fill a long felt want. 
A large barley grower in Ohio writes as follows after testing this barley : ‘‘I have raised barley for a num- 
ber of years and tried the leading and best bearded sorts and find no bearded sorts that will yield with it.” 
One of our agents sowed, this spring, a sample we sent him and he writes : “I sowed the sample of Hum- 
boldt Beardless Barley in the garden and it looks fine, think it would be great feed for horses.” 
J. T. STANLEY, Hamilton Co., Ind. 
Now is the Time to get in the Seed 
of this remarkable variety while it is scarce. Why continue raising old run out varieties that yield from 30 to 40 
bushels per acre when the Humboldt Beardless Barley will produce from 60 to 70 bushels per acre. 
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