SOY BEANS 
Inoculate your Soy Beans properly. They will build up 
your soil for you . . . put into the soil more than they 
take out. They are great gatherers of nitrogen, and that 
is what increases the fertility of your soil. Successful 
farmers say it pays to inoculate their Soy Beans seed. 
Pfiaret Them Anywhere 
Plant Soy Beans on any kind of soil, sweet or sour. 
If your soil is sweet the inoculating bacteria will work 
rapidly for you. If your soil is sour, however, add lime 
in order to get the best results. 
Fast Growers—They Fight Weeds 
Sov Beans are disease free . . . exceptionally hardy. 
Plant them when the ground is good and warm . . . not 
until after corn planting time. 
“Wilson Black” SOY BEANS 
The best all-round general-purpose variety. Makes 
Hay, Beans, or silage. A strong, fast grower with 
slender stems and branches . . . makes such tine Hay. 
This variety matures Beans in lower Pennsylvania, 
higher New Jersey and states to the south. ‘‘Wilson 
Black** does well and produces beans on poor soil. . . . 
On good soil, it produces more forage. “Wilson Black** 
is a medium sized jet black Bean. Often yields 20 
bushels of Beans per acre. Many farmers get more 
than 30 bushels per acre. Use “Wilson Black** for 
Hay, forage, soiling and green manuring. It *s a money¬ 
maker. 
“Manchu” SOY BEANS 
A favorite in Pennsylvania and nearby states. Grows 
tall, erect and bushy. A great producer of Beans, good 
for forage. Excellent for hogging down. Beans are 
yellow and medium sized. 
Treat Your Soy Bean Seed with 
HOFFMAN’S INOCULANT 
Costs Very Little—Insures Success 
1 bushel size for Soy Beans @ $0.35 
2 bushel size for Soy Beans @ .65 
5 bushel size for Soy Beans @ 1.40 
(Postage Paid) 
SOME FACTS ABOUT SOY BEANS 
Soy Beans cut green and packed with corn for silage 
—1 part Soys to 4 parts Corn—will make a perfect 
ration of more value than corn silage alone. 
Ground Soy Beans are greedily eaten by all stock— 
easily digested—have a tonic effect. 
Corn and Soys grown together can be hogged down 
with convenience and profit. 
Planted in corn, Soys will aid the corn rather than 
curtail it. Nitrogen gathered by the Soys becomes 
available to the corn. 
Soys can be grown on land too poor and acid to pro¬ 
duce Clover. 
