1084-1086 Main Street, Hartford, Connecticut 
45 
Selected Farm Seeds 
SPECIAL MIXTURES FOR PERMANENT HAY 
No. 1, for cool, moist soils, sow 35 lbs. to acre. 
No. 2, for high, dry soils, sow 40 lbs. to acre. 
No. 3, for wet soils, sow 35 lbs. to acre. 
SPECIAL MIXTURES FOR PERMANENT 
PASTURES 
No. 4, for cool, moist soils, sow 35 lbs. to acre. 
No. 5, for high, dry soils, sow 40 lbs. to acre. 
No. 6, for wet soils, sow 35 lbs. to acre. 
Barley 
Montana, Two-Rowed. Head longer than the six- 
rowed varieties and the grain is larger, plump, extra 
heavy, in favorable seasons nearly white. Exten¬ 
sively grown for green foliage. 
Common. Six-rowed; grown for foliage. 
Soja Beans 
One of the most valuable and important forage and 
soil-improving crops. When cut together with Corn 
for the silo, they greatly improve the quality of the feed 
Rye 
Spring. Valuable for “catch crop” to sow where Win¬ 
ter grain has failed. 13 d? bus. per acre. 
Winter Rosen. Sow from the middle of August to last 
of September. Sow broadcast, or drill at rate of 134 
bus. per acre. 
Dwarf Essex Rape 
Rape has a high feeding value for fattening sheep 
and swine, also a good milk producing food for cows. 
Sow broadcast, 5 to 6 lbs. to the acre. 
Prices on seed in the following list fluctuate with 
the market, and will be quoted on request. 
Millets 
Sow three-fourths to one bushel to the acre. 
Hungarian Grass (Sectaria germanica). 48 lbs. to 
the bus. Market price. 
Golden. 50 lbs. to the bus. Market price. 
Japanese, or Barnyard. 32 lbs. to the bus. Market 
price. 
Sudan Grass 
An annual of quick growth, the first crop being ready 
to cut in 50 to 70 days after planting, depending upon 
the length of the seasons and moisture; the second and 
third crops about 45 to 50 days later. 
Japanese Buckwheat 
1 bus. to the acre (48 lbs. per bus.). 
Canada Field Peas 
2 bus. to the acre; with oats 1J4 bus. 
Vetches 
Winter, Sand, or Hairy. No other legume surpasses 
it as a nitrogen-gatherer or as a cover crop. 30 to 
60 lbs. to the acre. 
Spring. An annual legume valuable as a Summer 
forage when sown early in Spring at the rate of 30 
lbs. Vetch and 2 bus. grain Barley or Oats per acre. 
Wheat 
Marquis Spring. Adapted for New England, ma¬ 
turing about ten days earlier than others. 
White Winter (Klondyke White Chaff). Bald. A 
hardy variety; very prolific in this section. 2 bus. 
to the acre. 
SEED INOCULATION 
The best inoculation for 
all legume seeds means bet¬ 
ter crops, better soils, less 
fertilizer expense. 
Alfalfa, Clovers, Soy¬ 
beans, Cowpeas, Vetch, 
Peanuts, all thrive into 
bumper crops when prop¬ 
erly inoculated with Stimu- 
germ pure bred cultures. 
WHAT STIMUGERM JELLY IS 
Nodules with Nitro¬ 
gen worth their 
weight In gold 
Stimugerm jelly is a pure culture of nitrogen fixing bacteria, 
selected for maximum vitality and ability to transform nitrogen 
from the air into soluble nitrates and deposit them in the soil. 
Every bottle is dated and guaranteed for one year. 
Prices Are Low 
Special Garden Size for Beans, Peas and Sweet Peas, 25c. 
ALFALFA and 
CLOVERS 
Small Seed 
Varieties 
234 bu. unit...$1.40 
1 bu. unit.65 
34 bu. unit.35 
SOYBEANS and 
COWPEAS 
5 bu. unit.$1.40 
2 bu. unit.65 
1 bu. unit.35 
VETCH, PEAS 
and BEANS, ETC. 
Large Seed 
Varieties 
5 bu. unit.$1.40 
2 bu. unit.65 
1 bu. unit.35 
When ordering, be sure to state what crops you wish to inoculate, 
also number of bushels you will sow. 
moa**" 0 * 
High Bred Nitrogen 
Gathering Bacteria 
FOR LEGUME SEED 
inoculation 
To fur«»»h nitrate* t« 
plant*. iocieoM 
growth and food value, 
and to enrich the 
ONE BUSHEL SIZE 
ST1MCPLANT 
laboratories, INC 
a™, a s '- 
Long UUnd C»ty. N. 
(Jelly Medium) 
