MEMPHIS, TENN. 
RUSSELL-HECKLE 
SOY BEANS 
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Field of Laredo Soy Beans. 
RUSSELL-HECKLE’S SOY BEANS 
The most valuable and popular leguminous summer forage crop. Our location in the very heart 
of the original and best Soy Bean seed producing section enables us to supply the finest stock of 
seed offered anywhere at especially advantageous prioes. quality considered. When you buy from 
us, you buy direot from Soy Bean headquarter*. Wo grow and handle many thousand bushels of Soys 
every year. 
PTloes Change Frequently. Write for Quantity Prioes. 
✓ INOCULATE ALL LEGUMES^ 
NITRAGIN 
V Ortqmgl Itqums inocuUtor ^ 
Biloxi Soy Beans 
An upright variety growing 4 to 6 feet high, covered with 
a dense mass of foliage that does not shed easily. A heavy 
yielder of beans; the oil and protein contents are high; a 
fine bean for hogging down, for planting with corn or 
sorghum and for oil. The beans do not shatter, will stay 
in the pods until February. Late in maturing, requiring a 
long season to mature, but makes an unusually luxuriant 
growth; sow seed broadcast at rate of two bushels to an 
acre. In drills, sow % bushel to the acre. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List. 
Delsta 
Very stout, erect, short and bushy, splendid for combina¬ 
tion with corn. Plant thick for hay. Very prolific, beans little 
larger than Mammoth Yellow and shatter much less. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List. 
George Washington Soy Beans 
Very early maturing, ready to cut in August; makes more 
vine than Virginia, and a very desirable variety; sow seed in 
May, same quantity as recommended for Virginias. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List. 
Laredo Soy Beans 
One bushel will plant 6 to 8 acres in rows 3 to 3% feet 
apart, depending upon how thick you want them. We know 
of one farmer who got a perfect stand using one bushel to 
12 acres. They should not be covered deeper than 1^4 Inches; 
a half-inch Is better. One or two cultivations to keep down 
the grass and weeds is advisable. The Delta Experiment 
Station reports splendid results from sowing Laredo March 
Jlth to April 10th with a wheat drill on oats planted prev¬ 
ious fall. This drill helped instead of hurting the oats, and 
the beans were not large enough when the oats were harv¬ 
ested to interfere with the binder. Sow seed broadcast at 
rate of one bushel per acre; when sown in drills sow about 
1 gallon or 2 gallons per acre. 
Quantity Prioes on Green Ink List. 
Mammoth Yellow Soy Beans 
Valuable for both beans and forage. Mammoth Yellow is 
one of the largest growers among Soy Beans, and the most 
widely grown variety and excels in yield of bean and hay; 
sow seed in May broadcast at the rate of two bushels to the 
acre; when planted in drills use % bushel seed to the acre. 
Quantity Prloas on Green mk List. 
Mammoth Brown 
A fine big foliage variety, succeeds well in this section; 
won’t shatter. The plant is upright, with heavy branches; a 
big yielder of beans and foliage. Does well on all soils. It is 
a medium early variety; matures its beans in about 110 
days. 
It should be planted in rows 3 to 5 feet apart and 8 to 10 
inches in the row; sow 10 to 12 pounds to an acre. Mammoth 
Brown Soys grow 4 to 5 feet high and are covered with a 
dense mass of foliage that does not shed easily. When sown 
broadcast, use 1 to 1% bushels of seed to the acre. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List. 
Mamredo Soy Beans 
Produced from a hybrid of Mammoth Yellow and Laredo 
Soys at Delta Branch Ex. Sta. Shatters comparatively little, 
upright bushy plant, splendid for grazing and hay; its ex¬ 
tra earliness is very valuable. Each of the characteristics is 
desirable; try some of these sure. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List. 
Otootan Soy Beans 
Few Soy Beans can equal Otootan as a hay maker. Its late 
maturity is more than overcome by the abundant growth— 
5 feet or more in long growing seasons—its fine stems and 
abundant foliage, and the fine texture of its hay. It differs 
from most varieties in having many leafy branches instead 
of a coarse central stem, making it easy to cut. Planted in 
3-foot rows, they will cover the land with a mass of foliage. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List. 
Tokio 
Maybe a few days earlier than Mammoth Yellow but does 
not shatter quite so much. Bush type, erect growth; very 
prolific, and much grown in Tennessee and East Mississippi. 
Plant thick for hay. Seed greenish color, round. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List 
Virginia Soy Beans 
As It Is about 20 days earlier than Mammoth Yellow, It can 
be grown farther north and throughout the corn belt. The 
vines make a fine growth, are filled with pods, stand about 
3 feet high, are easy to cut and easy to cure. The stems 
being fine and the leafage profuse adapts it particularly 
well for hay making; sow broadcast one and one-half bush¬ 
els to an acre; in drills % bushel to an acre. 
Quantity Prices on Green Ink List. 
P KICKS OK LAKGX QUA* TIT Lira QUOTED OK OTTH GBEEK IKK LIST. 
