TRUE TO NAME AND SURE TO GROW SEEDS 
33 
CLOVER AND GRASS SEED 
The market on the above seed will be somewhat higher than last year, and at 
the present time, we believe, it will be well enough to buy earlier, as we understand 
the seed is very short. Let us figure with you on your wants. 
Alsyke. Native of Sweden; perfectly 
hardy; does not heave in winter. Unsur¬ 
passed for bees. Market price. 
Medium Red. The common variety. 
Market price. 
Mammoth or Pea Vine Clover—A com¬ 
mon variety of clover used extensively on 
poor ground and yields well. Market price. 
Crimson. An annual with crimson 
flowers valuable as a fertilizer; sown in 
late summer after early crops are taken 
off; will produce a heavy growth to turn 
under the following spring. Prices vari¬ 
able. 
White Dutch. Valuable for lawns and 
pastures. Market price. 
Timothy. Market price. 
Fancy Red Top. Cleaned from chaff. 
Market price. 
Kentucky Blue Grass (Poa pratensis). 
Thrives on a variety of soils. Valuable 
for lawns. Market price. 
German Creeping Bent. A low growing variety. Used for fine lawns. Modern golf 
has popularized this thickly rooting, densely cropping mass for putting greens, 
making a very velvety surface. 
Orchard Grass (Dactylis glomerata). The most valuable and widely known pas¬ 
ture grass. Market price. 
SUDAN GRASS 
A forage crop of immense value. It is strictly an annual and dies each year like 
millet and must be seeded again each spring. Sudan Grass grows tall, reaching 
a height of six to nine feet. 
Sow in rows 18 to 42 inches apart and cultivate like corn, or it can be drilled in 
with a grain drill, or sown broadcast by hand. If sown broadcast, about 20 pounds 
required per acre. If drilled in rows, four to eight pounds of seed is sufficient. 
THEILMANN’S LAWN GRASS 
This is by far the best mixture of grasses offered for the purpose of quickly pro¬ 
ducing a permanent lawn. It is prepared by a careful blending of different grasses 
to produce a thick, velvety appearance so much sought after. Many of the choicest 
lawns in our city have been seeded down with this mixture and have proven satis¬ 
factory. 
THEILMANN’S “SHADY PLACE” GRASS 
We have a special lawn mixture for shady places. The grasses used in making 
this mixture are only those that are well adapted for growing in the shade, and as 
it blends well with our regular Lawn Grass Mixture, it may be used on those por¬ 
tions of the lawn which are shaded by trees, buildings etc. 
Timothy 
