SWEET 
CLOVER 
WHITE 
BLOSSOM 
YELLOW 
BLOSSOM 
GRUNDY 
COUNTY 
thrive for you. . . . Sweet Clover is many times sown into 
corn at the last cultivation and pastured the following sum¬ 
mer, instead of putting the corn stubble in oats. The Sweet 
Clover can then be plowed, and the ground put into wheat. 
Enough moisture gives success to this plan. 
• 
This is the variety that the great majority of people sow. 
Plant in the Spring and you will get a fine growth in the 
Fall of the same year. This biennial White Blossom (Meli- 
lotus Alba) lives for two years, then dies. Planted either 
Spring or Fall of one year, it will live until the Fall of the 
following year. Let it go to seed and it will reseed itself 
and last for years. Invaluable for soil improvement, hay, 
pasture—and to inoculate soil for Alfalfa. Seldom suffers 
from Clover diseases. 
Yellow flowering biennial Sweet Clover (Melilotus Offi¬ 
cinalis). Grows 2^/2 to 3 feet the first year and 4 to 5 
feet the second year. Preferred by some because of its finer 
stems. It makes a finer grade of hay or pasture. Stems 
nearly as fine as Alfalfa. 
An early dwarf strain of the biennial White Blossom Sweet 
Clover. Matures two weeks earlier. Has finer stems—makes 
a finer hay—more palatable feed—not as tall. 
