SEED WHEAT SORGHUMS 
MARQUIS 
SORGHUM CANE 
Grown and selected for us from pure stock. We believe 
it to be unusually perfect stock. Write for prices. 
USE 
Minnesota Early Amber Cane 
The Early Amber Sugar Cane grown in Minnesota is su¬ 
perior to that grown anywhere else. It is the earliest 
CERES AN 
For Greater Yields 
WHEAT 
Now! A Lower Cost for Stinking Smut of Wheat Control 
Use New Improved Ceresan 
You can now turn your stinking smut yield and dockage 
losses into extra profits by treating the seed with New 
Improved Ceresan before sowing, at a cost of only l%c to 
2%c per bushel of seed wheat. Only % ounce (there is a 
measuring spoon in each can) of this effective ethyl mer¬ 
cury phosphate grain disinfectant is used per bushel of 
seed. Easily and quickly applied by 20 to 25 revolutions 
of seed treater or 3 turnings with a shovel. Seed should 
be treated 24 hours before planting. Does not reduce drill¬ 
ing rate nor damage drill. Prices, 1 lb., 75c; 5 lbs., $3.00. 
May be mailed. Add postage. Free pamphlet. 
SEED RYE 
(Sow 40 to 50 lbs. per acre) 
SPRING RYE 
Is an excellent soiler and can be produced on poor, 
worn out land under dry conditions where other grains 
would fail. It is useful as a cleaning crop for the purpose 
of eradicating wild oats. Makes early pasture and may be 
cut and cured for hay. 
strain grown, very hardy, of fine quality, and yields 
an enormous tonnage per acre. Many people use Cane 
as a "Catch Crop" when other early spring sown crops 
fail. A few acres will insure a good roughage that will 
help your milk production. May be put in pit silos. 
We offer an improved strain of Minnesota Early Amber 
Sugar Cane which has been carefully bred for size, sugar 
content, and palatability. Sow 15 to 20 lbs. per acre for 
fodder. 
NITRAGIN —a trade name— 
is a granular soil-like sub¬ 
stance, teeming with millions 
of nitrogen-gathering legume 
germs, scientifically grown, 
and packed in neat yellow 
and black tin containers. 
Directions on every can. Safe 
and easy to apply to seed be¬ 
fore planting. 
NITRAGIN IS DATED 
Because Legume Germs are 
PERISHABLE, every can of 
NITRAGIN is DATED for the 
year contents must be used, 
which guarantees the garden¬ 
er fresh, live Legume Germs. 
Undated inoculators may be 
old and worthless. 
WINTER OR FALL RYE 
CANADIAN FIELD PEAS 
Serves a very useful purpose for pasture and hay. Mav 
be sown in the spring and summer as well as in the fall. 
When Winter Rye is sown after frost it goes into the fol¬ 
lowing season before maturing, thus making it a biennial. 
Fall Rye planted in the spring on either dry or irrigated 
land for pasture purposes gives satisfactory results. Makes 
an early abundant pasture due to the stooling characteris¬ 
tics emphasized by the spring conditions. 
The Legume family—plants 
that bear their seed in a pod 
—like clover and alfalfa, form 
a partnership at the roots 
with certain kinds of helpful 
bacteria called Legume Germs, 
that are able to pump or 
draw nitrogen from the air 
and give it to the plant. They 
form on the roots in colonies, 
looking like lumps, called 
nodules, which are really 
nitrogen storehouses. 
Without these germs, le¬ 
gumes would rob the soil of 
nourishment and have a sick¬ 
ly growth. Few soils contain 
a natural supply of these 
beneficial organisms. It is 
therefore necessary to "inocu¬ 
late"—apply these nitrogen- 
gathering germs directly to 
the seed before planting. All 
Agriculturists recommend in¬ 
oculation for legumes. 
(Sow 60 to 75 lbs. per acre in drills; 100 to 120 lbs. per 
acre broadcast) 
One of the very best feeds grown for a balanced green 
pasture and for a legume hay. A good pasture and hay 
mixture is 50 lbs. of field peas and 50 lbs. of oats. 
RAPE 
(8 lbs. per acre) 
An annual plant of the rutabaga family. Grows readily 
alone or with a nurse crop and is considered one of the 
best pasture plants for all kinds of stock, especially valu¬ 
able for hogs and sheep. When eaten off will sprout up 
from near the ground and keep growing until cut down by 
hard frosts. Sow about 8 lbs. to the acre. 
BEANS 
Montana Grown 
"X-L" Hi-gerxninating 
Great Northern Field 
We wish each customer of ours would plant a tew acres 
of this bean. You will always find a ready market. Mon¬ 
tana grown beans are known the country over and always 
command a premium. 
NITRAGIN 
on 
ALFALFA 
The won- r 
derful no -1 
dules enrich! 
I the soil and 
| insure a big ; 
crop. j 
64 
All Packets of Seeds carry the date packed 
