OUR FLOWER SEEDS ARE CHOICE SELECTIONS 27 
BOISE, IDAHO 
KILL INSECTS 
with 
EVER GREEN. 
GRASS SEED —Continued 
White Bokhara or Sweet Clover (Melilotus Alba). Tall shrub 
plant. Grows from 4 to 6 feet high; good for pasture. The best 
plant to grow' as a soil renovator. Sown in the spring in drills 
16 inches apart. Ten pounds will sow an acre. Price per lb. 
25c; 25 lbs. for $4.50. 
Yellow Blossom Sw'eet Clover. Yellow Blossom is a biennial 
the same as the white, but does not grow as large. Better for 
pasture as it is more leafy and seems to stay green longer. 
Price, 25c per lb.; 25 lbs. for $4.50. Ask for price in quantities. 
Red Clover. The seed crop from our Red Clover fields in 1936 
brought Southwestern Idaho growers hundreds of thousands 
of dollars. It was readily purchased by Eastern buyers, and 
as the season advanced and the crop shortage become more 
apparent the prices advanced accordingly. While we pur¬ 
chased heavily, we have only retained about 100 bags of very 
select stock for distribution for seed production purposes. 
This stock will be free of all noxious or objectionable weeds, 
with high purity test. Price, single lb. 40c; 25-lb. lots for 
35c per lb. Write for special prices on 100-lb. lots. 
White Dutch Clover (Trifolium Repense). Excellent for pas¬ 
ture. and when mixed with Kentucky Blue Grass makes the 
finest and most nutritious food for sheep and cows. Used 
universally on lawns in most of the United States. Sow for 
pastures 5 to 8 lbs. per acre. Extra fancy, 50c; choice, 35c and 
40c per lb. Write for special quantity prices. 
Ladino Clover. Said to be the best pasture grass so far dis¬ 
covered. It grows very rank and stock are very fond of it. 
Pasture grade, 75c per lb. Write for prices on Certified 
Ladino. 
Crested Wheat Grass. One of the hardiest and nearest drouth 
resistant grasses discovered. If this grass will thrive as ex¬ 
periments so far indicate, our dry lands and hills can be made 
as valuable for pasture as many of our meadows. Price, per 
lb. 60c; 10 lbs. for $5.75. Supply limited. 
Canadian Blue Grass (Pea Compressa). Produces a fine foli¬ 
age of dark green color and is more hardy than Kentucky 
Blue Grass. It is especially adapted to light, poor, dry soils, 
and makes very satisfactory lawns. It has somewhat of a 
creeping habit and does not need to be clipped as often as 
Kentucky Blue Grass. Price, lb. 35c; 10 lbs. $3.00. 
Kentucky Blue Grass. The standard for lawns. Our “Idaho 
Tested Seeds” grade is the purest obtainable. The old stan¬ 
dard grass for pasture as well as lawns. Every farmer knows 
it and its good qualities. Sow 15 to 30 lbs. to the acre for 
meadows; for lawns, 1 lb. to 300 square feet. Ask for “Idaho 
Tested Seeds.” Price, lb. 40c. Special prices on quantities. 
Creeping Bent Grass (Certified Blue Tag Astorian). Especially 
recommended for lawns at country homes where depending 
on irrigation. It flourishes with but little moisture. Also good 
on terraces and sloping ground. Price, lb. $1.00. 
Perennial English Rye Grass (Lolium Perenne). A good pas¬ 
ture grass, it grows quickly and withstands drouth reasonably 
well. For pasture sow in the spring, 25 to 30 lbs. to the acre; 
for lawns, 60 to 70 lbs. to the acre. Price per lb. 20c. 
Meadow Fescue or English Blue Grass (Festuca Pratensis). 
Especially adapted for permanent pasture. Grows 2 to 3 feet 
high, but not in tufts like orchard grass. Earliest and most 
nutritious of grass. Makes good hay and cattle thrive on it, 
whether in green or dry state. Succeeds even on poor soil, 
and as the roots penetrate deep, from 12 to 15 inches, it takes 
extremely dry weather to affect it. Sow 15 to 20 lbs. per acre. 
Price, per lb. 25c; 25-Ib. lots, $5.00. 
Tall Meadow' Oat or Evergreen Grass (Avena Elatior). The 
roots of this grass descend deeply into the subsoil, enabling it 
to withstand a protracted drouth, and is green all seasons of 
the year. Its early growth in the spring makes it equal to rye 
for pasture. It grows quickly after mowing, giving a denser 
and more succulent aftermath than any of the present popular 
tame grasses. Sow broadcast 25 to 30 lbs. to an acre. Price, 
per lb. 40c; 25-lb. lots, $8.75. 
Orchard Grass (Dactylis Glomerata). Stands the drouth, grows 
well in the shade, does well in wet or poor ground, and is 
splendid to prevent worn-out fields from washing. This grass 
furnishes excellent pasture three weeks before any other and 
after close grazing ten days’ rest is sufficient for another 
growth. It is especially adapted for winter grazing, as it 
remains green all season. It is well suited to sow mixed with 
alfalfa on average of 12 lbs. orchard to 8 lbs. alfalfa seed. 
Sow 20 to 25 lbs. per acre. Price per lb. 30c; 25 lbs. for $6.00. 
Timothy (Phleum Pratense). As a crop for hay, timothy is 
probably unsurpassed by any other grass. Being an early 
grass, it is well adapted to spring and summer grazing, and 
if the fall season is favorable, it will grow sufficiently to fur¬ 
nish good fall grazing, too. Sow 10 to 12 lbs. to the acre. 
Price per lb. 12 }4c. Write for quantity prices. 
Red Top (Agrostis Vulgaris). A valuable grass for most soils. 
It is good, permanent grass, standing our climate as well as 
any other, and consequently well adapted to our pastures, in 
which it should be fed close, for if allowed to grow up to seed, 
the cattle refuse it. On moist, rich soil it will grow about 2 
feet, and on poor gravelly soil about half that high. It has 
been grown successfully even on “alkali” bottom lands, where 
other grasses failed. We offer only the clean seed. Sow 15 to 
20 lbs. of clean seed to the acre. Price per lb. 30c. Write for 
quantity price. 
Bromus Inermus or Hungarian Brome Grass. A wonderful 
drouth resister. A grass for the stock raiser. All kinds of 
stock like it. Its nature is to stool out, and thus it does not 
show its best until the second season. It seldom produces seed 
the first year. Aside from alfalfa, no grass has fulfilled the 
pi’omises to our western farmers better than the Bromus 
Inermus. It meets drouth as well in wet and cold, and for 
Idaho we know of no grass to equal it. Many of our large 
ranchers are planting it extensively. Sow 20 to 25 lbs. per 
acre. Price per lb. 35c. Write for quantity prices. 
GRASS SEED MIXTURES FOR MEADOWS 
AND PASTURES 
It is a well ascertained fact that a thicker and more pro¬ 
longed growth is produced by a mixture of many sorts of 
grasses that are especially suitable. Some sorts do best on 
high ground and in dry weather; others prefer plenty of 
moisture. Some mature so early and others so late that from 
the beginning of spring until winter sets in there is no time 
when one species or another is not at its best. 
In the matter of preparing the soil for pasture, it is neces¬ 
sary to put the ground in the best condition possible to get 
the best results. The soil should be perfectly even after sow¬ 
ing the seed. You will find that cross harrowing will be to 
your advantage, as it has a tendency to scatter the seed more 
evenly. 
We are prepared to furnish any mixture wanted at the 
lowest prices, and would ask that you ask us for mixture 
prices, such as you may require for pasture mixtures. How¬ 
ever, we specially recommend our Union Brand Pasture Mix¬ 
ture which is carefully mixed from the very best seed stock. 
No chaff or light seed. Will give you a fine pasture with 
proper care. Price, lb. 25c; 100 lbs. for $22.50. 
Timothy and Alsike Seed Mixed. $10.00 per cwt. Ask for 
for sample. Supply limited. 
