9 
Fy^RIVH SEEDS 
PRICES OF FARH SEEDS 
Subject to Change Without Notice 
Special Prices can often be made on large 
quantities. Write us 
The Earliest Large, White Dent. 
Ripens thoroughly in latitudes south 
of Albany and liuffalo. Extraordinarily 
prolific, often yielding 110 bushels shelled 
corn per acre. Large ears, 10 to 12 
inches long, 7 to 8 inches in circumfer¬ 
ence. Long kernels, small cob. Ears 
2 to 3 feet from the ground. Plant 
leafy and luxuriant, making fine fodder. 
It is the earliest large white Dent 
Corn we know of. Price, 80c. pk., 
$2.75 bush.; 10 bush, lots, $2.65 bush. 
Early Green Soja Bean. 
This varity produces enormous crops as far north as 
Canada, and will ripen its seeds even in Massachusetts. It 
? :row3 about 4 ft. high and yield.s ten to twenty tons of green 
odder per acre, or 20 to 40 bushels of Beans. 
It is a valuable leguminous plant for the farmer and dairy¬ 
man for either green or cured fodder or grain. It is especially 
valuable for ensilage in combination with fodder corn or 
Japanese Millet, thus furnishing a complete balanced ration. 
It increases the milk and butter and fattens the stock. 
The grain is abo exceedingly nutritious, ranking, when 
ground, oven higher than cotton seed or linseed meal for 
feeding cattle, hogs and other .stock. 3 lbs. of Soja Bean meal 
added to the grain ration of milch cows produces a rich milk. 
Soja Beans are great soil cnrichers, adding humus and fix¬ 
ing nitrogen from the air. {See cut.') 
^larket price. 
Long’s Champion Yellow Dent Corn, 
This King of Corns is without doubt the finest, the largest 
and the most productive Yellow Dent Corn ever produced, 
and will be found to be of great value to the farmer, especially 
in the Aliddle and Eastern States, on account of its immense 
yield, at least 25 per cent, and often 50 per cent, more than 
can be obtained from the average old-type corns generally 
planted. 
Long’s Champion is the climax of 25 years of Com breed¬ 
ing and selection by Mr. I. S. Long, one of the most success¬ 
ful and progressive formers in the Pennsylvania corn belt. 
The ears are of immense size, 12 to 14 inches in length, 
8 to 11 inches in circumference, carrying 20 to 24 uniform 
rows of long large kernels well developeri over tip and butt. 
It is a luxuriant growler, about 12 to 16 feet high, and in 
Lebanon County, Pa., where it originated, has never failed 
to mature by September 20th, when planted during the 
first half of lilay. There is but a limited quantity oi seed 
grown by the originator for sale, and it cannot be offered 
by any other seedsman or dealer. {See cut.) 
Price, $1.25 pk., $4.50 bush.; 10 bush, lots, @$4.40 bush. 
WOOD’S 
NORTHERN WHITE DENT CORN 
FARM SEEDS WE DO NOT DELIVER FREE, 
But when small quantities are wanted by- 
express or mail, we will prepay postage or 
carriage, if _8c. perlb. or loc. per quart is 
added to prices. 
Henderson’s Japanese Buckwheat 
This grand variety, introduced by us several years ago 
has proven a bonanza to Buckwheat raisers in this coun¬ 
try. It is of strong, branching growth, stands up well and 
produce.^ from two to four times as much grain as any 
other variety under same conditions. It is also fully a 
week earlier. The seed of our Japanese variety is nearly 
ns large again as that of other Buckwheats; it makes the 
finest flour and for bees has practically displaced all 
other sorts where known. 
The Iowa Agricultural Experiment Station reports 
that it has grown Henderson’s New Japanese Buck¬ 
wheat for two years, and has found it superior to the old 
varieties in several important respects. ** It is larger and 
stronger, and stands up better during storms, and its 
seeds are larger, but what places it far ahead of other 
varieties is that of setting full crops of Buckwheat in 
dry, hot weather.’* 
Henderson’s Japanese Buckwheat seed is grown from 
the largest Japanese type imported by us for stock seed 
and IS therefore immensely superior to that grown here 
for several seasons whereby it has deteriorated. {See cut) 
Price, 50c. pk.,$1.60 per bush, (of 48 lbs); 10 bush. loti. 
@ $1.50 bush, 
For 
other 
kinds 
of Millet 
see page 67 
JAPANESE MILLET. 
A very distinct variety that is particularly valuable in 
the Northern States as a quick-growing forage and en¬ 
silage crop, attaining a height, in good soil, of 6 to 8 feet 
and yielding from 10 to 18 tons of green fodder per acre. 
For feeding green, it may be cut from day to day as 
needed until the seed begins to ripen. During this period 
it is much relished by stock; cattle especially consume it 
without waste before touching green fodder corn, and 
cows fed^ on it invariably increase in milk. For dried 
fodder, it should be cut in the blossom stage; it is freely 
eaten 1:^ stock and is often preferred by horses to Timo¬ 
thy and Clover hay; w'hen sown early, it produces a fair 
second cutting. For ensilage, two parts of the Millet 
in combination with one^ part Soja Beans forage, form 
a complete balanced ration that may be fed, without 
^ain. Sow from May to July, 15 lbs. of seed per acre if 
broadcasted, or if in drills, 12 to 18 inches apart, use 10 
to 12 lbs. per acre. {See cut.) Price, 10c. lb.; 10 lbs., 
90c.; 100 lbs., $8.00 
■1^ Henderson’s Farmers’ Manual, Mailed FREE to Farmers and Breeders. 
