DIBBLE’S 
Are early, extremely productive, with tall, stiff straw bearing long heads 
filled with good-weight, thin-hulled grain, this year’s crop weighing from 
36 to 38 pounds per measured bushel. These Oats originally came to us 
from northern Canada, being discovered by one of our men we had out 
looking for new varieties of grain. After growing them on our farms for a 
year or two, with good results, we introduced them to our trade, and 
they have given general satisfaction. 
On our own farms, growing from 100 to 150 acres annually, they have 
given us a yield of over 60 bushels per acre for a ten-year average, which 
is over twice the average production of the United States for the same 
period. Several crops, on large fields, have yielded over 80 bushels per 
acre, and a neighbor, from a 4-acre field, threshed and delivered to our 
v/arehouse 440 bushels of recleaned grain. 
Dibble’s Twentieth Century Oats have had a direct sale to farmers, 
through our Catalog, of over 450,000 bushels since we introduced them 
twenty years ago, and they seem to be as popular and productive as ever. 
DAIRYMEN 
Read the Following Carefully 
For a number of years many of our customers have been growing 
their concentrated grain-feeds on their own farms instead of buying 
patent feeds at high prices from the feed-dealers, and these dairy- 
farmers have made money year in and year out. From our experience, 
we recommend the two following Mixtures to sow per acre for best 
results: 
Mixture No. 1 
1 bushel Heavyweight or T. C. Oats 
1 bushel Alpha Barley 
1 bushel Canada Field Peas 
Mixture No. 2 
1 bushel Heavyweight or T. C. Oats 
1 bushel Alpha Barley 
1 bushel Marquis Spring Wheat 
And quite a few farmers are using just Oats and Alpha Barley, 
sown together in equal quantities. All of the grains above mentioned 
may be sown early in the spring, ripen at the same time, and can be 
harvested without shelling. Letters from our customers report yields 
from these Mixtures of from 60 to 89 bushels per acre, average weight 
50 pounds per bushel; or lj/£ to over 2 tons per acre, of a highly con¬ 
centrated grain-feed. 
Analysis, as recently made by New York State Experiment Station, 
Geneva, N. Y., was as follows: 
Oats, Barley and Canada Pea Mixture 
Protein.15.7 
Fat. 2.5 
Oats, Barley and Spring Wheat Mixture 
Protein. 11.9 
Fat. 2.9 
Compare these analyses with those of the patent or open-formula 
feeds you are buying, and we are sure you will decide to grow your 
own High-Grade Dairy Feed hereafter. What else can you grow on 
your farm that will make you the same amount of money? 
The Oats I got from you last year were fine and I had a good crop. 
—G. S. Stanhope, Isle La Motte, Vt., March 6, 1935. 
The Twentieth Century Oats were fine; they yielded just two 
bushels where other Oats yielded one in the same field.—C. A. Boyd, 
Saegerstown, Pa. 
The Twentieth Century Oats yielded 65 bushels to the acre, free 
from smut—about twice the yield of my neighbors.— Elmer G. 
Davis, Stone Ridge, N. Y. 
EDWARD F. DIBBLE SEEDGROWER 
HONEOYE FALLS, N. Y 
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