A PERSONAL LETTER 
We are pleased to present you 
with our 1939 Seed Catalog for we 
know you are interested in tested 
hardy dryland grown seed. 
We offer you the advantages of 
ordering direct from a producing 
• house with an established reputa¬ 
tion for Hardy Seeds, produced un¬ 
der the most severe climatic con¬ 
ditions and of High¬ 
est Yielding ability. 
You will profit by 
my life-long farm ex¬ 
perience, Agricultur¬ 
al College training, 
my nine years 7 work in charge of livestock 
pasturing experiments with grasses and 
alfalfa at the Government Experiment 
Farm. Seeds are tried on my own 3,000 
acres of farm land before being offered to 
my customers and friends. 
We want your orders large and small. We have the 
quality to deserve your business and our prices are bed¬ 
rock reasonable. Your order will be shipped promptly 
and you will get good generous measure. 
SAM H. BOBER 
Terms of Sale and Shipment 
Payment: Cash in full with order. Money order, bank draft, check 
on good bank, or stamps accepted. 
We pay postage on all Garden and Flower seed. All other items 
are priced f. o. b. Newell. 
Newell is in Butte County, on the northern foothills of the Black 
Hills, about 30 miles from Montana line. We are on the C., N. W. 
Railway and on 
graveled Highways 
212 and 79 and not 
far from 85. Long 
distance telephone 
No. 52 and 54 in the 
evening. 
Plant a field of 
Prozo on every farm. 
The grain millet is 
the most wonderful 
feed for poultry, 
turkeys and hogs, 
and the straw a good 
forage for cattle and 
sheep. See page 18. 
FREE AND PREPAID 
For every $3.00 order for vegetables and 
flower seeds received before March. 1st we 
offer your choice of any one of the following 
items: 
1 lb. Prof. Hansen’s famous Siberian Cos¬ 
sack Alfalfa. 
6 lbs. Proso—the highest yielding grain 
millet. 
1 lb. Giant half-sugar beet, the greatest win¬ 
ter feed for livestock and poultry. 
1 lb. Bober’s 30-day Lawn Grass. 
12 beautiful Gladiolus Bulbs. 
Vi lb. Spencer Color Mixture Sweet Peas. 
Sam H. Bober 
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