Hoffman’s 
Good Year to Start Pastures —Seed Prices Low PASTURES 
Three-year-old pasture on the 
farm of Harry Geib, Lebanon 
County, Pa. 
How Much Lime? 
The most practical applica¬ 
tion lor genera! conditions in 
pasture improvement is one ton 
ol limestone and 400 or 500 
pounds ol Superphosphate per 
acre. 
e 
“From your Hay and Pas¬ 
ture Mixture I sure did get 
a good tough sod and plenty 
of grass .”—Jasper Williams, 
Craigsville, W. Va. 
PERMANENT HAY AND PASTURE 
MIXTURE 
Make money on your idle land—land that 
you cannot farm, because it is too rocky, too 
steep, too small or too wet. Put that land 
to work for you. Do as thousands of other 
successful farmers have done. Sow this mix¬ 
ture of selected Pasture Grasses that will 
produce Hay or Pasture, for many years to 
come, on your land that is not suited for 
general farming. 
Get either of these two mixtures. The 
Highland Mixture for well-drained, hilly 
land, and the Lowland Mixture for low, 
wet land, meadows, etc. This mixture is 
made up of carefully selected grasses, 
blended in their proper proportions. This 
mixture contains the Blue Grasses, Herds 
Grass or Red Top, Rye Grasses and Fescues, 
other permanent grasses, some Timothy and 
a proper proportion of the Clovers—thus 
making up a well-balanced mixture pro¬ 
duced under the direction of the highest 
authorities and verified by our own practical 
experience. Plant either spring or fall. Sow 
about one bushel —32 pounds to the acre. 
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