REMEMBER ALWAYS; INOCULATE YOUR LEGUME 
SEEDS EVEN THOUGH PLANTED ON FIELDS THAT 
HAVE BEEN INOCULATED BEFORE. IT NEVER PAYS 
TO DEPEND UPON NATURAL INOCULATION. 
Read below the experience that other farmers have had 
planting NITRAGIN inoculated legumes on fields that have 
grown similar inoculated crops the previous year. 
The farm manager of H. Weil & Bros., Goldsboro, North 
Carolina, says: “Last season we used “NITRAGIN” on soy¬ 
beans for the first time in comparison to no “NITRAGIN” in 
the same field, on land that had GROWN SOYBEANS before 
satisfactorily; and we were able to notice considerable differ¬ 
ence in growth in favor of “NITRAGIN”. While we did not 
harvest the beans to determine the amount of difference, we 
feel there was sufficient difference for us to use “NITRAGIN” 
on our main soybean crop this season and to recommend it to 
our farmer friends”. 
Mr. Louis G. Reis, a New York farmer, writes, “Last year I 
bought “NITRAGIN” for soybean inoculation and to tell you 
the wonderful results I got, I would be short of words to 
explain it. It does every bit you claim, and last year was 
certainly the best time to bring out the fine qualities of this 
life giving plant food. . . . This proved . to me beyond doubt 
that “NITRAGIN” is the medium available to anyone who 
wants to avail himself of the free nitrogen in the air to work 
for him, and the beauty of using it is its simplicity—just mix 
it with the seed and sow. 
Use NITRAGIN on all legume seeds, on old fields as well as 
new seeding, before planting. Costs a few cents per acre. 
AGRICULTTTRAI. EXPERIMENTAL STATIONS AND COLLEGES 
RECOMMEND INOCULATION 
Wis. Exp. Station, Madison, Wis. Circular 252 
"Wisconsin farmers can improve their crops and enrich their soils by inoculat¬ 
ing legumes such as alfalfa, clover, soybearss and peas." 
Ill. Exp. Station, Urbana, Ill. Circular 326 
”.In order, therefore, to function most effectively as soil builders, 
legumes must be inoculated." 
Texas A. & M. Collefre, Circular 118 
"Legumes store nitrogen in the soil through nitrogen firing bacteria. 
As these bacteria are not present in all soils, and may be weak even if 
present, it is safest always to inoculate the seed with fresh, live cultures before 
planting." 
New York State Agr. Exp. Station, Geneva, N. Y., Circnlar 179 
".The average returns are such, however, that when the small cost of 
the culture is considered, inoculation is perhaps the most profitable farm 
operation." S 
U. S. Dept, of Agric. Farmers' Bnlletin No. 1663 
"Under Cotton Bel t conditions all winter legumes need to be inoculated with 
nitrogen-fixing bacteria." 
NITRAGIN — Approved Moist Soil Culture — Easy to Apply. 
Manufactured by the Nitragin Co., Inc., Milwaukee, Wisconsin 
CARPENTER SEED CO. 
76 N. University Ave. 
Provo, Utah 
