Low in Cost 
Positive in Results 
cjloffman’s 
“I have pure 
from you wit 
orders. And 
a failure y 
either cro 
ways look; 
plump a 
ways suri 
part in 
treatmen 
have use 
grass se 
falfa. An 
derful ca 
believe 
before pi 
Maines, 
ed Ceresan 
s and wheat 
e never had 
smut on 
seed al- 
clean and 
t I am al- 
done my 
e Ceresan 
lanting. I 
lants on 
and al- 
r get a won- 
I firmly 
treating of seeds 
ting .”—Carl N. 
ton, N. J. 
HARDY SPRING WHEAT 
'Marquis” type. Good for flour. Early, and not often sub¬ 
ject to rust and disease. Smaller grain than winter wheat. 
Sown mostly in higher altitudes of Pennsylvania. 
SPRING RYE 
A grain-producing Rye not as tall or plump as Winter Rye. 
Sow early. Handle about like oats. Also good for spring 
pasture, soiling purposes, and nurse crops. 
GREATER GRAIN YIELDS WITH 
“CERESAN'’ TREATMENT 
Many a good breakfast is in 
the making—in this fine stand 
of Buckwheat. 
New Improved "Ceresan” costs so little—about 2 cents per 
bushel of grain seed treated, or 6 cents per acre—that it no 
longer pays to gamble with losses through stripe and seed¬ 
ling blight, covered or black loose smut. Or seed rotting 
caused by soil fungus parasites. Use it on your wheat, oats, 
barley and sorghum seeds BEFORE planting as a control 
against infection. 
Extensive tests have proved that "Ceresan” treatment in¬ 
creases yield even when seed is not smutty. In 65 tests over 
a 3-year period with oats, increases averaged 18 per cent per 
acre over untreated seed. Barley and wheat increases averaged 
about 6 per cent. And treatment of grain known to be 
smutty has resulted in INCREASES AS HIGH AS 19 
BUSHELS PER ACRE. 
The U. S. Dept, of Agriculture recommends "Ceresan” 
highly, and reports ". ... in 3 years experiments were very 
satisfactory, not only in bunt control but in its effect on 
germination when properly applied . . . cheaper than most 
other dusts, more easily applied, has no undesirable effect 
on drill action or rate of sowing, and—protects seed against 
organisms other than bunt more effectively than do copper 
carbonate and formaldehyde.” 
Use y 2 ounce of dust per bushel of seed. Cover 24 hours 
before planting. 
1 -lb. can.$0.75 25-lb. can.$14.00 
5 -lb. can. 3.25 
VIGOROUS BUCKWHEAT SEED 
Buckwheat makes a valuable, dependable grain for lands where 
soil is thin or where other crops have failed. Also excellent 
for choking out weed and grass growths in fallow land pre¬ 
paratory to planting other crops. 
Buckwheat middlings are high in protein value, valuable 
as dairy feed. The grain makes a feed much relished by 
poultry. The blossoms are fine for bees and produce a rich, 
dark honey. 
May be seeded all of June and early July, about one bushel 
per acre. 
43 
GRAIN TREATMENT 
