SOY BEANS 
Harold Wentworth, farm 
manager, with a bundle of 
MUKDEN SOY BEANS 
FOR HAY 
AND GRAIN 
Plant Soy Beans and maintain the 
fertility of the soil on your farm. 
THEY ARE THE BEST NITRO¬ 
GEN GATHERERS OF ANY OF 
THE LEGUMES, will thrive on 
acid soils, and being annuals will 
work into any system of crop rota¬ 
tion. 
More Soy Beans are being planted 
each year, and this is proof that they 
are A PROFITABLE CROP TO 
GROW. They yield large crops of 
grain—sometimes as much as 40 
bushels per acre. 
You can always dispose of your 
crop as THERE IS A REGULAR 
MARKET FOR SOY BEANS. 
The hay is EQUAL TO AL¬ 
FALFA in feeding value. 
Soy Beans can be broadcast or 
planted in rows and cultivated. Plant 
1 Yi inches deep; 40 to 60 pounds per 
acre. You can plant as late as June 
15, and even if they do not get ripe, 
will make a good crop of hay. 
MUKDEN SOY BEANS: This variety is earlier than either Manchu or 
Illini, maturing seed in about 100 days. The stout, bushy plants grow about 
36 inches tall and are literally covered with pods. It does not shatter as 
easilysas other varieties and you do not lose so many beans when threshing. 
Yields about as much as the later varieties and on account of its short grow¬ 
ing season should be planted in the Northern part of the Soy Bean territory. 
1 lb., 15c; 5 lbs., 35c; V« bu., 60c; V4 bu., $1.00; 1 bu. (60 lbs.), $1.75; 
100 lbs., $2.90. 
MANCHU SOY BEANS: Manchu 
is the best known and most popular 
variety of soy beans in the North¬ 
west. It is medium early in season, 
early enough to fully mature dry 
beans under ordinary conditions and 
large enough to be of real value. The 
dry beans mature in about 105 days. 
Iowa farmers report as high as 38 bu. 
per acre yield. They can be cut with 
a grain binder and threshed with an 
ordinary threshing machine by re¬ 
ducing the speed of the cylinder to 
one-half and taking out part of the 
concaves. 
1 lb., 15c; 5 lbs., 35c; V* bu., 
60c; Vi bu., $1.00; 1 bu. (60 lbs.), 
$1.75; 100 lbs., $2.90. 
ILLINI SOY BEANS: This variety 
was developed at the Illinois Experi¬ 
ment Station. It grows a little taller 
than Manchu (about 40 inches) giv¬ 
ing a heavier yield and is nearly as 
early, maturing a seed crop in about 
110 days. 
Soy beans as a hay crop are higher 
in protein content than alfalfa hay 
or field peas. An excellent hay for 
dairy cattle. 
Illini Soy Beans are recommended 
for eating purposes, and are a very 
good substitute for Navy Beans. 
1 lb., 15c; 5 lbs., 35c; Vi bu., 
60c; Vi bu., $1.00; 1 bu. (60 lbs.), 
$1.75; 100 lbs., $2.90. 
NITRAGIN INOCULATION for SOY BEANS: Soy Beans should be 
inoculated before planting. Inoculation may DOUBLE YOUR YIELD 
of both hay and grain. 
1 Bu., 30c; 2 Bu., 50c; 5 Bu., $1.00; 10 bu., $1.40; 25 Bu., $2.90 
Postpaid. 
FILMS —DEVELOPED AND PRINTED 25* 
Our prompt service and fine workmanship have 
made us many customers. Send your Films to: 
RICHARDS—GURNEY BLDG., YANKTON, S. DAK. 
MILLET 
MILLET FOR HAY—GER¬ 
MAN, SIBERIAN, AND JAPA¬ 
NESE are the best, sometimes yield¬ 
ing 4 or 5 tons of good hay per acre. 
They can be planted up to July 15th 
and still produce a crop. If you find 
you are going to be short of feed, 
PLANT MILLET. 
MILLET FOR GRAIN- 
WHITE SIBERIAN PROSO AND 
EARLY FORTUNE OR RED 
PROSO are the Millets to plant for 
grain. They yield up to 50 or 60 
bushels per acre, and it only takes 
60 or 70 days to mature a seed crop. 
The large, shiny red or white seed 
make WONDERFUL CHICKEN 
FEED or can be ground and fed to 
any kind of livestock. 
GERMAN MILLET: It grows from 3 to 6 feet tall, and makes excellent 
hay for dairy cattle. The seed is very good chicken feed. Few grasses or 
plants will make the enormous yields of hay and seed produced by German 
Millet. Four or five tons of hay and 60 or 70 bushels of seed per acre have 
been reported. It may.be planted as late as July 1st and still mature. Plant 
25 pounds per acre. 
10 lbs., 55c; 25 lbs., $1.00; 50 lbs. (1 bu.), $1.80; 100 lbs., $3.25. 
SIBERIAN MILLET: A wonderfully productive hay millet. It never 
grows as coarse as the German, making a better quality hay. It grows from 
3 to 4 feet tall and is the earliest of the hay millets. Plant 30 pounds 
per acre. 
10 lbs., 55c; 25 lbs., $1.00; 50 lbs. (1 bu.), $1.80; 100 lbs., $3.25. 
JAPANESE MILLET or BILLION DOLLAR GRASS: You can get 
two good cuttings of leafy, nutritious hay from Japanese Millet. Even if it 
is not cut until it is 6 or 7 feet tall, the hay will not be very coarse, and is 
superior to corn fodder. It does fairly well on high land but is best on lower 
land where the moisture is plentiful. The seed is of very little value for 
feed. Plant 20 pounds per acre. 
10 lbs., 70c; 25 lbs., $1.15; 50 lbs., $2.10; 100 lbs., $3.85. 
PROFESSOR HANSEN’S WHITE 
SIBERIAN PROSO: Yields up to 
50 OR 60 BUSHELS PER ACRE 
have been made where the soil and 
moisture conditions were favorable. 
It will STAND A LOT OF 
DROUTH and still produce a fair 
crop of grain which is about EQUAL 
TO WHEAT for poultry and live¬ 
stock feed. 
Proso forms the principal article 
of diet for millions of people in Rus¬ 
sia and China, and can now be pur¬ 
chased in many stores in America. 
Its greatest value is as a catch crop, 
one that can be planted as late as 
July 15th and still mature a crop of 
grain and hay. Height 2 to 3 feet. 
Plant 20 pounds per acre. 
1 lb., 15c; 10 lbs., 50c; 25 lbs., 
90c; 50 lbs. (1 bu.), $1.45; 100 
lbs., $2.60. 
EARLY FORTUNE—RED HOG 
or RED PROSO: This extra early 
Red Proso is a very heavy yielder of 
grain, which ripens while the leaves 
are still green. You can harvest your 
grain crop and still have good qual¬ 
ity hay. Plant at the rate of 20 
pounds per acre as late as July 15th. 
10 lbs., 50c; 25 lbs., 90c; 50 lbs. 
(1 bu.), $1.40; 100 lbs., $2.50. 
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