White Clover Will Keep Your Lawns Green All Summer 
Grass and Clover Seeds 
Grasses in Separate Varieties 
Prices subject to fluctuation 
Canada Blue Grass (Poa compressa). For 
sowing on hard clay and poor soils. Sow 
60 pounds per acre. 5 lbs. $4; 100 Ibs. $70. 
Chewing’s New Zealand Fescue (Festuca 
rubra fallax). Excellent for fairways and 
putting greens. 5 Ibs. $4.50; 100 Ibs. $85. 
Coos County Bent (Seaside Bent; Agrostis 
maritima). 5 Ibs. $7.50; 100 Ibs. $125. 
Colonial Bent (Agrostis vulgaris). Grown 
in New Zealand. Desirable for putting 
greens. 5 Ibs. $7; 100 Ibs. $120. 
Creeping Bent (South German Mixed Bent; 
Agrostis species). Used largely for putting 
greens. 5 Ibs. $7.50; 100 Ibs. $140. 
Crested Dog’s-tail (Cynosurus cristatus). 
For pastures and lawns. 5 Ibs. $3; 100 
Ibs. $55. 
English Rye Grass (Lolium perenne). Very 
nutritious, valuable for meadows and 
pastures. Sow 60 pounds to the acre. 
5 Ibs. $2 ; 100 Ibs. $30. 
Fine-leaved Fescue (Festuca tenuifolia). 
Suitable for Iawns and putting greens. 
5 Ibs. $7; 100 Ibs. $120. 
Italian Rye Grass (Lolium  italicum). 
Thrives in any soil and yields early and 
abundant crops. Valuable for pasture 
mixtures. Sow 50 pounds per acre. 5 Ibs. 
$1.75; 100 Ibs. $28. 
Kentucky Blue Grass (Poa pratensis). 
Especially useful for lawns, meadows, and 
rich lands. Sow 70 pounds per acre for 
lawns, 40 pounds for pasture. 5 Ibs. $3; 
100 Ibs. $55. 
Meadow Fescue (Festuca pratensis). An 
excellent grass of great value in mixtures 
for permanent pastures. Sow 45 pounds 
per acre. 5 [ks. $2; 100 Ibs. $37. 
Orchard Grass (Dactylis  glomerata). 
Adapted for growing in shady places or 
under trees. 5 Ibs. $2.50; 100 Ibs. $45. 
Red Top Fancy or Recleaned (Agrostis 
palustris). Splendid for lawns. 5 Ibs. $2; 
100 Ibs. $35. 
Oats 
Sow 3 bushels of seed to the acre; 
32 pounds to the bushel 
Heavyweight. This variety grows 5 feet 
high and carries the heaviest and largest 
branching heads ever grown. Bus. $3 
Regenerated Swedish Select. Popular for 
its heavy yield. Bus. $3. 
Storm King. A very early variety that 
makes a strong growth of straw, producing 
70 bushels per acre. The large heads are 
well filled with big, heavy, white grains. 
Bus. $3. 
Twentieth Century. Early and extremely 
productive, with tall, stiff straw, bearing 
long heads filled with heavy-weight, thin- 
hulled grain. Bus. $3.50. 
Millet 
Sow 50 pounds of seed to the acre 
Golden Millet. Grows 4 to 5 feet high and 
yields a heavy crop. 100 Ibs. $12. 
Hungarian. Yields a heavy growth of excel- 
lent hay. Can be sown as late as July. 
100 Ibs. $14. 
Japanese. Grows 6 feet high and yields 10 
tons of green fodder per acre. 100 Ibs. $15. 


Grasses in Separate Varieties, continued 
Red or Creeping Fescue (European; 
Festuca rubra). For lawns and sandy soils. 
Sow 35 pounds per acre. 5 Ibs. $4.50; 100 
Ibs. $85. 
Rhode Island Bent (Agrostis tenuis). One 
of the best grasses for lawns. Very scarce. 
5 Ibs. $6; 100 Ibs. $110. 
Sheep Fescue (Festuca tenuifolia ovina). 
A valuable variety for the rough. 5 Ibs. 
$4.50; 100 Ibs. $85. 
Sudan Grass. Very valuable grass for hay, 
especially in sections subject to drought; 
ee 4 to 9 feet high. 5 Ibs. $1; 100 Ibs. 
Timothy (Phleum pratense). If used alone, 
sow 30 pounds to the acre. 5 Ibs. $1; 100 
Ibs. $16. 
Wood Meadow Grass (Poa _ nemoralis). 
A desirable grass for shady places. 5 Ibs. $8; 
100 Ibs. $140 
White Clover for Lawns 
Specially selected seed of high purity. Lb. $1.25; 
5 Ibs. $6; 100 lbs. $100. 
Meadow and Pasture Mixtures 
Our Mixtures are compounded with the 
object of securing a good stand from early 
spring until the setting in of winter. 
We are prepared to make special formulas 
to meet certain specified conditions. 
Meadow Grass Mixtures 
BOTH HAY AND PASTURE} 
No. 1. For light soils. 20 Ibs. 100 Ibs. 
100 Ibs. to the acre. $8 50 $40 00 
No. 2. For heavy soils. 
90 Ibs. to the acre. 10 50 45 00 
No. 3. For woodland. 
100 Ibs. to the acre. 10 50 45 00 
Farm and Field Seeds 
Wheat 
Sow 11, bushels of seed to the acre 
Honor. The best variety for fall or wimter 
sowing. Very hardy and prolific. Bus. 
Marquis. Spring Wheat. Dakota type. 
Bus. 
Buckwheat 
Sow 1 bushel (48 lbs.) of seed to the acre 
Japanese. Early and productive, yielding 
almost double that of the other varieties. 
100 Ibs. $8. 
Silverhull. Light gray grain. 100 Ibs. $9. 
Rye 
For ee sow I bushel (56 lbs.) of seed to the acre; 
for forage or soiling 11 bushels 
Winter. An improved form of Russian Rye. 
Very heavy cropper, producing 25 to 45 
bushels to the acre. Bus. $3; 5 bus. $14. 
Spring. This is excellent for catch-crop, and 
produces an abundance of green feed in 
the summer season. Bus. $4; 5 bus. $18. 
WILLIAM M. HUNT & CO., Inc., NEW YORK 4 


PERMANENT PASTURE MIXTURES 
No. 4. For light soils. 20 Ibs. 100 Ibs. 
80 Ibs. to the acre. $7 50 $35 00 
No. 5. For heavy, wet soils. 
80 Ibs. to the acre. 11 00 50 00 
No. 6. For woodland. 
90 Ibs. to the acre. 12 00 55 00 
FOR HAY ONLY 
No. 7. Mixture. 
40 Ibs. to the acre. 5 00 22 00 
Clovers 
Alfalfa (Lucerne). Requires a deep, rich 
soil, and in such will produce several large 
crops every season. Sow 20 to 25 pounds 
per acre. 5 Ibs. $3; 100 Ibs. $55. 
Alfalfa, Grimm’s. Certified. Very hardy 
and productive; thrives well on hardpan 
soils, and better suited to wet soils than 
other Alfalfas. In 60-Ib. (bus.) sealed 
bags, $45. 
Alsike Clover. Resembles in growth, 
duration, etc., the Red Clover; thrives 
well in cold, wet, and stiff soils. Sow 10 
pounds per acre if used alone. 5 Ibs. $4; 
100 Ibs. $50 
Crimson or Scarlet (Trifolium incarnatum) . 
An annual variety for feeding green and 
for hay. Sow 15 to 20 pounds per acre. 
5 Ibs. $1.75; 100 Ibs. $30. 
Large Red or Pea Vine Clover (Trifolium 
pratense perenne). The English Cow Grass 
for plowing under. Sow 15 pounds per 
acre. 5 Ibs. $2.50; 100 Ibs. $47. 
Medium Red Clover (Trifolium pratense). 
Considered most nutritious of all species; 
best in moist locations. Sow im spring or 
fall, a pounds per acre. 5 Ibs. $2.75; 100 
Ibs. $49. 
Sweet Clover, Bokhara (Melilotus alba). 
Especially suitable for bees; also used as 
a fertilizer. 5 Ibs. $1.25; 100 Ibs. $20. 
White Clover (Trifolium repens). Valuable 
for lawns. Sow in spring at the rate of 8 
pounds per acre; or when used with other 
grasses, half that amount. Lb. S125 505 
Ibs. $6; 100 Ibs. $100 
Grass and Clover Seed prices are subject to 
market changes 
Miscellaneous Farm Seeds 
BARLEY, Alpha. Two-rowed; early; hardy 
and prolific. Two bushels will sow one 
acre. Bus. $3.50. 
COWPEAS, New Era. Valuable in this 
latitude as a fodder plant. Its chief value 
Is as a green crop to plow under. Bus. $9 
PEAS, Canada Field. Fine ensilage. If sown 
with oats, sow about 11% bushels to the 
acre; in drills, 2 to 3 bushels. Bus. $8 
SOJA BEAN, Mammoth Yellow. Splen- 
did as ensilage or green fodder. Bus. $6. 
RAPE, Dwarf Essex. (English.) For sheep 
pasture and also for soiling. 100 Ibs. $19. 
SUNFLOWER. May be grown to advantage 
on waste ground. An excellent and cheap 
food for fowls. Sow 5 pounds to the acre. 
100 Ibs. $17. 
VETCHES 
Spring Vetches or Tares (Vicia sativa). 
Valuable for soiling or for green manur- 
ing. 2 to 3 bushels to acre, broadcast, or 
1 to 2 bushels in drills. 100 Ibs. $18. 
Winter Vetches or Tares (Vicia villosa). 
For fall sowing, use 1 bushel of the seed 
per acre with 1 bushel of rye. 100 Ibs. $24. 
All Farm Seeds subject to market changes 
GRASS AND CLOVER SEEDS 
