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We Have Some Good Hybrids For Feeding 
“I have seen several fields of your Kelly hybrids at Meadow Grove, Nebraska, 50 
_ miles southeast of here. This corn is yielding fine and is growing in popularity fast.” 
—HENRY NAGEL, ORCHARD, NEBRASKA. 
CLIPPER MILLS 
We are Illinois distributors for Clipper Mills and all farm size mills are sold to dealers 
through us. A good fanning mill will pay for itself in a short time, by being able to clean 
up small lots of seed which oftentimes is lost or wasted. 
Instead of sowing Soy Beans or Cow Peas with a part of 
them split you can clean these splits out and sell them for 
almost as much as the whole bean, and a bean which is split 
is worth no more after being seeded than fertilizer. 
Farms are being so fouled up with weeds that every farmer 
should have one of these mills. Weeds cause the farmer the 
greatest loss of anything. From our thirty-five years in the 
seed business we have found the Clipper Mill to be the best 
mill made. Not only does the best work but will last, for 
regular farm use, an average life time. We not only recom- 
mend and sell Clipper Mills but use five of the largest mills 
in our cleaning plants. 
No. 1-B complete with twelve sieves and drive pulley for 
use of gasoline engine or motor, capacity of Clover about 10 
bushels of clover seed per hour, $47.50. 
No. 2-B, which is a much better buy, having about a 40% greater capacity, complete 
with twelve sieves and drive pulley, $55.00. 

We will furnish you a good % H.P. Emerson motor which will operate either of these 
mills for only $9.50. 
If you have a dealer in your town who handles Clipper Mills, buy from him, or have 
a order a Clipper Mill for you. If you have no dealer in your town who handles Clipper 
ills, write us. . 
KELLY’S INBREDS 
We have more than 100 inbreds of our own 
production some of which are still in the experi- 
mental stage. These inbreds have cost us many, 
thousands of dollars. Some have proven to be 
very valuable, but most of them in time will be 
discarded. If a grower produces three or four 
good inbreds in a lifetime out of thousands and 
thousands of inbreds, he has done good work. 

A picture of a 
field of K874 
taken on Thanks- 
giving day after 
a fall of 17 inches 
of rain in forty 
days and several 
strong winds. 
K374 cannot be 
excelled for yields 
or standability. 
Try it and be 
convinced. 

