


‘INOCULATE 
SEEDWitay 
This is an excellent inoculating material and 
a@ product you can absolutely rely upon.’ Will 
produce heavy nodule clusters on roots. 
Hasy to apply. 
POSTPAID PRICES 
For all Clovers and Alfalfa 
% bu. 80c; 1 bu. 50c; 2% bu. $1.00. 
Lespedeza 

NDERFUL 
LOING 


















Low agric 
ore Soy Beans. f ou 
to Grer-production and 198 ct leave Soy et 
r cotton, and o n w pro ‘years ag 
the few cash crops you C& ctor than a few your. due 






















NA re ster, 
Bean acreage a et ues ao increase meh jaFrood for 50 lbs. 35c; 100 Ibs. 50e: 
et the deman need found for Soy facturing paints, Soy and Velvet Beans, also Cowpeas, 
Peanuts and Crotalaria 
120 lbs: 30c; 5 bu. 55e; 
25 bu. $2.50; a0 Py. (6—5 bu. cans) 
to the unlimited 
livestock and: 
humanias, sOaD rubber substitutes, ana other products. 
i ’ pie 
; housan at applies. 
: dios and a t oreign SUPP" 
ile accessories, Tadio’ 205, Wve cut o me many times to 
Wars in ; 
American pr duction m ist be increas 
: : u 
atch up th the commercial demand. 
Cc wit 
MAM oth Yellow 
3.) _ A_Mamment Station. 
704 aetna by the DELS Eras, ieted, St, he 
iloxl, i of a 
i st producing 50 bushels. P 
Tt’s the highes d above » ng, 
station, having ronan, J ioxi for hay, 8raZin oO any 
is much pera soil building. 
Be tant 



«2D. 
- When. ordering..state kind of seeds 
NOTE: wanted for inoculation. 
















































&) 708 (Matures in 165 days.) 
A rank-growing late variety. 
It takes longer than some to 
mature its grain but makes a whale 
of a plant. Planted in rows with corn 
for silage it usually grows 6 feet high. For grazing, 
for hogging down with corn, and for soiling, it is un- 
excelled. It is an erect, upstanding plant having no 
runners. This means something to the orchardist who 
wants a cover-crop to coyer the. ground only. Makes 
good hay if planted late in 3-foot rows, and. thick 
enough in the drill to subdue .its natural growth. 
It’s a great hog and cattle Bean. Best results when 
planted in rows from 3 to.5 feet wide.. Yields 
from 10 to 15 -tonS of green forage per acre. 
Will stand a lot of wet and a lot. of drought.. 
Does well on stiff, heavy soils, and on the light 
gandy soils. One bushel plants 1% to 2 
acres. Lb. 20c;2 lbs. 35c; 5 lbs. 75¢. 
Write for larger quantity prices. 










709 (Matures in 170 days.) Them 
main-crop hay and ONG ey ese ava) Sled 
Compared with cowpeas, one-fourth the 
amount of seed .will produce double the 
amount of hay. Compared to velvet beans, it 
makes a better cover-crop, does not over- 
run trees or fences, and can be cut for hay if 
wanted. There is no legume that will put as 
much humus and nitrogen combined into the 
soil. Produces 4 to 6 tons of dry hay, or 10 
to 15 tons of green forage per acre, a - 
passes alfalfa in facdevatae. Wh erooa 
for seed, you can expect 15 to 20 bushels per 
acre. Grows over a long period and is seldom 
affected by wet or dry weather. Less liable 
to shatter than other sorts. It cures quickly, 
and for hay and grain combined it has no 
equal. Plant in rows 2% to 8 feet apart, 4 to 
8 inches apart in drill. A bushel will plant 
3 to 4 acres solid, or from 6 to 8 acres in 
corn middles. Lb. 20c; 2 Ibs. 35c; 5 Ibs. 
75c. Write for larger quantity prices. 
















711 (Matures in 140 
days.) The plant’s many 
slender, leafy branches make it unexcelled as 8 
high-quality hay. _In a six-year test it averaged 
1% to 2 tons to the acre. Yields 15 to 20 bushels 
of seed per acre. It is early enough to be har- 
vested in warm weather—usually the latter part of 
September—and late enough to be productive. In 
our latitude can be planted up to August 1. 
Distinctly a-hay and land-improving Bean. 
Immune to roof-knot. One bushel plants 
6. to 8 acres. Lb. 20c; 2 Ibs. 35c;3 
5 lbs. 75c. Write for 
larger quantity 
prices. 
06 Matures in 170 days. A new type that is widely 
Of successfully grown in Louisiana. The leaves and 
stems are large and .coarse and the plant is a semi-viny, 
bushy type. The seeds are dull black and slightly larger 
than the O-too-tans. It produced 25 to 30 bushels. of 
seed per acre. Yields over: 3 tons of cured hay per acre. 
Louisiana planters prefer it to the O-too-tans because the 
Soy Bean ‘caterpillars show a preference for 0-00 
when both are grown in the same field. One bee el 
plants 2% to-3 acres in rows 2% to 3 feet apart, to 
8 inches apart in drill. Lb. 20¢; 2 Ibs. 30c; 5 lbs. 65c. 
i r quantity prices. 
Write for jeulate all Soy Beans with NITRAGIN. 










































Farm and Field Seeds 
