Uncle Sam Asks for MORE FLAX 
Today, flax holds a position of im- 
portance in the war program. Every- 
thing from gunstocks to battleships 
requires finishes — paints, varnishes, 
and the like. Vast quantities are 
also necessary for commercial pur- 
poses. 
Plant BISON Flax — the highest 
yielding rust and wilt resistant va- 
riety for a cash crop. 
1 bu. $3.40; 5 bu. $16.50; 10 bu. $32.00 
including bags 
Flax is the very best nurse crop for 
alfalfa and grass seed. Plant 1/3 to 
1% bu. per acre. 
SPRING WHEAT 
RUBY 
Earliest maturing, highest protein, 
smooth bearded spring wheat. Higher 
protein brings more money per 
bushel. Order at once for early plant- Bison Flax 
ing. 

1 bu. $1.55; 5 bu. $7.50; 10 bu. $14.50 
NEW LOW-ACID CANE 
A friend from Nebraska writes, ‘‘My cane is so heavy, that it is almost im- 
possible to cut it.’’ 
Produces a mass of sweet, rich, succulent forage, 
more nutritious than corn silage. Cattle and sheep 
eat it right to the very root. 
A new strain of Sorghum low in prussic acid; 
lessens danger of cattle and sheep poisoning. 
The way the cattle and sheep go after it proves 
that they relish this cane, and the gains they are 
making on it go to prove that it has lots of feed 
value, too. 
Our customers in Indiana and in Ohio plant it for 
bigger yields for silage. 
It yields 25 to 50 per cent more than other 
varieties of cane. 
10 Ibs. 80c; 25 Ibs. $1.40; 50 Ibs. $2.25; 100 Ibs. $4.00, 
bags included 
DAKOTA BLACK AMBER CANE 
The earliest and best cane for the North. Grows 
from 5 to 7 feet tall and matures in 90 days. 
Stalks very sweet, slender and leafy. 
“Sam,” himself, in a field of 10 Ibs. 55c¢; 50 Ibs. $1.70; 100 Ibs. $3.00 
Low Acid CANE six weeks 
after planting S , XTY-D AY M : LO 
Grows the size of wheat and can be harvested with a binder, header or com- 
bine. It has yielded nearly 100 bushels of grain per acre. In dry years when 
wheat made two to four bushels this Sixty-day Milo made 35 to 40 bushels 
grain per acre. Distinctly superior to corn or barley in yield. Plant 6 to 8 
pounds per acre in rows, using a cane plate and cultivate. A cattle and sheep 
feed for the western farmer. 
10 Ibs. 80c; 25 Ibs. $1.40; 50 Ibs. $2.25; 100 Ibs. $4.00 
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