Farm and Field Seeds 
BEANS 
Sow % to % bushels to the acre. 
Soja Bean, Early Black Wilson. Val- 
uable as a forage crop and for fertilizing the 
Thrives well in hot and dry weather. 
soil. 

BARLEY 
‘ 48 lbs. to the bushel, 2 bushels to the acre. 
Oderbrucker. A six-rowed bearded variety. 
BEET, MANGEL-WURZEL 
Sow 6 to 8 pounds to acre. 
Champion Yellow Globe. Bright or- 
ange color; globe-shaped and of excellent 
quality. Lb., $2.50. 
Golden Tankard. An enormous yielder 
per acre. Flesh deep yellow. Lb., $2.50. 
Mammoth Long Red. The largest and 
heaviest cropper of all the Mangels. Lb., 
$2.50. 
BUCKWHEAT 
48 lbs. to the bushel. Sow 1 bushel to the acre. 
Japanese. Earliest and most productive of 
the Buckwheats. 
FIELD CORN 
8 quarts will plant 1 acre in hills; 3 bushels 
will sow 1 acre broadcast. 
FLINT VARIETY 
Early Eight-Rowed Canada. Early 
Flint Corn with medium large ears, 12 to 14 
inches long, of deep yellow kernels. Stalks 
7 to 8 ft. high. 
DENT VARIETIES 
Improved Leaming. Large ears, deep 
grained and of deep orange color. 
Lancaster County Sure Crop. A good 
variety for crib or silo. Long ears with deep 
yellow grains. 
FODDER AND ENSILAGE 
VARIETIES 
Golden Eureka. The plants grow 12 to 15 
feet high. Valuable for ensilage or as a yellow 
Dent Corn. 
Southern Horse Tooth. A large, leafy 
grower, especially valuable for ensilage. 
Sweet Fodder. Succulent and nutritious 
for feeding green. 
MILLET 
Golden. Very large crop, though not so early 
as Hungarian. Grows 3 to 5 ft. high. Sow 1 
bushel to the acre. 48 lbs. to the bushel. 
Hungarian. A favorite summer forage crop. 
ow in June. Withstands heat and drought 
well. Plant about 3 pecks to 1 bushel per acre. 
48 lbs. to the bushel. 
Japanese. Grows very tall, 6 to 7 feet; makes 
valuable forage. Sow about 15 lbs. per acre. 
32 lbs. to the bushel. 
OATS 
Sow 2 to 3 bus. to the acre. 32 lbs. to the bu. 
Storm King. The heads measure from 8 to 
10 inches and the kernels are of immense size, 
thick, plump and heavy. It is very early, has 
great length of straw. 
Canada Cluster. 
heavy cropper. 
ALL ABOVE MARKET PRICE 
A true side Oat and 
PEAS 
Canada Field. Valuable for cattle feeding 
and ensilage. Sow broadcast in the spring at 
the rate of two bushels to the acre. 
Cow Peas, Whip-poor-will. A very 
early maturing variety of upright or bush 
growth. Sow 2 bushels per acre. 60 lbs. per 
bushel. 
RAPE 
Dwarf Essex. Fine for sheep pasture; val- 
uable as a soil enricher. Plant in June or 
July in drills at the rate of 3 lbs. per acre, 
broadcast 5 lbs. per acre. Lb., 60c; 100 lbs., 
$35.00. 
Re 
For grain, 1 bushel to the acre; for foliage or 
soiling, 1% bushels. 56 lbs. to the bushel. 
Giant Winter. Popular as a cover crop. 
If allowed to mature will produce a heavy 
crop of grain, and a fine quantity of straw if 
cut about July Ist. 
SUNFLOWER 
Mammoth Russian. Very productive 
large heads with large seeds. Valuable for 
poultry. 5 lbs. will plant 1 acre. 
VETCHES, or TARES 
Spring Vetches (Vicia sativa). Highly val- 
uable for soiling or for green manuring. 
Sometimes grown with oats for mowing and 
feeding to stock. Use 40 to 60 lbs. to the 
acre. 
Winter Vetches (Vicia villosa). Also called 
Sand Vetch, or Hairy Vetch. Recommended 
for fall sowing with rye. A valuable food for 
stock in early spring. Use 30 to 50 lbs. per 
acre. 
WHEAT 
The seed Wheat we offer is grown in Pennsyl- 
vania by a very reliable grower, especially for 
seed purposes. Sow 1% bushels to the acre. 
Marquis Spring. A very early beardless 
Wheat, producing larger yields than any other 
kind. Sow early, about 2% bushels per acre. 
Market price. 
Leap’s Prolific. A very hardy, beardless 
white chaff and dark amber grain. Market 
price. 


Marshall's Farm and Field Seeds 
[44] 
W. E. MARSHALL & CO. 
