Plant STOCK or COWPEAS 
For Hay and Soil Improvement! 

COWPEAS ARE FINE 
FOR SOIL IMPROVEMENT 
WHEN AND HOW TO SEED 
Sow one to two bushels per acre broad- 
cast. Two to three pecks in drills. When 
sown with soy beans, kaffir corn, sorghum 
and sudan grass sow half a bushel soy 
beans or one peck kaffir corn or sorghum or 
10 pounds. sudan grass with one bushel 
cow peas to the acre. 
CLAY. (110 days.) The seeds are buff colored, 
medium size, the plant is large, vigorous 
growing and of vining or running habit, 
pods are large and yellowish. The Clay 
pea is used mostly for soil improving or 
green manuring. 
Postpaid, pt., 35c; qt., 55c; 
gal., $1.75. 
RED RIPPER. (110 days.) Seeds are red, it is 
a vigorous growing vining pea. Like the 
Clay or Black, makes fine yield of long 
vines. Shy seeder, very popular where 
known. Planted mostly for soil improving 
and in mixtures for hay. 
Postpaid, pt., 35c: qt., 55c; 
gal., $1.75. 
NEW ERA. (80 days.) The seeds have a blue 
cast with many black specks—an early ma- 
turing upright growing variety, very prolific 
producer of peas, small vines cure quickly, 
splendid for hay. Seeds are smaller than 
Whippoorwill and it does not require as 
many to plant an acre. 
Postpaid, pt., 35c; qt., 55c; 
gal., $1.75. 
BLACK. (120 days.) Seeds jet black, viny or 
running, making a fine growth of vines and 
leaves—shy seeder, splendid land improver; 
most valuable as a forage crop; used also 
as a general purpose pea. If broadcast for 
hay mix some upright-qrowing pea with 
them to hold vines off the ground for cut- 
a. There is also a bush variety Black 
ed. 
Postpaid, pt., 35c: qt, 55c; 
gal., $1.75. 
MIXED PEAS. (Hay 90 days.) For hay and 
soil improving, our mixtures consist of up- 
right and vining peas—the upright growing 
peas, such as Whippoorwill or New Era 
(when used) hold the vining or running peas 
such as Black, Clay and Red Rippers off 
the ground, which makes it much easier to 
cut for hay. 
Postpaid, pt., 30c; qt., ‘50c; Y gal., 85c; 
gal., $1.50. 
1% gal., 95c; 
Yn gal., 95c; 
YY gal., 95c; 
Y% gal., 95c; 
DWARF SHELL OR FIELD BEANS 
Culture—Do not plant until the middle of June. Plant in rows 2 to 3 feet apart, spacing 
the seed 2 to 3 inches apart, and cover 1 to 2 inches deep. 
One lb. for 100 feet; 60 to 75 lbs. 
per acre. Plants erect, semi-bush type. For best results inoculate seed with nitrogen. 
GREAT NORTHERN. (90-100 days.) The stand- 
ard dry shell bean, used for baking and 
soup. Vine large, slender, and productive. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; VY Ib., 25ce; lb., 45c; 
2 lbs., 75c; 5 lbs., $1.60; 10 lbs., $3.00. 
PINTO. (100-110 days.) A standard shell bean, 
grows well in the South. Vine 22 feet, 
vigorous and productive. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; ¥% 1b., 25c; Ib., 45c; 
2 lbs., 75c; 5 lbs., $1.60; 10 lbs., $3.00. 
VELVET BEANS 
90-Day or Early Speckled 
It is very prolific and can be planted later 
than other serts on account of its early ma- 
turity. Velvet Beans make a greater growth 
of vines and beans than any other known 
forage plant in the same length of time, there- 
fore, one of the best soil building legumes. 
Excellent for grazing off green and cattle will 
fatten on them even after frost has killed 
vines. 
Postpaid, pt., 35c; qt., 55c; Y2 gal., 95c; 
gal., $1.75. 
INOCULATE THE SEED BY ALL MEANS 
Field tests have shown that better crops 
are harvested when Legume seeds are 
inoculated even when planted on fields 
where inoculated seeds of the same Le- 
gume crops had grown the previous year.. 
Use NITRAGIN, the oldest and most widely 
used inoculator in America. 
Small size (inoculates up to 120 lbs. of 
seed), postpaid, each, 30c. 

See Green Ink List « 
RED KIDNEY. (90-100 days.) One of the finest 
of all beans for baking. Very productive. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; Y2 Ib., 30c; Ib., 50c; 
2 Ibs., 85c; 5 lbs., $1.85; 10 lbs., $3.50. 
WHITE NAVY. (90-100 days.) This small shell 
bean will outyield all others. Excellent for 
use as baked beans. Plant large, spreading, 
with many runners. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; % Ib., 25c; Ib., 45c¢; 
2 lbs., 75c; 5 lbs., $1.60; 10 lbs., $3.00. 
MUNG BEANS 
Green Seeded 
There has developed an enormous demand 
for Mung Beans:for commercial sprouting and 
canning. Heretofore the supply came from 
China and other Asiatic countries. The bean 
sprouts are used particularly by Chinese 
restaurants for making chop suey and other 
Chinese dishes. It is a legume used to some 
extent as a forage, pasture and soil building 
crop. Grows well on any type of soil, but 
best suited to warm sandy loams. They are 
very hardy and disease resistant. The seed 
are small and it takes 5 to 8 pounds to drill 
an acre in 3-foot rows. Broadcast, 25 to 35 
pounds an acre. Beans mature in 90 to 100 
days, depending on the season. 
Postpaid, pt., 50c; qt., 85c; Y2 gal., $1.50; 
gal., $2.75. 
DEMAND 
That your seed dealer furnish you an 
authentic germination and purity test 
on all field seeds. If he can’t do it, 
don’t buy them. 


THE WHIPPOORWILL. (90 days.) Also known 
as speckled. The seeds are buff, brown or 
grey, depending on type, and are speckled; 
they are spoken of as bush peas, but will 
make vines when planted on rich land; on 
poor soil they produce few vines and many 
peas. The plants grow upright, two to five 
feet tall—half bushy or semi-erect. The 
Whippoorwill is the most popular general 
purpose stock pea for either seed or hay. 
Postpaid, pt., 35c; qt. 55c; V2 gal., 95c; 
gal., $1.75. 
For Table Use! 
WHITE SUGAR CROWDER (Semi-Dwarf.) Very 
sweet. Considered best of the Crowders for 
home or market. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c: Y2 Ib., 35c; lb., 60c; 2 
Ibs., $1.00. 
BROWN SUGAR CROWDER (Semi-Dwarf). Will 
bunch on poor ground, make some vine on 
good soil, sometimes larger than the White 
or Cream Crowder; very prolific. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; 4 Ib., 35c; lb., 60c; 2 
Ibs., $1.00. ° 
SMALL CREAM CROWDER (Bunch). Also called 
Six Weeks or Two Crop. While we do not 
considér it superior to large Sugar Crowder, 
it is equally as good and its earliness 
makes it more desirable for early market. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; ¥ Ib., 35c; Ib., 60c; 2 
Ibs., $1.00. 
LADY or GALLIVANT (Running). There are 
more of these peas sold on the southern 
markets than any other of the small white 
peas. Fine flavor. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; 1% Ib., 35ce; lb., 60c; 2 
Ibs., $1.00. 
LARGE WHITE BLACKEYE (Running). Main 
crop pea, late maturing. Long pods well 
filled; good producers. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; 2 Ilb., 30c;: Ib., 50c; 2 
Ibs., 85c. 
RICE or CREAM (Semi-Dwarf). Early. Similar 
: Gallivant or Lady, but larger, very pop- 
ular. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10c; Y% lb., 35c; lb., 60c; 2 
lbs., $1.00. 
CALICO (Running). White pea with red 
splotches, known in some sections as Coat 
and Jacket, Joseph Coat and Wild Goose. 
Peas of good flavor and not as strong as 
most dark peas. 
Postpaid, pkt., 10cz 12 Ib., 35c; lb., 60c; 2 
Ibs., $1.00. 
WHITE BROWNEYE PURPLE HULL (Semi- 
Dwarf). Produces green peas of good qual- 
ity. Very prolific with well-filled pods. 
Postpaid, pkt., l0c; 1% lb., 35c; lb., 60c; 2 
Ibs., $1.00. : 

MUNG BEANS 
ee RUSSELL-HECKLE 
