SOY BEANS 
A. K. SOY BEANS 
Plants erect and fairly bushy with medium sized stems and branches. Flowers 
are both white and purple, pods range from gray to brown. Seeds of medium 
size, straw-yellow in color. Matures in from 100 to 120 days. Good for seed 
and hay. 
ILLINI 
A selection from the A. K., but is an earlier variety. Seed is more rounded. 
Very good for either seed or forage. 
DUNFIELD 
An early maturing yellow-seeded variety that is especially well adapted to the 
northern half of the soybean producing area. Good hay and grain yield. 
VIRGINIA 
Mainly a hay variety. 
seeds medium small, flat, olive brown in color. 
HONGKONG 
A yellow-seeded variety of Soybeans that produces a good yield of both hay 
and grain. It is a medium maturity variety, but ripens more uniformly than 
the A. K., otherwise they are about the same. 
MILLET 

SOW 60 TO 90 POUNDS PER ACRE 
WHITE WONDER MILLET. The heads of this 
variety will run from 8 to 18 inches and a sin- 
gle head will have as many as 15,000 seeds. 
Foliage is very heavy. 
SIBERIAN MILLET. Early, hardy, withstands 
drought. 
VICTORY MILLET. Enormous heads, heavy 
yield of seed and fodder. 

MISCELLANEOUS FIELD SEEDS 
FLAX SEED. Largely grown in Kansas for 
seed. Sow one-half to three-quarters bushels to 
the acre. 
CANARY SEED. As easily grown as wheat. 
Requires similar culture, 20 to 30 pounds per 
acre. 
CASTOR BEANS. Should be planted in rows 
so that they can be cultivated. One bushel to 
15 acres. 
DWARF ESSEX RAPE. Excellent pasture for 
cattle, sheep, hogs.and chickens. Endures cold 
weather and lasts after ordinary pasture is 
gone. 
BARLEY—SIX-ROWED. Sown in the spring, 
and can be grown farther north than any other 
grain. Sow 2 to 2% bushels per acre. 
Page Thirty-eight 
Very good for poor soils. Flowers purple, pods brown, 
MISCELLANEOUS 
FIELD SEEDS 
MAMMOTH RUSSIAN SUNFLOWER. Single heads measure 15 to 
20 inches in diameter and contain an immense amount of seed. The 
best egg-producing food known for poultry, and can be raised 
cheaper than corn. Three pounds of seed will plant an acre. 
SAND VETCH—(Vicia Villosa). Sometimes called Hairy Vetch or 
Winter Vetch. Valuable for forage and fertilizing purposes. Makes 
good hay, ensilage and pasture, and the yield of green fodder is 
immense. 
KANOTA OATS—(Kansas Fulghum). Especially valuable for its 
earliness and ability to yield large crops. 
LARGE KERNEL BUCKWHEAT. It is early and very productive, 
with kernels twice the size of any other variety. 

SOY BEANS 
FIELD PEAS. Field Peas deserve more general cultivation. They 
are equal to corn in fattening hogs and are ready for feed several 
weeks earlier. White seeded. 
FIELD BEANS—WHITE NAVY. Standard variety of white beans. 
Medium size. Sow 30 pounds to the acre. For table use. 
Peanuts 
Very popular for dry 
land farming and are 
now grown as_ far 
north as Iowa with 
success. Good feed 
for forcing cows to a 
high yield of milk and 
for rapidly fattening 
cattle and hogs, espe- 
cially when combined 
with Milo. A peck and 
a half of shelled pea- 
nuts will plant an 
acre. 
WHITE JUMBO. 
Standard variety for 
roasting. Three times 
as large as the Span- 
ish. : 
SPANISH. Very early, 
pods small! but re 
markably well filled, 
and yield is very large. 
TENNESSEE RED. 
Best yielder. Pods con- 
tain four or five nuts. 

Inoculated Peanuts Make a Larger Yield. 
