

A Fine Wisconsin Sweet Clover 
Grundy County White Blossom 
Grundy County Sweet Clover has several 
outstanding advantages. First, it is three 
weeks earlier than the common sweet clover. 
Thus the seed ripens ahead of most weeds. 
Second, while it grows to a good height and 
makes a good hay crop it is not as tall as 
the common and is much more easily han- 
dled. Third, it is finer and more leafy than 
the common and branches thickly about a 
foot above the ground, Fourth, it yields more 
seed than the common, several farms in 
Grundy County producing as high as 8 to 
15 bushels per acre. 
Grundy County Sweet Clover is perhaps 
more like Alfalfa than Sweet Clover. It 
grows like alfalfa only faster and the hay 
is like alfalfa hay so that it is 
most a ‘‘White Blossom Alfalfa.’’ 
Prices, Old Gold Brand: By mail, 1 Ib., 
40c; 5 lbs., $1.75, postpaid. By freight or 
express f.o.b, Madison: Pk., $3.20; bu., 
$11.80; 3 bus. at $11.75 per bu. 
in fact al- 


corn, 
pact. 
Kaffir. 
as Kaffir. 

White Kaffir Corn. 
Field of Waconia Orange Sorghum Cane Grown in the North. 
Farmers should grow more fodder cane. 
tons of green feed per acre. 
ORANGE FODDER CANE 
Like the Waconia Orange Cane, but southern grown. 
Prices, by mail: Lb., 30c; 5 lbs., $1.25, postpaid. By freight or ex- 
press f. 0. b. Madison: 10 lbs., $1.40; 100 lIbs., $10.00. 
AMBER FODDER CANE 
Makes a wonderful fodder crop, rich in sugar. 
Cane but southern grown for fodder purposes. 
Prices, by mail: Lb., 30c; 5 Ibs., $1.25, postpaid. By freight or express 
f. o. b. Madison: 10 lbs., $1.40; 100 Ibs., $10.00. 
Sorgo 
A cross between White Kaffir Corn and Sourless Cane. 
height of seven to ten feet and require from 120 to 130 days to mature. 
Has a sturdy leaf stalk, abundantly juicy and sweet. 
Branches filled with white seeds. 
Excellent for silage. 
Prices, by mail: 
A variety of sorghum. 


NITRAGIN 
on ' 
Sweet Clover & 
The : 
wonderful t 
nodules enrich | 
the soil and 
insure a big | 
crop. 
OLDS’ 

Atlas 
ilo 
SWEET 
Ideal for silage either alone or drilled with 
é t Produces a large tonnage of succulent feed. 
Prices, by mail: Lb., 25c; 5 lbs., $1.00, postpaid, By freight or express 
f. o. b. Madison: 10 lbs., $1.25; 100 Ibs., $8.50. 
White Kaffir Corn 
Makes the best kind of fodder for cattle or horses. 
poultry. Plant fifteen pounds an acre in rows, 50 pounds broadeast. 
Lb., 30c; 5 Ibs., $1.25, postpaid. By freight or ex- 
press f. 0 b. Madison: 10 lbs., $1.30; 100 lbs., $9.00. 
Maize 
I Grows very large, 8 to 10 feet high, with 
seed heads of great size, often weighing % of a pound each, 
é Excellent for poultry. 
Prices, by mail: Lb., 25c; 5 lbs., $1.00, postpaid. By freight or ex- 
press f. 0. b, Madison: 10 lbs., $1.25; 100 lbs., $8.50. 
=e 0e 
CLOVERS 
(The Great Soil Builder and Hay Crop.) 
Sweet Clover should be planted for 3 reasons: 
First—A Great Pasture Crop. When the ordinary blue grass pastures 
dry up in midsummer, Sweet Clover keeps right on growing and fur- 
nishes wonderful pasture right through the drouth period. . 
Cows on Sweet Clover produce a splendid flow of milk. It will gen- 
erally pasture a thousand-pound cow per acre for a period of about 4 
months. . 
Second—Wonderful Soil Builder. Sweet Clover is an excellent crop 
for building up worn-out soils. It grows faster than red clover or 
alfalfa and larger and the roots penetrate deeper into the soil. : 
. Third—A Valuable Hay Crop. While not quite equal to Alfalfa it 
makes good hay if cut at the right time and cattle will eat it. The 
Grundy County and the Albotrea are the best for hay. ; 
CULTURE—Sweet Clover is best sown in the spring with one bushel 
of extra early oats or barley per acre aS nurse crop. It can also be sown 
successfully in June or July without a nurse crop or im corn at the last 
cultivation. Fifteen Pounds of Seed per Acre is usually sufficient 
—a little less for Grundy County as the seed is smaller. Inoculate the 
seed before sowing with Nitragin or Nod-O-Gen. Use lime if your soil 
is sour, Most any well-drained soil is all right for Sweet Clover. ; 
Note: Our Old Gold Brand Sweet Clover is Premium seed testing 
99.25 or better purity. 
Tall White Blossom Sweet Clover 
The best probably for pasture and for soil building and the most 
la ly sown for all purposes. : 
pPaices Old Gold Brand: By mail, 1 lb., 40c; 5 lbs., $1.75, postpaid. 
By freight or express f.o.b. Madison: Pk., $3.15; bu. (60 lbs.), $11.50; 
3 bus. at $11.40 per bu. 
Yellow Blossom Sweet Clover 
This is the large strain of Yellow Sweet Clover, biennial the same as 
the Tall White. Increasing in popularity. Some say it is better for 
pasture than the White because it stays green longer. é 
Prices, Old Gold Brand: By mail, 1 1b., 40c; 5 Ibs., $1.75, postpaid. 
By freight or express f.o.b. Madison: Pk., $3.15; bu., $11.50; 3 bus. at 
$11.40 per bu. 
Hubam (The Annual Sweet Clover.) 
Produces a full crop of both hay and seed all in one year. Very de- 
sirable for a honey crop because it continues to blossom all summer 
long. : 
Prices, Old Gold Brand: By mail, 1 lb., 45c; 5 Ibs., $2.00, postpaid. 
By freight or express f.o.b. Madison: Pk., $4.00; bu., $15.10; 3 bus. at 
$15.00 per bu. 
CANES 
Sow 4 to 8 pounds of seed to the acre for sorghum and 15 to 25 pounds for fodder. 
Sorghum Canes 
ROX ORANGE. A new variety of sweet sorghum that has been 
bred to overcome some of the disadvantages of Early Black Amber. It 
is a medium early maturing kind, originated by the Wisconsin College 
of Agriculture Experiment Station. While developed for a syrup sor- 
ghum, it is also found the best variety for silage. Its advantages over 
the Early Amber are its thicker stalk, easier to strip, easier to thresh, 
stands up better without lodging and will produce a higher yield of 
syrup, averaging about 80 gallons of syrup per acre. Most seasons 
will produce ripe seed in Central and Southern Wisconsin, Prices: By 
mail, lb., 35c; 5 Ibs., $1.50. By freight or express f. 0. b. Madison: 10 
lbs., $2.30; 100 Ibs., $18.00. 
WACONIA ORANGE. A great improvement over the old strain 
of Amber cane. It has a stronger germinating seed, better withstanding 
unfavorable growing conditions, grows a mych heavier but shorter stalk, 
withstands storms and wet weather without lodging and most important 
of all in running tests produces a better quality of syrup and more of it 
per acre. 
Prices, by mail: Lb., 35c; 5 lbs., $1.50, postpaid. By freight or ex- 
press f. 0. b, Madison: 10 lbs., $2.10; 100 Ibs., $16.00. 
Fodder Canes 
It produces as much as thirty 
Same as the Sorghum 
Plants reach a 
Heads fairly com- 
Similar in size and shape to 

Seed splendid for 
Plant same 

Amber Fodder Cane. 

