
SOY BEANS 
__ A good soil-builder when plowed under for green manure. Makes excellent 
hay or silage but is little used for pasture except for hogs. Sow when ground js 
thoroughly warm, in May or June. If used for hay, cut after the pods form 
Use 2 bushels to the acre broadcast; 114 bushels when drilled. Seed should be 
inoculated. — ; : 
We offer two varieties—Wilson Black and Manchu. Both are suitable 
for hay, silage, or soil improvement. Manchu. Stalk is large and bushy and 
a heavy producer of both foliage and beans. Seed is yellow. Wilson. Not 
quite so rank a grower as Manchu. Does well on most any type of soil. The 
most popular variety in this section. 
OATS 
Alfalfa, red clover, permanent grass and clover mixtures can all be satis- 
factorily sown with Oats. Sow during April or early May at the rate of 2 to 3 
bushels by weight to the acre. 
VICLAND. By all odds the best grain Oats for this section. In comparison 
with other varieties it has out-performed them all. Kernels plump and heavy; 
straw stiff and strong. Early maturing and resistant to rusts and smuts. A 
good yielder and because of its short straw is not likely to lodge. Does best 
in good soil. The seed we offer is Wisconsin-grown, thoroughly cleaned and 
graded, and of high germination. 
SWEDISH SELECT. A well-known variety preferred by many farmers. 
Kernels very thick, with thin shuck; straw stiff and of medium height. 
Late maturing. 
STORM KING. A side Oats that has been grown successfully for many years. 
Has jong, strong straw that will stand the most severe winds without lodg- 
ing; heads long, containing an unusually large number of grains. 

SPRING BARLEY. Valuable either as a grain crop or as a nurse crop for 
clover or alfalfa. We have the Oderbrucker variety, a six-rowed, bearded 
Barley, and a good producer of both grain and straw. Requires 2 bushels of 
seed for an acre. 
BUCKWHEAT. A dependable crop for poor land. Matures in about two 
months and makes an excellent feed for poultry. Sow during June or early 
July, using 1 bushel of seed to the acre. 
WINTER WHEAT. We can supply the leading sorts of Winter Wheat. Write 
us for samples and prices before seeding time. 
SPRING WHEAT. Grain is smaller and harder than Winter Wheat. Not so 
popular as Winter Wheat but gives a satisfactory yield and makes excellent 
flour. Sow in early spring, about 2 bushels to the acre. 
WINTER RYE. Grown principally for a winter cover-crop, sometimes for 
winter pasture or cut for hay. Can be sown up to the middle of November. 
Requires about 2 bushels of seed for an acre; for small garden plots, about 
5 or 6 quarts for 2,500 square feet. 
SPRING RYE. Makes an excellent green food when cut, or will supply pas- 
turage for several weeks. Sow early. 
SEED POTATOES 
The stock we offer is raised by experienced growers in the cold North and 
Northwest. It is grown especially for seed purposes, and is certified stock, 
U.S. Standard No. 1, high quality, true to type and free from disease. Ex- 
perience has shown that northern-grown stock moved only a few hundred 
miles south often produces double the crop of home-grown seed. 
Early Varieties 
EARLY OHIO. An early sort that is well known by market-gardeners who 
want a first-early Potato for home trade. The tubers are almost round, with 
pink skin, and of excellent quality. 
IRISH COBBLER. An extra-early, round, white Potato with rather deep 
eyes. Vines yield heavily and the tubers are of extremely fine quality. A 
most Beene variety, either for the home-garden or for growing com- 
mercially. 
CHIPPEWA. About ten days later than Irish Cobbler but superior in smooth- 
ness and whiteness, and eyes are not quite so deep. Has desirable cooking 
qualities. 
Late Varieties 
-KATAHDIN. A handsome, shallow-eyed, glossy, white-skinned variety of 
fine table quality. It is roundish-oval in shape and very uniform in both 
shape and size. Gaining in popularity every year. Good yielder. 
RUSSET. Tubers round to oblong, of good size, with pure white flesh, russet 
skin, and few shallow eyes. Excellent table quality, good keeper, and very 
roductive. Vines are strong and disease-resistant. : 
SEBAGO. A high-yielding, smooth, white, shallow-eyed variety of excellent 
‘- * _ table quality. A strong grower highly resistant to blight. Very late. 
_--—s Latest Price-List of Farm Seeds gladly sent on request 


SOY BEANS 


