
// 
“Sweet and Low 
This dairy cow’s taste tells that 
SWEET Sudan excels. Likewise with 
sheep and hogs. 
The “table” was spread in this manner: 
Adjoining areas of Common and 
Sweet Sudan Grass were planted; then 
cattle and hogs were allowed to graze 
them at will. The Sweet Sudan was 
grazed down close to the ground, but 
the Common Sudan was only “nib- 
bled” in scattered spots. 
This significant test, conducted under 
the direction of Dr. R. E. Karper, 
Agronomist, Texas Agricultural Experi- 
ment Station at Lubbock, points to the 
great future for Sweet Sudan Grass. 
And suggests the logic and economy 
of planting this remarkable hybrid in- 
stead of the common variety. 
Photo Courtesy Dr R. E, Earper 
ADVANCE SEED CO” co: 
— ——FHOENIX, ARIZO 

This hybrid ‘‘delicacy’’— with its sweet, juicy stalks and stems, 
and its heavy-bearing wide leaves —is “just what the livestock 
ordered”. 
SWEET SUDAN GRASS combines roughage, bulk and savory 
sweetness — more palatable to livestock, more profitable to feed. 
AOVANCE SEEDCOMPANY 
a a wr 
PHOENIX, ARIZONA 
