
I grow the year it is sown. 







eF High Protein 
Wonde 
eed. High Prot 
rfully fine for fe 
Hubam does it the same year it 
ment and want a quick rotation, 
you sow it. 
8 s0wn. 
$ removed and then plow it under. Yeu can us 
ing on how your farm work develops. 
100 Ibs. $24.80 
LADINO CLOVER 
GREATEST PASTURE CLOVER 
Long lived, widely adapted, easy to 
start Giant White Pasture Clover. 
Similar to White Dutch lawn and 
pasture clover but grows much larg- 
er. Ladino as a poultry range has 
yielded as high as 30 to 40 tons of 
green feed. On a dry basis that is 4-5 
tons. Runs close to 30% protein on a 
dry basis. Makes wonderful feed. An 
8-acre range carried 2500 to 3000 head 
of poultry from April to late October. 
It is widely adapted and being grown 
from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from 
Canada to Tennessee as well as some of the 
gulf states. It is one of the earliest legumes 
to start in the spring. Kentucky reports it 
makes year around pasture. Michigan says 
it can be used for hay, ture or silage. 
Illinois says it does well in all parts of the 
state. Only requires 1 or 2 Ibs. per acre 
with other grasses or 3 lbs.. when sown 
alone. 




















By Mail Prepaid 
LB. $2.25 Peck $33.00 — 
1, Bushel $65.00 
It’s New! 
Delicious, Nutritious and a Heavy Pro- 
ducer. Here is something so new and dif- 
ferent and superior we predict it will 
in a few years replace the regular Sudan 
Grass. It grows just like the old Sudan, 
but more vigorously. It stools more free- 
ly. The leaves are a little broader. The 
yields are enormous, It is a cross be- 
tween Regular Sudan and Leoti, a sweet 

7 
_ How eattle love it either as hay or 
; asture, Tests have been made by turn- 
BP eceattle into fields planted to Regular 
and Sweet Sudan growing side by side. 
Invariably they ate the Sweet Sudan 
down to the ground while they only 
nipped at the regular and let it grow to 
_ the height of a foot or more. You can 
expect cattle to make better gains on 
feed that they eat with a relish and the 
‘su ar content should unquestionably add 
tothe feeding value. 
t oy oat. 
- = 


dan abo 
eld | 






I and weather. 
0 Bi w some Sweet Sudan, 
8. $1f 3.50 50 Ibs. $9.50 10 Ibs. $2.50 

ee aes 
; oer © 
\ 7 
a. : 
ntent, 20-25% Excellent to grind for stock feed. 
tilizing. A deep subsoiling plant. 
4. An excellent pasture crop. A legume of exceptional possibility. 
_ 6. A good honey producer, Blooms abundantly. 
6. A profitable cash seed crop. Yields up to 10 bushels of seed per acre. 
_ %. Helps control root rot in corn by providing quick rotations. 
’ You can make extra profits from Hubam the Wonder Clover. 
grain. Harvest your grain crop. Then take a seed crop of Hubam in the fall. That 
gives you two cash crops in one year. Yields up to 600 lbs. of seed per acre for 
which there is a good market. Or use the crop for pasture. It ees fast up toa 
height of 4 to 5 feet if not cut or pastured. That gives a lot o 
Sow with spring 
carrying capacity 
and it is high protein feed, making it all the more valuable. Makes a heavy ton- 
nage of rich hay if cut when it begins to bloom. 
DOES TWO YEARS WORK IN ONE 
With ordinary sweet clover you sow one year it blooms and bears seed the second year. 
Even if you want the crop principally for soil enrich- 
q Hubam is an excellent crop. Plow it under in the same year 
It will not come up again the next year as the ordinary Sweet Clover may do if you 
pics it under the same year it is sown. You can 
pasture Hubam for a while after the grain crop 
e this crop in a number of different ways depend- 
We have a good supply of seed now—but order early. 
Bu. (60 Ibs.) $14.90 
Birdsfoot Trefoil . 
You are going to hear a lot about 
this crop in the next few years. Expe- 
riment stations in a great many 
States are working with it. Like al- 
falfa, it is a hardy, deep-rooted, long- 
lived legume. It is fine stemmed and 
leafy and has a feeding value equal to 
alfalfa. It will grow on land too low 
in fertility for alfalfa. Stands a lot of 
heat and drought and also stands 
some alkali in the soil. 
Birdsfoot Trefoil seems to be free of dis- 
f eases that trouble alfalfa. The crop can be 
grown anywhere in the nation excepting 
perhaps the deep South. Its great value will 
come as a pasture legume because it stands 
trampling. It will keep up soil fertility and 
help other grasses sown with it and it will 
last for years, if so desired. While a little 
slow in starting it is not Particular as to 
soil types. Farmers who have grown it think 
the crop has a wonderful future. This seed 4 
is still very short — Order Early! Le 
By Mail Prepaid 
LB. $2.25 5 Ibs. $11.00 
10 Ibs. $21.00 



















SWEET SUDAN 
sorghum that has high disease resist- 
ance and big yields. The resulting crop 
has the sweet juicy quality and disease - 
resistance of Leoti. The general appear- 
ance of the crop is like Sudan. The seed 
does not shatter as easily and is quite- 
distinctive looking. Makes good hay even 
after threshing out the seed. 
‘Most Palatable — Fastest Growing Pasture Grass 
You can expect more grazing from 
Sweet Sudan. It is a little later in ma- 
turity, thereby lasting longer as a pas- 
ture. The stalks grow taller and since- 
leaves are a little heavier you can im. 
anine what a yield it can make. You 
-may have seen the large production of 
Regular Sudan. It has yielded up to 10 
tons of hay per acre, Sweet Sudan will 
outyield it. For fast growth, big yields 
and fine feed value you will find this 
new Sweet Sudan tops. It can be pas- - 
tured just as safely as regular Sudan. 
- x <* aS a Pe ® ‘ 
oe Not Expensive To Sow 'S 
p corn planting time. Wait till the ground and weather is warm. You 
wing as little as 12-15 lbs. per acre as it stools freely. That means a 
A heavier seeding makes a finer growth and. we recommend 20 Ibs. 
bed. Cover about an inch. 
I It will grow an inch or more a day 
For the fastest growing heaviest yeilding, most. 
nates, 
