The South's finest pastures are planted with 
Everett's Dependable PASTURE GRASSES 
ALFALFA 
Rich in proteins and lime—hence a great 
feed crop for dairy cows, beef cattle, hogs, 
sheep. A marvelous soil builder and soil 
restorer, too, when properly inoculated. 
We carry a full range of selected Alfalfa 
varieties, all well suited to the needs of 
this territory. 
BEANS 
Soy Beans—The crop of many purposes. 
Excellent for hay, ensilage, grain, and 
soil improvement. Ground Soy Beans are 
as good or better than Oil Meal for mixing 
with your grains in a balanced dairy ra- 
tion. We offer the highest quality seed in 
a range of varieties. 
Velvet Beans—Fine for a forage crop and 
a good soil builder, too. Grows rapidly. 
Excellent for planting in corn or in fruit 
groves. (Be sure to inoculate.) 
Buckwheat—A nourishing plant yielding 
large quantities of grain. Tends to smother 
out weeds, needs little rain. 
Broom Corn—Plant 4 to 6 seeds in hills, 30 
to 36 inches apart. Thresh the same day 
pulled and cure in dry frames for about 
a week before baling. 
Lespedeza—Produces plenty of high qual- 
ity hay, and does an excellent job of soil 
building — particularly when inoculated. 
Stands dry, hot weatHer and produces re- 
peat crops in good volume, even where 
moisture is low. 
Chufas—Any land suitable for corn, cotton 
or peanuts makes a profitable crop of 
chufas. 

For SPRING 
Planting 
CLOVERS 
White Dutch 
Hop 
Ladino 
GRASSES 
Dallis (Imported) 
Bermuda—Hulled 
Bermuda—Unhulled 
Carpet 
Orchard 
Lespedeza 

Crotalaria—A valuable land builder. Re- 
quires no lime and grows well on any 
soil. Smothers out summer weeds. 
Feterita—A good grain yielder. 
resistant. 
Drouth 
Cow Peas—tThe triple-purpose crop, good 
for table use, stock feed, and soil improve- 
ment. One of the greatest general hay 
crops, and adapted to practically every 
kind of soil. Food value is exceptionally 
high. Be sure to inoculate. 
GRASSES 
Bermuda Grass Hulled. The highest grade 
of Bermuda, with the hard, almost water- 
tight hulls removed. Produces much quicker 
and more certain results. Germination, 
with proper moisture conditions, takes only 
1 to 2 weeks. 
Bermuda Grass Unhulled—As valuable for 
lawns or golf courses as it is for pasturage 
— or wherever a thick, heavy sod is 
desired. 
Carpet Grass—Excellent permanent pastur- 
age because its creeping growth lets it 
stand close grazing. Needs plenty of 
moisture. Especially desirable for golf 
courses. 
Dallis Grass—Germinates slowly and needs 
plenty of moisture at the start—but well 
worth the effort because it comes closer to 
giving you year-round pasturage than any 
other grass. 
Kentucky Blue Grass—Produces a deep 
dark green lawn of close, thick turf. Main- 
tains its green color until late in fall. 
Roots are deep, plants very hardy. 
Orchard—Tall, vigorous pasture grass es- 
pecially adapted to moist and shaded 
places. 
Rye Grass—A rapid grower, valuable in 
lawn mixtures demanding quick effect. Not 
long lasting. Good in moist soils. 
Sudan Grass—One of the greatest summer 
grazing crops. Also fine for green feed. 
Keep a small plot near the barn to cut and 
feed green to cows or horses. 
Millet—Its quick growth makes it particu- 
larly desirable for hay and pasturage, 
especially in times of drouth. 
Peanuts—A very profitable crop for light, 
loamy or sandy soil. 
Peas — Austrian Winter — This is a lequ- 
minous crop which vastly increases the 
fertility of the soil. 
Dwarf Essex Rape—Excellent green food 
for all livestock, including hogs and 
chickens. An acre of good Rape will pas- 
ture 20 hogs for two months. 
Shallu (Egyptian Wheat)— Makes a big 
yield of both grain and fodder. Very good 
for fattening hogs. 
Sorghum—A seed that must be bought with 
special caution because of the danger of 
impurities. We handle only seed which 
has been produced with the greatest care. 
Vetch—A great producer, for hay, pastur- 
age, or silage. Good cover crop and soil 
builder. May be sown spring or fall, is not 
particular as to soil, and needs only mod- 
erate moisture. 

For FALL 
Planting 
CLOVERS 
White Dutch 
Hop 
Ladino 
Crimson 
GRASSES 
Rye Grass 
Orchard Grass 
Blue Grass 

CLOVERS 
White Dutch Clover—This hardy perennial 
clover is particularly suitable for pastures 
in the South—both for forage and for cut- 
ting. It is also excellent for an early green 
manure crop. It inocculates the soil with 
Nitragin ‘’B”. 
The plant reseeds itself when seeds are 
allowed to reach the soil. 
Hop Clover—A good clover for late winter 
and spring pastures—it affords early graz- 
ing. Inocculates the soil with Nitragin “B’’. 
Grows upright, bearing small yellow 
blooms. Does well on sandy soil or waste 
lands. 
Ladino—An excellent white clover which 
makes double the growth of other dwarf 
white clovers and quickly recovers from 
pasturing. : 
Crimson — An annual variety of clover 
much used as a cover crop, usually sown 
in the spring. 

Ask For Our Latest 
List Of Varieties 
And Prices 


