
A boon to farmers wanting High-Grade Seeds at a Money-Saving Price. 
What they are, where they come from 

AN IDEAL SEEDING FOR 10 ACRES. 2 bushels of Timothy-Alsike Mixture plus 1 bushel of Medium 
or Mammoth Clover 
Minesota, and in certain sections of Canada, 
Alsike and Timothy grow naturally together, 
ripen at the same time, are harvested and threshed, 
and as the seed grains of Alsike and Timothy are 
eaten of the same size, the two varieties cannot 
€ separated. 
We frequently are able to buy round Iots of these 
fancy Mixtures containing 20 per cent or more of 
Alsike at only slightly higher prices than for the best 
Timothy, and as we pass these seeds on to you at 
our usual small margin of profit, you get the Alsike 
you need in your seeding Mixture at a little above the 
regular Timothy Price and then by adding the re- 
[IK SOME of the northwestern states, especially 
quired amount of our D. B. Medium and Mammoth 
Clovers, you have an ideal Mixture and save money. 
This is briefly the story of the Natural Mixture. 
Now these Mixtures are good, bad, and indifferent, 
and no one should buy a Mixture of any kind with- 
out a positive guarantee from a responsible seller 
as to the purity and also the percentage of each 
variety of seed in the Mixture. We sell just one 
grade—the best—and give, on our guarantee tag 
attached to each bag, the purity, germination, and 
percentage of Alsike and Timothy in this particular 
Mixture. The quantity of the two principal seeds 
may vary in different lots, but in all cases you will 
find “less than 1% of 1 per cent of weed seeds.” 



TIMOTHY-ALSIKE 
MIXTURES 
NITROGEN is the one plant-food you 
CAN grow! 
DIBBLE’S rec/eane 
NATURAL 
NOD-O-GEN The Pre-tested Inoculator 
When ordering cultures specify kind of seed to be 
inoculated 
FOR CLOVERS 
Medium, Mammoth, Al- 
sike and White 
Preteted 
ang CULATO 
am 

FOR SOY BEANS 
Z-DUBABIZOs cae ne tiehe $0.30 
S=DUSESIZE te) eters an. 30D 
S0=DUsTSIZ@seasiels «coe 9113-00 
FOR VETCH and PEA 
For best growth, and to put atmospheric nitrogen in the soil, it 
pays to inoculate all legumes. The cost is trivial compared with the 
profit. Legumes are clovers, peas and beans, alfalfa, soy beans, 
vetches and other plants that grow seeds in a pod. Their roots are 
the home of bacteria that draw fertility-building nitrogen from the air 
and store it in swellings on the roots, called nodules. These nodules 
not only feed nitrogen to the crop they are on, but rot in the ground 
and supply valuable nitrogen to the soil. 
