
TESTED 
TAGGED 
SMALL GRAINS. 
FIELD 
SEEDS 
PRICES 
Prices cannot be determined when catalogue is printed. They will be issued later or quoted 
on request. 
SEED WHEAT 
MARQUIS WHEAT is the standard, hard, red, 
spring wheat for irrigated sections of the West. 
It is early maturing and high yielding. It is 
beardless, short, stiff-strawed. 
REWARD WHEAT is a very new, high yielding, 
beardless, hard, red spring wheat for the dry- 
lands and non-irrigated areas. It has proven 
satisfactory under irrigated conditions where the 
water supply is limited. It shows promising for 
milling and baking. 
THATCHER WHEAT. A new beardless, hard red 
spring wheat that yields at the Fort Collins Sta- 
tion about the same as Komar. It is adapted to 
irrigated conditions only and may replace Komar 
in this area. It-is rust resistant. 
SEED BARLEY 
BALD or NEPAL BARLEY. An early variety that 
withstands drought remarkably well and ofttimes 
surviving when wheat fails. It has no beard and 
shells off its hulls the same as wheat. A very 
desirable crop for green feed or hay or for grain. 
LICO BARLEY is a smooth awned (without barbs 
on beards), six-rowed, hulled barley. It has less 
flinty kernels and is earlier and stiffer strawed 
than Trebi. Adapted to irrigated conditions. 
TREBI. Six-row, bearded, hulled barley with large, 
bluish kernels, and comparatively weak straw. 
The standard for irrigated sections of the state. 
BEECHER BARLEY is a new semi-smooth awned 
barley adapted to dry land. It is stiff strawed. 
Has outyielded Club Mariout and Flynn and 
shows a higher bushel weight. 
CLUB MARIOUT BARLEY. A six-row, rough awned, 
hulled, early barley; particularly adapted to 
eastern Colorado non-irrigated plains section. 
Will yield one-third more than Trebi in its region 
of adaptation, and 70 per cent of Trebi under 
irrigation. Could be used to advantage on 
irrigated land with early water where only one 
irrigation is available. 
FLYNN. A six-row, smooth awned barley yielding 
about the same as Club Mariout. The smooth 
awned or thinner hull has increased its popu- 
larity in the plains area and in other non-irrigated 
sections of the state. 

SEED OATS 
BLISS SIDE OATS is a white side oat adapted to 
irrigated land. This variety is noted for its 
abundant yield of oat hay in the mountain areas. 
BRUNKER OATS are well 
adapted to dry land, 
being early maturing, 
smut and drought re- 
sisting. They are a 
red oat and were de- 
veloped by the Akron 
Experiment Station. 
This variety suggested 
in place of Texas Red 
Rust Proof. It is the 
leading dry land oat. 
BANNOCK OATS is a 
plump, smut - resistant, 
white, midseason va- 
riety that has pro- 
duced higher yields 
than any other irri- 
gated variety in Colo- i 
rado.' ‘It’ is a ‘little 
earlier than Colorado 37 and the straw is finer 
but stiff. A limited amount of registered seed is 
available this year. 
COLORADO NO. 37 OATS. This oat is well adapted 
for irrigated areas of Colorado. It is a midseason 
white oat. It is characterized by its high yield; 
its straw and awnless kernels. 

VICLAND and VICTORY OATS. Similar to Colo. 
No. 37. 
MARKTON OATS. A medium sized white variety, 
smut resistant, that does well under irrigation 
YT Thal Atenas eye) Iker 
calities. 
SEED RYE 
SPRING RYE is an excel- 
lent soiler and can be 
produced on poor, 
worn out land under 
dry conditions where 
other grains would 
fail. It is useful as a 
cleaning crop for the 
purpose of eradicating 
wild oats. Makes 
early pasture and may 
be cut and cured for 
hay. When sown with 
vetch its value _ for 
pasture and hay is 
greatly enhanced. 
WINTER or FALL RYE serves a very useful purpose 
for pasture and hay. May be sown in the spring 
and summer as well as in the fall. When Winter 
Rye is sown after frost it goes into the following 
season before maturing, making it a biennial. 
ROSEN is the leading variety of winter rye. Tests 
on Balboa at Fort Collins are not complete. 
To 
Buy with Confidence—Plant with Confidence—GOLD SEAL SEEDS 79 
