FATTENS LIVESTOCK FASTER £ 
Because of its sweet, juicy 
flavor, livestock relish Sweet 
Sudan grass. Therefore 
they eat lots of it... in 
a shorter period of time... 
and thus gain weight faster. 
Owais LOrenO@eEaisers, 
beef and dairy cattle pro- 
ducers, lamb and wool 
growers Sweet Sudan grass 
is unexcelled pasture. It 1s 
the finest quality pasture-at-— 
the lowest cost per acre. 
Further, because the im- 
proved $372 Sweet Sudan 
tops all others in genetic 
purity and seed cleanliness, 
still greater economy re- 
sults. Certainly, this is what 
the tarmerptoday. must 
have! 
Look closely at the field 

MG eco GF eee i $e 2 fate a MS wen ¥ hd % of Sweet Sudan pictured on 
A < of \ oe *s & os pe na ee" : we : i. few ‘ § * “gig oe teeel. ay ‘ *s bs ee : y bree ; # : a . 
= Peet ES he 4 : = “ % we ‘ eh 2 e Hy. 4 a %, tse oie ‘ ‘ Pid - eee : is 
ie ee Me A gion bees ek SOs Kia 24a OO this page. Note the heavy 
leaf structure, its bulkiness, 
GO TESA ST A AGGIE L PPL AL AP LIL the solidly-rooted erectness 
SWEET SUDAN PAYS AT THE PAIL nds ui 
Sweet Sudan is winning new friends in nearly every section of the country 
where it has been tried. 
Last June 4, L. O. Ward, a dairyman in Liberty County, Texas, seeded 20 Our Sweet Sudan 4372 
acres of sudan—13 to the new sweet variety and 7 to common. On July 9 he ; : : 
turned 30 cows on the sweet sudan, and ten days later shifted them over to 1S ready now. Write, wire, 
common. But they wouldn’t graze it. They kept walking along the fence, trying ; 
to get back into the sweet sudan field. After three days Ward gave up, turned or phone your requirements 
the cows back into the sweet sudan, and cut the common sudan for hay. 
Now for the pay-off! When the cows went on Sudan Ward cut his 18% con- OD ae 
centrate ration from an average of 6 pounds to 3% per cow per day. For the 
next three weeks the 30 cows produced 172 pounds more milk each day with 75 
pounds less concentrate. 
(Reprinted by permission from FARM JOURNAL, July issue) 
® 
MAND Un BY NUMBER 372 


