(ENE 
itt Kean edy 

walily ‘fen Sues 

Prices On Request Where Not Quoted 
BARLEY 
Weight per bushel, 48 Ibs. 
Sow 2!4 bushels to the acre. 
Alpha. Two rowed. Heavy cropper. 
BUCKWHEAT 
Weight per bushel, 48 lbs. 
Very early yield, double that of other sorts, much larger 
grains. Sow 2 bushels to the acre. 
CARROT 
Sow 3 to 4 lbs. per acre. 
Improved Long Orange. Good keeper. Lb. $4.00 
Large White Belgian. Long, white, fleshy roots; good keeper. 
Lb. $4.00 
FIELD CORN 
Sow Dent and Flint varieties 1 to 1% pecks and Fodder 
varieties 1147 to 2 bushels per acre. 
Cornell No. 29-3 Hybrid Dent. Tall, more leafy than Sweep- 
takes, matures early, strong root system and can be used 
for ensilage and husking. 
Extra Early Yellow Flint. Matures in 100 days. 
Selected Leaming Early (Dent). Successful anywhere grown, 
ripens in 100 to 110 days. 
Southern Hybrid Sweepstakes Ensilage. One of the earliest 
and at the same time one of the highest yielding varieties 
in ensilage and dried grain. 
MANGEL-WURZEL 
The most satisfactory crop for stock feeding, both for cattle 
and hogs. The yield per acre is tremendous. Mangels will 
grow in any good loose loam and should be well cultivated 
after thinning out to 10 to 12 inches apart, in drills 2 to 214 
feet apart. 
Sow 5 to 8 lbs. per acre. 
Leviathan Long Red. Will produce more than any other 
variety. Lb. $2.20 
Champion Yellow Globe. Lb. $2.20 
Golden Tankard. Lb. $2.20 
Sugar Beet, Lane’s Imperial. Lb. $2.20 
MILLET 
Sow 50 lbs. per acre. 
Golden. Considerably larger than Hungarian and produces a 
heavier crop but not as early as Hungarian. 
Hungarian. Valuable when hay is short. 
Japanese. (Domestic grown.) Tall, and produces an enor- 
mous crop. Sow 15 Ibs. per acre. 
OATS 
Sow 2 to 3 bushels per acre. 
Storm King. Heavy yielder, full grain and thin-skinned, won- 
derful feeding value. The name of this variety was sug- 
gested because of strength of the straw, being so strong that 
it will withstand any weather. 
Swedish Select. Strong grower, grain full and heavy. 
White Tartar. The earliest and most prolific Oat grown. Grain 
large and full. 
PEAS—Canada Field 
Sow as early as the ground can be worked. Advisable to 
sow with Oats to keep from lodging when the crop is to be 
used for hay or fodder, using 100 pounds Canadian Field Peas 
and 1 bushel Oats per acre. When sowing to be plowed under 
use 150 pounds Canadian Field Peas per acre. 
RAPE 
In drills sow 5 lbs. to the acre, broadcast 10 lbs. per acre. 
Dwarf Essex. Forage plant, of great value for sheep and 
lambs. Sow in June or July. 
RYE 
Sow 1!4 to 2 bushels per acre. 
Rosen. Very productive. 
Spring. 
RUTABAGAS 
Sow 2 to 3 lbs. per acre. 
Improved American. Purple top, yellow flesh. Lb. $2.00 
Long Island Improved. An improvement on the above; grows 
much larger. Lb. $2.50 
SOY or SOJA BEANS 
Used for plowing under as a soil enricher or for fodder or 
hay. Soy Beans should not be sown until the ground is warm 
and may be sown as late as the middle of August. 
Manchu. Matures in 110 days. One of the earliest and very 
prolific producer of Beans. 
SUNFLOWER—Mammoth Russian 
Useful as chicken feed, because it can be grown cheaper 
than Corn, and supplies the necessary diet for egg production. 
VETCH 
Sow 60 to 100 lbs. per acre. 
Spring. Grown for stock. Broadcast 100 to 150 lbs. per acre. 
Sand or Winter. A hardy plant of the Pea family, yielding 
large crops for feeding green or soiling. Sow 60 to 100 
Ibs. per acre. 
WHEAT 
Sow 2 bushels per acre. 
Marquis. Beardless. For spring sowing. Hard, dark amber 
kernels. A very heavy cropper. 
[30] 
