FOR LOW-COST 
H#GH-PROTEIN HAY, PASTURE, SILAGE 
Soybeans play an important part in many 
a farm feed program. They are valuable 
for hay. The beans have a high-protein 
content . . . the meal makes an excellent 
base for mash. May be used in with corn 
silage or also fed as pasture. Combined 
with oats, sudan grass, millet, or sorghum 
. . . soys offer a wide variety of nutritious 
feeds. 









““WILSON BLACK” SOYS 
Here is the most popular bean of the East 
for hay purposes. Makes a great growth 
of slender stems, sometimes five feet on 
good ground, three to four feet even on 
poorer soil. Yields of two to four tons of 
high-protein hay per acre are common. 
Its rich growth makes it an excellent pas- 
ture variety, too. 
Will mature the beans in lower Penn- 
sylvania, Ohio, New Jersey and to the 
South; has produced up to around 380 
bushels per acre in good seasons. Some 
folks use it to plant in with their corn. 
The nitrogen produced by inoculated soy- 
beans helps the corn crop, and the result- 
ing ensilage is high in feeding value. 
Other varieties have come and gone, 
but “Wilsons” still lead the field where 
soybean hay is wanted. 
“LINCOLN” SOYS 
Developed in Illinois, enjoys wide popu- 
larity through the Mid-West, and has rap- 
idly come toward the front in the East. 
Approved by many authorities. Gained 
farmer-boosters every year on its perform- 


