The Brewer's No. 1 Choice 
KINDRED or 'L' MALTING BARLEY 
For Cash Crop 
(1) Early Maturing; (2) Heavy Yielding; (3) Stem-rust Resist- 
ant, and (4) BEST MALTING QUALITY. Adapted to Central and 
Northern Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota. 
Based on its performance, Kindred barley was recommended as 
most satisfactory of all malt barley varieties by the Malt Research 
Institute. 
$2.35 per bu., including bags 
PLAINS the ‘Heads Up’ Barley 
A new six-rowed, smooth-awned, EARLY MATURING, short 
crowing, stiff strawed, feed type barley. Resistant to stem rust and 
drought. Best adapted to central and northern sections of Iowa, 
Nebraska, Wyoming and South Dakota. Introduced by the South 
Dakota Experiment Station. In the past two years of moderate and 
below average rainfall, it has produced the most bushels of feed 
barley on our farms. Combines good. 
$2.30 per bushel 
SPARTAN BARLEY EVADES DROUGHT 
Ripens Ahead of Hoppers, Drought and July Heat 
The earliest maturing and one of the highest yielding varieties. 
It is a two row, smooth bearded, easier to handle and equals corn in 
feeding value, weighing 56 pounds per bushel. IT ESCAPES drought 
rather than resists it. | 
$2.25 per bushel 
Wider Drill Rows Give Better Alfalfa Stands 
Give Better Alfalfa Stands 
We all like shade on hot summer days, and livestock does better if you give 
them some sort of protection in hot weather. ... But not alfalfa or clover. 
They need sunshine. If you use a nurse crop it makes a difference how you plant 
your grain, if you are trying to get a good stand of legumes. 
In tests with oats and alfalfa-bromegrass at Iowa State College, drilling the 
oats in rows 14 inches apart gave the alfalfa and brome plants more sunlight 
than broadcasting. As a result, they counted a fourth more alfalfa plants, and 
almost twice as many brome plants, in the drilled grain than in the broadcast 
oats. 
BOBER'S ns 
