WEET CLOVER 
Will add 
80 to 100 
pounds of 
NITROGEN 
per acre 
and improve 
your soil 
structure! 
RESTORES POOR LAND — MAKES GOOD LAND 
BETTER IN NATURES OWN WAY. 
Adds from 80 to 100 Ibs. of nitrogen per acre, plus humus to your soil and improves soil structure. 
Time after time sweet clover has proved its ability to give a 15 to 25 bushel an acre yield increase in 
return for a planting cost of only about two dollars an acre. As an intercrop—sown in small grain this 
spring, plowed down next fall or spring for corn—it does not take the field out of cultivation. It’s a 
bonus, pure and simple, and easy to collect. 10 pounds of seed can produce 20 tons, green’ weight, 
including roots, of some of the best green manure you ever turned under. Sweet Clover makes stow 
growth in spring, but by the first fall its taproot is big and deep, making nearly all its nitrogem the 
first season. Best time to plow down is the next spring to get the most nitrogen. For your biggest 
doffars worth of fertilizer, pasture, ensilage and soil improvement, seed sweet clover this spring. Many 
sow with oats using about | bu. oats per acre, and can be sown in wheat in the spring. An excellent 
honey crop. Plant 10 to 12 Ibs. per acre. 
Bi-ennial YELLOW Sweet Clover 
LOT 9914% Pure 
Bow 85% Germination 
This is extra fine quality seed, 9914'% or better pure, plump and of bright color. A bienniel or 
two year yellow bloom clover, it is earlier and dees not get es large as the white. It seems to 
stand drought and adverse conditions better and is better liked by many for these reasons. Yel- 
low makes excellent pasture and is easter to handle because of its smatler growth, but does net 
give as much green manure when plowed down. Tests, however, have shown very little differ- 
ence between white and yellow in amount of nitrogen added to the soil. This seed is hulled and 
scarified for quick germination. 
For 18 Years! 
Baileys Harbor, Wisc. 
We have been using your seeds since 1932, and have never had a failure. Yields are always good and 
they stand the winters better than most do. We had the most severe winter in 1949-50, and the 
crops from your seeds came thru in fine shape. We have a very fine stand of clover and brome seeded 
in 1949. Jacob Merkte, Sr. 
