Valuable for hay. The beans have high-protein con- 
tent . . . the meal makes an excellent base for mash. 
May be used with corn silage. Also used with oats, 
Sudan Grass, millet, or sorghum. 
‘‘WILSON BLACK’’ SOYS 
Still lead by far where hay is wanted. Makes great 
growth of slender stems, 3 to 4 feet even on poorer 
soil. Yields 2 to 4 tons of high-protein hay per acre. 
Excellent pasture. Wilson Black will mature beans in 
lower Pennsylvania, New Jersey and south; has pro- 
duced 30 bushel yields. When planted with corn, the 
nitrogen produced by inoculated soybeans helps the 
corn. Makes good feed. 
“HAWKEYE’’ SOYS (Yellow) 
A good yielding yellow bean. About a week earlier 
maturity than “Lincoln.” “Hawkeye” fills the need for 
a good-standing bean, earliness, and high yields of 
soybeans. Its use has spread rapidly. 
“LINCOLN” SOYS (Yellow) 
“Lincoln” is high-yielding. Stands up. Produces qual- 
ity beans. In some tests, averaged 8% more oil with 
a higher iodine number than other beans of same 
maturity; led by nearly 6 bushels per acre. 
INOCULATE SOYBEAN SEED ALWAYS! 
Soybeans not inoculated take the nitrogen they need from the soil; but well- 
inoculated beans can take about 300 pounds of nitrogen per acre from the air, 
thus increasing soil fertility. Soybean seed should be inoculated every time. In 
addition to yield benefits, protein content gets higher. 
Tests showed inoculation giving increases of 34 ton hay, and almost 12 
bushels beans per acre. Your soybean crop will pay much better when inocu- 
lated .. . cost is low. 
FORAGE CROPS 
HOG PASTURE MIXTURE 
Provides 8 to 11 weeks’ use at low cost. Quick 
green feed—often ready in 4 weeks. Useful after 
other crop failures. Grows until frost; won’t winter. 
Producer of flesh, fat, wool. For cattle, cut and 
remove to prevent trampling. Gets second growth. 
Use 70 Ibs. to acre, broadcast or with seeder, June 
to Aug. 1. Harrow in. 
RAPE—for Quick Pasture 
For sheep and hogs. Inexpensive, prolific. Thrives 
on all soils with little preparation. Sow 5 to 6 
pounds per acre, through spring up to end of 
August. Alone, with other pasture seeds, or in 
corn fields. Makes second growth. Pasture when 
less than 10 inches high. Stands hard usage. 
COW HORN TURNIP 
Improves soil, provides forage. Sometimes used in 
corn fields. Tops relished by sheep, hogs, poultry. 
Sow 2 to 4 lbs. per acre. 
