FIELD SEED (Continued) 
All prices quoted are subject to change without notice and 
are f.o.b. Plant City except 2 Ib. lots or less which are postpaid. 
Write for prices on larger quantities. 
LUPINES (Continued) 
SWEET BLUE LUPINE. This variety is the pasture 
and feed counterpart of Bitter Blue Lupine. Both plant 
and leaf are sweet to the taste and are relished by all 
kinds of livestock. Makes about the same growth and 
tonnage as Bitter Blue Lupine. Stock can be turned 
in on Sweet Blue Lupine as soon as it is about a foot 
high. The plants have a high protein value averaging 
approximately 18% of the dry matter. 
1 lb, 50c; 10 lbs. $1.70; 25 lbs. $3.75: 100 lbs. $15.00 
SWEET YELLOW LUPINE. (White seeded.) Seems to 
be more palatable and therefore is more readily grazed 
by cattle than the Sweet Blue strains, and will recover 
more rapidly than the Blue after grazing. The sweet 
strains of Yellow Lupine tend to be more tender and 
less resistant to excessive cold than the Blue, and thus 
the Yellow Lupine is more particularly adapted to the 
southern portion of the Lupine belt than to the more 
northern areas. 
1 lb. 60c; 10 lbs. $2.30; 25 lbs. $5.25: 100 lbs. $20.00 
PEARL or CATTAIL MILLET 
Sow 8 to 10 pounds per acre in rows 3 feet apart. 
Sow 20 to 25 pounds per acre broadcast for pasturage. 
This is one of the best yielders of green forage and hay, 
and continues to grow and produce through the entire 
season if cut frequently enough for hay to prevent its 
going to seed. Relished by all kinds of stock, and they 
eat it greedily. Plant in early spring as soon as frost 
danger is past in March, and can be planted from then 
on until September 1. Sow thinly in rows three feet 
apart or for pasturage, sow broadcast 20 to 25 lbs. 
per acre. 
1 Ib. 50c; 10 Ibs. $1.80; 25 lbs. $4.00; 100 lbs. $15.00 
E 
OATS 
Sow 5 pecks (40 Ibs.) per acre in drills; broadcast 2 to 212 
bu. per acre. A bushel weighs 32 pounds. 
Plant in drills 1% feet apart and cover seed 2 to 3 
inches deep. If the seed is broadcast, use tooth harrow. 
The best time to plant oats in Florida is October and 
November, but can be planted to January. Land should 
receive 300 to 400 lbs. per acre of complete fertilizer 
at planting, followed by a side-dressing of 150 to 200 
lbs. Nitrate of Soda or its equivalent after the crop is 
half grown. 
SOUTHLAND (Disease Resistant). (125 days.) Is a 
vigorous growing oat with broad, coarse leaves and a 
strong upright growth habit. Produces a large amount 
of very early forage. A spring type oat and is not cold- 
hardy, and where not injured by cold it produces an 
abundance of green pasture. Adapted to the Gulf Coast 
region and to north central Florida. Resistant to Vic- 
toria blight and to most races of Crown rust, it is 
susceptible to two races of this rust which have now 
become prevalent in Florida. It suffers little from stem 
rust, but is quite susceptible to Culm rot. Yields of 
forage and grain have been high under good cultural 
conditions. Grain is heavy and plump, free of hairs, 
white in color and of high quality. A good general 
purpose oat for Florida. 
1 lb. 35c; 2 lbs. 50c; 8 lbs. (pk.) 60c: 32 lbs. (bu.) $1.75 
FLORILAND (new) (Disease resistant). (115 days.) The 
outstanding characteristic of this new variety, selected 
and increased at the north Florida Experiment Station, 
is its very high resistance to Crown rust, the most im- 
portant oat disease in Florida. An early intermediate 
to upright habit of growth which gives good yields of 
forage and grain. More resistant to Culm rot than 
Southland, and it is also resistant to Victoria blight. 
Has better winter hardiness than Southland and is well 
adapted to north and west Florida. Kernels are red 
and quite hairy. The grain quality is only fair, recom- 
mended chiefly for pasture. 
Lb. 35c; 2 lbs. 50c; 8 lbs. (pk.) 70c; 32 lbs. (bu.) $2.00 
SEMINOLE (new) (Disease resistant). (110 days.) This 
new, early maturing oat has been increased on Experi- 
ment Station Farms in Florida, and seed is now 
available. It is resistant to different races of Crown 
rust and to smut. Due to its earliness it escapes dam- 
age from stem rust. A short variety with strong straw 
and not subject to lodging. The grayish-white grain is 
larger, plumper and of higher quality than Floriland. 
Makes a very early, upright growth of medium large 
leaves. Produces an abundance of early forage and is 
good for early and mid-winter forage. Also excellent 
in grain yield. Because of its earliness it is well 
adapted to central and south Florida. 
Lb. 40c; 2 lbs. 65c; 8 lbs. (pk.) 80c; 32 lbs. (bu.) $2.50 
PEANUTS 
Plant 1 bushel of seed per acre. 
A bushel weighs 25 Ibs., except Valencia 22 Ibs. per bu. 
In addition to the crop of nuts for hogs, peanuts yield 
a large quantity of nutritious dry forage. Dixie Runner 
peanuts are by far the best when grown to fatten hogs, 
as they can be left in the ground until eaten. 
It is better to shell the seed that is to be planted. If 
planted in corn, a bushel will plant 4 acres, but where 
planted solid it requires a bushel of seed per acre, in 
3-foot rows, dropping seeds in hills a foot apart. Plant 
from March to July. For best results inoculate peanuts 
with Nitragin. (See page 69.) 
Most shelled peanuts are treated so they will keep 
better and longer, and also to protect them from rot 
and disease after they are planted and to increase the 
stand. Do not use Nitragin inoculation with treated 
shelled peanuts. 
For Insect and Disease Control See Page 57. 
VALENCIA. (100 days.) This variety is adapted for 
growing in light sandy soils. It fills the demand for a 
peanut that is large and contains more nuts than the 
common varieties. Pods are large, well filled, usually 
containing 3 or 4 nuts. 
Lb. 55c; 52 lbs. (pk.) $1.75; 22 lbs. (bu.) $6.50 
(Continued on next page) 
44 General Offices and Mail Order Department, Plant City, Florida 
