. [Catalog]. Nurseries (Horticulture) Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Nursery stock Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Flowers Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Vegetables Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Fruit Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Gardening Tennessee Memphis Equipment and supp. OTTO SCHWILL &â CO. MEMPHIS SOUTH S OLDEST seed house H] SCHWILL'S SOJA OR SOY BEANS. Field of Soy Beans The soy bean is an annual leguminous plant used in the South for hay, improvement of the soil and as a commercial product for oil, canning and meal. Climatic adaptations are the same as those of corn. It should be planted at t
. [Catalog]. Nurseries (Horticulture) Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Nursery stock Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Flowers Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Vegetables Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Fruit Tennessee Memphis Catalogs; Gardening Tennessee Memphis Equipment and supp. OTTO SCHWILL &â CO. MEMPHIS SOUTH S OLDEST seed house H] SCHWILL'S SOJA OR SOY BEANS. Field of Soy Beans The soy bean is an annual leguminous plant used in the South for hay, improvement of the soil and as a commercial product for oil, canning and meal. Climatic adaptations are the same as those of corn. It should be planted at that time, then. The hay is of excellent feeding quality and the yield is from 1 to 3 tons per acre. Inoculate this | Seed with MULFORD CULTURE' Laredo Laredos are heavier producers of seed per acre than cowpeas or other soys, and are surpassed in hay production by only the Otootan. They will grow anywhere in the South that cowpeas grow and they are less affected by rains and drouth. The plants are slender, erect and mature in about 140 days when planted early. From July planting they will mature seed in 100 days. The flowers are purple and white and the seed are black, numbering about 460,000 to the bushel. Does not make as much hay as Otootan, but the seed yield is from 15 to 25 bushels per acre. Plant 8-10 pounds in rows and 24-30 pounds broad- cast. 1 lb. 25c; 2 lbs. (qt.) 40c, post paid. Otootan For late planting for hay no bean has been found to equal Otootan. The plants are slender, erect, bushy and mature in about 170 days when planted early. The flowers are purple and the seed black, numbering about 370,000 to the bushel. Exper- iments, conducted by C. A. Mooers, Director of the University of Tennessee Agricultural Station, Knoxville, Tenn., produced little Otootan seed, but an enormous yield of hay. He recommends Otootan above all others as a late hay crop. Plant 10-12 pounds in rows and 30-36 pounds broadcast. 1 lb. 40c; 2 lbs. (qt.) 60c, post paid. Virginia This var
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