Hastings' Seeds : fall 1912 catalogue . No. 3—Stand from Seed Shown in No. 1 Crimson Glover No. 4—Stand from Seed Shown in No. 2 Alsike Glover Melilotus or Bokhara Glover SWerT^u i?>f«?S^k^ land builder it has few equals. Lb. postpaid, 40c. In quantity not prepaid, about 20c per CRIMSON CLOVER.—A Vegetable Gold Mine. 14 H. G. Hastings & Co., Seedsmen, Atlanta, Georgia. GROW Grass As Well As Kill Grass Georgia bought during the year 1910 over twenty-three million dollars worth of hay fromoutside the State, mostly from States further north. Hay is dried or cured grass cut at thetime it i


Hastings' Seeds : fall 1912 catalogue . No. 3—Stand from Seed Shown in No. 1 Crimson Glover No. 4—Stand from Seed Shown in No. 2 Alsike Glover Melilotus or Bokhara Glover SWerT^u i?>f«?S^k^ land builder it has few equals. Lb. postpaid, 40c. In quantity not prepaid, about 20c per CRIMSON CLOVER.—A Vegetable Gold Mine. 14 H. G. Hastings & Co., Seedsmen, Atlanta, Georgia. GROW Grass As Well As Kill Grass Georgia bought during the year 1910 over twenty-three million dollars worth of hay fromoutside the State, mostly from States further north. Hay is dried or cured grass cut at thetime it is in its prime. It is one of the great staple crops of this country, our recollection beingthat in value it is exceeded only by the great staples of corn, wheat and cotton. Georgia is a hay buyer. So is every other one of the distinctively cotton States. In theface of the lact. this drain of millions upon millions of dollars of our money, there are millionsof acres in the South suitable for grass crops that are laying out in briers, pine saplings andbrush. We have got so used to looking on grass as an enemy in our cotton and corn fields thatwe have formed the habit of looking on it as a pest instead of a valuable crop. Grass in a cropneeding clean cultivation needs to be k


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1912