Johnson's garden & farm manual : 1913 . gar Corn, whichis especially grown for fodder purposes, being ofquick growth and early maturity. Sown at therate of two bushels per acre, in drills four feet apart,it makes splendid stalks 6 to 8 feet in height, whichare of the finest quality for feeding green, cuttingfor ensilage, or curing for fodder. 13y express orfreight: per qt., 15c.; peck, 65c.; bush., $;10 bush, and over, $ per bush. SELECTED SEED CORN AND OATS I am more than pleased with JOHNSONS GIANTBEAUTY CORN. It is a most vigorous grower and yieldeddouble any other variety grown her


Johnson's garden & farm manual : 1913 . gar Corn, whichis especially grown for fodder purposes, being ofquick growth and early maturity. Sown at therate of two bushels per acre, in drills four feet apart,it makes splendid stalks 6 to 8 feet in height, whichare of the finest quality for feeding green, cuttingfor ensilage, or curing for fodder. 13y express orfreight: per qt., 15c.; peck, 65c.; bush., $;10 bush, and over, $ per bush. SELECTED SEED CORN AND OATS I am more than pleased with JOHNSONS GIANTBEAUTY CORN. It is a most vigorous grower and yieldeddouble any other variety grown here.—S.\.muel Jones,Cleveland. O. I raised 50 lbs. of WASHINGTON OATS from onepound of seed I purchased from you. They gave 17 to 21stalks from each kernel, beating all others I have ever grown.—A. A. Hall. Agate. Ore. Your GOLDEN FLEECE OATS yielded 50 bushela tothe acre; they are the finest and heaviest oats grown in thi»section.— T. Morrell, Torresdale. Pa. 66 JOHNSON SEED COMPANY Choice Northern Grown Seed Oats cleaned. Wiotogxaph of average heads of WashingtonOATS, 12 inches in length. NEW WASHINGTON The seed of this new white oat wasfirst procured from Professor Carlton^of the U. S. Department of Agricul-ture, who pronounced them at the headof the Oat kingdom. Prof. Moore, at experimental sta=tion, says: New, heaviest, thinnesthull, stiffest straw, best of thirty-six va-rieties ; weight, 36 to 40 lbs. measuredbushel. A small field of a acresyielded 227 bushels. Our grower inOntario County, N. Y., says : Theyare the finest oats we have ever grown ^straw 4 to 5 feet tall; many heads 10 to12inches long (as shown in our photo=graph alongside) ; they do not rust istand up well; the plump meats makeit the greatest of all oats. One of thelargest and most experienced oatgrow-ers in Chester County, Pa., says: Itswonderful productiveness is far beyondwhat the most enthusiastic farmers inthis section ever expected to says: Twenty bushels peiacre more than


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1913