. Dreer's garden calendar : 1898. Seeds Catalogs; Nursery stock Catalogs; Gardening Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs. Crimson or Scarlet Clover. Sow seed at the rate of 15 to 20 lbs. to an acre. J)^ We offer the finest quality recleaned seed at 8 cts. per lb., per bu. of 60 lbs., or per 100 lbs.; 2-bu. bags 13 cts. each BUCK^WHEAT. Sow about the middle of June broadcast from 2 to 3 pecks per acre. Japanese. This superior variety is earlier and more prolific and yields double the weight per acre of other sorts. Peck 40 cts., bu. (48 lbs.) $ Silver Hul


. Dreer's garden calendar : 1898. Seeds Catalogs; Nursery stock Catalogs; Gardening Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs. Crimson or Scarlet Clover. Sow seed at the rate of 15 to 20 lbs. to an acre. J)^ We offer the finest quality recleaned seed at 8 cts. per lb., per bu. of 60 lbs., or per 100 lbs.; 2-bu. bags 13 cts. each BUCK^WHEAT. Sow about the middle of June broadcast from 2 to 3 pecks per acre. Japanese. This superior variety is earlier and more prolific and yields double the weight per acre of other sorts. Peck 40 cts., bu. (48 lbs.) $ Silver Hull. Flour whiter and more nutritious than the Japanese. Peck 40 cts., bu. $ Prices variable. German or Golden Millet {Southern grown). A valuable annual hay and fodder crop, more productive and coarser than Hungarian Grass, medium early, 4 to 5 feet high. .Sow one bushel to the acre. Lb. 10 cts,, bu. (50 lbs.) $, 5 bu. and upwards § per bu. Hungarian Millet {Panicum Gcrnianiciivi). An annual for- age plant, early and produc- tive, growing 2 to 3 feet high, with an abundance of foliage, often yielding 2 or 3 tons per acre. Sow 1 bushel to the acre. Lb. 10 cts., bu. (48 lbs.) $, 5 bu. and upwards per bu. Egyptian or East India Pearl Millet {PeniciUaria spicatii). Grows from 8 to 10 feet high. When cultivated for fodder, sow in drills 3 feet apart, and thin out in rows to 1 foot apart. Sow 3 to 5 pounds per aire. Lb. 20 cts., 100 lbs. Early Amber Sugar Cans. § Sorghum, or Early Amber Sugar Cane. (See cut.) This is the sorghum of the Northern States; makes the finest quality of syrup. The earliest and most produc- tive variety. Height 10 to 12 feet. For Ensilage or fodder it possesses good ; stock of all kinds relish it. Sow four quarts in drills or eight quarts broadcast to acre. Per lb. 15 cts., bu. (56 lbs) $2 50, 100 lbs. $4 00. Johnson Grass, or Sorghum Halepense. .\ valuable Southern fodder plant, growing 30 inches f>r more


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