. Dreer's garden book 1919. Seeds Catalogs; Nursery stock Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs. 50 HENRTADREERfflilADELP^IA-PA- RELIABLE FARM SEEDS FIELD, FORAGE AND SILO SEED5 Prices of all Farm Seeds are f. o. b. Philadelphia and subject to market changes Golden Millet {Southern Grown). (See cut.) A valuable annual hay and fodder crop. Grows 4 to 5 feet, matures quickly. Sow 1 bushel to the acre. Bushel (50 lbs.), write for price. Hungarian Millet {Panioum Germanicum). An annual forage plant, ear


. Dreer's garden book 1919. Seeds Catalogs; Nursery stock Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs. 50 HENRTADREERfflilADELP^IA-PA- RELIABLE FARM SEEDS FIELD, FORAGE AND SILO SEED5 Prices of all Farm Seeds are f. o. b. Philadelphia and subject to market changes Golden Millet {Southern Grown). (See cut.) A valuable annual hay and fodder crop. Grows 4 to 5 feet, matures quickly. Sow 1 bushel to the acre. Bushel (50 lbs.), write for price. Hungarian Millet {Panioum Germanicum). An annual forage plant, early and productive, growing 2 to 3 feet high, and makes good hay. Sow 1 bushel to the acre. Bushel (48 lbs.) , write for price. Egyptian, or East Indian Pearl Millet [Penicillarin spieatu). Grows from 8 to 10 feet high, and is very productive. For fodder, sow 5 pounds of the seed in drills 3 feet apart, thin out in rows to 1 foot apart. Lb., 35 cts., postpaid. By express or freight, at purchaser's expense, 5 lbs., $; 10 lbs., § Japanese Barn=yard Millet {Panicum Crus-gaUi.) An excellent fodder plant; grows 6 to 8 feet high. Sow between middle of May and end of July. Lb., 30 cts., postpaid. By express or freight, at pur- chaser's expense, 10 lbs., $; 50 lbs., $; 100 lbs., $ MISCEI^LANEOUS FARM SEEDS Teosinte {Reaud Lnrurians.) fSee cut.) This plant somewhat re- sembles corn, but produces larger leaves and is more succulent; excel- lent for feeding horses and cattle, either green during summer or as fodder during winter, and is more nutritious and better liked than com fodder by stock of all Kinds. Grows well in this latitude, supplying an immense amount of fodder, but will not mature seed. Sow in May or June, in drills about 4 feet apart, using 3 lbs. of seed per acre, and cultivate in the same manner as coru. Per oz., 10 cts.; \ lb., 30 cts.; lb., $, postpaid. By express or freight, at purchaser's expense, 5 lbs. or over, 90 cts. per lb. Speltz. or Emm


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