Garden flower and field seeds 1902 . re. Lbv 20c; 100 lbs.,$ COMMON MILLET. (Panicum Mlliaceum.) Height2 to 3 feet; succulent stems; leaves broad and numerous,grows rapidly, and matures early. Can be planted as lateas August and mature a crop of hay the same % bushel per acre—50 lbs. to the bushel. Bu., $, HUNGARIAN MILLET. (Panicum popular forage grass in dry sections and dry seasons; itendures drouth remarkably well. Stalk leafy, 2 to 4 feethigh, with slender heads; 48 pounds to the bushel. Sow% bushel per acre. Cut wnen in blossom, and cure thesame as clov


Garden flower and field seeds 1902 . re. Lbv 20c; 100 lbs.,$ COMMON MILLET. (Panicum Mlliaceum.) Height2 to 3 feet; succulent stems; leaves broad and numerous,grows rapidly, and matures early. Can be planted as lateas August and mature a crop of hay the same % bushel per acre—50 lbs. to the bushel. Bu., $, HUNGARIAN MILLET. (Panicum popular forage grass in dry sections and dry seasons; itendures drouth remarkably well. Stalk leafy, 2 to 4 feethigh, with slender heads; 48 pounds to the bushel. Sow% bushel per acre. Cut wnen in blossom, and cure thesame as clover. Bu., $ PEARL MILLET. (Egyptian, East India Millet, Pencil-laria spicata.) Sow in light, sandy soil, cut when small, for feeding green, it produces a secondcrop; is one of the best of fodder crops in the south. Lb. 10c. GERMAN, or GOLDEN MILLET. A greatyielder, and one of the best of hay and fodder crops Sow% bushel per acre, 50 pounds to the bushel. Bu ,$ 56 W. W. BARNARD & CO., SEEDSMEN, ALFALFA CLOVER. CRIMSON GLOVER. (Trifoiium Incarnatum.)This is an annual clover lor fall sow-ing only, and when ripe to cut fororseed it neverstarts can be sown in August,September or early in Oc-tober. It can be sown inorchards, in fields of grow-ing crops, or in open groundafter some other crop hasbeen harvested. It ger-minates quickly, grows late,in the fall and during warmspells in the winter, whenred clover will not think ofstarting. Makes remark-ably rapid growth in Springand by the first week inMay it stands two or threefeet high and is in fullbloom, ready to turn underas green manure in timefor almost any Spring succeeds on nearly everykind of soil standing northern win-ter and southern summer. It canbe cut for hay and for this purposegrows as easily as common red clo-ver. It thrives on land so poorthat the common clover would dobut little. 10 to 15 lbs. are requiredto the acre. Lb., 15c, not prepaid. ALSIKE, Or SWEDISH. {Trifo


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