. Dreer's garden book : 1906. Seeds Catalogs; Nursery stock Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs. HfflkYADREER-PHIlAKiiPfllA-PA- RELIABLE PARM SEEDS FIELD, FORAGE AND SILO «imued. Qerman, or QoMenmUet (SoiMi^rn g^rown). A valuable annual hay and fodder crop; 1 bu. to acre. Lb , 10 cts. (postpaid, 18 cts.); bu. (50 lbs.), write for price. Hungarian Millet {Panicum Germanicimi). An annual forage plant, early and productive, g}0\ving 2 to 3 feet high ; 1 bu. to acre. Lb., 10 cts. (postpaid, 18 cts.);


. Dreer's garden book : 1906. Seeds Catalogs; Nursery stock Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs. HfflkYADREER-PHIlAKiiPfllA-PA- RELIABLE PARM SEEDS FIELD, FORAGE AND SILO «imued. Qerman, or QoMenmUet (SoiMi^rn g^rown). A valuable annual hay and fodder crop; 1 bu. to acre. Lb , 10 cts. (postpaid, 18 cts.); bu. (50 lbs.), write for price. Hungarian Millet {Panicum Germanicimi). An annual forage plant, early and productive, g}0\ving 2 to 3 feet high ; 1 bu. to acre. Lb., 10 cts. (postpaid, 18 cts.); bu. (48 lbs.), write for price. Egyptian, or East India Pearl Hillet {Pencillaria spkata). Grows from 8 to 10 feet high ; 3 to ,5 lbs. per acre. 12 cts. (postpaid, 20 cts.); 100 lbs., $ Japanese Barn-yard Millet (Paniium Crus-galli). An excellent fodder plant; grows 6 to 8 feet high, and is more tender than most tall varieties of Millet. Should be sown between middle of May and end of July, either broadcast or in drills ; if broadcast use 12 lbs. to acre, if drilled 8 IbR. The yield is heavy and fodder equal to Corn. Can be fed green, cured as hay, or siloed. Lb., 10 cts. (postpaid, 18 cts.); 10 lbs., 75 cts.; 100 $ Sorghum, or Early Amber Sugar-Cane. (See cut.) This is the Sorj;hum of the Northern States; makes the finest quality of syrup. The earliest and most productive variety. Height, 10 to 12 feet. For ensilage or fodder it possesses good qualities ; stock of all kinds relish it. Sow 4 quarts in drills, or 8 quarts broadcast, to acre. Per lb., 10 cts. (postpaid, 18 cts.); bu. (56 H'S.), $; 100 lbs., $ Johnson Grass, or Sorghum Halepense. \ Southern fodder plant, growing 30 inches or more in height; liardy in New Jersey. Per 15 cts. (postpaid, 23 cts.); bu. (25 lbs.), $; 100 lbs., $10 00. Sunflower, Hammoth Russian. May be giown to great advantage in waste ground. An excellent and cheap food for fowls. All farmers should p


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1906