32 GRIFFITH <a TURNER CO. °^ 



£J0 



GRASSES AND CLOVERS 



CONTINUED, 



MILLET. 



MILLET. 



GERMAN, OK GOLDEN MILLET. 



AN improved variety, medium early, growing 

 three to five £eet high. The heads aie closely 

 condensed, though the spikes are very numer- 

 ous. This is the best and most productive Mil- 

 let to grow. Weight per bushel, 50 pounds. 

 Market prices. 



HUNGARIAN MILLET (Panicum ger 

 manicum). — Early and productive, growing 2 

 to 3 feet high, with an abundance of foliage and 

 slender heads. Weight, per bushel, 48 pounds. 



Market prices. 



COMMON MILLET Weight, per bushel, 



50 pounds. 



IMPORTANT It does not pay the far- 

 mer to buy cheap Grass Seeds, as it is liable 

 to be either old seed, or full of weeds. 



TIMOTHY (Phleum pratense). 



This makes one of the most popular, nutritious 

 and salable of hay grasses. It is best adapt- 

 ed for sowing on clay or heavy loams, low lands 

 or in mountainous districts, although it will do 

 well on any good stiff loamy soils, provided 

 moistuie is abundant. It does not succeed 

 nearly as well, however, as Orchard, Tall Mead- 

 ow Oat or Herd's Grass on soils of a sandy or 

 light loamy texture, and is not of as much value 

 for pasturage as other grasses. The stand of 

 Timothy will also be injured if grazed or cut 

 too closely. The yield of hay on good ground Is 

 from one and a half to three tons per acre. The 

 best clover to sow with Timothy is either the 

 Sapling or Alsike, as they mature and ripen 

 with Timothy. Market prices. 



WHITE DUTCH CLOVER.. 



Thrives most everywhere. The best to sow with lawn grass and valu- 

 able to sow with blue grass for permanent pastures. 



Vi Pound, 10c. y z Pound, 15c. 1 Pound, 25c. 



By mail, Pound 35c. 



10 Founds, by express $2.25 



CRIMSON CLOVER. 



SEE PAGE 33. 



Grass and Clover 



FOR MOWING FOR HAY, 

 BUT CAN BE GRAZED. 



MIXTURE No. 1 For Moist Bottom Land. 



Composed of the following Grasses : 



Bed Top. Meadow Fescue. Timothy. 



Bed Clover. Alsike Clover. Kentucky Blue Grass 



Sow 20 pounds to the acre. 

 Price— $13.00 Per 100 Pounds. 

 MIXTURE No. 2.— For Light, Dry, Gravelly, or Sandy Soils. 



Composed of the following Grasses : 



Orchard Grass. Perennial Bye Grass. Tall Meadow Oat Grass. 

 Hungarian Brome Grass. Bed Clover. Fancy Bed Top. 

 Meadow Fescue. 

 Sow 35 pounds to the acre. 

 Price— $13.00 Per 100 Pounds. 

 MIXTURE No. 3.— For Good Loam Soil. 

 Composed of the following Grasses : 

 Meadow Foxtail. ,. Orchard Grass. 

 Perennial Bye Grass.' Meadow Fescue, 

 Bed Clover. 

 Sow 35 pounds to the acre. 

 Price— $13.00 Per 100 Pounds 



Tall Meadow Oat Grass. 

 Kentucky Blue Grass. 



ORCHARD GRASS. 



(Dactylis glomerata.) 



f)NE of the best and most reliable grasses for 

 *' the Middle aud Southern States, either for 

 hay or pasturage. It succeeds well on nearly 

 all soils but does best on upland, loamy or 

 modorately stiff soils. It starts early in the 

 spring and continues well into w inter. It is of 

 quick growth and relished by stock, especially 

 when young, and bears close giazing. It makes 

 excellent hay, and gives the veiy best results 

 mixed and crown with Tall Meadow Oat Grass 

 ani Bed Clover, as suggested iinder the head of 

 Tall Meadow Oat Grass. It should be cut when 

 in blossom, as the hay is injured if the seed is 

 allowed to ripen. It can be sown in the spring 

 or fall either with grain or alone. Sow 3 bushels 

 per acre if sown alone, or with Bed Clover, one 

 and one-half bushels of Orchard and seven 

 pounds of Clover are the quantities usually 

 sown. Price fluctuates. 



By express, 20c. lb. Bus. of 14 Lbs., $2.35. 



CLOVER 

 SEED 



OECHAKD GBASS. 



RECLEANED RED CLOVER. 



\I7E take great pains to supply an extra quality of Bed Clover at a I 

 »" reasonable price. Farmers should not sow a poor quality of Cloven 

 Seed. We have, however, cheaper grades for those who wish them. 

 Market prices. 



AWIHE OR SWEDISH CLOVER. 



HARDIEST of all the Clovers, and on rich, moist soils yields an enor- 

 mous quantity of hay or pasturage. Valuable for sowing with other! 

 Clovers or Grasses, as it forms a thick bottom and increases the yield ot | 

 hay. Sow, either fall or spring, 6 pounds per acre when used alone. 



lib., 20c. By mail, 30c. 10 lbs., $1.80, by express. 



LUCERNE OR 

 ALFALFA CLOVER 



One of the most valuable among Clovers, 

 resisting drought and lemaining green when 

 other sorts are dried up. Sow on rich, moist 

 loam or sandy soil. Prepare the land thor- 

 oughly and sow, either fall or spring, 20 

 pounds to the acre. 



Pound 25c. 



By mail 25c. 



6 Pounds, by express. . .81.20 



Special prices in large quantities on 

 application. 



LUCEBNE. 



FINEST IN THE COUNTRY. 



Last June you sent me four bushels of German Millet, and I now 

 have five acres of it. Everyone says it is the finest in the 

 country. It is in a low meadow, and the dry weather does not 

 seem to have any effect upon it. 



F. A. WELTT, Emmittsburg, Md. 



If any of the above wanted by mail, add 8c. per pound for postage. 



