GERMAN MILLET 
Is still the most popular millet on the 
market, is very prolific, has great stool- 
ing habits, and is very leafy and bushy 
and full of rich green blades. It grows 
very rank, three to four feet high, is 
without question the best of the millets 
for hay, being sweet, palatable, and 
milk producing. The hay to get the 
best results should be cut when in full 
bloom. Numbers of our customers re¬ 
ported to us that if it hadn’t been for 
German Millet their feed question this 
past year would have been very serious 
with them. Grows on any kind of soil 
and will make a crop for you in short 
notice. We have an excellent stock on 
hand of the purest millet seed we ever 
handled. Protect your hay requirements 
this year by putting in an adequate 
acreage of German Millet. We strongly 
recommend this variety. 
Even under the best of conditions the 
extreme shortage of hay will not be 
overcome in one year, and German 
Millet will help you build up a surplus of 
hay perhaps better than any other an¬ 
nual crop. Disc up your Winter Wheat and 
Winter Rye or Oat stubble and sow 25 pounds 
of German Millet to the acre, and you will be 
well repaid. 
SIBERIAN 
German Millet 
EARLY FORTUNE 
RED PROSO 
Of the same type as Hog or 
Broom Corn, with the exception 
that the color of the seed is red, whereas the 
Hog or Broom Corn variety is white. A good 
yielder, the seed being very valuable for either 
poultry or hog feeding, and it also yields a 
heavy weight of fodder. Quantity to sow, same 
as Hog Millet. 
When in doubt, use Millet. Costs so 
little. Absolutely dependable, quick 
growing, prolific—smothers weeds. 
Wonderful feeding value—may be sown 
late—thrives in real hot weather—surest 
quick growing catch crop—great drought 
resister. 
HOG OR BROOM CORN 
WHITE PROSO 
Can be used as hay or as a 
cleaning crop just the same as 
other Millets. It, however, 
yields an unusually heavy crop 
of seeds—from 60 to 70 bushels 
to the acre, and experiments at 
our Experiment stations have 
shown that it is an excellent 
substitute for wheat. The seed 
will mature and be ready for 
cutting, as a rule, two months 
after date of seeding. For hay 
purposes use from 30 to 40 
pounds and for- seed from 8 to 
12 pounds per acre. 
“DISCO” 
MILLETS 
A very fine variety of Millet, hailing from 
Russia. Unusually early, extremely hardy and 
withstands drought. The plant shows a remark¬ 
able stooling habit, as many as 30 to 40 stalks 
frequently grown from one seed. Use 30 to 40 
pounds to the acre. 
Disco Improved 
Seed Grains 
SPELTZ 
COMMON 
Grows an exceptionally sweet and palatable 
hay. Will thrive on almost any soil; attains a 
height of from 4 to 5 feet, and is unusually 
drought resistant, producing a fair crop on even 
poor soil. Sow broadcast 30 pounds per acre. 
Also known as Emmer. This remarkable crop 
belongs to the wheat family. The kernels are 
smaller and the hull or shuck does not come off 
entirely in threshing. Both shuck and kernel 
make excellent feed. Poultry thrive on it, and, 
ground up, it makes excellent hog feed. The 
straw also is of good feed value. It can be grown 
almost anywhere, from Canada to the Gulf and 
from Maine to the Pacific Coast. 
JAPANESE 
Justly called Billion Dollar Grass. Will grow 
from 6 to 9 feet high. Stands up remarkably 
well and yields enormous crops, over twenty 
tons per acre being easily obtained. The forage 
is tender, highly relished and in nutritive value 
appears to be about equal to the best Sweet 
Corn Fodder. 
Write for Special Bulletin 
Free on Request 
We have a complete line of all small 
grains at your disposal-wheat, oats, 
barley, rye, flax, buckwheat, 
sunflower, etc. 
Owing to the existing uncertainty in the grain 
market we do not consider it advisable (at the 
early date of this writeup) to list the many 
varieties of small grain in detail. 
While we have taken delivery of some of our 
small grain we shall continue adding to our 
stock for some little time yet. We shall be well 
in shape long before seeding time and be in a 
pesition to offer thoroughly recleaned grain of 
all kinds. Let us know your requirements. 
Millets are a very short crop and we suggest when ordering that first, second and third choice 
be given to avoid delay and disappointment. 
12 The DAKOTA IMPROVED SEED COMPANY 
