Peanuts Are Easily Grown, Easily Harvested, and Among Our Very Best Feed Crops 
CHUFAS 
Sow 1 peck of seed per acre 
Ninety days. One of the very best 
and most reliable crops that can be 
grown for fattening hogs; also a 
most excellent feed for poultry, and 
especially turkeys. Plant from April 
to August, 1 peck of seed per acre, in 
3-foot rows, dropping three or four 
seeds every 6 inches in the drill. Pkt. 
TOc; lb. 25c; 2 lbs. 45c; postpaid. 
Not postpaid, 11 lbs. (pk.) $1.25; 44 
lbs. (bu.) $4.00. 
WHITE KAFFIR CORN 
Sow 10 pounds to 1 bushel of 
seed per acre 
(90 days.) A very valuable crop to 
grow where you have poultry or live 
stock. Plant from March until Au¬ 
gust, in rows 3 feet apart, drilling the 
seed thinly, and using 10 pounds per 
acre where planted for the grain; for 
forage, broadcast 1 bushel per acre, 
which will give two cuttings. Lb. 25c, 
postpaid. Not prepaid, I2V2 lbs. (pk.) 
75c; 50 lbs. (bu.) $2.50. 
Florida Runner Peanuts 
PEANUTS 
Sow 1 bushel of seed per acre 
In addition to the crop of nuts for your hogs. Peanuts yield a 
great quantity of nutritious dry forage. The Florida Peanuts are 
by far the best when grown to fatten hogs, as they can be left in 
the ground until eaten, but not so with the Spanish Peanuts, as 
they must be harvested as soon as matured, or they will sprout 
and come up the first wet spell. 
It is better to shell the seed that is to be planted. If planted in 
corn, which is a splendid scheme, a bushel will plant 4 acres, but 
where planted solid it requires a bushel of seed per acre, in 3-foot 
rows, dropping seeds in hills a foot apart. You can produce two 
crops of the Spanish types per year on same ground, if first crop 
is planted early, but this is not true of the Florida. 
Florida Runner (120 days.) This is the principal variety 
— — where you are growing for hog feed, as 
the nuts will remain in the ground in good condition all fall and 
until eaten out bv the hogs. Lb. 15c, postpaid. Not prepaid, 6 J /4 
lbs. (pk.) 45c; 25 lbs. (bu.) $1.35. 
CATTAIL 
or PEARL MILLET 
Sow 4 to 20 pounds of seed 
per acre 
F.O.B. Plant City, except 10-pound 
lots or less, which are prepaid 
This variety produces green feed 
from early spring throughout the en¬ 
tire summer for your live stock, including horses, cows, hogs, 
sheep, etc. Plant in spring, just as soon as frost is over and as 
late as August, in 3-foot rows, using 4 pounds of seed where 
drilled in rows, or 20 pounds of seed broadcast. Pkt. 10c; lb. 25c; 
10 lbs. $2.25; 25 lbs. $3.85; 100 lbs. $12.50. 
GOLDEN MILLET 
FORMERLY GERMAN MILLET 
Sow 1 bushel of seed per acre 
(60 days.) For large-yielding, nutritious, quick-growing hay 
crop, there is nothing better than Golden Millet. However, it 
must be thickly seeded. If you want some early hay, plant in 
March and April. Then, for second crop, plant in July and Au¬ 
gust. Cut in about six weeks from time of planting, or while in 
bloom. Lb. 25c, postpaid; not prepaid, 12 l / 2 lbs. (pk.) 75c; 50 
lbs. (bu.) $2.50. 
OATS 
A bushel weighs 32 pounds 
If you wish to plant in drills, make them IY 2 feet apart and 
cover seed 2 to 3 inches deep. If the seed is broadcast, put them 
in with a tooth harrow. The best time to plant here in Florida is 
October and November. However, the Burt, or 90-Day, can be 
planted as late as January and frequently makes a good crop. 
Do not use less than 2 bushels of seed per acre. 
Fulghum. (110 days.) Undoubtedly this is one of the South’s 
——— very best. Almost as early as the Burt, it is a far 
heavier yielder, rustproof, entirely beardless, and drought-resist¬ 
ant. If you are not familiar with this variety, we assure you that 
you need not have any hesitancy in planting Fulghum Oats. Lb. 
15c; 2 lbs. 25c; postpaid. Not prepaid, 8 lbs. (pk.) 45c; 32 
lbs. (bu.) $1.25. 
(90-DAY). (90 to 100 days.) Quick-maturing and one of 
_1 Florida’s most popular Oats. It is a sure cropper, and 
can be planted later than any other variety. Lb. 15c; 2 lbs. 
25c; postpaid. Not Prepaid, 8 lbs. (pk.) 40c; 32 lbs. (bu.) 
$ 1 . 10 . 
Winter Turf. (GRAZING). (130 days.) Splendid for pastur- 
- ■ ing; looks more like rye while growing. No 
matter how severe the cold, it never seems to affect this variety. 
For grazing there is no other Oat that will beat it. 
Lb. 15c; 2 lbs. 25c; postpaid. Not prepaid, 8 lbs. (pk.) 45c; 
32 lbs. (bu.) $1.35. 
Improved Spanish. (Valencia). (ioo days.) a bush 
————variety with two to four peas to the 
pod, making a large amount of top which can be converted into 
most nutritious hay by proper curing. If you desire to grow 
eating Peanuts for the market, this would be the best type for 
this purpose, as it has the size, productiveness, and most excel¬ 
lent flavor. Lb. 15c; postpaid. Not prepaid, 5y 2 lbs. (pk.) 85c; 
22 lbs. (bu.) $3.00. 
Small Spanish. (90 days.) This is the little white Spanish 
— Peanut, very productive and one of the surest 
croppers. Two crops a year can be produced on same ground. 
The nuts stick to the vine in harvesting and both tops and nuts 
are fed to cows, horses, and hogs as a whole-grain ration. Lb. 
15c, postpaid. Not prepaid, 6Vi lbs. (pk.) 50c; 25 lbs. (bu.) 
EGYPTIAN WHEAT 
WHITE-SEEDED CHICKEN CORN 
Sow 10 pounds of seed per acre 
F.O.B. Plant City, except 10-pounds lots or less, which are prepaid 
(120 days.) This variety is well adapted to our soil and has 
been grown in Florida with great success. It will, no doubt, be¬ 
come one of our most popular forage plants, as it is relished by 
all kinds of stock. Produces an abundance of grain that is far 
superior to kaffir corn or sorghum for chicken feed. 
You will often get almost a pound of seed from one head. Drill 
10 pounds of seed per acre in 3-foot rows. One of the best yield- 
ers of all the sorghum or kaffir families, and can produce two 
crops from one sowing—first cut for green feed and second as a 
grain crop. Perfectly adapted to the Gulf States. Pkt. 10c; 
lb. 20c; 10 lbs. $1.50; 25 lbs. $2.75; 100 lbs. $8.00. 
36 
TWELVE KILGORE STORES SERVING FLORIDA 
