mm 
R.B.BUCHANAN SEED CO. MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 
SKOS 
F!£0 
Wild game is disappearing rapidly. Your State and Federal Governments ask you to help save it by feeding and protecting it. Join the Wild Life 
Conservation Program: Observe the game and fish laws; make constant war on the hawk and all predators, thereby increasing your sport. 
Wild birds save the farmers of the U. S. A. millions of dollars GAME BIRD SEEDS FOR PLANTING — The Federal Game 
each year by destroying insects; feed and protect them during 
the winter. 
Attract game birds to your farm by shelter feeding them during 
the winter with Buchanan’s Game Bird Scatter Food, and by 
growing crops on which they like to feed. 
1201—BUCHANAN’S GAME BIRD SCATTER FOOD—Our for¬ 
mula was prepared by a high authority on game bird feeding. 
It is composed of cracked grains and the seeds on which they 
love to feed. Scatter near the edge of woods or brush. This 
mixture is held in high favor, especially by game preserve 
owners, who are using it in increasingly large quantities. 
1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 80c; 10 lbs., $1.40; 25 lbs., $3.00 
and Inland Fisheries Commission recommends the planting of 
the following crops for game bird feeding: Korean lespedeza, 
buckwheat, brabham, groit and black-eye peas, shallu Japan 
clover, hairy vetch, German millet, laredo soy beans, kaffir com, 
benne. wheat and rye. 
1202—BENNE SEED—Tall annual herb, about 3 feet high, pro¬ 
ducing flowers followed by seed pods which shatter the oily seeds 
in great profusion. These seeds are relished by poultry and a 
great use at present is a crop to attract and feed wild birds, 
especially quail and partridges. The oil from the seed is sweet, 
and, like olive oil, is used on salads and for other culinary 
purposes. The parched seeds are used in confectionery. This is 
one of the finest plants ever grown for poultry feed. Try it this 
year. Drill seed in rows 3 feet apart, as soon as frost danger is 
past, at rate of 5 pounds per acre. 
1 lb., 35c; 5 lbs., $1.25; 10 lbs., $2.45; 15 lbs., $2.60 
All Prices on This Page Post Paid. 
PEANUTS See Yellow List Enclosed for Quantity Prices. 
\ SO LBS. S' 
BUCK BRAND? 
SPANISH 
PEANUTS 
R.B. BUCHAN AN i 
SEED CO. 
A\E>\P«IS,TENN. 
CULTURE—Plant the shelled nut in May or 
early in June, dropping the nuts 8 to 10 
inches apart in 2 y 2 to 3 foot rows and cover 1 
to 2 inches deep. Cultivate thoroughly until 
the nuts begin to form. When harvesting, 
loosen the roots with a plow, pull the vines 
with the nuts attached, allow them to dry, 
stack around a stake, turning the nuts inward. 
1177— PEANUTS (Spanish Type)—They 
can be grown closer than most varieties, 
are more easily cultivated and gathered, 
as the nuts, which are clustered around 
the base of the plant, cling firmly to the 
roots. 
1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 75c; 10 lbs., $1.30; 15 lbs., $1.75 
1178— PEANUTS (Tenn. Red Running 
Type)—The finest large variety grown; 
similar to Spanish Peanuts, but the pods 
are much larger and longer, well adapted 
to all soils. The pods usually contain 
from three to four nuts, which are very 
rich and highly flavored. 
1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 80c; 10 lbs., $1.35; 15 lbs., $1.90 
1180—PEANUTS (Valencia Type)—Fills 
the demand for a peanut that is larger 
and containing more nuts than the com¬ 
mon varieties. It is splendidly adapted 
for growing on the light sandy soils of 
the South Atlantic Seaboard, where it 
has yielded uniformly satisfactory crops. 
The pods are large, well filled, usually 
containing three or four nuts. 
1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 75c; 10 lbs., $1.30; 15 lbs., $1.75 
50 LBS. 
BUCK BRAND] 
: TENN. LONG-RED = 
i PEANUTS J 
-R.B. BUCHANAN 
SEED CO 
[ AAEMPHIS.TENN 
'JAN! 
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MILLET FOR SUMMER FORAGE 
1185—TENNESSEE GERMAN MILLET (Big Headed Type)—Seed are grown in Middle 
Tennessee. The standard weight of millet is 50 pounds to the bushel. Broadcast 1 
bushel to acre. There are about 232,000 seed to 1 pound. 
German Millet makes a quickly grown, easily cured and large yielding, nutritious 
hay crop. It comes so quickly that it can be sown after wheat, oats or other early 
crops are harvested, and leaves the land clean and in fine mechanical condition for 
the following crop. Millet should be cut when coming to flower, as after that stage 
the woody fibre forms in the stem and the hay is hard and unpalatable. Cut at the 
proper time, it makes a splendid hay. As a summer catch-crop, it has few equals, 
for it makes its crop in about sixty days, discing and harrowing wheat or oat land 
being the only preparation necessary. 
1 lb., 20c; 5 lbs., 70c; 10 lbs., $1.15; 15 lbs., $1.50 
1187— JAPANESE OR BARNYARD MILLET (Called Billion Dollar Grass)—Distinct 
from other millets; grows 4 to 6 feet high, yielding an enormous crop that in quality is 
equal to corn fodder and is relished by stock. Sow in May, June or July, 20 pounds to 
the acre broadcast; or plant in 15-inch drills and cultivate until it is 18 inches high. 
When green, feed a moderate quantity at first, gradually increasing the quantity as 
the animals become accustomed to it. This millet is used in great quantities by Southern 
Hunting Clubs for wild duck feed. 
1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 90c; 10 lbs., $1.65; 15 lbs., $2.00 
1188— PEARL OR CAT-TAIL MILLET—Will grow 10 to 12 feet high, but for the great¬ 
est amount of green feed it should be cut when 3 to 4 feet high. It will then stool 
out enormously. Give three or four cuttings a season, and keep on growing right up 
to frost. It is highly nutritious. It is a warm weather plant, and should not be planted 
till the ground is thoroughly warm, otherwise the seeds will not germinate. Plant 5 
pounds to the acre, in drills 3 feet apart. 
1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 95c; 10 lbs., $1.75; 15 lbs., $2.25 
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