64 
JOHNSON & STOKES, PHILADELPHIA 
This enormous growth of tli£ 
East Indian or Pearl Millet 
For Hovoral yeftVH wo lmve been experimenting with all the known forace nlants anrl have fnnnrl 
nothing equal to Pearl Millet either in growth or quality. It has produced^he most abundantlJ and 
can be cut several tunes during the season. The United States Agricultural Department hasalsomade 
numerous experiments and w 1, about the same results as those at Floracroft. I?you „ow 4een Image 
tiy Fast Indian or Pearl Millet on our recommendation and you will find there is nothin ^ 5 ominl tn h 
rill in 2 feet rows 10 lbs. to the acre. Price, choice American grown seed Pe lOr 30 c 
By mail, postpaid, lb, 20c.; 10 lbs. (enough for 1 acre), $1.50; bushll, $5.00, by freight or express ’ 
' KAFFIR CORN 
n^inJ 1 ! 1 “ ak 0 a . ?. ne c /op Of forage if cut in early bloom, 
and t he shoots that then follow will mature a full crop of seed 
U/niL- *« ft8 i°' 1 n nn ^ fodder are excellent, the whole 
a nn» H e1 :/ 0 tho ful1 purity of seed. There is no failure 
Sr wr»!i , i. l !S. 1 ^ p088e f ses t ! 1 ? wotily that all the tribe possess, 
ThnVrr ; ^ f ! >1 rai n u "’ithout any loss of capacity to yield. 
ke9a floU T t,mt is like whe »t. Cultivated the 
n miunfa common Indian Corn, requiring four to five 
&J’:3 1h B e ° fi i P . e , r ". 0, 2-Pps'OBC paid, P™., 10c.;lb.. 
J incut, puobpuiu, ill., 1U 1US. ^UllOUgH 101* 1 
Teosinte (Reana Luxurians) 
This gigantic Qraminca will furnish a continuous daily 
supply of most initrltloiiH green food for horses and all kinds 
, c, } lt J 4 * 11,1 through tho summor. It also makes splendid 
dry ladder, yielding enormously, and being more nutritious 
and hotter relished by all kinds of stoek than corn fodder 
In appoarunco it somewhat resembles Indian corn, but the 
loaves am much larger and broader, and the stalks contain 
sweeter sap. In Its perfection It. produces a great number 
ol shoots, growing ten to twelve feet high, very thickly 
covered with leaves, yielding an abundanee of forage. It 
stools out enormously after being cut, as many as forty-five 
Htallcs having been grown from a single seed. Sow in May 
or Juno, at the rato of throe pounds per aero, in drills three 
and a half to four feet apart, l'kt., 10c.; oz., 15c.; M lb 10c • 
lb., SI. I 15. postpaid. * 
LATUYItUS SYLVESTItlS, or FLAT PEA. If the 
strong claims made for this forage plant are but half true, it 
Is certainly one of the best yet discovered. The roots pene¬ 
trate the soil twenty to thirty feet, enabling it to withstand 
cold or drought, and will last, fifty years without manure or 
reseeding. It will fatten hogs or sheep without grain, and 
will out six to eight tons of hay to the acre. Sow in drills 
twelve to fifteen inches apart. Pkt., 10e.; oz.. 20e • lb 
00c.; lb., 92.00, postpaid. * ’ * 
. O nV ' rn i , • 1 •' UUI,1 » postage paid, pm., juc.; 10 
buHi.^rli uls. fc:^' K ° r express - qt " 15c - : i )eck - GOc 
soridmmF^ri'*' 1 '* COK >>'- Belongs to tlie non-sacclinrin 
nblb „ V 1111 ,™ brought a few years since from thenri 
fVm U . ls Pronounced by all wlio have crow 
Grows su ’f es t crop for dry countries and season! 
lieTriv n, Vu rCe fc0t h, ' eh - T1,b Krnins are pure, white an 
lion U „„ ThrUC P ,°T Gs plant an acre. The cultivr 
Pkt tne . lb oL^o o r Kan"-Coro and other forage plant 
bush. (fioitw.y, S2?..;)) 3 by S fre?gi]t POStl ' U ' <i ’ “ l - ^ pCck ’ 75c 
BOAv’MtLLO^r Prvl' VIZ « ’ ° r DH( H®A, and YEL 
valtinhle fn,. i, ,1 Copular varieties of sorghmr 
! ! and grain. Pkt, 10c.; lb, 2oc.; 3 Pis 
We, postpaid, qt, 15c.; peek, 7ac.; bush, $2.50, by freight 
