MILLETS-CLOVER 
“Money-Back” Terms Always—See Page 50 
^jioffmaris. 
Half a bushel of Millet with a bushel of Cow Peas per acre 
make a fine hay or green-feed combination. The Millet grows 
quickly, produces a heavy crop even on poor land. It is 
best sown in June and July and cut for hay when seed heads 
have come on about a third of the plants—before the seeds 
harden or the growth gets "woody.” 
“GOLDEN” MILLET 
Seven to nine weeks to a heavy crop in Pennsylvania. Leafy 
character, satisfactory hay. Sow 3 pecks seed per acre. Runs 
48 pounds per bushel. 
“HUNGARIAN” MILLET 
Dependable for Northern growing conditions—and preferred 
by many for this reason. 48 pounds to bushel. 
“JAPANESE” MILLET 
The "Million Dollar Grass” yielding as high as 20 tons per 
acre. A tall variety that thrives on poor soil. For green feed¬ 
ing, cut just before seed heads appear. When well cured, 
makes valuable hay. Sow y 2 bushel per acre. 32 pounds is 
a bushel. Cover seed well. 
KOREAN LESPEDEZA 
Thrives on lands too poor for other clovers. Is widely used 
from Maryland southward as a soil enricher. It is an annual, 
killed by the frost, but it is a great drought resister. Often 
reseeds itself. Has made from 1 to 4 tons of easily cured 
hay per acre. Be sure to inoculate the seed. Sow 20 to 25 
pounds per acre. 
“SERICEA” LESPEDEZA 
A perennial strain of "Lespedeza.” Not only thrives on poor 
soils and in drier seasons, but gives you finer hay than 
"Korean.” Grows taller. Eliminates the need of reseeding 
because it will last for several seasons. 
CRIMSON (SCARLET) CLOVER 
“Equal to 20 Loads of Manure per Acre” 
Such is the value one user claims for "Crimson (Scarlet) 
Clover” plowed under as a soil improver! Admittedly, it is 
one of the most valuable winter cover crops, planted after 
other crops mature. Provides abundant winter and spring 
pasturage. Fine planted in orchards or in corn fields at last 
cultivation. Grows well on soil too poor for red clover. 
Be sure to inoculate this seed, and it will gather great 
nodules of soil-enriching, nitrogen-fixing bacteria on the 
roots. Seed 20 pounds per acre from middle of June to late 
August, not too far North. It matures the following June. 
Best south of Pennsylvania, although it has been used with 
success in Southern Ohio, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. To 
insure success, use only good seed, enough of it, inoculate, 
and cover properly. Richer soil will be your reward. 
“I was very much pleased 
with the Funk ‘G 15’ Hybrid 
Seed Corn. It produced 108^2 
bushels to the acre of nice 
corn. The stalks were a good 
bit stronger and had a better 
root system than the other 
variety which I planted this 
year. If I had planted this all 
Hybrid Corn this year I 
would have had about 250 
bushels more corn.”—F. A. 
Ringeisen, Callery , Pa. 
© 
Note this thick, heavy stand 
of Crimson Clover. What a 
crop to turn under. ... For 
it's a wonderful soil-improver. 
44 
