SORGHUMS for GRAIN and FODDER 
FARMERS AND STOCK RAISERS: DON’T GAMBLE ON GRASSHOPPERS AND WEATHE! 
SWEET STALKED 
SORGHUMS 
EARLY BLACK AMBER CANE: The earliest 
fodder Cane for the North. Grows from 5 to 7 feet 
tall and matures in 90 days. The stalks are very 
leafy, slender and easily cured. They are so sweet 
that all livestock relishes cane more than most 
other rough feed, and will clean it up down to the 
last stem. Besides the fodder you will get a good 
grain crop, which can be ground and fed to any 
kind of livestock. 
1 Ib., 15c; 5 Ibs., 35c; 10 Ibs., 55c; 25 Ibs., 
80c; 50 Ibs., $1.25; 100 Ibs., $2.25. 
PLANT SORGHUM 
I am writing this to the farmers in the 
dry areas where the corn crop in 1938 was 
a total failure or very poor. When the hot, 
dry weather of July and August came, and 
your corn burned and made no ears, weren't 
there fields of Cane and Grain Sorghums 
that stayed green and made a good crop? 
Didn’t you wish you had planted more of 
‘this grain yourself? 
This is a new year, we do not know what 
the weather will be—the mistakes of last 
year cannot be remedied, but we do not 
need to make the same ones again. Play 
Safe— Plant at least half your corn acreage 
to Sorghums. The stalks make good fodder, 
and the grain is nearly equal to corn in 
feeding value. 

(RAIN 
SORGHUMS 
FETERITA: Matures in about 90 days. This 
is one of the earliest of the grain sorghums and one 
of the best for the North. It grows about 6 feet 
tall. The stems are slender and very leafy, making 
it one of the best for fodder. The large heads are 
always well filled. The seed is white and somewhat 
larger and softer than other sorghums. Feterita 
has nearly the same feeding value as corn, and ina 
dry year will outyield corn both in grain and fodder. 
1 Ib., 15c; 5 Ibs., 35c; 10 Ibs., 60c; 25 Ibs., 
90c; 50 Ibs., $1.50; 100 Ibs., $2.75. 
EARLY ORANGE 
CANE: This sweet 
stalked cane is 
about two weeks 
later than Black 
Amber. Grows 
about 8 feet tall. 
The stalks are me- 
dium large and very 
leafy. Willproduce 
more silage or fod- 
der per acre than 
any crop except At- 
las Sorgo, and is 
early enough to ma- 
ture a seed crop ex- 
cept in the extreme 
North. Matures in 
about 100 days. 
1Ib., 15c; 5 Ibs., 
35c; 10 Ibs., 60c; 
25 Ibs., 90c; 50 
Ibs., $1.50; 100 
Ibs., $2.75. 
ATLAS SORGO: 
Atlas will produce jaeaa ig f I 
‘ Hike 
MOREANDBET- 
GYAN SORGO & GURNEY’S SUGAR SWEET 
GROHOMA: Ma- 
tures in about 
105 days. 
This new dry- 
weather forage 
plant of the Kaffir 
family has made a 
good crop of fodder 
and seed when corn 
was a total failure. 
Grows from 6 to 
8 feet high with 
leaves clear to the 
bottom of the 
stalks. The heavy 
heads are nearly a 
foot long and some- 
times weigh 1 
pound each. Gro- 
homa will outyield 
any other grain sor- 
ghum. There are 
record yields of 
over 100 bushels 
per acre. 
1 tb., 15¢; 5 
Ibs., 35c; 10 Ibs., 
60c; 25 Ibs., 90c; 
50 Ibs., $1.50; 100 
Ibs., $2.75. 
SOONER MILO & WHEATLAND MILO. Clifford 
Seely says: ‘“‘Plant Grain Sorghums as insu- 
TER FODDER 
than any other 
ORANGE CANE. Lawrence Kaiser of Gurney’s 
Seed Dept., with two of the best Sweet Stalked 
sweet stalked sor- 
ghum you can 
plant. It combines 
the sweet stalk and HIGH FOD- 
DER YIELD OF CANE. and the 
IMMENSE GRAIN YIELD OF 
KAFFIR. The stalks are so sweet 
that your livestock will eat it down 
to the last stem, and ask for more. 
The grain is nearly equal to corn 
for fattening hogs, cattle or sheep, 
and you can expect from 40 to 60 
bushels per acre. Atlas will stand the 
drouth and the grasshoppers don’t 
like it. It matures in about 120 days. 
Plant Atlas Sorgo and MAKE LIVE- 
STOCK RAISING PROFITABLE. 
1 Ilb., 15c; 5 Ibs., 35c; 10 Ibs., 
60c; 25 Ibs., $1.00; 50 Ibs., $1.75; 
100 Ibs., $3.00. 
Sorghums. 

GURNEY’S SUGAR SWEET 
ORANGE CANE: EARLIER 
THAN ATLAS, SWEETER THAN 
ATLAS, FINER STEMMED 
THAN ATLAS. There isn’t much 
more you can say for any Cane. It 
may not yield quite as much as 
Atlas but it will yield immense crops 
of Sugar Sweet fine stemmed, leafy 
fodder and a lot of good grain. It 
grows from 8 to 10 feet tall and will 
Mature a seed crop in about 105 
days, which makes it early enough 
for any part of the Northwest. 
1 Ib., 15c; 5 Ibs., 35c; 10 Ibs., 
60c; 25 lbs., $1.00; 50 Ibs., $1.75; 
100 Ibs., $3.00. 
Trance against drouth, grasshoppers.”’ 

SOONER MILO: This extra early 
Milo grows from 8 to 4 feet high, and 
matures in about 85 days. The heads 
are medium sized and very solid. 
Yields of 40 bushels of grain per acre 
are very common even in the dry 
years. One farmer west of the river 
in South Dakota, got 425 bushels 
Sooner from 10 acres, and less than 
300 bushels of corn from 40 acres. 
This year he will plant 100 acres of 
Sooner. It can be combine harvested. 
Raise SOONER MILO AND 
HOGS. MAKE FARMING PAY. 
1 Ib., 15c; 5 Ibs., 35c; 10 Ibs., 
55c; 25 Ibs., 80c; 50 Ibs., $1.25; 
100 Ibs., $2.25. 
36 
WHEATLAND MILO: If you want 
a heavy yielding grain sorghum that 
can be HARVESTED CHEAPLY 
and easily, plant Wheatland Milo. 
It grows from 2 to 3 feet tall and the 
large heads stand well above the 
leaves, making it PERFECT FOR 
COMBINING. It is medium early, 
maturing in about 105 days, and has 
made record yields of nearly 100 
BUSHELS -PER ACRE. It will 
stand the drouth. The grasshoppers 
do not care for it, and the grain is 
nearly equal to corn for feeding. 
1 Ib., 15c; 5 lbs., 35c; 10 Ibs., 
60c; 25 Ibs., 90c; 50 Ibs., $1.50; 
100 Ibs., $2.50. 
