34 OLDS Se WourePpre: 

MILLETS 
These are quick-growing annual grasses. adapted 
to a wide range of soils and climates, but requiring 
a good supply of moisture at the start and warm 
weather throughout their short growing seasons. 
German Millet. Also called Golden Millet. 
Stems heavier, leaves broader and coarser than 
common Millet. Requires a slightly longer and 
warmer growing season and a mellower soil. Ready 
to cut in about 65 days. Weight 48 lbs. per bushel. 
Sow 25 to 40 lbs. per acre. 
Hungarian Millet. Sometimes incorrectly called 
“Hungarian Grass.”” An early variety. The hay 
is of excellent quality and the yield, under good 
conditions, averages 2 to 214 tons per acre, ranking 
second in this respect to German Millet. Weight 
48 lbs. per bushel. Sow 25 to 40 lbs. per acre. 
Japanese Millet. It is rather coarse and suc- 
culent, which makes it difficult to cure for hay and 
it is not recommended for that purpose. It makes 
the best silage and green forage of any of the 
Millets. For green feed, cut just before the heads 
appear. For ensilage, cut in late bloom or when 
the seed is beginning to form. Weight 32 lbs. to 
bushel. Sow 15 to 20 lbs. per acre. 
GRAINS 
Barley. Oderbrucker. Six-rowed, heavy yield- 
ing, used mostly for cover crop. Weight 48 lbs. 
to bu. Sow 2 bu. to acre. 
Buckwheat—Japanese. Yields heaviest on fertile 
well-drained, sandy loam, but will give fair results 
on soils too poor for most other crops, matures in 
about 70 days, ripens best in early Fall. Weight 
48 lbs. per bu. Sow one bu. per acre. 
Oats—Victory Type Select. Large, plump, white 
kernels, with thin hulls, grows well on light soils 
and stands considerable drought, earliest of the 
heavy yielding sorts. Weight 32 lbs. per bu. Sow 
2 bu. per acre. 
Rye—Rosen Winter. Produces a strong, vigor- 
ous straw. The grain is large and heavy and 
commands a premium over common rye. but the 
excess yield will more than pay the extra cost. 
Weight 56 lbs. per bu. Sow 2 bu. per acre. 

With this integral mower, the Model “‘L”’ really 
gets hay down ina hurry. On the jobs that follow, 
such as raking, loading, sweep raking, or baling, 
the Model“L”’ will handle them all at mighty low 
cost. 
IN GC 
HARTFORD, CONN. 
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ratio at) Vel eco) 1A Cone t-U0-\ 

Make sure of nitrogen gathering 
nodules for your legume crops by 
inoculating with NOD-O-GEN 
Assures heavy early growth. 
Better plant growth above and 
below ground. Higher pro- 
tein content of crops. 
NOD-O-GEN improves 
quality, quantity and yield. 
Use NOD-O-GEN. 
trSeed 
| 
nocularz;, 
NOD-O-GEN is available for inoculation 
of all legumes divided into many separate 
groups. Write us what legumes you are 
planning to grow. Full information FREE, 











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For Alfalfa and Sweet Clover. 
lg bu. size 30ec )=0srd 1 bu. size 50e §=—. 2% bu. size $1.00 
For Clovers, Medium Red, Crimson, Mammoth, 
Alsike, White and White Dutch. 
1% bu. size 30e = 1 «bu. size 50e §=—. 21 bu. size $1.00 
For Soybeans. 
1 bu. size 20c 2 bu. size 30c 
For Cowpeas, Lima Beans and Velvet Beans. 
1 bu. size 20c 2 bu. size 30¢ 5 bu. size 55¢ 
For Field Beans, Wax String, Navy Snap, Kidney 
and Scarlet Runner. 
V6 bu. size 20c 1 bu. size 30¢ 5 bu. size $1.00 
For Vetches—Spring, Wild, Common, Hairy or 
Winter and Hungarian, 
5 bu. size 55e 
Peas, Austrian, Canada, Garden, Sweet and 
Canning. 
1 bu. size 35c¢ 5 bu. size $1.50 
Garden Combination for Garden Peas and Beans, 
Sweet Peas and Lima Beans. 
For 5 lbs. or less 10¢ 
Vs bu. size 25e 
At Last! an Ideal Food for 
Dogs. Purina Dog Chow 
belongs to the Checkerboard 
family of quality feeds. That 
is your guarantee of depend- 
ability. When you feed 
Purina Dog Chow you start 
in at a point it has taken 
Purina over thirty years to 
reach. All of their experience, 
all of their science, all of 
their skill is behind every 
little cube of Dog Chow. 

5 lbs. 50e 10 Ibs. $1.00 25 lbs. $2.15 50 Ibs. $4.00 
