F’eterita 

Branches from the root and one plant makes several 
heads. Withstands dry weather remarkably well, and is 
earlier than Kaffir. Heads are erect, cylindrical, grains 
are bluish white, hulls black and shiny. Excellent for 
feeding chickens, makes good ensilage, and can be hog- 
ged down with satisfactory results. Feterita is noted for 
its smut-resistance. 
Colby Milo 
A new short seasoned variety of grain sorghum which 
grows about 20 inches high. Heads are erect, seed are 
yellow and threshes free from the glumes. 
Sooner or 
60 Day Milo 
A non-saccharine sorghum of high feeding value. Well 
adapted to eastern Colorado and western Kansas for a 
grain crop. The seed is larger than Kaffir and is 
claimed to be equal to corn in feeding value. 
Grohoma 
Midseason to late variety 4 to 6 feet tall with stout 
stems moderately juicy and slightly sweet. It tillers 
freely and branches abundantly. Heads are from 8 to 15 
inches long and may or may not be well exserted from 
the upper leaf sheath or boot. Botanical origin is uncer- 
tain, but believed to be a cross between Feterita and 
some variety of sorghum. 
Broom Corn 
BLACK SPANISH. The leading standard variety. Glumes 
are dark brown to black. Favored by growers because 
of early maturity and tendency to produce finer, 
straighter brush with less reddening than the older 
type. 
Millet 

Used in this country principally as a catch crop 
and for this purpose it is very valuable, as it can 
be sown quite late and still make an excellent 
crop of hay. A very good crop to grow on foul 
land to get rid of weeds. Also makes lots of feed. 
GERMAN MILLET. Enormous heads, heavy yield of 
seed and hay. 
SIBERIAN MILLET. Early, hardy, withstands drought. 
WHITE WONDER MILLET. The heads of this variety 
will run from 8 to 18 inches and a single head will have 
as many as 15,000 seeds. Foliage heavy. 
JAPANESE MILLET. Also known as Billion Dollar Grass. 
Enormous yields. 
HOG MILLET. Large seeded yellow variety. Seed makes 
excellent feed. 
EARLY FORTUNE MILLET. Large seeded red variety. 
Wheat 
TENMARQ. A heavier yielding fall wheat: A cross be- 
tween Marquis and Turkey Red. Has stiff straw. 
THATCHER. A relatively new beardless, hard red spring 
wheat; rust resistant and of very good milling and bak- 
ing quality. 
TURKEY RED. A hard, bearded winter wheat. 
MARQUIS. An old standby in spring wheat. It is beard- 
less and a good yielder. 
Beans 
We can supply the following dried Beans: Pinto, Great 
Northern, Red Mexican, Navy, and Red Kidney. 
Soy Beans 
Are becoming more popular every year. Used for hay, 
a soil builder and has a wide variety of commercial uses. 
Also used with corn in ensilage. 
We recommend the Illini variety. 

We are located in the heart of the growing section, and can furnish the very best in 
forage crop seeds. 
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