PROF. HANSEN'S PROSO GRAIN AND HAY MILLET — 
We’d like to see you try Prof. Hansen’s Proso Grain Millet in your 
ration. This high protein feed is necessary for heavy production. It 
will keep your chickens healthy and will produce many more eggs. 
The Latin name (Panicum Mitiaceum) indicates that it will yield a 
thousand fold. | 


Be 
=e Sa BP Pager as 
A field of Proso ‘that yielded 75 bushels of grain per acre 

A Grain Crop in Sixty Days 
This Russian introduction yields fifty to eighty bushels per acre. It takes 
only sixty or seventy days to mature a grain crop. This is one of the most 
versatile crops in the country and can be grown everywhere, on dry land and 
,on irrigated land, low land or upland. It can be cut for hay or matured for 
grain which makes a wonderful chicken feed and can also profitably be used 
for fattening turkeys and livestock. We counted 1,500 kernels on one plant 
of Proso. 
_ On dry land plant twenty pounds per acre, any time from May Ist to August 
lst. In sections with better rainfall plant it at the rate of 30 pounds per acre 
with a grain drill. Harvest the same as you do grain. 
Look for Two Eggs from Every Pound of Feed. 
10 Ibs. $1.00; 25 Ibs. $1.75; 50 Ibs. $3.00; 100 Ibs. $5.75; 500 Ibs. $27.50 
Mighty High in Goodness—Mighty Low in Price 
HAY MILLETS 
KURSK SIBERIAN—A very fine variety of millet, extremely hardy and with- 
stands drought. The plant shows a remarkable stooling habit, as many as 30 
to 40 stalks frequently grown from one seed. Produces the most hay from 
least amount of rainfall. 
Prices: 50 Ibs. $3.50; 100 Ibs. $6.25; 300 Ibs. $18.50 
WHITE WONDER AND GERMAN MILLET 
A wonderful producer of hay and exceedingly valuable as a food for cattle 
and sheep. Like other millets it has a very low water requirement and is an 
excellent dry land crop. Produces 4 or 5 tons of hay per acre. 
Prices: 50 Ibs. $3.50; 100 Ibs. $6.25; 300 Ibs. $18.50 

improved TEPARY BEAN 
A small white edible bean that yields 50 per cent more beans per acre than 
other types. Can also be used for a quick high protein hay crop and soil 
builder. Plant it first week in June and in'60 days you have large tonnage 
high protein hay and pasture. . 
It has greater HEAT and DROUGHT RESISTANCE than other beans, pro- 
ducing good crops in seasons when other beans failed completely, and has 
outyielded the best varieties of soybeans by a considerable margin. ~ 
10 Ibs. $2.25; 25 Ibs. $5.10; 50 Ibs. $9.50; 100 Ibs. $18.00 
16 } gis 
