‘REGISTERED BRANDS’ SEEDS 
; e 
FOR HAY 
and 
FORAGE 
SUDAN GRASS 
This is one of the best annual forage 
plants ever introduced. It is suitable for 
almost any locality. It thrives best on 
tich loam but has been grown success- 
fully on almost every kind of soil from 
heavy clay to light sand. Sudan is a 
sorghum, It is an annual and has no 
underground root sprouts. It is a hot 
weather crop and will produce several 
cuttings in a long growing season, En- 
ormous yielder and eaten readily by all 
kinds of livestock. 
SWEET SUDAN GRASS 
This new variety has been developed 
to produce a higher sugar content than 
the common strain, which makes it 
much superior for livestock feeding, It 


is more vigorous, leafier, higher yield- 
ing, and more uniform than common 
sudan. It also is more disease resistant. 
MILLET 
PROSO—Seed of this millet has a 
slightly higher feeding value than oats, 
and it is found in many feed mixtures. 
When forage or hay is desired, the crop 
should be cut early. This strain is hardy 
and disease resistant. 
RED PROSO—This is a good variety 
for hay and forage for general feeding. 
SIBERIAN—This is a very fine, early, 
and extremely hardy drought-resisting 
variety. It is noted for its big yields. 
The forage is quite palatable, and the 
seed has a high feeding value. 
Lio aks aanacsanreenneonageeenemener meme 

OTHER FORAGE SEEDS 
CANE, BLACK AMBER—WMatures in 80 
to 100 days. It is the favorite of many 
planters, because it is the earliest, It 
grows very tall when allowed to mature. 
CANE, RANCHER—Certified Blue Tag 
seed. We have found this variety es- 
pecially suited to the soils and climate 
in this area. 
CANE, ORANGE—AMatures in 100 to 110 
days. It has a higher sugar content and 
produces more fodder than other varie- 
ues. 
NORGHUM—An extra early, high yield- 
ing, new variety of grain sorghum re- 
leased from the South Dakota Experi- 
ment Station in 1949. It is a combine 
type which grows from 36 to 46 inches 
tall. Seed panicles are long, open, erect 
and carried well above the foliage. Open 
panicle favors drying. 
IMPROVED COES—35 to 50 inches tall, 
leafy, slender stalk, semi-juicy, very 
early, Seed heads long erect, and semi- 
compact, seeds white. A fair dual- 
purpose sorghum. 
NORKAN—A cross between Atlas and 
Early Sumac. Semi-sweet stalk. Seeds 
white, palatable. Earlier than Atlas, 60 to 
70 inches tall. 
MARTINS MILO—This is a disease re- 
sisting, non-shattering early maturing 
type of combine sorghum. Heads erect, 
somewhat open, seeds reddish and 
slightly hard but brittle, 
MIDLAND MILO—This is a heavy pro- 
ducing variety with moderate heads of 
high feeding value. 
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