OTHER MONEY MAKING CROPS FOR GRAIN, HAY AND PASTURE 
CANE 
MAKES TREMENDOUS YIELDS 
This forage Cane is very rich in sugar and fat. 
It is a very palatable crop. Its yields are enormous 
as it produces 10 to 15 tons of excellent green feed 
on rich land. It also is a remarkable drought re- 
sister. If you want it for hay make the seeding 
at a heavier rate of 75 to 100 pounds to the acre. 
For a fodder crop you:can drill it in rows as far 
apart as corn rows, using around 10 pounds to the 
acre, or double up the rows and use 20. For hay 
the heavier your rate of seeding, the finer the 
growth. Our seed is all Gro-Coated Brand. 
Early Amber type, the kind most generally grown, 
a great value because of its splendid growing 
power. Item 216 on Price List. 
Early Orange type, heavier stalks, more abundant 
leaves, heads more compact. Heavier yielder but 
a little coarser. Cane seed is more plentiful this 
year. See Item No. 215 on Price List. 
CANE ror sorGHum purposes 
We use great care in getting our sorghum seed. 
We cannot guarantee the crop but we do consider 
it equal, if not superior to any on the market. 
This was secured for molasses purposes from Cane that had been 
used in making sorghum. It makes molasses of excellent quality, 
both as to color and flavor. It is juicy and is the choice of most 
sorghum makers in this section who call it Kentucky Red Top. 
See Item 214 on Price List. 
Postpaid, 1 lb., 35e; 5 lbs., $1.50; 10 lbs., $2.50. 
WNot> 
HEGARI 
This is a sweet sorghum, somewhat after 
the order of the Atlas Sorgo and the Norkan, 
described on the previous page. It does not grow 
as tall. The stalks are very sturdy. The crop is 
very nutritious, whether used as a fodder, for en- 
silage, grain or even as pasture. Hegari yielded 
up to 5000 pounds of grain per acre and up to 8 
tons of ensilage. Livestock, especially cattle, are 
very fond of it because of its sweet taste. It com- 
bines the grain production of Kaffir and Milo with 
the high forage value of Cane. It matures earlier 
than Atlas. The growth is at least three foot 
shorter. Item 217 on Price List for Gro-Coated 
Brand. 
MIDLAND MILO 
THE EARLY MATURING COMBINE TYPE. 
RIPENS IN ABOUT 90-95 DAYS 
This new low growing Milo has become the 
most popular of all the grain sorghums. It has 
been dwarfed insofar as stalk growth is concerned. 
For grain production, however, it has remained 
very high. You can harvest this grain with an ordinary grain com- 
bine. Therefore, if the crop has matured so that the seed is good and 
dry, you do not have to first cut it and shock it, you can combine it 
right out of the field. Feeding value runs quite close to that of corn. 
You will find this extremely drought resistant. It makes good feed 
for cattle and widely used for chicken feed. You get good insurance 
of a crop of grain by having some of this drought resistant grain on 
Photo of 
Hegari 
if 
*"Showing the Superiority of Gro-Coated Seed Under Unfavorable . 
Weather Conditions’ Bis ha shou b en car ly. 
ENORMOUS YIELDING HIGH PROTEIN PASTURE 
DWARF ESSEX RAPE 
A Crop that Will Help You Reduce Pork Production Cost 
This is a very rapid growing crop. It is one of the greatest of quick growing 
forage and pasture crops for the cornbelt. It can be pastured within 6 to 8 weeks 
after seeding. You can sow it any time from early spring until next summer. Rape 
is equal to Alfalfa in feeding value for hogs and sheep, and it also is good for calves, 
cattle and horses. With Rape pasture you can cut down the amount of grain that is 
required, and you will get your hogs ready for market quicker. In tests at the Iowa 
Experiment Station Rape pasture cut down more on grain consumption and tankage 
than when they were fed on Alfalfa and it carried more head per acre. 
Rape, under favorable conditions, will yield 40 tons or 80,000 Ibs. of green matter 
per acre. On a dry basis it analyzes high as 37% protein. It is also high in calcium 
and phosphorus, It is superior to Alfalfa and Clover as a corn balancer. Provides 
pasture from early spring until the ground freezes in the fall. 
Rape is a crop that grows and makes a heavy leafy growth. The leaves look some- 
what like cabbage leaves, but it does not form heads. One of the finest things about 
it is that it grows so fast. If you are looking for a quick pasture, especially for hogs 
and sheep, you will find it hard to excel Dwarf Essex Rape. 
Be sure to grow some. Sow it alone in the spring or with Oats and pasture when 
the Oats are removed. Some sow about the same time they sow Oats, others broad- 
cast when the Oats are up a bit, and let the rains cover it. 
Only requires about 5 or 6 Ibs. of the seed per acre. It grows on many soils. It does 
best on fertile, well drained loams. It is not so well adapted to sandy or stiff clay 
soil. Our seed is guaranteed genuine Dwarf Essex Rape. It’s Gro-Coated Brand. 
See Item 233 on Price List. Photo of 
Postpaid, 1 lb., 35e; 5 Ibs., $1.40; 10 Ibs., $2.60. Dwarf 
Essex Rape 
Always Gets o Stand and Saves Money 
Gentlemen: North Tazewell, Va. 
I have been buying your seed for years and I always 
save money. Your seeds are just what you say they are 
and I have never failed to get a stand. I always speak 
a good word for Berry’s, 
Dear Sir: 
Yours respectfully, factory. 
0 
Joe N. Hunt, 
your farm. We ship best available on orders. 
It’s Gro-Coated Brand, 
Sows More Acres Because of High Quality 
I have been sending to you for my seed for the past 
several years and have been well pleased. This last spring 
I sent in an order but when the seed came it looked so 
good that I decided to sow more, 
Item 222 on Price List. 
One of the Newest and Earliest Grain Sorghums 
This is a combine variety that originated in South Dakota. You know 
After last year’s experience, that is what many 
will be looking for. A crop that is more cer- 
tain to mature even if it is necessary to plant 
late. 
This is a new variety. It wasn’t released until 
1949. As reported to us, over 50 types of sor- 
ghums were crossed to develop this Norghum. 
It is a selection from crosses of Dwarf Freed 
Yellow Kaffir and Dwarf Feterita. Under South 
Dakota and Nebraska conditions 
plants grew 36 to 46 inches high 
with an average of 40 inches. It 
has an open type seed head that 
sticks up high above the leaves. 
This head dries out welleand is 
ideal for combining. Stalks seem 
sturdy and resistant to lodging. 
Norghum is rapidly becoming 
very popular because of its heavy 
yield and high feeding value. In 
a 3 year test at 3 locations in 
South Dakota the average yield 
for Norghum was 47.7 bu. per 
acre; for Sooner Milo, 26.2. That’s 
almost double. In feeding trials 
it took 513 pounds of Norghum to 
put a 100 pounds of gain on lambs 
as compared to 495 pounds of 
Corn. On hogs 357.5 lbs. of Nor- 
ghum equaled 354.3 lbs. of Corn. 
So you see they are almost the 
same in feed value. Poultry rais- 
ers say chickens pick Norghum 
out of any other grain feed. 
Drill 8 to 10 pounds per acre a 
little after Corn planting time in 
36 to 40 in. rows. Our Seed is all 
Gro-Coated Brand. See Item No. 
219 on Price List. 
Freeport, Ill. 
It has been very satis- 
Yours truly, Henry Kortemeier, 
15 
