PROF. HANSEN'S PROSO GRAIN AND HAY MILLET 
Multiplies Itself 1,500 Fold 
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. 
Hogs | fatten on Proso easier than on corn, because of its higher 
protein content. 
= * & 
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 to 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 food 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 1 to August 
1. In sections with better rainfall, plant it at the rate of 35 pounds per acre 
with a grain drill. Harvest the same as you do grain. 
10 Ibs. $1.50; 25 Ibs. $3.00; 50 Ibs. $4.50; 100 Ibs. $8.00 
Mighty High in Goodness—Mighty Low in Price 
KURSK SIBERIAN HAY MILLET 
The most drought resistant hay producing plant in the Great Plains states. 
Produces a hay crop with less rainfall and in shorter time than any other plant. 
On dry upland plant 15 to 20 pounds of the millet seed per acre, any time 
from Ist of May to Ist of August. . 
50 Ibs. $4.75; 100 Ibs. $9.00 
SUDAN GRASS 
The perfect summer pasture and annual hay plant, whether you live in 
eastern states, north, south or in the west. Grows rapidly and thrives in the 
hot dry months when other pastures are least productive. 
Sweet Sudan Grass has the grassy character of Common Sudan plus juicy 
sweetness that livestock want. Sweet Sudan grows taller than Common Sudan, 
has more and wider leaves, non-shattering seed head, and is resistant to 
drought and disease. No. 1 pasture for July and August. 
Plant 10 to 20 lbs. per acre depending on rainfall. 
Standard Sudan—50 Ibs. $8.50; 100 Ibs. $16.00 
Sweet Sudan—50 Ibs. $10.50; 100 Ibs. $20.00 
OATS with an OVERCOAT 
for Western and Southwestern farms 
Brunker Oats No. 2054 are frost resistant. They can be planted in late Feb- 
ruary or early in March and are not materially injured by spring freezing. When 
other varieties of oats were killed by late freezing, Brunker oats came through 
uninjured and made record yields of grain per acre. They are also smut and rust 
resistant. Earliness cheats hazards of hot July weather. Record yield of 107 
bushels per acre. 
10 bu. $19.50; 20 bu. or more, $1.90 per bu. 
Brunker Oats have outyielded all other varieties on upland. 
More meat per kernel than most varieties 
BOBER'S 1 
