FIELD SEED 
All prices quoted are subject to change without notice. 
All prices quoted are f.o.b. Plant City except 2 Ib. lots or less which are postpaid. 
Write for prices on larger quantities. 
Sorghum—Texas Seeded Ribbon Cane 
SORGHUM 
Amount of seed needed per acre depends upon the purpose 
for which planted as indicated below. 
Sow 8-10 Ibs. to 1 bushel (50 Ibs.) per acre. 
The uses of Sorghum are many, such as grain, green feed, hay, 
pasturage, silage, syrup, etc. 
It is common practice to sow Sorghum and Cowpeas to- 
gether for hay and pasturage purposes using about 14 bushel 
Sorghum and 1 bushel of Cowpeas per acre, sown broadcast. 
Planted in drills alone in 3- to 314-foot rows use | peck or 12 to 
15 Ibs. per acre; where planted for making syrup, in 4 foot rows, 
use 8 to 10 lbs. per acre, thinning plants 8 to 10 inches apart; 
or where sown broadcast for forage, use 1 bushel of seed per 
acre. For grain Sorghums apply 300 to 500 lbs. of a complete 
fertilizer mixture per acre. Plant from March to August. 
Texas Seeded Ribbon Cane. (For syrup, ensilage, forage and 
green feed.) The plants grow ten to twelve feet tall, and the 
thick stalks contain an abundance of juice and also produce 
plenty of leaves for fodder. Not only valuable for syrup-mak- 
ing, but will make a large amount of forage and green feed 
for livestock. The tallest and heaviest producing Sorghum 
for both forage and syrup. 
1 Ib. 55c; 10 Ibs. $2.50; 25 Ibs. $5.75; 100 Ibs. $22.00 
Hegari (Higear). Early Dwarf Type. (For grain and forage.) 
(100 days.) This crop, which is quite similar to Kaffir corn, 
has become very poular in the southeast because of its quick 
growth and enormous yield of grain, sometimes running over 
a ton to the acre. In addition, it makes better forage and silage 
than Kaffir. Unlike Kaffir, the stalks are very sweet and juicy. 
Grows 2 to 5 feet depending on type of soil, with large heads 
of white grains which do not shatter. Stands dry weather ex- 
ceptionally well. Sow ten pounds per acre for grain, one 
bushel (50 lbs.) per acre broadcast for forage. 
1 Ib. 40c; 10 Ibs. $1.10; 25 Ibs. $2.25; 100 Ibs. $8.00 
Hegari (Higear). Regular Type. (For forage and cover crop.) 
(115 days). This strain of Higear is slower to seed but makes 
more forage quicker than the Early Dwarf Type, and also is 
better than the Early Dwarf for cover crop. Sow 30 to 40 
Ibs. per acre broadcast for forage or for a cover crop. On 
the lower east coast this strain is used extensively as a cover 
crop and a common practice is to mow the stand just before 
seed heads form the plants will then sprout out and make 
similar height as before, thus making a double cover crop 
to turn under. 
1 Ib. 40c; 10 Ibs. $1.10; 25 Ibs. $2.25; 100 Ibs. $8.00 
Shallu or Egyptian Wheat. See “Chicken Corn’—page 43. 
SESBANIA 
Sow 30 to 40 pounds per acre. 
Sesbania is a most valuable summer cover crop to grow on land 
that is more or less covered with water. Unlike other cover 
crops, Sesbania will grow in water, and will grow ideally well 
in the hot weather of midsummer on low, wet land. It 1s 
used extensively as a summer cover crop in low, wet muck 
lands, as well as in other vegetable and commercial flower- 
growing lands. Sesbania is valuable not only as a green manure 
cover crop, but also as a means of killing out Bermuda grass, 
nut grass and other weeds. Because of the fact that Sesbania 
grows so rapidly, and makes such a heavy, dense growth quick- 
ly, it smothers out all weed growth. In addition to all this, it 
being a leguminous crop, forming nodules on the roots, it 
fixes atmospheric nitrogen. For best results use Nitragin. 
(See page 69.) 
We recommend scarified Sesbania seed for quicker and 
higher germination. It is generally recommended to plant seed 
broadcast at the rate of thirty to forty pounds per acre, even a 
little heavier if weeds are bad. It is usually planted in late 
May, June and July, and a dense, tall growth is obtained in 
about two months, at which time, just before blooming, the 
crop may be plowed under with a disk plow, and the stalks will 
rot or decay rapidly. In some sections Sesbania is grown for 
pole bean sticks. For this purpose it should be sown 12 to 15 
Ibs. per acre. 
Write for prices. 
SUNFLOWER 
Sow 6 pounds per acre. 
Mammoth Russian. The Mammoth Russian makes .hree to 
four times as much seed as ordinary varieties. It is used ex- 
tensively as a windbreak for beans. Plant from March to 
September. Plant seed in drills three feet apart, and hills one 
foot apart in the drill, thinning out to one stalk in the hill 
when four to six inches high. 
1 Ib. 55c; 10 Ibs. $2.30; 25 Ibs. $5.25; 100 Ibs. $20.00 
VELVET BEANS 
Sow 2 pecks (30 Ibs.) per acre. 
Velvet Beans are good for groves and truck lands in building 
up the humus; good pasturage for cattle and hogs; and fine 
land renovators. They are specially valuable because they are 
resistant or practically immune to nematodes causing root knot 
disease. Plant from March to August. Use Nitragin. (Page 69.) 
90-Day. (90 to 100 days.) This variety makes a very luxuriant 
growth and an abundant amount of foilage for pasturage and 
soil improvement. It matures quicker than other varieties. 
Write for prices on Velvet Beans, indicating quantity desired. 
A typical field of Hegari (Higear) grown for grain 
46 KILGORE’S FLORIDA STORES: Plant City, Belle Glade, Fort Myers, Gainesville, Homestead, Miami, 
Ocala, Pahokee, Palmetto, Pompano Beach, Sanford, Vero Beach, Wauchula, 
West Palm Beach 
