ROHRER’S GRASS SEEDS ARE DEPENDABLE 
Sorghum or Fodder Cane 
Forage varieties of sorghum and corn mixed with soy 
beans are being used more each year for silage, the 
early-maturing varieties of corn being the most im- 
portant in the northern counties. Silage sorghums with 
corn produce a good grade of roughage with a somewhat 
higher yield than corn alone. Silage from fodder cane 
can be stored for a longer time than corn silage without 
material loss of quality. 
The amber variety of cane or sorghum is the earliest 
and best adapted for growing in the North. Grows 6 to 
9 feet tall. The needs and adaptabilities of cane are 
more closely comparable with corn than with any other 
farm crop. 
For silage we recommend the following mixture per 
acre: 114 bushels of soy beans, 15 to 20 pounds of 
amber cane and 1 peck of early-maturing corn. This 
can be sowed with a grain drill and harvested with a 
green crop harvester. Silage from this mixture produces 
more and higher quality feed than corn silage alone; 
cattle relish it better. One acre of this mixture will 
produce as much silage as 1% acres of corn. See Price- 
List: 
sige Mixture—Soy Beans, Amber Cane and Corn. 
: N O C U LAT E All Legumes with 
Soy Bean Root Nodules Alfalfa Root Nodules 
EFFICIENT ROOT NODULES 
Developed by Good Inoculation 
ALFALFA AND CLOVERS 
Enough to treat 
Te DUS. it ceed ee ee oy os $0 55 
DGPS ctr tye ence a 1a Tee eR eee 1 05 
LESPEDEZA AND VETCHES 
TOO TDS eh eine ee ee 50 
SOY BEANS 
Up to12) bus. aerate er eee ee 35 
DUS te ee ec SOR CE EE e e ReORE Wepre mee 60 
SOtD usta oat eee et Rte ee ears ar ee ee 5 00 
BIRDSFOOT TREFOIL 
LOT ee ry ke 25 
1 bus. 55 
LADINO CLOVER 
LO1DS Sere a ee crate eertosione 25 
GARDEN PEAS AND BEANS 
St 1 DS eRe yt ea erect ee Ee Cee: 15 
PAR OSV CPO Rae rey i Pere eh eae TARE dee! Adlon RR, in eA. 55 
The nodule illustrations above are evidence of well-inoculated 
legumes. The bacteria in the nodules help the plants to secure 
free nitrogen from the air and ‘‘fix’”’ it so as to develop better plant- 
growth in both yield and quality and also to improve the soil for 
succeeding crops. It is ‘‘Nature’s Easy Way.’’ 
CAUTION: Always Specify Name of Seed 
to be inoculated. 
MICHIGAN PEAT— 
For lawns, roses, shrubs, evergreens, golf courses, 
and trees. Used by nurserymen, growers, and flor- 
ists. Retains moisture, binds sandy soil, loosens 
clay soils, puts new life in soil. 
LOO-[ Dba secret pee ee hee ess inet $4 25 
SUE Taiyo ee ya ee Sea Oe ee 2 49 
ZL DAD eae E weniee Che ae Bi pene hint gene ane Snb 1 69 
WAN VowAle i heae 0) wee) Sound | Ea Cae 5 Seen Ene eer 89 
Express or freight collect. 
NATURE’S FINEST 
SOIL BUILDER 
100 pounds of Michigan Peat is sufficient for any 
of the following: 
1000 sq. ft. top dressing established lawns. 
500 sq. ft. new lawns. 
700 lin. ft. vegetable or flower seed rows. 
300 hills of pole beans, corn, etc. 
200 berry plants. 
25 rose bushes or flowering shrubs. 
12 Azaleas, Rhododendrons, Evergreens. 
P. L. Rohrer & Bro., Inc., Seedsmen 
Smoketown, Lancaster Co., Penna. 
a aS SE TS 
