VARIETIES AND THEIR ADAPTATION. Se 
Kernels white, wrinkled, narrow and deep, 
loose, shedding readily from the dry ear. Plants 
74 to 8 feet tall, bearing ears about 30 inches 
aboveground. Foliageabundant. Late. Very 
tender and sugary, a standard of first quality. 
At Polk’s cannery, at Greenwood, Ind., the 
largest establishment of its kind in the United 
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FIG. 14.—STOWELL’S EVERGREEN. 
States, no other variety of sweet corn is used. 
Has been grown many years, and is referred to 
by Burr in 1805." | 
Squantum: Ears 6 to 7 inches long, about 2 
inches in diameter at the butt, strongly taper- 
ing to a tip that is seldom well filled, 12 to 14 
rowed; cob white. Kernels white, large, 
crimped, nearly as broad as deep, not crowded. 
* Field and Garden Vegetables. 
