3 Most Excellent Sweet Corns. 



FIRST OF ALL. 



For years, as my friends well know, I have boomed theCory Corn to 

 the exclusion of all other sorts as the earliest variety in cultivation. I 

 now take pleasure, however, in offering them a variety that is even 

 earlier than the Cory. This a bold statement, but it is made with due 

 deliberation, after careful test by several thousand of my customers. 

 First of All has proven itself, in this test, two days, and in some cases, a 

 week earlier than the Cory, and at the same time produces not only lar- 

 ger ears, but more of them to the stalk. It will be found an especial 

 boon to all market gardeners who desire to have the first sweet corn in 

 market and thereby receive the top notch prices. I need not say more. 

 Packet, 10 cents; pint, 25 cents; quart, 40 cents. 



NONE SUCH. 



This variety well deserves its name— None Such. Introduced first by 

 me in 1892, it has turned out to be one of the best second earlv varieties 

 ever put on the market. In quality it is simply delicious; while I have 

 reports from many customers stating that numbers of stalks contained 

 two ears at least 12 Inches long, compactly filled from end to end. None 

 Such IS not a white cob, but a red cob variety, and on this account alone 

 is preferred by many. I am sure all my customers will be delighted with 

 it. With First of All for early, None Such to follow, and then Zig Zag 

 Evergreen for general crop there is no reason why you should not have 

 delicious sweet corn from the first of ,Tuly until October. 



Packet, 10 cents; pint, 25 cents; quart, 40 cents. 



"N0NE^SUCH"6WEET cS. 



ZIQ ZAQ EVERGREEN. 



This grani new sweet corn is without doubt the most tender and 

 sweetest medium late variety ever introduced. It comes in about eight 

 days ahead of Stowell's Evergreen; the kernels very much resemble this 

 variety, but grow on the cob in zig zag fashion— hence its name. The 

 illustration below gives a good idea of an ear in a dried state. It inva- 

 riably produces two perfect ears on every stalk, and of such presentable 

 appearance as to readily command high prices wherever offered. It is 

 a most excellent variety for the family garden, market gardener 

 or the canner, and I heartily recommend it to all wishing a tender and 

 delicious sweet corn. Excellent for a rotation of crops, as it can be 

 planted at any time during the season, and can always be depended 

 upon to give an abundant yield. In my trials the past summer, while 

 many varieties did not produce a perfect ear on account of the long dry 

 spell in this section, almost every stalk of Zig Zag Evergreen produced 

 one or more ears of as fine corn as one could wishTcii-.^' 



Packet, 10 cents; pint, 25 cents; quart, 40 cents. 



Why Not Try All Three of These Sweet Corns ? 

 One packet of each for 25 cents; one pint of each 

 60 cents; one quart of each for $1.00, postpaid. 



...DO NOT CONFOUND... 



2IGZAG^^M^^^S 



us with any other firm of seedsmen who have been giving their seeds ^ 

 away under the auspices of the Government. Maule's Heeds have always 5 

 had a commercial value distinctively their own, and have never been dis- f" 

 tributed promiscuously over the country either by the Government or any '^ 

 one else. For many years I have made it a point to give away with every ^ 

 order a few choice seeds free for trial, and in this way have distributed in > 

 the last few years more than one and one-half million packets of choice ^ 

 seeds. Many firms do not sell as many as I give away annually free for p 

 trial. It must be remembered the larger the order, the more free trial W 

 packets you receive. Have your friends club with you. 



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