PETER MENDERS O N & C O 



N E W YOU h 



*' 



HENDERSON'S 

 EUREKA YELLOW DENT CORN 



Large Handsome Ears 12 to 15 [nches Long 

 Weighing 1 to 2 Lbs, Each. Heavy Yieldei 



This is one of the finest and most productivi 

 Corns grown; 150 bushels of shelled Corn per acre . 

 unusual. The average yield of Corn per aci 

 [T. S. Statistics is 26 bushels. The cost of grown 

 of Corn yielding only 26 bushels, is just tl 

 growing an acre of Henderson's Eureka oi ham- 



pion, yielding 100 bushels. The plants grow 12 to 15 

 high, a large proportion of them bearing two immense ears 

 to the stalk, averaging 12 to 15 inches long, with small red 

 cob covered full, over both butt and- tip ends, with 18 to 

 22 even rows of large, deep grain of a rich orange-yellow 

 color. It is fairly early for so large a Dent Corn, bur, 

 of course, does not mature as quickly as the small early 

 Dent and Flint varieties, but where 105 to 110 days of "' 

 weather" are assured, is the Corn to grow. For ensilage or 

 fodder, cured or green, Henderson's Eureka can be sa 

 planted even in Northern States, and it is not equalled by any 

 other Corn grown, being leafy and having large ears, when 

 only half grown, thus giving a great quantity of fodder pel 

 acre. (See engraving.) 



Price, $1.25 per peck; $4.00 per bushel; 10 bushels and up- 

 ward, $3.90 per bushel. 



C. S. Clark, the well-known Seed and Corn grower of Huron C 

 Ohio, writes: "In your Eureka Corn you have the largest-eared Corn in 

 cultivation; it's a wonder." 



"We have fdled a CA-ton silo from less than four acres of your Eureka 

 Dent Corn:' D. W. CHAFEE, 



Sheshequin, Pa. 



"My field of Eureka Corn (seed purchased from you) is the finest sight 

 I have ever seen in the way of Corn. Everyone asks where I got the seed." 



MR. A. B. LEE, 



Madison, > 



LONG'S CHAMPION YELLOW 

 DENT CORN 



For Ten Consecutive Years on a Section of 90 Acres this 

 Corn Has Yielded An Average of 133 Bushels 

 of Shelled Corn to the Acre 

 Long's Champion Yellow Dent Corn is the result of 25 3 

 of Corn breeding and selection by one of the most sue- 

 farmers in the Pennsylvania Corn belt. 

 Will mature in the latitude of New York if planted during the 

 first week of May. Early planting is essential even though there 

 may be some risk of injury by the frost, which could be overcome 

 on emergency by replanting. This King of Corns is without doubt 

 one of the finest Yellow Dent Corns ever produced, and will be 

 found to be of great value to the farmer, especially in the 

 belt of the Middle and Eastern States, on account of its immense 

 yield, at least 25 per cent and often 50 per cent more than can be 

 obtained from the average old-type Corns generally planted. The 

 ears weigh 2 to 2M lbs. at cribbing time, and contain 20 to 24 

 niform rows of long, broad kernels. 



It is a luxuriant grower, about 12 to 15 feel high, and in 

 Lebanon County, Pa., has nevei failed to mature by September 

 20th when planted the first week of May. There is only a limited 

 quantity of seed grown by the originator, which can be had 

 through us. 



Price, $1.40 per peck; $4.50 per bushel; 10-bushel lots, 

 $4.40 per bushel. 



"7 had three bushels of Long's Champion Yellow Dent Corn .'.:-. 

 filled two silos 8 by 10 by 30 ft. high from six acres." 



THBO. T. OBD& 



Columbus S 



"Last year I bought same Long' 

 fine, just as you represented it." 



Champion Yelloic D 



HBNR Y HOP N BR, 

 fin 



Prices of Farm Seeds are Subject to Change Owing to Fluctuations of the Market 



