SCHULTZ'S SEED STORE, WASHINGTON, D C. 



SWEET OR SUGAR CORN— Continued. 



Stabler 's Early 



Of larger size than usual for the early grades, 

 dozen, 40c. 



New Early Evergreen ripens eight to ten days in advance of 



Fine flavor. Ear. 5c.; per 



$1.00; ear, 5c.; per dozen, 



Kendel's Early Giant 



Early Champion 

 Early Mammoth 



sweetness. Pt., 15c. 



Eight-Rowed Sugar 



Stowell's Evergreen. The 

 lOc; qt., 20C.; gal., 60c.; peck, 



than the Mammoth. Ear;* 

 remarkable for its delicious 



kernels are sweet and tender. Price, pt 

 50c. 



A variety with ten or more rows of large grains of rich, sugary flavor. 

 Pt, lOc; qt., 20c.; peck, $1.00; ear, 5c.; dozen, 40c. 

 Premo An early variety of unusual merit. Pt., lOc; qt., 20c.; gal., 65c.; peck, $1.00; bushel, $3.50. 



This variety is very sweet, yielding from two to three ears on each stalk. 

 Ear, 5c.; per dozen, 40c. 



A valuable variety, at least ten days earlier 

 twelve-rowed, straight and handsome. It is 

 qt., 25c.; gal, 65c.; peck, $1.00; bushel, $3.50. 



The grains are pure white and are very sweet and tender. Ready for use 

 in sixty to seventy days after planting. Ear, 5c.; per dozen, 40c. 

 Country Gentleman ^^^^ most delicious and sweetest of all the sweet corns. A main 



crop variety. It is extremely productive, the stalks averaging three ears 

 and sometimes as many as five. The small, irregular kernels are very deep and pure white in 

 color. Ears average nine inches in length. My seed stock has been especially selected for sweet- 

 ness and quality. Pt., 15c.; qt., 25c.; gal., 65c.; peck., $1.00; bushel, $3.50; ear., 5c.; per dozen, 50c. 

 ^towpll "PvprfrvpfiTi '^^^ most popular of all Sweet Corn varieties. Large, fine flavored; ears 

 dtoweil S JliVergreen borne in abundance, with deep kernels, white in color. Main crop sort. 

 To supply the right seed of this favorite has been my careful effort. Seed sown near the Eastern 

 Atlantic Coast has always shown by its flavor and shriveled, ripen- 

 ed kernels the highest percentage of sugar known. Long and 

 deep kernels are also a characteristic of selected seed of Stowell's. 

 I invite comparison of the stock I oflfer with that offered by lower- 

 priced houses. Pt., lOc; qt., 20c.; gal., 60c.; peck, 90c.; bushel, 

 $3.25; ear, 5c.; per dozen, 50c. 



The largest late variety grown; very 

 productive and fine flavored. It is of 

 excellent quality, sweet, tender and delicious, and its only fault 

 is the immense size of ear. Price, same as for Stowell's Evergreen. 



A very handsome and prolific variety. Ears 

 short; kernels long, pointed and resembles rice; 

 color white. No variety of pop corn is superior to this for parch 

 ing. Per lb., lOc; 3 lbs., 25c.; 25 lbs., $1.50. 



It can be planted earlier than any other 

 but is not a sweet corn; short ear. Pt., 

 lOc; qt., 15c.; gal., 40c.; peck, 65c.; bushel, $2.50; ear, 5c.; 

 dozen, 25c.; 100 ears, $2.00. 



Early Adams excellent, early variety and often used 



table. Ears about eight inches long. Pt., lOc; 

 15c.; gal., 40c.; peck, 65c.; bushel, $2.50; ear, 5c.; per dozen, 

 100 ears, $2.00. 



FIELD VARIETIES 



Large Late Mamm<)th 



Rice Pop Corn 



Adam's Extra Early 



per 



for 

 qt, 

 25c.; 



Thoroughbred Yellow Dent 



If any seed grain can truly be 

 called pedigreed, the Thorough- 

 bred Yellow Dent Field Corn is certainly entitled to be known as 

 such, as its history dates many years back. It has been bred-up 

 and selected with painstaking care to what is at the present time 

 one of the best varieties of yellow corn grown. Ear medium in 

 size, remarkably uniform, and of a bright-yellow color, with solid 

 deep grain and small red cob. Has from 18 to 24 rows of kernels 

 on the cob, 50 to 60 grains in the row, and is well-filled over the 

 ends, and especially the butt, leaving a small shank, which makes 

 it a great favorite with buskers. Best shredding sort, as it shatters 

 the least of any by actual test. Price, peck, 75c.; bushel, $2.25. 



Boone County Special Corn ^ ^'^^^y ^''^A "^^'i^ com, extra 



^ large ear, contains a high percentage 



o fprotein, maturing about medium.^ The ears range from 8 to 12 inches long, 



to 8 inches in circumference, with 18 to 24 rows of Corn, with from 1,000 

 to 1,200 grains to the ear, and averaging in weight from 12 to 18 ounces. The 

 cob is medium to large, pure white, both butts and tips are remarkably well 

 filled, grains are very deep, fine large germ and the greatest yielding corn in 

 existence. _ ^ ' 



From the fact that it is the germ that contains the nutriment of the corn 

 it is manifestly the most fattening and economical corn per bushel for fattening 

 stock — by reason of the fact that the grains are comparatively small, and a bushel 

 necessarily contains so many of them. Price, pk., 6oc. ; bushel, $2.00. 



TlinlrrkV^T TTino* The leading white-grained ensilage Corn; grain very broad. 



moiioiy ivmg p^^j^^ . ^^^^ bushel. 



14 



Hickory King. 



