MAYS NORTHERN CROWN SEEDS BEST FOR ALL CLIMES 
THE GREAT YELLOW FLINT CORN 
PRIDE OF CANADA 
THE CORN FOR THE EXTREME 
NORTH. 
The greatest of all the flint varieties. Ears long, of rich yellow 
color. Enormously productive, outyielding any field corn we have 
ever grown. Will prove to be of the greatest value to the farm- 
ers of the far North. Ripens earlier than 
any of the flints. Don't fail to try it if 
you want a big yieUiing flint corn. Lb. 
2Sc., 3 lbs. 70c., postpaid; pk. 50c., bu 
$1.75, bag hu.) $4.00. 
EXTRA EARLY FLINT VARIETIES 
Sanford's White. 
Merret" f'^'^*™ early yellow flint.) Prolific, good size ear and small 
^ivj.v/bx. gob been grown in Northern Minnesota and North 
Dakota for the past ten years with great success and complete sati.sfaction. 
Average season of maturity 80 days. Has yielded 164 bushels of good, 
sound ears to the acre; ears average 10 inches in length, 12 to 14 rowed, 
well filled out to the tips; a rich golden yellow color. Lb. 2Sc., pk. 60c., 
bu. $2.00, bag (2H bu.) $4.75. 
It is quite early, with large sized ears, and 
is a corn that can be depended on to produce . 
a good crop, even in poor seasons. One of the best flint rariilies (or 
sections where flint corn is grown. Lb. 25c., pk. 50c., bu. $1.60; bag 
(2'A bu.) $3.75. 
Tfllimnll Triumph Corn is a very early flint variety, very bright 
AXluill^ll. yellow in color, maturing in from 80 to 90 days. Ears av- 
erage about 18 inches in length (about 3 inches longer than the Mercer), 14 
to 16 rowed. The kernels are large, and the stalks of good height. Tiic ears 
average two to a stalk, growing well up so as to readily admit of l>eing cut by 
the harvester. Lb. 2i>c., pk. 60c., bu. $2.00, bag (2H bu.) $4.75. 
Compton's Early. 
PllVian fiianf T7Tlci1aCT<» LInequaled in yield and uni 
«^UDan Vjiant JinSUage. passed in quality. The grains 
Jumbo Ensilage. 
Kaffir Com. 
Early, prolific. Very large ears, averaging 9 
_ , to 15 inches in length, 12 to 14 rowed, well 
filled out to the tip.s. a rich golden yellow color; small cob, has matured 
in 75 days from time of planting. Lb. 25c., pk. 60c., bu. $1.75, bag (2)^ bu. 
$4.00. 
TClTlP" ^HlllTl '^^ extra early red flint, valuable for the North; ma 
"■^■^^o -t iiiiijJ. tures in 90 days. A sure cropper on poor land. Eeits 
8 rowetl and from 9 to 12 inches long. One of the best and most reliable 
sort*. Lb. 25c., pk. 60c., bu. $1.75, bag (2^ bu.) $4.00. 
T nnafpllnw ^ variety that is particularly adapted to the North 
±J^Jlx^L^x^\J^nf * n jg ^n eight-rowed sort , with ear 12 to 15 inches in 
length an<i about 1 ^ inches in diameter, small cob, large kernel and very 
broad. Lb. 25c., pk. 60c., bu. $1.75, bag (2J^ bu.) $4.00. 
Ensilage, Fodder and Kaffir Corn 
unsur 
- „ - -n8 are 
pure white and very large, broad and long. It is the best milk producer 
of all tlie field ensilage corns, being almost as sweet and tender as .sugar 
corn. Pk. 35c., bu. $1.00. 
Large grained, yellow, tall grower, very- 
leafy. Pk. 30c., bu. 90c. 
T>ckA r*n*h "Pncilfltrp large, white, heavj' cropping variety 
IVCU V/UU JZ^ilOliagC. producing from fifty to seventy tons per 
acre. Fofider sweet, ten<ler an<l juicy. Pk. 30c., bu. 90c, 
A pure white fodder corn; ears of an 
immense size. Pk. 30c., bu. 90c. 
^WPPt "RnrfHpr Pnrn It is a rapid growing corn with a great 
C5WeeX roaaer V./Om. abundance of leaves, wonderfully 
tender stalks, and gives by far the greatest yield per acre. Every farmer 
and dairyman knows the value of a good crop of fodder corn for feeding 
cattle during the winter months. Pk. 50c., bu. $L50. 
Yields heavily even on the poorest soils. Thj • 
wonderful forage plant has become very popular 
in all sections and is highly recommended by the leading agricultural 
writers. It is a variety of non-saccharine sorghum and <listinct from al 
others of this class. It does not stool from the ro()t.>j, but branches from 
llie top joints, producing two, three and four heads of grain from each 
stalk. The average height on good laud is about 5 feet, but the stalks 
are very strong and never known to blow down in ordinary windstorms. 
It has the valuable quality of resisting drought, and if the growth is 
checked for want of moisture, the plant waits for rain and then resumes 
at once its progress without any apparent detriment to its condition, 
infleed. reports show that it has never failed to produce a good crop in the 
most disastrous seasons. The whole stalk, as well as the blades, cure 
into exrellont fodder, and in all stages of it.s growth is available for green 
feed. All kinds of cattle are fond of it. Kaffir Corn may be planted very 
early in the spring, and should be sown in rows about 3 feet apart, using 
about three or four pounds to the acre. It can be grown as far North as 
Minnesota, and is therefore desirable for cultivation in all parts of this 
country. Pkt. 2 oz., 10c., lb. 20c., postpaid; 10 lbs. 50c., 50 lbs. $1.40. 
100 Ihs. %2Sn 
White Cob Ensilage. 
Kaflir Corn, 
