EPAULMINN 
Pride of Minnesota 
The King of Corn 
FROM A PHOTO, GREATLY REDUCED ^. 
Vfter years of experiment a combination of Varieties has at last been effected 
vhich has produced 
i quality of corn nearer perfection than any yet known. 
The ear is very large and the cob small, bearing from 1 8 to 22 rows of large kernels and averaging 2 to 3 ears of well filled corn 
from top to butt on each stalk, thereby combining the virtues and eliminating the defects of Minnesota No. I 3, the here-to-tore 
leading variety of northern grown corn, and Iowa Gold Mine the leading southern corn; the former having a small kernel and 
small cob and the latter, a large kernel and large cob. Iowa Gold Mine and Minnesota No. 1 3, weighing 75 lbs., to the bushel 
on the ear will not shell out over 48 to 50 lbs. to the bushel, and the standard weight of corn on the cob is 75 lbs., to the bushel; 
shelled, 56 lbs., but the 
Pride of Minnesota shelled averages from 60 to 62 pounds to the bushel; 
hence its excellence as a seed corn. As a fodder com, too, it bears the palm, a stalk from 6 to 8 feet high, leafed to the bottom. 
As well as being the most prolific variety known, it is one of the earliest to mature and its adaptability to vanous soils and climates 
pushing it to the fore as a corn for the Northwest, to which region it is particularly adapted, that section being generally recognized 
now as a great corn producing country. It is owing to the quality of the parent stock, that we have been able to obtain this unusually 
fine crop and as the inherited quality of corn to yield heavily or lightly depends upon the seed stock used in planting, we would 
urge you to submit your order early before this finest stock of which we have only a hmited supply .s exhausted 
bags only. None genuine without our stamp. Pt. 20c, Qt. 30c, Post Paid, Pk. $1.00, By Express. 
Sold 
led 
FILLS RIGHT UP TO THE BUTT 
SHOWING THE KERNELS AND THE 
SMALLNESS OF THE COB 
THE CORN WITH THE FULL TIPS 
