4 * 
WILL’S PIONEER SEEDHOUSE, GREENHOUSE AND NURSERY 
PIONEER BRAND SEED CORN 
Grown in the Missouri Valley in North Dakota 
Prices of Seed Corn include sacks, are f. o. b. here and subject to prior sale and change without notice 
TEST ALL SEED CORN WHEREVER OBTAINED 
SEED CORN IS OUR SPECIALTY 
„ Our stock is ail grown for us on contract from seed of our own selection We hand sort all 
the d mo°isture d i| t be?nw f^y buiidings after sorting, shelling, testing and making sure that 
all of^thcdrying when necessary. We have bred and introduced practically 
to lead a recent Va ” eties °! C °r.. for the Northwest. We were flattered 
Oorii Pvprfvlviftv in V College news story detailing adapted commercial varieties of 
Gehu Dakota Whfte DliiVt one . introduced by us. The varieties mentioned were 
uenu, Dakota White Flint, Northwestern Dent, Pioneer White Dept and Falconer Semi-Dent. 
< ^ nC +v, m ° re i,^'° rl ^T.^ laS P rove d its right to be called the surest crop for the Northwest and has 
"fISmSS-“ “{T'S'”* F 1 "' 1 ' We t hWe t i:ana!e5 a from h ou?’?w , »'?^ 
to offer an outstandingly excellent hybrid which is tho .... fi, e VL1 ^ giaa now to be able 
at the State Asrricultural Oniiep’k r m l io 1 the result ot the work of Dr. P« *J. Olson 
o„, y not 
Will’s Dakota 
White Flint 
The Earliest, Most Drought Resistant, Highest Yielding 
of the Standard Early Flints 
Dakota White Flint, the first Corn developed by 
Oscar H. Will in the early eighties, has stood the 
test of years and is a standard for earliness and 
hardiness. Tt is a pure, pearly white flint with long, 
slender ears which shell out the maximum amount 
of grain. A great many ears are borne to the hill 
which accounts for the exceptional yields, there being 
many reports of fifty and sixty bushels to the acre 
for small fields and forty to fifty bushels per acre in 
fields of forty, fifty or more acres. 
Dakota White Flint Corn matures with an un¬ 
usually small moisture requirement and is the most 
^ ^ f V ost . resistant and hail resistant of any known 
variety. Stalks are leafy and bushy in appearance, ears grow low on the stalk which 
attains a height of from four to six feet in a fair to good year, being somewhat shorter 
Awonderfu 1 variety for feeding in the fields as there are no coarse 
stalks, and every bit of stalks as well as grain is consumed wflth gusto by stock. 
Do not confuse Dakota with other white flints. The Dakota is a grain producer 
with a small cob. Other 
flints with tremendous 
cobs which shell out a 
very low percentage are 
sometimes offered as Da¬ 
kota. Lb., 30c, postpaid. 
Fop prices see enclosed _ 
blue price list. Single Far of Dakota White Flint 
Dakota White Flint 
SHOTA WHITE FLINT—For the Silo 
This is a cross between a white flint from the Iriquois Indians of New York and 
our own Dakota White Flint. Grows about 6 inches taller, ear is a foot from the 
ground. About a week later. Very leafy with slender stalks which make wonderful 
silage or fodder. Price, lb., 30c, postpaid. For prices see enclosed blue price list. 
Shota Flint 
A Corn Handbook for the Northern Great Plains 
Corn Growing, Corn Cultivation, Corn Harvesting, Seed, Etc. 
This is a new book covering the subject of Corn in the Northwestern States and 
Western Canada. It is written in popular style, yet at the same time gives the 
scientific facts about Corn growing, seed selection and food values of varieties Deals 
with the history of Corn in the Northwest, varieties and their particular uses seed 
Corn selection and breeding, methods of planting, cultivating and harvesting and the 
utilization of the crop, under the varying climatic conditions of the Great Plains 
Published by the Webb Publishing Co., written by George F. Will. 
Price, here, 50c. Postpaid to any address, 60c. 
A Copy of the Handbook Free with Each Seed Corn Order of #10 or More Upon Request 
