16 
THE CRAND JUNCTION SEED CO., Grand Junction, Colorado 
Golden Bantam. 
Mountain Grown Sweet Corn 
THE DIFFERENCE. The names of the varieties which we list are the same as those listed by other re¬ 
liable seed companies. They are the same varieties. But they have been grown in the mountains at alti¬ 
tudes of 5000 to 6000 feet and they will mature earlier. Ten days earlier may not seem a great difference, 
but in many localities this is over ten per cent of the growing season. Do you, market gardeners, want to 
get’your Corn on the early, high priced market? Do you, home gardeners, want to have Sweet Corn when it 
is still considered a luxury? There is nothing in the vegetable kingdom hailed with as much delight, looked 
forward to with as much anticipation, as juicy Sweet Corn. 
THE SWEETEST CORN cannot be purchased, it must be home raised. It should be gathered for the table 
or for canning not more than two hours before it is cooked, as the quality and sweetness are injured by keep¬ 
ing longer than this. Sweet Corn is in the proper stage for gathering when the grains are plump and just 
entering the dough stage. 
Culture. One pound to 400 feet of row; 10 pounds per acre. Rows should be laid off about three feet apart 
and seeds sown 1 to iy 2 inches deep and 6 to 8 inches apart in the row. Or plant in hills 3 feet apart each 
way, leaving three plants to a hill. Growers often plant early corn before the normal season. Then, if the 
crop escapes frost, it matures earlier and is correspondingly valuable. 
If it is killed it may be cheaply planted again. In the home garden it 
is well to have a succession of plantings to supply 
the table during the season. 
Plant Spanish Gold for Your Early Crop 
444 Spanish Gold. (55 days.) Our Superior 
New Sweet Corn. A careful check has 
been kept of our seed field of Spanish Gold. 
In many ways it surpasses all other varie¬ 
ties. It is fully as early as Golden Gem 
and has larger ears, which leave the stalk 
higher above the ground. A true sugar 
corn, tasty and delicious. Spanish Gold is 
a good yielder. The ears are twelve-rowed, 
six to eight inches long. Stalks are about 
four feet high, a great many producing two 
or three ears. Spanish Gold is the best of 
all early sweet corn. See color cut on in¬ 
side Front Cover. Fkt, 10c; V z lb, 25c; 
lb, 40c, postpaid. Not prepaid, 10 lbs, $1.85; 
25 lbs, $4.00. 
455 Golden Gem. (55 days.) As early as the 
earliest. Tender and of the finest flavor. 
Golden Gem has been our leader and our best 
selling sweet corn for the last three sea¬ 
sons; in fact, we have never been able to sup¬ 
ply the demand for this new sweet corn. Is 
your family fond of sweet corn? Plant 
Golden Gem and have roasting ears 2 weeks 
earlier. Mr. Market Gardener, plant Golden 
Gem and make a clean-up on the market, 
before other varieties of early corn ma¬ 
ture. Golden Gem stalks are dwarf; ears 5 
to 6 inches long; very often 2 and 3 ears on a 
stalk. The corn is tender and of the finest 
flavor. Fkt, 5c; y 2 lb, 20c; lb, 30c, postpaid. 
Not prepaid, 10 lbs, $1.40; 25 lbs, $2.90; 10O 
lbs, $11.00. 
453 Sioux Squaw. (50 days.) The earliest and 
hardiest corn. . A hard flint corn when ripe, but 
is of fair table quality when in the dough stage. 
Grows only 3 or 4 feet high, but bears a good 
number of small cobs well filled with kernels 
of varying colors. Fkt, 5c; y 2 lb, 15c; lb, 25c, 
postpaid. Not prepaid, 10 lbs, $1.10; 25 lbs, 
$2.25; 100 lbs, $8.00. 
443 Feep o’Day. (62 days.) The earliest real sweet 
white Corn. Even more dwarf in growth than the 
Golden Bantam, and with ears about the same 
size. The flavor of this variety is excellent. Fkt, 
5c; y, lb, 15c; lb, 25c, postpaid. Not prepaid, 10 
lbs, $1.30; 25 lbs, $2.75. 
Improved Golden 
Bantam. 
Ortler Tri-Pkts. 
On all varieties of sweet corn and pop corn. 
Just put tri-pkt. on your order and allow double the 
price of the regular packet. You will receive three times 
the quantity of seed. 
Golden Gem, 
