Last Year I Had Splendid Success with Your Bonny Best Tomato .— 
Tacoma , Ohio 
SWEET CORN 
(Continued from page 29) 
Golden Early 
^ d a y s. 
IVlanvcl ^ money 
maker for the mar¬ 
ket gardener who 
wishes to be first 
with a very early 
golden sweet corn. It 
is two weeks earlier 
than Golden Bantam 
and while hardly as 
sweet, the quality is 
better than most ex¬ 
tra early sorts. The 
plump yellow kernels 
set 12 to 14 rows to 
the cob. 
(Fkt., 10c) (i/ 2 lb., 
20c) (lb., 30c) (5 lbs., 
$1.35) prepaid. Not 
prepaid—(10 lbs., 16c 
per lb.) (10O lbs., 14c 
per lb.). 
You will like our 
mountain grown 
Sweet Corn 
Photo taken in our field of Golden Early 
Market 
llantam Evergreen detasseled to show ears to better advantage. Note 
nearly all stalks bear two nice ears. Photo taken in our field. Green¬ 
horn Mountains in the distance. 
Ran+am PvorirfaAn 89 days. This variety is considered by 
uaiiiaiii £iVCrgrecll many the sweetest and best of the Sweet 
Corns. It has the color and quality of Golden Bantam, but the ears 
are longer and have twelve to fourteen rows. A valuable sort for 
the market growers owing to the combination of highest quality 
and desirable size. This sort originated in. New England, a cross 
between Golden Bantam and Stowell’s Evergreen. 
(Fkt., 10c) (% lb., 20c) (lb., 30c) (5 lbs., $1.35) prepaid. Not pre¬ 
paid—(lO lbs., 12c per lb.) (10O lbs., 10c per lb.). 
Npw Goirfpri 71 da y s - The earliest yellow or golden 
c ” V,U1UCU eared corn, being a week earlier than Sun¬ 
shine, of more dwarf habit and possessing a sweet, eight-rowed ear 
equal in size to Golden Bantam, although two weeks earlier than 
that variety. 
(Pkt., 10c) (y 2 lb., 20c) (lb., 35c) (5 lbs., $1.50) prepaid. ‘Not pre¬ 
paid—(10 lbs., 19c per lb.) (100 lbs., 17c per lb.). 
[ 30 ] 
