FARM, GARDEN AND SEED ANNUAL 
17 
Sweet Corn — Continued. 
LATE VARIETIES. 
Platt’s Fancy Evergreen. A very superior 
strain earlier and more productive than 
Stowell’s. Price per pt., 30c.; per qt., 50c.; 
10 lbs., $2.30; 100 lbs., $20.00. 
Stowell’s Evergreen. A large 16-20 rowed 
variety, 8 to 9 inches long; the standard late 
for family or market use; of high quality. 
Price per pt., 25c.; per qt., 45c.; 10 lbs., $2.00; 
100 lbs., $17.00. 
Country Gentlemen. (Shoe Peg). Medium 
late; good size ears, 7 to 7^2 inches long, ir¬ 
regularly crowded full of slender, deep grains, 
deliciously sweet and finest flavored. Price per 
pt., 25c.; per qt., 45c.; 10 lbs., $2.10; 100 lbs., 
$18.00. 
Long Island Beauty. A very late corn with 
immense ears, often 12 inches long, sixteen or 
eighteen rows of pearly white grain, tender 
and delicious, in an attractive dark green husk. 
A most excellent sort for home canning. 
Price per pt., 25c.; per qt., 45c.; 10 lbs., $2.10; 
100 lbs., $18.00. 
Sweet Corn for Fodder. The sweet corn 
fodder is decidedly preferred by stock to the 
field varieties. Price per 10 lbs., $1.00; per 
100 lbs., $7.00. 
Pop Corn Selected for Seed. 
Granone per Scoppio. 
Golden Giant. (South American). Also 
called Dynamite. A new, fine quality pop 
corn. Pops extremely large, and although 
introduced recently, has become almost the 
universal favorite. Price per lb., 20c. 
White Rice. Sharp-pointed kernels, twelve to six 
Price per lb., shelled, 20c. 
EUREKA ENSILAGE CORN. 
(Man in photo is 6 ft., 3 in. tall) 
-rowed, more generally grown than any other. 
Corn--Varieties for Field Culture. 
Granone e Grano — Turco. 
Note. Seed Corn postpaid to any post office within 150 miles for 
60c. per bu. extra, plus cost of bag—2 bu. burlap, 10c.; cotton 30c. 
It pays to use improved seed. Our corn has been especially grown 
for seed. Prices subject to market fluctuations. / 
FLINT VARIETIES. 
Early Eight-Rowed Yellow Canada or 90-Day Corn. The Flints will always be favorites 
for certain uses and conditions. Earliness and ability to yield well on light ground; they 
have qualities that make the finest grade of meal (Indian meal). Will produce a profit- Qt. Bu. 
able crop where the later and heavier sorts would be a failure. Early Canada is the (56 lbs.) 
earliest of these. 20c. $3.00 
Longfellow. The ears are larger and longer than Early Canada, cob small, kernels 
large; eight-rowed yellow flint . 20c. '2.50 
Improved Sanford. Large white ears, 12 to 15 inches long, very productive and pro¬ 
ducing also a good leafy growth. 20c. 3.00 
DENT VARIETIES. 
Queen of the Prairie, or Pride of the North. This is ail early Yellow Dent, medium 
size, uniform ears, cob small; a winner in many shelling contests . 
Improved Learning. Select stock. The ears are large, with deep dented grain, twelve 
to sixteen-rowed. Extensively grown for both grain and silo. Matures in 100 to 110 days. 
Sweepstakes Ensilage. Earliest big-eared Dent, heavy producing silage corn for Con¬ 
necticut and north. It is very important to secure seed of superior quality produced 
only in limited areas of Northeastern Pennsylvania. This stock grows 12 to 15 feet high, 
and produces in 90 to 100 days, 15 to 20 tons per acre, silage of high food value, contain¬ 
ing a large amount of grain in the glazed stage, considered ideal . 
Eureka Ensilage. One of our specialties, an extra large southern corn grown and se¬ 
lected with great care to keep the true vigorous stock. White seed, luxuriant and heavy 
in stalk and foliage. Will ordinarily produce more tons of ensilage than any 1 other. We 
have had stalks 17 feet, 10 inches tall. 
20 c. 
20 c. 
20 c. 
20 c. 
2.50 
2.50 
2.75 
2.75 
