Costs Pennies 
T his little booklet requires only 4 minutes to read. 
Its pages describe an easy and inexpensive way to coax 
more dollars from your corn crop. 
Treating seed corn is an easy job. Half an hour’s work 
treats the seed for 80 acres. It’s easy on the pocketbook, 
too, costing only about 2 34 cents per acre. 
The most important thing, however, is that it pays to 
treat seed corn with New Improved Semesan Jr. There’s 
no doubt about that. Farm tests, scattered all over the 
Corn Belt, have been proving it for the past three years. 
And, now, this entirely new seed corn disinfectant is ready 
to go to work on your farm, too. 
There is nothing mysterious about the way New Improved 
Semesan Jr. increases corn incomes. It’s as simple as 
A-B-C. This modern seed corn dust usually produces a 
better stand of healthier plants. That’s all there is to it. 
Why wouldn't that increase the yield? It's just exactly 
what you would expect. 
For example, in 1932, tests were run on 17 farms. New 
Improved Semesan Jr. increased the yield on 15 of them. 
Seven of these increases in yields ran between 2 and 5 
bushels per acre, and on 6 farms the increase ranged from 
5 to 8 bushels per acre. 
Again, in 1933, we tested it on a total of 28 farms in 
20 counties scattered over 4 of the largest corn-growdng 
states. On 26 of these farms. New Improved Semesan Jr. 
increased the yield 134 to 634 bushels per acre. 
In 1931, six tests all showed large increases in yield. 
But, counting only the last two years, when a large number 
of farm tests v^ere conducted, New Improved Semesan Jr. 
increased the yield on 91% of the farms. 
On the average good Corn Belt farm, treating seed corn 
usually increases the yield about 10%. If your seed, soil, 
and weather are good enough to make a crop of 50 bushels 
per acre. New Improved Semesan Jr., under average condi¬ 
tions, will add usually about 5 extra bushels to each acre. 
That’s why we say, “It pays to treat seed corn with 
New Improved Semesan Jr.” 
