Golden Jewel —Especially Adapted to South Dakota 
Claimed to be the greatest prize winning Yellow Dent Corn ever intro¬ 
duced. It is especially adapted to South Dakota, Iowa and Wisconsin, pro¬ 
ducing a handsome compact ear 8 to 10 inches long, with 16 to 20 rows of 
deep square shoulder kernels, rough and compact on a small cob. It matures 
in 95 to 100 days. It is of stalky growth, very leafy and vigorous, about 7 
feet high. 90 bushels per acre have not been uncommon with the Golden 
Jewel. 
WIMPLES YELLOW DENT—100 to 
110 days. This variety is very popu¬ 
lar in many districts where it seems 
to excel all others, and we recom¬ 
mend it for trial where other va¬ 
rieties already tried have not been 
entirely satisfactory. It belongs to 
the early type of Yellow Dent, espe¬ 
cially adapted for the Northwest. 
Good drought resister. 
FULTON YELLOW DENT— A vari¬ 
ety well adapted to an area of South 
Dakota somewhat farther north than 
that occupied by Wimple’s Yellow 
Dent. Selected and named at Fulton 
in Hanson county, it has become 
widely established in the central 
counties and as far north as Spink 
cpunty. # 
DISCO PRIDE YELLOW DENT—A 
very early variety of corn. Especially 
well adapted to the northern part of 
South Dakota, North Dakota, Mon¬ 
tana and Manitoba, Canada. The 
strong features of DISCO PRIDE 
are earliness, small cob and its abili¬ 
ty to resist dry weather. 
SILVER KING WHITE DENT— 
Very early white dent corn, matur¬ 
ing a few days later than our 90-Day 
White, but produces a larger ear and 
deeper kernel. Recommended for 
southern South Dakota, southern 
Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin and 
the Eastern states. Produces 16 rows 
of deep-grained kernels. Ears well 
filled, medium size, about 8 or 9 
inches long. Does well in either wet 
or dry weather. 
the Northwestern states and Canada 
it is unequalled. Is really a hybrid 
type, being a cross between an early 
Yellow Dent and a Flint variety. In¬ 
stances are on record where this corn 
has matured in 80 days, but even 
where it is grown for the silo it will 
mature corn sufficiently to greatly 
increase its value for silage purposes. 
FODDER AND SILO CORN— Fodder 
Corn is a very valuable crop on the 
farm, but in the Northwest in par¬ 
ticular it occupies a place that can 
not be well filled by any other crop. 
In the selection of a corn for fodder 
purposes, we do not recommend 
planting the large later varieties, be¬ 
cause • they do not come near 
enough to maturity to produce the 
largest amount of feeding value. We 
recommend the earlier varieties that 
come nearly or quite to maturity, for 
this purpose. It is not so necessary 
that the crop fully matures, but the 
nearer it comes to maturity the 
greater the food value and the more 
valuable it is to the stock feeding 
on it. 
EARLY CALICO— Earlier than the 
large dent varieties; very popular as 
early feeding corn. Will do better on 
old and thin soil than most any other 
variety. On good soil it will yield 50 
to 70 bushels per acre. Grows from 
7 to 9 feet high, very stalky, with 
heavy foliage, making excellent fod¬ 
der or ensilage corn; white and red 
kernels and small cob. 
Wimples Yellow 
Dent 
NORTHWESTERN RED DENT— 
Has been on the market for 38 years, 
and is still gaining in popularity. For 
FLINT VARIETIES 
SPECIALLY SUITED FOR LATE PLANTING. SHOW 
GREAT RESISTANCE TO GRASSHOPPERS. 
RAINBOW FLINT —An unusually early variety, the 
kernels being all colors of the rainbow. Very popular 
for late planting. Ears are much larger than Gehu. 
some over 12 inches lohg, and it is a corn of good quul- 
ity and yields well. 
FALCONER — (Semi-Flint) — We 
tried out this wonderful corn for 
the past three seasons, and we can 
now definitely say Falconer has 
come to stay. It is an exceptional¬ 
ly heavy yielder, ears are high 
enough to be easily cut with a corn 
binder. Stalks are leafy and pro¬ 
duce high tonnage of edible feed. 
Ears 12 to 14 rowed, 8 to 10 inches 
long. 
BLUE SQUAW—Yields an immense 
ear and large numbers of them. 
One of the most valuable corns, es¬ 
pecially for early feeds. 
DISCO EARLY YELLOW FLINT— 
Do not confuse this variety with 
Gehu Yellow Flint. While not quite 
as early, it will outyield Gehu two 
to one. The stalks grow 6 to 8 feet 
high, ears 8 to 10 inches long, 
which grow well up on the stalk. 
It is as near drought resistant as it 
is possible for corn to grow, and 
when yield and earliness are taken 
into consideration, cannot be beat. 
We strongly recommend this vari¬ 
Silver King White Dent 
ety. 
HOUSES, MITCHELL, S. D. - EMMETSBUKG, IOWA 
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