42 
Pick Sweet Com when the milk will fly when pinched for best quality, 
Vz 1^. of seed will plant 100 hills. y 4 bu. of seed will plant one acre in hills. 
621 Country Gentlemen Sweet Corn 
70 Day Corn, an Improvement on the Old Favorite Shoe Peg Sweet Com, 
Used Extensively by Canners for Their Best and Highest 
Priced Canned Corn 
Is a late main crop variety, which should find a place with every grower for 
home or market. The ears which are 7 to 9 inches long are borne on stalks 
6 to 7 feet high. Unlike other sorts the grain is small and rather round and 
crowded together on the cob, instead of forming in defined rows. Deliciously 
tender and sweet this corn is regarded by many as the highest quality of all 
White Sweet corns. Condon’s strain has been especially selected for small 
deep kernels and high sugar content and represents the highest bred type. 
2-oz. packet, 10 cts.; y 2 lb., 25- cts.; lb., 45 cts.; 2 lbs., 80 cts., postpaid. 
622 Early Adams 
Earliest Corn in Cultivation 
Very early, and Used extensively for 
a first-early table corn in the South. 
Stalks about 4 feet high, with small 
tassel, very few leaves, and without 
suckers. Ear short, very full, often 
nearly as thick as it is long, well cov¬ 
ered with coarse husks; kernels white, 
smooth. An extremely hardy variety 
which can be grown closer together 
than most sorts. 2-oz. packet, 7 cts.; y 2 
lb., 18 cts.; lb., 30 cts.; 2 lbs., 50 cts., 
postpaid. 
6U Black Mexican 
70 days. Considered the Sweetest of 
All 
Grains when first perfected are pure 
white, and are then at their best for 
table use. Very tender and sweet; 
bluish black when ripe, but when 
cooked, grains are white with ja, 
bluish tinge. Fit to eat in 70 days. 
One of the best for home use. 2 -oz. 
packet, 10 cts.; y 2 lb., 23 cts.; lb., 40 cts.; 
2 lbs., 70 cts., postpaid. * 
628 
Mammoth Late Sugar 
This tall growing sugar corn is one 
of the very sweetest known. It ma¬ 
tures a little later than Stowell’s Ever¬ 
green, and is large in both stalk and 
ear. In quality it is delicious, being 
sweet and tender. The ears remain 
long in the green state, and it is par¬ 
ticularly good for canning purposes. 
An excellent late sort for the garden. 
2-oz. packet, 10 cts.; y 2 lb., 23 cts.; lb., 
40 cts. 
621 
Country Gentlemen 
Sweet Corn 
626 Early 
Evergreen 
Earliest of All Evergreens 
Has ears fully as large as 
those of the regular Stowell’s 
and is about five days earlier, 
while the grains remain tender 
for a longer period. Its most 
valuable feature, however, is 
the extreme paper whiteness of 
the grains, which makes not 
only a more attractive ear 
when served on the table, but 
is most important for the can- 
ner. It retains its whiteness 
when put up in cans as distinct 
from the yellowish tinge of the 
still popular original Stowell’s 
Evergreen. 2-oz. packet, 16 cts.; 
y 2 lb., 24 cts.; lb., 42 cts.; 2 lbs., 
75 cts., postpaid. 
626 Early Evergreen 
Highest Quality 
Lowest Prices 
