SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS, BULBS AND PLANTS FOR 1896. 
New' Field G op n. 
COLDEN SUPERB. 
an enormous golden dent variety, so curly that it can be 
vn in the Northern States, and outyields any other sort. 
4 It oriBinated in Connecticut. It is the finest Field 
L Com we have ever seen. Ears very large and liand- 
Sr> some. 24 rows of deep kernels. It is enormonslv pro- 
Haiifio.producing over :5» bushels to the acre in vorv 
mg dry seasons, in hills four feet apart each way. and 
rtf with ordinary cultivation. Its groat vigor enables it 
and dry weather remarkably and give a bo.kI crop when 
>r sorts fail from drouth. Two or three ears are borne on 
i stalk, and they run as Hiiiform as though they were all 
lain the same mold, and they are us perfect and hand- 
e as though they were made of wax. No other varietv of 
lean approach this, and it is bound, when known, to be 
e extensively grown than all other kinds put together, 
ng to its extreme earliness it may be harvested earlier 
i any other Dent Corn, even when planted much later, 
the earliest by several weeks of all dent varieties. It is 
ora one sees anything bred up to such perfection as is this 
corn. Pkt., 10c.; lb., 35c.: 3 pounds for 81.00, postpaid. By 
ress or freight, peck, $ 1 . 50 ; bushel, $ 4 . 00 ; 3 bushels, $ 7 . 00 . 
lames Ferguson, Bloomfield. N. .1.. Sept. 3d, writes: "I 
ibout to harvest my Golden Superb Corn. I have never 
I such good corn in my life. Its yield is immense, better 
1 you claira.There Is not a field of corn in the State of New 
ley that can beat it. Some of the stalks have four good 
ears with 24 rows of kernels, exceedingly handsome 1 
1 take it to the State Fair.” 
