“GOLDEN QUEEN” 
Here is a very nice and popular yellow 
corn. Southeastern Pennsylvania grows 
large acreages of it. A golden yellow, 
rich in color and feed value. Ears are 
of good size, rows nice and even on the 
ear. Good, tall, leafy fodder. Grain 
medium size. Matures in mid-season. 
Not adapted to Northern situations for 
husking use, but widely used for ensilage 
well to the North. A great show corn— 
wins many prizes. 
“REID’S YELLOW DENT” CORN 
A good corn for Southern Pennsylvania, Delaware, Ohio, 
New Jersey, West Virginia and Virginia. It is not quite 
early enough, however, for the Northern or mountainous 
sections. This is a real good practical yellow corn. It is 
the most compact ear of corn that we know of. The ears 
are medium sized. It has a red cob and very thin, deep 
yellow grains. Long and deep from the tip to the butt. 
Regular rows from end to end. The rows are set very 
closely on the cob. See picture of ears of Reid’s Yellow 
Dent bottom page 43. You get more shelled corn and a 
very thin cob with Reid’s. 
“JOHNSON COUNTY WHITE” 
Our only strictly white husking corn. 
Makes a heavy, leafy growth, and is pre¬ 
ferred by many folks as a silage corn. You 
will secure ample tonnage for ordinary 
silo requirements with this "Johnson 
County” variety. Its growers win many 
prizes at the Corn Shows. A late variety 
—requires full season to mature ears. 
Does not require rich soil. "Johnson 
County White” will prove profitable 
where climate permits. A very successful 
ensilage variety. 
“95 tons Silage from 5 18/100 acres.” 
That’s what Dr. Chas. H. Peck, of Newtown, 
Conn. (photo to right), got from his Hoffman 
Seed Corn. (Lancaster County Sure Crop.) 
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