N. SLUIS & SONS, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 
q 
Whipple’s Early Yellow—14-Rowed Ears, 7 to 8 Inches Long 
Sweet Corn 
Peck, 12 y 2 pounds; bushel, 50 pounds. 
YELLOW-SEEDED VARIETIES 
Lb. 
Golden Dawn (60-day Yellow) .$0.35 
Pk. 
$1.90 
Bu. 
$7.00 
Golden Alpha. This new variety 
is slightly later than our Gold¬ 
en Dawn. Ears about 7 inches 
long, mostly 10-rowed. 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Golden Sunshine .. 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Golden Bantam . 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Premo Bantam . 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Barden’s Wonder Bantam. 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Whipple’s Early Yellow. The 
best sort for main crop; 14- 
rowed ears, 8 inches long, 
tender and sweet. 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Tendergold. A hybrid Corn of 
great merit; slightly earlier 
than Golden Bantam. Ears 7 
to 8 inches long, 10 to 14 rows 
of golden kernels. 
.50 
4.60 
17.50 
Golden Cross Bantam. Highly 
resistant to Stewart’s disease. 
Ears 10- to 14-rowed; kernels 
pale yellow, medium in width. 
One of the best hybrids de¬ 
veloped to date.50 4.60 17.50 
Prince of Orange. A second 
early variety; color is a deep 
orange, kernels are somewhat 
narrower than other yellow 
sorts . 
.35 
2.00 
7.50 
Golden Giant. Fine late sort. 
Heavy thick cob; kernel 
deep yellow . 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Golden Cream. Second early. 
Kernels are irregular on cob, 
like Country Gentleman in 
the White Corn. 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
Golden Evergreen. Also called 
Bantam Evergreen. Main sort 
for late Summer and Fall 
crop. Large ears of a splendid 
yellow color. Stalks 6 feet. 
Plenty of forage. 
.35 
1.90 
7.00 
In Hybrid Corns We Rate the Tendergold and Golden Cross Bantam as the Best Sorts 
