SOUTH WETHERSFIELD, CONN. 
21 
Thoroughbred 
Learning Corn. 
Hi 
W e would again call your 
attention to this excellent strain 
of Field Corn which has proved to be 
so very satisfactory, both for ensilage 
and shelled corn, and we do not hesitate 
to highly recommend it for such pur¬ 
poses. It is a strain of the Improved 
Learning, bred up to its highest effici¬ 
ency, ripening about the same time as 
the old style, kernels and ears more uni¬ 
form, better filled out and of much purer 
type. It has a good sized stalk with 
abundance of leaves and is a heavy 
yielder of large, handsome ears, making 
it a valuable variety for general pur¬ 
poses. 
FIELD AND ENSILAGE CORN o? 5 £?e 
Per 4 quarts. Per peck Per bu. Per bu, 
Ninety-Day Yellow (true stock) ; probably the earliest field 
corn in cultivation; bright yellow flint, small cob and very 
prolific. A bushel of ears generally shelling about 24 
quarts of shelled corn, . . . • • • • . $o 25 $0 40 $1 40 $1 35 
Early Canada Yellow. Medium size flint corn, extensively 
grown in New England,. 2 5 4° 1 4° 1 35 
