LANDRETHS’ PENNA. CERTIFIED TOMATO AND PEPPER SEED HAS NO EQUAL 
26 
GARDEN CORN—Continued 
LANDRETHS’ EARLIEST TABLE OR EARLY 
BEVERLY—72 Days. Gi'ains medium in lenj^tli, 
cream color. Height of .stalk to 5 ft. Ears 
medium length and thin, averaging 6 to 7 inches, 
short pointed. Rows generally 8 or 10. This is a 
cream colored flint corn that may be planted very 
early in the Spring for early market, not a true 
sweet corn. 
^ lb. 16c lb. 26c 5 lbs. $1.06 10 lbs. $1.96 
Truckers Favorite—86 Days. Grains medium in 
length, white in color. Height of stalk 7| to 8 ft. 
Ears medium length and thickness, average 7 to 8 
inches, and short pointed. Rows generally 12 or 14. 
This is a favorite in the South foi roasting ears, 
being a white dent. The long tight husk protects 
the ear from worms. 
i lb. 12c lb. 20c .7 lbs. 86c 10 lbs. $1.60 
WHAT THE MATURITY FIGURES MEAN 
Throughout the vegetable section of this catalog, 
figures representing the days to matuilty follow 
immediately the names of the individual varieties. 
These represent the average days required from the 
planting of the seed to the harvest of the crop. 
They are particularly valuable for comparison as 
to the approximate maturity of various varieties of 
the same kind of vegetable. Weather conditions, 
kind of soil used, and locality of growing, however, 
obviously alter the exact number of days required. 
Truckers Favorite 
FIELD CORN 
Plant 10 to 16 pounds to the acre or about one bushel, 66 pounds to 6 acres. Originally a native 
of North and South America. Was grov^n in Peru centuries ago. We feel that our stocks are superior 
in quality and germination to the usual strains grown, as they are all grown in Bucks County, Pa., one of 
the four best corn counties, and Pennsylvania Field Corn is famous. It is all grown from the best hand 
selected, tipped stock which we select from the various fields which we are growing in this neighborhood. 
Landreths’ stock should not be compared with the cheap field corn, as our aim is to produce better quality, 
regardless of price. 
BRISTOL EARLY YELLOW or White Capped 
Yellow Dent—100 Days. Grains are medium in 
length, broad, the color being light or lemon yellow 
with a white dented cap or top. Height of stalk 
7 to 7^{t. Ears long, thin, averaging 10 to 11 inches, 
short pointed. Rows generally 10 to 14 on a white 
cob. A fine quality corn, highly productive on good 
soil and even does well on poor ground, giving it the 
name of “Poor Man’s Corn’’ in some sections. 
i bu. $1.00 I bu. $1.90 bu. $3.60 
Eureka White—130 Days. Grains are medium to 
long, broad, the color being white with a distinctly 
dented cap or top. Height of stalk 10 to 11 ft. 
Ears are medium in length and thickness, averaging 
7 to 8 inches, short pointed. Rows generally 10 to 
14 on a white cob. This is an ensilage corn grown 
by us in Virginia. It is very popular in New 
England and some other northern states for silage, 
but will not mature hard seed even in Penn.sylvania. 
We recommend Snowflake for this section. 
i bu. $1.16 J bu. $2.00 bu. $3.76 
Golden Beauty or Sweepstakes—120 Days. 
Grains are medium in length and very broad; the 
color being rich, golden yellow with a rather shallow 
dented cap or tip. Height of stalk about 9 to 10 ft. 
Ears medium in length and thick, averaging 8 to 9 
inches, short pointed. Rows generally 10 to 14 
on a red cob. This variety is similar to Golden 
Dent but tlie grains are not so long and are wider 
than Golden Dent. It is ten days later than Golden 
Dent. i bu. $1.16 i bu. $2.00 1 bu. $3.76 
Bristol Early Yellow 
