WILL’S PIONEER SEEDHOUSE, GREENHOUSE AND NURSERY 
22 
Mais 
(Ger.) 
Our Specialty SwCCt COTO 
Our Specialty 
Mais 
(Scan.) 
Culture. Plant in 
every six inches, or 
rows 3 to 3^ feet 
hill. Sweet Corn of 
ground has become 
the seed before it 
hills; 10 pounds per 
more than a pint. 
drills about three feet apart, one kernel 
in hills 2 34 feet apart in the row, and the 
apart, dropping four or five kernels in a 
any sort should not be planted until the 
warm, as cold, wet ground is sure to rot 
can germinate. One-fdurth pound to 100 
acre. One pound of Sweet Corn is a little 
WILL’S SWEET CORN COLLECTION 
This collection is designed to give Corn lovers the long¬ 
est possible succession of roasting ears by furnishing a 
planting of each variety from the very earliest sorts to 
the latest which we can use profitably in our climate. 
Two ounces of each of the following varieties: 
GOLDEN GEM 
WILL’S EARLY JUNE 
SUNSHINE 
IMPROVED EARLY DAKOTA 
GOLDEN BANTAM 
STOWELL’S EVERGREEN 
The Price of the Collection, 
Postpaid 
Varieties Listed in Order of Earliness 
GOLDEN GEM SWEET CORN. A very early golden Sweet 
Corn developed by Professor A. F. Yeager of North Da¬ 
kota from a cross of Sunshine with Pickaninny. It is 
two weeks earlier than Golden Bantam, about four days 
earlier than Banting and a much heavier yielder in our 
fields. It is the earliest yellow Sweet Corn of Golden 
Bantam quality, with eight rows that put it in the marketing class with Golden Bantam. This 
variety should be in every home garden and is a money getter for the market gardener. Pkt., 
5c; 34: lb., 15c; 34 lb., 25c; 1 lb., 42c, postpaid. Not prepaid: 5 lbs., $1.40; 10 lbs., $2.65; 50 lbs., 
$11.25; 100 lbs., $22.00. 
Golden Gem 
Your seeds grew fine in my garden last year. 
The Golden Gem Corn was sure early. 
IVAN LUTHER, 
Shelton, Wn„ Matlock Route. 
WILL’S EARLY JUNE (Registered U. S. Patent 
Office). The Earliest White Sweet Corn. A 
very dwarf and amazingly early variety bred 
by us for a short season, and a true and de¬ 
licious Sweet Corn. The white, eight-rowed 
ears are from 4 34 to 6 inches long. Pkt.., 5c; 
34 lb., 15c; 34 lb., 23c; lb., 37c, postpaid. 
Not prepaid: 5 lbs., $1.15; 10 lbs., $2.20; 
50 lbs., $9.75; 100 lbs., $19.00. 
SPANISH GOLD. An extra early bright golden 
yellow sort of good quality. Pkt., 5c; 34 lb., 
15c; 34 lb., 23c; 1 lb. 37c. Not prepaid, 5 
lbs., $1.15; 10 lbs., $2.20. 
SUNSHINE. A golden cross developed by Pro¬ 
fessor A. F. Yeager of the North Dakota Ex¬ 
periment Station, with twelve-rowed ears, 
seven to eight inches long. In our plantings, 
ten days earlier than the earliest strain of 
Golden Bantam and much larger, this is the 
closest to the Bantam in quality of any of the 
golden crosses. A great Corn for the home 
Will’s Early June 
garden and one the market gardener needs. Pkt., 5c; 34 lb., 15c; 34 lb., 
25c; lb., 42c, postpaid. Not prepaid, 5 lbs., $1.15; 10 lbs., $2.20; 50 lbs., 
$11.25; 100 lbs., $22.00. 
IMPROVED EARLY DAKOTA. Combining size with earliness, it is the larg¬ 
est of the extra early sorts and one of the best. Its outstanding quality is 
its uniformity in maturing. The white ears are 12 to 16 rowed, 7 to 8 
inches long, borne mostly two to a stalk. Pkt., 5c; 34 lb., 15c; % lb., 23c; 
1 lb., 37c, postpaid. Not prepaid: 5 lbs., $1.15; 10 lbs., $2.20; 50 lbs., 
$9.75; 100 lbs., $19.00. 
Have used your seed for about 10 years and I will never use any other seed 
than Oscar Will’s. MRS. CECELIA CARLSON, 
R. No. 1, Box 37, Bowbells, N. Dak. 
Sunshine 
