'' b 7 %■ 
He Sold His ENTIRE Crop 
of Aunt Mary’s Sweet Corn 
at 35c per Dozen 
In March last year, Mr. Charles W. Sibel, a market gar¬ 
dener at North Wales, Pennsylvania, sent me Ten 
Dollars ($10.00) for seed. 
Seven months later, in October, he wrote that Aunt 
Mary’s was easy to grow—that it was prolific, some 
individual stalks having three and even four ears—that 
his customers told him the green ears were delicious— 
that he sold all his corn at 35^ per dozen and that he 
could have sold five times as much at the same price. 
Mr. Sibel closed his letter by ordering one hundred 
pounds of seed for 1938 planting. 
AUNT MARY'S SWEET CORN FARM 
t t v 
WEST RIDGE ROAD VAN WERT, OHIO 
