GOLDEN GLOW 
IS 
of 
An extremely early, pure golden yellow Corn, most attractive in color and appearance. It 
strictly a Wisconsin Corn developed by the Wisconsin Experiment Station. The ears are w 
medium size, around 8 inches in length, and in spite of its earhness it grows good stalks with 
heavy leaves. We are offering only the “big type of Golden Glow” and the strain that has been 
bred to be “cold-resistant.” Recommended for northern N. Y. by our N. Y. Dept, of Plant-breeding. 
Last spring you shipped me an order of seeds including Cornell No. 11 Field Corn, Heavyweight Oats, Grass Seed 
tc - 11 /r rOV L- f XC t sp JT ? a , c ? ( ’ wet s .P r,I JS- The Corn is the best ever grown in this section, and the Oats 
:T re ^ 2.1^£t high the middle ot J uly. _ 1 have received many splendid comments on these two crops. —Allen Salisbury, 
etc 
w 
Ellsworth Falls, Maine, September 27, 1938. 
Dibble’s Golden Glow 
I think your Catalog description of 
Golden Glow Corn is too modest.—C. F. 
& J. B. Woodward, Meriden, N. H. 
■r 
Dibble’s Cornell 1 1 
CORNELL 11 
Cornell 11 is a variety developed by ear-to- 
row selection from Pride of the North and 
differs from Pride of the North mainly in that 
it is about two weeks earlier in maturity while 
in stalk it is about 1 foot shorter. The ears are 
characteristically cylindrical in shape, 6 to 
8 inches long, usually not well filled at tips 
and of 14 to 18 rows, with cob rather large. 
The kernels are medium broad and thick and 
rather shallow as compared with Corns of the 
Corn-belt such as Learning or Early Yellow 
Dent. The color is yellow but some reddish 
ears appear. The selection was designed not 
for producing a “show” Corn but for high 
yield of grain and early maturity. During the 
past few seasons this variety has proved very 
popular with many of our customers. Cornell 
11 is recommended by the New York State 
Department of Plant-breeding as one of the 
most desirable varieties for the hill sections 
where the seasons are short. 
Lancaster County 
SURE CROP 
A splendid Corn of Pennsylvania origin, and 
the leading variety grown in Lancaster 
County, the best and most productive agri¬ 
cultural county in the state. 
Sure Crop is a hybrid developed from two 
well-known old varieties. It has long, rather 
large ears and small cob, is an extremely heavy 
yielder, medium as to time of ripening, and 
grows a wonderful mass of foliage, with stalks 
10 to 18 feet high. Being extremely rich in 
protein makes it most desirable for ensilage. 
It is practically sure to ripen on good Corn- 
land anywhere in the East in the latitude of 
Pennsylvania where the parent seed-stock was 
grown. Our 1938 crop is averaging over 
40 bushels per acre of recleaned, screened, and 
graded Corn, germinating nearly 100 per cent. 
Can you beat it? 
J, 
Dibble’s Lancaster County 
Sure Crop 
EDWARD F. DIBBLE SEEDGROWER • HONEOYE FALLS, N . Y. 
19 
