FLINT 
The best known of 
our native early Hints; 
might well be called Ihe 
universal Corn. We 
have shipped it to every continent and 
have had fine reports from it in Scan¬ 
dinavia, Russia, Ireland, Scotland, South 
Africa and South America. It has been 
carefully bred by us for nearly fifty 
years and shows the effect of this breed¬ 
ing. Its feeding qualities are the high¬ 
est of any variety of Corn, it is leafy 
and produces a tremendous amount of 
excellent fodder, since there is no 
heavy stalk, and every part of the 
plant is utilized. It is drought, frost 
and hail resistant to a wonderful ex¬ 
tent in addition to its great earliness. 
In good soil and under favorable con¬ 
ditions it may be cut wilh a Corn 
binder. Gehu is of a lemon-yellow 
color, ears mostly twelve-rowed, 7 to 
10 inches in length. Stalks 4 to 6 
feet. Ears 10 to 15 inches from the 
ground. Hog raisers declare that hogs 
will fatten on Gehu at least a third 
faster than on any other Corn variety. 
This is said to be especially notable in 
hogging off when the hogs do not have 
access to alfalfa or sweet clover. Lb., 
30c, postpaid. F. O. B. here, 10 lbs., 
50c; Vs. bu., 80c; bu., $1.50. 
BURLEIGH COUNTY MIXED or DAKOTA SQUAW CORN 
Hardy—Early—Heavy Yielding. This is a mixed form of the early flint and is the first 
variety listed by us after our business was started. It has retained its popularity through all 
the years since on account of its extreme earliness, and its unusual hardiness and heavy yield. 
It is very resistant to both drought and frost and fully as heavy a yielder as any variety of 
early flint. It is a flint Corn of mixed colors, yellow, white, blue and red predominating, ears 
long and slender, mostly eight-rowed. This Corn shells out heavier than any other variety. 
Lb., 30c, postpaid. F. O. B. here, 10 lbs., 50c; x /» bu., 80c; bu., $1.50. 
MINNESOTA 13 is one of the most popular varieties of Corn for silage and fodder purposes in the Northwest. 
The ordinary strains are adapted, however, only to good soil and favorable conditions and will mature in a favor¬ 
able year, but are on the average somewhat too late for anything but feed in our climate. Its yield of fodder ana 
silage is very heavy and it attains near enough to maturity so that there is much dry matter in the content, in 
grows to a height of from seven to nine feet, depending on the season, usually bears two large ears to a staiK, 
which are many-rowed, and of a beautiful rich yellow color. Cob is red. We have strains, extra eaily ana 
adapted to the Northwest. 
The Haney Strain is adapted to the eastern and our Boyd Strain to the western part of the state. Lb., postpaid, 
30c. F. O. B. here, 10 lbs., 50c; V 2 , bu., 80c; bu., $1.50. 
OSCAR H. WILL & CO., BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA 
WILL'S ORIGINAL NORTHWESTERN DENT 
The original Northwestern Dent Corn, a history of which is 
given in Bulletin No. 107 of the Montana Experiment Station, 
was introduced by Oscar H. Will in 1896, and almost imme¬ 
diately attained great popularity over the whole Northwest. 
So much so in fact that corn of every type, color and descrip¬ 
tion has since been sold under the name which we gave to 
this early red dent. Bloody Butcher and Calico from South 
Dakota and Nebraska have disappointed many a farmer who 
had bought them as Northwestern Dent, and found them too 
tall and too late to be of any value. The only safe plan 
therefore is to buy WilPs Original Northwestern Dent from 
Oscar 11. Will & Co. 
It is extremely hardy and will produce a crop when all 
other dents fail, owing to its frost and drought resistance. 
It ripens in 80 to 90 days. Lb., 30c, postpaid. F. O. B. Bis¬ 
marck, 10 lbs., 50c; y 2 bu., 80c; bu., $1.50. 
WILL S GEHU YELLOW 
