DIBBLE’S 
SEED CORN 
GUARANTEE 
E GUARANTEE every bushel of our 
Seed Corn to be northern-grown and 
thoroughly recleaned. Our germination 
tests show 90 per cent or above, and we sell 
Seed Corn subject to your test. 
_ You may keep our Seed Corn ten days, test 
tt any way you wish, and if it does not ‘“‘make 
& ie : : 
good,” return it immediately and we will 
refund your money, paying the freight both 
ways, or refill your order. We use reasonable 
care in packing and sending out our Seed 
Corn, but as so many circumstances may 
arise over which we have no control, we do 
not guarantee, nor will we be responsible for 
the crop grown from any of our seeds. 
When the white-oak leaves are as big as a 
squirrel’s ear, then it is time to plant corn. 
—Old Indian saying. 
DIBBLE’'S 
SEED-SOWING 
TABLE 
The months mentioned below each variety are 
the time of seeding. Pounds per acre 
Common Altalfanse eee eee eee 15 to 20 
April, May, June, Aug., Sept 
Grimm-Alfalfasiee pee eee eee 15 to 20 
April, May, June, Aug., Sept 
Alsike neat ort tri ckne ca haeeere 8 to 10 
Feb. to June, Aug., Sept. 
Barley Prt ace crs aoe OO 96 
April to June 
Corn; Field 209 cee oceans 10 to 12 
ay, June 
CornsEnsilagea-ee ee eee NSS mo) PAR 
ay, June 
Red Medium Clover................ 10 to 15 
Feb. to May, Aug. to Nov. 
Mammothy hed Cloverars nie 10 to 15 
Feb. to May, Aug. to Nov. 
Oats t-t5 Si eee ete ea ona 80 to 96 
March to May 
Peas, Canadas oe Lee 90 to 120 
March to May 
Timothy? he eee 12 to 15 
April to June, Aug., Sept. 
Sudan Grasset. oe reer 20 to 25 
Late May to early June 
JapanesesMillet x: a, oe ee eee 20 to 25 
Late May to early June 
Hungarians Voller eee ate 40 to 50 
Late May to early June 
GoldeniMillets. asec tan etsiien 40 to 50 
Late May to early June 
Sweet) Clover;ce a pete een 15 
March to Aug. 
DIBBLE’S 
Early Yellow Dent Corn 
AS introduced by us thirty-three years ago as the earliest 
large Yellow Dent in existence. During that time we have 
tried out, tested, and inspected fields of other Early Dents 
and, as a result, we still say to our customers that Dibble’s Early 
Yellow Dent is the most desirable of the Early Dents for the eastern 
farmer. 
We do not advise its growth at high altitudes, such as the hill 
lands of New York, for a husking crop, but we do recommend it 
as the best early Yellow Dent for ensilage now grown. 
Dibble’s Early Yellow Dent planted here in the Genesee Valley 
country, May 15 to June 1, is usually ready for the silo by early 
September, but many of our customers report that it matures earlier 
with them. The foliage is very leafy and the stalks average 10 to 
12 feet in height. One field of 12 acres on one of our own farms 
measured 14 feet on the level for the entire field. The ears, 8 to 10 
inches in length, are closely set with bright yellow zrains on a small 
cob. Hundreds of our customers, in a dozen different states, plant 
Dibble’s Early Yellow Dent year after year. 
Our seed is from carefully selected, hand-picked ears, thor- 
oughly recleaned, of splendid germination, and we sell it subject 
to your test on our money-back-if-you-want-it guarantee. 
I am writing to tell you that the Seed Corn from your place last year (1941) was 
the best I have had from standpoint of production. Dibble’s Early Yellow Dent 
filled my stlo and I was obliged to let my Cornell 29-3 ripen and husk it; a measured 
acre produced 108 bushel baskets of ears. 29-3 is best all-purpose Corn we have ever 
had here. At Jeast 70 per cent of the stalks had two perfect ears. We do not have the 
best kind of Corn-ground here as we are at a 1200-foot elevation, and my farm is in a 
slope of the Catskills facing the north—R. C. Grecory, Grantin, N. Y 

Pd . | = — i ‘x 
“Comin’ through the corn’’—thirty tons of ensilage to the acre on our own farms 


EDVARD =F. DIBBCEMSEEDIGROWER = HONEOYE FALLS, N. Y. 17 
