Stowell’s Evergreen 
THE BEST SWEET CORN 
Our Northern Groun Seed Corn Means Eartier 
Crops and Hordier Plants 
Sweet Corn can be raised on any good, ordinary soil that is thoroughly worked. Plant five kernels to the 
hill, which should be about 3 feet apart each way, or plant in rows, one seed every 3 inches, covering seed 
with about | inch of soil firmly pressed down. Thin out to three plants to a hill. 
two weeks up to July 15th. A pkg. will sow a row 50 ft. long or 30 hills. Pound, 1000 ft. of row or 400 hills. 
Seneca “60.”” The Earliest Hybrid. Matures 
in 60 days. Very prolific; bears two and some- 
times three ears to the stalk. Six-inch ears 
packed full of medium size golden yellow 
kernels. Good quality for such an early sweet 
corn. 
Pkg. 15c¢; 2 Ib. 30c; Ib. 55¢; 5 Ibs. $2.35 
Sixty-Day Golden. Ready to eat in 60 days. 
The earliest open pollinated sweet corn. Ears 
are 6 inches long, filled with 12 rows of creamy 
yellow kernels of good quality. A good variety 
for both home and market. 
Pkg. 10c; 2 Ib. 25c; Ib. 40c; 5 Ibs. $1.60 
Golden Cross Bantam 
The highest quality hybrid sweet corn 
that we have seen. The ears are about 8 
inches tong, with 14 rows of cream-colored 
kernels. Golden Cross is ready for use in 
about 88 days. Stalks are 4 to 5 feet 
high, thrifty growers, and bear two ears 
to a plant. We believe it is one of the 
leading yellow sweet corns, and recommend 
it to all progressive gardeners. 
Pkg. 15c¢; 2 Ib. 30c; Ib. 55c; 5 Ibs. $2.20 
Golden Early Market. (75 days.) One of 
the best large-eared yellow corns for home 
and market gardens. Has 12 rows of creamy 
yellow kernels of very good quality. Matures 
nearly a week before Golden Bantam 
Pkg. 10c; Y2 Ib. 20c; Ib. 35¢; 5 Ibs. $1.50 
Golden Bantam 


Golden Bantam. (78 days.) Hart & 
Vick’s old-fashioned strain with 6-inch ears, 
8 rows of deep kernels. The original strain 
that made Golden Bantam famous, is, we be- 
lieve, away ahead of any other; not only has 
it the wonderful richness, sweetness, and ten- 
derness that make this variety so popular, but. 
to these we have added a larger and better- 
filled ear and a much greater yield. If you 
have only a small garden, grow just Golden 
Bantam; sow it in succession so you can have 
it on your table all season long 
Pkg. 10c; 2 Ib. 20c; Ib. 35; 5 Ibs. $1.50 
Whipple’s Yellow. (78 days.) One of 
best large eared early yellow sweet corns that 
we know. It is ready for use at about the 
same time as Golden Bantam, but in most 
instances can be depended on: to ripen a few 
days earlier than Bantam. The ears are long, 
running from 8 to 9 inches, and carry from 
14 to 18 rows of deep yellow kernels, which are 
of extra good quality. It is a profitable sort 
for the market garden and no less valuable 
for the home garden. 
Pkg. 10; Y2 Ib. 20c; Ib. 35c; 5 Ibs. $1.50 
Bantam Evergreen. (80 days.) To garden- 
ers who want a larger-eared corn than Golden 
Bantam, we recommend this variety. The ears 
are 8 to 10 inches long and filled with creamy 
yellow, tender, sweet, and juicy kernels of 
very fine quality. It ripens about 10 days 
later Site our Bantam, 
kg. 10c; V2 tb. 20c; Ib. 35c; 5 Ibs. $1.50 
Golden Colonel. (87 days.) A yellow Country 
Gentleman. Rich, deep, golden yellow kernels, 
shoe-peg shaped, in irregular formation on 
8-inch ears. Tender, sweet, delicious. We 
urge you to try this new variety. It is some- 
thing different. Top quality. 
Pkg. 10c; 12 Ib. 25c; Ib. 40c; 5 Ibs. $1.60 
loana. All-America Winner, 1940. A new mid- 
season yellow corn (87 days) that is resistant 
to drought and wilt. The ears are 8 in. long 
with 12 to 14 rows of light yellow kernels. 
Very heavy yielding. Ready to eat 5 to 6 
days after Golden Cross Bantam. 
Pkg. 15c; 14 Ib. 30c; Ib. 55c; 5 Ibs. $2.40 
Black Mexican. (88 days.) Kernels mixed, 
blue and white, but turn white when cooked. 
Usually sweet, tender, and prolific. Many home 
gardeners declare it the finest quality of all 
sweet corn. 
Pkg. 15¢; V2 Ib. 25c; Ib. 45¢; 5 Ibs. $1.85 
Country Gentleman. (93 days.) A fine 
main-crop variety for home garden, market 
and canning. Ears 7 to 9 inches long, covered 
with irregular rows of long, slender white ker- 
nels. One of the best of later varieties. 
Pkg. 10c; 14 Ib. 25c; tb. 40c; 5 Ibs. $1.60 
Stowell’s Evergreen. (95 days.) The 
standard main-crop variety for home garden or 
market. Ears very large and filled to the tips. 
The sweet kernels are pure white. Remains 
fresh and edible longer than any other. 
Pkg. 10c; 14 Ib. 20c; Ib. 35¢; 5 Ibs. $1.50 
A 15-cent pkg. of Semesan, Jr., dusted on 
corn seed, makes stronger plants and much 
greater yield, Use it this spring. ” 
POP CORN 
Pkg. 10c; 1 Ib. 25c; Ib. 40c; 5 Ibs. $1.75, 
postpaid to you. 
Baby Golden. Sweet and tender yellow hulless 
kernels. 
Our Seed is all Tested for Germination. It 
will grow with proper care. Sowing too thickly 
wastes seed and good seed is not plentiful. 
HAMMOND’S NO CROW 
Keeps crows, blackbirds, moles, pheasants, 
field mice, and squirrels away from newly 
planted seed. Economical, costs about 10c an 
acre and is easy to use. 1 pt. (treats one 
bushel of corn) 60c; pt. $1.00; qt. $1.75. 
[10] 
For succession, plant every 



Golden 
Colonel 


Golden 
Bantam 
Cross 
