
DAKOTA 
WHITE 
FLINT 
The first variety 
produced by Oscar 
H. Will in the ear- 
ly eighties. A 
pure, pearly white 
flint, 8 to 12 rowed, 
long slender ears 
with small cob and 
a great deal of 
grain. Many ears 
to the hill, and 
yields of 50 bu. 
per acre have been 
reported. Stalks 
areleafy and 
bushy, a wonder- 
ful variety to feed 
off in the field. 
Height from 3% 
to 5% ft. F. O. B. 
here: 10 Ibs., 

$1.20; % bu., 
$3.00; bu., $5.25. 
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Mercer 
MERCER FLINT 
A fine silage variety with stalks 6 to 8 ft. high, leafy, with slender 
stalks, ears long and slim, several to a hill, color orange yellow. A 
second early sort that does not always mature in short seasons. 
to feed in the bundle as well as for silage. 
acclimated strain. 
$5.00. 
FF. O. B. here: 

Assiniboine 
ASSINIBOINE FLINT CORN 
From the Canadian Indians—Earliest Type of Corn Grown. Ripens 
10 days before the Gehu and Dakota, so has an especially useful place 
in hogging off. Lb., 40c, postpaid. F. O. B. here: 10 Ibs., $1.50; 
% bu., $3.25; bu., $6.00. 
10 Ibs., $1.15; % bu., $2.75; bu., 

Flint Corn Is More Grasshopper 
Resistant Than the Pure Dents 
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WILL'S GEHU YELLOW 
FLINT 
The best known of our native 
early flints. We have shipped it to 
every continent. It has been care- 
fully bred by us for years and shows 
the effect of this breeding. Its feed- 
ing qualities are the highest of any 
variety of Corn, it is leafy and pro- 
duces a tremendous amount of ex- 
cellent fodder, since there is no 
heavy stalk, and every part of the 
plant is utilized. It is drought, 
frost and hail resistant to a wonder- 
ful extent in addition to its great 
earliness. In good soil and under 
favorable conditions it may be cut 
with 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. 
Lb., 35c, postpaid. F. O. B. 
here: 10 Ibs., $1.20; 1 
bu., $4.00; bu., $5.25. 
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Fine 
Dakota Squaw 
We have an extra good 
BURLEIGH CO. MIXED or 
DAKOTA SQUAW CORN 
Hardy—Early—Heavy Yield- 
ing. This is a mixed form of 
the early flint and is the first 
variety listed by us after our 
business was started. It is 
very resistant to both drought 
and frost, and fully as heavy 
a yielder as any variety of 
early flint. It is of mixed col- 
ors, 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 Ibs., $1.25; 4% bu., $3.00; 
bu., $5.50. 

