
CORN, SWEET 
Fr., Mais Sueve; Ger., Zucker Mais; Sp., Maize Dulce; It., Gran Turco Dolce 
1 pound will plant 100 hills or about 200 feet of row 
Plant when soil is warm in hills 3 or 4 feet 
apart 8 to 10 seeds to hill. Thin out to 4 plants 
to hill or plant in rows 3 feet apart, thinning 
out plants to 12 inches apart. Cultivate fre- 
quently giving a dressing of commercial fer- 
tilizer about every two weeks. 
First Early Varieties 
Golden Bantam Hybrid. The only really sweet, 
extra early eight-rowed hybrid golden corn, 
slightly larger than Golden Bantam and ten 
days earlier. Wilt-resistant. Lb. 85¢, 5 Ibs. $4.10 
Golden Bantam. Early, golden yellow color, and 
highest quality. Ears 6 to 7 inches long, 
8-rowed. Our stock has been carefully selected 
and is superior to most stock offered. 
eae Lb. 45c, 5 Ibs. $2.10 
Golden Early Market. Rapidly taking the place of 
Golden Sunshine. Four to 5 feet tall, ears very 
large, being 12- to 14-rowed and _ excellent 
quality. Two weeks earlier than Golden Ban- 
tam and very prolific. Lb. 45c, 5 Ibs. $2.10 
Mason’s Golden Midget. Exactly like White Midget 
in growth and habit except the cob is smaller 
and the kernels sweeter; in fact, anyone who 
has eaten Mason’s Golden Midget acclaims it to 
be the sweetest corn they have ever tasted. 
It grows on miniature plants rarely exceed- 
ing a height of three and one-half feet and 
can be sown in rows, thinning the plants out 
to six inches apart, allowing eighteen to 
twenty-four inches between the rows. Each 
plant carries three to five ears about four 
inches long, maturing in 50 to 55 days. For a 
continuous supply, successive sowings should 
be. made every ten days until July 10th in 
the latitude of New York. 
Packets containing approximately 500 seeds, 
, $1.00 
Metropolitan. Large, white, handsome ears of fine 
quality, very early; ears about 9 inches long 
and about 14 rows of kernels. : ; 
Lb. 45c, 5 Ibs. $2.10 

Hybrid Corn—Golden Cross Bantam 
20 
Sweet Cross. Hybrid. Early Golden Sweet crossed 
with Purdue Bantam, extreme earliness of 
Golden Sweet and unusual sweetness of Gol- 
den Bantam with wilt-resistance. 
Lb. 85c, 5 Ibs. $4.10 
Second Early Varieties 
Black Mexican. One of the sweetest and best; ears 
8 inches long and 8-rowed; grains bluish 
black when ripe. Lb. 45¢, 5 Ibs. $2.10 
lee. A Yellow Hybrid. Resembles Lincoln ex- 
cept that the ears are slightly longer and of 
better quality. The ears are 8 inches long 
and slightly tapering. Grows 7 ft. tall and is 
wilt-resistant. Lb. 85c, 5 Ibs. $4.10 
Marcross Hybrid. A .cross between Early’ Golden 
Market and Purdue Bantam with the earli- 
ness of Early Golden Market. Better quality 
and wilt-resistant. Lb. 85c, 5 Ibs. $4.10 
General Crop 
Country Gentleman. An especially fine quality 
corn. Ears 7 to 8 inches long, cob small, white 
and densely covered with long, slender white 
grains, without row formation. — 
: Lb. 45c, 5 Ibs. $2.10 
Golden Cross Bantam. Hybrid. A cross between Gol- 
den Bantam and Purdue Bantam. Ears 8 
inches long, 8 to 12 rows of delicious quality. 
Heavy -yielder and the same resistance as 
Purdue Bantam. Lb. 85c, 5 Ibs. $4.10 
“Stowell’s Evergreen. ‘The standard and: best known 
sweet corn. Ears 8 to 9 inches long, 16- to 
18-rowed, with a very deep, sweet grain. Our 
strain of this variety is uniform deep grain; 
small cob and high quality. Lb. 45¢, 5 Ibs. $2.10 
White Cross. Hybrid. (Resistant to ear worms.) 
Kars 8 to 9 inches. 12 rows, matures 95 days. 
Has the sweetness and quality of yellow corn 
and has such an exceptionally tight husk that 
it is resistant to ear worms. Lb. 85¢, 5 Ibs. $4.10 
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