36 Reliable Seed Corn Ensures Profitable Crops 
OC 0G 0 G0 G3 0S 0 G0 G0 G0 S910 0 Cs 0S 0 0 0 G5 00 0 SS 0 90 0 0 0 OS 0 OO 

Buivue RipaeE ENSILAGE SEED CORN 
OPEN POLLINATED 
FIELD AND ENSILAGE SEED CORN 
Virginia-Grown Eureka Ensilage Corn. It is the largest Corn 
we know of; grows from 14 to 18 ft. high, on stalks 2 to 2% in. 
in diameter, and has a vast amount of foliage. If it is a question 
of tonnage on your farm, grow Eureka Ensilage Corn. It gives 
you a succulent, palatable, cheap feed the year around. The 
seed we offer is the genuine Eureka, grown in the Shenandoah 
Valley of Virginia, and will give one of the largest crops of Ensilage 
Corn you have ever had. Pkt. $1.35, bus. $5.00. 
Longfellow Flint. This for a long time has been the popular, 
8-rowed Yellow Flint Corn. It is a very productive variety; 
ears 12 to 14 in. long and matures where the Yellow Dent fails. 
Pkt. $1.35, bus. $5.00. 
West Branch Sweepstakes Ensilage Seed Corn. The genuine 
West Branch Sweepstakes is a big Corn. The stalks are very 
large, 1144 to 2 in. in diameter and 12 to 15 ft. high. The foliage 
is long, broad, and heavy, starting well down to the ground, with 
an abundance of leaves, and produces from 15 to 25 tons of silage 
per acre. The ears are large, averaging 12 in. long and 10 in. 
in circumference, containing 14 to 20 rows of red and golden 
grains, with a decided reddish cast. Pkt. $1.10, bus. $4.00. 
Blue Ridge Ensilage Seed Corn. A variety of Ensilage Corn of 
great merit. Blue Ridge Ensilage is at least three weeks earlier 
than its famous prototype, Eureka Ensilage, with all its good 
qualities and none of its faults. It is bred for earliness so as to 
give a glazed ear in this locality at harvest-time. It grows 12 to 
14 ft. high, on a thick, heavy stalk, well filled with leaves which 
retain their color well to the ground until harvested. (See illus- 
tration from an actual photograph, two thirds natural size.) 
Pkt. $1.35, bus. $5.00. 
Lancaster Golden Sure Crop. This is a large-growing Corn, 12 
to 14 ft. high, with long ears and a large amount of leaves, making 
it an excellent Silage Corn. Will not mature for grain in a short 
season in Northern Pennsylvania and New York. Fine for silage 
in these locations. Pkt. $1.25, bus. $4.50. 
White-Cap Yellow Dent. This Corn has never failed to mature 
properly; vigorous habit, large foliage, and a sure cropper. The 
ears are large—9 to 11 in. and 14- to 16-rowed—well filled out 
and showing practically no gloss whatever, thus demonstrating 
its well-bred propensities. The grains are large, beautiful lemon- 
yellow, and white-capped. Pkt. $1.10, bus. $4.00. 
CLINTON OATS 
Ciinton Oats is a new variety developed 
through the united efforts of the U. S. Depart- 
ment of Agriculture and state experiment sta- 
tions. This variety was bred especially for and 
resistance to the more hazardous strains of rust, 
smut and blight. 
RESISTANT TO 
HELMINTHOSPORIUM 
The disease causes seedling blights with a vel- 
vety dark color showing at the nodes, premature 
ripening, reduction in weights per bushel and in 
yield. This disease causes Oat plant seedling to 
die. Leaves of the plants which survive are 
streaked with an orange and brownish color. The 
plants lodge badly. The plants shrivel and die 
before the heads are filled out. Damage to older 
Oat varieties such as Vicland and Tama are ex- 
tremely heavy some years. CLinron Oats are 
resistant to Helminthosporium. 
HIGH YIELDS 
CLINTON Oats are medium early, and produce 
high yields in the Oat growing sections. They 
have greatly outyielded the older disease suscep- 
tible varieties. Yields have equaled or exceeded 
those of Tama and Vicland Oats when cut with 
the binder, but when combining was delayed they 
have consistently outyielded the other popular 
variety. The grain color is almost lemon-yellow. 
WIDELY ADAPTED 
Highly recommended by local State Experiment 
Stations for Spring Oat producing sections. 
Bu. 32 Ib. $2.00 100 lb. Bag. $6.00 
In ordering Seed Corn by Parcel Post allow for postage and cost of bags. 
