Corn and Cereal Grains of High Quality 

IMPROVED FIELD CORN 

Sow 1 peck per acre for ears, % bushel for silage, up to 1 bushel for fodder. 
enough apart to allow tractor cultivation. 
Rows wide 
Flint Corns and early Dents are quick plants of moderate size and are grown for ears. 
Slower Dent sorts are larger and are for both ears and leaves. 
and are grown for their leaves. 
Fodder varieties are still larger 
HYBRID VARIETIES 
Hybrid Corn versus Open- pollinated Corn 
In a field of Corn, pollen grains are carried by the wind from the upper or male flowers 
onto the ‘‘silk” of a neighboring Corn plant, resulting in a normal ear, consisting of kernels 
which are fertile, and which are able to grow. Seed Corn, as grown by first-line producers, 
is planted sufficiently far from other varieties that the pollination i is confined to the one 
sort, which is therefore unmixed. 
If two kinds, however, are grown together so that an intentional impurity Is obtained, 
we produce a Hybrid Corn, and when scientific care is taken in selecting parents, In remov- 
| ing male flowers from the female parents, and discarding the ears from the male parents, 
we have high-quality hybrids such as are listed below. They are more thrifty plants, more 
disease-resistant, and far heavier producers of grain or ensilage, or both. 
2A 9502 Cornell 34-53. (100 days.) 
The characteristic of this new variety 
is Its earliness, and the certainty with 
which it will mature its ears; recom- 
mended for this purpose almost any- 
where in New York State and southern 
New England. A fine yellow Dent 
with 7 to 9-inch ears, with 14 to 18 
rows. Essentially a grain Corn, tt makes 
excellent ensilage also. Height 8 ft. 
Qt. 70 cts., postpaid 90 cts.; pk. $4.25, 
bus. (56 Ibs.) $12, 10 bus. $110. 
2A 9503 Hybrid Yellow Dent. (105 
days.) Heavy-yielding variety. Pro- 
duces very long, large, sound ears, deep 
grains; strong, stocky, medium- tall 
stalk. For ensilage as well as grain. Qt. 
70 cts., postpaid 90 cts.; pk. $4.25, 
bus. (56 Ibs.) $12, 10 bus. $110. 

2A 9504 Cornell No. 29-3 Hybrid Dent. 
(110 days.) Adapted to our eastern con- 
ditions. Yellow kernels with a slight 
red tinge. It is a double-crossed hybrid 
which may be used for a double pur- 
pose. Splendid for ensilage in areas with 
short seasons and grain for other areas. 
Qt. 75 cts., postpaid 95 cts.; pk. $4.50, 
bus. (56 Ibs.) $12.50, 10 bus. $115. 
2A 9505 Southern Hybrid Sweep- 
stakes. (Fodder.) A cross between 
inbred strains of the heaviest yielding 
and largest stalked late southern en- 
silage variety, and the heaviest yielding 
early northern fodder Corn. akes a 
large stalk and heavy tonnage, and will 
often mature grain in the North. A prof- 
itable sort. Qt. 75 cts., postpaid 95 cts.; 
pk. $4, bus. (56 Ibs.) $12, 10 bus. $110. 
Open-pollinated Corn 
2A 9508 Golden Eureka (Dent.) Under 
favorable conditions may yield 150 bushels 
of ears or 25 tons of silage per acre. Grows 
12 feet high, ears average 12 to 15 inches 
long, 18 or 20 rows, yellow grains, and small 
cob. 100 days. Qt. 55 cts., postpaid 75 cts.; 
pk. $2, bus. (56 Ibs.) $6, 10 bus. $55. 
2A 9509 Cornell No. 11 (Dent). A 110- 
to 115-day yellow Corn for silage as well as 
grain. Ears9 to 10 inches. 14- to 18-rowed 
with small red cobs. Grows 8 to 9 feet tall. 
Qt. 60 cts., postpaid 80 cts.; pk. $2.35, 
bus. (56 Ibs. ) $7, 10 bus. $65. 
2A 9510 Longfellow (Flint). (90 days.) 
Ears 12 inches long; cobs small; kernels of 
good size. Safe for the production of ears 
as far north as Massachusetts. Qt. 60 cts., 
postpaid 80 cts.; pk. $2.35, bus. (56 Ibs.) $7, 
10 bus. $65. 

92 Farm Seeds 
2A 9511 Jumbo Silage. (Fodder.) An 
improved West Branch Sweepstakes. 
Large plant, 12 to 15 feet high. For low, 
rich lands. Qt. 60 cts., postpaid 80 cts.; 
pk. $2.35, bus. (56 Ibs.) $7.25, 10 bus. 
$67.50. 
2A 9512 Evergreen. (Fodder.) A _ sweet 
Corn valuable as silage or green fodder. 
Qt. 65 cts., postpaid 80 cts.; pk. $2.50, bus. 
(45 Ibs.) $8, 10 bus. $75. 
7A 5342 AT SEEDING TIME USE AN 
AMERICAN CORN PLANTER 
Strongly made; highly practical. One- 
hand model. Plant your hills as quickly as 
you walk your fields. Adjustable as to num- 
ber of grains in a hill; puts them at the cor- 
rect depth. $4.50. 
Longfellow (Flint) Corn 
PLEASE NOTE: Seeds on this page F.O.B. our stores, except where stated otherwise. 
Customer pays transportation. Prices subject to change without notice 


POP-CORN 
Slow curing under cover in thin layers and 
with maximum ventilation ensures good pop- 
ping quality. Sow 5 pounds per acre in hills. 
2A 9515 Sunburst. Fine large yellow ker- 
nels that have a buttery tint when popped. 
2A 2p. 8 White Hulless. Small, white ker- 
nels. 
Above two, Ib. 65 cts., postpaid 85 cts.; 
10 Ibs. $6, 100 Ibs. $50 
POP-CORN FOR POPPING 
2A 9518 Giant Yellow. Lb. 25 cts.,. post- 
paid 45 cts.; 5 Ibs. $1.10, postpaid $1.45. 
2A 9519 White Hulless. Lb. 30 cts., post- 
paid 50 cts.; 5 Ibs. $1.35, postpaid $1.75. 
SEED OATS 

Superior varieties often weigh up to 40 — 
pounds per measured bushel, but are sold at 
the standard weight of 32 pounds per bushel. 
For production of grain, use 24% bushels per 
acre; for forage, 3 bushels. Sown wit 
Canada Peas, 1 4 bushels each of Oats and 
Peas per acre. 
2A 9522 Clinton. Has been giving re- 
markable results m the East. Straw- 
colored type; early. Tall, stiff straw va- 
riety. Heavy Oat and high yielder. Pk. 
$1.50, bus. $4.25, 10 bus. $40 
2A 9523 Mohawk. Fine, hardy, heavy, 
resistant to belmintbosporium, Oat. Heavy — 
yielder. Stout straw. Pkt. $1.65, bus. 
(32 Ibs.) $4.50, 10 bus. $42.50. 
2A 9524 Welcome! Heavy, ere and 
productive. Swedish type. 
postpaid 50 cts.; pk. $1.35, bus. a Ibs.) 
$3.75, 10 bus. $35. 
2A 9526 ALPHA BARLEY. High-yielding — 
and satisfactory. The kernels are large, 
plump, and heavy. Splendid for the dairy 
farmer who uses one bushel each of Barley, 
Oats, and Field Peas per acre. When 
used alone, sow 114 to 2 bushels per acre. 
Qt. 40 cts., postpaid hee ; pk. $1.85, bus. 
(48 Ibs.) $5, 10 bus. $47.5 
Qt. cts.; a 
: 
2A 9529 SPRING RYE. acne with 
Vetch as a plow-under crop for soil- 
improvement, using 44 bushel with 75 
pounds of Vetch per acre. When grown 
alone, sow 114 bushels of Rye per acre. 
Ot. 50 cts., postpaid 70 cts.; pk. $2, bus. 
(56 Ibs.) $6, 10 bus. $57.50. 
2A 9531 SPRING WHEAT. A Son ae 
cropping, hard, beardless variety. Sow in 
spring, 114 to 2 bushels per acre. Qt. 50 cts. 
postpaid 70 cts.; pk. $2.35, bus. (60 lbs.)'§ 
$7, 10 bus. $67. 50. 
2A 9533 WHEAT FOR COOKING: 
0 cts., postpaid 50 cts.; 10 Ibs. $2.50, 
100 Ibs. $15. 
STUMPP & WALTER CO. 
Lb. 
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