Lancaster County 
Sure Crop 
A splendid Corn of Pennsylvania origin 
and a leading variety in Lancaster County, 
the most productive agricultural county 
in the state. 
Sure Crop is developed from two well- 
known old varieties. It has long, rather 
large ears and small cob, is an extremely 
heavy yielder, medium as to time of ripen- 
ing, with stalks 10 to 18 feet high. Rich 
protein content makes it most desirable 
for ensilage. Practically sure to ripen on 
good Cornland anywhere in the East in 
the latitude of Pennsylvania where the 
parent seed-stock was grown. 
Golden Glow 
An extremely early, pure golden yellow 
Corn, most attractive in color and appear- 
ance. It is strictly a Wisconsin Corn de- 
veloped by the Wisconsin Experiment 
Station. The ears are of medium size, 
around 8 inches in Iength, and in spite of 
its earliness it grows good stalks with 
heavy leaves. We are offering only the 
“big type of Golden Glow” and the strain 
that has been bred to be “‘cold-resistant.”’ 
Golden Glow is very popular in northern 
New York and in regions having a similar 
growing season. 
DIBBLE'S 
SEED-SOWING TABLE 
The months mentioned below each variety, 
are the time of seeding. 
Pounds per Acre 
Common Alfalfa 
April, May, June, Aug., Sept. 
Grimm Alfalfa 
April to June 
Corn, Field. . 10 to 12 
May 
Corn, Ensilage 
May, June 
Red Medium Clover 10 to 15 
Feb. to May, Aug. to Nov. 
Mammoth Red Clover 10 to 15 
15 to 20 
March to May 
Peas, Canada 
March to May 
amcthy 
pril to June, Aug., Sept. 
Sudan Grass Peon: 
Late May to early June. 
Japanese Millet 
Late May to early June 
Hungarian Millet 
Late May to early June 
Golden Millet 
Late May to early June 
Sweet Clover 
March to Aug. 
20 to 25 
20 to 25 
40 to 50 

Diane Conn on a aie ponatee field, 10 
inches apart in 3-foot rows or 17,000 plants per 
acre for maximum yield. 

CORNELL 11 
CORNELL 11 
Cornell 11 was developed by ear-to-row selection 
from Pride of the North and differs from it mainly 
in being about two weeks earlier in maturity while 
in stalk it is about 1 foot shorter. The ears are 
characteristically cylindrical in shape, 6 to 8 inches 
long, usually not well filled at tips and of 14 to 18 
rows, with cob rather large. The kernels are 
medium broad and thick and rather shallow as 
compared with Leaming. The color ts yellow but 
some reddish ears appear. The selection was de- 
signed not for producing a “Show” Corn but for 
high yield of grain and early maturity. Cornell 11 
is recommended by the New York State Depart- 
ment of Plant-breeding as one of the most desirable 
varieties for the hill sections where the seasons are 
short. 
15 


SP onde 
i! 
ra, 
IMPROVED EARLY LEAMING 
