‘Because Sweet Corn is fer- 
tilized by the wind, plants 
must be grown in blocks rather 
than lines, so that the pollen 
will drift from one plant to 
another. In the home garden 
it is best to plant blocks of 10 
square feet every two weeks 
until midsummer. 
Golden Evergreen Corn 
Golden Sunshine Corn 
SWEET CORN 
Zucker Mais Mais sueve Maiz dulce Mais dolce 
One pkt. plants two 15-ft. rows; 1 qt., about 200 hills 
Corn needs hot weather and should not be planted until the ground is thor- 
oughly warm. Plant 6 kernels in hills 3 feet apart. Thin to 3 plants in a hill. 
Keep the ground hoed well up around the plants to support them against the 
wind. Always plant at Jeast two rows together to insure pollination. Succession 
planting until mid-July is advised for home gardeners. 
Black Mexican. 87 days. A favorite in the West, where it ranks very 
high in quality. Young kernels are pure white, later becoming blue- 
violet and finally black. Ears 8-rowed. Kernels tender and very 
sweet. 
Country Gentleman. 95 days. A main-crop variety with large ears 
maturing a week after Stowell’s Evergreen. Deep, pointed, white 
grains In irregular rows. 
Early Evergreen. 90 days. Another variety similar to Stowell’s Ever- 
green in flavor and appearance but 10 days earlier. Ears 7 inches 
long. Remains in good condition a long while. A good canning 
variety. 
Extra Early Bantam. 75 days. Ears 6 to 7 inches long, with 8 to 10 
rows of dark yellow kernels. Has a good flavor and is fair to good 
in quality. 
Golden Bantam. 80 days. Everybody’s favorite. Small but delicious 
ears of sweet golden kernels. Plants are dwarf but generally bear two 
ears to a stalk. Unsurpassed im flavor. 
Golden Evergreen or Bantam Evergreen. 95 days. Ears 7 to 8 inches 
long, borne in midseason. Stalks 71% to 8 feet tall. Golden yellow 
kernels of good flavor. 
Golden Early Market. 75 days. A very early variety with large ears 
of creamy yellow Corn, 9 inches long and containing 12 to 14 rows of 
kernels. Tender, sweet and good flavor. 
Golden Gem. 70 days. Short stalks often bearing two ears. Deep 
yellow kernels on rather small, 8-rowed ears. Exceptionally sweet 
and early. 
Golden Giant. 87 days. A late yellow variety with large ears of thick 
golden kernels in 12 to 16 rows. Popular for both home and market 
gardens. 
Golden Sunshine. 74 days: Developed from Golden Bantam, and 
about a week earlier than that variety. Ears are larger, with 10 or 12 
rows of kernels but the same delicious flavor. 
Howling Mob. 85 days. A medium-early sort bearing 7 to 9-inch ears 
with 12 to 14 rows. Broad, deep white kernels, very tender. Good 
for shippmg because it has heavy husks. 
Improved Golden Bantam. 84 days. Golden yellow ears 6 to 7 inches 
long. Sweet, tender, golden yellow kernels in 12 to 14 rows. Mid- 
season; strong, vigorous plant. 
Stowell’s Evergreen. 95 days. Very widely planted. Long, slender, 
white kernels on large ears, 16 or 18-rowed. Excellent quality. The 
standard late or main-crop variety. 
Whipple’s Early Yellow. 85 days. Deep, broad, golden yellow kernels 
in 12 to 16 rows. Ears large, well filled; stalks 6 feet tall. 
Wonder Bantam. 80 days. An early yellow Corn with 8-inch, 8-rowed 
ears. Good colcr and taste. Matures with Golden Bantam but 
yields more. 
ee 
Vegetable Seeds 
10 PAGE’S STANDARD QUALITY SEEDS 
