STANLEY’S 
CROW REPELLENT 
Bierce 
iFf0aq Hi FoenuLAL 
MLW BayrTAIN CONN 
oe ones 
7s 
These black-winged robbers 
won’t stay long im a field pro- 
tected by Stanley‘s Crow Re- 
pellent. Not poisonous, and 
does not affect the corn—but 
the crows leave. A 60-cent can 
treats a bushel of seed. 
Weg tantra Ree ase eases $1.75 
(enough for 4 bushels 
of seed corn) 
bs 2) 2s Ae recente een 1.00 
(enough for 2 bushels 
of seed corn) 
DoD Eins Bao he eteae eased -60 
(enough for 1 bushel 
of seed corn) 
inches apart in 3-foot rows for maximum yield. 
A splendid Corn of Pennsylvania origin and a leading 
variety in Lancaster County, the most productive agricul- 
tural 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 ripening, with stalks 
10 to 18 feet high. Rich protein content makes it most 
desirable for ensitlage. Practically sure to ripen on good 
Cornland anywhere in the East in the latitude of Penn- 
sylvania where the parent seed-stock was grown. 
Harwood Martin, President and Treasurer of our 
Company, checking a neighbor's field of excellent 
Ensilage Corn in the hard dough stage. 
Cornell 11 was developed by ear-to-row 
selection from Pride of the North and dif- 
fers 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 is 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 ma- 
turity. Cornell 11 ts recommended as one 
: of the most desirable varieties for the hill 
CORNELL 11 sections where the seasons are short. 
LANCASTER COUNTY SURE CROP 
