SCAR H. WILL & CO., BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA 
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Corn is grown for feed. The corn that produces the most in 
both ears and stalks is the cheapest to feed. It costs money to 
pick corn—hogs, cattle and sheep pick for nothing. Feeding 
corn in the fiel@ is the most economical way to handle. 
_For feeding in the field the highest yields always come from 
flint corn, flour corn and semi-dents. 
Pee a HARDY FLINT CORN 
Developed by the Indians for Northern Plains Planting 
Great Piains a 
Rainbow od 
Great Plains Rainbow. Sure maturing, a tremendous yielder and a wonderful corn for the silo 
3 or to feed in the field. Developed by John Sarvis at the U.S. Great Plains Experiment Sta- 
tion at Mandan. Will outyield all Dents and Hybrids year in and year out. We have a remark- 
ably fine stock matured in one of our poorest corn years. Lb., 50c, postpaid, F.0.B. Bismarck; 
10 Ibs., $2.00; 146 bu., $3.70; bu., $7.00. 
WILL'S GEHU YELLOW FLINT 
Seventy-Five-Day Corn 
The best known of our native early flints. We have shipped it to 
every continent. It has been carefully bred by us for years and 
shows the effect of this breeding. Its feeding qualities are the high- 
est of any variety of Corn, it is leafy and produces a tremendous 
amount of excellent fodder, since there is no heavy stalk, and every 
part of the plant is utilized. It is drought, frost and hail resistant 
to a wonderful extent in addition to its great earliness. In good soil 
and under favorable conditions it may be cut with a Corn binder. 
Gehu is of a lemon-yellow color, ears mostly twelve-rowed. 7 to 10 
inches in length. Stalks 4 to 6 feet. Ears 10 to 18 inches from the 
ground. Lb., 50c, postpaid; F.O.B. here: 10 Ibs., $2.00; % bu., 
$3.70; bu., $7.00. 
BURLEIGH CO. MIXED or DAKOTA 
SQUAW CORN 
Burleigh Co. Mixed : Seventy-Day Corn 
- Hardy—Early—Heavy Yielding. This is a mixed form of the early flint and is the first variety 
listed by us after our business was started. It is very resistant to both drought and frost, and fully 
as heavy a yielder as any variety of early flint. It is of mixed colors, yellow, white, blue and red 
_ predominating, ears long and slender, mostly eight-rowed. This Corn shells out heavier than any 
other variety. Lb., 50c; postpaid; F.O.B. here: 10 Ibs., $2.00; % bu., $3.70; bu., $7.00. 
ASSINIBOINE FLINT CORN 
Sixty-Day Corn 
From the Canadian Indians—Earliest Type of Corn Grown. Ripens 10 days before the Gehu and 
- Dakota, so has an especially useful place in hogging off. Lb., 50c, postpaid; F.O.B. here: 10 Ibs., 
$2.25; 1% bu., $4.75; bu., $9.00. 
: 2a : Seventy-Day Corn 
_ The first variety produced by Oscar H. 
Will in the early eighties. A pure, pearly 
_, white flint, 8 to 12 rowed, long slender 
ears with small cob and a great deal of 
grain. Many ears to the hill, and yields 
_. of 50 bu. per acre have been reported. 
Stalks are leafy and bushy, a wonderful 
ty Sane to roe ee in ene Sam aoe Sure se 
 -frony 3% to 3 ° + postpaid; H 
 *F.O.B. Peel 10 Ibs., $2.25; 34 bu., $3.85; Dakota White Flint _ 
ae bu., $7.50. 
