26 JOSEPH HARRIS COMPANY, INC., COLDWATER, NEW YORK 
Pfoffer ( Ger .) PEPPERS Peperoni (It.) 
A n ounce of seed will produce about 1000 plants. 
Harris’ Northern Grown Pepper Seed 
For a number of years we have made a specialty of growing pepper seed on our farms here in 
the North. Ordinarily peppers would not ripen enough fruit to pay us to grow seed here so we have 
developed a number of special early varieties that will mature and ripen an abundance of fruit even 
in our short seasons. • 
Several of our varieties have become so popular among market gardeners that much inferior 
Southern grown seed is being offered to the trade. Be sure to get Northern grown seed that will 
produce lots of fruit early. Get your seed direct from the originators. We do not sell to dealers. 
“Harris’ King of the North” Pepper 
Extremely Large, Early and Very Prolific 
The Outstanding 1934 Introduction 
We put it very mildly when we 
say that those who tested this new 
pepper last year were extremely 
pleased with it. 
The immense size, earliness and 
heavy yield make Harris’ “King of 
the North” a variety that will give 
enormous yields of fine fruit even 
here in the North. The plants are 
medium size, branching and liter¬ 
ally covered with fruit. The size and 
shape of the peppers is well shown 
in the photograph on this page and 
the front cover. 
The flesh is thick, mild and 
sweet. While we planted all our stock 
seed and had a fine crop, our acreage 
of this variety was necessarily lim¬ 
ited. 
We advise you to order early 
before our seed is sold out, as seed of 
this new variety cannot be pur¬ 
chased elsewhere. 
Pkt. 15c; }/i oz. 35c; oz. Sl.OO; 
M lb. $3.40; lb. $12.00. 
Harris’ “King of the North” Peppers 
“As you sent me a trial packet of new pepper last spring 
I thought you might he interested ire how it did in this 
section. * * * * They made a strong stocky growth, and 
the 5th of August I sold green peppers from them. I have 
had a single pepper weigh % th. and lots of them weighing 
% lb., and a tremendous yield of large sweet peppers. I 
think it beats anything you have in the sweet pepper line. 
W. L. Hannah, Northwood, N. H. Sept. 29, 1933. 
Harris’ Early Giant Pepper 
The Earliest Large Pepper 
This large early pepper which we intro¬ 
duced a number of years ago is the standard 
large early variety for market gardeners. 
Buy seed of Harris’ original Northern 
grown strain of Early Giant Pepper rather 
than inferior seed grown further south. 
The seed we offer is all grown under our 
strict control on and in the vicinity of our 
farm from our own carefully bred stock seed. 
We have had the finest crop this year and the 
best seed we have seen in years. 
The true Harris’ Early Giant will produce 
a large number of peppers about 4^6 in. high 
and 4 in. across, and is only a week later than 
Harris’ Earliest, the earliest pepper grown. 
Oz. 60c; M lb. $1.75; lb. $6.00. 
