BETTER CROPS FROM HARVEY’S SEEDS 
29 
Scottish Chief Oats 
HARVEY’S FIELD SEEDS 
Due to rapidly changing prices we are unable to quote prices in this catalog—Write for price 
MARQUIS WHEAT 
Holds the Championship Trophy for 
The World’s Best Wheat 
THE KING OF THE SPRING WHEATS 
Even the name Marquis carries a conviction that 
inspires confidence, so enviable is the reputation it 
has attained as the earliest, largest yielding, most 
dependable, greatest adaptability and most plump 
of the bald Spring wheats. 
Marquis is a cross between Calcutta, Hard Red 
and Red Fife (a combination of earliness, yield and 
high quality). Kernels are a beautiful dark red, 
hard, large size, attractive shape and color. Heads 
are exceptionally large, beardless and practically 
rust-proof. Straw medium in height and very stiff. 
WINTER ROSEN RYE 
Price Variable 
BARLEY 
Six-Rowed. Oderbrucker. 
Two-Rowed. For feeding purposes the two-rowed 
is superior to the six, yielding a third more of 
both straw and grain. 
Alpha. Two-Rowed. Stiff straw best adapted for 
general use in New York. 
Price Variable 
BUCKWHEAT 
Japanese. The kernels are at least twice as large 
as any other variety. 
Silver Hull. Earlier than the common variety, and 
yields nearly double under the same conditions. 
See Note Above 
FIELD CORN 
Bags will be Charged Extra in which 
Corn and Farm Seeds are Shipped. 
Genesee Valley. Our famous eight-rowed yellow 
flint, with ears from 12 to 15 inches long, cannot 
be equalled; small cob, beautiful bright golden 
yellow grains. Ripening very early, and good 
yielder. 
Early Sanford. An eight-rowed white flint, very 
desirable for either grain crop or ensilage pur¬ 
poses. 
King Philip. Copper colored with long, slim ears. 
An old standard variety. 
Longfellow. Extra long ears of bright yellow color; 
very attractive. 
Smutnose. A good old-fashioned variety with tips 
of ears stained red. 
Pedigree Learning. Best Silo Corn to be had, and 
is used for that purpose more than any other 
variety. Our stock is one of the best. 
Bloody Butcher. An extra early maturing variety 
extensively grown in the Northern States where 
the seasons are short. Ears 8 to 12 inches long 
with 12 to 16 rows of a reddish or flesh color ker¬ 
nels, maturing in 90 days. 
Pride of the North. An early Dent variety intro¬ 
duced several years ago, and as popular today as 
ever. We have the genuine variety. 
Early Butler Yellow Dent. A cross from Pride of 
the North, and somewhat earlier than that excel¬ 
lent variety. Probably no corn in cultivation will 
outshell it, 70 lbs. of ears having shelled out 64*4 
lbs. of shelled corn. It has a beautiful yellow 
color, and will give the grower the greatest satis¬ 
faction. 
White Cap Yellow Dent. Claimed to be 10 days 
earlier than the Learning; and on poor, thin soil 
to outyield that variety by 25 per cent. The tip 
end of the grain is white and the inside yellow, 
which combination gives it a most beautiful ap¬ 
pearance. Expert corn growers pronounce it a 
perfect field corn. 
Lancaster Co. Sure Crop. Silo, 90 days; ripe, 100 
days. There is no corn in Eastern States that 
produces a bigger yield under normal conditions. 
Thousands of dairymen count on this great corn 
for their silage crops. 
Sweepstakes. One of the heaviest yielding silo 
varieties that will mature in the Northeastern 
States. The ears are immense and the stalks grow 
10 to 12 feet high. 
Cornell No. 11. This corn produces a heavy yield of 
both stalks and grain. At its best for silo in 
95 days. 
PEDIGREE LEAMING CORN 
