30 
HARVEY SEED CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. 
FIELD SEEDS—Continued 
Red Cob Ensilage. A large white corn with red cob; 
stalks especially sweet, tender and juicy; has short 
joints, abundance of leaves and grows to a great 
height; a perfect ensilage corn. 
Virginia Eureka. 
Pa. Golden Beauty. Our name for Sweepstakes type. 
WRITE FOR PRICES ON SEED CORN 
Bags Extra on Beans, Peas, Grass Seed and 
Seed Grains 
MILLET 
Valuable as a catch crop. When grass is short 
may be sown up to the end of June or middle of 
July, and produce a good crop of hay. 
German. Per bu. $2.50. 
Broom Corn (or Hog). Valuable for hog and chicken 
feed. Per bu. $2.00. 
Japanese. The largest variety of all; grows from 
6 to 8 feet high, yielding immense quantities of 
feed. Per bu. 32 lbs., $1.50. 
Hungarian Grass. Similar to the millets. Per bu. 
$1.75. 
OATS 
Scottish Chief Oats. A revelation in seed oats. 
Grains are brilliant, white, extra large. Weighs 
42 to 46 pounds to the bushel. Grows about 4 
feet high, with strong, stiff straw. Phenomenal 
yielders, often 75 bushels to acre. Northern grown 
and acclimated. 
White Wonder Oats. An excellent variety, of good 
weight. 
Swedish. Very hardy and a sure cropper, large 
plump grain with thin hull. 
Certified Ithacan. The heads are branching or pani¬ 
cle type, mature medium early and do not lodge 
in a normal season. A heavy yielder. 
Cornellian. The heads are large, branching or tree¬ 
shaped and stand up well. The kernels are long, 
rather slender but have thin hulls and large meats. 
Ask for Prices on Field Seeds 
SUDAN GRASS 
An annual grass, growing from 5 to 7 feet high 
in ten weeks, making enormous quantities of hay, 
eaten greedily by all kinds of stock, on which they 
will thrive. It will make two heavy cuttings in a 
season and grows freely in droughty weather. It 
should be sown broadcast at about 20 lbs. to the 
acre. Per lb. 15c. 
POTATOES 
Bovee. An extra early variety. It is pink and of 
oblong shape. This potato is twelve days earlier 
than the early Ohio. 
Early Ohio. Round early variety. 
Early Six Weeks. Said to be a seedling from Ohio, 
which it resembles, but very much earlier. Under 
favorable circumstances the potatoes reach the 
size of hens’ eggs in six weeks from planting. Its 
extreme earliness makes it an ideal variety for the 
home garden. Ask for prices. 
Irish Cobbler. A medium early white variety that is 
round in shape and unsurpassed in cooking quali¬ 
ties. Excellent yielder. 
Carmine No. 9. Most popular late variety. 
HAIRY VETCH (Vicia-villossa) 
Winter Vetch has been found adapted to nearly 
all parts of the United States. In drought resistance 
it is perhaps the best of the Vetches. It will also 
stand severe cold, so that it is rarely frozen out in 
the Northernmost States. This makes it particularly 
valuable as a winter cover and green manure crop. 
Hairy Vetch gives the best results when planted 
on well tilled and well drained land. Seed should be 
drilled or broadcasted at the rate of 25 to 40 pounds 
per acre. When grown for hay it is usually sown 
with a bushel of rye, oats or wheat. Some farmers, 
however, use only a peck or less of the grain. It 
may be sown from September to December. When 
desirable to delay the maturing of a Fall-sown crop 
it may be pastured quite late in the Spring. 
Winter Vetch. Lb. 18c. Spring Vetch. Lb. 10o. 
SPELTZ 
A cereal somewhat resembling rye, yields enormous 
crops of green fodder if cut early, or may be left to 
ripen its grain, which is of great feeding value and 
relished by all kinds of stock. 
RAPE 
Dwarf Essex. Grown extensively for forage, especi¬ 
ally for sheep. Sown in June or July, it yields a 
bounteous Fall pasturage, on which sheep and 
young stock fatten with marvelous rapidity. If 
sown broadcast, about 5 lbs. per acre will be re¬ 
quired; if drilled, considerably less will do. We 
have the true Essex Dwarf, which should not be 
confounded with the worthless annual. Lb. 10c. 
SUGAR CANE 
Early Amber. Used largely for fodder; rich in sac¬ 
charine, and the best of dairy foods. Lb. 12c. 
COW PEAS 
Makes poor land rich and rich land better. For 
this purpose the Cow Pea is very popular, especially 
for light soil. There is no surer or cheaper method 
of improving worn-out soil than with Cow Peas. 
They add large quantities of nitrogen to the soil and 
leave it in good shape for the following crop. There 
are several varieties, and we carry the best adapted 
to the northern climates. 
Whip-poor-will. The most popular. 
New Era. 
SOY BEANS 
Early Yellow Soy Beans Hollybrook 
Ito San Mammoth Yellow 
Manchu Black Wilson 
Ask for prices on Cow Peas and Soy Beans 
PEAS 
Canada Field. Per bu. $3.25. 
Bags Extra on Beans, Peas, Grass 
Seed and Seed Grains 
We pay particular attention to the needs 
of golf courses and prepare special mixtures 
adapted to your soil conditions. We also pre¬ 
pare mixtures for formulas furnished by the 
clubs. Prices on application. 
Lawn Grass Mixtures Listed on Back Cover 
