PEDIQREED SEEDS 
Potatoes, oats, peas, 
barley, wheat, rye, 
cabbage, field corn, 
sweet corn, field 
beans, soy beans, 
clovers and grasses. 
FARM CHEMICALS 
Seed disinfectants, 
seed inoculants, 
fertilizers, sulphur, 
gypsum, lime, 
dust & spray materials. 
Also drain tile. 
HONEOYE FALLS, N. Y. 
Dear Friend:— 
Somebody has said “Change is the only unchanging thing.” This surely is true in farming. Each year brings 
new machines, new methods, new strains of crops, new materials and new marketing methods, all intended to help us 
solve the new problems that confront us. 
It is part of our job at Quaker Hill Farm to search out the new things in crops that promise to add to the profits 
in farming in these North Eastern States. The latest additions to our list are Lenroc Oats, OAC 181 Peas, Cornell 29-3 
Hybrid Corn, Cayuga Soy Beans, Genesee and Honeoye Pea Beans, Chilean Red Kidney Beans, Louisiana Copenhagen 
Cabbage, Reed Canary Grass, Kent Wild White Clover and a series of hybrid sweet corns. Back of each of these is a 
story of purpose, effort and accomplishment; and from each of these will come added profits and increased comforts to 
the farmers alert enough to take them on. 
Our seed offerings are limited to things of proven value and from sources that have been proved best. Please 
read the descriptions carefully. We have tried to make them concise, specific and accurate. Prices of seeds and seed 
treating materials are on page 3. Prices of fertilizers and other chemicals are on page 4. 
Hoping to serve you and wishing you a successful season, I am 
Sincerely yours, 
K. C. LIVERMORE 
Quaker Hill Hybrid Srueel Corns 
They actually yield 25% to 100% more than the old favorites, are 
much more uniform, have high quality and most of them are resistant 
to the dread wilt disease. The seed is produced by controlled cross 
pollination of two or more specially bred strains. The seeds cost 
more, but results justify the cost many times over. Hybrid sweet corns 
are rapidly displacing the old kinds. 
We offer nine hybrids that ripen at different times, each the best 
available in its ripening period. One can choose those that best suit 
his market or can provide a continuous supply from early to late by 
planting at one time several that will ripen in succession and then 
follow with successive plantings of a late one. 
In the brief descriptions given below, the maturity dates are ap¬ 
proximate for this section and naturally vary with locality and season. 
They are comparable with Golden Bantam at 80 days. For more com¬ 
plete descriptions ask for our sweet corn circular. 
Yellow Hybrids - Mostly 12-rowed, some 12 to 10 rowed 
GEMCROSS P.39 - 68 to 70 days, newest and earliest, highest 
quality. 
SPANCROSS P.39 - 72 days, very prolific, wilt resistant, fine type. 
WHIPCROSS C6.2 - Sold out. 
SUNCROSS P.39 - 76 days, dandy quality, wilt resistant. 
WHIPCROSS P.39 - 80 days, big yielder, large ears, wilt resistant. 
BANCROSS P.39 - 84 days, wonderful quality, wilt resistant, 
heavy yielder. 
GOLDEN CROSS - 86 days, best of all in yield, type, quality and 
disease resistance. 
BLOOMCROSS P.39 - 88 days, large ears, very heavy yielder, wilt 
resistant. 
White Hybrid - 12-14 rowed. 
REDGREEN - Sold out. 
Family Qarden Assortment 
Here is a package of assorted sweet corn seeds that will provide 
an average family with an abundance of delicious fresh sweet corn 
from early summer till fall and some to can and plenty to pop through 
the winter. It includes % lb each of Gemcross, Suncross, Whipcross 
P.39, and South American Yellow pop corn and 1% lbs. of Golden 
Cross, with directions for planting. Price $1.00 post paid 600 miles. 
These packages made a great hit last year. Send them as gifts 
to your gardening friends. They will thank you all the year. 
Pop Corn 
SOUTH AMERICAN YELLOW - Large stalks, ears and kernels. 
Yellow. Large Yielder. Late Finest popping quality. Most profit¬ 
able to grow, but requires long season. 
JAPANESE HULLESS - Small stalks, ears and kernels. White. 
Low yielder. Excellent popper. Very tender. 
Oats, Barley, Peas and Mixtures 
All the following are experiment station developed strains. 
They have proved their superiority in hundreds of tests in the North¬ 
eastern States and usually outyield other varieties by enough to pay 
the taxes on the land they occupy. It is these extra 5 to 10 bushels 
per acre that spell profit. 
All the oats and barleys we offer were grown especially for seed 
purposes from certified treated seed. Half of our fields were college 
inspected for certification. Nine met the requirements for registered 
certified. Germination on most of the lots is over 95%. The seed is 
thoroughly recleaned and well graded with modern equipment by ex¬ 
perienced operators. It is free from weed seeds and does not need 
treating. Will it pay you to bother to clean and grade your own seed 
when good seed from test-proven strains, ready to sow, can be secured 
at such reasonable prices ? 
LENROC OATS A white oat, bred from the grayish Cornellian. 
The best yielder in New York tests, 1.3 bushels better average than 
Cornellian. Good straw, medium kernel, low percentage hulls. Ex¬ 
pected to have wide adaptation like Cornellian. 
CORNELLIAN OATS - Second only to Lenroc in the North¬ 
eastern States. High feed value. Usually weighs 3 to 10 pounds 
more per bushel than other varieties. 
ITHACAN OATS - Second to Cornellian in most places, but some¬ 
times better near Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. White, medium 
sized kernels, very good straw. 
UPRIGHT OATS - Outstands all others. Safest on rich or low 
land. Ranks high in grain yield, highest in straw yield. Best oat for 
green feed or hay. Large white kernels. 
ALPHA BARLEY - Two row hybrid, wide adaptation, excellent 
straw, one of highest yielders in North Eastern States. Ripens with 
Cornellian Oats. Best for mixtures with oats. Best for milk pro¬ 
duction but not for beer. 
WISCONSIN 38 BARLEY - Smooth bearded, 6-rowed hybrid. 
Yields about the same as Alpha. Straw weaker. Not so good for 
mixed sowing. Best for beer. 
OAC 181 PEAS - Product of Ontario Agricultural College. Best 
in yield of grain and good vine growth. We grow our peas in Idaho 
to escape blight infection. They are 100% disease free. Peas from 
other sections are showing too much infection this year to be safe. 
GRAIN MIXTURES - We offer Cornellian Oats and Alpha Bar¬ 
ley with or without OAC 181 peas in proper proportions. These high¬ 
est yielders, ripening together make the best and cheapest home 
grown feed. 
GREEN FEED OR HAY MIXTURES - Oats and peas make a 
very nutritious green feed or hay that cattle relish. A patch handy 
to the lane or pasture is worth a lot when pastures dry up. Our mix¬ 
ture of Upright Oats and OAC peas yield 20% to 40% more forage 
than other varieties. 
SCRUB SEEDS WASTE MONEY 
GOOD SEEDS MAKE MONEY 
