HENDERSON* 1 -' EUREKA YET.l.QW DriNT CORN 
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HENDERSON'S 
FARMERS' 
MANUAL 
AN UP-TO' DATE CATALOGUE 
DESCRIPTIVE AND ILLUSTRATED, 
OF HIGH-GRADE 
FARM SEEDS 
MAILED FREE 
Note. —Prices of Farm Seeds are subject to change without notice 
. w 
From PETER HEHBERSOH ©. CO., HEW YORK 
BROOM CORN. Evergreen. Sow S to 10 lbs. per 
acre. Free from crooked brush and remains 
green. Lb., 15c.; 100 lbs., SI2.00. 
BUCKWHEAT Japanese. Sow 1 bush, per acre. 
(See page 84.) The best of all; early, large 
grain; enormous yielder. Bush. (4S lbs.), 
$4.00; 10 bush., @ S3.90. 
CARROT. Sow 4 lbs. per acre. 
Improved Long Orange. Enormous yielder of 
large roots; good keeper. lb., SI.00; lb., 
$3.50. 
Danvers. Good-size, handsome, stump-rooted; 
big yielder. M lb.. $1.25; lb.. $4.00. 
Large White Belgian. Long, white roots; very 
productive. 14 lb., 60c.; lb., $2.00. 
Large Yellow Belgian. Long, yellow-fleshed 
roots; good keeper. \4 lb., 60c.; lb., S2.00. 
White Vosges. Thick, shapely roots, easily 
harvested; heaviest cropper. lb., 60c.; 
lb., $2.00. 
CASTOR OIL PLANT. From which the Castor Oil 
of commerce is produced. \4 lb., 20c.; lb., 50c. 
CLOVER. (See page 81.) 
CORN, DENT VARIETIES. Sow 8 to 10 qts. per 
acre. In ten-bushel lots or over, deduct 10c. 
per bushel on Dent and Flint Corns. 
Long’s Champion Yellow Dent. (See page 83.) 
Qt., 30c.; S1.50 peck; $5.50 bush. 
Eureka, Henderson’s. (See engraving.) Qt., 
30c.; peck, $1.50; bush., S5.50. (See page 83.) 
Wood’s Northern White Dent. The earliest 
large White Dent ears 10 to 12 inches long. 
Qt., 30c.; peck, SI.50; bush., $5.50. 
Early Mastodon. A large-eared, early Yellow 
Dent. Qt.. 25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00. 
Golden Beauty. A large Golden Dent; very pro¬ 
ductive. Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00. 
Extra-early Huron. Very early; may be grown 
North and in Canada. Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.40; 
bush., $5.00. 
Queen of the Prairie. (Pride of the North.) 
Early Yellow Dent, maturing North. Qt., 
25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00. 
Early Butler. Earliest Yellow Dent; long grains, 
small cob. Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00. 
Learning Improved. Low-set ears of good size; 
golden grain, productive. Qt., 25c.; peck, 
$1.40; bush., $5.00. 
White Cap Yellow. Early; thrives on light soils; 
grain yellow, tipped white. Qt., 25c.; peck, 
$1.40; bush., $5.00. 
Hickory King. Largest grain, smallest cob of any 
white Corn. Late; maturing south of New 
Jersey. Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00. 
CORN, FLINT VARIETIES. Sow 8 to 10 qts. 
f >er acre. 
ison’s Twelve Rowed White Flint. New. (Sec 
page 83). Qt., 35c.; peck, $1.75; bush, $6.00. 
Extra-early Yellow Flint. A ninety-day Corn. 
The best eight-rowed Yellow Flint in culti¬ 
vation. For detailed description see our 
Farmers’ Manual. Qt., 30c.; peck, $1.50; 
bush., $5.50. 
Longfellow. A large, 8-rowed Yellow Flint; 
ripens as far north as Massachusetts. Qt., 
25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00. 
Large White Flint. Large, handsome, well-filled 
ears. Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00. 
Large Yellow Flint. (Early Canada Yellow.) 
Largely grown in the North. Qt., 25c.; peck, 
$1.40; bush., $5.00. 
King Philip. Coppery-red, very early, largo 
handsome cars. Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., 
$5.00. 
CORN FOR FODDER AND ENSILAGE. Sow 
broadcast 2 bush.; in drills, 1 bush, per acre. 
Southern Horse Tooth. A large, leafy grower; 
especially valuable for ensilage. Bush., $5.00; 
10 bush., @ $4.00. 
Improved Early Horse Tooth. Two weeks earlier 
than above, and better suited for fodder and 
ensilage in Northern States. Bush., $5.00; 10 
bush., ® $4.90. 
Rural Thoroughbred White Flint. Valuable for 
both grain and ensilage; suckers yielding 
enormously. Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.40; bush., 
S5.00; 10 bush., © $4.90. 
Evergreen Sweet Fodder. Richer, sweeter and 
more digestible than the ordinary. Peck, 
$1.75; bush., $6.00; 10 bush., @ $5.90. 
Sweet Fodder. Succulent and nutritious for 
feeding green. Peck, $1.40; bush., $5.00; 10 
bush., @ $4.90. 
ALFALFA. (See Clovers, page 81.) 
ARTICHOKES, JERUSALEM. Potato-like roots, 
excellent for feeding stock, especially hogs. 
Qt., 25c.; peck, $1.25; bush., $4.00. 
AUSTRALIAN SALT BUSH. Sow 3 lbs. per acre. 
A valuable forage plant for dry situations and 
alkali soils. Oz., 15c.; lb., $i.25; 10 lbs., @ 
$1.15. 
BARLEY.- Sow 2 to 2H bush, per acre. 
New White Hulless. 2 to 3 weeks earlier than 
ordinary Barley, grows about same height, and 
the grain will not shell out in the field. Peck. 
1.00; bush. (48 lbs.), $3.50; 10 bush. @$3.40. 
Beardless. Large heads of large grain; big 
yielder. Entirely free from beards. Peck, 
85c.; bush. (48 lbs.), $3.00; 10 bush., @ $2.90. 
Vermont Champion. Two-rowed; hardy, pro¬ 
lific and early. Peck, 85c.; bush. (48 lbs.), 
$3.00; 10 bush., @ $2.90. 
BEANS. Sow' 1 bush, per acre. 
Boston Small Pea. Very desirable; early, 
hardy and prolific. (Price on application.) 
Improved Red Kidney. More prolific than the 
ordinary variety. (Price on application.) 
White Marrow, or Navy Bean. Extensively 
grown as a shell Bean. (Price on application.) 
BEANS FOR SOILING, FODDER, Etc. 
Early Green Soja. This produces enormous 
crops as far north as Canada. It grows about 
4 ft. high and yields ten to twenty tons of 
green fodder per acre, or 20 to 40 bushels of 
Beans. 
It is especially valuable for ensilage in com¬ 
bination with fodder Corn or Japanese Millet 
(two parts of Millet to one pa^t of Soja Beans), 
thus furnishing a complete balanced ration. 
Soja Beans are great soil enrichers, adding 
humus and extracting nitrogen from the air. 
Sow 3 ecks per acre. 
Price, peck, $2.50; bush. (60 lbs.), $9.00; 
10 bush.. @ S8.90. 
Velvet. (Mucuna utilis.) Sow 1 bush, per acre. 
Late; valuable in the South for plowing under. 
Peck, $2.50; bush. (60 lbs.), $9.00. 
BEET. Mangel Wurzel. Sow 6 to 8 lbs. per acre. 
Colossal Long r ed, Henderson’s. A valuable 
improved and distinct variety. Extra large, 
long mots; blood-red, very nutritious. 14 
lb., 75c.; lb., $2.‘)0; 10 lbs., @ $1.90 lb. 
Champion Yellow Globe, Henderson’s. Smooth, 
large, round roots; yellow' flesh. 14 lb., 75c.; 
lb. $2.00 ; 10 lbs.. @ $1.90 lb. 
Giant Intermediate, Henderson’s. Big yielder; 
handsome, large ovoid roots. )4 lb., 75c.; 
lb., $2.00; 101bs., @ SI.90 lb. (See engraving.) 
Golden Tankard. Flesh yellow, thus differing 
from other varieties, sheep prefer it; heavy 
yielder. \4 lb., 75c.; lb., $2.00; 10 lbs., @ 
$1.90 lb. 
Long Red. Largely grown; large roots of ex¬ 
cellent quality. \4 lb., 75c.; lb., $2.00; 10 
lbs., @ SI.90 lb. 
Long Yellow. Differs from the Long Rec only 
in color. }4 lb., 75c.; lb., $2.00; 10 lbs.. @ 
$1.90 lb. 
Yellow Globe. Large globular roots; good 
keeper; adapted for shallosv soils. 14 It • 
75c.; lb., S2.00; 10 lbs., ® $1.90 lb. 
BEET, SUGAR VARIETIES. As seca of the differ¬ 
ent varieties of «uger beet is almost unprocur¬ 
able this season we would recommend planting 
for stock feeding the improved breed of New 
Sugar Mangels offered below. 
New Half Long Sugar Mangel. By analysis it 
shows a nearer approach to sugar beet than 
any other mangel. The flesh is white, 
solid and rich in saccharine. 
Half Long Red, per ]4 lb . 75c.; lb., $2.00 
10 lbs., @81.90 lb. 
Half Long White, per lb., 75c.: lb., 
10 lbs., @$1.90. 
BEGGAR-WEED. Sow 10 lbs. per acre. A 
valuable forage and soil-improving plant for 
the South, growing 2 to 6 ft. high; sow broad¬ 
cast 10 to 12 lbs. per acre; price, \4 lb., 20c.; 
lb., 75c. 
