PRICES OF FARM SEEDS ARE SUBJECT TO 
CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. 
Henderson's Farmers' Manual, an up^todate Catalogue of All 
Farm Seeds, mailed FREE on request to Farmers and Breeders. 
Special Prices can often be made on large quantities. Write us. 
Long s Champion Yellow Dent Corn. 
This King of Corns is without doubt the finest, the largest and the most productive Yellow Dent Corn 
ever produced, and will be found to be of great value to the farmer, especially in the Middle and Eastern 
States, on account of its immense yield, at least 25 per cent, and often 50 per cent, more than can be 
obtained from the average old-type corns generally planted. 
Long s Champion is the climax of 25 years of corn breeding and selection by Mr. X. S. Long, one of the 
most successful and progressive farmers in the Pennsylvania corn belt. 
The ears are of immense size, 12 to 14 inches in length, 8 to 11 inches in circumference, carrying 20 to 
24 uniform rows of long large kernels well developed over tip and butt. It is a luxuriant grower, about 12 
to^5 feet high, and in Lebanon County, Pa., where it originated, has never failed to mature by September 
__ — . ^ ‘ * .... of seed ; 
20th, when planted during the first half of May. There is but a limited quantity ot seed grown 
by the originator for sale, and it cannot be offered by any other seedsman or dealer. (See cut.) Price 
SI.25 pk., S4.00 bush.; 10 bush, lots, (3) $3.90 bush. 
“Last year 1 bought of you Lone’s Champion Yellow Dent < 
say that it more than warrants all you claim for it.” 
' Corn and my experience with it leads me to 
E. A. PALMER, Stockton, N. J. 
HENDERSON'S 
Japanese Buckwheat. 
This grand variety, introduced by us several years ago, has 
proven a bonanza to Buckwheat raisers in this country. It is of 
strong, branching growth, stands up well and produces from two to 
four times as much grain as any other variety under same conditions. 
It is also fully a week earlier. The seed of our Japanese variety 
is nearly as large again as that of other Buckwheats; it makes the 
finest flour and for bees has practically displaced all other sorts 
where known. 
The Iowa Agricultural Experiment Station reports that it has 
grown Henderson's New Japanese Buckwheat for two years, and 
has found it superior to the old varieties in several important respects. 
|‘It is larger and stronger, and stands up better during storms, and 
its seeds are larger but what places it far ahead of other varieties 
is that of setting full crops of Buckwheat in dry, hot weather.” 
Henderson’s Japanese Buckwheat seed is grown from the largest 
Japanese type imported by us for stock seed and is therefore im¬ 
mensely superior to that grown here for several seasons whereby 
it has deteriorated. (See cut.) Price. 60c. pk., $1.80 per bush, 
(of 48 lbs.); 10 bush, lots, (5) $1.70 bush. 
“ The Japanese Buckwheat ripened about one week sooner than 
the old-fashioned kind., and produced more than as much again to the 
same amount of sowing the past season.” 
LEMUEL VAN NESS, Pompton, N. J. 
. " Truly, the Japanese Buckwheat is one of the greatest improvements, 
m a single line o f grain, of the present age. All other kinds of buck¬ 
wheat can be well thrown aside; and not only the bee-keepers of our 
land, bu‘. farmers in general, can unite in tendering a vote of thanks 
c :' ier f r ^ n P. seedsman Peter Henderson.”—CLEANINGS IN 
BEE CULTURE. 
' The Japanese Buckwheat I purchased from you is distinct, and 
stamls the sun better than any other sort.” 
JOHN WILSON, Sandwich West, Essex Co., Ontario, Can. 
HENDERSON’S EUREKA CORN. 
One of the finest and most productive field corns grown; it is a tremendous yielder—150 
bushels of shelled corn per acre is not unusual. The plants grow 12 to 15 feet high, a 
large proportion of them bearing two immense ears to the stalk; the ears are very 
handsome, averaging 12 to 15 inches long, with small red cob covered full, and over 
both butt and tip ends with 18 to 22 even rows of large, deep grain of a rich orange- 
yellow color. It is fairly early for so large a dent corn, but, of course, does not 
mature as quickly as the small early dent and flint varieties, but where 100 to 110 
days of "corn weather” are assured, it is the corn to grow. It gives unqualified 
satisfaction from Connecticut to Ohio and south, but north of that latitude we do 
not advise planting it unless in favored localities. ( See cut page 68.) Pk 75c • 
bush., $2.25; 10 bush, lots, @ $2.15. 
WOOD'S NORTHERN WHITE DENT CORN, 
The earliest large. White Dent, ripens thoroughly in latitudes south of Albany and 
Buffalo. Extraordinarily prolific, often yielding 110 bushels shelled corn per acre. 
Large ears, 10 to 12 inches long, 7 to 8 inches in circumference. Long kernels, smali 
cob. Ears 2 to 3 feet from the ground. Plant leafy and luxuriant, making fine 
fodder. It is the earliest large, white Dent Corn we know of. Price, 80c. pk., $2.75 
bush.; 10 bush, lots, $2.65 bush. 
Hendersons Superior. 
Farm Seeds 
Farm Seeds we do NOT deliver free, ^ if 8c. per lb. or 10c. per qt. is added to prices. 
