HARRIS’ NEW EARLY HYBRIDS 

584 NORTHLAND HYBRID WATERMELON 
Extra Early—Red Flesh—Fine Quality 
Here is a watermelon designed especially for Northern 
gardeners. It is a true first generation (F,) hybrid combin- 
ing earliness, yield, perfect size and wonderful flavor. De- 
veloped and grown here on our farms, Northland will pro- 
duce fine crops where ordinary varieties fail. 
The smooth oval fruit are handsomely striped and about 
8 in. in diameter, just right for the refrigerator. The rind is 
hard and the rich red flesh is crisp and juicy with a high 
sugar content. 
Northland has hybrid vigor—the vines are large and 
healthy and the fruit are borne in great profusion. Easy to 
grow, we believe it is the last word in fine early watermelons. 
Pkt. (40 seeds) 35c; 14 Oz. 95c; 14 Oz. $1.65; Oz. $3.00; 
4% Lb. $10.00. 















<@ Wilbur Scott, plant breeder, samples our delicious new watermelon. 
858 EARLY HYBRID TOMATO 
The Earliest Good Variety 
For growing big crops of tomatoes very early in the 
season, this hybrid is valuable for home gardens and 
profitable for market. It has proved most successful on 
soils of high fertility where ample moisture is available. 
The fruits are of attractive round or oval shape, medi- 
um in size, smooth and well-colored. The quality is good, 
mildly acid, sweet in flavor and the tomatoes set freely 
in large clusters on the vigorous vines. A true F; hybrid, 
every seed pollinated by hand, expensive to produce but 
essential to get maximum earliness, size and yield. 
Pkt. (50 seeds) 40c; 7s Oz. $2.50; 144 Oz. $4.75; 14 Oz. 
$8.75; 44 Oz. $16.00; Oz. $30.00. 
Hand-pollinating the blossoms of Early Hybrid in our seed crop. 
794 HARRIS’ HYBRID COCOZELLE SQUASH 
Rich in Flavor—Tops in Yield 
If you have never tasted the delicate, appetizing flavor of Cocozelle, 
you don’t know how good summer squash can be. Delicious boiled or 
fried, it is a real treat that anyone can grow. 
This year we offer our customers a new F, hybrid, earlier and more 
prolific than ever before. The long slender fruit are alternately striped 
with light and dark green, smooth, uniform and attractive. The sturdy 
bush vines grow rapidly and produce astonishing crops all summer. 
For home or market, this exclusive Harris’ Hybrid is an outstanding 
development. Be sure to try some this year. 
Pkt. 20c; 44 Oz. 50c; Oz. 90c; 14 Lh. $2.65; 14 Lb. $4.00. 
These long handsome fruit are early and very good fo eat. > 
; 
We pay shipping charges anywhere in the United States on all 
seeds, plants and other items, except larger quantities where 
quoted “Not paid.” Nearly all orders are shipped by mail but we 
Please Read Before Ordering 
SPECIAL HANDLING. For faster mail service, include extra 
reserve the right to ship large orders by freight where cheaper. 
(If you want express shipment, your order will be sent express 
collect.) 

postage for each shipment as follows: Up to 2 Ibs. 15c— Over 
2 Ibs. and under 10 Ibs. 20c—Over 10 Ibs. 25c. 
Please mark on your order the items to go Special Handling 
and if plants are to be sent later on different dates, include 
postage for each mailing. 
PLANT SHIPMENTS. Order plants along with your seeds in 
early spring. Seeds are sent at once and plants later at dates 
indicated for each. Onion sets go out early, onion plants later, 
tomato plants still later, etc., so do not expect to get all plants 
in one shipment. 
C.O.D. SHIPMENTS. 25% down payment required on all 
C.O.D.’s. Not recommended because of extra C.O.D. fee and 
frequent delays. 
No C.O.D.’s on Plants, Onion Sets, Potatoes, Nursery Stock, 
Roots, Hotents, Superhotents and Fertile Pots. 
PLEASE NOTE—Write your name and address clearly on 
order sheets. All members of same household should order under 
one name. 
NOT PREPAID SHIPMENTS: Potatoes, Field Seeds, Plants and Accessories listed “Not 
paid” are sent at purchaser’s expense. Please check the box on your order for the 
method you prefer—Parcel Post, Express, Freight or Truck. 
1. Parcel Post. The most economical for shipments up to 50 Ibs. Include postage with 
your remittance at zone rates: 2Yc per Ib. in New York west of Utica and Bing- 
hamton; 3c per Ib. east of Utica and north of Baltimore; 5c per Ib. east of Spring- 
field, Mass., and south of Baltimore. For other places, consult your post office. 
2. Express Collect. Quick service but expensive. Recommended for large plant 
orders and other items needed quickly. 
3. Freight Collect. Cheapest for large shipments but often slow. Minimum rate is 
based on 100 Ibs. and is never less than $1.47. 
4. Truck. If your community is served by a truck line connecting with a Rochester 
line, this is a good method for large shipments. Rates slightly higher than freight. 
IMPORTANT. For freight or express, be sure to give your nearest railroad station or 
express office. For truck shipments, give name of truck line. 
