Ss W E E T te | 4 See ea ea ise an acre, 
HYBRID SWEET CORN. Sweet Corn breeding has been a Harris specialty for many 
years, and we have created a number of exclusive varieties that have met with great 
favor. A large scale research program is carried on here on our farms to bring you 
more great hybrids in the future, and at the same time we continue to make the exist- 
ing varieties better than ever. We feel that the greater vigor, earliness and quality of 
our Northern-grown strains prove for themselves the value of our work. 
2 Hybrid sweet corn is so far superior to the old open-pollinated varieties in yield, 
vigor, uniformity and quality that we now offer only one open-pollinated kind, the 
old original Golden Bantam (see next page.) 
There is now an excellent hybrid in every season from extra early to late. To get 
a succession of the best corn, use several hybrids maturing at different dates and 
plant them all at the same time. Our Sweet Corn Collections are ideal for this pur- 
pose. (See below.) 
Note: Plant three or four rows of corn in a block to get the best ears. In a single 
row, pollination is often not complete and the ears are not entirely filled with ker- 
nels. Do not save seed from your hybrid crops as it will not come true. 
At the prices here quoted, we pay transportation charges on sweet corn to places in the 
United States. Please write for special prices on larger amounts. 
138 SUN-UP. Large-Eared—First Early. 
65 days. You can be the first in your neighborhood to enjoy really good sweet corn 
when you plant Sun-Up, Harris’ remarkable extra early hybrid. Right from the start 
of the season you will have large, attractive ears, 10 or 12 rowed, 614-7 in. long and 
of golden yellow color. But the real thrill comes when you eat them; these early ears 
have real quality for this season—sweet, tender and fine-flavored. 
Developed by Harris, Sun-Up is a three-way cross, taking us two years to grow 
the seed crop, but giving you the maximum earliness, size and quality. It is bred for 
early planting to get the first early crops, and it has the vigor to come through well 
even in cool weather. For extra early corn, Sun-Up is without equal. Sun-Up 
Pkt. 20c; 44 Lb. 45c; Lb. 80c; 2 Lbs. $1.55; 5 Lbs. $3.50; 10 Lbs. $5.75. The earliest variety to combine both size and quality. 
127 MINIATURE (New). Supreme Quality. 
66 days. No garden is too small to grow some of this delicious extra 
early corn. A new Midget hybrid, its dwarf plants produce an abun- 
dance of perfect little ears, about 5 in. long, with extremely high sugar 
content and exceptional flavor. A real treat on the dinner table and fine 
for canning and freezing. See photo and full description on page 5. 
Pkt. 25c; 44 Lb. 75c; Lb. $1.35. 
130 NORTH STAR. Harris’ Famous Early Hybrid. 
67 days. There is no early corn that can match the combination of 
earliness, vigor, size and quality found in North Star. Home gardeners 
and market growers both acclaim it as the one outstanding early 
hybrid, profitable to grow and wonderful to eat. Developed and sold 
only by us, it has rapidly become famous all over the Northern part 
of the country. 
North Star has unusual vigor and can be planted very early—it keeps 
right on growing even in cold weather. The husky plants produce tre- 
mendous crops of large ears, well covered by a dark green, attractive 
husk. The ears are 7 to 8 in. long, mostly 12 rowed and the golden 
kernels are remarkably tender, sweet and delicious. Without question, 
the finest early corn to grow. 
Pkt. 20c; 44 Lb. 45c; Lb. 80c; 2 Lbs. $1.50; 5 Lbs. $3.50; 10 Lbs. $5.75. 
125 MARCROSS C6.13. Wilt Resistant Early Hybrid. 69 days. A well- 
known early hybrid, ripening a day or two later than North Star. It 
is noted for its uniform cylindrical ears, about 7 inches long, 12 rowed 
with light golden kernels of good quality. The stalks are short but 
sturdy and are more resistant to wilt than most early varieties. Main- 
North Star ly used for market. 
Pkt. 15c; % Lb. 40c; Lb. 70c; 2 Lbs. $1.30; 5 Lbs. $3.10; 10 Lbs. $5.50. 
Absolutely the tops in early corn. 
SWEET CORN COLLECTIONS 
Many thousands of gardeners have found our Sweet Corn Collections to be the best means of growing the finest of 
corn right through the season. Each variety has been selected because it is the best in its class, and they ripen in suc- 
cession—from early till medium late. Plant them all together and you get a continuous supply of the most delicious 
sweet corn to be had. For a very late crop, sow Golden Cross Bantam again in late June and early July. 
NO. 5 COLLECTION NO. 6 COLLECTION 
Plenty of Delicious Ears for the Small Family. Quantities to Eat Fresh, and Some to Can or Freeze. 
Sun-Up, North Star, Carmelcross, Hoosier Gold, Golden One pkt. Sun-Up. One half pound each North Star, 
Cross Bantam. One packet of each, planting about 200 Carmelcross, Golden Cross Bantam. Plants over 600 
hills in all. hills. 
65c postpaid (You save 25c) $1.15 postpaid. (You save 30c) 
SWEET CORN—Continued on Next Page 
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