eed 

All other prices in this Catalogue on BEANS, SWEET 
CORNand PEAS include delivery, all charges paid, at your 
nearest post or express office. 
of those desiring to purchase these three varieties in quantity. 

Price: List. 
This price list is for the benefit 



BEANS—Dwarf or Bush. BEANS—Pole or Running. 
Pk. Bu. (Continued.) ao 
Farl 0 Maule’s Marliestof All ..... “et 25 84 50 
hae WR Pod Nelentlne. Rone ween Pk. Bu. Maule! s Improved Extra Early . 1 125 425 
Imp. Early YellowSix Weeks . . | 100 375/ Salem Improved Lima . . . . . $225 9750| Warly Prizes) ta. 2 1 1: 198 600 | 
sto ca 4 Me pticomen lool xtra Early Lima ........ 225 750 Wonde Fy ONGS NR tant 
Round!PodiRetusces 4) sss en eal 25 400| Kingofthe Garden Lima .... . 225 750 American Wonder OS ae hea nee neh 
White Kidney. . + 2 « » « . 125 450] Dreer’s Improved Lima ..... 225 750 Bliss’ Everbearinge . POE A S05 ZA 
ere White Marrowfat . .. .. 125 4 25 aston avalpha Ain ile CH), 0.1 195 aes 
SIFT ECR UREN Maa he Teh ace SWEET CORN. Improved Dan O’Rourke | : ; : | 195 400 | 
i 3 RE ee Tom! Thumb se) es eb Om SCO § 
Wardwell's kidney Wax POS: dees a2 550| New Cory . . 5 eer et ent) el COW8)755 | Advancerse Se otn) bk A) | 
Black Wax y SY EN Soe Early Marblehead 0 Soka . . . 100 350] McLean’s LittleGem : i: / 1/31 25 450) 
RustiecootliGelden: Wax Or O80 175 650 Early Minnesota elles) ee 1s et 100% 8/00) Premium iGemie 25 2 ee oOaibom 
Golden Wax see ig eke! ineiias 150 500 Adam’s Extra Harly ...... . 100 300] McLean’s Blue Peter Cub oboe LEO He) | 
PEOAGHG STi Aaa 150 550 Crosby’s Extra Harly .... . . 100 350|ShropshireHero. ....... . 22 750) 
New Flageolet Wax Da eo aoveziGo Everbearing O Joko GONG ovo. oy LORS Heroine . . eae ON) iG) | 
Vononitg. Wax Beatin ae Maule’s XX Sugar... . . . . . 175 600] Ghampionof England . . : : : : 100 375 || 
GHGE AS TBR ILA BAA eine se 225 800 Country Gentleman eu tLenbtets lotion reniaere Hee B08 Dwart Bing inperial OG Gwko tom oo 2h Co) 3 50 | 
ee ane aiiib a Pie\tioh inte) Ly es Neh ital suvetotuivel orkshire Hero . Ooo oo. oo lee! 
Burpee’s Bush Lima . . ... . . 400 Shoe Eeey A OAR eM ioe haseniseT Ie tina? 8 ie a neleo non Ty: Sree eyo OG 175 5a | 
° rium : Sie ANN anol ic ride o e Market. . 5... Le 600m 
BEANS—Pole or Running Stabler’s Karly: 054 20) 298) ael00 U3 ODN Stratage nny) Saaire sine elas a mI 750 | 
f . Amber Cream ........ . 100 350] Perpetual . . bike oto 6) 0 db a i} 
White Creaseback ..... . . . 200 700] Perry's Hybrid ....... . . 100 350) Horsford’s Market Garden : | . | 125 450 
Improved Dutch Runner ... . . 200 700/ ExcelsiorSugar . 7 +» « »- « - . 100 350] Large White Marrowfat ... .. 100 275 
New Golden Wax ....... . 200 700) Egyptian. - . + + « « « « «. 100 350} Black Eye Marrowfat . GOO 27a 
Golden Cluster ........ . 225 750| Maule’s Mammoth... : : - - 100 350 | Southern MW aippoor will (feld) - - 100 250 
Lazy Wives. . Can 0 2 50 Stowell’s Evergreen .., ... . 100 300! Canada Field . : a fo A200 

QO 
Cc 
nar-AT THE ABOVE FI 
chalee for bags: ee NE Ue aS ek Tes Le faa Wee SEG = = 

Abcoiniae FECES ek On Bidens pabiencde , Gee ae Selah in i? years and | 
the demand rapidly increasing. For sale at all the leading bookstores in the United States 
272 pages, Qx6 inches VERY, line of which is full ot practical information. 



zee Canada. 

Mr. T. rereiney, that justiyecclepeated writer and atOHyc on gardoaice 
and horticultural topies. in 1889 compiled the results of his notes and experience 
for many years into a voluminous and exhaustive book on the subject entitled 
od" THOW TO MAKE THE GARDEN PAY" b 
, 1 have undertaken the publishing and placing before 
the American public of this the best and most practical 
work ever written for the benefit of the American 
1 vegetable gardener. I am confident it will prove the 
stepping-stone to successful gardening for many 
thousands who are now unacquainted with this, the 
noblest calling on earth, while I know it will give 
many profitable common-sense ideas to those 
who are even now high up in the profession. 
In giving a brief summary ot the work, I cannot do 
better than quote the following from Mr. Greiner’s in- 
troductory remarks in “‘ How to Make the Garden Pay:” 
“Gardening, in the minds of average people, is a 
s| dreadful combination in its requirements of skill and 
‘A unceasing drudgery. Many, especially farmers, doubt 
4 their ability to acquire the one without giving more 
1 time and thought than they can afford to devote to the 
garden, and fear the other, hence, home gardening is 
often at a discount. To disabuse the minds of the 
masses of this only too common error, to convince people in rural districts and 
in the suburbs of cities, that gardening in reality is a very strong combination 
of pleasure, health and profit, and to point out the ways and means how to 
relieve the task of all semblance of drudgery—that is one of the aims, and per- 
haps the chief one of this volume. 
“ While in the following pages I shall attempt to teach the whole of the art, 
in the aspects that have been revealed to me during long years of practice, study 
and experiment. and propose to conform these instructions with the needs of the 
new beginner, both in kitchen and market gardening, I am quite certain that 
even the experienced horticulturist can find new truths and valuable suggestions 
in it, and it will pay all—novice and expert—to look these pages over carefully. 
“ Any one of the readers who thus far has remained in the old ruts, let him 
(urn over a new leaf and try the newer ways that I poink out ; for gardening. like 
lite, is what you yourself make of it—a paradise o pleasure or a veritable sheol 
of drudgery. You have the decision in your own hands. You may leisurely 
accompany your Visitors through the well-kept grounds that are beaming with 
thrifty, sparkling vegetation, as your own countenance is beaming with ‘pleas- 
are and satisfaction, and that is as free from weeds as your face is free from care ; 
or you may crawl through the beds on hands and knees, piling up stacks of 
weeds, with a face sour and distorted in discontent and in hatred of yourself 
and the life you are leading. My instructions, if faithfully followed, willinsure 
you the former conditions and save you from the curse of the latter. %, 




THIS VALGABLE BOOK “isis'or iim a $2.00 


RES I deliver these goods on board cars in this city, and 

| CHAPTER XV. EARLY PLANTS FOR THE HOME GARDEN.—Various 

PEAS. i} 




3 
» 
2 
® 
5 
fe) 

""HOW TO MAKE THE GARDEN PAY ” 
Contains almost ome humdred thousand words, is finely printed 
in large readable type, is handsomely bound, copiously illustrated 
at great expense, with almost 200 practical illustrations, and is, in 
all respects, both as to the matter it contains and the manner in 
which it has been printed, bound and published, superior to any 
work of its kind ever issued. 
It is not only a common-sense helper for every gardener, large or small, but | 
will also prove an ornament to any centre table. 
PRICE, $2.00 POSTPAID TO ANW ADDRESS. } 
CUAL BS | I. ve HOME GARDENING.—Gardening for Pleasure, Health, Profit 
an orality. 
CELNE Sy II. ERSTenaia GARDENING AND TRUCK FA RMING.—Garden- 
ing for profit on 
CHAPTER III. FARMER’ S KITCHEN GARDEN.—Selection of locality and 
arrangement of beds. 
CHAPTER IV. REQUIREMENTS OF SUCCESS IN MARKET GARDENING, 
—Selection of soil and location. 
CHAPTER V. HINTSIN MARKETING.—Secrets of success exposed. 
LUE ae VI. MANURES 'OR THE GARDEN.—I. Stable wanure and how 
to manage it. 
CHAPTER VII. MANURES FOR THE GARDEN.—II. Commercial Fertil- 
izers, their value and uses 
CHAPTER VIII. MANURES FOR THE GARDEN.—III. Nitrates, wood-ashes, 
and other Bpecine fertilizers. 
CHAPTER IX. GARDEN IMPLEMENTS AND HOW TO USE THEM. 
CHAPTER X. COLD FRAMES.—Their construction and use. 
PTER XI. MANURE HOT BEDS.—Their construction and use. 
CHAPTER XI. FIRE HOT BEDS AND THEIR CONSTRUCTION. - 
CHAPTER XIII, COLD FORCING HOUSES.—How to build and manage. 
CHAPTER XIV. HOT FORCING HOUSES.—Simple, sensible structures, 
successfully managed ; cost, construction, ete. 

means and devices for everybody. 
CHAPTER XVI. DRAINAGE.—Where needed and how done. 
CHAPTER XVII. IRRIGATION.—Surface soaking, and Sub-Karth Flooding. 
CHAPTER XVIII. INSECTS AND OTHER FOES.—Their ways of Sowing | 
mischief, and how to keep them in check. 
CHAPTER XIX. FUNGUS DISEASES OF PLANTS.—How to prevent andl 
cure them. 
CHAPTER XX. SEEDS AND SEED SOWING.—By machine aa by hand. 
CH TER XXII. NOVELTIES, AND WHY WETEST THEM. 
CHAPTER XXII. SYSTEM AND ROTATION OF CROPPING. 
TER XXIIT. WEEDS, AND HOW TO MANAGE THEM. 
ER XXIV. THINNING AND TRANSPLANTING. 
CHAPTER XXV. PROTECTION AGAINST DROUTH AND FROST. 
CHAPTER XXXVI. HIRED HELP.—Employment and treatment of labor. 
OLN Le XXV SG sos THLY MEMORANDA. —A Chronological Summary 
he year’s wo 
CHAPTER Xx VIL CULTURAL DIRECTIONS. How the various cropea 
ot our gardens are grown BOOS easily) and profitably. 
Be a sr ee 

eae aes 
Sinn ne han 

