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Davis Kidney Wax. — A new variety introduced 1897 season. It is adapted alike for the canner, 

 market gardner, shipper or amateur. The dry bean is large, kidney shaped and white in color, making it 

 one of the best for cooking in the dry state. The pods are long, mealy, stringless, and of a beautiful yel- 

 low color. Quart, 25c. Peck, 1.75. Bushel, $7.00. 



Dwerf German Wax. — One of the finest of Snap-shorts, and the oldest of the Wax varieties ; 

 pods transparent, waxy yellow, and snap like pipe-stems ; boil as rich as butter, and when, highly sea- 

 soned, are luscious ; they are thick and very tender, entirely stringless, and fully as early as the Valentine. 

 Quart, 25c. Peck,$i-75. Bushel, $6.50. 



Improved Golden Wax. — (Rust-proof.) — This variety, the pods of which are of a dark, rich, 

 golden-yellow color, is rapidly surpassing the famous Golden Wax, which has been the most popular 

 and most desirable of all Wax varieties. Quart, 25c. Peck, $1.75. Bushel, $6.50. 



Currie's Rust Proof. — Pods long, flat, and straight, of a beautiful golden color. Price, per 

 quart, 25c. Peck, $1.75. Bushel, $6.00. 



Wardwell's Kidney Wax.- 



with purple. Price, per Quart, 25c. 



Extra Large-Size Lima.- 



winter, if soaked 6 to 10 hours 

 Ford's Mammoth.— The 



King of the Garden.— 



Large bean and pod; very 

 heavy cropper. Quart, 25c. 

 Peck, $1.50. Bushel, $6.00. 



Lazy Wife's Pole Bean. 



— The pods grow from six to 

 eight inches long entirely 

 stringless, of a rich, buttery 

 flavor when cooked. Pods re- 

 tain their tender, rich flavor 

 until nearly ripe. A good white 

 shell bean for winter use. 

 Quart, ' 25c. Peck, $#25. 

 Bushel, $5.00. 



Speckled' Horticultural, 

 or Cherry— Very productive ; 

 equally good in the green 

 state or when shelled. Quart, 

 25c. Peck, $1.50. Bushel, 

 $5-50. 



Kentucky Wonder or 

 Improved Old Homestead 



— We regard this variety as 

 being the most desirable, best, 

 and earliest of all the green- 

 podded running beans. Quart, 

 25c. Peck, $1.50. Bushel, $5.50. 



Golden Carmine Pole 



Bean. — A new strain of hor- 

 ticultural pole of sterling merit. 

 Excels in earliness, quality, 

 handsome appearance and pro- 

 ductiveness. Quart, 30c. Peck, 

 $2.00. Bushel, $8.00. 



Red Speckled Cut 

 Short or Corn Field. 

 —Quart, 20c. Peck, $1.50. 

 Bushel, $5.50. 



Pods long, broad, flat, and of a waxy yellow. Beans white, mottled 

 Peck, $1.75 Bushel, $7.00. 



Burpee's Dwarf Lima.— This is a bush form of the 

 well-known large White Lima Bean. It is very fixed in its 

 bush character, growing to a uniform height of about 

 twenty inches, and forming a circular bush two to two 

 and a half feet in diameter, yielding from fifty to two 

 hundred pods similiar to those grown on the Large White 

 Lima Pole Beans, and contain as many beans of the same 

 delicious quality. (See cut.) Quart, 25c. Peck, $1.50. 

 Bushel, $6.00. 



BEANS-POLE OR RUNNING. 



They succeed best in sandy loam, which should be 

 liberally enriched with thoroughly rotted manure in the 

 hills, which are formed according to the variety, from 

 three to four feet apart. 

 -Large white bean, very tender; used without shell; equally good in 

 before cooking. Quart, 25c. Peck, $1.50. Bushel, $6.00. 

 pods grow to an average length of eight inches, are produced in great 

 dusters, with from five to seven beans per pod, of most 

 excellent quality, for using either green or dry. The vines 

 grow vigorously, setting the beans early at the bottom of 

 the pole, and continue in bearing right up to frost. Ford's 

 Mammoth Podded is without excep- 

 tion the largest podded, finest flavored 

 and most productive of all Lima Beans. 

 Quart, 25c. Peck, $1.50. Bushel, $6.00. 



