THE WHITE WONDER BEAN. 
It 1$ a mansions Cropper, 
tures very early, three weeks ahead of the Navy. 
It yields all the way from 40 to 104 bushels per acre. 
Fine for either family use or market. 
and those not accustomed to fabulous yields scarcely 
credit the scores of bushels that an acre produces. Ma- 
Habit dwarf, very bushy and wonderfully full of pods. 
Has taken first premium at every fair where exhibited 
An Enormous Yiclder. John Henderson who is one of the most extensive bean growers in Monroe 
County, N. Y., says under date of December 1st, 1894, that the White Wonder bean has out-yielded 
all the other varieties he has ever grown, that it has from 5 to 7 beans to the pod where the Scofields 
the leading bean grown in this section, only had 4 to 5 jn a pod, and the men who threshed them 
said they were the finest crop of beans they had ever threshed. 
$60.00 from $3.00. W T. Byrom, our salesman of Susquehanna Co., Pa., who called at our office 
recently, reported that one half bushel of WHITE WONDER BEANS he sold last season produced 24 
bushels. The customer sold his crop at $2.50 per bushel, and claimed the seed he bought was the 
best investment he ever made! 
BOSTON SMALL PEA BEAN. 
A New Early hardy and Very Thrifty Field Bean. Wonderfully Productive. 
The seed is small, round 'and handsome, being an exact duplicate of the Northern Small Pea Bean, 
which sells in the Boston market al from 25 to 40 cents per bushel above the ordinary varieties of pea beans 
and mediums. This Bean seldom fails to give from 40 to 60 fold, and in some instances has yielded one hun- 
dred fold with ordinary culture. One hundred and twenty-three good pods have been picked from one plant 
of this variety, the pods averaging six beans each. If you raise beans for either market or family use, do not 
fail to try these superior varieties. The cost is but small and the returns large. 
James Stowe, of this county, a very extensive grower of field beans, says that the BOSTON SMALL 
PEA has largely outyielded the Scofields, which he has heretofore considered the best Bean in cultivation. 
WE ARE GROWERS OF SEEDS.— Our seed farms which comprise over 500 acres of land, in a high 
state of cultivation, are looated in Penfield, N. Y., five miles east of Rochester, and are devoted to the testing 
and growing of improved varieties of Farm Seeds, and are under our personal supervision. 
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