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Wax Podded Dwarf or Bush Varieties 
Improved Rust-Proof Golden Wax. This is a great 
improvement on the old Golden Wax and is the standard 
variety for general use with market gardeners as well 
as for growing in the home garden. It has far more 
vitality than the parent sort and hence is much less 
liable to rust or spot. The pods are straight and suc- 
culent, broad, flat and of a clear yellow color. They are 
borne in great profusion. The quality is unusually fine 
and the pods are tender and brittle. The illustration, 
engraved from a photograph, gives a good idea of the 
habit of growth, shape of pods, and abundance of crop. 
We commend it to our customers as a superior wax 
bush bean in every respect. Pint, 15 cents. Quart, 
25 cents. 
Pencil-pod Wax. For splendid table and market 
qualities, this new Bean is unsurpassed. It is entirely 
stringless and of unusually tender and good flavor when 
cooked. It is a strong grower and heavy bearer, early 
in maturity, is quite hardy, and makes a healthy, vig- 
orous growth of bush, bearing its beautiful round yellow 
pods in great profusion. The pods are of a uniform 
rich yellow color, making a very attractive and desir- 
able sort, either for table, market or canning. Pint, 
15 cents. Quart, 30 cents. 
IMPROVED RUST-PROOF GOLDEN WAX. 
Wardwell’s Kidney Wax. The very strong grow- 
ing vines of this variety yield a large crop of long, nearly 
straight, broad, creamy white, handsome pods. These 
are of good quality and always command a ready sale, 
making the variety one of the most profitable for the 
market gardener. It matures a little later than the 
Golden Wax. Seed, large, kidney-shaped, white, with dark 
markings about the eye. Pint, 15 cents. Quart, 30 cent*. 
Davis White Wax. A first-early Wax Snap Bean; 
nearly always rust-proof, and extraordinarily productive. 
It holds its pods well off the ground; always matures 
plump, full and solid, and of a beautiful yellow appear- 
ance. This is one of the best and most profitable ship- 
ping snaps in our list, but rather undesirable for home 
use, as it is not equal in table qualities to other kinds. 
Pint, 15 cents. Quart, 30 cents. 
Scarlet Flageolet Wax. This variety seems to do 
especially well in the South, and is a favorite with many 
truck farmers. The large, strong growing and erect 
vines produce very long, flat, rather coarse, but beau- 
tiful wax-like pods, which, though often curved and 
twisted, are always handsome. Seed, large, flat. Pint, 
20 cents. Quart, 35 cents. 
Prolific German Black Wax. This Is 
* much improved strain of the old Black 
Wax. Its habit of growth is stronger, it 
has longer, straighter and more rounded 
pods, and it is far more productive. The 
pods are three to four inches in length, 
of a handsome yellow color, fleshy and 
stringless. Quality, the very best. Market 
gardeners consider it an exceptionally 
valuable sort, and it is equally useful for 
the home garden. Pint, 15 cents. Quart, 
30 cents. 
Black Wax. A favorite main-crop 
wax variety. Pods are round, waxy 
yellow, solid and tender. Desirable for 
home use on account of its superior ten- 
derness and flavor when cooked. Pint, 
15 cents. Quart, 25 cents. 
Golden Eye Wax. A most reliable 
cropper, standing adverse weather re- 
markably well. The vines grow bushy 
and strong, holding the pods well off the 
ground. The pods are thick, of a waxy, 
yellow color, uniform in size, free from 
rust and blight, and keep well after pick- 
ing. Pint, 20 cents. Quart, 35 cents. 
Special Prices for Larger Quantities. 
