HASKELL IMPLEMENT AND SEED CO. 
LEWISTON MAINE 
Black German Wax. (Black Seed.) Very early; 
round, yellow pods; a well-known standard sort. 
Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50; Fifteen Pounds, $3.00 
Curries’ Rust-proof Wax. Pods long, flat and 
straight, very productive and rust-proof; black seed. 
Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50; Fifteen Pounds, $3.00 
Improved Golden Wax. Rust proof. An improve¬ 
ment on the old Golden Wax. The pod is somewhat 
round, meaty and entirely rust-proof. 
Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50; Fifteen Pounds, $3.00 
Green Pod Varieties 
Stringless Green Pod. The pods are green, not 
quite as round as Valentine and less curved. The 
pods are stringless—absolutely—this quality at once 
placing the variety at top of the list among table beans. 
Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50; Fifteen Pounds, $3.00 
Long Yellow Six Weeks. Pods are long, flat, straight 
green. 
Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50; Fifteen Pounds, $3.00 
Low’s Champion. Very productive, with stringless, 
large flat green pods. Excellent either as a string or 
shell bean. 
Pound, .25; Two Pounds, .40; Fifteen Pounds, $2.50 
Dwarf Horticultural. Pods are of medium length, 
slightly curved, and when nearly developed are freely 
splashed with bright red on the yellow skin. The 
green shell beans are of good size, tender, and of fine 
flavor. 
Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50; Fifteen Pounds, $3.00 
Burpee’s Bush Lima. The only Bush form of the 
true large Lima. Bushes grow to eighteen inches in 
height and always erect. 
Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50; Fifteen Pounds, $3.50 
Pole or Running 
German,—Stangen Bohnen Spanish,—Judias 
French,—Haricot a Rames 
One Pound to 150 hills 
These are more tender and require rather more care 
in culture than the Bush Beans, and should be sown 
two weeks later. They succeed best in sand loam, 
which should be liberally enriched with short manure 
in the hills, which are formed, according to the vari¬ 
ety, from three to four feet apart. From five to six 
seeds are planted in each hill, about two inches deep. 
Rough cedar or similar poles about seven or eight 
feet long should be used for these to climb on. The 
poles should be set in the ground at least eighteen 
inches, so as to prevent being blown over. 
Add .08 per Lb.; each additional pound add .01 if 
to be sent by mail. 
Kentucky Wonder Wax. Similar to the green pod 
Kentucky Wonder. Pods 8 to 9 inches long. Very 
early. Pkt., .20; Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50 
Lazy Wife. One of the best of the later green- 
podded pole beans for snaps. The pods borne in large 
clusters, are five to seven inches long, broad, thick, 
fleshy and entirely stringless. When young they have 
a rich, buttery flavor, which is retained until they are 
nearly ripe. The dry beans are excellent for winter 
use. Seed white. Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50 
Kentucky Wonder 
Kentucky Wonder. An excellent green podded vari¬ 
ety; enormously productive, the long pods hanging in 
great clusters along the entire vine. Seed dark brown; 
entirely stringless. 
Pkt., .20; Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50 
Lima, King of the Garden. Heavy cropper—bean 
and pod very large. Pound, .30; Two Pounds, .50 
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