BRAND PEONY FARMS, Inc 
Stringless Green Pod Beans. 
Vegetable Seeds 
Grow your own vegetables. Gather them fresh from the garden. In this way 
one has perfect vegetables. All seeds are prepaid. 
Beet 
DETROIT DARK RED. A choice early variety with small tops. Can be crowded 
more in the row than the heavy top sorts. Roots are globe-shaped. Skin and 
flesh deep rich red showing no lighter zones. Fkt. 5c; oz. 10c. 
Beans 
STRINGLESS GREEN POD. Of the green-podded varieties we think this bean 
the best of all. A strong growing sort, dark foliage, with round, meaty, brittle, 
well-filled pods of highest quality, that don’t get stringy. Fkt. 10c; y 2 lb. 20c; 
lb. 35c, postpaid. 
IMPROVED PENCIL-FOD BLACK WAX. This is the old original black wax 
and it was never beaten for quality. A beautiful long pencil round slightly 
curved pod. Fine for the home garden. Fkt. 10c; y 2 lb. 20c; lb. 35c. 
TENDERGREEN. A new bean of the finest quality. One of the very best of the 
round, green-podded beans. Fleshy pods about 6 inches long, stringless, very 
productive and closely resembles an improved Full Measure. Fkt. 10c; y 2 lb. 
20c; lb., 35c. 
Carrot 
CHANTENAY. A large thick blunt-rooted carrot slightly tapering towards 
the bottom. Very smooth in appearance and of the very finest flavor. Fkt. 5c; 
oz. 12c. 
Cucumber 
LONGFELLOW. An excellent, long, slender, dark green 
variety that has proven an excellent sort for the mar¬ 
ket gardener and an especially fine kind for home use 
both for slicing and for making dill pickles. Perfectly 
straight, 2% inches in diameter and 12 to 14 inches 
long. Fkt. 10c; oz. 15c. 
Sweet Corn 
EARLY GOLDEN GEM. (New). 67 days. A very early 
yellow sweet corn newly developed by Prof. Yeager of 
North Dakota. Two weeks earlier than Golden Bantam 
end the heaviest yielder of the very early sweet corns 
in our fields. The Earliest Yellow Sweet Com, in a class 
with Golden Bantam. Everybody should plant it for 
extra early. It proved the earliest corn in our trials 
this year. Hand shelled and selected. *4 lb* 15c; y 2 lb. 
23c; lb. 35c. 
EARLY SUNSHINE. Another new golden sweet corn 
from Prof. Yeager that we have grown some 5 years 
now. It is a real sweet corn, ear longer than Bantam 
and about a week earlier. Because of size, productive¬ 
ness, sweetness, and earliness this has been our fa¬ 
vorite corn. All seed of this variety hand shelled and 
A-l. Fkt. 10c; y 2 lb. 18c; lb. 30c. 
GOLDEN BANTAM. The genuine Golden Bantam is still 
the last word in Sweet Corn. The sweetest of all. Were 
it 10 to 14 days earlier no other corn would be needed. 
Genuine Golden Bantam. Large pkt. 10c; y 2 lb. 15c; 
lb. 25c. 
Muskmelons 
EXTRA EARLY SUNRISE. A very early melon that 
ripens with the earliest. Grows to a weight of 5 pounds 
or more, oval in shape, light golden yellow. Flesh deep 
rich orange. Very sweet. 75 days. Fkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
HONEY DEW. (New Golden). A golden fleshed Honey 
Dew. Earlier and smaller than the green-meated. A 
good keeper and will last several weeks after ripe. 
Delicious flavor. Fkt. 10c; oz. 25c. 
SUGAR ROCK. A marvelous new melon. Beautiful in 
appearance, of medium size, round as a ball and of 
wonderful quality. Melon light green turning to a light 
golden yellow. Flesh rich, sweet, deep orange. 82 days. 
Fkt. 10c: oz. 15c. 
HEARTS OF GOLD. A fine shipping melon and taken all 
in all one of the finest quality melons of all. Fruits 
slightly oval and about 5 inches long. Small cavity, 
rich deep orange flesh clear to the rind. Superb quality. 
70 days. Fkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
HONEYMEL. A new Rocky Ford introduction. Brought 
nearly double what other cantaloupes did. Rather early, 
pearl-gray rind with medium light netting. Darge. 
Flesh same as Honey Dew. A Honey Dew early enough 
so we can raise it in this northern country. Fkt. 10c; 
oz. 25c. 
Radishes 
SCARLET GLOBE. Grown from carefully selected trans¬ 
planted roots that has resulted in giving us a surpris¬ 
ingly uniform radish true to type. Brightest scarlet, 
well rounded bottoms, slender tap root. Flesh pure 
white, crisp, and best flavor. Fkt. 5c; oz. 10c. 
WHITE ICICLE. We have been very careful in selecting 
our radish strains both in White Icicle and Scarlet 
Globe so as to get the very best. Dong, pure white, 
crisp, and very mild in flavor. Best of all radishes. 
Fkt. 5c; oz. 10c. 
Squash 
It is during the fall when the cool sharp days first 
come, when we are working out-of-doors and get the chill 
of the air of approaching winter that we like to come 
in to a big noonday meal and find baked squash on the 
table. For then it is that the squash is really at its best. 
BLUE HUBBARD. Everybody likes Hubbard, and the 
blue Hubbard is about the best of the Hubbards. Grows 
very large, of a blue-gray color, with extremely thick 
flesh and an unusually hard shell that makes of it a 
long winter keeper. One of the very best of the late 
winter sorts. Fkt. 10c; oz. 15c; y 2 , lb- 80c. 
BUTTERCUP. A new squash of the turban type brought 
out by Prof. Yeager of the North Dakota Experiment 
Station. The fruit is of medium size, weighing 4 to 5 
pounds, just right for the family use. The thick orange 
flesh cooks unusually dry and is sweeter and finer than 
that of any other squash we know. The finest quality 
we have ever found in a squash. Fkt. 10c. 
Watermelons 
BLACK-SEEDED ANGELENO. Most beautiful of all 
watermelons. A large sized melon, beautiful dark green 
rind with a tinge of gold showing through the green. 
It is hard to find a melon to compare with the bright 
red flesh of Angeleno. Red to the rind and free from 
fiber. When the gold shines through the green it is ripe 
and then is the time to pick it. One need never pick a 
green melon. Delicious. Fkt. 10c; oz. 20c. 
STRIPED KLiONDYKE. (New Special). A long light 
green melon. A good shipper and of excellent quality. 
Flesh deep red, small brown seeds. Very sweet. One 
of the finest quality melons we have ever tasted. Early 
and grows to a large size. 25 to 30 pounds. Fkt. 10c; 
oz. 20c. 
KLECKLEY’S SWEET IMPROVED. An improved strain 
of this fine old variety. Oblong, 18 to 20 inches long. 
Dark green skin and brilliant scarlet flesh. Delicious. 
Fkt. 5c; oz. 10c. 
Tomatoes 
THE PRITCHARD. (Scarlet Topper). A wonderful new 
bright red tomato developed by the late Dr. Pritchard 
of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Pritchard has 
Marglobe blood in it and carries many of the good 
qualities of that wonderful variety. Color of scarlet 
with dark red flesh, medium size and solid. Received 
Gold Medal (Southern Seedsman’s Association in 1932). 
A wonderful new tomato. 60 days. Fkt. 20c; y 2 oz. 35c; 
oz. 65c. 
OXHEART. 87 days. One of the most sensational garden 
novelties ever produced. A tomato of fine quality, of 
the very largest size. Fruits often weigh up to three 
pounds, while 5-pound specimens have been produced. 
Unlike any other tomato in shape resembling a giant 
Oxheart or a big Delicious apple. Skin smooth, pink, 
flavor fine, deep flesh often 2 inches with very few 
seeds. Fkt. 10c; y 2 oz. 25c. 
BREAK O’ DAY. (New). A wilt-resistant tomato and 
one of the best of the recent introductions of the U. S. 
Department of Agriculture. About 10 days earlier than 
Marglobe and nearly as large. Scarlet, globe shaped, 
and very productive. One of the very best earlies. 
Fkt. 10c; V4 oz., 20c. 
MARGLOBE. One of the very best of all recent intro¬ 
ductions. Similar to Globe but larger. More productive, 
smooth and red. About a perfect tomato. Wilt resist¬ 
ant. Fkt. 5c; y 2 oz. 15c; oz. 25c. 
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