1884 
SIOUX CITY SEED CO. 
1936 
BEETS—Mangel-Wurzel, Sugar, Etc. (Continued) 
MAMMOTH LONG AND RED MANGEL- 
WURZEL—Very large, selected strain, the 
largest and finest roots. The standard. 
GOLDEN TANKARD MANGEL-WUR¬ 
ZEL—A bright yellow; handsome and sweet, 
and very productive; tops small, roots large. 
VILMOR1N IMPROVED SUGAR — A 
much improved strain of the preceding; very 
valuable as a sugar-producing beet. 
KLEIN WANZLEBEN—Larger than Vil- 
morin; good sugar beet; very hardy. 
Prices: oz 
GIANT FEEDING SUGAR—This unites 
the large size of the Mangel with the greater 
feeding value of the Sugar Beet. The roots 
are always regular and uniform, broad at 
the top with a full and sightly tapering shoul¬ 
der. 
GIANT SLUDSTRUP—A long, reddish- 
yellow, ovoid root, growing more than half 
above ground; easily harvested, and by actual 
test far excels any other variety in weight 
and feeding value. 
BEANS—Bush 
CULTURE 
— Beans 
are easily frost-killed, 
so plant them at corn¬ 
planting time on light, 
dry land. Cold, wet 
weather will rot the 
seed in the ground and 
fresh manure causes a 
rank growth of vine 
with a lack of pods. If 
hand-cultivated beans 
can be drilled in poor 
soil as close as eighteen 
inches, but in rich soil 
with horse cultivation, 
thirty inches are required. Drill six beans to a foot and cover one inch deep, 
or plant four beans to the hill eighteen by twenty-four inches apart. One quart 
of seed should plant 200 feet and five pecks plant an acre. Plant every third 
week for a succession up till August 1st, in the latitude of Sioux City. Pick 
beans before the bulge of seed appears and pick beans clean-to continue the 
plants bearing. Give beans shallow cultivation and do not till the soil when 
the plant is in bloom or the plant in self-defense will drop its blossoms. To cul¬ 
tivate when wet is to invite rust. 
40 Acre Field Sioux Stringless Beans in Montana. 
Dwarf Wax Beans 
ROYAL PURPLE WAX — Plant large, 
without runners, generally drooping with 
fruit-laden branches and spreading when full 
grown. The season is early; the leaf is 
large, medium green; wide across leaflets; 
pods are very round and yellow in color; 
very brittle; stringless; without fibre and un¬ 
surpassed in quality. 
SIOUX STRINGLESS—Pods round and 
straight. Strictly stringless and tender 
quality. Color light creamy yellow. Ex¬ 
cellent for home gardening or canning. Pro¬ 
lific producer. 
STRINGLESS KIDNEY WAX—A very 
prolific variety. Twenty inches high, pods 
rich creamy, long and semi-round. String¬ 
less and of excellent quality. 
GOLDEN WAX—Best known was bean; 
very early; popular for home and market 
gardener. 
ROUND POD KIDNEY WAX—An early 
round podded stringless variety of highest 
quality and a good yielder. The six-inch 
light yellow pods mature in 55 days. 
DAVIS WHITE WAX—Very hardy, pro¬ 
ductive, long pods, very handsome, rustless, 
fine shipper, best canner; a valuable variety 
for market gardeners. 
WARDWELL’S KIDNEY WAX — The 
largest wax variety and one of the best. A 
strong grower; the long handsome pods are 
stringless, brittle, and of finest flavor. A 
heavy cropper. 
