JOSEPH BRECK & SONS 
(Corporation) 
23 
Beans—Dwarf Wax or Butter Varieties 
Packets of all varieties, 15c each. 
Breck's Round Pod Bountiful Wax. An early. 
Pt. 
Qt. 
tender, stringless and most prolific variety. 
Note illustration and description on first 
pages of Catalog. 
$0.30 
$0.50 
Black Wax, Improved Prolific. Very early 
round thick pods of medium length. 
.30 
.50 
Black Wax, Currie’s Rust Proof. Flat pods, 
early, prolific, very good quality. 
.30 
.50 
New Kidney Wax. A great improvement on 
Wardwell’s Wax; more prolific bearer, 
pods large, vines of stout growth, loaded 
with beans, very popular with all market 
gardeners who have become familiar with it 
.30 
.50 
Crackerjack Wax. Pods rounder and more 
meaty than Wardwell’s, good size, color, 
splendid market variety, stands shipping 
well; very popular with the Western mar¬ 
ket gardeners . 
.30 
.50 
Davis Kidney Wax. The best white seeded 
wax bean; long, well shaped pods, good 
quality; a general favorite. 
.30 
.50 
Golden Wax, Improved Rust Proof. Early, 
long, fiat pods, quite immune from rust, 
stringless, the most popular variety for 
home garden . 
.30 
.50 
Golden Eye Wax. Hardy and prolific, pods 
fiat, very free from rust . 
.30 
.50 
Ward well’s Kidney Wax. Early, long, flat 
pods, good quality, good shipper, the 
standard wax variety with market garden¬ 
ers in this vicinity. 
.30 
.50 
Dwarf Horticultural Wax Rust Proof. A 
splendid bean, very prolific, pods 6 inches 
long, quite stringless, good flavor. 
.30 
.50 
Prices quoted subject to change without notice. 
Beans—Pole or Running 
German, “Stangen Bohne.” — French, “Haricots a Rames.” — 
Spanish, “Jidas” 
It is good policy to plant Pole Beans at least a week 
later than the first planting of dwarf varieties because 
they are not as hardy. The poles are usually set at the 
time of planting. Plant four or five beans to a hill, in 
hills three or four feet apart, each way. Some growers 
raise the hills a little to insure good drainage. Hill- 
applications of well composted manure are of value. One 
quart of Limas will plant 100 hills; one quart of the 
smaller seeded sorts about 200 hills. All large seeded 
Limas should be planted eye down to insure quick 
growth. 
Beans—Green Podded Varieties 
We supply packets of beans at 10 cents each. 
Carmine Podded Horticultural. Also Pt. Qt. Pk. 
called Columbia, Hampden and Wor¬ 
cester. The best Horticultural Pole 
Bean in existence. It is early and 
produces an immense number of 
large, highly-colored pods. A splen¬ 
did shell bean . $ 0.20 $ 0.35 $2.50 
Horticultural or Speckled Cranberry. 
Large green pods, streaked with red; 
good either as a string or shell bean 
Kentucky Wonder or Old Homestead. 
A very prolific, long, green podded 
sort. Sometimes known as the 
“Snake Bean,” and without doubt the 
best pole string bean offered. 
Lazy Wife. Long pods, beans white, 
wonderfully prolific . 
Slebert’s Early Lima. Improved large 
Lima and the earliest . 
Lima, Large White. An old much es¬ 
teemed variety . 
Lima, Dreer’s or Challenger. Round, 
very thick beans, productive. 
Lima, King of the Garden. Large pods, 
productive, good market sort. 
.20 
.35 
2.50 
.25 
.40 
3.00 
.20 
.35 
2.50 
.20 
.35 
2.25 
.25 
.40 
2.25 
.25 
.40 
2.25 
.25 
.40 
2.25 
New Kidney Wax 
Lima, Seiva or Small. Earlier and 
Pt. 
Qt. 
Pk. 
hardier than the large Lima. 
.20 
.35 
2.25 
Red Cranberry. Large, tender, string¬ 
less pods, very productive. 
.25 
.40 
3.00 
Scarlet Runner. Used in the United 
States almost wholly as an ornamen¬ 
tal climber on account of its bright 
scarlet flowers, rapid growth and 
large leaves . 
.25 
.45 
White Dutch Runner. Same as Scarlet 
Runner, except that the flower is 
white . 
.20 
.35 
2.25 
Brockton Pole. Broad, slightly curved 
pods, splashed with bright crimson 
when ripe; beans large. As yet the 
good qualities of this variety are not 
widely known, although it is one of 
the best shell beans for home gar¬ 
dens . 
.20 
.35 
2.00 
Pole Beans—Wax Podded Varieties 
Golden Cluster. Pods very large, ten- Pt. Qt. Pk. 
der, early, rich golden color, grown 
in clusters, beans white. $0.25 $0.40 $3.00 
November 10, 1915. 
Gentlemen:— 
I have had heads from your Warren Stone Mason 
weighing 9 and 10 lbs., and this is the first time I 
have ever tried to raise cabbage. Every one of your 
heads have done wonders. Your Boston Market Celery 
is superb. Everyone asks me where I get such celery 
from. 
Yours truly, 
WM. 1). BOX, 
117 Alden St., 
Springfield, Mass. 
For free delivery offers and general instructions regarding orders and shipments see third page of cover. 
