WOOD'S 
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Our Select New Variet 
Specialties Deserve a P 
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Carolina Header Collard 
Sulphur or Brimstone 
Beans 
In the mountain sections of South- 
west Virginia and bordering states 
|there is no bean more highly es- 
teemed. It is not stringless but is 
a good bearer and remains tender till 
the beans in the pod are quite far ad- 
vanced, The mountain people tell us 
they prefer it because it has a flavor 
| that they particularly like; a flavor 
quite distinct from all other beans. 
Try them and see if you agree with y 
the mountaineers. Pkt. 10c; 144 lh. 
25c; lb. 40c; 2 lbs. 70c; 5 lbs. $1.50; 
10 lbs. $2.75, postpaid. Not postpaid, 
lb. 30c; 2 lbs. 55c; 5 lbs. $1.25; 10 lbs, 
$2.40; 100 lbs. $22.00, 
Black Gypsy 
W atermelon 
| <A Tar Heel is a judge of good water- 
'melons, and there are parts of North 
Carolina where you just can’t give away 
any other good melon when Black 
| Gypsy can be had, These folks claim it 
‘is the “last word” in watermelons. It 
thas such a dark green color that a short 
)distance away it appears to be black. 
It is a big, long melon, about the same 
‘diameter from end to end; the ends do 
not taper. The half-inch tough rind 
qualifies it as a good shipper, although 
‘it is rather large for some markets, but 
it is grown principally for home use and 
‘for nearby markets. Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; 
1% lb. 40c; 1b. $1.25; 2-1b. lots $1.10 per 
\Ib.; 5-Ib. lots 95¢ per 1b.; 10-Ib. lots 85¢ 
per lb., postpaid. 
MOTT TIT ICC 




— 
Varieties 
and Specialties 
ies are Better — Our 
lace in Every Garden 
Carolina Header Collard 
Hard Heading—Short Stemmed— 
Hardiest of All Collards. 
A collard that heads up like a cab- 
bage, yet is hardy enough to stand 
more Severe winters than any collard 
we know. It makes a nice sized solid 
head, with just enough bottom leaves 
to protect it. The stalk is very short, 
the head is firm, the slightly savoyed 
leaves are spaced close together; it 
is a late seeder. In flavor we do not 
believe any collard can compare with 
it. You can grow it on land so poor 
that it would not produce a crop of 
cabbage. Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; 14 lb. 40c; 
lb. $1.25; 2-lb. lots $1.15; 5-lb. lots 
$1.05 per lb.; 10-lb. lots 95c per lhb., 
postpaid. 

Woons EEEDS 
Sulphur or Brimstone Beans 
1 


Black Gypsy Watermelon 
ay 
Baby Fordhook Bush Lima Beans 
Baby Fordhook Bush Lima Beans 
In flavor like Fordhook Bush Lima. In growth like 
Henderson’s Bush Lima. 
Winner of the Silver Medal in the All-American trials. 
In crossing Henderson’s Bush Lima with one of the 
potato lima types, the introducer has brought to you an 
early and prolific bush lima that will produce abundantly 
in sections where, because of temperature, the Fordhook 
will not set pods satisfactorily. The pods hold 3 to 4 
small, fat, plump beans that are bright green when fresh 
and have the chestnutty flavor similar to Fordhook. In 
our photograph note the number of pods on a Single plant. 
By mail postpaid, pkt. 15c; 4% 1b. 25c; lb. 45c; 2 lbs. 75c; 
5 lbs. $1.65; 10 lbs. $3.05. Not postpaid, lb. 35c; 2 lbs. 60c; 
5 lbs. $1.40; 10 lbs. $2.70; 100 Ibs. $25.00. 


Wood's Earliest Prolific Squash 
Read on page 25 what we say about this outstanding 
squash, Every market grower shauld grow it and it 
should be in every home garden, 

