Joseph Harris in 1892. ‘““You don’t know 
beans” until you have tried this old time favorite. We 
have raised Scotia beans here in our own farm for over 
50 years and we have yet to taste a bean that is more 
delicious. Hundreds of our customers have told us this 
same thing. If you haven’t tried them do so; you have 
a real treat coming. The pods when cooked have a 
rich melting butter flavor that is possessed by no other 
kind. 
This is one of the earliest of the pole beans and com- 
mences to bear only five or six days after Kentucky 
Wonder. A few hills will produce enough for a family 
and if kept picked will bear through August and Sep- 
tember when the earlier bush beans are gone. 
Plant enough to can—Scotia beans are far more rich 
and tender than any other canned beans we have eaten. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 7144 Lbs. $2.15 
transportation paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $3.15; 60 Lbs. 
(Bu.) $10.80. 
Kentucky Wonder Wax. A yellow Kentucky Wonder. 
This is the best pole bean with wax or yellow pods we 
know. It is early, very prolific, and the pods are long, 
bright yellow, stringless when young, and of fine quality. 
Pkt. 10c; 4 Lb. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 744 Lbs. $2.10 
transportation paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $3.00; 60 Lbs. 
(Bu.) $10.20. 
KENTUCKY WONDER, WHITE SEEDED. 
Special Stock, Heavy Yielder. This is the heaviest 
yielding stock of Kentucky Wonder we have ever seen. 
Bred on our own farm from a single high producing 
plant it has outyielded and outgrown three similar 
stocks nearly two to one. 
This is a real addition to the list of fine pole beans. 
The pods are exceptionally long and straight, of an 
attractive green color and when young are round and 

Other Pele Beans 
A packet will plant about 20 ft. of row or 15 hills. 1 lb. will plant 100 hills. : 
Although not always necessary most of these varieties do best if given some support for the vines. 
SCOTIA. Tender and Delicious. Introduced by KING HORTICULTURAL. Harris’ Special 
Strain. A heavy 
yielding large seeded variety that we can very highly 
recommend both for home gardens and commercial 
growers who want a high class horticultural bean. The 
vines are vigorous and healthy and we particularly 
recommend this variety in places where French Horti- 
cultural does not do well. 
Our stock has been bred from a single early large 
seeded plant which we selected several years ago, so 
that it produces uniformly long, straight pods with the 
much wanted large seed. The pods are 6 inches long, 
heavily splashed with bright red, entirely stringless and 
of fine quality. 
Although a pole bean, King Horticultural can be 
grown successfully on light land without support. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 714 Lbs. $2.30 
transportation paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $3.45; 60 Lbs. 
(Bu.) $12.00. 
KENTUCKY WONDER. (Also called ‘Old Home- 
stead’’). We have a fine true stock of this old favorite. 
The pods are very long, round, light green, stringless 
when young and of extremely high quality. The vines 
are enormously productive, the pods often hanging in 
great clusters. These beans mature-very early, being 
among the earliest of the pole varieties. This is also a 
profitable market bean in many sections. 
Pkt. 10c; % Lb. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 7144 Lbs. $1.95 
transportation paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $2.70; 60 Lbs. 
(Bu.) $9.00. 
GOLDEN CLUSTER WAX. White Seeds. Has im- 
mense pods seven inches long and 1% inch wide, golden 
yellow in color. They are thick, tender, brittle, string- 
less and of good quality. This is a very prolific bean, 
maturing in mid-season and does well under adverse 
conditions when many pole beans do not succeed. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 714% Lbs. $2.30 
meaty like Kentucky Wonder. In addition they have 
white seed. This is an advantage as it not only improves 
the appearance of the pods when cooked or canned, but 
the dry beans are excellent for baking. 
Pkt. 10c; 44 Lb. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 7% Lbs. $2.15 
transportation paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $3.15; 60 Lbs. 
(Bu.) $10.80. 
transportation paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $3.45; 60 Lbs. 
(Bu.) $12.00. 
Scarlet Runner. Grown principally as an ornamental 
vine. The flowers are bright scarlet and produced in 
attractive clusters. The pods somewhat resemble the 
limas in shape and can be used when very young, the 
beans in the green shell stage being of good quality. 
Pkt. 10c; 44 Lb. 25c; Lb. 45c; 2 Lbs. 80c transportation 
Gield Beans ty 

Scotia Beans 
Their flavor is unexcelled. 
A pound will plant from 100 to 150 feet of row, depending upon the size of 
the beans. Plant 60 to 75 lbs. to the acre. 
The following varieties of beans are used for baking, soup, etc., and are 
grown extensively as field crops. These beans should be planted in rows 
28 to 30 inches apart, dropping the seed about 10 to the foot of row. 
Prices subject to market changes and stocks being unsold. Lowest prices 
quoted on larger lots. 
CALIFORNIA RED KIDNEY. Large, red, kidney-shaped beans. Yields 
heavily on strong land. This is considered one of the most profitable 
field beans to raise. Our stock is of a very fine strain. It is hardy, rust 
resistant and very prolific with long, straight well filled pods. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lh. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 71% Lbs. $2.00 transportation 
paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $2.85; 60 Lbs. (Bu.) $9.60. 
BOSTON MARROW or WHITE MARROWFAT. (Perry Strain.) 
Large plump white beans of high quality, very productive on good soil. 
An exceptionally fine stock, the beans being uniformly large. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 25c; Lb. 35c; 2 Lbs. 60c; 714 Lbs. $1.85 transportation 
paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $2.55; 60 Lbs. (Bu.) $8.40. 
ROBUST PEA BEAN. Michigan Certified. An improved mosaic re- 
sistant strain of Marrow Pea beans. We find that the yield from Robust 
is nearly twice as large as from common Marrow pea beans. In other 
respects the beans are the same. The beans are small, round, pure 
white. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 20c; Lb. 30c; 2 Lbs. 50c; 714 Lbs. $1.65 transportation 
paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $2.25; 60 Lbs. (Bu.) $7.20. 

King Horticultural Beans 
The heaviest yielding Horticultural kind. Photo taken in our seed field. 
“We had a very heavy crop of Kentucky Wonder Beans (White Seeded) 
and had almost 2 bu. from one 10c pkt. We had more than we could use so 
disposed of them to others. 
WHITE KIDNEY. Large, white, kidney-shaped beans of extremely fine 
quality for baking. The vines are vigorous and productive. A week or 
10 days later than common péa beans. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 25c; Lb. 40c; 2 Lbs. 70c; 74% Lbs. $2.00 transportation 
paid. Not paid: 15 Lbs. $2.85; 60 Lbs. (Bu.) $9.60. 
“We had some seeds of the Rutgers tomato (see page 40) from which we 
grew some fine plants. The fruit was wonderful, both for table and for can- 
ning it has no equal.” 
“As always when we order will say ‘no seeds like yours.’ ”’ 
Mrs. Herbert E. Boyer, Hagerstown, Md., April 11, 1941. 
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