16 2 OSCAR H. WILL & CO., BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA 
POLE BEANS 
KENTUCKY WONDER WAX. The best pole wax bean for northern 
planting. The light yellow pods are 8 to 9 inches long, thick, very 
fleshy and brittle. This is one of the earliest of the pole sorts. Pkt., 
5c; 14 Ib., 14c; 14 Ib., 24c; 1 Ib., 40c, postpaid. Not prepaid, 5 Ibs., 
$1.30; 10 Ibs., $2.40. 
KENTUCKY WONDER or OLD HOMESTEAD, The most pop- 
eet aisle ii | aie ae Aaa rma TE 
podded climbing bean. The pods are 8 to 9 inches long, fleshy, curved, 
tender and of good quality. The old reliable. Pkt., 5c; 144 Ib., 14c; 
¥% Ib., 23c; 1 Ib., 39c, postpaid. Not prepaid, 5 Ibs., $1.25; 10 Ibs., 
$2.30. 
EDIBLE SOY BEANS — 
AGATE. An extra early sort, developed by the United States Department of 
Agriculture. Soy Beans have twice the protein and twelve times the fat 
of Navy Beans, with low starch content. An excellent source of Vitamins 
A, B, and G, they are eaten either dry or green. Pkt., 10c; 4 Ib., 18¢e3; % 
Ib., 31¢e; Ib., 55¢e, postpaid. 5 
STANDARD EARLY. Until the introduction of such Edible Soys as Agate 
and Sioux, these were regarded as the earliest. Pkt., 7c; %4 Ib., 14e;3 % Ihb., 
24e; Ilb., 40e, postpaid. 
FIELD BEANS 
GREAT NORTHERN—The Best Baking Bean 
Every one Knows the Great Northern Beans, but few know that the seed 
was originally obtained over fifty years ago by Oscar H. Will from Son of 
a Star, an Hidatsa Indian, by whose tribe it had been grown for many years. 
Hardy, a heavy yielder and early, it is much more tender and more quickly 
cooked than the Navy Bean, and one.of the most largely grown field Beans. 
GREAT NORTHERN—IDAHO U. NO. 56, 4 sreat improve- 
, ment over the 
standard Great Northern in earliness, yield and uniformity of seed. %4 Ihb., 
lle; % Ib., 18e;3 1 Ib., 28e, postpaid. Not prepaid, 10 Ibs., $1.25; 100 Ibs., 
$11.50. se eS f 



GREAT NORTHERN. A good standard 
stock, %-Ib., lle; % Ib., 1%7¢e; 1 Ib. 27e, 
postpaid. Not prepaid, 10 Ibs., $1.10; 100 
Ibs., $10.00. 
HIDATSA RED. A heavy yielding, hardy 
and excellent baking Bean. Resistant to 
bacterial blight. The seed is red in color 
and similar to the Great Northern in shape. 
Pkt., 5e; % Ib., 11e; 1% Ib., 18e;3 1 Ib., 28e, 
Great Northern Beans postpaid. Not prepaid, 10 Ibs., $1.25. 
(Natural Size). 
ASPARAGUS 
Culture. One ounce will sow 100 feet of row. Soak seed for 24 hours 
before planting 1 inch deep in rows 1 foot apart. When 1 year old set 
plants in permanent beds. Work soil to depth of 16 inches, manure heavily, 
and set roots 2 feet apart in the row with rows 4 feet apart and crowns 
4 inches below the surface. 

MARY WASHINGTON. The very vigorous and rust resistant variety de- 
veloped by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. The best yielding pedi- 
greed strain, with large rich, dark green stalks. About 225 seeds to a iit 
packet. Pkg., 8c; 0z., 15¢; %4 Ib., 35e; 1 Ib., $1.10, postpaid. Mary Washington Asparagus, 
A S P AR AGUS ROOTS MARY WASHINGTON. Two Year Old Roots. Price, postpaid, doz., 
s5e3 50, $1.00; 100, $1.75. F.O.B. here, 50, 90c; 100, $1.65; 1,000, $12.00. 
Germaco 
H ti Help You Grow Earlier, Hardier 
0 aps Vegetables and Flowers 
Strong little individual hothouses for every plant. Increase yields, 
promote larger fruits and vegetables and ripen plants earlier. Made 
of waxed paper, protect against rain, frost, wind and insects. Quickly 
and easily set—directions on package. Home Garden Package contains 
25 Hotkaps and cardboard setter, postpaid, 70c; not prepaid, 50c. Not 
prepaid, 100 Hotkaps, $1.95; 250 for $3.50; 1000 for $11.00; 5,000 
lots at $10.75 per 1000. The 100 and 250 Hotkap packages contain a 
Fibreboard setter. 

