Plant Good Seeds or Pay the Penalty 
= “Ye Reap What Ye Sow” 
GOLDEN WAX BEAN 
McCASLAN POLE BEAN 
“75> ROTENONE 
GARDEN DUST AND SPRAY 
We have the 
above General 
“15” Rotenone 
DUSt— Wal toh = 3ioG 
DDT added to 
make it more ef- 
fective. I lb. Can 
35e; 2 Ibs. GSe3 4 
Ib. Pkg. $1.10; 50 
Ibs. $8.50. 
Is an ideal in- 
secticide for the 
home garden. Dust 
or spray. The kill- 
ing ingredient is 
Rotenone — non- 
injurious to hu- 
man and warm 
blooded animals. 
Acts both as con- 
tact and stomach 
poison against a 
wide range of in- 
sects. 
1 Ib. Can 30e3; 2 
Ib. PKe. 50c; 4 Ib. 
Pke. 85e. 
BEANS—Dwarf or Bush 
Green Podded Varieties 
SULPHUR—Adapted for early market. The set is heavy and the 
growth vigorous and hardy. Vines 16 to 17 inches tall, vigorous 
with heavy erect stem, well branched and spreading. It is hardy 
and highly productive. Pods 4% to 5 inches long, plump, straight 
to slightly curved, slightly constricted, light green, stringy and 
almost fiberless. Seeds, medium to small, plump short oval. Color 
cream or light sulphur yellow, faint greenish or brownish eye-ring. 
Pkt. 15e; pt. 50e; qt. $95e; % gal. $1.70; gal. $3.10; pk. $5.95; % bu. 
$11.90; bu. $23.50. 
Dwarf Varieties For Shelled Beans 
RED KIDNEY—A well-known shelled bean. PkKt. 15e; pt. 40e; qt. 70c; 
ym gal. $1.20; gal. $2.25; pk. $4.35. 
WHITE NAVY—A splendid table variety and very prolific. Pkt. 15e; 
pt. 40c; qt. 70ce; % gal. $1.20; gal. $2.15; pk. $4.00. 
BEANS—Dwarf or Bush 
Wax Podded Varieties 
PENCIL POD BLACK WAxX—One of the most popular of the wax 
varieties. A heavy producer of medium size, round pods, clear 
and a waxy white. Used in many instances for pickling; also 
a very desirable snapbean. Pkt. 15e; pt. 45e; qt. S5e; % gal. $1.45; 
gal. $2.65; pk. $4.95; 1% bu. $9.65; bu. $19.00. 
GOLDEN WAX—Harly, vigorous and a bountiful yielder of beauti- 
ful tender pods. The vine grows 1% feet high, holding the pods 
well off the ground. The pods are shapely, flat and large. Pkt. 15e; 
pt. 50e; qt. 90c; % gal. $1.55; gal. $2.85; pk. $5.45; % bu. $10.65; bu. 
$21.00. 
Prices on beans are not postpaid. If delivery by parcel post is 
wanted, sufficient postage should be added. See page 2 for parcel 
post rates. 
BEANS—Pole or Running 
CULTURE—Plant after the soil has become well warmed, using 
poles six to eight feet long, in rows four feet apart each way. 
Put five or six beans around each pole and thin to three plants to 
a pole; or if preferred, plant in hills a foot apart along a trellis 
(of poultry netting). Cultivate frequently. Pole beans do best in 
very rich soil. They do not mature as rapidly as the bush beans, 
but are more productive. Often planted in a corn field. 
WHITE HALF RUNNER (50 Days)—A prolific bearer of 5 inch pods; 
stringless when young. The 20-inch vines are bushy at the bottom 
with short runners. Beans white; fine for winter baking. Pkt. 20e; 
pt. 55e;3; qt. $1.00; % gal. $1.80; gal. $3.80; pk. $6.35; 1% bu. $12.40; 
bu. $24.59. ; 
IMPROVED KENTUCKY WONDER—AIlso known as Old Homestead. 
We believe this is the most extensively planted green-podded pole 
bean, suitable for uSe aS snaps. It is an early, very prolific sort, 
with showy pods which are of most excellent quality. The pods 
are medium light green, very long, often reaching 9 to 10 inches, 
nearly round and crisp, when young. Our stock is fine quality. 
Pkt. 15e; pt. 40c; qt. 75e; % gal. $1.25; gal. $2.25; pk. $4.20; % bu. 
$8.15; bu. $16.00. 
WHITE KENTUCKY WONDER OR BURGERS STRINGLESS — A 
splendid variety, early, prolific, bearing handsome -pods 6 to 7 
inches long. Round, slender, and straight, very tender and fleshy, 
color dark green. Pkt. 15e; pt. 45e; qt. SOc; % gal. $1.35; gal. $2.40; 
pk. $4.50; 1% bu. $8.65; bu. $17.70. 
KENTUCKY WONDER WAX—One of the earliest of the pole wax 
sorts. Pods 8 to 9 inches long, thick, decidedly creasebacked, very 
fleshy, brittle but stringy, attractive and fair quality; color light 
yellow. Pkt. 15e; pt. 50c; qt. 95e; % gal. $1.75; gal. $3.25; pk. $6.25; 
Y% bu. $12.15; bu. $24.00. 
STRIPED CREASE BACK—A good variety for either pole or cornfield, 
bears very large green pods, are excellent shell beans. Pkt. 15e;3 
pt. 40ce; qt. 75e; % gal. $1.30; gal. $2.30; pk. $4.30; 14 bu. $8.15; 
bu. $16.00. 
HORTICULTURAL POLE—The pods are of immense size, striped and 
splashed with brilliant crimson, and the beans, when dry, are 
colored and marked the same way as the pods. Pkt. 15e; pt. 35e;3 
qt. 65e; % gal. $1.20; gal. $2.15; pk. $4.00; 1%4 bu. $7.65; bu. $15.00. 
RED SPECKLED CUTSHORT—An old variety, very popular for 
planting among corn. Vines medium size; snap pods, medium 
green, short, 3 to 3% inches in length, straight flat to oval; fleshy 
and of good quality. Pkt. 15¢; pt. 40ce; qt. 75e; % gal. $1.25; gal. 
$2.25; pk. $4.20; 1% bu. $8.15; bu. $16.00. 
LAZY WIFE—One of the most productive and easiest gathered of 
the pole beans. Green pods, 4 to 5 inches long, and are borne in 
large clusters. Beans white. Very desirable for shelling. Pkt. 15e; 
aa may qt. 75e3; % gal. $1.25; gal. $2.25; pk. $4.20; 1% bu. $8.15; bu. 
ST. LOUIS PERFECTION—One of the finest varieties available today 
for use aS a green snap or dryshell bean in the home or market 
garden. Is early, prolific and bears pods 8 to 9 inches long, nearly 
straight, almost round and brittle. Pkt. 15e; pt. 45e; qt. SOc; % gal. 
$1.35; gal. $2.40; pk. $4.50; 1% bu. $8.65; bu. $17.00. 
