OEE 
i ntl 
ee N ENEN AEE A NAE E E S S 
NOVEMBER 28, 1874. J 
THE 
GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE 
681 
—_ 
prcne ns IN NEW 
duded from 
not Coady known by this 
tame Ty Peg but age tha. knows 
hey are 
the poorest caer has pate, 
Beans, and Am 
== 
Foreign Correspondence, 
T ENGLAND (cost. 
French Beans, = "These are 
650).— 
them 
Snap Beans, very — 
n the laird’s garden, 
same of Ireland, but in England 
grown by the working 
| 
name, nor by the | 
" iinan 
classes, 
W 
they are called S String Beans, 
a after the ey are too old for String Hen and 
are hard ripe, when we 
Shell Beans. market 
Ist they are in 
ey tern 
ll people will ge eat Riva. Beans a they get 
Be 5 
the green-pod state 
e also use th 
cae 
1ell Be 
but we 
a them 
eans, 
‘garde en veg zetable 
i rticularly with Southerh 
Sones, Fa og Fy Ne orth in great gia 
The varieties we grew this qa were Early Va ee aes 
Early Yellow Refugee, Newington d ; 
gra are almost forgotten, an 
—These are aim T: > 
WS. 
Sy et be foun d in a few gardens, and ven then 
in limited qi 
Pole Sank s —The Limas are 
on account of the way in which they are 
‘hese Beans, ‘oom ag i venden, are not ani uli 
nearly a fortnight after French Beans—no! na 
gether on noom of ny is am seedlings from 
but mainly rotting eel fen 
the yg: be cold, Opening the 
hg to 
ng 
poa i 
germinating 
Té 
% P — ; >: FERNS, E 
136.— CARIPUNA INDIANS WITH TAPIR, ORCHIDS, BROMELIADS, FERNS, 
FIG. 
| drills for French Bean seed in Laan y Sol- a 
A 
| 3 fet apart each iT, so thal it may be 8 feet 
