TO BE SATISFIED ORDER FROM LANDRETH 



POSTAGE NOT 

 PAID ON BEANS. 



POLE BEANS— Continued 



Tennessee Wonder 



Golden-Pod Kentucky Wonder, 55 days. Peck. H Peck. Qt. ^ Pt. 



— A light golden or lemon wax pod of the 

 same good qualities of earty matmity, 

 solidity and tenderness as found in the old 

 Green-Pod and, like the old sort, free 

 from strings. Larger. Notice this is a 



golden wax pole bean $2.25 1.25 35 10 



Tennessee Wonder, 55 days. 



— Named by us in 1889, catalogued in 

 1901. Dried seeds large, fiattish and oval, 

 incurved at eye. Color generally gray, 

 but marked with many black irregular 

 stripes. The Department of Agriculture 

 Bulletin 100, page 124, states that the 

 "green pods are the largest and hand- 

 somest of all cultivated Beans, the pods 

 curved, double barreled, tinged with 

 purple and wrinkled and depressed be- 

 tween each of the eight or nine seeds." 

 Something similar to the Kentucky 

 Wonder, but more attractive and more 

 valuable; quite productive 2,50 1.50 



Horticultural Pole, 65 days.— Pods short, 

 broad, striped with red, principally used 

 for shelling like Limas, Does well in Northern latitudes, very early and 

 ornamental 2.00 1.25 



50 10 



35 10 



Trial Grounds.— Two hundred and sixty samples of Beans, thinned out to 150 of each for convenience 

 in estimating an3^ percentages or impurities. All varieties classified as to time of ripening. Pea trials 

 to the left. 



Bush Beans — Average Height of Vine, 15 Inches 



These Mature for Table 30 to 50 Days from Germination, According to Variety. Three Quarts 

 of Seed to 100 Yards of Row. One to One and One-half Bushels to the Acre. 



Sow when the Apple is in bloom, and repeat as frequently as necessary until within fifty days of frost. 

 In field culture sow in drills at three feet apart. In garden culture, when the cultivation is done by hand, 

 the rows may be at 24 inches. The seeds should be sown in such quantity as under ordinary circumstances 

 to warrant one Bean vine to every four inches. If closer than this, their production will be impaired. On 

 .strong soil they do best at a greater distance. Yield about 125 to 150 bushels of green pods p^r acre. 



For Express charges paid by customer, or small seeds Postage paid by us, see inside of cover. 



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