HHHHB H 
I=*FaE,IM[ ILJIV1 SE,E,DS 
BEANS — Continued. 
bloom is likely to cause the blossoms to blast and 
so cut off the crop. The cultivation of beans 
should always be very shallow. 
LARGE WHITE MARROW. — The standard 
large white Bean commonly sold in market. Beans 
are good green or dry, or vigorous growth and 
productive. Pk., $2.50; bu., $9.50. 
WHITE NAVY. — Valuable chiefly as a field 
bean and considered by many the best baking va- 
riety. Pk., $2.50; bu., $9.50. 
DWARF HORTICULTURAL, or Bush Cran- 
berry. — Very productive and compact in growth. 
Pods medium length, broad, thick, curved and 
splashed with red. Very desirable as a green 
shelled bean, maturing early. Seed large, oval, 
plump and splashed with bright red. Pk., $3.00; 
bu., $11.50. 
ROYAL DWARF, or WHITE KIDNEY. — Excel- 
lent cooked with sweet corn, making “succotash." 
Among the best as a winter bean. Pk., $2.75; 
bu., $10.50. 
RED KIDNEY. — Similar to White Kidney, ex- 
cept being of a dark pink color. Pk., $2.50; 
bu., $9.50. 
Wax Beans 
(Crop Failed) 
CURRIE’S RUST-PROOP WAX. — An excellent 
Wax Bean in every respect. Rust proof, tender, 
thick, flat pods of very good quality. Very little 
string in early stages, developing a little when 
nearing maturity. Fit for table use 47 days from 
planting. Pk., $4.50. 
GOLDEN WAX. — The old standard wax sort. 
Productive and early with yellow semi-round pods 
of good quality, ready to pick 49 days from plant- 
ing. Pk., $4.00. 
GERMAN 
BLACK WAX 
(Black Seed). — 
Very early, round 
yellow pods, a 
well known 
slandm-ri sort.' 
Pk., $4.00. 
WARDWELL’S 
WAX. — One of 
the most desira- 
ble of the wax 
beans. Matures a 
little later than 
the Golden Wax; 
produces a large 
yield of long, 
nearly straight, 
broad, light gol- 
den yellow, very 
handsome pods. 
The very attrac- 
t i v e appearance 
of this variety 
makes it extreme- 
ly saleable and 
one of the most 
profitable for the 
market, b e s ides 
one of the best 
for home garden. 
Pk., $4.50. 
Wardwell’s Wax. 
Pole Beans 
Pole Beans are even more sensitive to cold and wet than the Dwarf 
varieties, and should be sown two weeks later. After settled warm 
weather, set poles four to eight feet long in rows four feet apart and 
extending north and south, the poles being three feet apart in the row. 
Around each stake plant five to eight beans two inches deep. 
One quart will make about 100 hills. 
KENTUCKY WONDER OR OLD HOMESTEAD. — Pods green, nine 
inches or more long, nearly round, fleshy, stringless, and of excellent 
flavor. Dry beans, long, oval, dun-colored. It is an early 
and most prolific variety. Pk., $2.00; bu., $7.50. 
WHITE SEEDED KENTUCKY WONDER, or ST. LOUIS 
PERFECTION. — Similar to the above except that the seed 
is white and pods not quite so large. It is desirable for 
shelling when green, also valuable as a dry bean for Winter 
use. Known also as Berger’s Stringless Green Pod. Pk., 
$2.35; bu., $8.25. 
CREASEBACK. — Early pods, long, round, green, tender 
and stringless”, white beans. Pk., $2.25; bu., $8.00. 
HORTICULTURAL POLE, OCTOBER or SPECKLED 
CRANBERRY. — A well known variety with beans of high 
7 
Stringless Green Pod. 
