56 Vegetable Seeds 
Beans 
TO HA VE PLENTY OF BEANS THEOUGHOUT THE SUMMEE —A fine idea is to plant both early and 
late varieties every two weeks from early Spring through the Summer. As most beans are ready to eat in from 45 
to 50 days, keep planting just as long as there is that much time left before frost. This will give you plenty of the 
luscious health-giving beans for your table and for canning from early Summer to late Fall. 
CULTUEE— Make your first planting as soon as 
the soil is warm and danger of frost is past. Plant 
in rows 2 feet apart, dropping the seed 3 to 4 inches 
apart and 2 inches deep. Cultivate thoroughly but 
not when the vines are wet. 
QUANTITY OF SEED —One pound of beans 
(except Limas) should plant a 100 foot row, 90 pounds 
will be required for an acre of ground. Bush Lima beans 
—one pound will plant 75 hills and 40 pounds will 
plant an acre. 
Burpee’s Strin^ess 
Tendergreen 
(Round 
pod.) If 
you want 
a wonder¬ 
fully de¬ 
licious early snap Bean, plant 
Tendergreen. It is long, 
round, tender, meaty, light 
green and the finest flavor. 
Our customers friends tell us 
it is the best bean they ever 
ate. It matures early and the 
vines are exceptionally strong 
and vigorous. Pkt. 5c; M lb* 
15c;lb.40c;31bs.f 1.00. 
3510 Pull Measure 
(Round Pod). One of the best 
round podded varieties. 
Yields large quantities (even 
more than Tendergreen) of 
fine-grained, large, dark green 
tender pods. Very good table 
quality. Pkt. 5c; ‘^Ib. 15c; 
lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
Dwarf Green Pod Beans 
3507 Burpee’s Slringless 
Dwarf Wax Pod Beans 
35S1 Sure Crop Wax 
best black seeded varieties as it is early,has attractive 
tender pods to 6J4 inches long, nearly straight and 
is a “sure cropper.” Pkt. 5c; %lb. ISc; lb. 35c; 3 lbs. 
90c. 
3525 Unrivalled Wax fSl SkSy 
bean of great value and well named. Long, slim al¬ 
most transparent, nearly round, only slightly flattened, 
quite straight, a little curved at tip, very tender. 
Pkt. 5c; *4 lb. 15c; lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3526 Wardwell's S 
finest looking, largest and best quality pods imaginable. 
Long, straight, broad and golden yellow, fleshy but 
brittle and fine-grained. Delicious flavor and tender. 
Pkt. 5c; V 4 lb. 12c; lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3530 Stringless White Wax 
has long been a favorite because of the handsome 
appearance of the pods. This new strain has much better 
eating quality, being free from fibre or stringiness. 
Pkt. 5c; «4 ib. 15c; lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3522 \^ebber or 
Cracker Jack Wax 
(Flat Pod). Broad, flat, 
golden yellow, gracefully curv¬ 
ed. In our experience, Webber 
is invariably ready to pick be¬ 
fore any other wax bean and 
will yield more than any other 
except Sure Crop Wax. It is 
very vigorous, healthy and 
wonderfully productive. Pkt. 
5c; '4 lb. 15c; lb. 40c. 
3523 Improved 
l__(Flat Pod). Pods 
vj OIQ e n perfectly straight, 
very broad, flat, but thick 
through, fleshy and stringless. 
An early abundant cropper. It 
is a greatly improved strain of 
the old style Golden Wax. It 
will pay you to plant this strain 
of (Golden Wax. Pkt. 5c; (4 lb. 
12c; lb. 35c; 3 lbs. 90c. 
The most pop¬ 
ular of the round podded varieties. Early, very pro¬ 
ductive—pods tender, fleshy and free from strings. 
Ready in 50 days. Pkt. 5c; >4 Jb. 12c; lb. 35c. 
3509 Giant Stringless SS 
less, but pods are a trifle longer, straighter, and a shade 
lighter green. Exceedingly productive. Pkt. 5c; *4 
lb. 12c; lb. 35c; 3 lb. 90c. 
3515 Early Red Valentine 
and dependable early variety. Pods are round, fleshy, 
of medium green color and average 4H to 5 inches 
long. Pkt. 5c; ^ lb. 12c; lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
Sure Crop 
Was Beans 
3527 Stringless Refugee Wax K)'! 
Tender enough to melt in your mouth and absolutely 
stringless. Better in all ways than the old Refugee 
Wax. Early and productive. Round pods 5 inches 
long, very fleshy and curved. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 15c; 
lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3528 Pencil Pod Black Wax k'dr^b'i 
best of the black-seeded wax varieties. Early. Podslarge, 
round, 6}^ to 7 inches long, straight and entirely string¬ 
less. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 15c; lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3529 Round Pod Kidney Wax 
(Round Pod). Also called Brittle Wax. An excellent 
variety that deserves much attention. Produces hand¬ 
some pods 5 to 6 inches long, bright, rich yellow in 
color and absolutely stringless.- For table use this 
variety is hard to equal, its tender fleshy, yet brittle 
pods are of the finest quality and are freely produced. 
Seeds are white with brownish-black eye. Pkt. 5c; 54 
lb. 15c; lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
Webber 
INOCULATE ALL LEGUMES 
. WITH 
NITRAGIN 
r The Oriqirtel lequme InocuUtor 
Inoculate 
Your Beans 
with 
Nitragin 59 
Field or Baking Beans 
3552 Robust for baking. Also 
called “1000 to 1” Field Bean. The dry beans are the 
same shape and color as the popular Boston Pea Bean, 
but it has been proven by Experimental Stations that 
the New Robust out-yields all other white beans. 
Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. lOc; lb. 30c; 3 lbs. 75c. 
3555 White Marrow te'SCri 
for baking. Vigorous vines that are very productive 
of the highest quality beans. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. lOc; 
lb. 30c; 3 lbs. 75c. 
3553 White Kidney J'r.,r'’'pro’d’uS 
large upright plants, bearing plenty of pods, which 
are dark green and about 6 inches long. Seed large, 
white, kidney-shaped and of excellent quality. Use 
as green, shelled or dry. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. lOc; lb. 
30c; 3 lbs. 75c. 
3554 D..J Quite like White Kidney 
KSQ IXldnCy except that the beans 
are deep red in color. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. lOc; lb. 30c; 
3 lbs. 75c. 
Full Measure 
Very early, vigorous. 
3508 Early 
Bountiful dSjBest 
flat-podded stringless va¬ 
riety. Pods 6 H to 7 inches 
long,stout, flatand nearly 
stringless. Color light green, 
hardy, productive. Fine quahty. Pkt. 5c; 54 Ib^ 
15c; lb, 45c; 3 lbs. $1.10. 
3514 Refugee Stringless iSr^de^sDabd 
stringless strain of the popular Refugee. Pods round, 
light green, stringless and of high quality. Pkt. 5c; 
54 lb. 12c; lb. 35c; 3 lbs. 90c. 
3513 Ruby Dwarf Horticultural ^fiety 
for green shell beans, or can be used early as a green 
pod snap bean. Plants are productive and mature pods 
are broad five inches or more long, color yellow splashed 
with red. They are about equal to lamas in quality. 
Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 15c; lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
Lima Beans 
Two Fine Pole Limas 
A favorite with 
gardeners because 
of the great size of pods, which contain 4 to 5 very 
large fine quality green beans. The vines produce con¬ 
tinually until killed by fro.st. An improved strain of 
Large White Lima. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 15c; lb. 40c; 
3 lbs. $1.00. 
The earliest of the 
Pole Limas, vigorous 
and remarkably productive of large curved pods 
about 5 inches long. The beans are very easy to shell 
and of excellent quality. Pkt. 5c; 541b. 12c; lb. 
35c; 3 lbs. OOc. __ 
Dwarf or Bush Lima 
3536 Klnu, o*' Burpee’s Improved 
rsew Wonaer Bush Lima. The recog¬ 
nized standard of Bush Lima Bean quality. Large ro¬ 
bust, compact, plants; productive. Pods uniformly 
large, produced in clusters and maturing in midseason. 
Large flat beans of superior quality. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 
15c; lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3537 The plant is ideal for pro- 
i OianOOK ductiveness and disease re¬ 
sistance, bearing the large pods in clusters of 4 to 6 
well up above the ground. The pods and beans are of 
the Potato Lima type, large, thick and handsome. 
Early, being ready to eat in 75 to 80 days yet produc¬ 
tive over a long period. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 15c; lb. 
40c; .3 lbs. $1.00. 
3538 Henderson’s Early Tiilim^Beanf 
—by planting it gardeners in even the northern¬ 
most States can enjoy Limas from their own 
gardens. Pods are small but borne so plentifully that 
the yield is large. Beans of excellent flavor. Pkt. 5c; 
54 lb. 12c; lb. 35c; 3 lbs. 90c. 
3546 King of the Garden 
3547 Siebert’s Early 
3501 Asparagus, Mary 
Washington 
This is the best of the 
newly developed Rust 
Proof varieties, and is 
recommended by the 
U. S. Dept, of Agri- 
cultiu'e. It is a selection 
from Martha Washing¬ 
ton and produces large 
straight tender green 
stalks of excellent quality. 
SEED. Asparagus is not 
hard to grow. Start seed 
in early spring, covering 
an inch deep. Cultivate 
well during the summer, 
transplanting the roots to 
their permanent bed the 
following spring. One 
ounce should sow a 60 ft. 
row and produce 200 to 
300 plants. Pkt. lOc; 
Oz. 15c; 54 lb. 30c; 
lb. 75c. 
The Templin-Bradley Co., Nationwide Seedsmen and Nurserymen, Cleveland, Ohio 
