VEGETABLE 
“SEEDS 
Canegully selected 


BEANS 
1, Bountiful 2. Stringless Green Pod 
3. Tendergreen 4, Giant Stringless Green 
Pod 5. Kentucky Wonder 6. Kentucky 
Wonder Wax 7. Golden Wax, Improved. 

ASPARAGUS 
A hardy perennial; will bear over 
20-year period if properly cared for. 
We recommend purchase of ASPARA- 
GUS ROOTS rather than seeds, as 
roots produce crop 2 years earlier. 
If seed ts used, sow thinly in drills 
in early Spring. Cover to Ye" depth. 
Thin plants to 6 inches apart and 
when a year old transplant to heavily 
enriched beds. 1 oz. sows 60' of drill. 
Mary Washington (fr)—Thick tall green 
spears with purple tops. Highly rust 
resistant. Rapid growing. Tender. 
BEANS 
Green Podded, Dwarf or Bush 
Sow in rows 2%4' to 3%’ apart, Plant 
seed 1¥4" to 2” deep and 3 to 4g” 
apart. Do not plant until danger of 
frost 1s past. Press soil around seeds. 
Thin young plants to about 6” 
apart. Keep cultivated until plants 
blossom. (DO NOT CULTIVATE 
when blossoms are at prime or when 
plants are wet with dew. Keep vines 
picked to insure a longer bearing 
period.) Plant every two weeks. 
Black Valentine Stringless (fr)—Hardy, 
early maturing, very productive. Pods 
dark green, 6-6% in. long, brittle, 
smooth, stringless. Seeds black. 49 days. 
Bountiful (fr)—An early, heavy-yielding 
variety. The leading flat podded bean 
for market and home use. Flat, light- 
green, stringless, but slightly fibrous 
pods of finest quality. 47 days. 
Stringless Green Pod (fr)—Large, sturdy 
plants. Meaty round pods, brittle and 
strictly stringless. Medium green pods, 
oval, yellowish-brown seed. 54 days. 
Giant Stringless Green Pod—5%” pods 
almost round, Meaty, stringless and 
brittle. Medium Green. 53 days. 
Plentiful—Productive, early. Flat, medi- 
um green pods, 6 to 7-in. long, strictly 
stringless. Choicest quality. All-Ameri- 
ca Bronze Medal 1939. 51 days. 
Tendergreen (fr)—Large, erect plants. 
Abundant, round, dark-green pods, 
strictly stringless and fleshy. 54 days. 
Wax Podded, Dwarf or Bush 
Improved Golden Wax (fr)—Small erect 
plants, moderately productive. Straight, 
thick, flat pods, creamy yellow and 
stringless. 51 days. 
Pencil Pod Black Wax (fr)—Stocky, large, 
strongly productive plants. Pods, golden 
yellow, tender, stringless. 55 days. 


Vegetables for 
Freezing 
The symbols (fr) following the variety 
names indicates vegetables suitable 
for home freezing. 
Sure Crop Stringless—Handsome, rich 
yellow pods. Sturdy, brittle. 6-62 in. 
long. Strictly stringless. 53 days. 
Beans, Pole 
In warm ground, set poles 4 to 8 
long, slanting a bit to the north in 
rows ¢ apart. (Extending north and 
south the poles will be 3’ apart in the 
row.) Plant 5 to 8 beans about 1” 
deep around each pole. When growth 
is sufficient thin to four plants. 
Caution: To avoid spreading plant 
diseases, do not cultivate or pick when 
plants are wet. 
London Horticultural or Cranberry— 
Hardy, good climber, 5” pods flat-oval, 
dark green when young, splashed with 
red. Slightly curved, stringless, little 
fiber and very fleshy. 70 days. 
Kentucky Wonder (fr)—Strong climber 
long-bearing. 
Kentucky Wonder Wax (fr)—Vigorous, 
good climbing plants, waxy-yellow pods, 
flat and nearly stringless. 68 days. 
Lima, Dwarf or Bush 
Plant in dry, warm ground. Make 
rows 2’ apart and drop beans 6” apart 
in row. Cover with 1” of soil, Can 
also be planted in hills, 3’ apart one 
way and 2' apart the other way. Use 
410 6 beans per hill. 
Burpee’s Improved Bush (fr)—Best of 
flat seeded bush limas. Pods contain 
four or five large beans of excellent 
quality. 75 days. 
Fordhook Bush. (fr}—Straight pods with. 
plump, large beans, excellent quality. 
Henderson’s Bush—Know as Baby Lima. 
or Butter Bean. Plant small, early and. 
bushy. Very productive. 65 days, 
Continued on Page 8 
Geauns 
15¢ PER PACKET 
ALL OTHER VEGETABLE SEEDS 10¢ 
EXCEPT WHERE OTHERWISE NOTED 

It’s just plain horse 
sense to buy gar- 
den seed from the 
seedsman—and 
nowhere else! 


OLD GARDENER SAYS.... 
One excuse for growing your own vege- 
tables (beside the fact that they cost you 
less) is that you can never buy them as 
good as you can pick them from your own 
garden. 
Don’t be conservative when it comes to 
using your own produce. It costs you so 
little and you get so much that it will pay 
you to try some interesting combinations. 
A special favorite with many is a mixture 
of half Swiss Chard and half New Zealand 
Somehow this tones down the 
“earthy” taste that some object to in chard. 
Spinach. 
And have you tried lettuce cooked with 
young peas? A wonderful combination. 
Young green onion tops with peas is an- 
other. Speaking of green onions, try cook- 
ing them in bunches like asparagus and 
serving with Hollandaise sauce. A real 
treat for epicures! 
And, if you have a freezer, try freezing 
clean washed mint for winter use in fresh 
mint sauce. Remove flower buds and 
course stems before freezing. 
Caen ener ee errr eeeeeereeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee eee 
T 

