Vegetable Seeds 
BEANS 
Bohnen Haricots Habas o Frijoles Favas 
One pkt. plants 30 ft. of row; 1 1b., 100 ft. 
Beans should not be planted until the weather ts settled and the ground is 
warm. Earlier plantings are generally a waste of time and seed. Space the rows 
114 to 2 feet apart, and the seed 2 inches apart and 1 inch deep. Pole Beans are 
planted in hills 3 feet apart, 4 to 6 Beans in a hill. Keep them hoed, and dust 
with rotenone to ward off the Mexican Bean beetle. Make several sowings so 
as to supply your table all season. Pick the Beans frequently. 
GREEN-PODDED BUSH BEANS 
Black Valentine (Stringless). 50 days. Round, dark green pods, shaped 
like a pencil, with black seeds. Thick, meaty, and of good flavor. 
Plant very hardy and a good producer. 
Bountiful. 47 days. Long, flat, light green pods of delicious flavor. It 
is well named, for the plant is a bountiful producer early in the sea- 
son. We cannot recommend this too highly for both home and 
market gardens. 
Burpee’s Stringless. 50 days. Handsome pods, nearly round, slightly 
curved at tip, 51% inches long, borne prolifically on healthy plants. 
Dependable under all soil and climate conditions. 
Dwarf Horticultural or Cranberry. 54 days. May be used as a snap 
Bean when young or as a shell Bean. Pods are Jong, semi-round, 
light green becoming splashed with carmine at maturity. Popular 
in New England. 
French’s Horticultural. 68 days. Pods longer than those of Dwarf 
Horticultural, splashed with crimson. Compact in growth, with a 
tendency to throw short runners. Fine for green shell Beans. 
Bountiful Beans 
Burpee’s Stringless Green-Pod 
Top-Notch Golden Wax Beans 
