4 
THE NEBRASKA SEED CO.. OMAHA, NEBRASKA 
INOCULATE ALL LEGUMES 
L. WITH 
NITRAGIN 
v The Origin*! legume Inoculator ^ 
BEANS 
DWARF. BUSH OR SNAP 
INOCULATE ALL LEGUMES 
|l with a 
NITRAGIN 
r The Original legume Inoculato*^^ 
Kentucky Wonder 
Wax Podded Varieties (Continued) 
PENCIL POD BLACK WAX. Plant large, vigorous, 
upright. Pods 5 to 6 inches long, round, curved, very 
meaty, stringless and of excellent flavor. Ready for 
picking in 53 days. 
ROUND-POD KIDNEY WAX. An excellent dwarf 
bean of spreading habit which can be picked about 54 
days from sowing. The curved pods are 5 to 6 inches 
long, light yellow, and entirely stringless. Recom¬ 
mended for home canning and is a good variety for shell¬ 
ing when dried. The beans are white with a purplish 
eye. 
UNRIVALLED WAX. Immensely productive, very 
early. Pods 6 to 5% inches long, rather narrow, either 
perfectly straight or slightly curved, somewhat flattened 
but fleshy. The pods show their clear yellow color at 
an early stage and while having a trace of string are 
quite fiberless. Plant large, vigorous and nearly disease 
resistant; seed distinctly small, flat, kidney-shaped, 
ochre-brown in color. Ready for picking in 52 days. 
Pole or Running Beans 
Culture—These are more tender and require more 
care in culture than the bush beans and should be 
planted two weeks later. Plant in hills from three to 
four feet apart; plant five or six beans in a hill, leaving 
a space in the center for the pole. 
KENTUCKY WONDER. Vines vigorous, climbing 
well and very productive, bearing its pods in large 
clusters; blossoms white; pods green. Stringless, 8 to 9 
inches long; nearly round when young and very crisp, 
although at maturity they become irregular and spongy. 
Ready to pick in 65 days. The dry beans are long, oval, 
dun-colored. Best of all pole beans. 
We also carry Cutshort or Corn Hill, Scarlet Runner, 
White Dutch Case Knife, Lazy Wife, White Creaseback, 
Striped Creaseback, Kentucky Wonder Wax, Missouri 
Wonder, 
Lima Beans 
BURPEE’S BUSH. Plants are perfect bush type. 
Beans broad, buttery, and deliciously flavored, borne 
10 to 14 days earlier than tall varieties of equal qual¬ 
ity. Remarkably prolific for the bush type. 77 days. 
FORDHOOK BUSH. Plants are strongly erect, bear¬ 
ing large clusters of pods well above the ground, aver¬ 
aging 4% inches long and containing 4 or more fat, 
thin-skinned beans, very tender and of fine quality. 75 
days. 
HENDERSON’S BUSH. 65 days. An early and 
prolific bearer of small beans. Thrives in ordinary soil 
and is an excellent variety for home gardeners who have 
difficulty growing the larger limas. Crop reliable, very 
productive, compact form, free from mildew. One of 
the first lima beans to mature. 
DREER’S. The true bush form of the chubby 
Dreer’s or Potato Lima. The pods are heavy and thick. 
It is quite productive and of excellent quality. 80 days. 
NEW WONDER BUSH LIMA. Earlier and more 
prolific than Burpee’s. The plants are large, compact 
and very prolific. The pods are green, uniform and 
large, and excellent quality. 
KING OF THE GARDEN POLE. A standard large 
podded variety bearing its hugs pods in pairs in great 
profusion. Do not let more than two plants grow in 
one hill. This will bring them into bearing early. 88 
days. 
RED SPECKLED CUT SHORT OR CORN HILL. A 
fine variety for planting with corn, 5% to 6 feet tall; 
pods 4 inches long, straight, thick, crisp when young. 
All wax and green podded beans: Pkt. 5c; 
V* lb. 10c; Vi lb. 15c; 1 lb. 25c. 
Lima beans: V 4 lb. 15c; Vi lb. 25c; 1 lb. 50c. 
Burpee’s Bush Lima 
