YOUR FALL GARDEN WILL HELP! 
Every true American is anxious to aid his country and the starving people in other parts of the world in any manner possible. It seems 
that our Victory in Europe and the Pacific has added to our Food Problem and for this reason we will note a shortage of canned vege- 
tables on the shelves of our grocer, even though the ration points have been removed. 
In the Fall of the year you can successfully grow many vegetables and occasionally with better results than obtained from your Spring 
planting. 
Thousands of home gardens can help in several ways. It will certainly add to the food supply, requiring no transportation space and 
at the same time help your pocketbook, as well as combat inflation and is certainly most healthful. 
Raise all you can eat and can sufficient to help insure your supply of winter foods. NICHOLSON’S SEEDS will help! 
Inoculate Beans With Nitragin 
Nicholson’s Bush Beans 
We are listing only the early, quick-matur- 
ing sorts. One pound plants 75 to 100 feet of 
row. 
Green Pod Beans 
106—BOUNTIFUL. Requires 48 days. Has long 
pods of a light green color, tender and string- 
ess. 
105—STRINGLESS BLACK VALENTINE. Re- 
quires 49 days to mature. A wanted sort for 
market gardeners and home use. 
101—BURPEE’S STRINGLESS GREEN POD. 
Absolutely stringless. Round pods, matures 
early and is very prolific. 
100—NICHOLSON’S GIANT STRINGLESS. 
Dandy for home and market. 
102—NICHOLSON’S EARLY ROUND POD 
RED VALENTINE. Plants will stand adverse 
weather conditions. 
103—TENNESSEE GREEN POD. Very prolific 
and one of the earliest Beans there is. Pods 
long, flat, bright green. 
107—-TENDERGREEN. Delightfully tender. 
PRICES—On all varieties of Beans listed 
above: Pkt., 10c; 1% Ib., 25c; Ib., 40c; 2 lbs., 75c; 
5 lbs., $1.65, postpaid. Ask for prices in larger 
quantities. 
Wax Beans 
210—NICHOLSON’S IMPROVED GOLDEN 
WAX. Pods are large, slightly flattened, bright 
yellow, brittle, and quite stringless. 
1l1I—PROLIFIC BLACK WAX. An improved 
strain of the old favorite German Black Wax. 
112—PENCIL POD BLACK WAX. Handsome 
sort of the Wax variety. Pods are round. 
PRICES—On all varieties of Beans listed 
above: Pkt., 10c; 1% Ib., 25c; lb., 45c; 2 Ibs., 80c; 
5 lbs., $1.75, postpaid. Ask for prices in larger 
quantities. 
Pole Beans 
125—KENTUCKY WONDER OR OLD HOME- 
STEAD 
123—IDEAL MARKET. 
124—McCASLAN POLE. 
128—STRIPED CREASEBACK. 
127—-WHITE CREASEBACK. 
Pkt., 10c; 14 Ib., 25c; lb., 40c; 2 lbs., 75c; 5 lbs., 
$1.65, postpaid. Please ask for prices in larger 
quantities. 
Table Beets 
One ounce per 100 lineal feet; 5 to 6 pounds 
per acre. 
140—-NICHOLSON’S EARLY WONDER. Sim- 
ilar to the Crosby’s Egyptian, but is claimed to 
be earlier and is very uniform in growth. 
138—CROSBY’S EGYPTIAN. The exterior col- 
or of the root is bright red, and the flesh is 
bright red zoned with a lighter shade. 
136—IMPROVED EARLY BLOOD TURNIP 
BEET. Color deep blood-red; very sweet and 
free from strings. 
137—DETROIT DARK RED. Dark blood-red 
color. 
PRICES—On all varieties of Beets listed 
above: Pkt., 10c; oz., 20c; 1/4 lb., 50c; Ib., $1.60; 
5 lbs., $7.50, postpaid. Please ask for prices in 
larger lots. 
Swiss Chard 
141—SWISS CHARD or SPINACH BEET— 
LUCULLUS. The leaves grow very large and 
make an excellent green for table use. The 
midrib of the leaf may be cooked like aspara- 
gus; you will find this to be a very tasty dish. 
Plant in spring or fall. Pkt., 10c; oz., 20c; 1% lb., 
45c; lb., $1.35; 5 Ibs., $6.25, postpaid. Please 
ask for prices in larger lots. 
Broccoli 
Should be grown and cultivated in the same 
way as cabbage and cauliflower. One ounce 
will produce about 3,000 plants. 
150—EARLY GREEN CALABRESE. Makes a 
fair sized green head of good quality, and 
after this is cut new sprouts develop, which 
make smaller heads for a second crop. Pkt., 
10c; oz., 35c; 14 Ib., $1.00; lb., $3.50; 5 lbs., 
Phil postpaid. Please ask for prices in larger 
ots. 
Brussels Sprouts 
A member of the cabbage family that pro- 
duces small miniature cabbages growing close- 
ly on the stalk. Plant in the same manner as 
cabbage. : 
151—BRUSSELS. SPROUTS. Improved dwarf 
variety. Pkt., 10c; oz., 40c; 1% lb., $1.25, post- 
paid. 
ens 

Cauliflower 
Can be grown in the South as easily as 
cabbage. One ounce of seed will produce about 
2,500 plants. 
194—EARLY SNOWBALL. Produces beautiful 
snow-white heads of finest flavor. Pkt., 20c; 
VY oz., $1.10; oz., $2.00; 1/4 lb., $7.00; lb., $26.00, 
postpaid. 

137—DETROIT DARK RED 

110—IMPROVED GOLDEN WAX 
Celery 
The soil should be well prepared, sow seed 
thinly and cover lightly. Keep the soil well 
moistened after planting. Count on about 
4,000 plants per ounce, or one-fourth pound 
per acre. 
182—GOLDEN SELF-BLANCHING. The plant 
is naturally golden yellow (both stem and 
leaves), but needs to be blanched to make it 
brittle. Pkt., 10¢; oz., 85c; 1% Ib., $2.75; Ib., 
$10.00, postpaid. 
Collards 
Cultivate like cabbage; about 2,000 plants 
from one ounce of seed, 
185—GEORGIA or SOUTHERN. The standard 
variety. Pkt., 5c; oz., 10c; 14 lb., 20c; Ib., 65e; 
5 lbs., $3.25, postpaid. 
186—-CABBAGE COLLARDS. A cross between 
cabbage and collards giving it a cabbage-like 
flavor. Very hardy, withstanding both extreme 
heat and cold. Pkt., 5c; oz., 10c; 14 lb., 20c; Ib., 
65c, postpaid. 

Mangel Beets for Stock Feeding 
Mangels or Stock Beets are a splendid feed for cattle and hogs. Increases the milk yield 
from cows. Puts animals in better physical condition. Yield larger crops than turnips and are of 
greater feeding value. The best food in existence for all kinds of livestock. Over 40 tons have 
been grown on a single acre, and in feeding value this is equal to 130 bushels of corn. 
CULTURE. Much depends on good culture, so prepare your land thoroughly and plow 
deeply. Sow and give thorough cultivation. After the first cultivation, thin out, so as to stand 
six inches apart in the row, and cultivate like corn. If late in planting, soak the seeds for 24 
hours before planting. Sow 4 to 5 pounds to the acre in rows 214 feet apart. 
145—NICHOLSON’S MAMMOTH LONG RED. 
These Beets, on good soil, sometimes grow 18 
inches long. Dark leaves; flesh white with 
veined rings of rose-pink. . 
146—NICHOLSON’S GIANT FEEDING HALF 
SUGAR. The roots average i0 to 12 inches, and 
the outline is that of a broad thick wedge. 
148—-KLEIN WANZLEBEN (Sugar Beet). Roots 
long with thick shoulder; tapered; skitn grey- 
white; flesh solid white. One of the best 
varieties for stock feeding. Planted in many 
sections by dairymen. 
PRICES—On all varieties of Mangels and 
Sugar Beet listed above. Pkt., 10c; oz., 15e: % 
Ib., 35c; Ib., $1.00; 5 lbs., $4.50, postpaid. Please 
ask for price in larger lots. 
A I | 

ROBERT NICHOLSON SEED CO. 
—_j3— 
DALLAS, TEXAS 
