10 
WILL’S PIONEER SEEDHOUSE, GREENHOUSE AND NURSERY 
Early Flowering Spencer Sweet Peas 
Will’s 
Sweet Peas 
SWEET PEA 
COLLECTION 
One regular packet of 
each of the 14 varieties of 
Sweet Peas listed on next 
page. If purchased sepa¬ 
rately would cost $1.40. 
Will sow 80 feet of row. 
95c 
Choice Mixed Sweet Peas 
EARLY FLOWERING SPENCER MIXTURE. These 
bloom two weeks before the standard Spencer varieties, 
but ■with the same large, waved flowers. They have 
replaced the standard Spencers in greenhouse planting 
and, though they do not grow quite as tall, their earli¬ 
ness and long season of bloom make them invaluable 
in outdoor planting, particularly in the short seasoned 
north. Pkt., 10c; oz., 30c; A lb., 90c; lb., $1.65; 
1 lb., $3.00. 
RUFFLED SPENCER MIXED SWEET PEAS. The newest 
and finest in Sweet Peas with gigantic blooms so ruffled 
and frilled that they appear almost double; a treat for 
all lovers of Sweet Peas. Pkt., 15c; oz., 50c; M lb., 
$1.80; M lb., $3.25; 1 lb., $6.00. 
WILL’S IMPERIAL MIXED SWEET PEAS. A blend of all 
the best Spencer Strains and the old, but ever popular 
Grancfiflora types. Every color of the rainbow in un¬ 
limited variety is represented in every possible combina¬ 
tion; striped, blotched, mottled, and margined. Pkt., 5c; 
oz., 10c; r A lb., 35c; % lb., 60c; 1 lb., $1.00. 
WILL’S GIANT SPENCER MIXED SWEET PEAS. A 
blend in proper proportions oi many splendid varieties 
of the large waved Spencer or orchid-flowered type 
throughout the whole range of color. Not in bloom as 
early as the Early Flowering, this mixture will give 
stronger growth to vine and will bloom later. This 
mixture has involved careful selection and we highly 
recommend it. Pkt., 10c; oz., 20c; *4 lb., 55c; 34 lb., 
$1.00; 1 lb., $1.80. 
Treat Sweet Peas with 
INOCULATEJHls'sEED ! 
NITRAGIN 
Z- 
NITRAGIN 
Garden Size 25^, Postpaid 
See Page 55 
Your sweet pea collection that we got from you last year was the 
best we have ever had. Took everything at the county fair, and 
everybody, including the judge, wanted to know where we got the 
seed. 
FLINT BROTHERS, G. M. Flint, Elbow Lake, Minn. 
A Few Suggestions 
The Sweet Pea plant or vine succeeds best in 
cool, moist, yet well drained soil. To secure the 
longest possible season of bloom the seed must 
be planted early. The best mode of planting is 
the trench method. The trench is dug two feet 
deep and two feet wide, and filled nearly to the 
surface of the ground with a mixture of well 
rotted manure and rich soil, with a six-inch 
layer of soil at the top. The seed should be 
sown, two inches deep, at the rate of one ounce 
to twenty feet. During dry weather the ground 
should be thoroughly soaked once or twice each 
week. A light spraying of the vines in the eve¬ 
ning during hot weather will be found beneficial, 
and the earth should at all times be kept loose 
about the plants to a depth of two inches. 
Sweet Peas should be cut early in the morning 
and the more closely the flowers are kept cut off 
the longer will be the period of bloom. Remem¬ 
ber, the vines quickly wither if allowed to pro¬ 
duce any great amount of seed. Spray thoroughly 
and often to prevent infection by aphis. 
Will’s Giant Spencer Sweet Peas 
