Prettier Than Single Colors 
Mixed Sweet Peas Are 
Woodgro Selected Sweet Peas 
Summer-flowering Spencer Varieties 
Culture. —It is a well-known fact that, in 
order to have largest blooms of Sweet Peas, 
seed must be planted early, so as to make the 
greatest root-development during early 
spring; many professional gardeners sow in 
pots and transplant in April, or sow the 
previous fall. 
Sow seed as soon as the ground can he worked 
in the spring. Dig a trench about a foot wide 
and deep, and fill in with 6 inches of well- 
rotted stable manure; tread down firmly and 
replace the good garden soil. Draw a single 
straight line in the middle of the prepared 
surface, about flinch deep; sow seed at even 
distances of about 3 inches and cover. When 
the plants grow about 3 to 4 inches high, 
thin out, leaving the plants 6 inches from 
each other. Experts who raise for exhibition 
thin out to one foot. 
The Sweet Pea is a moisture-loving plant, 
and by the month of May the plants will 
require water. In order that the water may 
be retained by the soil and get to the roots, 
as well as keep them cool, it is advisable to use 
a mulch of Woodgro Cow-Manure and soak 
well with hose each or every other day, as 
needed. 
Woodgro Selection of the Finest 
Named Spencer Sweet Peas 
From an almost unlimited and much- 
confusing list of Spencer Sweet Peas now on 
the market, we have selected what we know 
to be the most improved and finest today in 
each color. When you select from this list 
you know you have the best. All varieties 
are robust and most vigorous growers, the 
flowers are beautifully waved and are carried 
in three’s, four’s, and even five’s on long, 
strong stems. 
Asta Ohn. Beautiful clear lavender. Pkt. 
10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Brilliant. Cherry-cerise; four to five flowers 
on long stems. Pkt. 10 cts.: oz. 35 cts. 
Charity. Brilliant carmine. Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 35 cts. 
Cherub. Creamy white, beautifully edged 
with rose. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Constance Hinton. Large, pure white, 
beautifully waved. (Black seed.) Pkt. 
10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Dobbie’s Cream. Fine; large; pale prim¬ 
rose-yellow. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Doris. Rich carmine-pink, sunproof. Beau¬ 
tiful. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Hawlmark Lavender. Pure lavender self; 
very large. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Hawlmark Pink. Rich, bright rose-pink, 
deeply flushed and shaded salmon. Pkt. 
10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Hebe. Bright pink—a deeper shade than 
Hercules and the largest of all pinks. Pkt. 
10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Hercules. Clear pink, of extraordinary size 
and substance. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Illuminator. Salmon-orange, overlaid with 
cerise-pink. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
King White. Pure white; beautifully 
waved. (White seed.) Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 
35 cts. 
Lavender Belle. A fine pure lavender self, 
without any suggestion of rose or blue. 
Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Mary Pickford. Dainty cream-pink, suf¬ 
fused with salmon. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
M rs. Cuthbertson. Standards clear rose- 
pink; wings pure white. Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 35 cts. 
Picture. Flesh-pink, with rosy flush beauti¬ 
fully suffused and shaded with creamy 
apricot. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Royal Purple. A fine, deep, royal purple. 
Distinct. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Royal Scot. Bright, glowing scarlet. Very 
fine. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Warrior. Rich chocolate-maroon. Pkt. 
10 cts.; oz. 35 cts. 
Wedgwood. A lovely blue. Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 35 cts. 
Mixture of Giant Spencer Sweet Peas 
Carefully balanced, it contains practically 
every color and shade appearing in Sweet 
Peas. In it are included not only the varieties 
in our list, but also a good many new hybrids, 
as yet unnamed, all of them producing three 
to four beautifully waved flowers of largest 
size to a stem. It is the richest, best-balanced, 
and most up-to-date mixture of Sweet Peas 
that can be made. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz.-25 cts.; 
Mlb. 75 cts.; Hlb. SI.35; lb. $2. 
Early-flowering Spencer Sweet Peas 
(Winter-Blooming) 
If sown in August and September under 
glass, they will bloom from November until 
late in the spring. If sown outdoors they 
will bloom at least three weeks earlier than 
the summer-flowering type, and because of 
their extreme earliness, a row of these should 
be in every garden. 
Aviator. Dazzling crimson-scarlet. Pkt. 
15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Canary Bird. Primrose self. Pkt. 15 cts.; 
oz. 75 cts. 
Giant Early Rose. Improved Zvolanek’s 
Rose. Half again as large. Pkt. 15 cts.; 
oz. 75 cts. 
Glitters. Bright, fiery orange standard; 
wings deep orange. Pkt. 15 cts.; oz. 
75 cts. 
Lavender Harmony. Clear lavender. Pkt. 
15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
M rs. Kerr. Salmon-pink, overlaid and 
suffused orange. Pkt. 15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Orange Beauty. Glowing orange-scarlet. 
Pkt. 15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Silver Blue. Delicate lavender-blue. Pkt. 
15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Sunkist. Picotee edged on cream. Pkt. 
15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Superior Pink. Rose-pink with salmon; 
16 to 18-inch stems. Pkt. 15 cts.; oz. 
75 cts. 
True Blue. A real true violet-blue. Pkt. 
15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
White Harmony. Pure glistening white. 
Germinates readily. Black seeded. Pkt. 
15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Zvolanek’s Rose. True rose-color. Pkt. 
15 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Mixture of Early-blooming Spencer 
Sweet Peas. A carefully balanced blend 
made from above varieties. Pkt. 15 cts.; 
oz. 50 cts.; 341b- $1-50. 
Speciosa. A quick-growing annual, 6 to 
10 . feet high, with rough, ornamental 
foliage and long-stemmed, brilliant scarlet- 
orange flowers, resembling in some ways 
enormous single French marigolds or single 
dahlias. Pkt. 15 cts. 
Torenia 
Fournieri grandiflora. Flowers velvety 
violet-blue. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Virginian Stock • Malcomia 
Mixed. A pretty, slender annual with grace¬ 
ful sprays of small, brightly colored flowers. 
A good edging plant. Pkt. 10 cts. 
THOMAS WOOD & SONS, Inc., Montclair, N. J. 
12 
Flower Seeds 
