28 
Quinlan Seed Store 
1936 
SWEET PEAS 
Seed should be sown as early as the ground can he worked 
in the spring, to enable the vines to get a good strong 
growth before the warm weather comes. Prepare the 
ground by thoroughly working in a large quantity of 
well-rotted manure. Make a trench six inches deep; in 
this sow the seed and cover two inches deep. As soon as 
the plants begin to show through, fill the trench. This 
will secure a deep planting without the bad effect of deep 
covering of the seed at first, and so enable the plant to 
bloom continually through the heat of the summer. As 
the flowers come into full bloom or fade, they should be 
cut off, for if the pods are allowed to form the plants will 
stop blooming. 
TRY THE NEW LATE SPENCER VARIETIES —or 
Separate Colors, Ounce, 20c 
Purple 
Yellow 
Royal Purple 
Salmon Pink 
King White 
Rose Pink 
Maroon 
Golden Glory 
White 
Blue 
EVERLASTING, OR HARDY SWEET PEA. 
Showy, free-flowering climbers for covering old stumps, fences, etc.; continually in 
bloom ; fine for cutting. Hardy Perennial. Mixed colors. Packet, 10 cents. 
NASTURTIUM. 
NASTURTIUM. 
DwarfVarieties. The improved va¬ 
rieties of the Dwarf Nasturtium are 
among the most popular and beautiful of 
our garden plants. Their neat compact 
growth, rich colored flowers and free 
blooming and long lasting qualities, to¬ 
gether with their adaptability to almost 
any soil or situation, make them unsur¬ 
passed for garden decoration. One foot. 
Packet, 5 cents ; ounce, 10 cents. 
Tall Varieties. Elegant and luxuriant 
climbers for verandas, trellises, etc., 
bearing their gorgeous flowers in profusion 
until killed by frost. May be used to 
cover unsightly railings and to trail over 
rough ground with fine effect Four to six 
feet. Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 10 cents. 
NEW NASTURTIUM GOLDEN GLEAM, SWEET SCENTED PACKAGE 10 and 15 CENTS 
