■i . . . —I > ■ ■ ... 
Large-flowered Sweet 
A Superb Mixture of the Best Varieties. Brice Per Pound $1.00, 
1-4 Pound 30 cents, Ounce 10 cents. 
We take pleasure in offering to our friends a Superb Mixture of the best varieties of Sweet 
Peas. The seeds are all fresh and the mixture embraces the finest named varieties, in careful 
proportion. Those who buy and plant of this mixture can depend upon having a fine display, 
and we challenge comparison with those of any other mixture. Be sure to secure your supply of 
Sweet Peas from us. 
It is hardly necessary to speak in praise of the Sweet Pea as a garden flower. Its merits are 
well-known. The vines grow from five to seven feet high, and are covered with bloom for many j 
weeks. The flowers are exquisite in form, rich and varied in color, delicate in texture, borne in I 
clusters on long stems, delicious in fragrance, and unsurpassed for cutting, as they last well after S 
being detached from the vine. If you grow but six annuals one of them should be the Sweet Pea. 
Culture.—Sow in prepared trenches, covering the seeds one-fourth inch and treading the soil after covering. J 
When the plants have attained the height of three or four inches, fill in the trench until only an inch of the top j 
is seen. When further growth is made fill in again, and thus continue until the trench is full. Then place to- 8 
bacco stems upon each side of the row, and provide a trellis five or six feet high of chicken-wire, weaving tobac- | 
co-stems into the meshes of the wire. The tobacco stems will prevent the attack of green lice, which have lately I 
become the bane of the Sweet Pea grower. They will also enrich the soil and promote the growth and bloom 5 
of the plants. Sweet Peas should be sown in autumn and protected at the north by a board placed on each side 1 
of the row and covered with glass, or else sown early in spring, as early as the ground can be worked. If sown 8 
late the vines are liable to a blight which ruins them. Under any condition, however, it is important to obtain | 
good seeds. Address LaPark Seed and Plant Company, Successor to Geo. W. Park, 
.__ LaPark, Lancaster County, Pa. _ | 
THE BEST FIELD CORN-"SEEK-NO-FURTHER”. 
Lancaster County, Pa., is famous for its Field Cora, and never before was there a sounder or | 
larger crop of Corn grown upon the LaPark farm than the past year. It is all of the Improved, Selected Seek-uo-further i 
variety, a kind that matures early, always cures well, and weighs heavy. The stalks grow from eight to twelve feet high, | 
maturing often two ears, the ears from ten to thirteen inches long, the grains deep and solid. Thi 3 corn has been grown B 
at LaPark for many years, an effort always being made to improve it, and It is the finest and most prolific Corn to be 5 
found in the County. It is truly a Seek-no-further variety, and those who try it will be more than pleased with it. The B 
supply is limited and you should order early. Price per bushel $5.00, Half-bushel $2.75. packed and delivered (o the | 
express office here. By Parcel Post, per lb. 25 cts., 2 lbs. 45 cts. Peck $1.50, plus the postage. Your Postmaster can | 
give cost of postage. If he cannot, then add 10 cents per lb for postage and packing. Address 
LaPark Seed and Plan! Company, Successor to Geo. W. Park, LaPark, Pa. 
