
ihe A 
Are Gardeners 
yy Every good vegetable garden in 
1943 will be a crack at the Axis. It 
will aid victory for the Allies by im- 
proving the health of another family 
and by relieving the country’s trans- 
portation system of carrying that 
much food. No one is better prepared 
and supplied for having a good vege- 
table garden than an Eastern States 
member. Get your seed, fertilizer, 
spray and dust materials ordered 
early. 

Earle and Stanley Ellsworth (above), a 
ke couple of young fellows with 4-H careers, 
do some of the gardening on the Harry 
Ellsworth farm in Farmington, Maine. 
These are Eastern States Alderman peas 
they are picking for home canning. Mr. 
Ellsworth is an Eastern States local rep- 
resentative and has served as an officer of 
the Farm Bureau and the DHIA. 
At Kenney Farm, Concord, Massa- 
chusetts, they do a whopping market 
garden business. The harvests on this 
farm have “consumer-appeal” as sug- 
gested by the handsome celery in the 
picture at the right. Eastern States 
vegetable seeds are a regular part of the 
farm’s program. 

i) On the farm of Robert Hunter, 
Lincoln, Massachusetts, Eastern 
States sweet corn varieties were 
used extensively in producing a 
good quality production for the 
discriminating Boston market. 

