GURNEY'S DELICIOUS DRY-LAND PEAS 
For a continuous supply make several plantings, starting 
just as soon as you can get in the ground by planting the 
Alaska, and a week later follow it with other plantings of 
Little Marvel, Big Dakota, Yankton Main Crop. 2 
One pound of peas is enough for a hundred feet of row, 120238 
lbs. enough for an acre. Re 
SPECIAL: Be sure to inoculate your peas. A 10c packet : 
is enough for 8 lbs. of peas and beans. Full directions for use _ 
are printed on the packet. It will pay for itself many times 
over. 
Gurney’s strains of peas are all Northern-grown and care- 
fully selected for disease resistancy, for type and for vigor. 
Don’t take chances with anything but the best. 









Plant your smooth varieties of peas just as early as you can 
get in the ground in the spring. The wrinkled varieties should 
be planted about a week later. All varieties of peas appre- 
ciate support, even the dwarfs would like some brush or a 
trellis to grow on. Keep the pods up off the ground. They 
will give you a bigger yield, too. 




< Edible 
PODDED PEAS 
Eat Like Pod Beans 
<LITTLE | aeaae AMERICAN 
MARVEL (. #rgee w WONDER © 
The Tender, Sweet One Sure Grower—Big Yields 


160—D warf Gray 
Sugar: (57 days)—The 
pea with pods so juicy 
and tender you do not 
shell them but eat pods 
and all like string 
beans. 
The vines grow about 
20 inches tall and are 
heavy bearers. Give 
these a trial, and I 
know you ‘will never be 













152—If I could have 
but one kind: it would 
be Little Marvel. Take 
my word for it. I’ve 
tried ’em all—very ten- 
der, heavy yielder, and 
it will be a long time 
until we find a better 
one. In yield, earliness, 
and quality and deli- 
cious sweetness it is 
tops. 






strain of American 
Wonder is one of the 
earliest Wrinkled Peas 
grown, The dwarf vines 
grow about 1 foot tall 
and are covered with 
medium size pods. 
This is the sweetest 
and tenderest pea we 
have ever raised. If 
you want quality, plant 

Some Satisfied Gurney Customers 
and What They Grew 

Gurney’s Inc., 
Yankton, S. Dak. 
Dear Sirs: 
The picture is of my three year old 
daughter with a few of the carrots I raised 
last year. I can say they are the most 
wonderful carrots I have ever seen grown 
in these parts. These carrots are so sweet 
and juicy, the children just love to eat 
them raw. Yours truly, 
without them again. 
Triple size pkt., 10c; 
1% Ib., 20c; 1 Ib., 35c. 
All Postpaid. 
*) 
Gurney Seed & Nursery Co., 
Yankton, S. Dak. 
Dear Sirs: 
Find enclosed a picture of our Gur- 
ney. garden. This is just one pile of vege- 
tables picked before frost. I also canned 
325 qts. of vegetables for winter. Your 
seed have been used in our immediate 
family since 1916. We couldn’t do with- 
out it. 




American Wonder. 
Triple size pkt., 10c; 
% Ib., 18c; 1 Ib., 32¢; 3 
Ibs., 85c. All Postpaid. 




Triple size pkt., 10c; 
% Ib., 25c; 1 Ib., 40c; 3 
Ibs., 95c. All Postpaid. 
GOLDEN BANTAM CORN | 
Favorite of All 
177—The standard Yellow Sweet Corn. Most popular corn in cultiva- 
tion. A heavy producer of fine roasting ears, usually 2 to the stalk. Rich 
Mrs. J. H.’ Marler, Mrs.) Harry’ Harsin, Golden Yellow. The standard by which all sweet corns are judged. 
Hugo, Minn. Blunt, S. Dak. Tender, sweet and deliciously flavored. 

Gurney’s Inc., 
Yankton, S. Dak. 
Dear Sir: 
I am sending two pictures of my 
Husband in a field of Gurney corn, you 
can use either or both if you wish to. 
My husband is six foot tall, so you can 
just about tell how tall it grew. It is 
the best corn he has ever grown yet. 
He mentions the fact often. 
Yours truly, 
Mrs. George A. Kuether, 
Judson, N. Dak. 
j4 GURNEY’S, Yankton, So. Dak.—‘Northwest’s Largest Seed and 

Gurney’s Inc., 
Yankton, S. Dak. 
Gentlemen: 
In 1934 we planted four of your Spirea 
Van Houttei, Bridal Wreath. That was 
the year of the drouth here in Minne- 
sota, but the plants you sent us were 
healthy enough to grow in spite of the 
hot dry winds. Today we have a beau- 
tiful spot in our back yard, thanks to 
Gurney’s sturdy plants. 
Yours truly, 
Mrs. Leo Lawrenz, 
Winthrop, Minn, 


Triple size pkt., 10c; 1% Ib., 19¢; 1 Ib., 30c; 3 Ibs., 75c. All Postpaid. 

About Sweet Corn -- 
Some of people’s fondest memories have to do with sweet corn—espe- 
cially roasting. ears. You should have roasting ears early, mid season 
and late. You never can get too many. : 
This year, plant sweet corn and plenty of it. Remember Gurney’s 
Special Strains are carefully selected for vigor and vitality. You can 
depend on them. They have all been carefully tested. You’d be sur- 
prised at the number of roasting ears that you can grow in a small sized 
town garden. Sweet corn doesn’t grow as vigorous as field corn, so you 
can space the hills as close as 15 inches apart if you work them by hand 
and get an abundant crop. Sweet corn is a ‘four way” crop. You can 
use it fresh, canned, frozen or dried. The main thing is to plant lots 
of it so that you will have plenty for yourself and some extras for the 
neighbors. Make several plantings about one week apart so you’ll have 
corn coming on all season long. 
One pound plants 150 hills, 8 to 10 pounds plants an acre. 
ursery House”~ 

ML y 
Amtinet whe poem ee 
149—Our improved s = 


























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