


Best Summer Blowenring 
SWEET PEAS 
Hart & Vick’s Distinguished Varieties for Gardens 
Choice Spencer Varieties 
From the long list of Sweet Peas of this 
wonderful Orchid-Flowering class, we have 
selected 14 which in our judgment and experi- 
ence are the best for the garden. New kinds, 
if they are better than the ones now on our 
list, will be added as they are produced. One 
package will plant a row about 10 feet long; 
an ounce about 35 feet. 
Ambition. Very large, waved, clear lavender 
blooms. 
Amethyst. A clear and distinct amethyst-blue. 
Often four to the stem. 
Avalanche. A giant flower of glistening pure 
white. Best pure white. 
Barbara. Lovely rich salmon. 
to the stem. 
Charming. Rosy cerise. The character is well 
indicated by the name. 
Daffodil. Rich deep cream. The best of its 
color, and a strong grower. 
Leviathan. Rich maroon. One of the finest 
of the new Sweet Peas. 
Magnet. A brilliant light pink—almost cream- 
Pink. 
Three and four 
Olympia. Rich purple, giant flowers on long, 
strong stems, 
Pinkie. Largest of all deep pink Sweet Peas. 
Always a garden favorite. 
Powerscourt. 
Lovely waved flowers of clear 
soft lavender. 
Prince of Orange. Large, waved, deep orange 
flowers. 
Red Boy. 
Youth. Very fragrant giant white flower edged 
with rose-pink. 
Long-stemmed rich crimson. 
Each of the above named Sweet Peas: 
Pkg. 10c; oz. 30c. 
Collection: One package each of the above— 
14 varieties for $1.15. 

Early Flowering Sweet Peas 
This new race of Sweet Peas has the large, 
waved and frilled, long-stemmed flower of the 
Spencer Orchid-Flowered type, but blooms a 
month early. If you will keep them picked 
os will flower for three months. Plant them 
early. They are particularly adapted for grow- 
ing under glass during the winter and for out- 
door growing in the southern part of the coun- 
try, where the summer-flowering kinds have 
not proved satisfactory. Complete cultural 
directions on every package of seed. 
Ball Orange. Rich deep orange. 
Boon. A rich, deep salmon-pink. 
Bridesmaid. 
Harmony. 
Hope. Just about the finest pure white. 
Mrs. Hoover. Splendid clear blue. 
Large flowered, silvery pink. 
Early blooming clear lavender. 
Shirley Temple. The new giant rose-pink. 
Triumph. Lovely lilac-mauve. 
Each of the above Sweet Peas: 
Pkg. 15¢; 14 oz. 35c. 
Early Flowering Mixed. A splendid mixture 
of all the above kinds and many others. 
Pkg. 10c; oz. 35c¢ 
Ruffled Sweet Peas 
Large flowers so much ruffled as to appear 
double. Stems are long and strong and gen- 
erally carry three and many times four flowers. 
Will give a magnificent display in your garden 
and yield great quantities of cut flowers. 
Ruffled Blue. Mid-blue. 
Bonnie Ruffles. 
Crinkles. Cerise-pink suffused coral. 
Ruffled Rose. 
Ruffled Sparkle. Glowing cerise. 
Ruffled White. Beautifully ruffled pure white. 
Each of above: Pkg. 10c; oz. 30c. 
Salmon-pink. 
Rich deep rose. 
Hart & Vick’s Mixture of 
Giant Ruffled Sweet Peas 
Large flowers so much ruffled as to appear 
double. The stems are long and strong and 
generally carry three and many times four 
flowers. We offer you these ruffled Sweet Peas 
in a mixture of lovely colors ranging from the 
purest white through soft pinks, orchid, rose, 
red, maroon, lavender, blue and primrose. We 
feel sure that it will please the most critical 
gardener. Pkg. 10c; oz. 25¢ 
Blue Rikbou Collection 
of Sweet Peas 
Avalanche. White. Leviathan. Maroon. 
Youth. Picotee. Red Boy. Crimson. 
Pinkie. Pink. Amethyst. Blue. 
Charming. Cerise. Olympia. Purple. 
Prince of Orange. Powerscourt. Lavender. 
One package each of the above 10 varieties— 
a garden full of Sweet Peas—for 65c. 
Follow directions carefully when sowing Sweet 
Pea seed. Get it into the ground just as soon 
as the frost is out and after the plants are up, 
keep the ground around them moist. Soak it 
well at least twice a week. 
INOCULATE, THIS SEED 
i Neer se mes TON woes PCED 
Neen 
[46] 
Makes for better 
Sweet Peas. A 10c 
package will treat a 
pound of seed. Order 
it now. 

H. & V. Exhibition Mixture 
of Spencer Sweet Peas 
In this mixture are more than a 
hundred of the best named varieties, 
giving an extremely wide range of 
color. You will find pure whites, rich 
maroons, deep pinks, lavenders, and a 
great number of blends of the love- 
liest colors imaginable! A _ single 
package will give you a display about 
7 feet long, but for a perfect garden 
planting you should have not less than 
an ounce of this mixture, which will 
plant a single row about 25 feet long. 
Pkg. 10c; oz. 25c; %4 Ib. 65c; Ib. 
$2.00. 

How to Grow Sweet Peas 
Successfully 
Dust your Sweet Pea seed with Nitragin and 
sow as soon as the ground can be worked in 
the spring. Dig a trench about a foot wide and 
deep, 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 
three-fourths inch deep; sow seed at even dis- 
tances of about 3 inches, and cover. When the 
plants grow about 3 or 4 inches high, thin out 
to 6 inches from each other. As soon as the 
vines reach a height of about 8 inches, proper 
supports should be provided. 
The Sweet Pea is a moisture-loving plant, 
and by the month of May the plants will re- 
quire water. Use a mulch of old stable manure 
or peat moss and soak well with the hose as 
needed. 
TRAIN-ETTS 
Trellis Netting for Sweet Peas 
Does not rot 
like string nor 
burn like wire. 
Three Sizes: 
No. 1, 60x72 in., 
39c. No. 2, 60x96 
in., 49c. No. 3, 
60x180 in., 69c. 
Y Postpaid 

