7 NN OF. 
CURNEY’S DELICIOUS GARDEN PEAS 
Gurney’s strains of peas are all Northern-grown and 
carefully selected for disease resistancy, for type and for 
vigot. Don’t take chances with anything but the best. 
Plant your smooth varieties of peas just as early as you 
ean get in the ground in the spring. The wrinkled varieties 
should be planted about a week later. All varieties of peas 
appreciate 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. 
For a continuous supply make several plantings, starting 
< Edible 
PODDED PEAS 
Eat Like Pod Beans 
160 — Dwarf Gray 
Sugar: (57 days) — 
The pea with pods so 
for use are printed on 
just as soon as yo 
Alaska, and a wee 
SPECIAL: BE SURE TO INOC 
packet is enough for 5 
times over. 
< AMERICAN 
WONDER 
Sure Grower— — 
Big Yields 
149—Our improved 
strain of American 
Wonder is one of the 
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 bear- 
ers. Give these a trial, 
and I know you will 
never be without them 
again. 
Triple size pkt., 10c; 
4 lb., 25c; 1 Ib., 40c. 
All Postpaid. 

earliest Wrinkled Peas 
grown. The dwarf 
vines grow about 1 ft. 
tall and are covered 
with medium size pods. 
This is the sweetest 
and tenderest pea we 
have ever raised. If 
you want quality, 
plant American 
Wonder. 
Triple size pkt., 10c; 
Y, lb., 22c; 1 Ib., 38c; 3 
lbs., 87c. All Postpaid. 
ABOUT SWEET CORN 
Some of people’s fondest memories have to do 
~~ with sweet corn—especially 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 
surprised 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. 
Write Us a Letien 
Yes, write us a letter. We like to hear from 
you folks who grow gardens from Gurney Seed. 
We're a friendly company up here in Gurney- 
land. We like to know our neighbors, no matter 
if they do, some of them, live a long ways away. 
We want you all to have the best possible 
garden. And if there is anything we can do, any 
advice we can give, that will help this come 
about, we want to do it. So write us a letter. 
Tell us how your garden grew. And if you can, 
send a snapshot, too. We like to use pictures in 
the catalog and Planting Magazine—and we 
send you 50c when we print them, too. But 
most of all, we like to hear from you. 


GROW YOUR OWN 
a \ ! 4 
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q P. 
GOLDEN BANTAM 
Favorite of All 
_ 177—The standard Yellow 
Sweet Corn. Most popular corn 
in cultivation. A heavy producer 
of fine roasting ears, usually 2 
to the stalk. Rich Golden Yellow. 
The standard by which all sweet 
corns are judged. Tender, sweet 
and deliciously flavored. 
Triple size pkt., 10c; yy Ib., 
20c; 1 lb., 36c; 3 Ibs., 95c. All 
Postpaid. = f 
“Northwest's Largest Seed and Nursery Hou 

GOLDEN SUNSHINE 
174—This large-eared variety 
originated by North Dakota Ag- 
ricultural College for Dakota 
growing conditions — but does 
well anywhere—can take hot, 
dry weather. The ear is 12 rowed 
and 7 to 8 inches long, a heavy 
bearer of sweet and tender ears, 
larger and earlier than Golden 
Bantam. 
Triple size pkt., 10c; % Ib, 
20c; 1 Ib., 35c; 3 Ibs., 94c. All 
postpaid. — Le 

se’’—GURNEY'’S, Yankton, So. Dak 
u can get in the ground by planting the 
k later follow it with other plantings of 
Little Marvel, Big Dakota, Yankton Main Crop. 
One pound of peas is enough for a hundred feet of row, 
120 Ibs. enough for an acre. 
ULATE YOUR PEAS. A 10c 
Ibs. of peas and beans. Full directions 
the packet. It will pay for itself many 

BIG 
DAKOTA 
The Big Yielder 
for the NORTH 
144—You want the 
most peas you can get, 
don’t you? Then plant 
Big Dakota, because 
by actual count we 
have found that they 
yield more pods to the 
vine and more peas to 
the pod. They are of 
delicious quality, and 
luscious tasting. 
If you want the larg- 
est peas you have ever 
raised, plant Big Dakota. 
Thousands say this is 
the finest pea they have 
ever grown. 
Triple size pkt., 15¢; 
\, lb., 27c; 1 Ib., 44c; 3 
Ibs., 98c. All Postpaid. ~ 

IT’S SWEETER 
IT TASTES BETTER 
IT HAS MORE VITAMINS 

STOWELL’S 
EVERGREEN 
184—Here’s the big main crop 
sweet corn—the largest, and 
one of the best. Immense stalks 
produce long 10 inch ears. Ker- 
nels deep, white, sweet and 
tender. It stays in condition for 
table use for a long time. To 
lengthen out your roasting ear 
season, plant Stowell’s Ever- 
green. Canners and market 
growers plant lots of it. Price: — 
Triple size pkt., 10c; 4% Ib., 20c; 
1 Ib., 36c; 3 Ibs., 95c, postpaid. 


