46 GRAND RAPIDS GROWERS, Inc., Grand Rapids, Michigan 
Beautiful 
Sweet Peas 
To grow Sweet Peas successfully it is necessary 
to plant EARLY and give plenty of moisture. 
They should go in the ground as soon as the 
ground can be worked and should be planted six 
inches deep, being covered at first with only two 
inches of soil, the trench being filled as the plants 
grow. It is best to soak the seeds for several 
hours before they are planted. If this plan of 
planting early is followed, and if the Sweet Peas 
are kept mulched with peat moss, lawn clippings 
or else watered abundantly, they will certainly 
give a fine crop of lovely flowers held in admira- 
tion by every flower lover. The mixture we give 
you below will give you color in profusion and is 
well worth your consideration. 
Superb Spencer Mixed 
A great many people prefer to grow Sweet Peas 
in the mixed colors. Our superb Spencer Mixture 
is made up of all the best varieties obtainable. 
The greatest care is taken to insure a well bal- 
anced range of colors and worthy of a place in 
any garden. Pkt., 10c; 0z., 25c; 14 Ib., 65c; 1 Ib., 
$2.25, postpaid. 

Gigantic 

Fluffy Ruffles 
Summer. Flowering 
Spencer Varieties 
We give you below the best of the Spencer varieties in 
a range of individual colors for those who want to work 
out a color scheme. Each one is a rare beauty and worthy 
of a place in your garden: 
Ambition. Rich deep lavender. 
Fluffy Ruffles. Rich rose-shaded salmon and cream 
duplexed. 
Gigantic. Largest and best of the whites. 
Mary Pickford. Dainty cream-pink, suffused salmon. 
Mrs. Tom Jones. Bright blue. 
Crimson King. Rich deep clear crimson. 
Any of the above: Pkt., 10c. 
Perennial Sweet Peas. (Lathyrus latifolius.) (Hardy 
Sweet Pea). Very decorative, climbing vine of the Pea 
family for growing on fences, trellis, etc., and for cut- 
ting. Blooms all summer if the seed pods are removed. 
Mixed. Oz., $1.25; pkt., 10c. 
