
MAIN CROP DWARF VARIETIES 
193 VICTORY FREEZER. (New) (2% ft.) 67 days. All America 
ronze Medal for 1948. Another of the 
fine’ new peas specially Sara for home gardens and freezing, Victory 
Freezer is an excellent choice to fill the gap between the early and later peas. 
Not a large podded type but a dependable big yielder, with a quality that is 
hard to beat. It holds its appetizing looking, dark-green color well, and its 
tenderness and flavor will make it a real treat next winter—almost as though 
it had come directly from your garden. Even in hot weather, the husky, dark 
green vines bear large crops of delicious peas. 
The well-filled 3-314 in. pods are easy to pick and ripen so uniformly that 
they can nearly all be picked at once; and preparing them for freezing is thus 
an easier job. But fresh or frozen, Victory Freezer will be welcome on your 
dinner table. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 30c; Lb. 55c; 2 Lbs. 95c; 744 Lbs. $2.70; 15 Lbs. $5.10. 

168 LINCOLN. ne Sweetest Midseason Pea. (2% ft.) 69 days. A 
favorite for many years and one of the best main crop 
varieties for the home garden. The handsome, dark green pods are slender, 3 
to 31% in. long and closely packed with 8 or 9 peas of medium size and superb 
quality. We believe Lincoln is one of the most delicious peas grown; it is 
wonderful for both canning and freezing. On our farm, we always 
plant an extra lot of Lincoln for our own use and we believe every home 
garden should have some. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 30c; Lb. 55c; 2 Lbs. $1.00. 
156 DWARF MARKET. (New.) (28 in.) 70 days. The big, well-filled pods 
and good yields of this variety make it welcome in home and market gardens 
alike. Eight or nine large delicious peas are in each pod and they grow 4 to 5 
in. long, pointed and dark green. This is one of the most productive large- 
podded peas under our conditions and ripens just ahead of Alderman. We 
recommend it highly. 
Pkt. 10c; % Lb. 30c; Lb. 55c; 2 Lbs. 95c; 714 Lbs. $2.70; 15 Lbs. $5.10. 
180 MIDSEASON GIANT. Large Pods and Fine Quality. (2 ft.) 72 days. 
One of the finest midseason peas for both home and market. Vines are about 
24 inches tall, vigorous and stand up well even in dry weather. The pods are 
41% to 5 inches long, broad and slightly curved; they are dark green in color 
and well filled with 8-9 big peas of wonderful flavor and tenderness. Ideal for 
market, canning or table use and also excellent for freezing. 
Midseason Giant ripens about the same time as Alderman and produces big 
: : crops. It should not be sown until the weather is settled. 
Victory Freezer Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 25c; Lb. 45c; 2 Lbs. 85c; 74% Lbs. $2.70; 15 Lbs. $5.10. 
Heavy yields and fine quality —a rea! advance! 
TALL GROWING PEAS 
The tall growing peas produce enormous crops in comparatively small space if given support 
for the vines. Many growers use brush stuck in the ground along the row, and others use chicken 
wire or a light trellis. (TRAIN-ETTS are fine for home garden use—see page 82.) 
152 ALDERMAN. (4-5 ft.) 74 days. The Best Tall Variety. This is an improvement 
$$ _______. 0n the old Telephone pea, and it is by far the best variety of this type, 
yielding more than any other kind. The vines are of robust growth, bearing immense pointed 
pods often 5 inches long, containing 8 to 10 large peas. The quality is excellent and they hold 
up remarkably well. For canning and for quick freezing, Alderman is unsurpassed. 
In many sections of New England and at high elevations where the nights are cool, they can 
be planted late to mature in midsummer and thus prolong the season. When the vines are 
given support, they produce astonishing crops of delicious peas. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% Lb. 25c; Lb. 45c; 2 Lbs. 85c; 744 Lbs. $2.70; 15 Lbs. $5.10 
HOME GARDEN PEA COLLECTIONS 
Four of our Best Varieties, Ripening in Succession 
These four varieties will give a succession of the finest peas in your garden from early to 
late. Plant all at the same time in your garden, and as early in the spring as possible. 
World’s Record, Freezonian, Victory Freezer 
and Midseason Giant. 
Pea Collection No. 3 Pea Collection No. 4 
One regular packet of each of, the above One half pound of each of the above four 
four varieties. Enough for 40 feet of row. varieties. Enough to plant 200 feet of row. 
35c postpaid. $1.00 postpaid. 
PEANUTS 
Peanuts can be successfully grown in the North on a warm, 
sandy soil in a sheltered place with a southern exposure. 
Plant after danger of frost, in rows 244 ft. apart. If in hulls, 
space them about 8 in. apart in the row, or plant the shelled nuts 3 
to 6 in. apart. Cover about 11% in. deep. The pods or nuts are 
borne on flower stalks but are formed underground. Before frost 
in the fall, pull the entire vine and hang in an open shed to cure. 
647 EARLY SPANISH. The Earliest Kind. These are not large peanuts but are the earliest 
variety and very prolific. This is decidedly the best kind for planting in the North. 



Alderman Peas 
Pkt. 10c; 144 Lb. 35c; Lb. 60c; 5 Lbs. or more at 55c¢ per Lb. These tall vines produce tremendous crops, 
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