MAIN CROP DWARF VARIETIES 
193 VICTORY FREEZER. (New) (21 ft.) 67 days. Dependable Big Yielder. 
Best adapted for home gardens and freezing, Victory Freezer fills the gap be- 
tween the early and midseason peas. Not a long podded type but it produces 
big yields of fine quality peas, even in hot weather. The dark green color makes 
it particularly attractive for freezing, and it is so tender and delicious that it 
will be a real treat next winter on your dinner table. 
The well-filled 3-314 inch blunt pods are easy to pick and ripen so uniformly 
that they can nearly all be picked at once. We find they are also easier to shell 
and they are among the sweetest kinds we have eaten. 
Pkt. 10c; 14 Lb. 30c; Lb. 55c; 2 Lbs. $1.00; 5 Lbs. $2.50; 15 Lbs. $5.75. 
168 LINCOLN. The Sweetest Midseason Pea. (21 ft.) 69 days. A favo- 
rite of ours for many years and still one of the best main 
crop varieties for the home garden and roadside stands. We believe that Lin- 
coln’s sweetness and flavor cannot be matched by any other variety. It is 
wonderful for both canning and freezing. See photo and full description 
on page 6. 
Pkt. 10c; 14 Lb. 30c; Lb. 55c; 2 Lbs. $1.00; 5 Lbs. $2.50; 15 Lbs. $5.75. 
182 ONEIDA. Delicious New Garden and Freezer Pea. (2% ft.) 68 
ays. Oneida’s dependable big yields and fine quality de- 
serve even wider recognition. Several days earlier and a better yielder than the 
large podded late varieties, it is a vigorous grower and produces fine peas in abun- 
dance. Similar to Victory Freezer, Oneida has larger pods, averaging 4 to 414 in., 
and equally delicious flavor. It is ideal for freezing, as well as for eating fresh 
picked from your garden. The dark green peas fill the blunt pods tightly and 
without puffiness and they are remarkably tender and sweet. Oneida is a really 
successful variety for the home garden and is large enough for markets and 
roadside stands where quality counts. 
Pkt. 10c; 44 Lb. 30c; Lb. 55c; 2 Lbs. $1.00; 5 Lbs. $2.50; 15 Lbs. $5.75. 
180 MIDSEASON GIANT. Large Pods and Fine Quality. (2 ft.) 72 days. 
The best of the large midseason peas for both home and market. Vines are 
about 24 inches tall, vigorous and stand up well. The pods are 414 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. 
Pkt. 10c; 14 Lb. 30c; Lb. 50c; 2 Lbs. 95c; 5 Lbs. $2.25; 15 Lbs. $5.25. 



Oneida — Joe Harris notes the heavy yield from a single vine. 
TALL GROWING PEAS 
4 Pr 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 excellent—see page 81. 
152 ALDERMAN, (4-5 ft-) 74 days. The Best Tall Variety. An improvement 
: on 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, bear- 
ing 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. 10ce; 144 Lb. 30c; Lb. 50c; 2 Lbs. 95c; 5 Lbs. $2.25; 15 Lbs. $5.25. 

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, Lincoln 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 varieties. Enough for 60 feet of four varieties. Enough to plant 200 feet 
row—35c postpaid. of row—$1.10 postpaid. 

PEANUTS 
Peanuts can be grown in the North on a warm, sandy 
PSS soil in a sheltered place with a southern exposure. 
Alderman Plant after danger of frost, in rows 2% ft. apart. If in 
Tremendous crops of wonderful big peas. 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 
“Among our seeds and plants last year we ordered your underground. Before frost in the fall, pull the entire vine 
dollar Pea Collection. It proved everything and more than and hang in an open shed to cure. 
you recommended. It was the first time we ever had in our 47 EARLY SPANISH. The Earliest Kind. These are not large peanuts but ar’ 
garden more peas than we could eat fresh. the earliest variety and very prolific. This is decidedly the best kind for plantin 
Ernest H. Law, Vernon Center, N.Y., in the North. It is animproved strain with slightly larger size and much improved 
Feb. 2, 1949. quality. Pkt. 10c; 144 Lb. 35c; Lb. 65c; 5 Lbs. or more at 60c per Lb. 
Su 
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