34 Annual Catalogue for 1885, of Maule’s Guaranteed Seeds, 
30 CENTS PER QUART MUST BE ADDED TO PRICES OF ALL 
PEAS WHEN ORDERING THEM SENT BY MAIL. 
gw Maule’s Family Garden. See page 8. Maule’s Earliest of all. See page 8. 
NEW PEA. 
Pride of the Market. 
The following is an extract from THE Gar-@ 
DENERS’ MAGAZINE, of August 13th, 1881: 
“They are certainly the most useful to ama- 
teurs not overburdened with space, and mar- 
ket growers who cannot well employ supports, 
for they require no sticks and are quite un- 
equalled in productiveness. They have a robust 
free-branching habit, and attain a height rang- 
ing from eighteen to twenty-four inches, ac- 
cording to the weather and the soil, and are 
immensly productive. They are, indeed, such 
heavy croppers that I know of no peas from 
which so large a bulk of produce can be ob- 
tained from a given space; indeed, no such 
varieties exist. Their productiveness is by no 
means their only recommendation, for the 
pods are so large in size, and handsome in ap- 
pearance, that they take high rank for exhibi- 
tion purposes, and the peas, when on the table 
are of so splendid a quality that it would be 
difficult to over-praisethem.”’ Price, per pKt., 
15 cts.; pint, postpaid, 50 cts.; qt., 75 ets. 
THE TELEPHONE.—On account of its 
unusual excellence created an excitement 
among English gardeners. These peas are / yy ] 
wrinkled, of a pale green color, and superior 4 @ “| 
sugary flavor. It is second early, very robust 1 
in habit, a great bearer, producing unusually 
long pods, containing ten to eleven peas, often 
forming a double row. No private garden 
should be 
without’ this 
grand pea as 
it is one of the 
very finest yet 
introduced. 
Pkt., 15 cts.; pint 
40 cts., postpaid; 
qt., 50 cts. 
—— 
PRIDE OF THE MARKET, 
Many 
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BLiss’s ABUNDANCE PEAS. 
This, with the Everbearing, was first introduced last year. We give be- 
low descriptions given by the introducers: Abundance ripens second early. 
The most striking feature of this variety is its remarkable tendency for 
branching directly from the roots, forming a veritable bush. In proof of this 
we need only to refer to the above illustration, which is an exact photographic 
representation of a single plant. Owing to this extraordinary branching 
habit, six inches apart in the rows is the nearest that the plants should stand. 
Plant half dwarf, fifteen to eighteen inches high. Pods three to three and a 
half inches long, roundish and well filled, containing six to eight large 
wrinkled peas, of excellent quality. Supply of seed very limited. Pkt., 15 
TELEPHONE. cts.; pint, 60 cts., postpaid; qt., by express, 75 cts. 
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