;a<]^ NOVELTIES IN VEGETABLE SEEDS j^ 



11 



Johnson & Stoics' New Record Extra EarlvJ Pea 



See History on page 16, and Colored Plate on Back of this Book. 



It is the result of nine years' 

 selection and development made 

 by an expert. 



It is three to five days earlier 

 than any other pea, and the most 

 uniform in ripening. 



A single picking will secure 

 the entire crop. 



It is the heaviest cropper, con- 

 taining one to two more peas to 

 the pod than any other Extra 

 Early, 



Prices for 1898: pkt., 15c.; pint, 

 35c.; qt., 60c., post-paid; qt., 45c.; 2 

 qts., 75c.; peck, I1.50; bushel, fo.oo; 

 bag of 2 bushels, I9.00 ; 5 bushels and 

 over, I4.25 per bushel, by freight or 

 express. 



The "Record" on our Trial Grounds. Tests with Hitherto Earliest Known Peas. 



Names of Extra Early Peas planted for 

 comparison 



Date planted, 

 I8g6 



Crop picked, 

 1896 



Date planted, 

 i8g7 



Crop picked, 



1897 



Yield per ico 

 feet of Drill 



JOHNSON & STOKES' NEW RECORD EXTRA EARLY 



Johnson & Stokes' Extra Early Market Garden 

 First and Best Extra Early 



April 13th 

 April 13th 

 April 13th 

 April 13th 

 April 13th 

 April 13th 



June 2d 

 June 6th 

 June loth 

 June nth 

 June gth 

 June 15th 



April gth 

 April gth 

 April gth 

 April gth 

 April gth 

 April gth 



May 28th 

 June 2d 

 June 5th 

 June 7th 

 June 4th 

 June loth 



108 ounces 

 100 ounces 

 g4 ounces 



Rural New Yorker 



95 ounces 



Alaska or Earliest of AH . . 



Philadelphia Extra Early 



g2 ounces 

 8g ounces 







Two years' critical tests prove conclusively that Johnson & Stokes' Kecord Extra Early is not only the 

 very Earliest, but it is also the most productive of all the leading Extra Early Peas now on the market. 



