
































MAULE’S FAMILY GARDEN. 
MAULE’S FAMILY GARDEN.— An excellent, 
smooth, early pea, maturing in 48 to 50 days from 
seed. It is first rate in quality, very productive, and 
much resembles Maule’s Improved Extra. Early, but 
unlike that variety does not mature allits pods at the 
Sametime. Its bearing period is from one to three 
weeks, a fact giving special value in the home or 
family garden, Its prolonged term of bearing caused 
it to receive itsname. The variety is hardy, and 
readily resists a little frost. It isa favorite wherever 
known, and I commend it to amateurs for early 
spring planting. Packet, 10 cents; pint, 25 cents; quart, 
40 cents, postpaid. Peck, $1.00. 
ALASKA.—An extra early sort, with vines about 
two feet in height. The pod is three inches long, well 
filled with round peas. Alaska is one of the earliest 
peas. Quite profitable as a market sort and for can- 
ning. Packet, 10 cents; pint, 25 cents; quart, 45 cents; 
postpaid. Peck, $1.25. 
PREMIUM GEM.—A fine early wrinkled pea, 
with vine about 15 inches high. The pods are long, 
and are produced in abundance. One of the most 
profitable for market or family use. Pkt., 10 cts.; 
pt., 30 cts.; qt., 50 cts., postpaid. Peck, $2.00. 
McLEAN’S LITTLE GEM.—A’ green wrinkled 
variety which comes a few days after Maule’s Im- 
proved Extra Early, or in 50 to 55 days from theseed. || 
Its height is only 12 to 18 inches. Its table quality is |jj 
excellent, and it is a prolific bearer. Pkt., 10 ets.; || 
pt., 30 cts.; qt., 50 cts., postpaid. Peck, $2.00. | 
= = DUKE OF ALBANY. | 
—Also known as Ameri-|| 
ean Champion. An| 
exceedingly valuable tall- 
growing main-crop wrink- 
led pea. It is of branch- 
ing habit, and should be 
sown thinly. It is hardy 
and vigorous, producing 
large pods in great pro-'iji 
| fusion. The peas them- 
selves are of extra size 
| and flavor. Duke of Al- 
bany is fully equal to Tel- 
ephone, and somewhat 
| closely resembles that 
| famous variety. Indeed, } 
it has been called superior }} 
to Telephone in quality 
| and yield, and will be 
|| found exceptionally pro- 
fitable as a market sort. /ilt) 
Pkt., 10 cts.; pt., 30 cts.; qt., | 
50 cts. Peck, $1.75. NW 
PROSPERITY OR 
GRADUS. — Earliest 
wrinkled. (See page 25.) 
PRODIGIOUS. — The 
giant. (See page 27.) 
NEW PROLIFIC 
EARLY MARKET,— 
(See page 7.) 
DWARF TELE- 
PHONE.—(See page 28.) 
NEW DWARF CHAM- 
PION.—(See page 28.) DUKE OF ALBANY. 
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BLISS’S 
EVERBEARING. 
BLISS’S EVERBEARING. — A cele- 
brated wrinkled pea, 114 to 2 feet high, of 
good quality and flavor. Its season is 
late to very late, and it is especially ad- 
apted to summer and autumn cropping. 
It has a remarkable and valuable branch- 
ing habit; sometimes forming as many as 
ten Stalks from one root,the result of asin- 
gle seed. It will do well without sticks or 
brush. Repeated pickings may be made, 
for the vine continues to produce blos- 
soms and successional crops of pods in its 
effort to ripen its seeds. Itis thus a con- 
tinuous bearer through a long season. 
Packet, 10 cents; pint, 25 cents; quart, 45 
cents, postpaid. Peck, $1.25. 
HORSFORD’S MARKET GARDEN. 
—A first-class wrinkled pea; second early. 
Height, 24 inches; no sticks. It is a 
profitable sort for market gardeners, as a 
| Single plant has been known to_ produce 
more than 150 pods. It is equally good 
for the home table. The medium sized 
pods are borne in pairs, and are easily and 
quickly picked. This variety is said to 
have yielded more shelled peas to the acre 
than any other American sort. Packet, 
10 cents; pint, 25 cents; quart, 45 cents, 
postpaid. Peck, $1.25. 
| 
FOR A GOOD SUCCESSION 
Plant Maule’s Earliest of All, Horsford’s Mar- 
ket Garden and Pride of the Market and have 
peas from April till July. A pkt. of each, 25c. 
a pt. of each, 65¢c.; a qt. of each, $1.20 postpaid. 




































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MAULE’S IMPROVED EXTRA EARLY. A Favorite Home and Market Pea. 
; is surpassed in point of earliness only by Maule’s | and well filled, and the peas are of a most agreeable flavor. It is, in 
Banliest of SN ene ore of the best ions peas for quick cropping, | every respect, a satisfactory and profitable first early variety. US peels ; 
as the pods come all at once, after which the ground may be plowed | ing capacity may be judged from the fact that I havea record oF Over ‘| 
and put to other use. It requires no sticks. It grows toa height of | 20,000 pods picked from 150 feet of row, the product of one quae: ro) ae : ij 
about two feet, is a sure cropper, and is wonderfully productive. The | This is unquestionably one of the best first early ee on eae et. 1] 
seed may be put into the ground in earliest spring. The pods are large | Packet, 10 cents; pint, 20 cents; quart, 40 cents, postpaid. eck, $1.25. 
74 

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