rs | 
ATLL MAlDexrt Street, Philadcciphia, wBa., O- = a 
10 MAULE’S NOVELTIES AND SPECIALTIES FOR 1904 
New Profusion Wax Bean. 


-< This grand wax bean, which was first offered last year as ‘‘Nameless” has certainly sur- 
( passed my expectations. - 30,000 packets were distributed free for trial among my | 
™ : customers, who, without a single exception, were delighted, not only with its | 











































wonderful productiveness, but also with its fine flavor and handsome 
appearance. The illustration herewith is no exaggeration whatever. 
The vines are literally covered with fine, long, handsome trans- 
parent yellow pods, which are remarkably brittle, as it has no 
strings whatever. It is very sure to make a reputation 
for itself either in the home or market garden un- 




















Full \\ \" y : ae der all circumstances. It is a wonderfully 
AS S = : : strong grower, pods are round, of very 
Cultural large size, always full of meat; in ad- 
. ° dition to these good qualities it | 
Directions is very early and continues j 
ie in bearing a long time. | 
on Every PKt., 10¢.; pt... sles 
Packet qt., 60c., by mail, 
f postpaid. Pk. $2.50. 
(0) ; | 
Maule’s | 
Seeds. 
I offered in my = 
1903 catalogue, $100 in 
eash prizes for a suit- 
able name for Profu- 
sion Wax Bean. More 
than 10,000 names were 
suggested by my custo- 
mers, Six of whom selected 
the name Profusion Wax, 
which I considered the most 
appropriate for the variety, 
and the hundred dollar prize 
was divided among the follow- 
ing 6 customers, each of whom 
suggested the name Profusion 
Wax and received $16.67 : 
Oliver Cavitt, Westerly, R. I. 
Mrs. B. Milburn, Browns, Ill. 
Mrs. L. A. Royce, Palmer, Mass. 
Tryon Moore, Quesqueton, lowa. 
Mrs. Frank Robb, Wayside, Kan. 
Sam. N. Warren, Spring Hill, Tenn. 
Spark’s 
Carliana 
Tomato. 
This tomato has become very popular with 
many growers of tomatoes for early market, 
especially in New Jersey. There is no ques- 
tion but that it is a very early variety, and py 
one fully deserving the remarkable news- % 
paper notoriety it has had for the last two or “y 
three years. Now as faras I am personally 
concerned, I am satisfied Maule’s Earliest of 
All is still the earliest of all tomatoes; but at 
the same time I am willing to admit that 
Spark’s Earliana is also an excellent early 
variety, and that it has given Maule’s Earli- & 
est of All a harder tussle for supremacy than 
any early variety introduced in the last’ 
dozen years. It is certainly a fine early to- Y 
mato, of large size, good color and great pro- 
ductiveness. I have secured a supply of = 
seed direct from headquarters, and take phe = : \\ e= NG =344 
pleasure in offering it to my customers at BA EI) Was e REZ Lo | 
the following prices: Packet, 15 cts.; } ounce, Jy) 
40 cts.; ounce, 75 cts.; } pound, $2.00. 





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298 QTE TILT ON HTAV AUNGEH “LAL 9 $49P30 TT 







[F your order amounts to $42 you will be 
entitled to all of the fourteen volumes 
mentioned on pages 88 and 89, making a 
most complete and useful agricultural 
library for any home. 


















