F. W. BOLGIANO & CO., INC., Washington, D. C. 



25 



PEAS — Extra Early Varieties 



568. Extremely 

 Early Long-Podded 

 Alaska. (55 days.) 

 Vigorous handsome, 

 long-podded, delicious 

 flavored Alaska pea. It 

 has all the good qual- 

 ities of our Famous Ex- 

 tra Early Alaska Pea, 

 and in addition it has 

 a well-filled, long pod, 

 which will fill the bas- 

 ket quickly, and while 

 it is not a distinctly 

 sugar pea, yet it has a 

 much sweeter flavor 

 than the Alaska. It is 

 an abundant yielder. 

 Pkt. 10 cts.; pt. 30 cts.; 

 qt. 50 cts., postpaid; pk. 

 $2.10; bu. $7.75. 



564. Extra Early 

 Alaska. (55 days.) 



The earliest of all 

 smooth green peas, 

 having the best color 

 when shelled and the 

 best quality when 

 cooked. The dark green 

 color of the pods makes 

 it extremely desirable, 

 as it can be carried long 

 distances without los- 

 ing its color, which 

 quality, combined with 

 its earliness and uni- 

 f o r m i t y of ripening, 

 make it one of the best 



early peas for market gardeners. Pkt. 10 cts.; pt. 30 cts.; qt. 



50 cts., postpaid; pk. $1.90; bu. $7.00. 



Long Podded Alaska Peas 



555. Extra Early Thomas Laxton. (55 days.) An 



extra early wrinkled marrow of excellent quality, and a valu- 

 able addition to the very early varieties. It is three feet high 

 and somewhat more vigorous in habit than Prosperity. The 

 pods are medium to large, blunt-ended and filled to the tip 

 with large peas of true, rich "marrow" flavor. Its strong 

 vine and heavy cropping character make it very suitable 

 for an early crop in the private garden. It may be used 

 to great advantage as an immediate successor to Early Bird. 

 If sown together, Thomas Laxton will be in full production 

 just as the crop of Early Bird is diminishing. Pkt. 10 cts.; pt. 

 30 cts.; qt. 50 cts., postpaid; pk, $2.25; bu. $8.25. 



567. Extra Early Gradus, or Prosperity Peas. 



(55 days.) It produces pods equal in size to the well-known 

 Telephone. Quality and productiveness equal to that well- 

 known variety. The vines are vigorous, robust growth about 

 2% feet high, thick stems and luxuriant foliage; it bears 

 large, handsome pods with immense, luscious peas, remaining 

 sweet and tender a long time after they are fit to pick. Pkt. 

 10 cts.; pt. 30 cts.; qt. 50 cts., postpaid; pk. $2.25; bu. $8.25. 



563. First and Best. (55 days.) Pkt. 10 cts.; pt. 



30 cts.; qt. 50 cts., postpaid; pk. $1.65; bu. $6.00. 



566. Ameer. (55 days.) Fine podded Extra Early; 

 prolific. Pkt. 10 cts.; pt. 30 cts.; qt. 50 cts., postpaid; pk. 

 $2.10; bu. $7,75. 



Second Early or General Crop 



557. Telephone. 



(70 days.) A wrin- 

 kled variety of very 

 robust habit and a 

 great bearer. A sin- 

 gle vine produces 

 from 8 to 10 unusu- 

 ally long, well-filled 

 pods of largest size, 

 containing 10 to 11 

 peas. It is very pro- 

 ductive, of fine fla- 

 vor and an excellent 

 table variety. Height 

 about 4 feet. Pkt. 10 

 cts.; pt. 30 cts.; qt. 

 50 cts., postpaid; pk. 

 $2.25; bu. $8.25. 



PEAS— Edible- 

 Podded or Sugar 

 5 31. Melting 



Sugar. (75 days.) 



Grows to height of 

 5 feet; bears a pro- 

 fusion of large, 

 broad pods, which 

 are so brittle that 

 they snap without 

 any string. Should 

 be used in much the 

 same way as wax 

 beans. Pods, when 

 cooked, are very 

 sweet and tender. 

 Pkt. 10 cts.; pt. 35 cts.; qt. 50 cts., postpaid; pk. $2.50. 



Thomas Laxton Peas 



PEANUTS 



Peanuts grow on any soil, but are more easily harvested 

 on light soils. Plant 35 lbs. of shelled nuts or 50 lbs. Tin- 

 shelled to acre. Inoculate with NITRAGIN E. Peanuts re- 

 quire lime, phosphate and potash. Use GOLD TAG 2-8-10 

 fertilizer, 200 to 400 lbs. per acre, 



Virginia Jumbo or Virginia Runner. The biggest 

 and heaviest yielding extra large peanut. A good variety 

 for light sandy land, where they produce enormous bright, 

 attractive nuts, with few pops, that bring highest prices 

 on the market. Shells out 69.5 per cent. Lb. 20 cts.; 5 lbs. 

 90 cts., not postpaid. 



Nitragin for Garden Use 



INOCOLAIE THIS SEtD 



NlTMGlN 



Every garden needs Nitragin; fresh liigh count Nitragin, 

 containing billions of nitrogen-gathering germs builds up the 

 soil. Costs less than others — is cheapest crop insurance. 

 Insist on NITRAGIN. Garden size is for peas, sweet peas, 

 and beans, including lima (3 in 1 inoculent). Price 10 cts.; 

 Vi bu, size, 25 cts.; 1 bu. size, 35 cts.; Ifj bu, size, 50 cts,; 

 121/2 bu, size, $3.50. 



We Pay Postage on Pkts., Pts, and Qts. Only of Seed Peas — Larger Quantities Carrying Charges Extra, 



