A FIELD OF MAULE'S EAKMKST OF A 



15 DAYS FROM PLANTING 



In 1884 I offered this variety for the first time sis the EARLIEST PEA in cultivation. It has proved n 

 itself to be a remarkable addition, and if you desire to have peas long before your neighbors, this is ' 

 just the sort to plant. But extra earliness" is not the only tiling to recommend Earliest of All, for besides 

 being earlier than any other, it is a wonderfnl bearer, producing an enormous number of line pods, 

 well "tilled with extra plump peas of the most delicious flavor. It is an even cropper, can almost always e 

 be cleaned off with one or two picking"' Market-gardeners will all appreciate this quality. ® 

 Vines grow about 2 feet high, and are always loaded down with pods. Pkt., 15c; pt., 25c.; qt.,45c. o 



J. D. Harvey, Mt. Lake Park, Md. "1 have pur- 

 chased seed of you for 4 years, and I have yet to find 

 fault with them. My garden is superior to any in the 

 neighborhood. Maule's Seeds are unsurpassed. One 

 of my neighbors did not sow Maule's Seeds lust Spring 

 the result was a crop of mustard instead of turnips." 



J. B. Hall, Cicero, Ind. "For 3 or 4 seasons past 

 I have given you my order for garden seeds, and 

 you may count on my orders in the future. I con- 

 sider Maule's Seeds the best on earth." 



Mary J. Brink, Graham, Mo. " We have been plant- 

 ing seeds from you for the last few years, and never fall 

 to have a good stand. We notice in various other 

 catalogues we receive, that prices are lower, but we 

 are always sure when we plant your seed that they 

 will grow and be true to name." 



Mrs. J. M. Collins, Farmington, Te*as. 'I have 

 bought seeds of you for 6 or 7 years, and found them to 

 be the very best, I cheerfully recommend all my friends 

 who want a good garden to send to you for seeds." 



MAULE'S IMPROVED 



b EXTRA EARLY ^ 

 THE MOST PROFITABLE PEA' 

 FOR MARKET GARDENERS 



For a first early, lias no superior, excepting in Maule's Earliest of All. It is most 



wonderfully productive ; a very even cropper ; pods large and well filled ; height about two feet, 

 and of a most luscious and agreeable flavor. In fact.it is undoubtedly an extra A No. 1 and 

 very profitable variety in every respect. Pkt., 10 cts.; pint, 25 cts.; quart, 40 cts. 



Jackson Russell, Waldoboro, Me., secured the S50 premium last October, for picking the 

 enormous quantity of 20,047 pods from one quart sown in 150 feet of row. This certainly stamps 

 Maule's Extra Early as the most prolific of all. Any number of reports came to hand from 

 customers who picked from 10,000 to 19,000 pods. 



f 



^^-'■■- iiuattoiit- ■ — ** j— — ~- 77 



MAULE'S FAMILY GARDEN. — In earliness, Family Garden equals any ottoe r, <on*n 

 maturing In 45 to 50 days. In productiveness, it is simply 



most toothsome and delicate flavor. The only difference between them and Maule s Extra -Early 

 £thtt anhoug°h™he y frequently ripen equally as early, they ^^S^^^mS^SSSv^ 

 mature their crop all at once, but continue in bearing from one to three weeks. Jo-. ;^^?^§£S™ 



without them. Packet, 10 cents ; pint, 

 25 cents ; quart, 40 cents. 



AMERICAN WONDER PEA. 



-Peas planted in June matured in 

 thirtv-three days. 27 to *1 pods 

 have been counted on some 

 vines, nine large peas in some of 

 the pods, and all of them well 

 filled. The vine only grows about 8 

 to 10 inches high. My crop this year 

 is as choice as ever, strictly 

 true to name, the genuine 

 Hliss strain. Packet, 10 cents ; 

 pint, 25 cents; quint, 45 cents 



BLISS'S EVER-BEAR- 

 ING PEA.— The want of a relia- 

 ble first-class pea for Summer and 

 Autumn use has long and serious- 

 ly been lelt by everyone. With 

 this new and remarkable variety 

 I am confident I place before the 

 public a pea which, when suffici- 

 ently known, will everywhere be 

 recognized as the main depend- 

 ence for a Summer and Autumn 

 crop. Season late, to very late. 

 Height of vines 1* inches to 2 feet. 

 Its habit of growth isofa peculiar 

 branching character, forming as 

 manv as ten stalks from a single 

 root stalk. ( >nc hundred pods have 

 been counted on a single vine. 

 After repeated pickings of quanti- 

 ties of full-sized pods, the vines 

 continue to be covered with blos- 

 soms and buds developing to ma- 

 turity, making it practically a 

 perpetual bearer. On account of 

 its branching habit, half a pint of 



s 1 will plant as much '.'round as 



a quart of most other kinds. Pkt., 

 cts.; pt., 25 cts.; qt., 45 cts. 



BLISS'S 



Ev^r-Bearir)^ 



I W Woodman, New Gloucester, Maine: "The Tele- 

 phone Peas I had of vou last year were the lu st (ire 



Peas I ever ate and every one who tasted them said the sanx 

 Flower seeds did nicely. The Variegated Pansy and BalSBD 



Mrs ,n iT'M''7;'rnvc Greenfield, Ohio : " Maule's Earliest of ah » CI 

 Peas and The a merlcan Wonder an- the finest and moSt pro- ^■« 1 .w/ 

 llllo peas I ever had. All my patrons speak very highly of IT » 

 Maule's seeds." 



44 



