_,_S&s/Gp 
dependable Vegetable Seeds 
PEAS 
Extra Early Round Seeded 
Alaska. Height 2 H feet. Very early and exceedingly 
uniform in maturing its crop. The vines are very pro¬ 
ductive, bearing four to seven pods which are filled with 
medium sized, bright bluish-green peas of good flavor. 
First and Best. Height 2^ to 3 feet. Standard, 
white seeded extra early. Vines are vigorous and hardy, 
bearing from three to seven pods, each containing from 
five to seven medium sized Peas of good quality. 
Early Wrinkled Varieties 
Advancer. Height 2 to 2^ feet. Seeds green, wrinkled. 
The pods are broad and long and well filled to the ends. 
It is a very productive and satisfactory variety. 
American Wonder. Height 15 inches. The vines 
bear a great abundance of good sized pods containing 
five to eight large, exceedingly sweet, tender and well 
flavored peas. This is the earliest of the dwarf, wrinkled 
varieties. The seed is medium sized, wrinkled and 
pale green. Especially adapted for family use as they 
require no brush 
Gradus. A superb extra early wrinkled variety with 
immense pods. Very hardy and can be planted as early as 
Alaska. Grows 3§ feet high strong and vigorous. Pods 
nearly four inches long with 6 to 8 large sweet peas. Pods 
uniformly well shaped. 
Laxtonian. Early, productive and very satisfactory. 
Dwarf variety but excels Gradus in yield. Very delicious 
flavor. Height 18 to 20 inches. 
Little Gem. Height 16 to 18 
inches. The vines are of dwarf 
growth and produce an abundance 
of round, well filled pods 2 to 3 
inches long, only three days after 
the American Wonder. The peas 
are green, wrinkled, of sweet, del¬ 
icious flavor and excellent quality. 
Little Marvel. Pods are a little 
larger than Nott’s Excelsior, quality 
equally good. Large producer. 
Height about 1 feet. 
Nott’s Excelsior. Height 14 in¬ 
ches. It is of compact, dwarf growth 
and is nearly as early as the Amer¬ 
ican Wonder. The pods average 
three inches in length and are well 
filled to the square ends with green, 
wrinkled peas of fine quality. 
Progress. The earliest of the 
large-podded, sweet varieties. A 
dwarf plant with very large pro¬ 
duction. 
Thomas Laxton. Large pod¬ 
ded, extra early pea. In earliness 
the Thomas Laxton is only two 
or three days behind the Alaska, 
but the pods are very much larger, 
containing on the average seven or 
eight large, sweet, wrinkled peas 
of the very richest flavor. The 
vines attain a height of from three 
to three and one-half feet. In 
flavor this pea is unsurpassed. 
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