8 
ANDREWS-BURRI PRICE LIST 
PEAS 
WESTERN GIANT—This truly is 
a giant podded pea of recent intro¬ 
duction. Its mammoth long, dark, 
green pods, 514 to 6 inches long 
are slightly curved, the vines about 
26 inches high, produce a bounti¬ 
ful crop about 73 days from plant¬ 
ing. Unlike many varieties of its 
season, the quality is rich in flav¬ 
or and will remain tender and sweet 
several days after picking. 
LITTLE MARVEL—62 Days—Vine 
strong and vigorous, about 18 
inches tall. Showy pods about 3 to 
314 inches long with a blunt end 
containing 7 or 8 Peas. Seed large, 
green, wrinkled. A very fine pro¬ 
ductive, dwarf, sturdy variety. 
Popular with the home gardener 
and in some sections planted large¬ 
ly by market gardeners. 
LAXTON’S PROGRESS—A new 
variety of great merit and popu¬ 
larity. The pods are large, 4 to 414 
inches long, and of a fine dark 
green color. Vines grow only 18 to 
20 inches high, and bear a heavy 
crop of handsome pods. Being one 
of the earliest of the sweet wrink¬ 
led sorts, Laxton’s Progress is in 
great demand everywhere. Matures 
in about 55 to 58 days. 
LAXTON’S SUPERB OR EARLY 
BIRD — An exceptionally early, 
hardy, productive, handsome pea. 
Height 16 inches. Vine and foliage 
moderately heavy, medium green; 
pods deep green, 4 inches long, 
semi-broad, pointed and well filled 
with 8 to 9 very large, dark green 
peas. As early as Laxtonian and 
more productive; seed blue, semi- 
wrinkled; quality fair. 
HUNDREDFOLD—This is, without 
doubt, the very best dwarf pea ever 
grown. It is the best-flavored and 
the largest-podded dwarf-growing 
sort in existence. It is ready about 
three days after the earliest sorts, 
and bears an enormous crop of 
handsome, intensely dark green, 
fairly broad and pointed pods, 4 
inches long, containing about 8 
large, dark green peas of excellent 
quality. The vines are 16 inches 
high, sturdy, and resist heat well. 
THOMAS LAXTON—Days to ma¬ 
turity, 73. A variety having been 
originated in England by Mr. 
Thomas Laxton, of Bedford, a noted 
English horticulturist. This pea is 
hardy and slightly earlier than 
Gradus and a more abundant yield- 
er. The pods resemble Gradus in 
shape, excepting that they are 
blunt ended. They will attain a 
length of four and one-quarter 
inches. They are straight, inclined 
toward roundness and are well 
filled. The vines will grow to a 
height of thirty inches. 
