SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 - 
T. W. WOOD & sons - 
61 
RICHWOND, VIBGINIA 

EDIBLE PEAS 
They should be in every garden 
They not only make a delicious dish when green, but furnish 
dry peas for winter when vegetables are scarce and high in price; 
also a profitable crop for market. Dried peas usually bring good 
prices and are in constant demand. Plant after the ground gets 
thoroughly warm 2 inches deep, 1 1b. to 200 feet. 
Do not plant after tobacco; too much nitrogen remains, producing 
an excess vine growth and reducing the yield of peas, 
Dixie Queen Brown Eye (or Purple Hull) Ne pplackeys 
pass Dixie Queen in delicious flavor. It is a good-sized pea of the 
Ramshorn type, except that it has a brown eye and is a few days 
later, being ready in about 85 to 90 days. Tenderness and sweet- 
ness are its outstanding characteristics; in these respects it has 
no superior in blackeye peas. 
Wood’s Sumptuous Conch Peas —‘Ve believe you will 
agree with us that they are 
the best flavored of all edible peas. Upright vines of about 2 
feet high, and bear a generous crop of well-filled pods, 8 to 9 
inches long. Make green peas in about 68 days; dry peas in 80 
days. 
1 —Has a few equals as a dry pea, besides 
Rice Ce Lady Peas are deliciously flavored and splendidly 
suited for soup. The smallest of all the edible peas; prolific 
bearer and may be used either green or dry. 
IVoini —For the main crop this has always been 
Virginia Blackeye the most extensively grown of all blackeye 
peas in Virginia. One of the latest maturing varieties, making 
green peas in 75 to 80 days and dried peas in 95 to 100 days. Has 
proven so thoroughly dependable that they are generally grown 
to produce dry peas for winter use. The pods are long and well 
filled and produced in great abundance. 
Ex! —The earliest of all blackeye peas. Will 
tra Early Blackeye produce green peas for market in sixty 
days from early planting, and 50 to 55 days late planting. Will 
mature dry peas in 70 days. It is a prolific bearer of well-filled 
pods similar in appearance to Virginia Blackeye, but distinctly 
earlier. The home gardener should grow them for an extra early 
supply of sweet, tender peas; the market gardener to get the 
benefit of the uniformly high price paid for the first blackeye 
peas on the market, . 
—Makes green peas in about 68 days; 
Ramshorn Blackeye dry peas in 80 days. Makes a large leafy 
growth and is prolific, with well-filled pods. Its popularity is 
largely due to the attractive appearance of the matured peas 
and its extra good yielding quality. 
—Produce green peas in 
Brown Sugar or Cream Crowder {Produ SO apa ge 
peas in 100 to 110 days. One of our best flavored table peas, of 
large size and exceedingly popular throughout the South. Very 
prolific, yielding from 10 to 12 bushels of dried peas per acre. 
—Very prolific yield- 
Blue Goose, Gray Crowder or Taylor — Very prolific yield: 
pea, producing green peas in 70 days and dry peas in 80 to 85 
days. A large speckled pea with long pods, and largest yielder 
of all the Crowder types. 
Mr. C. S. Looney, Franklin County, Tenn., says: “The Giant 
Wilt-Resistant Ramshorn alongside was much more thrifty and 
much more prolific than others.” 
PRICE F. O. B. Richmond BY MAIL POSTPAID 
Per Lbesto  25to 100 Bi4i0 2s 50 
Wood’s Early 24 Lbs. 99 Lbs. Lbs.| Lb. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. 
Wilt-Resistant 
Ramshorn ...... 11G.\...°9C.... SC 25c...80c. $1.45. $2.90. $5.65 
Wood's Giant Wilt- 
Resistant Rams- 
HMOTN Te LO OT, Tle... 9c... 8ce 25c...80c. 1.45. 2.90. 5.65 
Dixie Queen Brown 
BYE VN ONT. - 8c... 6Y4c. Ee 20c. 65. 1.15. 2.30. 4.40 
Barly Ramshorn 
Blackeye Peas.. 9c... 7C... 644C|25c...70c. 1.25. 2.40. 4.65 
Extra Early Black- 
eye Peas....... » 10c.).. 8¢.;. .. 7440) 25c,.2.750.-1.35. 2.65. 5.15 
Va. Blackeye Peas. 7c... 540. 5c¢ 20c...60c. 1.05. 2.05. 3.90 
Wood’s Sumptuous 
Conch Peas..... 9c... 7c. 7c 25c. .<70¢...1.25,.,2.55.., 4.90 
Brown Sugar or 
Cream Crowver. 9c... 7c... 6l44c|]25c...70c. 1.25. 2.40. 4.65 
Blue Goose or Gray » 
Crowder ....... 8c... 6c... 544c/25c.. 65c. 1.15, 2.15. 4.15 
Rice or Lady Peas. 15c...13c...12¢ 30c. $1.00. 1.85. 3.90. 7.65 
Dwarf Essex Rape 18c...16c...15¢ 35c. 1.15. 2.15. 4.65. 9.15 


Pare i BE s Ob ERs ‘a a3 : oe) 
One row of WOOD’S GIANT WILT-RESISTANT RAMSHORNS 
with a vine spread of 14 feet, with pods a foot long. Ordinary 
Blackeyes were planted in the row on the extreme right (where 
hat lies), but were destroyed by wilt. 
Wood's Wilt- Resistant Ramshorn Peas 
Identical in appearance and growth to the other Early Rams- 
horns, except: PEAS are much larger, more uniform in shape and 
Size, brighter color, smoother skin with no split skins, and better 
eating quality. PODS are longer, better filled, will not pop open 
if left to ripen, and they make many more pods per vine. YIELD 
about twice as much on non-wilt land, and 4 to 8 times as much 
on wilt-infested land. They make three crops a season when 
planted early. RESISTANT to wilt, nematodes, charcoal rot and 
other diseases that materially reduce the growth, yield and quality 
of other blackeye peas, 
WOOD’S EARLY WILT-RESISTANT RAMSHORN BLACK- 
EYES—Matures green peas in about 63 days; dried peas 73 days. 
Extremely prolific. It makes a tremendous number of long pods 
for its small upright vine. It is uniform in size, growth and ma- 
turity. They have a delicious flavor and are the blackeye peas for 
early market. 
WOOD’S GIANT WiLT-RESISTANT RAMSHORN BLACK- 
EYES—Matures green peas in about 70 days; dried peas in 80 
days. The most vigorous and heaviest yielding edible pea. The 
peas are almost twice the size of ordinary blackeyes. They can be 
planted in wider rows, require less seed per acre and are best for 
the main or late crop. It is a dual purpose pea, producing a tre- 
mendous yield of green and dry peas, yet makes more vine growth 
and is better for green manure or hay than Iron, Brabham and 
other cowpeas. Home gardeners should plant both strains, but for 
the early market the EARLY WILT-RESISTANT strain is best. 
Mr. B. T. Abbott, General Manager of the Dixie Tung-oil Cor- 
poration, Hinds County, Miss., says: ‘The Giant strain has excited 
the most comment, perhaps due to the fact that it was an extra 
large pea and fruited heavier than the Harly strain. Every one 
who has seen these peas and tried them is loud in praise of them. 
Based upon performance in this most trying season, I feel that 
this pea will be a valuable contribution to agriculture in this 
section.” 
Dwarf Essex Rape 
Quick cheap pasturage for 
Poultry and All MSivestock. 
Ready in 6 weeks. Furnishes 
grazing throughout the year. 
Averages 10 tons of green for- 
age per acre of highest feed- 
ing value for fattening or sup- 
plying vitamins to growing 
stock. One acre will pasture 
20 hogs for two months. A 
State experiment station re- 
ports gains of over 7 to & 
pounds by lambs fed on rape 
alone. To avoid bloating, have 
salt and hay available, and do 
not graze when wet or stock 
are hungry. Graze only a short 
while the first day. SOW 6 to 
8 pounds per acre bregadcast, 
or 3 to 4 pounds in drills 18 to 
24 inches apart and cultivate 
| ocoasioygally. Sow again in 
corn at the last working for 
winter and spring pasturage, 

OS Bess ee 
Dwarf Essex Rape 
PrrTTiriiieiitilitiiitit iii iirrii iii iti titi iii iii LL LE LLL LL LiL Li 
