P PETER HENDERSON & CO., NEW YORK- 



i 



HENDERSON'S GIANT^FLOWERING 



Tom Thumb Nasturtiums. 



These Grand Bedding Nasturtiums have flowers often measuring three inches 

 across, in a great variety of new and charming combinations of colors, while 

 the brilliancy and velvety richness of the self-colored sorts have been greatly 

 enhanced. For summer flower-beds nothing can surpass them; the plants 

 form perfect mounds about one foot high by one foot across. Seed sown in 

 the open ground in the spring will produce plants that commence blooming 

 during early summer and continue until frost. 



Giant-Flowering Tom Thumb Nasturtiums, Mixed Colors. This mixture con- 

 tains seed saved from the largest-flowering, and a most beautiful and varied 

 collection. Per pkt., 10c; per oz., 20c; per }i lb., 60c; per lb. $2.00. 



Oz. Pkt. 



Mariposa. Yellow with terra-cotta blotches and red veins 25c. 10c 



Golden Gate. Immense flowers of rich golden-orange 25c. 10c. 



Kaleidoscope. The flowers vary in color on a single plant, some 

 being all yellow, others all red, while many are spotted and 



marked in diversified styles 25c. 10c. 



King of the Reds. Giant flowers of brilliant crimson-scarlet 25c. 10c. 



Rainbow. Canary, splashed, and shaded carmine and rose 25c 10c. 



Gorgeous. Grand flowers of glowing salmony-apricot 25c. 10c. 



The Collection, 1 pkt. each of the above 6 Giant Tom Thumb Nasturtiums, 50c. 



GIANT-FLOWERING 



CLIMBING NASTURTIUMS. 



A new section obtained by a French specialist by hybridizing, and distin- 

 guished by flowers of a large size and a richness and variety of coloring not to 

 be found in Nasturtiums heretofore grown. There have already been pro- 

 duced twenty-two different colors or combinations of colors in these new 

 hybrids, including various shades of rose, salmon, bright red, pale yellow, etc., 

 either self-colored or spotted, mottled, striped, and margined. 



For covering trellises, fences, arbors, piazzas, trailing from vases, over 

 rockwork, etc., nothing can equal the gorgeous effect produced by their mar- 

 velous quantities of bloom, borne in uninterrupted splendor from early summer 

 until cut down by frost. Their ease of culture and rapidity of luxuriant 

 growth, 12 to 15 feet high, render them worthy of great popularity. 

 Giant-Flowering Climbing Nasturtiums, Mixed Colors. Per pkt., 10c; 



per oz., 20c; per \i lb., 60c; per lb. $2.00. 



Oz, Pkt. 

 California. Enormous flowers having a deeply fringed throat; the 



color, a rich crimson- maroon, is strikingly rich and velvety. . . .25c 10c. 

 Twilight. Chamois- yellow, shaded salmon-rose and splashed scarlet. . 25c 10c. 

 Sunlight. Pure, rich, butter- yellow flowers, often 3 inches across. . 25c. 10c. 



Moonlight. Immense creamy-white flowers 25c 10c 



Jupiter. Magnificent flowers of a brilliant golden-yellow 25c. 10c. 



Ruby-Rose. Ruby- rose shading off into lighter and darker tints. . . .25c. 10c. 



Salmon Queen. Grand flowers of glowing salmon color 25c 10c 



Red Spur. Beautiful large flowers of different colors, blotched and 



spotted; some with red edges, etc., and all flowers are further 



ornamented with unique red spurs 25c. 10c 



The Collection, 1 pkt. each of the above 8 Giant Climbing Nasturtiums, 60c 



PRAISE FOR HENDERSON'S GIANT NASTURTIUMS: 



'We planted your collection of Giant Climbing Nasturtiums in a 60 foot row 

 and were astonished at the magnificent results. They presented a broad side of 

 foliage and bloom I had never before seen or dreamed of. The arrav was admired 

 by every passerby." J. T. THOMPSON, West Somerviile, Mass. 



"The Giant Nasturtium seed sent me last year did splendidly. I never saw 

 larger or more beautifut blooms, or more of them. 7 admiration 



who saw them." J. WM. BOYD, Roanoke, Va. 



"My Giant Climbing Nasturtiums last year were the finest I ever saw; '■':■ far the 

 greatest variety of color and most profuse bloomers. Thev ..• the higliest 



praise." Miss CAROLIN E R. CLARK. Del: Dd. 



FOR OUR COMPLETE LIST OF NASTURTIUMS AND TROPAEOLUMS, SEE PAGE 117. 



