24 BVdRYTHIIMQ FOR TIE GARDEH-Verfeftable Seeds 



PRAISE FOR 



HENDERSON'S 



SUCCESSION 



CABBAGE 



" The year before we had a beauti- 

 ful lot of Henderson's Succession 

 Cabbage, and took first prise at the 

 exhibition. Some of the heads were 

 immense*" 



II. N. ARNOLD, 

 Jan. 18, 1917. Calais, Me. 



"I was very successful with Hen- 

 derson's Succession Cabbage. It is 

 c great lest for any Cabbage to grow 

 them and gel every one to a firm head 

 as I have done. I have given about 

 40 away, and the friends were de- 

 lighted with them." t 



WALTER E. JACKES, 

 Feb. 2, 1917, Chatswood, N. S. W. 



"Henderson's Succession Cab- 

 bage has proved to be an unqualified 

 success and has elicited high praise 

 from everyone who has seen it." 

 ALEXANDER W. BALL, 

 Wood St., 

 June 14, 1917. Texarkana, Tex. 



"The Cabbage seed {Henderson's 

 Succession Cabbage) with which you 

 supplied me last year turned out 

 splendidly." 



L. WATSON, 



Avondale, 

 Sept. 27, 1917. Auckland, N. Z 



Our Leaflet "Best Methods of 

 Cabbage Culture for Early and 

 Late," Sent Free to Customers 

 if asked for. 



HENDERSON'S 



Succession Cabbage 



THE MOST CELEBRATED SECOND-EARLY 

 VARIETY OF CABBAGE IN CULTIVATION 



The Finest Cabbage for General Use 

 Enormous Heads of Exceedingly Tender __QuaIity 



HENDERSON'S SUCCESSION CABBAGE we consider* one of our most valuable 

 contributions to horticulture. 



It stands today unrivaled as a second-early or main-crop sort, and few vegetables have 

 held their place in the public esteem for so many years. The heads become solid- long 

 before they are fully grown, so that though immature, heads of satisfactory size may be 

 cut long before it is at its best. This quality, combined with its ability to stand well with- 

 out splitting, makes it available for use over a longer season than any variety we know, 

 and the best to use where only one sort is grown. 



We introduced this variety in 1888, and its appearance attracted instant attention. 

 Since then there have been many attempts at imitating it, but the enormous increase of 

 our sales, and the periodically unsatisfied demand for our stock, give testimony to the 

 acknowledged superiority of Henderson's Succession over all would-be competitors. It 

 stands today a money maker for the trucker, and the delight of the amateur. 



It is a second-early variety coming in immediately after the first-early sorts. It greatly 

 exceeds in size any variety in its season. Without doubt it is the best second-early Cab- 

 bage in existence, and is so finely bred, so free from coarse veining of the lea ves. # that, in 

 addition to its reliability and sure cropping quality,' it possesses all the fine qualities of the 

 very best earlier varieties. (See engraving.) Price, ioc. pkt., $1.30 oz., $4.70 14, lb., 

 $18.00 lb. 



"Growers of wide experience regard Henderson's Succession Cabbage as the most important produc- 

 tion in the cabbage line, and the surest to produce a crop. It is a Iradewinner for the market gardener, 

 which is the reason it continues to grow in popular favor." W.E. VAIL, Yorklown Heights. N. Y. 



"I used your cabbage seed for the first time last year, The Succession Cabbage were simply great, 

 hundreds of heads weighing 15 and 20 pounds, and one that I petted a little for show purposes weighed 

 29'A pounds." B. H. DORWIN, Bainbridge, N. Y. 



"I used to grow your Succession Cabbage years ago in Georgia and have never found anything here as 

 good, so I am ordering some." ■ AS. DENHAM, St. Augustine, Fla. 



"Henderson's Succession Cabbage Seed I find is the best variety I have ever planted." 



A. J. HA WSEY, Clinton, la. 



"Henderson's Succession is the finest Cabbage on earth. I had them all winter, in fact up to April 

 15th, stored in cold cellar." W. L. EYERIT, Jr., Weltsville, N. Y. 



TVOTI^ This peerless variety is so well known and so much sought after, that many firms are 



1,U1L| * offering A "SUCCESSION" CABBAGE. We have tested many of these and find 

 some entirely untrue and others of inferior strains. Be sure to get our highly bred and selected 

 type, which is procurable only direct from us.— PETER HENDERSON & CO. 



