H. CANNBLL & SONS’ AUTUMN CATALOGUE. 
8a 
never distress our stock with auctions, therefore weji>% 
have immense collections of everything mentioned herein, and can 
serve you well, and hope to be favoured with your orders. 
STRAWBERRIES. 
The fact of our being located in the midst of hundreds of acres of all the best Strawberries and 
Raspberries enables us to offer fine plants, and good sine cropping kinds, at the lowest prices. 
The following if planted at once will produce a crop next year. 
Warranted True to Name. 
James Veitoh, the largest fruit in cultivation (a good grower) 
Counts, very distinct, one of tho best 
©Garibaldi {lyn. Vicomtesse Hericarte de Thury) 
©Sir J. Paxton 
Sir O. Napier 
©Eleanor 
President, .; 
Dr. Hogg 
©Elton Pine 
British Queen 
Keen’s Seedling 
Sir Harry ...' 
Eliza 
Royal Hautbois 
Barnes Seedling • 
White Pine, producing very large wdiite fruit 
Pauline, very early ... ... 
Ordinary Runners, Is. per 100 less. 
Prepared 
Runners per 100. 
s. d. 
5 0 
4 0 
8 0 
4 0 
4 0 
4 0 
4 0 
5 0 
4 0 
5 0 
4 0 
4 0 
4 0 
3 0 
5 ,0 
15 0 
Special Prices for large quantities. 
Those marked thus (©) Cannell & Sons recommend to give a continual supply of fruit from a 
month to six weeks out of doors. 
I^“ALL THE BEST KENTISH RASPBERRIES— Prices, &c., on application. 
SPRING AND FLOWERS. 
If the voice of Spring be not just yet much heard in the woods, the age of Spring has begun to peep 
on us at least from the ascending Sun. The time of sowing and of planting, and all the busy work of 
the gardens and the fields is at hand, and will give us in a week or two the first substantial evidence 
that spring-time is declaring itself. We cannot possibly commend to all our readers a better companion 
of the Spring than the Floral Catalogue of Messrs. Cannell & Sons, the “Home of Flowers, Swanley, 
Kent. It is impossible, indeed, for any one to know what is going on in this extensive department of 
affairs without some manual of this kind, and as Messrs. Cannell & Sons spare no expense, whether in 
the letterpress and illustrations, to give a full account, their Catalogue is really a most valuable 
document for any one to have at this period of tho year. The list of flowers and flower seeds, with 
their prices, and 300 descriptive plates of the most rare or favourito kinds, is completely exhaustive. 
The inquirer will find many new kinds in all the various families which have been coming forward 
and making great mark in the shows and exhibitions, and the propagating of which in their highest 
quality Messrs. Cannell & Sons have taken under their careful protection. Such is the priceless kind 
of information obtained from Messrs. Cannell & Sons through the whole immense catalogue of flowers, 
and when they speak strongly in commendation, we need scarcely add that is always on the highest 
practical authority. The Home of Flowers was perhaps never in more admirable condition than this 
season. The professional skill and extraordinary care iu selection of flower seeds for which this firm 
enjoys sucli high repute, could not have a grander or more conclusive illustration than in the flowers 
of every kind, and suited to every climate, which they grow under their own hand in their own 
pleasant English soil.— Christian Union , Spring Number, 1883. 
