PRODUCE 
F OOD costs today are nearly double 
those of 1914, but there has been 
little or no increase in the cost of your 
home garden. The air and the rain and 
the sunshine are just as free to everyone 
today as in 1914, and the results are 
just as big. 
If your income has increased in proportion to the 
general rise in prices, you can get the full benefit 
of the increase by continuing to produce your 
summer’s food yourself. If it has not, you have 
a double reason for a garden of your own. 
PRODUCE 
Make your 1920 garden a better garden by giving it better attention 
and better seeds. We can help you to both; our full experience of 
seventy-three years is at your service in every way. The name 
“Henderson” on a packet of seeds means that everything we have 
learned in all those years has been done to make them the best that 
can be produced. Start your garden right with Henderson’s Tested 
Seeds and follow our instructions for bigger yields. 
PRODUCE 
The Henderson annual catalogue “Everything for the Garden” is the 
finest we have as yet issued. It is really a book—184 pages—a 
beautifully embossed cover in colors; eight pages in three colors; 
a full hundred new process color halftones and over a thousand half¬ 
tones direct from photographs. It is the last word in garden help. 
PRODUCE 
To demonstrate the superiority of Henderson’s Tested Seeds we have made up 
a Henderson Collection, consisting of one packet each of the following six 
great specialties: 
Ponderosa Tomato Henderson’s Invincible Asters 
Big Boston Lettuce Henderson’s Mixed Brilliant Poppies 
White Tipped Scarlet Radish Spencer Mammoth Waved Sweet Peas 
To obtain the largest possible distribution for our annual catalogue, “Everything for the Garden,” we make 
the following unusual offer: Mail us 10c and we will send you the catalogue, together with this remarkable 
“Henderson’s Specialty Collection,” and complete cultural directions. 
Peter Henderson & Co. 
35-37 Cortlandt Street 
New York City 
I enclose herewith 10c for which send catalogue and 
“Henderson’s Specialty Collection,” with complete 
cultural directions, as advertised in Rural New-Yorker. 
Every Empty Envelope Counts As 
Cash This collection is enclosed in a coupon envelope which, 
- when emptied and returned, will be accepted as 25c cash 
payment on any order for seeds, plants or bulbs amounting to one 
dollar or over. Make this year a “ better garden ” year. 
PETER HENDERSON & CO. 
35-37 Cortlandt Street 
New York City 
