PETER 1EHDERSOH ®. CO., HEW YORK 
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99 
CANARY-BIRD VINE 
A rapid-growing, summer-climbing annual, growing 10 to 15 feet high. It will 
cover trellis work in the most graceful manner, producing hundreds of its pretty 
fringed bright yellow flowers, which resemble a canary bird with expanded wings. 
Pkt. 10c. 
CARDINAL CLIMBER ot ^ T r ltl^lV a 
This new hybrid Cypress Vine is one of the most beautiful climbing annuals that 
we know of and deserves to be grown in every garden. The foliage of rich glossy 
green is palm-leaf like, with laciniated or fringed edges against which the brilliant 
scarlet tubular flowers, 1 to ll 2 inches across, contrast most vividly. In a warm, 
sunny location, in good soil, it grows about 20 feet in height, is of rapid growth, free 
from insects and a beautiful vine for trellis, piazza or pergola being literally bespangled 
with flowers from July until late fall. The seed is very hard-shelled and germinates 
quicker when started under glass, but if sown in the open ground the seeds should 
first be soaked for a few hours in warm water. 
Pkt. 15c.; two Pkts. 25c. 
CAMPANULAS OR BELL-FLOWERS 
CAMPANULA PYRAMIDALIS. The favorite “Chimney Bell-Flower," so prized 
in old fashioned gardens and also often grown in pots for greenhouse and piazza 
decoration. It is a hardy perennial, producing spikes 4 to 5 feet high, encircled 
about half of their length with large bell-flowers of white or shades of blue. It 
thrives in any good soil and is very ornamental. Grown in pots the plants should 
frequently be repotted; they will then attain a very large size. ( See engraving,) 
Mixed Colors. Pkt. 10c. 
CAMPANULA persicaefolia grandiflora. (Peach-leaved Bell-Flowers.) Remark¬ 
ably handsome, hardy perennials, throwing up spikes 2 to 3 feet high; clothed 
during summer with large, bell-shaped blossoms of blue or white. Prized for both 
garden and pot culture. 
White. Pkt. 10c. Blue. Pkt. 10c. 
CAMPANULA pyramidalis compacta. Mixed Colors. This new type is dwarfer 
and more compact in growth than the old pyramidalis — attaining a height of only 
2 to 3 feet. They bloom freely and the flowers are equally as large; colors, various 
shades of blue and white. «Pkt. 10c. 
Customer’s Collection of Campanulas, any three 10c. pkts. for 25c. 
CANTERBURY BELLS 
Very ornamental garden plants of 
easiest culture, flowering the second 
season from seed; hardy biennial (re¬ 
quiring to be sown every year for 
flowering the next year), 2\-i feet high, 
producing large bell-shaped flowers of 
exquisite colors. ( See engraving.) 
Single Mixed. Pkt. 5c. 
Double Blue. . 10c. 
“ White . 10c. 
“ Rose. .... 10c. 
“ Mixed. 10c. 
CUP and SAUCER CAN¬ 
TERBURY BELLS 
The “ Cup and Saucer ” varieties 
( Campanula Calycanthema) produce 
beautiful single flowers 3 inches in 
length, saucers 3 to 4 inches across. 
The plants form perfect pyramids of 
bloom for weeks during the early 
summer. 
Calycanthema Rose. Pkt. 10c. 
“ White. 10c. 
“ Blue . 10c. 
“ Striped . 10c. 
“ Mixed. 10c. 
Customer’s Collection of Canterbury 
Bells, any three 10c. pkts. selected 
for 25c. 
“ In your last year’s catalogue you 
advertised Canterbury Bells mixed. We 
got a packet and the result this summer 
is wonderful. Everyone admires the 
colors and the plants are very strong and 
full of bloom." 
Miss MARY F. LOUD, 
July 5, 1917. Weymouth, Mass. 
“ The seeds I purchased from you last 
spring made one of the prettiest gardens 
in the town and it was very much 
admired." 
Miss HARRIET W. GALBRAITH, 
Garden St., Mount Holly, N. J. 
"7 am sending you enclosed a photo 
of my Canterbury Bells, all of them 
raised from a packet of your seed. I 
had hundreds of blossoms, mostly the 
pink, of which only a few arc shown in 
the photo." 
Mrs. A. F. HEBARD, 
Aug. 18, 1916. Scarsdale, N. Y. 
“7 have a very pretty Porlulaca bed 
four feet by three feet, grown from Hen¬ 
derson's single variety. It was a most 
wonderful sight last year." 
Mrs. E. TUTTLE, 
Lackawanna Homestead, 
March 29, 1917. Stanhope, N. J. 
Henderson’s Garden Guide and Record £ a f ac r 3 don 
"In your Garden Guide is a list of Cultural Instructions for the 
planting of Fleaver Seeds and the handling of Seedlings. . . It is 
unquestionably the most condensed, concise and accurate set of directions 
of its kind I know." M. G. KAINS, Professor of Horticulture, 
Pennsylvania School of Agriculture, State College, Pa. 
