dai)t\ell & $or\$’ Complete Heed Gfnide. 
MVOSOTIS DISSITIFI.OIt A. 
NASTURTIUMS— Sre Troptcolum. 
ii. ii. A. NEMESIA VERSICOLOR COM- 
PACTA — Very neat, bushy, profuse-blooming 
plants ; tliey commence flowering when a few 
inches high, anil continue in beauty for months. 
Mixed, id. per pkt. 
ii. a. NEMOPHILA — These charming and 
useful dwarf-growing hardy annuals have a neat, 
compact, uniform habit of growth, with shades 
and colours the most strikingly beautiful ; ar- 
ranged in any style which the fancy may suggest, 
the effect is pleasing and very striking in the 
extreme ; for earlv bedding. 
it. A. NEMOPHILA MACULATA GRAN- 
DIFLORA — White and violet, id. per pkt. 
h.a. NEMOPHILA INSIGNIS GRANDI- 
FLORA— Lovely blue, white centre, id. per pkt. 
.h.a. NEMOPHILA ALBA— Pure white. 
id. per pkt. 
h.a. NEMOPHILA DISCOIDALIS— Vel- 
vety black, edged white, id. per pkt. 
h.a. NEMOPHILA, MIXED, id. per pkt. 
h.ii.p. NERTERA DEPRESSA— Valuable 
acquisition for rock work and carpet bedding, 
quite miniature and studded with innumerable 
pea-like red berries. Is. (i d. per pkt. 
ii. ii. A. NICOTIANA VICTORIA AFFINIS 
(True) — This lately introduced Tobacco plant 
has proved to be such a remarkable variety, and 
given such satisfaction, that it has been suggested 
it should henceforth, and for ever, bear tile name 
of Nicotiana “ Victoria.” Is. per pkt. 
Nicotiana Victoria affinis is a most extraor- 
dinary plant : lstly, because it is a Tobacco plant, 
and yet so different, botli in growth and flowers, 
to the ordinary kind. — L’ndly, because of its pro- 
ducing such splendid pure white noble flowers on 
long terminal tubes, with such a delicious scent, 
which renders it valuable for bouquets. — 3rdly, 
when its gigantic white Bouvardia-like flowers are 
NICOTIANA VICTOBIA (AFFINIS). 
H.H.A. nicotiana tabacum fol. 
VARIEGATIS — The shining green foliage, 
striped with white, renders it a very interesting 
kind. Is. per pkt, 
h.h.p. NIEREMBERGIA FRUTESCENS 
— Valuable for pots, or out of doors; flowers 
white, veined lilac. Is. per pkt. 
h.ii.p. NIEREMBERGIA GRACILIS — 
Charming plants for edgings, hanging baskets, or 
rock work. Is. per pkt. 
h.a. NIGELLA DAMASCENA (Devil in 
a Bush)— Blue, 1£ feet high. id. per pkt. 
II.A. NIGELLA HISPANICA (Love-in-a- 
Mist) — Brown and white, 11 feet high. id. per 
pkt. 
of the foliage is one of its chief merits. As its 
name implies, it is of peculiarly dwarf compact 
habit, and as a spring bedder it. is destined to 
occupy a most conspicuous place. Is. (id. per pkt. 
Sow in July or August in open ground, or in 
slight hotbed in February. 
fully expanded in the evening and early morning 
it has a most striking effect, and perfumes the 
whole surrounding atmosphere. It is, beyond 
doubt, the greatest novelty of the garden. In our 
nursery it has been the amazement of all, and the 
result of several hundreds of packets of seeds being 
sold. It will also unquestionably make a splendid 
greenhouse plant, and is probably adaptable for 
market work, as it is so very free, and only attain- 
ing the height of two feet in any ordinary soil. 
II 
