Connell & donpplete $eed Gfuide. 
H.B. STOCK, BROMPTON — A strong growing biennial 
variety, very nseful for winter or spring gardening. Scarlet, 
Is. per pkt. ; Purple, Is. per pkt. ; White, Is. per pkt. ; Finest 
Mixed, Is. per pkt. 
Brompton should be sown in July, and planted out in a good 
soil in a sheltered situation. They generally stand the winter 
without protection , and make a grand display in June and July. 
H.H.A. PERPETUAL TEN-WEEK STOCK — Snow white. 
Princess Alice; fine for pot culture and cut flowers. Is. 
per pkt. 
h.h A. STOCK, PERPETUAL-FLOWERING — Dwarf, 
mixed. Is. per pkt. 
II.H. STENACTIS SPECIOSA — Purple flowers, plants 
2 feet high ; if the seed is sown in a slight hotbed in March, 
it will produce flowering plants the sarno year. 3d. per pkt. 
SWEET ALYSSUM — See Alyssum Maritimum. 
SWEET SULTAN — See Centaurca Moschata. 
SWEET WILLIAM — See Dianthus Barbatus. 
II. l*. STELLARIA GR AMINE A AUREA— Neater than 
Golden Feather, and, like that, far better from seeds thm> 
plants. Is. per pkt. 
H.H. A. TAGETES, SIGNATA PUMILA— A miniature 
variety of Marigold, with small pinnate leaves, golden yellow 
flowers, striped with crimson during autumn and summer 
months; one of the most useful annuals for bedding am? 
decorative purposes. 3d. per pkt. 
o.A. THUNBERGIA ALATA — Beautiful climber for pot 
culture in conservatories, and for low walls on warm aspects 
in the garden, growing 4 to G feet high, and flowering profusely 
throughout the summer months; flowers pale buff with nearly 
brompton STOCK. black throat, leaves shaped somewhat like a spade. 3 d . nor pkt - 
h.h. A. GERMAN EMPEROR STOCK— 
Extra fine, mixed, Is. per pkt. 
The foregoing varieties of Stock have proved to be 
the most distinct and decorative, and suitable to the 
different styles of gardening for which the Stock is 
so admirably adapted. All are desirable pot-plants, 
and are greatly prized as cut flowers, both for their 
diverse colours and fragrance. For a continuous 
succession of bloom, seed should be soivn at intervals 
from the beginning of March to the end of May ; 
the first sowing under glass, the latter sowings may 
be made where the plants are intended to bloom. 
FOR COLLECTION OF STOCKS, SEE PAGE 64. 
Mrs. Telfer, Newington, Paignton. 
I wish to say that the seed of the White Stock I got from you last year has turned out 
splendidly, every plant double. 
Mr. Wm. Beli,, Knighton Road, Leicester, September GO th, 1891. 
The Ten-week Stock seed that you supplied me with produced the finest in the Midlands. . 
First prise everywhere exhibited. Fourteen entries at one Show. Princess Alice were 
simrlv grand — G to 12 splendid spikes on each plant. 
Mr. A. R. Newton, Killooney House, Armagh. 
The Stocks I got from you are very fine, hist I have ever grown. Ail the seeds I had from 
j you came very well. • 
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