Barbatus {Sweet William) (B) 
This, every old fashioned garden had in abundance, but if you 
haven’t grown the newer varieties, you don’t know its glamour. 
If your soil is not well drained, you must treat it as a biennial. 
With us, it is reliably perennial. Plant in masses in the border. 
If you shear after the June flowering the foliage remains pass¬ 
able, and there will be sporadic bloom again in August and 
September. 
Diadem (B) Deep crimson, with a well defined white eye. 
Sutton's Fairy (B) Delicately tinted salmon pink. 
Sutton’s Pink Beauty (B) Salmon pink, deeper than Fairy. 
The best in the world. 
Sutton's Rich Crimson (B) Deep, dark crimson. Luxurious, 
and curiously enough it clashes with nothing, but enriches the 
whole border. Indispensable, we think, for its vibrant warmth. 
Caesius grandiflorus {Cheddar PinfO (D) 
Compact, making a tuft of glaucous foliage from which in early 
Spring, rise fragrant, rosy flowers. Nice for the rockery. lo 
inches. 
Caryophyllus —See Carnation. 
Deltoides {Maiden PinJO (C) 
Prostrate plant, bearing many small red flowers in Summer. 
Good rock plant, well compacted. 
Knappi (E) 
Unique for its daintiness and its yellow flowers. Likes sun and 
sand. Excellent for the rockery. 
Plumarius Semperflorens (A) 
Single, continuous flowering, if sheared. Possesses a quaintness 
and humility which are appealing. 
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