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Sutton's Annual Poppy. 
WAYSIDE GARDENS 
NEMESIA SUTTONI 
Half-hardy annual. 
Nemesias can be grown practically all the year round. In the open 
they are becoming every year more and more popular as summer 
bedding plants and are admirable for putting out in late spring, fob 
lowing Wallflowers, as well as for planting at the end of June or in 
July for late summer flowering. They may also be grown for winter 
greenhouse work, and some of the best specimens we have ever seen 
were flowered by one of our customers at Christmas. 
For spring bedding Nemesias should be sown the first fortnight in 
February, grown on under cool treatment, and transplanted early in 
May; for summer bedding the end of March or early in April is the 
best time to sow. Seed should be sown in July or August for winter 
greenhouse flowering, and from mid-September to mid-October for 
a spring display under glass. When flowered in the open garden, and 
for summer bedding especially, it is most important that the plants 
should get a good root-hold of the ground before they come into 
bloom. 
Sutton’s Large-Flowered 
12717. Special Mixture. Including white, pale yellow, pink, crimson, 
blue, and an almost endless diversity of intermediate shades. 
Per pkt., 32c. 
NIGELLA - Love-in-a-Mist 
These charming hardy annuals are very profuse blooming and the 
plants continue to flower until the close of the summer. 
12781. Miss Jekyll. Lovely Nigella, giving an abundance of long¬ 
stemmed flowers which are of a clear Cornflower-blue, prettily set 
in slender elegant foliage. One of the most attractive annuals. 
The plants are extremely hardy, and an autumn sowing produces 
the best specimens for flowering in the following summer. Height 
18 inches. Per pkt., 32c. 
Sutton's Salvia. 
PENTSTEMON 
Sutton’s Large-Flowering 
A much improved strain of this favorite flower. The large Glox¬ 
inia-shaped blooms vary from pure white, pink, and rose, to richest 
crimson, including many which are beautifully edged with a fine con¬ 
trasting color. 
12917. Pink Shades. A most charming combination of delicate tints 
only, including rose, pink, and carmine, on white grounds. 
Per pkt., 49c. 
12919. Scarlet. Brilliant flowers, free from magenta tint. Makes a 
very striking bed edged with the pink or white varieties. 
Per pkt., 49c. 
12921. Pure White. Large pure white flowers freely produced. A very 
welcome addition both for bedding and cutting. Per pkt., 32c. 
SUTTON’S PANSIES 
Pansies and Violas from seed cannot be grown too freely in any 
garden. The beautiful and rich colors produced by these flowers are 
especially welcome after the yellow of the Daffodils has passed. We 
pay the greatest attention to Pansies and Violas, and the displays seen 
at our Reading and Slough grounds in May invariably call forth com¬ 
ment from passengers in passing trains and bring us many letters of 
inquiry. Pansies are best treated as biennials, sowing in July for flow¬ 
ering in the following year. 
12813. Sutton’s Perfection Mixed. It is impossible to convey an 
adequate idea of the delightful variations in color and markings of 
this well known and popular strain. Our seed is saved only from 
the largest and best shaped flowers of the very richest colors, and 
we still consider this one of the finest Pansies in cultivation. Mixed 
colors. Per pkt., 49c. 
12811. Sutton’s Ullswater. A fine race which has created the widest 
interest, and we are gratified to learn of the pleasure this Pansy 
has given to many customers who have grown it. The coloring is 
unusual and attractive—a solid blue flower with a blue-black center; 
size, form and substance are equal to our well-known Perfection 
Pansy. Per pkt., 49c. 
12836. Sutton’s Crimson Queen. The red counterpart of Sutton’s 
Ullswater. It is the reddest and most brilliant Pansy we know. The 
flowers are of the largest size, of perfect form, and are marked 
with a conspicuous dark blotch towards the center. Per pkt., 49c. 
