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SWEET PEAS 
Choicest Named Varieties 
WHITE 
9115. Sutton’s Sextet Queen Per packet 40c 
Pure white flowers of great substance. Gives 
normally five-flowered stems when grown 
under ordinary conditions, and _ six-flowered 
stems with quite a fair number of sevens, ° 
when grown on the “‘cordon’’ system for show 
purposes. 
CREAM 
9165. What Joy Per packet 25c 
Flowers cream, heavily frilled, and well placed 
on long substantial stems. 
FLUSHED, CREAM GROUND 
9210. Sutton’s Shell-Pink Per packet 25c 
Immense flowers of great substance, daintily 
flushed with an exquisite shade of deep shell- 
pink over a cream ground. 
PINK SHADES 
9255. Sutton’s Nobility Per packet 40c 
A giant among Sweet Peas. The color is clear 
pale salmon-pink on a deep cream ground, 
closely approaching buff, and many five- 
flowered stems are produced. 
CERISE AND SCARLET SHADES 
9500. Sutton’s Golden Radiance 
Per packet 40c 
Flowers clear salmon-cerise, suffused with 
golden lights. The constitution of the plant 
is very vigorous. 
9535. Flamingo Per packet 25c 
Brilliant orange-scarlet flowers, shaded cerise; 
of large size, and carried on long stems. 
BLUE SHADES 
9750. Sutton’s Ebony Per packet 40c 
Quite a distinct shade, almost a blue-black, 
and the blooms have a lustrous sheen which 
imparts a_ brilliance seldom seen in dark 
Sweet Peas. The flowers, which are perfectly 
placed, are frequently produced five on a 
stem. An exceptionally strong grower. 
9775. Blue Flame Per packet 25c 
Large true deep blue variety, the standard 
showing a little deeper color than the wings. 
9788. Pierrot Per packet 25c 
Pure white, with heavy deep blue picotee 
edges and markings to both standards and 
wings. 
PURPLE 
9900. Sutton’s Purple Monarch 
Per packet 25c 
A deep shade of purple, but free from the 
dead coloring often associated with purple 
Sweet Peas. 
9905. Bacchus Per packet 25c 
Immense wine-colored flowers; distinct. 
Sutton’s Giant Perfection Ten-Weeks Stocks 



SUTTON’S SWEET PEAS IN 
COLOR MIXTURES 
_ One of the most delightful methods of grow- 
ing Sweet Peas is to arrange a number of va- 
rieties in harmonious blendings or contrasts. The 
range of colors is so extensive and diverse that 
an almost endless choice is made possible, and 
as a basis for those who may be planning such 
color schemes we offer the following effective 
combination of the finest frilled varieties: 
9080. Pink, Yellow, and Salmon Shades 
9084. Pale Blue and Cream Shades 
9086. Salmon-Pink and Pale Blue Shades 
9088. Rose-Pink and Bright Blue Shades 
9090. Cream and Maroon Shades 
9092. Salmon-Pink and Crimson Shades 
9096. White, Pink, and Red Shades 
9100. Imperial Red, White, and Blue 
The above: All, per packet 25c 
9041. All Colors Mixed Per packet 25c 
Per large packet 65c 
SWEET SULTAN 
A very attractive hardy annual. The flowers 
are well adapted for cutting and retain their 
freshness in water for a long period. Sow in the 
open ground in March, April, or May, or in Sep- 
tember for early flowering. 
Sutton’s Giant 
Magnificent strain with flowers exquisitely 
fringed, delightfully scented, and at least twice 
the size of older varieties. The plants are also 
earlier flowering. Height 18 inches. 
4495. Giant White 
Superb pure white flowers. 
4503. Giant Splendens Per packet 15c 
Rich wine-red; unusual color in Sweet Sultans 
and most attractive. 
Per packet 15c 
4497. Giant Delicate Mauve Per packet 15c 
Pale mauve outer petals with white center. 
Very dainty. 
4501. Giant Rosy Mauve Per packet 15c 
The pinkest variety of Giant Sweet Sultan we 
know, and a very pretty shade. 
4507. Giant Mixed Per packet 25c 
Including white and various shades of mauve, 
blue, purple, etc. 
{145} 


Bowl of Statice Suworowi and Sinuata Mixture 
SWEET WILLIAM, 
Dianthus Barbatus 
French, Oeillet de poete. Hardy biennial. 
Height about 18 inches. Sweet Williams are as 
important for the garden in the early summer 
as are Antirrhinums and Asters in the later 
months. The Pink Beauty, Scarlet, and Giant 
White varieties are especially attractive, and 
make possible at a somewhat difficult period of 
the year brilliant bedding effects on a large 
scale, equal to those obtained with Antirrhin- 
ums or Wallflowers. Seed of the biennial vari- 
eties should be sown in May, June, or July, and 
the plants transferred to blooming quarters in 
the autumn. 
4518. Sutton’s Superb Mixed Per packet 25c 
Magnificent strain of large-flowered Sweet 
William, containing many attractive shades of 
Pet Ross deep pink, cerise, and other charming 
colors. 
4520. Sutton’s Pink Beauty Per packet 25c 
A beautiful salmon-pink variety, which should 
be grown in every garden. 
4524. Sutton’s Scarlet Per packet 25c 
A still more remarkable color than our Pink 
Beauty, from which this variety has been sel- 
ected. The flowers are of an intense scarlet, 
similar to that of Grenadin Carnation. A bed 
of this Sweet William in the distance is very 
striking. 
4527. Sutton’s Giant White Per packet l5c 
Enormous’ trusses which might well be mis- 
taken for perennial Phlox. The _ individual 
erate icc flowers exceed the size of a 
orin. 
4529. Sutton’s Giant Auricula-Eyed, 
Bright Shades Per packet 15c 
A rich mixture; every flower has a clearly 
defined eye. 
TAGETES 
4561. Signata pumila, Sutton’s Golden Gem 
Per packet 25c 
Hardy annuai. A much-improved dwarf com- 
pact variety; flowers very freely produced and 
thrown well above the foliage. Height 9 
inches. 
TITHONIA SPECIOSA 
4588. Per packet 25c 
Tall-growing half-hardy annual plant with rich 
orange-red flowers of a very telling color. The 
seed should be sown under glass in February 
or March, and the plants either flowered in 
the greenhouse or put into a sunny position in 
the border during May. Height 6 feet. 
COPYRIGHT S&S 
