








SALPIGLOSSIS Half-Hardy Annual 
Highly ornamental annuals, with large, veined, 
funnel-shaped flowers; much prized for cutting; 
very showy in beds or borders. A bed of these 
beautiful plants is one of the most striking feat- 
ures of the garden during July and August. 
Splendid pot plants for groups in the greenhouse. 
If an early display is wanted, a start should 
be made at the end of February or beginning of 
March, by sowing on a moderate hotbed. In 
May the plants will be ready for flowering 
quarters. Or sow in April in the open ground 
where the plants are to remain. For flowering 
under glass, seed should be sown in August or 
September, and under cool-house treatment will 
bloom profusely in the following spring. 
Sutton’s Large-Flowered 
Mixed Per packet 40c 
Including large-flowered sorts only. A beau- 
tiful mixture. 
SALVIA 
Fireball Per packet 40c 
A compact, large-flowered Salvia splendens, 
which commences blooming in July from an 
early sowing in heat. The plants are literally 
covered with long spikes of brilliant scarlet 
flowers, very striking in beds. 
Farinacea, Blue Bedder Per packet 40c 
Graceful waving spires of light blue on three- 
foot stems. Clumps planted throughout the 
border add charm, grace, and color. For cut- 
ting use it either long stemmed in tall vases 
or in short sprays with yellow and pink flow- 
ers. Seed should be started in March or early 
April for full summer bloom. 
SAPONARIA 
Vaccaria, Pink Per packet 15c 
Hardy annual. Produces graceful sprays of 
glistening flowers in great profusion. Specially 
valuable for vase decoration; successional sow- 
ings should be made. Height 2 feet. 
SCHIZANTHUS 
Poor Man’s Orchid 
Schizanthus should be grown in every garden 
for it is a lovely plant with masses of small 
Orchid-like blooms making an effective and 
unusual show in the border. As a cut flower it 
is exquisite when used to fill in flower arrange- 
ments and gives a change from the usual Baby’s 
Breath. For early bloom sow seed under glass 
in early March; for later blooms sow. towards the 
end of April or early May. 
Towards the end of April or in May seed may 
be sown out-of-doors. To ensure very fine speci- 
mens for blooming in spring, seed should be 
sown under glass late in August or early in Sep- 
tember. A high temperature is not required for 
Schizanthus, even in the winter months. 
Hybrid Type 
Sutton’s Pansy-Flowered (Danbury Park 
Strain) Per packet 40c 
One of the most attractive subjects that can 
be grown in the greenhouse. Our strain in- 
cludes many rich self-colors in diverse shades 
of pink, crimson, mauve and purple, as well as 
white, and a group of these plants makes a 
mass of wonderful coloring. The large smooth- 
edged Pansy-flowered blooms are remarkably 
substantial. Award of Merit, R. H. S., 1936. 
Sutton’s Giant Hybrids Per packet 40c 
Immense flowers, very varied in color. By sow- 
ing early, and potting on as growth develops, 
large specimens can be grown under cool- 
house treatment. 
Sutton’s Pansy-Flowered Schizanthus 
STATICE - Sea Lavender 
The Sea Lavenders have become extremely 
popular, especially for cutting for house dec- 
oration. The cloudlike masses of flowers of the 
branching varieties make borders gay for a long 
time, while their delicate -coloring and light 
graceful habit are’a great help to other ever- 
lasting flowers. 
Sinuata, Special Mixture Per packet 25c 
The large-flowered Sea Lavender, which is also 
extensively grown for the cut-flower market. 
Succeeds admirably under treatment as a half- 
hardy annual. Makes a graceful pot. plant for 
the conservatory, and the dried flowers are 
most effective for winter decoration. Height 
18 inches. 
SWAN RIVER DAISY, 
Brachycome Iberidifolia 
Brilliant free-flowering hardy annual, blooming 
throughout the summer months and suitable for 
beds or borders; the dainty flowers resemble 
small Cinerarias. Makes a very pretty pot plant 
for the greenhouse and the flowers are extremely 
lasting. Height 9 inches. 
Sutton’s Large-Flowered Dark Blue 
Per packet 25c 
Sutton’s 
Sweet Williams 
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. 
Sutton’s Pink Beauty Per packet 40c 
A beautiful salmon-pink variety, which should 
be grown in every garden. 
Sutton’s Scarlet Per packet 40c 
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 is very striking. 
Sutton’s Auricula-Eyed Mixed 
Per packet 25c 
Magnificent strain of large-flowered Sweet 
William; many attractive shades of salmon, 
deep pink, cerise, and other charming colors. 
Sutton’s Giant White Per packet 25c 
Enormous’ trusses which might well be mis- 
taken for perennial Phlox. The _ individual 
BOs -edged flowers exceed the size of a 
orin 
Dwarf Mixed Per packet 40c 
A free-flowering dwarf strain which will be 
found most useful for edgings to beds and 
borders. Mixed colors. Height 9 inches. 
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COPYRIGHT S&S 
Sutton’s 
Sweet Sultans 
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 September 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. 
Mauve Per packet 25c 
A lovely shade of light lavender. 
Sutton’s Giant 
Cen-Wyeek Stocks 
Delightfully fragrant heavy trusses of double 
flowers in spires on strong stems make Stocks 
an indispensable flower for the garden and cut- 
ting. 
It is usual to sow annual Stocks under glass 
from the middle to the end of March. Sow 
thinly that the plants may become stout, and 
from the first give air freely when practicable. 
Prick off the seedlings into pans or boxes and 
give them the protection of a cold frame. An- 
nual Stocks can also be successfully grown from 
le made in the open about the end of 
pril. 
Sutton’s Giant Perfection 
A wonderfully fine type of the largest-flowered 
Ten-Week Stocks, of strong growth, branching 
habit, very large and fully double flowers, the 
plants growing to a height of 15 to 18 inches. 
A remarkable percentage of plants of this strain 
yields double flowers. 
Mixed Per packet 40c 
Double Early Giant Imperial 
This is the cut-and-come-again type which is 
base branching and produces from 10 to 15 
flower spikes on each plant, growing about 20 
to 24 inches tall. Individual florets are better 
than 1 inch in diameter. An early strain produc- 
ing a high percentage of doubles. 
Pure White Crimson 
Blush-Pink Dark Blue 
Silvery Lilac Mixed 
Chamois-Rose 
The above, per packet 40c 
Ten-Week Intermediate 
East Lothian Mixed Per packet 40c 
Winter Flowering 
Beauty of Nice, Mixed Per packet 40c 
A fine branching Stock, excellent for winter 
decoration under glass if sown in July or Au- 
gust, or may be bedded out in the autumn in 
favorable districts for spring flowering in the 
open ground. It also answers extremely well 
as a Ten-Week Stock for summer bedding if 
sown in heat in February or March and planted 
out in May. Height 2 feet. 
Sutton’s Giant Perfection Ten-W eek Stocks 


