V 
NEVILL PRIMROSE FARM 
r^VERY year we raise new Primulas from 
^ seed and select such as are distinguished 
in type, color, shading or fragrance for 
propagating purposes. In this list are a num¬ 
ber of such new and striking Primulas, of 
which we have a very limited stock. 
SHIPPING 
We send all plants by parcel post except 
when requested to do otherwise. Retail or¬ 
ders from anywhere in the United States 
amounting to $5.00 or more will be shipped 
prepaid. Retail orders from Oregon, Wash¬ 
ington, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, Montana and 
California amounting to $3.00 or more will 
be shipped prepaid. On other orders send 
10% in addition to the cost of the plants to 
help pay postage. On orders amounting to 
more than $1.50 we will send a plant or 
plants gratis. 
To retail buyers we sell one dozen plants 
of a kind at the price of ten. Six plants at 
dozen rate. 
PRIMULA 
Primulas do best in a rich loamy soil and 
prefer a partly shady location, especially 
with some protection from the afternoon sun. 
They are perfectly hardy but should be 
protected during zero weather. 
Primulas, having a wonderfully varied col¬ 
oring and type of growth, rank among the 
foremost plants for the rock garden, and by 
using the different varieties the blooming 
period is prolonged to ten months in this 
locality. The best known and perhaps the 
greatest favorites of them all are P. acaulis, 
or common Primrose, and P. polyantlia, 
which are now hybridized into the most glor¬ 
ious color range, running from blue through 
violet, pink, rose, and orange, to various 
shades of yellow, many self-colored. 
The new types include such interesting 
varieties as rosea grandiflora, which sends 
up its lovely bright pink flowers very early 
in the spring and before the leaves; florindae 
with its large umbels of citron yellow on 
3-foot stalks with oriental fragrance, and the 
bog loving Juliae with its dark crisp leaves 
and deep rose flowers 2 inches high. This 
gives one little glimpse of the wonderful 
variety of the species, of which there are 
several hundred. 
No flower is more ingratiatingly loveable 
than the humble primrose. If it once gains 
entrance to your heart it will stay there for¬ 
ever and hold its corner against any com¬ 
petitor no matter how dazzling and exotic; 
it is so easy of culture, so grateful and gen¬ 
erous for any attention given it, comes up so 
cheerfully at the call of spring that it be¬ 
comes love at first sight. 
You will find that you never can get 
enough and plan at once for more and more; 
you will want them tucked under your decid¬ 
uous shrubs or used for edging your peren¬ 
nial beds and in your rockery or any little 
spare bit of ground that you have, where 
they will bloom and multiply and be a joy 
forever. 
You will become a collector of them, as 
there are hundreds of varieties and the list 
is steadily growing, as hybridizers are busy 
working on them and collectors are gathering 
them from the four corners of the earth. No 
other flower that we know of has such vast 
possibilities and such a long period of bloom; 
flowers of the acaulis and polyanthus will 
last for a couple of months if grown in partial 
shade and you can refrain from picking them. 
Juliae and its hybrids are exquisitely dainty 
and beautiful and are rapidly and deservedly 
becoming very popular; in fact, all of them 
are most lovable. 
Our plants are all field grown and receive 
no protection except in extremely cold 
weather, and are consequently as hardy as 
possible. 
Planting Primulas 
When you receive plants, remove any wilt¬ 
ed leaves or flowers and stand the roots in 
water in a cool shaded place for several hours 
before planting, taking care in planting that 
the roots are well spread out and have the 
soil firmly placed around them. 
Have the soil deep and rich and the re¬ 
sults will surprise you, as no plants respond 
more freely than primulas to good treatment. 
Plant primulas either in spring or autumn 
when the temperature is not too great, and 
be sure to plant in partial shade which pro¬ 
tects from the afternoon sun. 
Any information you would like as to plant¬ 
ing and caring for our plants will be gladly 
given upon request. 
VERNALES SECTION 
Primula Acaulis 
Having a single flower on a stem. 
Apricot Glow — A warm and glowing pure 
apricot with the delicious fragrance of 
apricots. Unusually fine. $1.00. 
Blue Bird —A beautiful sapphire blue. 50c. 
Cerise —Very free flowering and early. Beau¬ 
tiful for edgings. 25c. 
Cheerful —Deep rose with large yellow eye. 
Very free flowering. 25c. 
Dainty Miss- —Rosy mauve. Earliest of all 
and very floriferous. Each plant a most 
exquisite bouquet. 35c. 
True English Primrose —A soft shade of yel¬ 
low. Very fragrant and free flowering. 
Flowers up to 1 y 2 in. diam. 25c. 
Melody —Pale yellow with creamy edge, un¬ 
usually large blossoms making mounds of 
color. Blooms over a long period. One of 
the best yellow acaulis. 75c. 
Orchid Shades —35c. 
Pink Pearl —A very clear pink blooming early 
in the season, a wonderfully fine plant for 
edging. Well named. 75c. 
Purple Shades —35c. 
Queen of Heaven —Large blue flowers on 6 
to 8-in. stems. 35c. 
White Lady —White with yellow eye. Ex¬ 
tremely good. 25c. 
White Queen —Pure white. Lovley soft fluffy 
and ruffled with yellow eye. 35c. 
