Please see page 28 for postage rates. 
P. CORTUSOIDES—Korea and Siberia. Delicate rose and rose-laven- 
der shades. Blooms in spring with a scattering throughout sum- 
mer and fall, 1-1% feet. (Will do with moderate water and 
shade.) 35c each. 
P. SIEBOLDII—Another Asiatic woodland type desiring moderate 
water and shade. Resembles Polyanthus with large, cut or 
fringed blossoms on 9 to 12 inch stems in late spring. Shades of 
rose, lavender and some white. Siberia, Korea, and Japan. (Loses 
leaves in Summer dormancy.) 50c each. 
P. JAPONICA—Candelabra type liking shade and much moisture. 
Robust, persistent, showy and will self-sow its own seedlings 
when happy. Sold only in assorted shades of pink, rose and terra 
cotta. Yeso Island, Japan. 2 feet. 35c each. 
oR 


Candelabra Primulas 
P. PULVERULENTA—A beautiful, stately, brilliant cerise red 
Candelabra from the Chinese-Tibetan frontier. Stalks and buds 
heavily silvered. 2-3 feet in late spring. 35c each. 
P. SMITHIANA—From the Chumbi Valley, eastern Himalayas. An 
evergreen, yellow Candelabra with sulphur-mealed buds. Shade, 
moisture, and excellent drainage. 1% feet. 50c each . 
P. SCAPIGERA—P. scapigera has the exquisite beauty of transpar- 
ent porcelain, begins its true bloom in winter, is easy of culture 
and hardy as a rock, and multiplies as rapidly as one wishes to 
strip down the older leaves in the spring and root them in moist 
peat and sand. Discovered in Sikkim, India hardly more than a 
17 
