PRIMULACEAE 
The hardy cyclamens are not nearly so common in our gardens as 
they deserve to be. The foliage is very beautiful in texture, shape and 
color; many are somewhat marbled. The white or pink or crimson 
flowers are exquisite. They like woodsy soil and the shade of over- 
hanging branches. They seed themselves but the tiny corms are easily 
cultivated out of existence. 
Cyclamen Atkinsii rubrum. $1.00. 
C. Coum rubrum. $1.00. 
C. ibericum roseum. $1.00. 
C. Neapolitanum. $1.00. 
Soldanelle montana. Forms a close mat of rather kidney-shaped thick 
leaves. The fiowers are rich lavender funnels fringed on the margin. 
In shade and moist soil this is a very good bloomer and always ex- 
cites admiration. $1.00. 
RANUNCULACEAE 
Anemone nemorosa. All the varieties of wood-anemones are among the 
most amenable of plants. They can be lifted at any season and soon 
multiply into substantial colonies. 
A. n. fl. pl. An exotic-looking form; white and lovely. 35c. 
A. n. Robinsoniana. A pale blue and larger flowered form of the English 
wind flower. 35c. 
A. n. Royal Blue. Flowers of deeper blue. 35c. 
% Coptis asplenifolia. From Alaska to Vancouver Island. The most 
beautiful of the goldthreads in foliage which is cut like a fern. 75c. 
% C. laciniata. Evergreen creeper with finely dissected glossy foliage. 
Excellent ground cover. 35c. 
Hepatica acutiloba Pink Beauty. A beautiful shade of pink which persists 
in the self-sown seedlings. An early spring flower. 75c. 
SAXIFRAGACEAE 
Tanakaea radicans. Thread-like creeping stems settle down and grow 
into a loose clump of thick dark pointed leaves; loose panicles of 
small creamy flowers in the way of Astilbe simplicifolia. A very good 
plant for shade. 75c. 
Boe ee 
