All Juliana plants especially vigorous this year. 
Please note postage rates, page 36. 
DOROTHY— Gay, scalloped, primrose-yellow blooms in airy clusters. 
Mid-spring. English origin. 75c each. 
DUSKY—An unusual shade of rose edged silver resulting from a 
Kinlough Beauty cross with E. R. Jones. Polyanthus form on dark, 
knit-needle stalks. Originator, Mr. Wm. Goddard, Victoria, B.C. 
60c each. 
JEWELL— Actually a sonorous purple-crimson. An English favorite 
which could be described as a more extroverted Wanda with larger 
flowers and more splash, a cross between P. Juliae and an Acaulis 
called Hall’s Blue. 60c each. 
KINLOUGH BEAUTY—Rose pink, clear and lovely as a spring 
morning with five light rays radiating from eye to petal edge. Mid- 
spring. Ireland. 75c each. 
LADY GREER—Very patrician form, with blossoms like carved 
antique ivory in masses of clustered bloom. Mid-spring. England. 
75e each. 
MRS. KING—Here is an exquisite clear lavender large-flowering 
Juliana with especially rich green foliage. A leading favorite in 
British and Canadian gardens, now available. England. 60c each. 
NETTIE GALE—White with shell-pink overlay. Lovely massed bloom 
in late winter and early spring. Oregon. $1. each. 
PRIMROSE LODGE—Glowing wine red. Early spring. Illinois. 
20¢c each. 
ROBERT A—Vivacious lilac colored, golden-eyed blooms over lettuce- 
green foliage in fall and early spring. Oregon. 50c each. 
ROYAL—A cross between Julianas Wanda and Lady Greer in a 
bonny violet-rose shade. Combines both Acaulis and Polyanthus 
flowering habits with a long blooming season. Originator, Mr. 
Goddard. 60c each. 
SCHNEEKISSEN—A captivating little white elf whose Dutch orig- 
OE ides it the “Pillow of Snow.” Fall and early spring. 
c each. 
SPRINGTIME—Pretty orchid-pink blossoms in mid-spring. Oregon. 
o0c each. 
COLLECTIONS 
A 15% discount is allowed on Julianas when six or more plants, all 
different, are ordered. 
Cinderellas 
Cinderellas comprise a fetching group of Primroses that are too 
large to be accepted as Julianas but just as floriferous and every bit 
as gay. They are diminished Acaulis whose offspring they are sired 
by various Julianas. No one, it appears, can resist their infectious 
charm, and plants, held for a seed crop, are available only after July. 
(See Divisions, page 17.) 
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