TRANSPLANTED SEEDLINGS 
From these vigorous transplants you will have Primroses 
of silver-dollar size, and over, in the choicest and newest 
shades in the spring of ’52. You will find, as others have, that 
your neighbors as well as you will be making daily morning 
calls to the Primrose patch to keep current with latest happen- 
ings. We are trying to have transplants available the year 
around to catch the best planting seasons for various regions 
(see Regional Planting Outline, page 33) and expect to sup- 

Transplanted seedling approximately one-half shipping. size 
ply a good many this spring from the 1950 summer sowing 
—those for summer, fall and winter delivery will be from the 
winter, 1950, sowing. 
Robust, bushy-rooted stock, expert packing and special de- 
livery deposits the transplants at your door in garden-fresh 
condition. If weather is unusally hot when transplants arrive, 
plant in a box of wet sawdust or peat, or in the shadiest spot in 
the garden, keeping well watered and shaded until planting 
conditions become more normal. Almost always they can be 
planted to their permanent positions, but should be kept well 
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