plant for any garden with a cool corner. It has very delicate appear- 
ing magenta flowers with a green eye, about 12” high, carried in a 
dense umbel. In our garden it will bloom from April to November, 
sending up umbel after umbel of flowers. The leaves too, are lovely, 
very tiny and delicate looking in a tight mass. It is excellent for 
cutting, for the rockery, for edging, for naturalizing under shrubs 
or in a woody setting. 
P. SIKKIMENSIS 50 each 
Ancther of those “musts” for anybody’s garden no matter how it 
is situated. It is a lot like P. Florindae and should probably be 
planted with it to give a long succession of bloom, (six to eight weeks 
or longer). The main difference in the two plants is that P. sikki- 
mensis is smaller, about 16” tall, and blooms earlier, during late May 
and June. It is an excellent plant to put among the fall and winter 
blooming heathers. 
P. SINO-PURPUREA 1.00 each 
A wonderful Tibetian plant with purple flowers in May, it has 
very showy waxy flowers with a purple eye, that are sweet scented, 
and has long been a top favorite plant everywhere. It wants a lot 
of shade and plenty of moisture coupled with a medium heavy soil. 
It is best planted with its close cousin P. Chionantha in the rockery, 
or in a moist corner. 
P. SMITHIANA .75 each 
One of the two yellow candelabras, this uncommon plant bears 
lovely flowers in June and again in the fall on 30” stems. It is 
evergreen, not as hardy as some, (fully hardy in our garden), but 
is is an excellent foliage plant. It is at its best interplanted among 
shrubs, lovely in with the winter blooming heathers. 
aes ek 
