Pardalinum. Red and orang-e, brown spotted. 
This species thrives everywhere in g-ood garden soil 
and is probably the most vigorous lily grown. Tt 
should be widely planted. 
Var. minor. This has long been considered a form 
of L. parvumwith which it is identical in bulb, leaf and 
pod. Blooms much earlier than L. pardalinum, small, 
graceful, canary yellow ilowers, spotted. 
Rubescens. a llly resembling L. Washing-toni- 
aniun, but of much finer fuller flower, opening- white 
spotted with brown, becoming purplish, and often 
with flowers of all intermediate colors on the same 
stalk: equaled in fragrance by no other lily. 
Ready November 1st, 
Washingtonianum. a large llly with pure white, 
fragrant flowers. 3 to f) feet high. My supply is of 
medium sized, very solid bulbs which carry finely. 
Size 7 to 9 inches, 
Size 9 to 11 inches. 
L. Washingtonianum var. purpureum. A purple 
form of the species. Not L. Rubescens. 
Maritimum. a rare and fine lily; flowers deep 
blood red, spotted with purple; supply reliable. 
L. Bolanderii. A rare species similar to L. Mari- 
timiun. Supply uncertain. 
Lilium Parryi. I am now able to insure my cus- 
tomers a supply of this fine lily, and of excellent 
quality. Flowers long- trumpet shaped with a very 
sweet perfume: clear lemon yellow. Selected bulbs. 
Parvum. TRUE. A lily of the Canadense type, 
2 to 5 feet high, one to many flowered; flowers horizon- 
tal, petals not recurved, scarlet, spotted at center with 
brown. Supply reliable. 
Columbianum. A very pi'etty lily much like L. 
Humboldtii but dwarfed. 
L. Bloomerianum. Like L. Humboldtii, but 
with small bulbs (one to three oz. ) and a reliable 
bloomer, brilliant oi'ange. with black spots, occulated 
with red. Solid selected bulbs, 
L. Roez!i, This beautiful Lily which was intro- 
duced by Roezl to European g-ardens about 1870, and 
fig-ured in Regel Gartenflora t. 667, seems to have 
disappeared from cultivation, although the name is 
applied to a far different thing, which is a variety of 
L. Pardalinum. Well described by Baker. Habit oF 
L. Pardalinum, leaves narrow, bulb not increasing- as 
in L. Pardalinum. Petals reflexed to their base, 
brilliant orange red, lower half yellower, and spotted 
with dark purple (color exactly as in L. Humboldtii). 
I consider this the finest acquisition to Californian 
lilies since L. Parryii was brought out. Supply fail'. 
Ready September 1st. 
