California Bulbs, Rock Plants, Unusual Perennials 
57 
Fall Anemone. 
ANTH ERICU MS or St. Bruno Lilies are fine plants belonging to the Lily 
family. There are long grassy leaves at the base and the erect stems are sev¬ 
eral, flowered with fine pure white flowers which are very fragrant. Well worth 
while. Flower in early summer. 
Soil, any loam, but if rich and quite moist they do better. Sun. Prop., di¬ 
visions. PI., fall to spring. 
Antherieum liliago. 30 cts. each; $3 per doz. 
Paradisea Liliastrum is very closely related to above. You will like its 
fragrant flowers. 30 cts. each; $3 per doz. 
AQUILEGIAS 
Columbines combine as many good points as any group of garden flowers. 
With hardiness and ease of culture, they have handsome foliage at all seasons 
and beautiful flowers borne gracefully on long stems. While a light shade and 
loose, loamy soil are best, they do well in the full sun, and in any soil from 
light loam to adobe. Fall or winter planting is preferable. They are admirable 
for a fern-bed. Prop., seeds or divisions in fall or early spring. Seedlings sel¬ 
dom flower the first year. 
Alpina is a very dwarfed Northern sort with blue flowers. A fine rock plant. 
25 cts. each; 3 for 60 cts. 
Flabeilata is quite a novelty with a very dwarf plant with a white flower 
which shows hardly any spur. 30 cts. each. 
See next page for other species of Aquilegia. 
