20 
ERYTHRONIUM HARTWEGGII 
thick bulbs carry well without any other pac ing than dry sawdust or 
buckwheat waste, and can be delivered with my earliest shipments. 
$1 50 $10 00 
HOWELL1I. While botanically quite distinct, it varies in general 
appearance from Citrinum only in being less stiff and rose tinted. 
$4 50 
HENDERSOMII. With the beautifully mottled lea\es of the CaU 
ifornicum, it has light purple flowers with maroon, almost blac cen¬ 
ters. STRIKINGLY FINE. $3 00 $30 00 
E. CAL1FORNICUM WHITE BEAUTY. The flowers are more 
nearly white than Californicum, and in color much lesembling the 
true Giganteum. The leaves are very richly mottled. Many of the 
flowers are richly mar ed li e Tigridias, and a strain of these I am 
growing are, 1 thin 1 ', the finest of all Erythroniums. An excellent 
substitute for Revolutum Watsonii (Giganteum). $2 25 $15 00 
Purpurasceus. A unique small dowered species from high alti¬ 
tudes in the Californian Sierras. Hard to grow. $4 50 
Montanum. A subalpine species of Oregon and north. The large 
pure white flowers are on long stems and I am told are of great beauty. 
I am also told that often they are frozen repeatedly during the flowering 
season. I have never been able to grow one successfully. 
REVOLUTUMS 
GROUP II 
As this group have decided 1 Rings as to soils and moisture. I am 
treating them by themselves. They are natives of the coastwise section 
of Northwestern California, Oregon, Washington and British Colum- 
