PEACH PARFAIT (Craig, 1949) Each $4.00 



An all-over peach-pink, including the beard. It increases very rapidly, 

 produces a great mass of flowers on well branched stems and creates 

 a frothy mass of rich peachy color in the garden. Flowers are large 

 and the stems reach 3 feet. 



PEG DEBAGH (Craig, 1948) Each $7.50 



A large derivative of Wm. Mohr borne on 45-50 inch stems when well 

 grown. The full globe shaped flowers are immense, with broad segments, 

 a clear blue-violet in color. One of the best of Mohr Hybrids with typical- 

 ly oncocyclus traits. 



PERMANENT WAVE (Williams, 1948) Each $6.00 



Sweet lavender shading to blue with golden brown hafts and a metallic 

 luster. The falls flare out stiffly horizontal, they are fuU and rounded 

 in shape and possess the heaviest texture of any Iris we grow. Beard is 

 yellow and there is a yellow glow at the center. 40 inches, extra late, and 

 different. 



PIERRE MENARD (Faught, 1948) Each $10.00 



Finest of the new medium toned blues. The introducer calls it a Hyacinth- 

 blue, with some of the fine netting in slightly deeper shade that distin- 

 guishes Great Lakes. Beard is canary-yellow. Very flaring in form, large 

 with broad segments, 36 to 40 inches tall. A very, very blue Iris. HM 

 AIS, 1948; AM, 1950. Shown on page 19. 



PINK BOUNTIFUL fCooi^, 1949) Each $6.00 



Selected as the largest and best of all the orchid-pinks raised by Paul 

 Cook. Large, perfectly formed flowers with broad petals, smooth satiny 

 texture and very heavy substance. Not to be compared with the flamingo- 

 pinks, it approaches this color from the orchid side and is in the range 

 of Harriet Thoreau and Dreamcastle. Husky in growth and extremely 

 floriferous, 38 to 40 inches tall. A very beautiful Iris! HM AIS, 1951. 



PINK CAMEO (Fay, 1946) Each $2.50 



One of the new series of "flamingo" pinks — ^a true pink devoid of 

 violet influence — ^the kind of pink Iris we have all been wishing to see. 

 Color is described as pale cameo-pink, a self, with a startling tangerine 

 beard, like a tongue of flame on the hafts. An Iris of good size, 3 feet in 

 height. HM AIS, 1946; AM, 194«. 



PINK FORMAL (Muhlestein, 1949) Each $15.00 



A new deep pink which is conceded to be sensational. It is large in size 

 and very tall, with red-tangerine beard. Very few plants for sale. HM 

 AIS, 1949; AM, 1951. 



PINK REFLECTION fCool^, 1942) Each $1.00 



Chamois-skin-pink self, a peculiar and enchanting shade unlike anything 

 else. There seems to be a fleeting buff undertone. A crisp and clean 

 cut flower, flaring in form, with very heavy texture. The beard is lemon. 

 Height 3 feet; very late. HM AIS, 1942; AM, 1944. 



PINK RUFFLES (Smith, 1940) Each 75c; 3 for $2.00 



Solidly colored lilac-pink that might be classed as an intermediate be- 

 cause of its low growth — about 24 to 28 inches. The flowers are self- 

 colored and heavily fluted and ruffled, produced in great number. HM 

 AIS, 1940; AM, 1942. 



PINK SENSATION (David Hall, 1948) Each $10.00 



From the garden of the world's foremost breeder of pink Irises we se- 

 lected this new creation when it first flowered in the spring of 1946. True 

 delicate light pink, without any influence of lilac or salmon tones, and 

 sporting the famous tangerine or orange-red beard, it is just the kind of 

 pink Iris you have been wanting. PINK SENSATION is a large flower, 

 full and rounded in form, with laciniated petal edges. Extremely early — 

 one of the very first of the tall bearded to come into flower. Height about 

 33 inches. Shown on page 38. HM AIS, 1950. 



PINNACLE (Stevens, 1949) Each $10.00 



With standards of clear sparkling white and well foimed broad falls of 

 clean primrose-yellow this is really something new in Iris. Bred in 

 New Zealand ; it is a good grower with perfect branching on three- 

 foot stems. Very much in demand and will sell out early. HM AIS, 1949; 

 AM, 1951. Illustrated on page 36. 



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