For the first and only time the highest annual award 

 for an American Iris was won two years straight by 

 the same hybridizer, Orville Fay. Here we show them 

 both in color, and BLACK HILLS on the right is also 

 a Fay production. 



MARY RANDALL 



TRULY YOURS 



ADMIRAL NIMITZ (Graves, 1948) Each $1.00 



A spectacular new white from a famous introducer. The crisp, 

 firm flowers, with closely domed standards and semi-flaring 

 falls are large and very white, surmounted by a thick brilliant 

 gold beard. This combination of color and form suggests a 

 naval officer in white with rich gold shoulder ornaments. Fine 

 spacing of flowers, a husky grower, 36 to 42 inches in height. 

 HM AIS, 1948. 



AL BORAK (DeForest, 1952) Each $9.00 



A very large brown and copper-russet flower, having wide 

 spreading falls with extremely wide hafts. A light brown 

 garden effect in an Iris which many judges regard as abso- 

 lutely perfect in form. Three feet in height, finely branched. 

 HM AIS, 1953. 



ALLINE ROGERS (Kleinsorgs, 1950) Each $2.50 



The form of this flower resembles Cascade Splendor, one of its 

 parents, but the color inclines more to pink or rose, with just 

 a suggestion of ashes of roses in its cast. There is considerable 

 gold in the blending of color, especially near the haft. Style 

 arms and beard are both golden yellow. Falls are wide and 

 quite flat, standards upright and closed, the entire flower 

 heavily ruffled. 34 inches. HM AIS, 1951. See page 43. 



AMANDINE (Douglas. 1946) Each $1.50 



Large flaring cream self, slightly flushed with lemon. The wide 

 flaring falls are slightly ruffled and the standards are nicely 

 domed. Height 3 feet. Winner of the President's Cup at the 

 AIS meeting in Nashyille in 1948. HM AIS, 1946; AM. 1948. 

 Shown on page 45. 



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