FLOWER ARTICLES 
‘For those of our readers who wish additional information upon the grow¬ 
ing- of Iris, Peonies., ancl Oriental Poppies, we recommend tb# following maga¬ 
zine articles writteii by Howard and Thurlow Weed,_ members of our firm. 
Back numbers may be'procured at your city library. ' • 
“Outstanding Irises of 1934,” House & Garden, July, 1934. 
“Famous Iris Hybridizers,” Flower Grower, May, 1934. 
“Growing Peonies,” Sunset, August, 1933. 
“Choosing Irises According to Color,” Horticulture, June 1, 1933. 
“Four Famous Hybridizers of Iris,” Flower Grower, May, 1933. 
“Favorite Iris—and Why,” Flower Grow r er, June, 1933. 
“You Can Have Iris the Year Round in Sunset Land,” Sunset, May, 1933. 
“The Poppy as a Garden Flower,” House Beautiful, June, 1932. 
“The Iris—Past, Present and Future,” Flower Grower, May, 1932. 
“Interesting and Rare Iris Types,” Flower Grower, May, 1932. 
(The above article was condensed and re-printed in Garden Digest, July 1932.) 
“Iris Species of the Future,” Western Homes & Gardens, May, 1931. 
“Outstanding Iris,” House & Garden, July, 1931. 
“Superior Iris of Today,” House Beautiful, July, 1931. 
“Westerners Can Grow Peonies,” Sunset, October, 1930. 
An article describing a visit to our gardens appeared in Better Homes and 
Gardens, May, 1932, written by Lillie L. Madsen. 
If you enjoyed reading any of the above articles and wish to read more in the 
future, please write the editors of such magazines and encourage the publication 
of flower articles in future issues. 
KEEP THIS FOLDER FOR FUTURE REFERENCE OR HAND IT 
TO A FLQmR-LOYING FRIEND 
