PALLIDA DALMATICA VARIEGATA. Similar to 
above, except that the foliage is striped in a strik¬ 
ing manner with white. 25c. 
PARISIANA. Standards lavender pink, falls cream, 
stippled and suffused with lavender. 35c. 
PAULINE. Tall claret red. 25c. 
PERFECTION. Standards old blue; falls deep vel¬ 
vety purple. Particularly fine form. 25c. 
PRINCESS VICTORIA LOUISE. Standards are prim¬ 
rose, falls plum, margined primrose. 20c. 
PROSPER LANGIER. A fine bronze, with large 
flowers. 30c. 
PROSPERO. Bold purple and light blue, wonderful¬ 
ly good looking. 30c. 
QUAKER LADY. A demure combination of smoky 
lavender and mother of pearl tints. 25c. 
QUEEN CATERINA. A truly patrician flower of 
palest lavender, overlaid with a marked sheen. 
Exquisite. 25c. 
QUEEN OF MAY. If you are fond of pink effects, 
try a mass planting of this beautiful sort. With 
Iberis Tenoreana. It’s something to rave over. 10c. 
RED CLOUD. When the sun is on this iris, it is al¬ 
most crimson. 35 c. 
RHEIN NIXE. Standards purest white, falls deep 
violet bordered with white. 15c. 
SEMINOLE. Velvety flower or rich, reddish tone. 50c. 
SHALIMAR. A blue, out of the ordinary. 25c. 
SHEKINAH. Tall yellow. Plant with lavender or 
blue sorts. 30c. 
SHERWIN WRIGHT. Bright golden yellow, the rich 
color more than offsetting the rather small size 
of the flowers. Medium height. 25c. 
SOUVENIR de MME. GAUDICHAUX. A uniform 
shade of dark blue-purple, lit up at the center by 
the vivid gold of its beard. Many consider this the 
best iris ever introduced. 30c. 
STANDARD BEARER. Rich claret shade, tall and 
free blooming. A fine accent for the garden, par¬ 
ticularly when a half dozen or more plants are 
employed. 50c. 
SUNSET. Old gold is the prevailing tone. Very late 
blooming and handsome. 50c. 
WHITE KNIGHT. Standards and falls both of pure 
milk white. 25c. 
ZUA. Lavender, the flowers most distinctive on ac¬ 
count of their crinkled texture, like crepe. 25c. 
IRIS SIBERICA 
The Siberian Irises have slender, rush-like foliage, 
and look particularly graceful when bordering a pool 
or stream. 
The flowers are daintily constructed and not 
large, but generously produced. Plant in spring or in 
early fall. Later blooming than the Germanica. 
BLUE KING. A deep rich blue. 2 ft. 10c. white, 10c. 
DISTINCTION. Light blue, conspicuously veined. 
The flowers are so handsome and so different from 
other varieties that they well merit their name. 
2% feet. 25c. 
PERRY’S BLUE. Very large for this type of iris, a 
charming blue, flowers held well above the foli¬ 
age. 25c. 
24 
