PARISIANA. Standards lavender pink, 
falls cream, stippled and suffused with 
lavender. 20c. 
PAULINE. Tall claret red. 15c. 
PERFECTION. Standards old blue; 
deep velvety purple. 
TOP. Loc. 
PRINCESS VICTORIA LOUISE. Standards 
are primrose, falls plum, margined prim- 
rose. ldc. 
PROSPER LANGIER. A fine bronze, with 
large flowers. l5c. 
falls 
Particularly fine 
PROSPERO. Bold purple and light blue, 
wonderfully good looking. 15c. 
QUAKER LADY. A demure combination 
of smoky lavender and mother of pearl 
TET iS oan Ge 
QUEEN CATERINA. A truly patrician 
flower of palest lavender, overlaid with 
a marked sheen. Exquisite. 15c. 
QUEEN OF MAY. If you are fond of pink 
effects, try a mass planting of this beau- 
tiful sort. With Iberis Tenoreana. It's 
something to rave over. 10c. 
RED CLOUD. When the sun is on this 
iris, it is almost crimson. 25c. 
RHEIN NIXE. Standards purest white, falls 
deep violet bordered with white. 15c. 
SEMINOLE. Velvety flower of rich, reddish 
tone. SOc. 
SHALIMAR. A blue, out of the ordinary. 
DOC 
SHEKINAH. Tall yellow. Plant with lav- 
ender or blue sorts. 20c. 
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. l5c. 
STANDARD BEARER. Rich claret shade, 
tall and free blooming. A fine accent 
for the garden, particularly when a half 
dozen or more plants are employed. 25c. 
SUNSET. Old gold is the prevailing tone. 
Very late blooming and handsome. 25c. 
WHITE KNIGHT. Standards and falls both 
of pure milk white. 25c. 
ZUA. Lavender, the flowers most distinc- 
tive on account of their crinkled texture, 
like crepe. 25c. 
One each of all varieties—$5.00 
JAPANESE IRISES 
These unfold their regal flowers, often 8 to 10 inches across, in July. They range 
through delicate lavenders to the richest purple, some are pure white, marked with gold, 
others are daintily veined with contrasting color. They must have good drainage and 
sun. 
15c—12 for $1.50—Mixed Only 
IRIS SIBERICUM 
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 feet, 
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. l5c. 
PERRY’S BLUE. Very large for this type 
of iris, a charming blue, flowers held 
well above the foliage. 15c. 
SIBERIAN WHITE. 1l5c. 
IRIS. Siberian—Pygmy, (R). How fortun- 
ate we are to have this dwarf form of 
a universal favorite, for ‘‘Pygmy” is 
ideal for rockery, or fronting the peren- 
nial border. The color? Dark violet. 
Light shade. 15c. All 5 varieties for 50c. 
