Iria Gor Everyone 
Iris are listed with name, originator, description,season of bloom 
and height. Standards are 3 vertical petals, falls are 3 horizontal 
drooping petals. 
ACROPOLIS (Berry)—The tallest and best blue bi-color. Won- 
derful stem with candleabra branching. May be tender in 
freezing climates. Early, 40” SOC. SeOlep 1.20 
AIDA (Salbach)—Standards a golden bronze, falls brushed 
with a slightly deeper tobacco color. Vigorous and free flower- 
ing. Mid-season. 36”. 50a) for- $1.20 
ALTA CALIFORNIA (Mohr-Mitchell)—An old standby in Calif- 
ornia gardens and one of the earliest yellows. Multiplies rap- 
idly and of long blooming season. Fine for holding banks and 
slopes. Early to mid-season. 48”. SifomoUG 
ANITRA (H. Sass)—A silvery blue with ruffled standards, 
large and domed standards and flaring falls. Late mid-sea- 
Soleo ae SOC 83. LOregOc 
ARCTIC (Kleinsorge)—A rich white with gold spreading out 
from the orange beard onto the falls. Graceful flaring form 
and beautifully proportioned on a fine branching stem. Mid- 
season. 40”. $1.50 
AUBANEL (Cayeux)—A sort of orchidish rose pink, of nice 
form. Fine in front of delphinium. Late mid-season. 35’’. $1.00 
BERKELEY GOLD (Salbach)—The clearest, richest gold colored 
iris, and pure gold in the garden for its clean clear cut large 
form and beautiful proportion of flower to stem. As stable a 
value in the garden as the gold standard is on the money marts. 
Late mid-season. 36”. $5.00 
BLUE SPIRE (Milliken)—The tallest and largest flowered med- 
ium blue in growers garden. An especially strong stem. Mid- 
season, before Anitra and much sturdier. 4’. $1.00 
BROCADE (Berry)—A charming medium sized, medium height 
iris, good for border effects, standards a very pale warm orchid 
that fades to a silvery tone in sun with falls a velvety dark red- 
dish tone that would formerly have been hailed as quite red. 
Mid-season. 36”. DOC easton. 1220 
Pinas 
