ORMOHR 
ORMOHR (Klein, 1937). M. 40”. A.M. A.I.S. 1940. 
From Oregon comes this gigantic seedling of the 
famous Wm. Mohr. The color is lilac overcast with 
silver, with veining of violet. 79¢C 
OSCEOLA (Weis, 1937). ML. 40”. A clear sky-blue 
self, with crinkled texture; a rich golden beard lights 
up the haft of softest brown. 35c 
OZARK TRIUMPH (Maples). E. 42”. Medium blue. 
Closed standards and down-falling falls of me- 
dium blue with no touch of lavender; some veining 
on slight white ground seen at haft; short orange 
beard. Strongly fragrant, gigantic flowers on good 
stalks. One of the puresttoned blues. 30c 
PACIFIC SUNSET (Salbach, 1944). M. 36". This large 
ruffled flower is justly named with standards of 
old rose shading to gold at the base. Falls a light 
amaranth pink with edges of gold. The beard is 
bright yellow. $3.50 
PAINTED DESERT (Milliken, 1942). M. 48”. A mirage 
of magnificent grandeur is this replica of Arizona's 
Mesa. The copper tan flower has a brownish suf- 
fusion at the haft, while a violet midrib trims the 
standards. The heavy golden beard is conspicuous 
above the patch of violet on the falls. $10.00 
PATRICE (DeForest, 1945). M. 42”. A stately and 
beautifully formed plicata. Standards cream white 
speckled rose brown, distinguished by a subtle 
brushing of pale gold across the hatft. $8.00 

0 VE—Very Early. E—Early. EM—Early to Midseason, M—Midseason. ML—Midseason Late. L—Late. VL—Very Late. 

PEACH GLOW 
PEACH GLOW (Klein, 1943). M. 38”. A beautiful 
creation of peach-pink. Flowers are large and in 
perfect proportion. $5.00 
PEARL LUSTRE (Weed, 1937). M. 38”. A cream white 
iris with closed standards, falls same color but 
slightly tinged blue. Veined yellow at hatt, beard 
golden. 40c 
PINK IMPERIAL (Weed, 1939). EM. 50”. Beautiful 
blush-pink flowers growing on tall stalks that carry 
about seven blooms each. No veining noticeable 
at hatt. $1.00 
PINK MARVEL (Lap., 1941). M. 39". Glorious salmon 
pink. These large flowers are a revelation in the 
beauty of deepest pink, a rapid grower and a heavy 
seed producer. $2.00 
PINK REFLECTION (Cook, 1942). L. 36”. A.M. A.LS. 
1944. A clear-cut flower of very heavy texture and 
good size. The lemon chrome beard enlivens this 
unique blend of hydrangea pink with a buff under- 
lay. $6.50 
PINK RUFFLES (Smith, 1940). M. 30". A.M. A.I.S. 1942. 
Layers of dancing ruffles revolve from pale to 
deepest pink. Deeper pink veining at haft. $2.00 
POT OF GOLD (Grant, 1941). M. 36". A prize you must 
have is this vibrant deep yellow. A solid self grow- 
ing abundantly on wide low branches, its bril- 
liance in the garden remains unchallenged. $2.00 

