CARLSBAD CAVERNS (K. Wilson 1946). Ruffled lemon standards with white falls 
edged gold. Very large. $2.00 
CARVED IVORY (Essig). Heavy substanced, large creamy ivory self. Early. d0¢ 
CASA MORENO (DeForest 1943). Very large, deep, rich, glistening brown that does not 
fade. Stunning. AM 1946. $2.00 
CASCADE SPLENDOR (Klein. 1945). Very large ruffled pink, tan and apricot blend. The 
finest iris in the pink-tan effect. AM 1947. $3.50 
CHAMOIS (Kleinsorge 1946). Very large, beautifully formed, satiny, pure chamois self. 
Entirely different and wonderful in every way. AM 1948. $5.00 
CHANTILLY (Hall 1945). A large ruffled orchid pink flower. The edges of both standards 
and falls are so heavily frilled that they look as though they were edged with lace. 
HM 1945. $3.50 
CHERIE (Hall 1947). A large ruffled full bodied flamingo pink self of excellent form and 
substance with a deep tangerine beard. The finest pink of all. AM 1949. $18.00 
CHINA MAID (Milliken 1936). Soft lilac pink blended golden bronze. Finest for the price. 
AM 1939. 7d¢ 
CHIPPEWA (Salbach 1943). A new plicata in very deep yellow tones with brown mark- 
ings. 50¢ 
CHIVALRY (J. Wills 1944). This very fine medium blue won the Dykes Medal in 1947; 
holds third place in Symposium, ' $7.50 
CHOCOLATE CREAM (H. Sass). Large plicata of pale yellow with chocolate markings. 
Well liked. $1.50 
CHRISTABEL (Lapham 1936). Still one of the finest reds. Large, smoothly finished; 
makes a gorgeous clump. AM 1938. 50e 
CIGARETTE (Brehm 1946).. Pure pongee cream self. Large blooms perfectly placed on 
tall well branched 40-inch stems. Very fine cream. é $2.00 
CITY OF LINCOLN (H. Sass 1936). Brightest, largest and the finest of all true variegatas. 
Standards of clear golden yellow and falls of broad fiery red. AM 1939. 50e¢ 
CLOTH OF GOLD (Whiting 1945). A tall, stately deep yellow with perfect form. One of 
the very finest yellows. HM 1947. $2.00 
CLOUD CASTLE (Graves 1944). Exquisite wistaria blue. Waved and frilled, broad and 
flaring. Truly a majestic iris. AM 1949. $3.00 
COPPER LUSTRE (Kirkland 1934). Entirely different from all others. A bright copper, 
gold and pinkish tan blend. Dykes Medal 1938. 50¢ 
COPPER PINK (Kellogg 1941). Softest pink flushed with sparkling copper. Blue shading 
at midrib and the style arms are blue. HM 1942. 750 
CORITICA (Sass 1942). Precisely dotted brown on a rich yellow ground. Very attractive. 
$1.00 
DAYBREAK (Kleinsorge 1941). Huge golden pink, with slight undertone of copper. Tied 
with Ola Kala for 1946 Dykes Medal. AM 1943. $1.25 
DEEP VELVET (Salbach 1939). A self of very dark, yet bright, blackish red purple of 
large size. AM 1942. TOC 
DISPLAY (Grant 1942). One of the darkest and richest reds we have ever seen. Almost 
black in certain lights, it glows with an inner fire. HM. $1.00. 
DREAMCASTLE (Cook 1943). An orchid pink self with great purity of color and standards 
and falls of exceptional width. A ‘‘cold’’ pink, not a blend. AM 1948. $5.00 
EASTER BONNET (Maxwell 1944). Self color of rhodenite pink with half-inch margin of 
burnished gold on both standards and falls. A large flower. HM 1946. $1.25 
ELMOHR (Loomis 1942). Dykes Medal 1945. A lively shade of reddish mulberry. Large 
flowers of heavy texture and excellent form. $1.00 
EL MOROCCO (Becherer 1945). Broad, rounded flower of a lovely shade of opal- pink with 
extra heavy substance. A pinker shade than Angelus. $1.00 
ELSA SASS (H. Sass 1939). A clear sulphur with a greenish cast in its depth and a white 
blaze near the haft. Round form with edges frilled. AM 1944. 50¢ 
EDWARD LAPHAM (Lapham 1942). A very fine new red, the color is rich and glossy, 
deep but bright maroon-red and has no haft venations to spoil its purity. $2.00 
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