PACEMAKER (Lapham 1950) $10.00 
Red Iris fire ones enthusiasm all over again. Here is a new bright 
red with a silken-like finish which gives promise. A smooth, even 
textured self, with a velvety finish. No venations on the haft. 
Three and four way branching on 36” stalks. Early midseason. 
Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1950. 
PAGAN PRINCESS (G. Douglas 1948) $3.00 
In this Iris we find a pleasing, new and remarkable color. Persian 
pink standards and persian rose falls, contrasted with a tangerine 
beard. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1948. 36”. 
PAINTED DESERT (Milliken 1942) $1.00 
This Iris has been well named. Its soft desert colorings have pro- 
duced a lovely blending of colors which is unlike any other Iris. 
PARTY DRESS (T. Muhlestein 1951) $15.00 
(Parentage (45-22A: Lancaster x Hall’s 42-10) x 46-22B Sister 
to Pink Formal) Tell has given us a grand new ruffled pink that 
has a most interesting background. In color it is pinker than his 
famous Pink Formal, The flower is medium size with semi-flar- 
ing falls and closed standards. Both are of good substance; radia- 
ting charm and personality with its new ruffled skirt. Blooms 
midseason to late. Highly commended 1950. Honorable Mention 
Ad SaelO5Ax 
PATRICE (DeForest 1945) $1.00 
This is an excellent plicata. Creamy standards, flushed with soft 
shades of pale rosy-lavendar. The flaring falls are a frosted white 
brushed bright gold across the haft, and speckled rose-brown. Trim 
and prim in its flower placement on a nicely branched stalk. Mid- 
season. 38”. 
PEG DABAGH (Craig 1948) $7.50 
A Wm. Mohr derivative. Novel color of smooth clear blue-violet. 
Full rounded good substanced flowers. Early and longtime bloom- 
er, heavy increaser. 40”. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1948. 
PIERRE MENARD (Faught 1948) $10.00 
A magnificent addition to the medium blue class. The standards, 
slightly open, are of hyacinth blue, with beautifully flaring cam- 
panula violet falls, veined hyacinth blue. Very heavy substance, 
’ and good branching. Midseason. 36”. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 
1948. Award of Merit 1950. - 
PINK BOUNTIFUL (Cook 1949) $6.00 
This new exotic orchid pink comes to us from the east. highly 
recommended. Said to have a smooth satin texture and fine sub- 
stance. Beautifully formed large flower with broad petals on nice- 
ly branched 38” stems. Mid-season. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1951. 
PINK CAMEO (Fay °1946) $2.50 
One of the most famous “flamingo” pinks. Its deep, pure pink 
long pointed buds open into the delightful new translucent cameo 
pink, enriched by a tangerine-orange beard with which these 
new pinks are endowed. The smothly finished blooms are well 
placed on nicely branched stems. A picture of delicate beauty 
to delight the most exacting. Award of Merit A.I.S., 1948. Early 
midseason. 36”. 
PINK FORMAL (Muhlestein 1949) $15.00 
A Golden Eagle x Loomis S Q 72 seedling. This is one of the 
most talked about new pinks. Rated very highly. Large ruffled 
deep pink with a salmon influence. The beard is intense red-tan- 
gerine. Of heavy substance that withstands the hot sun. Beauti- 
fully branched 38” stalks. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1949. Award 
of Merit A.I.S. 1951. 
PINK MATRON (Carl C. Taylor 1950) $5.00 
A most delightful new pink blend. Very smooth texture with full 
rounded petals, flaring form, and pleasing size flowers. Winter 
hardy. 40”. Pictured on page No. 7. 
PINK SENSATION (Hall 1948) $10.00 
This is one of the latest introduction of David Hall’s world 
famous “Flamingo Pinks,’ with a tangerine beard. A true, deep 
pink with laced edges that do not fade. In form, the petals are 
large, full and rounded. A grand Iris. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 
1950. 35”. Early. 
PINNACLE (Stevens 1949) $10.00 
Tranquil in its new color combination. This Iris was a sensa- 
tion at the Oregon A.I.S. Convention in °49. Its standards are 
clear cool white, contrasted with smooth primrose yellow falls. 
Luminous enamel like finished flowers. Midseason. 35”. Award 
of Merit A.IL.S. 1951. 
PRAIRIE SUNSET (H. Sass 1939) $1.00 
Dykes Medal winner 1943. A subtle blending of rich apricot, 
peach, rose, copper, and gold. A self of indescribable iridescent 
colorings. The standards are slightly opened, falls flare. Midsea- 
son. 34”. 
PREMIER PEACH (D. Hall 1946) $2.50 
This is not a pink Iris but a peach Iris, which has no haft mark- 
ings to mar its delicate beauty. Flowers are a clear pinkish peach 
self of good size and form. Comparable to Haviland China. Hon- 
orable Mention A.J.S. 1946. Midseason. 34”. 
PRESENT (C. G. White 1942) $1.50 
An Onco-bred of merit. The flower is enticingly marked with 
soft colorings of pinkish tints, netted throughout, with a signal 
patch of velvety rose on the fall petals. In form, it shows much 
of its onco breeding, but the foliage, height, and performance 
take their place among the Eupogons. Midseason. 32”. Award 
of Merit A.I.S. 1949. 
PRETTY QUADROON (Kleinsorge 1948) $10.00 
A Mexico x Tobacca Road cross. Delectable smooth metallic 
light copper-brown with a hint of lavender and gold undertone. 
The beard is brown also. Standards are closed and falls widely 
rounded. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1948. Award of Merit 1950. 
Midseason. 34”. 
PROSPECTOR (Kleinsorge 1950) $10.00 
Very deep golden yellow, almost an orange, with an ivory-white 
patch in the center of the falls. Closed standards and saucer flaring 
falls make a highly pleasing garden picture. 34”. Honorable Men- 
tion A.LS. 1951. 
PURPLE MOOR (Lapham 1947) $3.00 
Massive, huge blooms of full rounded form in a rich glossy 
purple. Very showy because of its very large size, opening later 
than most bearded Iris. 35”. 
QUECHEE (Knowlton 1950) $8.00 
Reds are everpopular and we continue to search for perfection in 
this color. Quechee is said to be an Iris of distinctive form and 
richness of color. A handsome garnet red self with broad cupped 
standards, rounded flaring falls, and a thick short bronze beard. 
Very heavy substance and smoothness of finish gives it resistance 
to sunburning. Good branching and a mid-season bloomer on 37” 
ae Highly Commended 1948. Honorable Mention A.LS. 
RADIATION (Hall 1948) $10.00 
Some proclaim this to be Mr. Hall’s best Iris. It is an orchid-pink 
combined with flamingo shadings, and a bright tangerine-red 
beard. A more intensely colored flower than most the the “Flam- 
ingo pinks.” Flowers are beautifully formed, large, and well 
substanced. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1948. Award of Merit 
1950. Early Midseason. 33”. 
RAINBOW ROOM (J. Sass 1946) $7.00 
(Parentage H. Sass’ No. 50-36 x Matula) Nature has set her 
stage in a rich creamy-buff and then taken her paint brush in 
hand, proceeding to blend a symphony of colors by blending a 
multiple of shadings of apricot and orange over the greater por- 
tion of the fall petals, dashings a splash of lilac toward the 
center, finishing off with a metallic blotch at the end of a bright 
yellow beard. Mid-season. 36”. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1947. 
Award of Merit 1951. 
RAJAH BROOKE (Norton 1945) $1.00 
A variegata fancier’s joy. Its different. Standards topaz, falls 
pigeon-blood red, with wide border of topaz on the edge. The 
beard is of burnished gold. Late. An excellent Iris. 36”. 
RANGER (Kleinsorge 1943) $1.50 
A distinctive late blooming brilliant crimson-red with high closed 
cone-shapd standards. Broad velvety falls. Fragrant. 34”. Late. 
Award of Merit A.I.S. 1946. 
RED AMBER (Loomis 1942) $1.00 
Jasper pink standards, and falls a blend of old rose and eugenia 
red with copper suffusion. 40”. This is a color variation. 
RED MAJESTY (G. Douglass 1946) $3.00 
Majestic in its gorgeous, brilliant robe of eugenia rose, with a 
touch of yellow infusion at the throat, finished by a heavy yellow 
semi-flaring blooms. Honorable Mention A.I.S. 1948. Late. 42”. 
LY ON‘S. a. RASTA NB 
