LARIME (Wilson) 425. Formal orange, 
opening 8 to 10 6-inch florets in a dou- 
ble row on a flowerhead of 20 buds, 
overlaid with a wide spear of scarlet to 
red. Very showy. L .20; M .15; S .10. 
LAVENDER DREAM 466. A pale but in- 
tense lavender ‘‘blue’’ color, and earli- 
ness of bloom make Lavender Dream an 
important gladiolus. It is particularly 
impressive in basket work. It is a tall 
growing gladiolus. L .10; M .08; S .05; 
B 100-.50. 
LAVENDER LACE (466). The color is 
about the same medium lavender as 
Elizabeth the Queen, but it has a large 
yellow throat lip. It is also a stronger 
grower aud should ‘prove really good. 
It carries a nice exhibition type spike 
of 20 buds with 8 open. L .25; M .15; 
Se LOse Ds LO-20; 
LAVENDER PRINCE (466) (La Salle 
, 46). Deep lavender, verging onto pur- 
ple, with a deeper feather in the throat. 
Cuts well. Those tall spikes are always 
welcomed by the florists. L 3-.25; 10-80; 
M 10-.40; S 10-.25; B pkg. .20. 
ASE LADY (Johnston) 506. This 
white sport of Picardy is wonderful. 
Very large cream throat, with many 
open. It is sweeping the country as a 
winner and will be a winner for some 
time. Excellent in every way. L .10; 
M .07; S .05; B 10-.25; 100-.50. 
LIPSTICK (Balentine) 441. Beautiful 
pink with rose blotch which adds much 
to the beauty of this nice variety. 
Heavy producers of bulblets. L .15; M 
OOM Os 
MADELEINE BROWN 432 
salmon, regular performer, 
Picardy. L .10; M .08; S .05. 
(Mai) fine 
resembles 
MAGNET 560 (Fisher iS, AN aelaere 
light orchid rose that looks good to us, 
of good growing habits, opens 5 to 7 on 
tall always straight stem. Looks like a 
good commercial. L .40; M .30; S .20; 
B 10-.30. 
52) 
MARGARET WOOD (Marshall) 570. A 
huge flowered deep mauve or mauve- 
purple of exceptional size and great 
beauty of color. I believe its greatest 
value lies in the strikingly beautiful 
and unusual floral work it makes. 
L .15; M .12; S .08. 
MISTAYA (Kitcheson ’47) 586 (M). A 
huge tall smoky lavender gray. Quite un- 
usual and exotic in appearance. The 
giant spikes are real attention-getters. 
L .15; M .10; S .05; B 100-1.00. 
MOTHER FISCHER (400) (Fischer 751) 
(85 days). Rugged new white, 67 inches 
tall, and with a white-velvet sheen. 
L .30; M .20; S .15; B 10-.30. 
MT. INDEX (Miller) 401. White with a 
deep yellow throat blotch. An attrac- 
tive color and a fine cutflower. Plants 
grow tall and straight and it makes lots 
of bulblets. L .10; M .08; S .05. 
MY DEAR (Sisson) (440) EM. Nice shell 
pink that opens 7-8 somewhat ruffled 
wide open blooms. Good commercial. 
L .30; M .20; S .15; B 10-.30. 
NANCY (Arnett) 452. One of the finest 
commercial reds, in the 450 class, per- 
fect facing, perfect spacing, stands heat, 
55 inches tall, 24-inch flowerhead, 19 to 
21 buds. One you should grow. L .15; 
MeO S 05:8 b100=505 
NEW YORK (Salman) 562. Tall, formal 
deep rose self capable of super exhibi- 
tion spikes. Holds 8 to 10 florets open 
with spikes averaging 20 buds. Heavy 
substance makes this an excellent com- 
mercial that does not fade or burn. 
L .15; M .10; B 10-.20. 
NINETY GRAND 1950 532. (Zimmer). 
Deep orange red, a tall glad with many 
open at one time. Opens 10 to 12 ona 
tall, straight spike. A mid-season flower 
and should prove to be a good commer- 
cial. L .15; M .10; S .05; B 25-.25. 
NOCTURNE (354) (Fischer ’50). A beau- 
tifully ruffled deep rose-red, about half- 
way between maroon and purple. Some- 
thing different in glad colors. Marvel- 
ously rich and silky in a bouquet. A 
real beauty and a good grower. L .35; 
M .25; S .15; B 10-.25. 
NORDIE QUEEN (Fisher) 540-52-85. A 
soft glowing flesh pink blending to 
creamy throat, much better than Evan- 
geline, opens up to 6 on strong stem, 
Stamdsm Meat un >see lVLee OO Se COME: 
10-1.00. 
NOWETA ROSE (Fischer ’50) 560. This 
is the rose sensation of 1950. Clean 
lavender-rose that will readily open 12 
blooms on a spike of 22-24 buds. Excel- 
lent winner of top awards. L .30; M .25; 
S .15; B 10-.30. 
OCTOBER SUNSHINE (Quackenbush 
47) 420. This is an excellent orange 
blending to golden yellow. It will hold 
6 open florets on an 18-bud spike and 
it has excellent growing habits. This is 
an unusual variety in this color class. 
L .15; M .10; S .05. 
OGARITA (532) (Wilson 742). This is the 
tallest growing glad in entire list. 
Should not be difficult to grow it to 
6 feet in height. Color rose salmon shad- 
ing, to golden throat. li-10s9Mie2-12; 
S 10-.25; B pkg. .25. 
See list of Fragrant Glads on page 14. 
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