Lord Wolsely (Barr 1899) 4’. Deep blue-purple with yellow signal. Large flowers 
on good strong stems. $1.00 
Shelford’s Giant (Foster 1913) Creamy white with a rich yellow signal patch on the 
falls. Large flowers; fine for cutting. 48”. $1.00 
Sunny Day (H. Sass 1931) 414’. A tall clear canary yellow with no markings on the 
haft. Large flowers with artistic form and great beauty. A perfect cut flower. 
$1.00 
Two Opals (Nies 1946) Pleasingly ruffled in form, the standards are soft cream, 
falls are the same and washed with lavender. Two Opals has that odd and rare 
quality of acquiring the tones of whatever background it is placed against, which 
makes it valuable for corsages. 46”. $3.50 
Wadi Zem Zem (Miliken 1943) An extremely large flower of clear, deep cream 
color, with flaring falls two inches or better in width. Fine form, good heavy 
substance. $2.50 
SIBERIAN IRIS 
Every garden should have a few clumps of Siberian Iris. They produce dense 
clumps of grass-like foliage and very artistic butterfly-like flowers on slender, 
graceful stems. The Siberians are particularly charming intermingled sparingly in 
the border garden with other perennials, particularly such items as salmon pink 
oriental poppies, early yellow daylilies, campanulas, etc. The Siberians add an air 
of grace and charm to the planting that can be duplicated with no other flower. 
They are also excellent cut-flowers and splendid for corsages. 
Cool Spring (Kellog) Many clear pearly blue flowers open at the same time on 
well branched stems. $1.25 
Tunkhannock (Scheffy 1945) Large white with flaring falls. An excellent cut-flower 
for those artistic arrangements. $2.00 
Tycoon (Cleveland 1938) 34”. The largest Siberian iris. The flowers have broad 
petals and a lovely violet blue color with satiny finish. $2.00 
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