INTRODUCING FOR ’55: 
From the garden of the well known hybridizer Mr. G. H. Murray of 
Covina, California comes the following two introductions. | know you 
will like them both, otherwise we would not be offering them to you at 
this time. We have sufficient stock to offer them at a very low price. So. 
be the first to have something better than average that's new, in your 
garden next year. 
GREEN HAT—In the last few years 
there seems to be much interest in 
producing green blossoms on iris. 
This is perhaps one of the best to 
date. The standards are a gren 
chartreuse, with falls of hazelnut 
brown edged with the green stan- 
dard color, set off with a gold 
beard. This all is done in a very 
heavy substance, on well branched 
stems that are about 38 to 40 
inches in height. This blooms mid- 
season to late for us. Seven to ten 
blossoms to a stalk. The parentage 
is (Green Pastures X Melitza) X 
Appointee. With this parentage 
bringing in onco blood it would be 
well worth breeding further with a 
CLS ear ten er me re een, ek 7.50 
IRIS LURE — As the name would 
have you believe, this is an iris 
that draws everyone that sees it. 
Standards and falls are a medium 
lemon yellow with a large white 
area on both. A good yellow beard 
with no haft markings. Perfect 
branching and the heaviest of sub- 
stance on stems about 40 inches in 
height. The blooming period is late 
mid-season. The parentage is Gud- 
run X Grand Marshall. One of the 
- most prolific growing iris that we 
have seen. AS most of you know 
you just can’t plant too many yel- 
low iris in a garden so we know 
youswilelike “this, ones: 23.2.2 7.50 
