AZ^LM GARDENS, SEBRING, FLA. 
No. Name and Description. 
61. DAISY. Deep red ribs and center, edged 
old gold and spotted lighter green. Leaf 
crinkled and with a narrow green border. A 
lovely dwarf variety. 
114. JOHN PEED. Fine bold plant with many 
leaves. Center transparent cherry red, witu 
LIGHT green margin. A fine English intro¬ 
duction. 
35. CANDIDUM. An old farvorite and popular 
for Easter. Transparent pure white leaf, bor¬ 
dered narrow green, and with rich green ribs 
and netting. 
69. GRATIOSUM. Light pink center, bordered 
by a pink zone and green edge. The leaf is 
profusely covered with transparent carmine- 
red specks. 
89. CARO NOME. Whitish, straw-colored leaf 
with extra heavy scarlet ribs, distinctly zoned 
transparent carmine-rose. Only a 1 i m i t ed 
quantity. Sold out for 1935. 
It is a well known fact that in variegated 
leaved plants, such as Caladiums, the more chloro- 
phyl, or green, that the leaves possess, the propor¬ 
tionately less colors and variegation they have. We 
grow Caladiums with COLOR, which are not so 
easily and cheaply produced as inferior varieties 
with more GREEN in the leaves than COLOR, and 
COLOR is what Caladiums should have. 
You can then see that the more chlorophyl a 
plant has, as in the case of Caladiums, the faster 
it grows. It follows that Green Caladiums, more or 
less void of color, make “shoe-sole” bulbs of great 
size, and out of shape. We cultivate and fertilize 
our Caladiums scientifically, and produce a normal 
size bulb of nice' proportions, and with plenty of 
eyes to produce for you an abundance of foliage, 
foliage with COLOR. REMEMBER, COLOR 
COUNTS! The color of your money is certainly 
worth the best COLOR in Caladiums. 
