Lot 81 
Marie Lustrat McHatton 
At the 5th annual Camellia Show, spon¬ 
sored by the Camellia Garden Club at Columbus, 
Georgia, Jan. 28, 1937, a new variety of Camellia was 
named in honor of MARIE LUSTRAT McHATTON. 
Mrs. McHatton is past president of the Garden Club of 
Georgia and wife of Dr. Thomas Hubbard McHatton, Professor of 
Horticulture, at the University of Georgia. 
Her untiring and successful efforts in behalf of the Georgia Garden 
Councils is well known throughout that state. 
The beauty and purity of this salmon-pink Camellia . . . 
informality of form, reflects the dynamic, yet pleasing personality and 
character of Mrs. McHatton. 
This Camellia, a recent LONGVIEW origination, blooms freely and 
naturally from December to March in the latitude of Mobile. We have 
seen plants a solid mass of salmon-pink blossoms, and from a distance 
one would mistake them for Azaleas. 
Flowers 3 to 3% inches across, of robust, symmetrical growth. 
A lovely winter-hardy garden variety and equally desirable for 
conservatory culture. 
Very limited number of plants available 
Height Size Pot Propagated Character Each 
30-36 '— 9"— 1931— Well branched, budded .$15.00 
“LONGVIEW” Robt. O. Rubel, Jr., CRICHTON, ALA. 
Camellia Specialist _ 
Narberth. Pa.. Dec. 8, 1938.—"All my 
Camellias fram Longview are doing 
wonderful. I wish you could see them." 
C.P.S. 
