KURUME AZALEAS 
Kurume Azaleas. Smaller flowers but in great quantities in early 
spring. Kurumes are very showy plants for shady gardens. 
Quite often the rains will threaten the bloom but they are a 
hard lot and quickly recover. 
5-inch pots, 60c. 
Appleblossom. Single pale pink flaked with rose. 
Coral Bells. Popular semi-double flowers in several shades of 
coral and pink. 
Crabapple. Light pink. 
Salmon Queen. Single, deep salmon 
Seraphin. Brilliant pink. 
Snow. Pure white flowers like drifts of snow. 
Torch. When in bloom like a flaming torch. Brilliant and showy. 
BOUVARDIAS 
Bouvardia Humboldti, White Bouvardia. Popular flowers for cor- 
sages. Handsome low growing shrub with spreading slender 
branches and deep green glossy leaves and fragrant tubular 
white flowers with four flaring petals. 1-gal., 75c. 
Bouvardia Coral Red. Flowers a rich coral red, very pretty in 
good size clusters, but without fragrance. 1-gal., 75c. 
YESTERDAY AND TODAY 
Brunfelsia floribunda, Yesterday and Today. A very fine orna- 
mental shrub for either sun or shade. Grows more compact in 
sun, but the clear glossy light green leaves, tough branched 
stems and glorious fragrant flowers are equally lovely in light 
shade. Flowers open blue-violet, fading first to lilac, and! 
finally to white. 5-gal., $2.00; 1-gal., 75c. 


INDICA AZALEA, PAUL SCHAME 
MARSH’‘S NURSERY 
BRUNFELSIA FLORIBUNDA 
RARE AND UNUSUAL CAMELLIAS 
Camellias have become very popular in the last few years, for 
these ornamental evergreen shrubs have exquisitely beautiful 
flowers during the winter and spring. Contrary to most plants, 
camellias never get old and worn out, instead they become more 
valuable as they get larger. 
They are easy to grow in a shady, sheltered location; an acid 
soil with good drainage in which generous quantities of leaf mold 
Or peat have been added. They require generous amounts of 
water during the growing season, but they should never become 
stagnant for lack of drainage. Withhold water and fertilizer 
during the dormant season when the flowers appear. 
Alba plena. One of the finest pure white double camellias. For- 
mal-shaped, fully double, early—a beautiful and delicate flow- 
er. Makes a symmetrical plant. 5-gal., $6.00; gal., $3.00. 
Alexander Nowlin. Very double, formal flowers of tomato-red 
with white flecks. Gal., $3.00. 
Belle Romana. Large light pink double flowers, profusely striped, 
splashed and penciled with crimson. Vigorous and free-flow- 
ering. 5-gal., $4.00; gal., $2.00. 
Blood of China. Since the war, this lovely large dark red peony 
type camellia has received a great deal of publicity. Sought 
after by collectors everywhere, often at many times our price, 
it is worth a place in every garden. Gal., $3.50. 
Chandleri elegans. Most popular of the peony-flowered camel- 
lias. Soft rose with a center of tightly curled petals. Flowers 
are variously marked with white, making a soft and interesting 
contrast on the large flowers. 5-gal., $5.00; gal., $2.00. 
Cheerful. A good companion to Pink Perfection for beginners 
with camellias. Flowers about the same size, but a deeper pink 
and farther north where the climate is cooler it approaches a 
deep bright cherry red. Fully double but showing a few yellow 
stamens in the center. Late and profuse in bloom. 5-gal., 
S300 calealecor 
Ella Drayton. Beautiful deep red, formal and fully double. 5- 
gal., $4.50; gal., $1.50. 
150 N. Lake Ave., Pasadena, Calif. 
