JACKSONVILLE,» FLORIDA 
agation because we think they are the best from a standpoint of flow- 
ers, free blooming, shapeliness of shrub, fast and vigorous growth. 
The Sasanqua is splendid for hedges and good for specimen planting. 
As they become better known they will be more popular. 
CLEOPATRA—Large single, cherry red flowers, often double, 
having crinkled petals. Blooms very early. Foliage dark green and 
glossy. A fast, vigorous and very compact grower, making a sym- 
metrical and showy shrub. 
MINE-NO-YUKI (SNOW ON THE MOUNTAIN) —Flowers 
are large, double white, borne in great profusion, covering the entire 
plant when in full flower. Early bloomer, when young, it is a loose, 
open grower. Becomes compact and well rounded as it grows older. 
Fast grower. 
ROSEA—Brilliant pink single flowers appearing early in season 
and in great abundance. Small, dark green foliage. Upright dense 
growth and very fast, making a graceful shapely shrub. 
SETSUGEKKA—Large, semi-double white flowers with touch 
of pink at the margins of ruffled petals. Small very dark green 
foliage. Fast, erect and compact grower. A new variety strikingly 
beautiful and of great merit for hedges and as a specimen. 
PRICES CAMELLIA SASANQUA 
2734 $4.50 
3/4! 6.50 
4/5’ 8.50 
AZALEAS 
Without doubt, Azaleas are the most outstanding flowering plants 
we have in the South. The blooming season is long, if the varieties 
are selected with that feature in view. The list of Azaleas we carry has 
been carefully selected for freeness of bloom, variety of color, char- 
acter of foliage, and habit of growth. We have eliminated the plants 
that show weak growth, poor blooming habits, and poor foliage. 
Perhaps no shrub can be used to greater advantage in landscap- 
ing the garden than Azaleas. They are splendid for foundation plant- 
ing at the base of the home. This is especially true with the smaller 
and slower growing Kurumes. They are exceptionally good in borders 
and beds, or, as accent plants, spotted along evergreen shrubbery 
plantings. 
Indica Azaleas grow very rapidly, making magnificent shrubs and 
cover themselves with blooms in February and March. They grow 
tall and broad. We have seen some plants as much as thirty feet in 
diameter and twenty-five feet high. The Kurumes grow more slowly. 
Their flowers are smaller, but, what they lack in size of flower they 
