
PARRY NURSERIES — Signal Mountain, Tenn. 

SOUV. de DUCHER—Violet shaded 
ie SI et $4.00-$6.00-$8.00 
SOUV. @WETIENNE MECHIN—Salmon........... $6.00-$7.50 
SOUV. de la COUVELLERIE—Lilac rose....... $6.00-$8.00 
SOUV. de MAXINE CORNU — Yellow, heavily shaded 
orange, large double blooms; fragrant; profuse 
(oe Read Ea eo $10.00-$15.00-$18.00 
TRIOMPH de GAND—Rose. ..........02.0.0000000202.-- $6.00-$8.00 
TRIOMPH de VANDER MAELEN—Violet 
er ee ss Saas acin ding ceee ease $5.00-$6.00-$8.00 
VILLE de ST. DENIS—White. -........00........... $10.00-$12.00 
AZALEAS 
Without a doube azaleas are the most beautiful flower- 
ing plant we have, their season lasting for several months 
by planting with blooming time in mind. All azaleas are 
profuse bloomers and give a beautiful effect with their solid 
mass of color. 
Some are dwarf, making them especially suitable for 
the rockery; others are of compact, medium growth and 
blend in well with other evergreen shrubs. 
For all-around performance—brilliant coloring, profus- 
ion of bloom and versatility of use, there is no shrub that 
can rival the azalea. 
DECIDUOUS VARIETIES 
MOLLIS AND MOLLIS X SINENSIS HYBRIDS 
Unlike all other azaleas, the Mollis hybrids are quite 
tolerant of lime and do well almost anywhere. ‘They are 
very hardy. 
ALPHONSE LAVALLE—Bright orange, pink flushed. 9- 
bem. 12-15. in. 
DIR. MOERLANDS—Golden yellow. 12-15 in., 15-18 in. 
DR. REICHENBACH—Salmon. 12-15 in. 
FRANS VAN DER BOM-—Salmon rose. 9-12 in., 12-15 
in. 
HORT. H. WITTE—Orange. 9-12 in., 12-15 in. 
HUGO HARDIJZER—Geranium red. 12-15 in., 15-18 in. 
J. C. VAN TOL—Scarlet red. 9-12 in., 12-15 in. 
NICHOLAS BEETS—Deep yellow. 12-15 in. 
VON GNEIST—Orange red. 12-15 in., 15-18 in. 
PONTICA HYBRIDS 
HARDY GHENT AZALEAS 
These are the fine hybrid azaleas (also Rustica plena) 
whose ancestors were taken, many years ago from the wilds 
of America by enthusiastic hybridizers of fine plants, to the 
Old World. There they were crossed with Chinese and 
Japanese azaleas to produce a profusion of color, in single 
and double blooms, ranging from white to all shades of 
yellow, pink, salmon and red. 
Retaining the hardiness of their North American an- 
cestors, these native sons have now returned to their an- 
cestral home, bedecked in a magnificence of splendor and 
beauty. Delightfully fragrant. They are brilliant in fall 
as well as spring with leaves turning to richest shades of 
coppery red and fiery browns. 
BOUQUET de FLORE—Bright pink, striped white. 18-24 
in. 2-3 It, 
ak he pe 
