70 



CITRUS FRUITS AND THEIR CULTURE. 



bined; flavor rich, quality very good; pith rather open, 

 1-2 inch across; seeds present, six in number, large, oval, 

 pointed; season October-November. 



Said to have come from the old Dummitt grove origi- 

 nally. Its seedlessness was discovered by one of the 

 Starkes, of Glenwood, Fla. The variety was named after 

 the town of Enterprise, Fla. 



Foster. Form 

 rounded, oblate ; size 

 medium to large, 

 25-8x2 7-8 inches, 

 25-8x3 inches; 

 color orange; apex 

 rounded and slight- 

 ly depressed ; base 

 rounded, smooth ; 

 calyx rather large, 

 3-8 inch across 

 1-8 inch thick; oil 

 cells slightly ele- 

 vated or flush with 

 the surface ; sections 

 twelve, well defined ; 

 flesh rather coarse, 



Photo 6y Ensminger. 



Fig. 15. A Seedling Sweet Orange Tree in Florida. 

 It carried a crop of 12, 000 fruits when photographed. 



orange in color; juice sacks large; juice abundant, col- 

 ored; pulp melting; acid well defined; flavor rich, quality 

 excellent; pith 1-2 inch across, solid; seeds present, oval, 

 pointed, large, thirteen in number; season October- 

 November. 



According to Reasoner the original tree of this variety 

 was grown from seed obtained from Havana about 1847, 

 and in 1887 it was still standing in the grove of Col. C. 



