<Mene 4fU4ien^ toiled lo^ aold In 1850 . . . 
Now Growing Grounds for Roeding’s Quality Trees 
How our fruit tree growing grounds at Loomis, Placer county, appear right-hand corner of this view annually carry thousands of dollars 
from the windows of fast transcontinental planes on the Sacramento- in California fruits to eastern markets harvested from orchards 
Reno route. Highway U. S. 40 and overland rail lines in the upper, planted on these rolling foothills. 
Your Investment Safeguarded hye/xi^ ca^ 
In Every Nursery Operation 
Four fundamentals guide the production of Roeding's Quality fruit trees from start to finish: 
Careful bud selection from parent trees of known performance. 
Exercising every precaution to insure varieties that are true to name. 
Use of the best scientific and practical cultural methods. 
Supervision of every operation from start to finish on our own grounds by our own men. 
Peach on peach. Apricot on apricot. Almond on olm. Prune on myro. 
Every orchardist knows the importance of good 
soil and crop rotation to the successful develop¬ 
ment of fruit trees. Here at Loomis there is 
plenty of room for eight separate crops of trees. 
As soon as the 1939 supply is dug from the 
nursery rows, back goes this acreage into soil¬ 
building grains. Not until the late 1940's will 
we consider this ground to be in perfect con¬ 
dition for growing Roeding's Quality fruit trees. 
Here is the Result . . . 
Look at these beautiful trees dug at random 
from our Loomis growing grounds in Septem¬ 
ber! Similar trees placed on exhibit at the state 
and county fairs drew enthusiastic approval 
from commercial and home orchardists alike. 
You will agree with us that extra care pays big 
dividends when we get results like these. 
