CITRUS FRUITS GROWN 
AT OUR 
WINTER HAVEN NURSERIES 
ORANGE: Hamlin, King, Jaffa, Parson 
Brown, Pineapple, Lue Gim Gong, 
Temple, Tangerine, Glen Improved 
Navel, and Valencia. 
GRAPEFRUIT: Duncan, Marsh Seedless, 
McCarty, Foster Pink, Thompson Pink, 
Glenred Seedless, and Triumph. 
LEMON: Harvey, 
and Villa Franca. 
LIME: Tahiti (Persian), Lakeland. 
KUMQUAT: 
Nagami. 
TANGELO: Thornton, 
Minneola, and Seminole. 
MISCELLANEOUS: Eustis 
Mandarin, and Calamondin. 
Meyer, Ponderosa, 
Marumi, Meiwa, and 
Orlando, 
Limequat, 
For the convenience of our Central and 
South Florida customers, we maintain a 
citrus sales office in Winter Haven, located in 
the American National Bank Building. This 
office is in charge of experienced citrus men, 
whose services are available without charge. 
We urge our customers to take their citrus 
planting problems to these experts for 
solution. 
Our Winter Haven nurseries are located 
on high, well-protected land, seven miles 
east of Winter Haven, near the small town 
of Dundee, which is our shipping point. 
We also maintain a field office there. These 
are the largest citrus nurseries in the world 
and a cordial invitation is extended to 
visitors. 
40 


poe —_— 
TEMPLE ORANGE. 
See page 42 
Our SPECIAL CITRUS CATALOGUE, 
profusely illustrated, contains a detailed 
description of each of the varieties we grow 
at our Winter Haven nurseries, as well as 
much additional information of value to the 
prospective citrus planter. Write us at 
Winter Haven, Fla., for a copy of this in- 
teresting booklet. 
ie a nen/Dok, Jehint 
OOS, gaint, 
cor eNom 
ri PusHILee 




The Cultivation  ...... 2 
of Citrus Fruits 9 _....S3 
By 
H. Harold Hume 
Covers all phases of 
citrus fruit growing, in- 
cluding varieties, propaga- 
tion, planting, fertilizing, 
and frost protection. $5.00, 
postpaid. 
ee 
TANGERINE * 
wa 
CITRUS FRUITS 
N FLORIDA, citrus 
[ewes lead all others in 
importance. While the 
chief producing areas for 
commercial growing are lo- 
cated in the central and 
southern parts of the state, 
citrus fruits can be suc- 
cessfully grown both com- 
mercially and for home use 
in all parts of the state 
‘where soil and drainage 
conditions permit. 
The selection of varieties 
and rootstocks is of prime 
importance, and BEFORE 
ORDERING WE URGE 
THAT YOU READ AND 
CAREFULLY FOLLOW 
DIRECTLONSAGONE 
TAINED IN THE FOL- 
LOWING PARAGRAPHS. 
By so doing you will avoid 
delays in the handling of your orders 
and greatly improve your chances of 
making your plantings a complete 
success. 
On the map of Florida, at left, we have 
drawn a line from Jacksonville in a south- 
westerly direction through Gainesville to 
Cedar Keys on the Gulf of Mexico. If you 
live north or west of that line and wish to 
plant citrus trees, please make your 
selection frcm page 41 and send your 
order direct to our main office at Glen 
Saint Mary, Fla., where we grow trees 
budded on Citrus trifoliata rootstock, 
suitable only for soil and climatic condi- 
tions in Northwest Florida and the Gulf 
Coast states. 
If you live south or east of the line, make 
your selection from varieties listed in 
first column and send your order direct 
to our office at Winter Haven, Fla., where 
we grow trees budded on rootstocks 
suitable only for the southern and eastern 
sections of Florida. 

