

VALENCIA ORANGE 
OTHER SUBTROPICAL 
FRUITS 
GUAVA 
Red Strawberry Guava. Very attractive small or medium shrub for 
full sun. Dense, glossy green foliage on a compact plant. White 
flowers in spring; small red fruits in late fall and winter make excel- 
lent jelly. 5-gallon containers, $3.50; 1-gallon containers, $1.00. 
OLIVE 
Mission. The most picturesque olive tree; introduced by the Padres 
with the founding of California missions. Abundant fruits are small 
to medium, excellent flavor when pickled. 5-gallon containers, $3.50. 
PERSIMMON 
Hachiya. Large, tapering fruits hang on the tree after scarlet fall 
foliage is gone. Pick when firm-ripe and store until soft-ripe. Makes 
delicious salad with avocados. Bare root, 4-6 ft. $4.00, 3-4 ft. $3.00. 
POMEGRANATE 
Wonderful. The principal California variety, beautiful with red flow- 
ers in spring and russet-red fruits in fall. The best eating variety. 
Bare root, 3-4 ft., $1.25. 

HOW TO PLANT CITRUS TREES 
Plant like any balled or container-grown evergreen shrub, using care 
not to disturb the ball of earth around the roots. Do not use fertilizer 
when planting. Irrigate frequently during the dry season until Sep- 
tember. Spray frequently with combination of light oil and pyrethrum- 
rotenone material. Keep ants out of citrus trees. 
Gor Multiple Enjoyment 
PLANT CITRUS FRUITS 
ALL VARIETIES: $7.50 EACH 
BEARRS SEEDLESS LIME. Trees are semi-dwarf, compact and hand- 
some. Useful fruits in fall and winter. 
EUREKA LEMON. Principal commercial and home orchard variety 
in California. Fruits and flowers are found on this variety through 
the growing season. The heaviest crop appears in early summer. 
KUMQUAT. A dwarf citrus valuable as a tubbed subject for the 
garden terrace. Winter-ripening tiny fruits are intense orange-red 
and edible. 
MARSH SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT. Valuable in our climate for an 
ornamental tree as blooms and fruits are larger and more fragrant 
than other citrus and the trees are more heavily clothed with foliage. 
MEYER LEMON. Semi-dwarf. One of the best fruiting ornamentals 
for the home, either bush or tree-form. Covered with fragrant flow- 
ers in spring and summer; good supply of useful lemons in winter. 
Bush, or shrub form: 5-gallon containers, $3.50 to $5.00; 1-gallon 
containers, $1.25. 
PONDEROSA LEMON. Robust tree with huge fruits, large leaves 
and blossoms. A desirable and useful ornamental tree. ; 
RUBY BLOOD ORANGE. Handsome tree produces small, thin-skinned 
oranges with red flesh and juice. 
VALENCIA ORANGE. The finest summer-ripening orange, particu- 
larly enjoyed for its juice. Fragrant white flowers in spring. Fruits 
develop through summer and ripen following summer. 
WASHINGTON NAVEL ORANGE. Fruits are seedless, juicy, and 
make excellent orange marmalade; trees covered with fragrant white 
blooms in spring. Ripens in winter. 

EUREKA LEMON 
