TANGERINES 
Algerian Tangerine. If you like your Tangerines not too 
acid you'll enjoy this variety. Bears great quantities of 
reddish-orange fruit from December to March. Sweet mild 
flavor. Each, $6.50. 
Dancy Tangerine. Has been grown here with great suc- 
cess through many years. The tree attains large size and 
produces heavy crops of medium-sized, sweet, highly-flavored 
fruit, exceptional in quality. Youngsters, and grown-ups, too, 
go for them in a big way. February to May. Each, $6.50. 
Kara Mandarin. An amazing newer variety cram full of 
delightful orange-colored juice that has a distinctive flavor 
of its own. The sweet flesh is firm, yet tender and melting. 
February to April. Each, $6.50. 
King Mandarin. At an early age will bear good crops of 
large loose-skinned fruit of an intense orange color. Sweet, 
a flavorful flesh and few seeds. March to August. Each, 
6.50. 
Satsuma. Dwarf to 8 feet. 
to April. Each, $6.50. 
Exceedingly hardy. November 
DWARF CITRUS FRUITS 
Calamondin. A dense glossy small-leaved citrus shrub that 
produces incredible quantities of small fruit, orange-red with- 
in and without. The juice is greatly prized for use in drinks. 
Highly valued either in the garden or for pot culture. Balled, 
15-18 in., $3.75; 5-gal. containers, $3.50; gal. containers, $1.50. 
Chinotto Orange. Either as pot subject or in the ground 
you ll find these dense, round citrus shrubs highly attractive. 
Leaves are myrtle-like and deep green in color. In Winter 
and Spring the plants are loaded with small, cheerful, golden 
fruit that will dehght your eye (and your stomach, too, if 
you make them into marmalade). Withstands quite heavy 
frosts. 5-gal. containers, $3.50. 

RANGPUR LIME—Bears heavy crops of highly acid fruit. 

RED STRAWBERRY GUAVA—Highly prized for eating out of 
hand or for jelly making. See page 6. 
Nagami Kumquat. Through the winter and spring months 
these busy trees are simply loaded with small oval reddish- 
orange fruit. Eaten “bones and all’’—like a small trout— 
they’re really delicious. The skin has a sweet aromatic flavor, 
the flesh is agreeably tart. For marmalade they are unex- 
celled. Compact tree to 8 or 9 feet. Quite frost resistant. 
Balled, 2%4-3 ft. Each, $7.50. 
Meyer Lemon. This variety, in bush form, is particularly 
popular now. Grown as a shrub in the garden, used as a pot 
subject or planted in tree form in the family orchard it is 
highly useful and attractive. Pink, fragrant blossoms, large 
orange-colored fruit through most of the year, bright, healthy 
foliage. Being highly frost resistant the plant may be grown 
successfully most anywhere. Balled, bushy, 3-3% ft., $9.50; 
Bynes) ite, KILNS Zane We. Mls IWS) thi, SACU SHegul, eter 
tainers, $3.25; gal. containers, $1.25. 
Rangpur Lime. If you want a dense luxuriant shrub with 
plenty of big delightfully fragrant white flowers and rich 
usable tangerine-orange fruit, plant a few Rangpurs. Equally 
attractive in pots, as specimen plants in the garden or planted 
in hedges. Balled, bushy, 3-4 ft., $8.50; 2-3 ft., $6.00; 5-gal. 
containers, $3.25; gal. containers, $1.25. 
SUB-TROPICAL FRUITS 
AVOCADO 
Don’t overlook the ornamental possibilities of Avocado 
trees. You can’t find a better tree than a Puebla Avocado 
for shading a small patio. 
For cultural directions, planting distances and directions, 
and best months for planting, see page 31. 
Mail orders accepted for delivery on our regular truck 
routes only. See page 3. 
Each, $6.00 and up. 
Bostonia. An excellent tree for the colder areas. Quality 
fruit about the size and shape of the Fuerte, that matures 
from March to July. Tree has particularly big leaves and 
while large growing is quite compact. 
Fuerte. A tried and true variety through many years. 
Bears heavy crops of large, pear-shaped green fruit that is 
“tops” in flavor and quality. Probably nine-tenths of the 
late winter and spring avocados you buy in the market are 
of this variety. The tree is wide spreading and provides a 
maximum of dense, welcome shade. Hardy to frost. No- 
vember to May. 

GROWERS OF THE BEST IN NURSERY STOCK SINCE 1920! 5 
