JANUARY 1 TO MARCH 31, 1908. 27 



21946 to 21955— Continued. 



21947 to 21950. Dolichos lablab L. Hyacinth bean. 



21947. "Katj.'Ieda." 21949. "Katj: Ypit id jo." 



21948. "Katj: Ypit." 21950. "Katj: Ypit poetih." 

 21951 to 21953. Stizolobium capitatum (Roxb.) Kuiitze. 



21951. Black-seeded variety. 21953. " Bengoek item." 



21952. "Bengoek poetih." 



21954. Stizolobium hirsutum (Wight & Am.) Kuntze. 



21955. Stizolobium capitatum (Roxb.) Kuntze. 



21956. Axaxas SATivrs Schult. f. Pineapple. 



From Quito, Ecuador. Presented by Hon. W. C. Fox, American minister. 

 Received December 7, 1907. 



Guayaquil. (?) "This plant is undoubtedly the so-called Guayaquil variety, 

 although its exact habitat is ' El Milagro,' about 30 miles inland from Guaya- 

 quil. The Guayaquil is undoubtedly the finest pineapple I have ever tasted." 

 {Fox.) 



21957. Phragmites karka (Retz.) Trin. 



From Sibpur, Calcutta, India. Presented by Capt. A. T. Gage, superin- 

 tendent, Royal Botanic Garden. Received February 13, 1908. 



"A grass very similar to Phragmites com munis, but larger. Watt, Dictionary 

 of Economic Products of India, vol. (>. p. 216, 1892, states that the stems are 

 8 to 12 feet high and are used tor making baskets, chairs, hurdles, screens, and 

 the tubes of ' hukahs.' Roxburgh, Flora of India, vol. 1, p, 348, 1832, states 

 that the common Durma mats of Bengal are made of the stalks split open. 

 Watt also says that according to Stewar a fiber is extracted from the upper 

 part of the stems, and according to Atkinson the fiber of the flower stalks is 

 manufactured into rope in the Kumaon Bhabar. Useful Plants of Japan, pub- 

 lished by the Agricultural Society of Japan, 1895, p. 223, states that the grass 

 is planted in water sides to protect mud from being washed away by waves, 

 and that its young shoots are edible. Those produced in Udini village, of the 

 Province of Setsu, are called Udono-yeshi and are very famous for their large 

 and long stalks. 



•'Names in India: Hindu name, Narkul; Bengal name, Nal; Kumaon names. 

 Karka. Xal, Khaila. Japanese names: Jositake, Joosk or Sinagosa, Josi, Yoshi, 

 Ashi." (W. F. Wight.) 



21958. Panicum maximum Jacq. Guinea grass. 



From Santiago de las Vegas, Cuba. Presented by Prof. II. Benton, chief, 

 Department of Agriculture, through M. C. V. Piper. Received February 

 13, 1908. 



21959. Berberis vulgaris japoxica Kegel. 



From Jamaica Plain, Mass. Presented by Prof. C. S. Sargent, of the Arnold 

 Arboretum. Received February IT, 1908. 



For experiments in the breeding of barberries. 



21960. Quercus cornea Lour. 



From Hongkong, China. Presented by Mr. S. T. Dunn, superintendent. 

 Botanical and Forestry Department. Received February 20, 1908. 



(See No. 10633 for description.) 

 137 



