28 SEEDS AND PLANTS IMPORTED. 



25934— Continued. 



•'.It seems in mi' thai this or other of the Smith African melons should be more worth 

 cultivating in arid pari- of the West than the thornless prickly pear. Of course the 

 m. -Inns want water, l>nt much of whal they gel they store away for months." 

 [ Lountbury. I 



"( toe of our experimenters of the Monketaan melon has just reported that the return 

 per acre of unions amounted to 103 tons, and it was found that on an average there 

 were two melons to every square yard of land. This melon, according to the analysis 

 we have already had made, is high in feeding value and promises to take a leading 

 pari in Borne of our stock districts." {Extract from letter of Mr. R. \V. Thornton, 

 govern in< hi agriculturist, Cape Town Department of Agriculture, August 24, 1909.) 



25935. Vicia villosa Roth. Hairy vetch. 



Prom Moscow, Russia. Purchased from Immer & Son, through Prof. N. E. 

 Hansen, Agricultural Experiment Station, Brookings, S. Dak., while traveling 

 as an agricultural explorer for this Department. Received September 7, 1909. 



25936. Rosa sp. Rose. 



From Ogden, Utah. Presented by Miss Pearle Cramer, United States Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture, Forest Service. Received September 7, 1909. 



Yellow. ''This rose, so far as I have been able to ascertain, is native only to Utah 

 where it grows in great profusion." (Cramer.) 



25937. Oryza sativa L. Rice. 



From Tsangsheng, Kwangtung Province, near Canton, China. Presented by Mr. 

 Stuart J. Fuller, American vice consul-general-in-charge, Hongkong, for whom 

 it was procured by Mr. Leo Bergholz, American consul-general at Canton. 

 Received September 9, 1909. 



"Szemiu, the translation of which means 'Best quality refined.' The Chinese rice 

 merchant states that the exportation of this rice in any quantity or in samples is for- 

 bidden by the Chinese Government." (Amos P. Wilder, American consul-general, 

 Hongkong, China.) 



25938 to 25940. Mangifera ixdica L. Mango. 



From Philippine Islands. Procured by Mr. William S. Lyon, Gardens of Nagta- 

 jan, Manila, P. I. Received September 8, 1909. 



Seeds of the following standard varieties: 



25938. Carabao. 



See S. P. I. Nos. 24927 and 25659 for previous introductions. 



25939. Pico. 



See S. P. I. No. 24170 for previous introduction. 



25940. Pahutan. "From my viewpoint this is the best, not horticulturally, 

 other than being a vigorous grower, early fruiter, and enormously prolific. 

 Its very serious defects — small size, scanty flesh, and excessively large seed — 

 are from my point of view fully offset by a smoothness, sweetness, juiciness, 

 and flavor unapproached by any other. I have eaten the famous Alphonso 

 mango in Calcutta and do not consider it ace high with pahutan. Pahutan 

 further has a very thick rind. This, while still further diminishing its scanty 

 flesh, probably adds to its shipping qualities." (Lyon.) 



176 



