80 SEEDS AND PLANTS IMPORTED. 



43802 to 43807— Continued. 



43805. jASMiNrM officinai-e L. 



A long, slender, scarcely .self-climbing plant, native of India and Persia, 

 but now widely cultivated throughout the warmer portions of the earth. 

 The leaves have two or three pairs of sharp-pointed leaflets, and the white 

 flowers occur in terminal more or less leafy clusters. In the southern 

 United States the glossy foliage and the white summer-blooming flowers 

 make the plant very attractive, and with protection it will grow as far 

 north as Philadelphia. (Adapted from Curtis's Botanical Magazine, vol. 

 1, pi. 31, and from Bailey, Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, vol. 3, 

 p. 1718.) 



43806. Jasminum simplicitouum Forst. f. 



A climbing shrub or sometimes a tree, found in Australia and the 

 Friendly Islands, with opposite, shiny, oval leaves usually less than 3 

 inches long and white flowers about half an inch long, in terminal, 

 branched, many-flowered clusters. It may be propagated by cuttings ; it 

 flowers in .Tune and .luly. (Adapted from Curtlfs Botanical Magazine, 

 vol. 25, pi. DSO, and from Bailey, Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, 

 vol. 3, p. 1717.) 



43807. Jasminum sinense Hemsl. 



A climbing shrub from central and southern China, with papery leaves 

 composed of three oval or narrowly oval leaflets up to 3, or, occasionally, 

 6 inches long. The white flowers are IJ inches long and occur in dense 

 cymose panicles. (Adapted from Forhcn and Hemsley, Jour. Linn. Soc., 

 vol. 26, pp. 80, 81.) 



43808. CoRCHORus capsularis L. Tiliacese. Jute. 



From Amoy, China. Presented by Messrs. E. F. Spears & Sons, Paris, Ky., 

 who receivetl it from Mr. Chan Goan Sin, Amoy. Received December 

 22, 1916. 

 " Jute is an annual plant, requiring a rich, moist, well-drained, alluvial soil 

 and a warm, moist climate, free from frost for at least six months. It Avill 

 grow in sandy loam or alluvial soils from Maryland to Florida and Texas, but 

 will not ripen much seed north of the cotton belt. The seed is sown broadcast, 

 the crop harvested by hand, retted in water, and the fiber cleaned by hand from 

 the wet stalks in the water. It could be grown profitably in this country if 

 there were satisfactory methods of removing the fiber from the stalks and pre- 

 paring it for market. The fiber is used for burlaps, bagging, and gunny sacks." 

 (L. H. Dewey.) 



43809. ZizipHus JUJUBA Mill. Ehamnacese. Jujube. 

 (Z. sativa Gaertn.) 



From Keijo, Cho.sen (Korea). Presented by Miss Katherine Wumbold. 

 Received November 13, 1916. 

 " Tai dm. Eaten as they are and much used at feasts." (Wai'nbold.) 



43810 to 43925. 



From Jamaica Plain, Mass. Presented by the Arnold Arboretum and 

 selecte<l by Mr. H. C. Skeels and Dr. W. Tan Fleet, of the Bureau of 

 Plant Industry. Received November 23, 1916. The following plants 

 and cuttings : 



