Arizona Agricultural Experimknt Station 



445 



TABLE XIII. VARIETY TEST WITH TOMATOES SHOWING BEARING SEASON 



AND YIELD 



Variety 



Bearing season 



June Pink 



Tex-Seed Black Land.... 



Burbank 



.'\cnie 



Redfield Beauty 



Clark s Triumph 



Stone 



Chalk's Early Jewel 



Livingston's Cureless 



Truckers' Favorite 



Tex-Seed Beauty 



Texseed McCk'c 



Spark's Earliajia 



Livingston's (ilobe 



Bonny Best. 



Trophy 



Golden Ponderosa 



Matchless 



Red Rock 



Ponderosa 



Earlibell . . . .' 



Livingston's Dwarf Stone. 



Dwarf Champion 



Phoenix Special 



Early Detroit 



June 



June 



June 



June 



June 



June 



June 



June 



July 



July 



June 



June 



June 



July 



June 



June 



Jily 



Jrly 



July 



July 



June 



June 



June 



July 

 June 



12-Aug. 

 16- Aug. 

 24- Aug. 

 30-Aug. 

 24- Aug. 

 24-Aug. 

 30-Aug. 

 24-Aug. 



5-Aug. 



5-Aug. 

 30-Aug. 

 16-Aug. 

 16-Aug, 

 16-Aug. 

 24-Aug. 

 24-Aug. 



5-Aug. 



5-Aug. 



5-Aug. 



9-Aug. 

 24-Aug. 

 30-Au^. 

 24-Aug. 

 14-Autr. 

 30-July 



1 



7 



1 

 16 



7 

 16 



7 

 16 

 16 

 16 

 16 

 16 



7 



16 

 16 



7 



16 

 16 

 16 



7 

 16 



7 



26 

 16 

 25 



ORNAMENTAL GARDENING 

 Plans have been prepared for beautifying- the grounds at the 

 different branch stations and execution of the designs begun at the 

 Tempe Date Orchard, Cochise Dry-farm, Salt River Valley Farm, 

 and Yuma Date Orchard and Horticultural Station. These plant- 

 ings furnish opportunity for determining the adaptability of various 

 species of shade trees, shrubbery and flowers to conditions in the 

 different sections of the State. The new greenhouse and adjaceat 

 grounds on the University Campus will furnish additional oppor- 

 tunity for work in ornamental gardening. 



MISCELLANEOUS 

 Considerable time was required of the Horticulturist in the 

 general supervision of w^ork at the Tempe Date Orchard and the 

 Yuma Date Orchard and Horticultural Station as well as in start- 

 ing the citrus investigational work on the Yuma Mesa. It was also 

 necessary for both the Horticulturist and Assistant Horticulturist 

 to spend a rather large portion of their time in the interest of hor- 

 ticultural extension. In addition to regular project work in exten- 

 sion service, numbers of trips were made to different parts of the 

 State to assist in special field problems. More than five hundred 



