40 BULLETIN 172, U. S. DEPAETMENT OF AGEICULTUKE. 



Stoddard, 10, 14, 30, 32, 34, am. Originated on the grounds of a Mrs. Baker, Jesup, 

 Iowa, and introduced by J. Wragg & Son, of Iowa. 



Stoddart. See Stoddard. 



Strawberry, 14, an w. 



Stumpe. See Howe. 



Sucker State, 14, h. Believed to have come from Illinois. 



Sugar Plum, 25, am. A variety received from G. H. Wilson, Hustisford, Wis. 



Sunrise, 30, am. A seedling of De Soto, originated at the Central Experimental 

 Farm, Ottawa, Canada. 



Sunset, 30, h mi. Originated with C. E. Pennock, Bellvue, Colo. 



Surprise, 14, 17, 30, 32, 34, 36, am X h mi. A selection from a number of seedlings 

 grown from pits of De Soto, Weaver, and Miner by Martin Penning, of Sleepy Eye, 

 Minn. It is evidently a hybrid of americana and hortulana mineri. 



Suwanee. See Wild Goose. 



Swift, 28, am. A seedling of De Soto, grown at the Central Experimental Farm, 

 Ottawa, Canada. 



Tarleton, 14, an v X c. A Georgia variety. 



Tecuroseh, 14, am. Introduced by J. W. Poole, of Indiana, under the name of 

 Hughes Late. 



Tenneha, 38, mu. 



*Tennessee, mu. Apparently one of the seedlings of Wild Goose, grown about 1869. 



Tennessee Plum. See Tennessee. 



*Terrell, tr X an v (?). Originated by J. Terrell, of Hastings, Fla., and believed to 

 be a seedling of Excelsior. 



Terry, 14, 32, am 1. A seedling of Van Buren, grown by H. A. Terry, Crescent, Iowa. 



*Terry De Soto, am. A seedling of De Soto, grown by H. A. Terry in 1895 and 

 listed by Craig and Vernon as an americana. 



Terry's De Soto. See Terry De Soto. 



*Teton, am. Found in 1904 in a thicket a short distance from the Missouri River, 

 near Campbell, Campbell Co., S. Dak. Introduced by N. E. Hansen. 



Texas Belle, 14, mu. A variety introduced by Dr. W. W. Steele, Paris, Tex., and 



grown by Stephen H. Turner. 

 Thousand-and-One, 14, mu. 



*Throssel, am. Found wild on the Des Moines River by Mr. Throssel, near Pierson, 

 Woodbury Co., Iowa, and listed as an americana by Craig and Vernon. 



*Toka, am X s. Originated with N. E. Hansen, who states that it is the wild plum 

 pollinated with Prunus simonii. Introduced in 1911. 



*Tokata, s X am. Prunus simonii pollinated by De Soto, according to the originator, 

 N. E. Hansen. 



*Tokeya, b X s. Originated with N. E. Hansen, who says it is from the seed of 

 Prunus besseyi pollinated with Prunus simonii. 



^Tomahawk, b. Said by the introducer, N. E. Hansen, to be besseyi. 



*Tomlingson, am (?). Listed as a native in 1882,^ by Louis Koeper, Marshall town, 

 Iowa. 



*Topa, am. Listed by N. E. Hansen, Brookings, S. Dak., as an americana. 



Townsend. See Miner. 



1 Transactions of the Iowa Horticultural Society, 1882, p. 237. 



