(165 ) 
3648.1. Mazzard cherry. Wild black cherry.—A form of the same species, escaped 
3649. 
3650. 
3651. 
3652. 
3653. 
3654. 
3655. 
3656. 
3657. 
3658. 
3659. 
3660. 
3661. 
3662. 
3663. 
3664. 
366s. 
3666. 
3667. 
3668. 
from cultivation in many places. 
Bell Magnifique cherry.—Another cultivated variety of the same. Grown 
and presented by J. A. Staples, of Marlboro, New York. 
Montmorency sour cherry.—Another cultivated variety of the same. 
Same donor. 
Another sample of the same. Grown by H. H. Rusby at Newark, New 
Jersey. 
Big Montmorency cherry. A large form of the preceding. Same donor. 
Morello sour cherry.—The fruit of another cultivated variety of the same 
species. Grown at Newark, New Jersey, by H. H. Rusby. 
Choke cherry.—The fruit of Padus nana (Du Roi) Roem. Native of eastern 
and central North America. Collected by H. H. Rusby at Oscoda, Michigan, 
August 23, 1906. 
Another specimen of the same. Collected at Easton, Pennsylvania, by 
A. A. Tyler, July, 1898. 
Western choke cherry.—The fruit of Padus demissa (Nutt.) Roem. Native 
of western North America. Collected at Portland, Oregon, July, 1909, by 
H. H. Rusby. 
California choke cherry.—The fruit of a species of Padus. Native of the 
Pacific region. Collected by H. H. Rusby in the San Bernardino Mountains, 
August, 1909. 
Wild cherry.—The fruit of Padus virginiana (L.) Mill. Native of eastern 
and central North America. Collected by H. H. Rusby at Peekskill, 
New York, September, 1918. 
Flowering specimen of the same. Collected by R. S. Williams in the New 
York Botanical Garden, May 26, 1919. 
Western wild cherry.—The fruit of a species of Padus. Native of the south- 
western United States. Collected by H. H. Rusby at Johnson Cajion, 
Arizona, August, 1909. 
Yellow Icaco or coco plum.—The fruit of Chrysobalanus Icaco L. Native 
of tropical America, and cultivated. Collected by J. K. Small at Miami, 
Florida, November, 1904. 
Another specimen of the same. From the same locality. H. H. Rusby, 
January 27, 1907. 
Red-fruited variety of the same. J. K. Small, same locality and date as 
3103. 
Purple-fruited variety of the same. Same source as preceding. 
The same. Acquired by H. H. Rusby in Barranquilla, Colombia, September, 
1917. 
THE MIMOSA FAMILY (Mimosaceae) 
Jiniquil. Cua Jiniquil—The fruit of Inga Jinicuil Schlecht. Native of 
Mexico and cultivated. Presented by Mrs. H. O. Robinson, of Cuernavaca, 
Mexico, July, 1910. 
Another specimen of the same. Purchased by H. H. Rusby in the market 
of Mexico City, February, 1909. 
Inga.—The fruit of a species of Inga. Obtained by H. H. Rusby in Trinidad, 
West Indies, May, 1896. 
