136 



SEEDS AN. 



\ll'"|; | ||] 



13313 to 13315. Chrysanthemum leucanthemi m hyb. 



Shasta daisy. 

 From Santa Rosa, Cal. Received thru Mr. Luther Burbank, Vpril 7. 1905. 



13313. California. 13315. Alaska. 



13314. Wenlralia. 



13316 to 13318. 



Law renco, Kan Received th 



13316. A N i.i:. .1-. .. ...-. BORO.nCM. 



Amber. 



13317. AnDKoPOOON BOROH1 M. 



While. 



13318. \ SDKOPWIO.N SOROni M. 



Red. 



I Barteldea&C 



Ap 



1905. 



Sorghum. 



Kafir corn. 

 Kafir corn. 



1.3319. VSPAKAGUS DUCHESNII. 



. L. Belgium. Received thru Mr. H. Schuster, fiO Rue du Luxem- 

 bourg, \|.ril . i 



13320 to 13337. IIosa sp. Rose. 



From N'ewtownards, County Down, treland. Received thru Alex. Dickson & 

 Limited . Royal Irish Nurseries, Aprils, L905. 



13320. 



L3321. Dr. J. Campbell. 



13322. Hugh H 



I 

 13324. 

 L3325. d Williamson. 



13326. Irisli El 



13327. / ffar 

 13328. 



13329. Baron Lade. 



13338. Mangifera wdk 



13330. Annit Mam Soupert. 



13331. George Laine Paul. 



13332. L Progi 



13333. Rugom Delicata. 



13334. Souv. de Pierri Leper- 



ilrii a V. 



13335. Schnechlecht. 



13336. Andenkah Job Dieting. 



13337. Mine. Jean Dupuy. 



Mango. 



From Lucknow, India. Received from the Royal Botanical Gardens, thru .Mr. 

 Robert Anderson, Lansdowne, Pa., April 11, 1905. 



Bombay. 



13339. Loliuw [talicum. Italian rye-grass. 



From New York, X. Y. Received thru J. M. Thorburn & Co., April 8, 1905. 



13340. Meconopsis imk'.kifolia. 



Tibetan poppy. 



From Chelsea, England. Received thru James Veitch & Sons ('Limited), August 

 14, 1905. 



"English saved seed. A hardy yellow-flowered poppy from Tibet; hardy, bien- 

 nial. The plant thrives on the north side of a hedge or wall and grows and flowers 

 freely in open borders. The soil should be open and friable, with a large proportion 

 of peat and sand. Good drainage and ample moisture are required. The seed germi- 

 nates freely either in a cold frame or out of doors in a few weeks from the time of 

 sowing. Any attempt at any time to protect the plants is quite fatal." ( Veitch & 

 Sons. ) 

 97 



