﻿OCTOBER 
  1 
  TO 
  DECEMBER 
  31, 
  1910. 
  9 
  

  

  them 
  in 
  preference 
  to 
  rice 
  and 
  dates; 
  a 
  spineless 
  lime 
  and 
  a 
  seed- 
  

   less 
  lime 
  from 
  Trinidad 
  (Nos. 
  29123 
  and 
  29124); 
  the 
  Aomori 
  chestnut 
  

   from 
  Hokushu, 
  Japan 
  (No. 
  29132); 
  the 
  Sampson 
  tangelo, 
  a 
  hybrid 
  

   between 
  the 
  pomelo 
  and 
  the 
  tangerine 
  which 
  has 
  been 
  originated 
  by 
  

   the 
  Office 
  of 
  Crop 
  Physiology 
  and 
  Breeding 
  Investigations 
  (No. 
  

   29159); 
  and 
  the 
  Etonia 
  or 
  flowering 
  citrange, 
  a 
  hybrid 
  between 
  the 
  

   common 
  orange 
  and 
  the 
  hardy 
  Japanese 
  trifoliate 
  orange 
  which 
  

   promises 
  to 
  be 
  a 
  remarkable 
  ornamental 
  tree, 
  with 
  its 
  large 
  white 
  

   blossoms 
  which 
  nearly 
  hide 
  the 
  foliage 
  (No. 
  29160), 
  also 
  a 
  product 
  

   of 
  the 
  same 
  office. 
  

  

  This 
  inventory 
  was 
  prepared 
  by 
  Miss 
  Mary 
  A. 
  Austin, 
  and 
  the 
  

   botanical 
  determinations 
  are 
  those 
  of 
  Mr. 
  H. 
  C. 
  Skeels, 
  working 
  under 
  

   the 
  supervision 
  of 
  Mr. 
  Frederick 
  V. 
  Coville, 
  of 
  the 
  Office 
  of 
  Taxo- 
  

   nomic 
  and 
  Range 
  Investigations. 
  

  

  Daved 
  Fairchild, 
  

   Agricultural 
  Explorer 
  in 
  Charge. 
  

  

  Office 
  of 
  Foreign 
  Seed 
  and 
  Plant 
  Introduction, 
  

  

  Washington, 
  D. 
  C, 
  May 
  16, 
  1911. 
  

  

  227 
  

  

  