﻿JANUARY 1 TO MARCH 31, 1917. 47 



44243. Inodes exul O. F. Cook. Phcenicacese. Palmetto. 



From Victoria, Tex. Presented by Mrs. Martin O'Connor. Received March 

 9, 1917. 



A large palmetto, cultivated in Texas, with deep-green foliage, solitary 

 fruits, and large seeds not wrinkled above. (Adapted from 0. F. Cook, Bureau 

 of Plant Industry Circular 118, pp. 11-lJf.) 



11 These have been through several freezes." {O'Connor.) 

 See also S. P. I. No. 35116 for further description. 



44244. Annona squamosa L. Annonacese. Sugar-apple. 



From Dindigul, South India. Presented by Rev. Willis P. Elwood, Ameri- 

 can Madura Mission. Received March 9, 1917. 



" Seeds of sugar or custard-apple. Some of it I saved myself, but a greater 

 part came from other places where the fruit was said to be superior." 

 {Elwood.) 



44245. Lycopersicox esculextum Mill. Solanacese. Tomato. 



From Cristobal, Canal Zone. Presented by Mr. O. W. Barrett. Received 

 March 14, 1917. 



" Seeds from ripe fruits of the so-called bush (i. e., jungle) variety which 

 bears more or less wrinkled berries of 15 to 25 mm. in diameter ; the plant is 

 very loosely branched, 50 to 75 cm. or more high, and it appears to resist the 

 Bacillus solanacearum very well." (Barrett.) 



44246. Pyrus ussuriexsis Maxim. Malacese. Pear. 



From Charles City, Iowa. Scions presented by Mr. Charles G. Patten. 

 Received March 6, 1917. 



" In Grundy Center, Iowa, there is a pear tree growing which endured the 

 extremely cold winters of 1883, 1884, and 1885. This pear is owned by Mr. O. A. 

 Bardhall, a tailor, and was imported from China as a Chinese sand pear by 

 John S. Collins & Sons, of New Jersey, and was supposed by them to bear 

 pears nearly the size of Flemish Beauty, but only of cooking quality. The ex- 

 treme hardiness of the tree appealed to Mr. Charles G. Patten, of Charles City, 

 Iowa, who planted one in his orchard in 1885, and the following year planted 

 two in an isolated orchard on his farm. The second year after that the tree 

 bore fruit, but on account of its early blooming and consequent lack of pollina- 

 tion bore only a very scanty number of very small, green-colored, hard pears, 

 from which but few seeds were saved. There are in Charles City some 200 

 seedling pear trees, products of crosses of the Longworth, Seckel, and Chinese 

 sand varieties." (Adapted from Charles G. Patten, in Report of the Iowa State 

 Horticultural Society for the Year 1912, p. 162.) 



44247 to 44249. 



From China. Collected by Mr. Frank N. Meyer, Agricultural Explorer for 

 the Department of Agriculture. Received March 6, 1917. 



44247. Allium fistulosum L. Liliacese. Leek. 



"(No. 137b. Ansuhsien, Chihli Province, China, January 18, 1917.) 

 Ta t'ou ts'ung, meaning ' large-headed leek.' One specimen of a peculiar, 

 short variety of winter leek." (Meyer.) 



