46 



PLANT MATERIAL INTRODUCED 



91984 to 92000— Continued. 



91989. Allium geyeri S. Wats. 



For previous introduction and de- 

 scription see 91038. 



91990. Allium textile Nelson and Mc- 

 Bride. 



A hardy wild onion, with semiterete 

 linear leaves which are shorter than 

 the foot-high scape. The white flow- 

 ers with purple keels are in lax um- 

 bels. Native to North America. 



91991. Kalanchoe f l a m m e a Stapf. 

 Crassulaceae. 



A stout erect pale-green succulent, 1 

 foot high, native to Somaliland, Africa. 

 The obovate, entire, or obscurely crenu- 

 late leaves are over 3 inches long, and 

 the flowers are in a flat cyme 4 to 5 

 inches across. The corolla tube is pale 

 yellow, while the petals are bright 

 orange-red. 



91992 to 91996. Primula spp. Primula- 

 ceae. Primrose. 



91992. Primula algida Adam. 



A perennial primrose, white or yel- 

 low-mealy throughout, with oblong- 

 spatulate leaves and deep rose-violet 

 flowers. It is native to damp places 

 in Asia Minor and is closely related 

 to Primula farinosa. 



91993. Primula leucophylla Pax. 



For previous introduction and de- 

 scription see 91830. 



91994. Primula paxiana Gilg. 



A showy herbaceous perennial with 

 thin cordate-reniform triangular-lobed 

 denticulate leaves an long petioles. 

 The scape is 16 to 20 inches high and 

 bears three to four superposed umbels 

 of blue-lilac flowers 1 inch across. It 

 is native to China. 



91995. Primula paxii Hort. 



A name for which a place of pub- 

 lication and a description have not 

 been found. 



91996. Primula uralensis Hort. 



A name for which a place of pub- 

 lication and a description have not 

 been found. 



91997 to 92000. Rosa spp. Rosaceae. 



91997. Rosa beggeriana Schrenk. 



A bush 4 to 8 feet high with prickly 

 pinnate leaves ; the leaflets, usually 

 seven to nine, are elliptic to oblong, 

 smooth and deep green above, generally 

 thickly hairy and bluish-green below. 

 The inflorescences are 1 to nearly 50 

 flowered ; the flowers are white, cream 

 colored or more nearly red. The 

 fruits are very dark red. 



For previous introduction see 65774. 



91998. Rosa cornifolia Hort. 



A name for which a place of publi- 

 cation and a description have not been 

 found. 



91999. Rosa wasserburgensis Kirschl. 



Said to be a hybrid between Rosa 

 tomentosa and R. pendulina. 



For previous introduction see 66945. 



91984 to 92000— Continued. 



92000. Rosa zagrabiensis Vukot. and 

 Braun. 



A large shrub with a very thorny 

 stem and very leafy long branches. 

 The five to seven leaflets are oval to 

 oval-elliptic, and the pale-rose flowers 

 are solitary or in twos or threes. It 

 is related to Rosa zalana Wiesb. Na- 

 tive to Croatia. 



92001. Amygdalus persica L. (Prunus 

 persica Stokes). Amygdalaceae. 



Peach. 



From Morocco. Seeds presented by H. 

 Brayard, Ingenieur Horticole, Directeur 

 de la Ferme Experimentale, Marrakech. 

 Received March 11, 1931. 



Introduced for the use of specialists 

 interested in plant breeding. 



92002. Medicago sativa vakia (Mart.) 

 Urban. Fabaceae. 



Variegated alfalfa. 



From Canada. Seeds purchased from Wil- 

 liam Rennie Co. (Ltd.), Toronto. Re- 

 ceived March 11, 1931. 



Canadian. 



92003 to 92010. 



From Wales. Seeds presented by Dr. R. G. 

 Stapledon, Director, Welsh Plant-Breed- 

 ing Station, Aberystwyth. Received 

 March 11, 1931. 



to 92008. Trifolium pratense L. 

 Fabaceae. Red clover. 



Named varieties of late-flowering red 

 clover. 



92003. Montgomery. 



92004. Cotswold. 



92005. Vale of Glwyd. 



92006. Cornish Marl. 



92007. Huntingdonshire. 



92008. Essex. 



Phleum pratense L. Poaceae. 



Timothy. 



92010. Phleum pratense L. Poaceae. 



Timothy. 



92011 to 92022. Akachis hypogaea L. 

 Fabaceae. Peanut. 



From Java. Seeds presented by L. Koch, 

 Chief of the Section for the Breeding 

 of Annual Plants, General Experiment 

 Station, Buitenzorg. Received March 11, 

 1931. 



A collection of pure strains, isolated from 

 the erect type of Javanese peanuts, which 

 are practically resistant to a bacterial root 

 disease that is very common in Java. 



92011. No. 34. 



92012. No. 7. 



92013. No. 9. 



92014. No. 16. 



92015. No. 10. 



92016. No. 49. 



92017. No. 44. 



92018. No. 6. 



92019. No. 15. 



92020. No. 43. 



92021. No. 21. 



92022. No. 20. 



