INVENTORY. 69 



5464. Triticum vulgare. Wheat. 



From Argentina. Received September 1, 1900. 



Chubut. This variety comes from the valley of the Chuhut River, in southern 

 Argentina. It is a semihard, red-grained wheat of very good quality. It is probably 

 the best wheat for bread fi« »ur in South America. It is best known as a winter wheat, 

 but will probably not stand our hard winters north of the thirty-fifth parallel. It 

 should be sown about March 1. 



5465. Triticum durum. Wheat. 



From Argentina. Received September 1, 1900. 



CandecU. This wheat is rather commonly grown in Chile and Argentina. It has 

 Long, compact, bearded heads, and yellowish-white, hard grains. It will probably 

 l>e resistant to drought and to orange-leaf rust. Adapted for growing in dry, hotdis- 

 tricts, such as west Texas and the drier portions of Colorado, Kansas, and Okla- 

 homa. South of the thirty-fifth parallel it should be grown as a winter wheat, sown 

 October 15 to November 15. North of this line it will probably not stand the winter 

 and should be sown February 15 to March 1. 



5466. Triticum vulgare. Wheat. 



From Argentina. Received September 1, 1900. 



Francis. This variety is a soft or semihard, reddish-grained wheat, originally 

 introduced into Argentina from France. It is a bald variety of only fair milling 

 quality and not at all hardy. It is adapted for trial in the Southern States. Should be 

 sown in October. It is one of the two chief varieties of all Argentina. 



5467. Triticum vttlgare. Wheat. 



From Argentina. Receive" 1 September 1, 1900. 



Barletta. A bearded winter variety. Chaff brown to black, smooth; beards 

 very strong and ordinarily divergent; grain soft, red to amber; head rather loose and 

 flatfish : straw partially full. 



5468. Trapa bicorm>. Horn chestnut. 



From China. Seed purchased in the Chinese market. San Francisco, Cal. 

 Received September 1. 1900. 



5469. Cassia fistula. 



From Honolulu. II. 1. Presented bv Prof. Wm. C. Stubbs. Received Septem- 

 ber 4. 1900. 



This tree can be grown in all tropical countries. 



5470. Citrus limoxum. Lemon. 



From Honolulu, H. I. Presented bv Prof. Wm. C. Stubbs. Received Septem- 

 ber 4. 1900. 



5471. Ayexa satiya. Oat. 



From Svalof. Sweden. Received through Messrs. Lathrop and Fairchild (No. 

 453 i. March 11, 1901. 



Ligowo. "A pedigreed variety, selected by the Seed Breeding Institute of Svalof, 

 which has been very well received in Sweden, Russia, Germany, and Belgium. It 

 possesses an unusually full, white kernel, making it especially adapted for the manu- 

 facture of oatmeal. It is earlier and possesses a stronger straw than the varieties 

 generally grown in Sweden. It is of remarkable uniformity and a heavy yielder." 

 [Fairchud. I Distributed. 



