80 SEEDS AND PLANTS IMPORTED. 



12120 to 12129— Continued. 



12121. H0KDEr3[ DISTICHUM. 



Grown from S. P. I. No. 7992, originally from Munich, Bavaria. 



12122. HOEDEUM HEXASTICHUM. 



Grown from S. P. I. No. 8559, originally from Christiania, Norway. 



12123. HORDEUM VULGAKE. 



Maraout. Grown from S. P. I. No. 9877, originally from Cairo, Egypt. 



12124. HoRDEUM sp. 



Grown from California seed that was originally imported from ^Moravia. 



12125. HoEDEUM DISTICHUM NUTANS. 



Hanna. Grown from S. P. I. No. 10402, originally from Austria. 



12126. HoRDEUM DI^vTICHUM NUTANS. 



Prinsesi<. Grown from S. P. I. No. 10583, originally from Sweden. 



12127. HORDEU-M DISTICHUM NUTANS. 



Chefaller II. Grown from S. P. I. No. 10584, originally from Sw'eden. 



12128. HoEDEUM DISTICHUM NUTANS. 



Hannchen. Grown from S. P. I. No. 10585, originally from Sweden. 



12129. HoEDEUM DISTICHUM EEECTUM. 



Primus. Grown from S. P. I. No. 10586, originally from Sweden. 



12130. Oryza satita. Rice. 



From Calcutta, India. Received thru I. Henry Burkill, esq., M. C, officiating 

 reporter on economic products to the government of India, Indian IMuseum, 

 October 21, 1904. 



EekikesJ) paddy seed, said to be the most valuable rice in India; grown on the 

 Ganges where it emerges from the hills. A lowland variety of rice, said to be worth 

 twenty times the price of ordinary rice. 



12131. Xanthoxylum piperitum. Japanese pepper. 



From Yokohama, Japan. Received thru the Yokohama Nursery Companv, 

 November 14, 1904. 



12132 to 12134. » 



From Brighton, Utah. Received thru Mr. Ephraim Clawson, November 10, 1904. 



12132. Teifolium alexandeinum. - Berseem. 



12133. AVENA SATIVA. Oat. 



Grown from S. P. I. No. 10269, originally from Algeria. 



12134. Teiticum vulgaee. Wheat. 

 Chul-bidcd. Grown from S. P. I. No. 9131, originally from Russia. 



12135. ViCIA ATROPURPUREA. 



From Santa Clara, Cal. Received thru Mr. C. C. Morse in 1904. 



12136 and 12137. 



From London, England. Received thru Messrs. James Veitch & Sons (Limited) , 

 Chelsea, S. W., November 25, 1904. 



12136. Eucommia ulmoides. Tu-dning-. 



"■ Ta-chung is the name given by the Chinese to the tree which has been 

 described by Professor Oliver in Hooker's Icones Plautarum as Eucommia 



97 



