194 



Annals of Horticulture . 



Orthocarpus purpurascens. Orcutt. 



Annual, i foot or less high, with yellow crimson-tipped flowers and 

 gaudy bracts. Pacific. 

 Osteospermum moniferum. Reasoner Bros 



South Africa. 

 Oxera pulchella. Saul. 



New Caledonia 

 Oxyanthus Natalensis. Reasoner Bros. 



South Africa. 

 Papaver Calif ornica. He?iderso7i. 



Annual, I foot, very bushy, producing in great numbers saucer- 

 shaped flowers 6 inches in circumference, of rich pinkish orange 

 with center of sulphur-yellow. California. (See also Poppy.) 

 Parsnip, Magnum Bonum. Barnard. 

 Pea, Leader. Barnard. 



About 2^ feet high, very early. 



— New Very Dwarf Sugar. Henderson. 



Very dwarf, with large crimped pods. 



— Nott's Excelsior. Gregory. 



A wrinkled pea as early as American Wonder, with larger pods 

 and half taller, and a heavier cropper. Raised by Richard Nott, 

 Burlington, Vt. 



— Stanley. Horsford. 



— The Admiral. Henderson. 



A wrinkled pea, unusually productive, the pods about the size of 

 First of All, 3^ to 4 feet. English. 



— The Don. Henderson. 



A deep green wrinkled sort, producing large square-end pods ; 

 second early. 4 feet. English. 



— The Mayor. Henderson. 



A green wrinkled pea, of main crop. 3 feet. English, 

 Peach, Albright. Engle, Fa. 



— Burke. J. L. Norniandy, Marksville, La. 



Perhaps sent out as early as 1889. 



— Crosby. Hale, Connecticut. 



— Diamond. Albaugh, Ohio. 



— Gold Dust. Olden Fruit Co. , Missouri. 



— Hughes' IXL. — L. T. Suders, Collinsburg, La. 



— Kalona. L. F. Suders, Collinsburg, La. 



— Lancaster. Engle, Pa. 



— Normand's Choice. J. L. Normand, Marksville, La. 

 Pear,. Krull. Mallinckrodt, Missouri. 



— Lincoln. Jones, Lllinois. 



— Marshall. Foster, New York. 



