Bui. 1334, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture 
Plate III 
II 
Fig. 1.— a, Nepal (C. I. No. 595), the oiiginal hooded variety, parent of all hooded forms, 
much inferior to hulled awned varieties except in a few mountain sections of the West; 
B, Horsford (C. I. No. 507), a variety of hybrid origin typical of those (usually Nepal) 
crossed on varieties of the Manchuria group; C, Meloy (C. I. No. 1176), a hooded hulled 
variety from Oregon, probably from a cross of Nepal on Coast, shattering less than Hors- 
ford; D, Nakano Wase (C. I. No. 754), an awnless winter form from Japan 
Fig. 2.— a, Baku (C. I. No. 709), a naked variety, common in dry mountain plateaus of south- 
ern Asia, not commercially important in America; B, Blackhull (C I. No. 878), a deficient 
2-rowed varietv, promisint,' in C\)lora(lo; C, Himalaya (C\ I. No. 620), a naked variety from 
the same region as Baku, the best-yieliling naked variety in AincMica; D, Wintc-r Club (C. I. 
No. 592), one of the old winter varieties once common in Europe, grown occasionally in 
the Great Basin 
Heads of Barley Varieties.— 1 1 
