CLASSIFICATION OF AMERICAN WHEAT VARIETIES. - Fat 
WHITE FEDERATION, 
Description—Plant spring habit, early, short to midtall; stem white, strong, 
spike awnless, ob’ong, middense, erect; glumes glabrous, white, short, wide; 
shoulders wide, square; beaks narrow, acute, 0.5 mm. long; apical awns want- 
ing or nearly so; kernels white, short, semihard to hard, ovate, with truncate 
tip; germ midlarge; crease midwide, middeep; cheeks rounded; brush mid- 
sized, midlong. 
This variety is very similar to Hard Federation, except that it has white 
instead of brown glumes. The plant also is slightly taller and the kernels are 
not quite as hard. Jt has proved to be a high-yielding wheat in California and 
Oregon. 
History.—White Federation is of Australian origin, but as far as the 
writers are aware its history has never been recorded in Australian literuture. 
The following sentence, however, indicates its origin: 
The sced (hard kernels selected from Federation by Mr. J. T. Pridham, from 
which Hard Federation originated) was propagated, and in 1910 the occur- 
rence of white heads was noticed, and from then until 1912 distinctly white 
heads were common among the brown (30, p. 664). 
The name White Federation has been used for the wheat at the Cowra 
Experiment Farm, New South Wales, Australia, since 1915, when a field of 3 
acres of the variety was grown (154). 
It was introduced into the United States by the United States Department 
of Agriculture (197) in 1916 (S. P. I. No. 42104), when 5 ounces of seed 
were presented by A. E. V. Richardson, agricultural superintendent of the 
Department of Agriculture at Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It was first 
grown in a 5-foot row in the classification nursery at the Sherman County 
branch station, Moro, Oreg:., in 1916. Since 1918 it has been grown at the Plant- 
Introduction Garden, Chico, Calif., and because of its high yield at that point 
it has been increased and distributed for commercial growing in California 
(67, p. 24). 
Distridution.—Grown at experiment stations in California, Washington, 
Oregon, Idaho, and Utah and commercially in Butte County, Calif., in 1920. 
LYNN (LYNN RUST PROOF). 
Description —Plant spring habit, midseason, midtall to tall; stem white, 
glaucous, strong, stout; spike awnless, linear-oblong, middense, erect; glumes 
glabrous, yellowish white, midlong, midwide; shoulders narrow to midwide, 
oblique to elevated; beaks midwide, obtuse, 1 mm. long; apical awns few, 2 to 
15 mm. long; kernels white, short, semihard to hard, ovate; germ midsized; 
crease midwide, deep; cheeks angular; brush midsized, midlong, collared. 
The variety differs from both Defiance and Surprise in having an oblong 
spike and fairly hard kernels. The Lynn is resistant to some forms. of stem 
rust under California conditions. 
History—tThis variety probably is a selection from Defiance or Surprise. 
- According to R. B. Luther, Templeton, Calif., Lynn (Lynn Rust Proof) was 
first propagated by Lynn Brothers, of Paso Robles, San Luis Obispe County, 
. Calif. 
Distribution—Grown in San Luis Obispo County, Calif., where it was. 
introduced about 1914. 
Synonyms.—Arizona No. 39, Pride of Oregon. According to W. E. Bryan, 
plant breeder at the Arizona Agricultural Experiment Station, ‘Arizona No. 39 
was selected originally from a field of soft wheat grown in the Yuma Valley 
