14 BULLETIN 172, IT. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 
Bulah., 30, h mi. Originated under cultivation with J. F. Wagner, Bennett, Cedar 
Co., Iowa, in 1894 from seed of Miner pollinated by a wild plum. The material 
appears to be pure mineri. 
Bulah (No. 4). See Bulah. 
Burbank X Redick, tr X am. Originated by Theodore Williams, Benson, Nebr. 
Burbank' s Combination. See Combination. 
*Burdick, am. Offered by Youngers & Co., Geneva, Nebr., and apparently an 
americana. 
*Burford, trXmu. A seedling of Burbank crossed with Clifford, grown by T. V. 
Munson, Denison, Tex. 
Bursoto, 14, am X tr. Originated by Theodore Williams, Benson, Nebr. Supposed 
to be a hybrid of Burbank with De Soto, but it shows very little of the trifiora 
character. 
Burwood. See Emerald. 
*Butler, mu. A variety offered by W. H. Halloway, Butler, Bates Co., Mo., and 
said to be a seedling of Wild Goose. 
Caddo Chief, 14, an. Found wild in Caddo Parish, La., and introduced by G. W. 
Stoner, Shreveport, La. 
California, 14, am. 
California Seedling. See California. 
*Campbell, am (?). Scions taken from an old tree growing on a clump of rocks in 
the vicinity of Abingdon, Va., and named for the family near whose place it was 
found. Said by Thomas Mehan to resemble the common American red plum. 
^Canadian Apricot, n. Said to be the common wild plum of Canada. 1 
*Canary, am. A variety received by J. S. Harris in 1889 from H. Knudson, Spring- 
field, Minn. 2 
Canavoa. See Kanawha. 
Caneford, 37, am. A specimen under this name was received from the Washington 
Agricultural Experiment Station. 
Captain. See Cumberland. 
Captain Bacon, 27, am. A seedling of Weaver, grown by H. A. Terry, Crescent, 
Iowa. 3 
*Captain Watrous, am. A seedling of Harrison, grown by H. A. Terry, Crescent, 
Iowa. 
*Caro, am 1. A seedling of Wolf, originated at the Central Experimental Farm, 
Ottawa, Canada. 
^Caroline, am. Originated with C. W. H. Heideman, New Ulm, Minn. Apparently 
an americana. 
*Carpenter. A seedling variety from Vermilion, S. Dak. 
Carstesen, 9, n. A nigra seedling originated by H. P. Carstesen, Billings Bridge, 
near Ottawa, Ontario. 
Carver, 14, h. Introduced by Charles Luedloff, Cologne, Minn. 
*Centennial. From seed of plums brought by a Mr. Drake from his farm in Le 
Sueur, Minn., to Iowa, in the fall of 1876, and grown by George W. Oberholtzer, 
Sioux City, Iowa. 
1 Hedrick, TJ. P. The Plums of New York, 1911, p. 414. 
2 Harris, J. S. Minnesota Horticultural Society Report, 1890, p. 128. 
» Hedrick, U. P. Op. cit., p. 415. 
