46 
BULLETINS' 1197. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 
Table 45. — Yields of three varieties of emmer and one variety each of spelt, barley, and 
oats grown a* Xephi. Utah, in all or part of the 13 years from 1908 to 1920, inclusive — 
Continued. 
Yields per acre (pounds). 
C.I. No. 
■ 
1916 
1917 
1918 
1919 
1920 
Average. 
Crop and'-;:.:" 
to 
1920. 
1910 
::• 
1920. 
Emmer: 
B^ack Winter 
. 2337 
1524 
. 1772 
257 
1:34 
11.-501 
1.511 
2,282 
2. OSS 
1.252 
522 
538 
832 
3 SI 
506 
1,235 
1,222 
579 
1,312 
1,062 
1.106 
Vernal (White Spring). 
Sreit: 
Red Winter 
390 
1.600 
1.042 
275 
960 
1.229 
1.24S 
740 
>4> 
653 
141 
1,411 
S02 
.541 

1.367 
1.066 
576 
Birier 
Tennessee Winter 
Oats: 
Swedish Select 
9S9 
501 
i Yield from nursery row. 
RESULTS AT ABERDEEN. IDAHO. 
Two varieties of winter emmer were grown at the Aberdeen. Idaho, 
substation on dry land during 1913 and 1914. The experiments 
were conducted by the Office of Cereal Investigations in cooperation 
with the Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station. Both White 
Smyrna barley and Sixty-Day oats sown in the spring yielded nearly 
twice as much as the winter emmer. The yields are shown in Table 46. 
Table 46. — Yields of two varieties of ernmer and one variety each of barley and oats grown 
on dry land at Aberdeen, Idaho, in 1913 and 1914. 
[Data obtained in cooperation with the Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station.] 
Crop and variety. 
C.I. No. 
Yields per acre (pounds | 
1913 1914 Average. 
Emmer: 
Black W inter 
"Rnffnm Black Winter 
2337 
3331 
195 
165 
659 
486 
1,459 
1,520 
915 
S22 
1,698 
1.290 
281 
654 
Barley: 
White Smvrna 
Oats: 
1.579 
1.405 
RESULTS AT BURNS, OREG. 
Emmer and spelt were grown at the Harney County branch sta- 
tion. Burns. Oreg.. from 1913 to 1916. The experiments were con- 
ducted cooperatively by the Office of Cereal Investigations and the 
Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station. The results, which have 
been published by Scudder (4-5) and Breithaupt (4), are shown in 
Table 47. Vernal (White Spring) emmer yielded considerably more 
than the Black Winter variety. In two years Red Winter spelt 
produced slightly more than the Vernal emmer. Hannchen barley 
and a pure-line selection from an oat known as Rustless (probably 
Green Russian) both yielded about twice as much as Vernal emmer 
in the 4-year period. 
