PL All II 
II G M A H TP- 
furnished mainly by Agr 3N$Mr£ur^J.v/ / 
Correspondents relative vry-i&xLait^ 
during the month 
Introduction of 
the Bureau of Plant Industry of the Department of Agri- 
culture. These descriptions are revised and published 
later in the Inventory of Plants Imported. 
Descriptive" notes 
Explorers and Foreign 
newly introduced plants as have arrived 
at the Office of Foreign Seed and Plant 
Ks> D if- Jd% 1914- 
Genera Represented in This Number. 
Allium 
38787 
Ligustrum 
38807 
Beta 
38883 
Mangif era 
38981 
Brassica 
38782- 
783 
Panax 
38742- 
751 
Capsicum 
38788 
Plagianthus 
38969 
Coix 
38868- 
880 
Prunus 
38761 
Cucurbita 
38884 
38778 
Daucus 
38786 
38856 
■ 
Dendrocalamus 
38736 
38978 
Escallonia 
38759 
Syringa 
38828- 
830 
Gleditsia 
38800- 
802 
Thuja 
38797 
Hordeum 
38885- 
887 
Toona 
38805 
Lespedeza 
38808- 
09 
Vitis 
38853 
PLATES: Green Fruited Rubus from Brazil. 
The Manga da Rosa or Rose Mango. 
A Scene on the Banks of the Rio Sao Francisco. 
The Imbu tree (Spondias tuberosa) at home. 
(NOTE: Applications for material listed in these 
multigraphed sheets may be made at any time to this Office. 
As they are received they are filed, and when the material 
is ready for the use of experimenters it is sent to those 
on the list of applicants who can show that they are pre- 
pared to care for it, as well as to others selected be- 
cause of their special fitness to experiment with the par- 
ticular plants imported. 
One of the main objects of the Office of Foreign Seed 
and Plant Introduction is to secure material for plant 
experimenters, and it will undertake as far as possible 'to 
fill any specific requests for foreign seeds or plants 
from plant breeders or others interested.) 
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