+e ye te _" op 
142 ne i [Asses E 
blue ears have soft, flint and sweet aoicie, the colors yellow, white, and blue 
flint, blue and white soft, and white and black sweet. 
1901. Mandan or Squaw. . Pink flint kernels (Station): 
Kars four to eight inches long, same style as No. 1900, but apparently all flint. 
Chocolate pink the most abundant color, but ears covered with kernels of var- 
ious colors, except the bright red, which are of uniform color throughout, 
* No hybridization other than the colors to be observed. 
1902. Mandan or Squaw. Red flint kernels (Station) :. 
Ears three to seven inches long. Eleven 8-rowed ears, mostly yellow, all flint 
and of the type of Early Canada; nine ears 10-rowed, and of the Mandan type, 
* but all flint. 
* One red ear has one deep red kernel with a distinct white cap, which extends 
about one-third of the way down, sharply defined. One ear has kernels white on 
the chit side, red on the reverse, the tip showing the red and white in halves; 
some sweet kernels also of thesame description. The remaining ears s have slate, 
white, purple and yellow kernels, mostly flint, but some soft. 
1903. Mandan or Squaw. White flint kernels (Station): 
Ears five to seven inches long. Some ears copper yellow, others yellow and 
white, all flint and of King Philip or Early Canada type; cob, white. Thirteen 
ears 8-rowed, five ears 10-rowed. 
* Some white, purple and black sweet kernels, some purple slate, white and 
yellow flint kernéls. 
1904. Mandan orSquaw. Yellow flint kernels (Station): 
Kars five to nine inches long, and all of the Canada and Early Canada type, 
-mostlv yellow. Cob, white. Eleven ears 8-rowed ; three ears 10-rowed. 
* White, slate, copper-stained, purple and mottled flint kernels, white and yel- 
low sweet kernels, and variously colored kernels of soft on some ears, but not on 
others. 
POD-CORN 
1905. Flat Dent (J. W. N., Camden, N. J.) 
Ten-podded ears, four of which were 8-rowed and: six were 10-rowed. Nine 
unpodded ears, four of which were 8-rowed, and five were 10-rowed. Har-stalk 
medium for a pod; ear tapering a little ; heavily husked. - The unpodded ears of 
Blount’s Prolific type. 
* No hybridization observed. 
1906.. White Dent (J. W. N., Camden, N. J.) 
Ten ears podded, nine ears unpodded. Three of the podded ears slender, 
cylindrical in upper portion, tapering in lower ; five to six inches long; closely 
and thinly podded ; quite ripe; seven-podded ears, strongly tapering or cone 
form ; four to six inches long; long husks; very unripe. The nine unpodded 
ears resembled Blount’s Prolific, 
* No hybridization apparent. j 
Nos. 1905 and 1906 came from J. W. N., Camden, N. J., and said to have ‘ap- 
peared spontaneously in a crop of Blount’ s Prolific. 
1907. Yellow dent from husked ear of a yellow dent pod (Station): 
Ears four to six inches long. EHar-stalk small; ears cone-shaped, with long 
husks. Very unripe. 
* Not examined for hybridization on account ofthe husks. 
1908. Red dent from unhusked red dent ear of pod corn (Station) : 
Sixteen unhusked red ears, five to seven inches long - one red husked ear two. 
and one-half inches long. All the ears of the type of eh seed. 
* No appearance of hybridization. 
1909. White flinty dent (J. W. N., Camden, N. J.) 
Ears three to eight inches long. Four-podded ears, very unripe. Nine un- 
podded, but will answer to keep; nine unpodded, but below edible condition. 

