pea and not a climl)er or runner, but with us, in favorable soils and 

 seasons, it does climb in many instances as high as 10 feet, and bears 

 fully matured pods in profusion to the top. 



I 





; . 



-<5f- 



FiG. 1.— Three stalks ot corn covered with a grcnvlh of whip-poor-will cowpeas, 

 AN IDKAL TENNESSEE CROP FOR SILAGE DESCRIBED. 



My own silage crop of "Whip" peas and corn grown together the 

 past season was, to all appearances, an ideal one. A 20-acre field 

 of chocolate land, lying in, and on the slopes of the valley, was well 



