122 SOUTHERN FIELD CROPS 



State or Station Vaejety 



Texas (College Station) MeGaillard i^ellow Dent 



White Superior 

 Munson 



Virginia (Mountain Section) Boone County White 



Learning 

 Collier Excelsior 



Virginia (Tidewater Region, bottom 



land) Cocke 



Virginia (poor uplands) Hickory King 



108. Southern varieties by classes (Figs. 68 and 69). — 

 Among the productive varieties mentioned in the preced- 

 ing hst and belonging to the prolific type are the follow- 

 ing ; — 



Mosby Sanders Blount 



Albemarle Cocke Marlboro 



Weekly 



All the a1)ove varieties usuallj^ bear between 160 and 200 

 ears for each hundred plants. The cobs are small, the ears 

 small, and the grains usually rather long and slender, 

 but somewhat shorter in Albemarle and Blount. 



Among the large-eared varieties with red cobs are 



Henry Grady Tennessee Red Cob 



Arnold St. Charles White 



Among the large-eared or medium-eared ^■arieties with white 

 grains and white cobs are the following : — 



Shaw McMackin Boone County White 



Ronfro Bradbury 



Among the large or medium-eared varieties "nith yellow grains 

 are the following : — 



Experiment Station Yellow, ha\ing a short, flinty grain, and 

 usually a white cob ; and E-\'ans. 



