NAMES APPLIED TO VARIETIES OF COWPEAS. 



51 



Apparently the same variety is described in Bulletin 34, Texas Agricultural Ex- 

 periment Station, 1895 (p. 582). Agronomic and descriptive notes under this 

 name have also been published in Bulletin 46, Delaware College Agricultural 

 Experiment Station, 1900 ; Bulletin 53, series 2, Louisiana Experiment Station, 

 1898 ; and in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agricultural Experiment Station, 1896. It 

 is doubtful, however, if all of these notes refer to the same variety. In eastern 

 North Carolina the name " Coffee " is also more or less used for the Taylor 

 variety. 



Collar cl. — See Green Collard. 



Colvin. — This is described in Bulletin 29, series 2, Louisiana Experiment 

 Station, 1894 (p. 1044), as follows: 



Colvin is a medium large, light-red pea, resembling somewhat the Red 

 Ripper. It is the bunch kind, very prolific and early, fruiting in 8 or 9 

 weeks. Not much vine. 



Descriptive notes also occur in Bulletins 29, series 2 (1894), and 72, series 2 

 (1902), Louisiana Experiment Station; and in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agricul- 

 tural Experiment Station, 1896. 



Conch. — Described in Bulletin 26, Georgia Experiment Station, 1894 (p. 181), 

 as follows: 



Flattest grower of all the peas ; lies close to the ground like a sweet 

 potato vine; weak and slow grower; light-green leaves; pod, medium yel- 

 low ; pea, medium white ; unproductive ; very late and absolutely worthless. 



Agronomic and descriptive notes under this name also occur in the following 

 publications : 



Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletins 31 (1894) and 80 

 (1903) ; Annual Report, 1895 (p. 12.). 



Louisiana Experiment Station, bulletins 21 and 22 (1889), 7, series 2 

 (1891), 16, series 2 (1892), and 62, series 2 (1900). 



Georgia Experiment Station, Bulletin 26, 1894. 



Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 34, 1895. 



Mississippi Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 40, 1896. 



Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, Annual Reports for 

 1892 (p. 32) and for 1895 (p. 8). 



North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 98, 1394. 



Congo — Described in Bulletin 26, Georgia Experiment Station, 1894, p. 181, 

 as follows: 



Recumbent, though not a trailer; leaf and stalk moderately large; light 

 green ; blossom light lilac ; form kidney ; pod large, yellow ; pea, very large, 

 jet black ; very early ; yield of vines, moderate ; of peas, heavy. 



Descriptive and agronomic notes also occur in Bulletin 46, Delaware College 

 Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900 ; and in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agri- 

 cultural Experiment Station, 1896. It is apparently identical with Early 

 Black, 17336. 



Constitution. — This variety is described in Bulletin 26, Georgia Experiment 

 Station, 1894 (p. 181), as follows: 



Semirecumbent, but does not trail ; leaf and stalk small, medium green ; 

 handsome grower; blossom pale lilac; form kidney; pod small, yellow; 

 pea, very small, jet black ; very late ; yield of vines, heavy ; of peas, lightest 

 in the list. 



Descriptive and agronomic notes also occur in Bulletin 46, Delaware College 

 Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900; and in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agri- 

 cultural Experiment Station, 1896. 

 Cotton Patch.— See 29291. 

 229 



