54 



AGRICULTURAL VARIETIES OF THE COWPEA, ETC. 



Under the same name descriptive and agronomic notes are published in Bulletin 

 46, Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900; Bulletin 62. 

 series 2, Louisiana Experiment Station, 1900; Bulletin 34, Texas Agricultural 

 Experiment Station, 1895; and in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agricultural Ex- 

 periment Station, 1896. Apparently in all cases where this name is used 

 it is exactly synonymous with Taylor. 



Granite Crowder. — Described in the Industrialist. Kansas State Agricultural 

 College (vol. 28, 1902, p. 462). Probably identical with Taylor Crowder. 



Gray. — See citations on pages 35 and 36. 

 Gray eye. —See 17390. 



Gray Goose. — This name is usually, if not always, an exact synonym of 

 Taylor. Agronomic notes under this name have been published in the fol- 

 lowing : 



Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin TO, 1901. 

 Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station. Circular 69, 3903. 

 South Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletins 103 (1905) 

 and 123 (1906). 



Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Bulletin 130, 1904. 

 Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 160, 1909. 



Gray Prolific. — Notes on a variety under this name were published in Bul- 

 letin 61, Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station, 1893 (p. 335). 



Grecian. — See 17333. Agronomic notes are published in Bulletin 81, Delaware 

 College Agricultural Experiment Station, 1908. 



Green. — Descriptive and agronomic notes are published in Bulletin 40, Missis- 

 sippi Agricultural Experiment Station, 1S96. 



Green Collar A. — Described in Bulletin 53, series 2, Louisiana Experiment 

 Station, 1898 (p. 45), as follows: 



Presents every shade from a dirty white to a blue black. Unfortunately, 

 the contrast does not show as nicely in the photograph as it does to the 

 eye. The normal seed of this variety is a dirty white with dark stipple- 

 like dots, giving it a darker color about the eye. It was noticed that some 

 of these seeds were a little darker than others, and some of the darkest 

 ones were selected for a separate planting. As a result from this harvest 

 some seeds were obtained that were considerably darker than the ones 

 planted, while others were not as dark, the majority returning to the 

 ordinary color of the normal seed. 



Green Colored. — Described in Bulletin 34, Texas Agricultural Experiment 

 Station, 1895 (p. 5S3), as follows: 



Green Colored. — A greenish pea with vine very erect and running vigor- 

 ously ; first ripe September 18 ; pods medium length, well filled with small 

 peas; yield per acre, 17.5 bushels; sown May 11. 



The name may perhaps be a corruption of Green Collard. 



Green-Eye ~\Yliite. — Described by Puffin, Essays and Notes on Agriculture, 

 1855 (p. 355), as follows: 



A small pea, of delicate flavor, and valued for table use by those who 

 would reject the early black because of the dark and ugly appearance when 

 cooked. The growth is too small for use as a stock-feeding or manuring 

 crop. 



Grey Crowder. — Descriptive and agronomic notes are published in Bulletin 46, 

 Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900. 



Grey-Eye. — A variety advertised by the Amzi Godden Seed Co., Birmingham, 

 Ala., in 1905. Same as Grayeye. 



Groit.— See 17334. 



Guernsey.— See 3 740S. 

 229 



