68 



AGRICULTURAL VARIETIES OF THE COWPEA, ETC. 



According to additional notes by Mr. C. R. Ball, the seed sample represented a 

 medium-sized, short, kidney-shaped Blackeye. Descriptive and agronomic notes 

 also occur in Bulletin 46, Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, 

 1900. 



Tennessee Crowder. — Descriptive and agronomic notes of this variety appear 

 in Bulletin 46, Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900, as 

 follows : 



Very early; a rather light vine, inclined to run some: pods borne on long 

 stems, standing well above the vines ; heavy yielder of peas with a fair 

 weight of vine. Its chief merit is its earliness. 



Three Crop. — See citation from Transactions of the Virginia State Agricul- 

 tural Society, 1853, on page 36. 



Torg. — This name is published in Bulletin 34, Texas Agricultural Experi- 

 ment Station, 1895 (p. 583), where it is said to be a synonym of Everlasting. 

 The name also appears with brief descriptive and agronomic notes in Bulletin 

 40, Mississippi Agricultural Experiment Staton, 1896. 



Tory. — For early use of this name, see quotations from Farmers' Register, 

 1835, on page 35 ; from Transactions of the Virginia State Agricultural So- 

 ciety, 1853, under " Red " ; and Ruffin, Essays and Notes on Agriculture, 

 1855, on page 36. Under this name descriptive and agronomic notes have aiso 

 been published in Bulletin 34, Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, 1895: 

 in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agricultural Experiment Staton, 1896; and in Bul- 

 letin 146, North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, 1897. 



Toivnsend,— See 26844. 



Tribus. — See quotation from Transactions of the Virginia State Agricultural 



Society. 1853, on page 36. 

 Tsai don.— See 22902. 

 Turney's Bl a el-eye. — See 22050. 



Two Crop. — This is briefly described in the 1910 catalogue of the Crenshaw 

 Bros. Seed Co.. Tampa, Fla. The name was apparently first published in 

 the Industrialist, Kansas State Agricultural College. 1902 (vol. 28, p. 462), the 

 seed color not being given. See 29291. 



Unknown,— See 13468 and 27545. 



Unknown Black— See 27549. 



Upright.— See 21934. 



Vacuum, — This was first described in Bulletin 26, Georgia Experiment Sta- 

 tion, 1894 (p. 183), as follows: 



Recumbent, short stems: small leaf, light to medium green; blossom, 

 purple : form, kidney ; pod, large, yellow, but with vacancies at intervals 

 unfilled with peas — hence its name ; pea, large, white, wrinkled : very early ; 

 yield of vines, very light; of peas, medium. 



Descriptive and agronomic notes also appear in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agricul- 

 tural Experiment Station, 1896; and in Bulletin 62 (ser. 2), Louisiana Experi- 

 ment Station, 1902. 



Volunteer— See 22054. 



Warren— See 11236. 



Warren's Extra Early. — This varietal name seems to have been first pub- 

 lished by William Henry Maule, Philadelphia. Pa., in the catalogue of 1899. 

 It is there said to be the earliest of all varieties. Agronomic notes on it 

 have been published by many of the experiment stations, as follows: 



Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletins 70 (1901) and SO 

 (1903). 



Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station. Circular 69, 1903. 

 Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. Bulletin 130, 1904. 

 229 



