NAMES APPLIED TO VARIETIES OF COWPEAS. 



69 



New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Annual Report, 1905 (p. 

 368). 



South Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletins 103 (1905) 

 and 123 (1906). 



Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 73, 1906. 



Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 168, 1907. 



Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 74, 1907. 



Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 81, 1908. 



Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 160, 1909. 



North Carolina Department of Agriculture Bulletin, 1910 (vol. 31, no. 6). 



See also 17352. 



Warren's Extra Early X Sugar Growder. — See 17422. Agronomic notes pub- 

 lished in Bulletin 81, Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, 1908. 



Warren's New Hybrid. — This name was apparently first published by William 

 Henry Maule, Philadelphia, Pa., in the seed catalogue for 1901, and is there 

 said to be three weeks earlier than Warren's Extra Early. Under this name 

 agronomic notes have been published by the following experiment stations: 



Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletins 70 (1901) and 80 

 (1903). 



Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station, Circular 69, 1903. 

 Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Bulletin 130, 1904. 

 South Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletins 103 (1905) 

 and 123 (1906). 



New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Annual Report, 1905 (p. 

 368). 



Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 73, 1906. 

 Delaware College Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 81, 1908. 

 Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 160, 1909. 

 North Carolina Department of Agriculture Bulletin, 1910 (vol. 31, no. 6). 



See also 17345. 

 Watson's Hybrid. — See 17425. 

 Whippoonoill. — See 17349. 

 Whippoorwill Crowder. — See 17371. 

 Whippoorwill Saddleback. — See 17409. 



White. — Described in Bulletin 26, Georgia Experiment Station, 1894 (p. 184), 

 as follows : 



Recumbent ; small leaf and stalk, medium green ; trails at ends of vines ; 

 white blossom ; form, kidney ; pod, medium, yellow ; pea, very small, white ; 

 medium early ; yield of vines, heavy ; of peas, very heavy. 



The original seed samples, according to Mr. C. R. Ball, represented a small to 

 medium-sized, rather broad Blackeye. Under the same name descriptive and 

 agronomic notes are published in The Cowpea, issued by the North Carolina 

 State Horticultural Society. 



White and Broicn Speckled. — Described in Bulletin 34, Texas Agricultural 

 Experiment Station, 1895 (p. 584), as follows: 



White and Brown Speckled. — A brown-and-yellow speckled variety. Vine 

 made a moderate growth, erect and bunched; first ripe August 20; pods 

 long and well filled with peas of medium size; yield per acre, 14.4 bushels; 

 sown May 11. 



Descriptive and agronomic notes occur in Bulletin 40, Mississippi Agricultural 

 Experiment Station, 1896. 



White Blackeye. — Agronomic notes under this name appear in bulletins 

 (ser. 2) of the Louisiana Experiment Station, Nos. 28 (1894) and 62 (1900). 



White Browneye. — Agronomic notes under this name appear in Bulletin 118, 

 Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station, 1902. 



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