. Five oriental species of beans . Full-Grown Pods and a Branch with Leaves and Flowers of the Urd. 119, U. S. Dept. cf Agricultur Plate Pods and Seeds of the (1) Adsuki, 2> Rice, (3) Mung, (4) Urd, and (5) Moth Beans. In the lower figure the seeds are magnified 2i diameters. FIVE OEIENTAL SPECIES OF BEANS. 27 Except the trial in Louisiana, there has been found no record ofthe urd in the United States previous to 1900. Since that yearmore than 20 lots have been secured, mainly from India, by theOffice of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. The source of theseand their cultural behavi


. Five oriental species of beans . Full-Grown Pods and a Branch with Leaves and Flowers of the Urd. 119, U. S. Dept. cf Agricultur Plate Pods and Seeds of the (1) Adsuki, 2> Rice, (3) Mung, (4) Urd, and (5) Moth Beans. In the lower figure the seeds are magnified 2i diameters. FIVE OEIENTAL SPECIES OF BEANS. 27 Except the trial in Louisiana, there has been found no record ofthe urd in the United States previous to 1900. Since that yearmore than 20 lots have been secured, mainly from India, by theOffice of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. The source of theseand their cultural behavior are stated in the following notes: S. P. I. No. 5438. From the Botanic Gardens, Calcutta, India, in 1900, as Phaseolus pilosus. Grown but a single season at Arlington farm. A very late variety thatdid not bloom. Seeds black and gray marbled, very small. Killed byfrost October 12. The row formed a mass of herbage 20 inches high andabout 3 feet broad. 5439. From the Botanic Gardens, Calcutta, India, in 1900, as Phaseolus roxburghii. Seeds small, olive. No records of the testing of this variety are From Poona, India, 190


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