Varieties of cotton in 1909, ranked according to total value 

 per acre of seed and lint. 



VARIETY 



Cook, No. 206 



Cook, No. 221 



Dixie 



Hardin 



Poulnot 



Peterkin 



Cleveland 



Layton 



Cook 



Texas Bur 



Brown, No. 1 , 



Broad well's Double Jointed , 



Georg^ia Best 



Cook, No. 232 



Toole 



Truitt 



Kussell 



Cook, No. 239 



Blue Ribbon 



Dillon 



Gold Coin 



Rowden 



Strickland. . 



Drake (Defiance) 



Simpkins 



King- ■ 



Triumph 



Allen Long Staple 



Keen an 



Trice 



Actual Yield per 



Acre. 

 (Stand variable) 



Lint 



" *. « I. 



4) ^'*. Q, 



On 0^ 

 a R c3 



fen 



ca 



C 



4t 



u 



0. 



Corrected to 

 Uniform Stand. 



4) 



a 

 c 



h O o " 



.2"*- 1* c w 

 a 0.a a 



> 



Lbs. 



793.5 



736.1 



681.3 



693.5 



666.6 



658.1 



643.1 



659.1 



629.0 



610.4 



606.1 



599.6 



591.5 



596.2 



587.3 



565.2 



556.5 



585.1 



541.5 



557.9 



545.4 



526.9 



514 



506 . 1 



512.7 



502.4 



499.7 



485.8 



414.1 



390.0 



1125 58 



117 36 



113 75 



110 96 



107 35 



10'5 63 



104 65 



103 85 



101 26 



100 22 



97 72 



97 21 



95 60 



94 06 



93 36 



93 35 



93 13 



92 95 



90 54 



90 28 



87 78 



86 28 



85 20 



83 59 



83 33 



81 69 



81 92 



82 00 

 69 87 

 64 71 



On account of the amount of anthracnose on the Station 

 farm in 1909, and because the seed is believed to be one of 

 the means of convening this widely spread disease, the 

 Station must decline to send out seed of these strains of 

 Cook until further selection has been made for resistance 

 to this disease. 



Dixie, which ranked third in total value of products and 

 fourth in yield of lint per acre, is a strain of wilt-resistant 

 CQtton developed by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. 



