376 SOUTHERN FIELD CROPS 



Good middling + J cent 



Strict middling + t\ cent 



Middling cent 



Strict low middling — I cent 



Low middling — f cent 



LABORATORY EXERCISES 



As part of the practice to accompanj' this chapter a ginnery 

 should be visited, and inspection made of the parts of some gin 

 while it is not in motion. 



While it is not advisable for instruction in cotton classing to 

 be given by any except experts of long experience in cotton 

 buying and classing, it may be possible for samples of middling 

 cotton to be procured by the school and for the pupils to become 

 somewhat famiUar with its characteristics. 



College classes will doubtless be instructed bj- an expert, who 

 will need a complete set of specimens, or types, which can usualh' 

 be purchased from the U. S. Department of Agriculture. 



Literature 



Hunt, T. F. Forage and Fiber Crops in America, pp. 364-37S. 



New York, 1907. 

 BuRKETT, C. W., and Poe, C. H. Cotton. New Y'ork, 1906. 

 ToMPKiNS.D.A. Cotton and Cotton Oil. Charlotte, N.C., 1901. 

 Robinson, T. A. Classing Cotton. Stillwater, Okla., 1909. 

 Miller, T. S. The American Cotton System. Flat, Texas. 

 Hammond, Harry. U. S. Dept. Agr., Office of Expr. Sta., Bui. 



No. 33, pp. 264-268 and 3.51-3S4. 

 Earle, D. E. Cotton Grading. Clemson (S.C.) Agr. Col, 



Exten. Work, Vol. IV., Bui. No. 2. 



