CATALOGUE FOR THE SOUTH. 
57 

SELECTED QUALITY COTTON SEED 
Directions for Planting and Cultivating Cotton. 
— 
Thoroughly break and 
prepare your land early, 
having the rows 3% to 
4 feet wide, and hill 12 
to 14 inches apart in 
drill. When the cotton 
comes up it should be 
off-barred deep while it 
is small, in order to let 
the heat of the sun 
strike through the beds. 
As it gets larger shallow 
down, and towards the 
last cultivate very shal- 
low. Always keep the 
top crust of the ground 
broken in dry weather, 
as it prevents it from 
losing its forms. Never 
stop plowing for wet 
weather until the ground 
turns in slices; then 
quit immediately until it 
dries off. Never lay-by 
until the middle of 
August. The most suc- 
cessful time we have 
ever had in planting for 
2 big yield was on the 
5th and 6th days of 
April; in fact, the first 
week in April is the best 
time for planting cotton 
for good results. One 
bushel of cotton seed is 
required to plant an 
acre. 
_ All of our Cotton Seed 
is free from Boll Weevil. 
These are all good vari- 
eties which have been 
thoroughly tested and 
recommended by Agri- 
cultural Colleges and 
Experiment Stations of 
the Southern States. 
EXPRESS COTTON—The Experimental 
Station at Starkville, Miss., recommends it 
above all others. It has been planted for 
several years and has been found prolific, 
early maturing, and much sought after by 
the cotton buyers. It is a fine character of 
cotton, a strong 1 3-16 inch staple, always 
commanding a good liberal premium. 
1 1b., 40c., postpaid; bu. 30 lbs., $3.00, not 
prepaid. 

ISLAND COTTON. 
SEA : Extra long 
Staple; lint 15% or 1% to 2 inches. Seed 
black and lintless. Plant % bushel to acre 
in row—) foot rows, 3-foot drill. The 
famous Sea Island Cottons are known all 
over. 1 1b., 50c., postpaid; bu. 40 lbs., $7.50, 
not prepaid. 
SIMPEKIN’S EARLY PROLIFIC COT- 
TON.—(Short Staple.)—The superiority of 
this cotton over all others consists of its 
extreme earliness and heavy fruiting; has 
long limbs, which come out at the ground. 
1 1b., 40c., postpaid; bu. 30 lbs., $3.00, not 
prepaid. 
KING’S EARLY IMPROVED COTTON.— 
This short staple Cotton has wonderfully 
increased in popularity. It is extra early, 
wonderfully prolific, long limbed, seed 
small, lint 36 to 40 per cent. 1 Ib., 40c., 
postpaid; bu. 30 lbs., $3.00, not prepaid. 

_ BOLL.—Plant 
| 
! 
Express Cotton. 
ALLEW’S IMPROVED COTTON.—(Long 
Staple.)—Runs full 1% to 15%. Considered 
by the mills as the most desirable cotton 
raised in the United States, Sea Island ex- 
cepted. 1 Iib., 50c., postpaid; bu. 39 Ilbs., 
$4.50, not prepaid. < 
BANK ACCOUNT COTTON. — (Short 
Staple.)—Early for boll weevil lands. 
While some very extravagant claims have 
been made in certain quarters for this cot- 
ton, it is in all truth one of our best types 
today. 1 1b., 40c., postpaid; bu. 30 Ilhbs., 
$3.00, not prepaid. 
WANNAMAKER CLEVELAN 
vigorous, thrifty, with 
large bolls 
D BIG 
+1 low 
close-jointed basal fruit limbs; 
easily picked, medium Size seed, 34 to 38 
per- cent lint, 1% to 1% inches long, fine 
and strong. Earliest and most prolific 
experimental stations. Especially recom- 
mended for sections where the boll 
bu. 30 
is present. 1 lh., 40c., postpaid; 
$3.00, not prepaid. 
Special prices on large quantities of any 
of the above Cotton Seed. 
