//. G. Hastings & Co., Seedsmen, Atlanta, Georgia. 
21 
^ V • 
#eatfi 
•i^ers Say 
ojfhe jjlai . ^ 
my acre. 
lio^indSiseecl 
i^it^&wrein jlvljpg'iresultS^-'JjHthsilftFser J^n, 
liptii 1; iliey camfc-iiB 
■ ^ " "-'I |i#itstoim n&lch uitepoi’o^tliiMl' 
seefjlflpo icp'ant 
summer, but la-three ^eKtBttilibave-l.lBO. 
'tht^;par,t stand. Have saved' Ihfe. besf-fpr plaut- 
J/a^ nest year.”—'instave Kanmgarten, Lavaca Co., .Texas.’. 
‘‘Ai)x well pleased with the Kosser N’o. 1. I planted 7 acres and it was 
a good stand.- Easter Sunday a cold spell came bn and killed about 
halfofitp Will get-4 bales. First bale weighed 69s pounds; second 645 
HUmds'.,’!.—C. T. Nicholson, Matagorda County, Texas. 
Kqss,ei.Jto»J_la, a..fi.afi..cottoii. .Th.e seed bought of you was planted, 
rch 18th and it was open July 1st so that a good picker could pick '.iOO 
.__^indsia day.OSfs'lpr^.Tsdil.aCK sandy pralrl^. Did pot use any manure 
oJ^ertUi^er; poKoh 4 Rifles,; I have- g^hered 6 bales on 15 
icres sjnfl hai«e^iK ,nHsre-fk..»ather. ■ Last yearJ plaatedJSacrels with 
another kind and mt^^ only one bale of 436 pujinds on the 25 acrej, so 
yoii can je^tryt'litfgsarJSijbl lag gopd cotton.; ”F,think It is the fastest 
PB|kingcf)ttonmalevCT came'to'TeSas.”^44eo. Harnhafd, Colorado Co. 
‘‘RosSee-Nor^i-is-about weevil proof. We caught 150 weevils in one 
Pt ^r b<rt couljl,jip)t,^e,thF.t,lt, made any difference. I made two bales 
en rhy nelkjioqrs made none. 1 belieye the reason is that it puts on so 
cu and so iaj;! that the boll Weevil cannot get It all.”—H. L. Wheeler, 
Ison Co'un'ty.'Te^as/ 
■'Rpsser Nbj'l'ltitned ootO. K. I planted on poor sandy land, and 
being qyt’t.yjrpp'p^ildjould not work it as I sliould have done. It has 
en bjqpmi'ng.e'ver 'sl'nne it Started and is still blooming (October lOlli). 
‘ere isisome openlng.aome ready to open, some half-grow n bolls w bich 
1 make about .1.000'pnunds of seed cotton befure frost. To date have 
kedj 9VerT'.800‘;pound's. Lints-above the awrage and is of very good 
de, ihraVlng bfoaght'best ptlCe on day I sold it. This is how Rosser ^ o. 
dorn.gunder qpnditiobs of pppf land, bad cnltlvation and no fertiTzer. 
. sfih^* seedsare gopd-ehough for me or anybody else.”—C. 0. Kaiser, 
lyetipSounty,'-Texas; : 
Pound, postpaid, 3 ^ cents; 3 pound) 
prepaid, 60 cents; bushel (30 pound 
S 15.00; loo pounds, not prepaid, 
SI,OS per lOO pounds* 
A standard extra early variety; prolific, 
but has small bi.)U«. Plantclose. MakesllO 
S35 percent. lint. Onr seed is grow n in extreme North Georgia and is the 
1^1 gevailne’K'isk- Lb., postpaid, 20c; 3 lbs., .50-. Not prepaid, peck. 50c; 
55-) §ll.fi0;f0u lbs.,84.00. Write for prices on larger quantities. 
41iieeATl'Tinll Hi? boll late variety, Seed.4>,0i;i .green and 
JJxg UUll white. Strong, vig^oi^^/'P'sy'eT.-b.ut.yery late 
^d shiould notlje planted in any section whe:^:iitroit(>,^,’bf er'op is de- 
sWed. ; Lb., postpaid, 20c; 3 Ihs., 50c: i)k.,,not;pr^'60ia&':v^4;'but, 81.25. 10 
Js., SlliOU; 100 lbs, 84.00. Write fur spe£4fc^j^.Wl[js^Margeft|i8antitles, 
. Misslssipi'l 
n>«f.a .^ 1 -.—.. -.-litt^Oss'er No. 1. We. had 
Hif!wtw0)£rB vv^wilfvMl.bsd; {Jetir, but on accqript of 
tlot^WiHBMurl^ofilMfco'lTb^it rntpi e more per acroithan 
Ppfint^?*—(|i^V. Cooper, Himia-Co. 
I blight one,'Sttslb6K^W&fiit,>ega and pltipted 4 acres of common 
■ pine ridge land, ■. TIsed'i^tK) poitBds-com'mbtclal fwctlllzer jier acre. 111 
gather aboTit 1,000 poilhds per acre. All that have'seen mjr. cptton^aae' It 
is tine for the year and land. 1 have had more calls for seed! thahl y ill 
be able to supply.”—S. C. Mabry, Newtou Co. 
T rkiiiGiaTia “Had bad hick with-the seed boHghtpf you, lislngalttjost 
l.iUUialalla () 4 i by the A.utilfreezp; Had.eitcaigh. left to 1)1801 Taerv- 
ing’s^Extra Early 
yt'h') an'd'thirft'wiirmBfke two bAlesmveTaglng-’ftts ifjoctTids. I h^ve pla 
the Sp-’.Ube.foreAOd liXoiiL. Expect tot order some more In the spring.”— 
J. S. (/iHieitK earfatu La.,'i r_: . i''/ > 
"Kossi^r No. 1 grew off nicely and commenced fruiting early; which 
w'e'were gla'd to see. A bottom crop is always appreciated sitjee the boll 
made it appearance here.”^—Louis Hflugler, Ascension Parish’, La., d 
I w-:: 
AloKama should have gotten 2 bales per acre (Rosser Nrt. lybul 
EVidUallla will getbnly about bales per acre. If I had used aci'l 
and p))ta5h instead of cotton Seed meal guano as a feeder I am sure the 
results w.ould have been satisfactory.”—R. A. Speer, Clay Co. 
‘■Seed did well. Planted 4 acres new land, first year’s crop, will get 
nearly 2 bales with poor stand, as cold and lice killed quite a Iqt of It. 
Garden seed was fine.’'—.A. 1 . Harwell, E.scambia Co. ! : 
“Rosser No. 1 Is fine. I only planted one acre and have got 576 ponnd.s 
of lint cotton. Everybody in my settlement wants some of m!y_S)(t)l 
Your cu.stomers heed not be afrai l of Rosser No. 1. They are a-good 
seed.”—0. R, Smith, Randolph Co. 
B, postpaid to your address, Sl.OO; peck, by expreVs or lrei^ti,-not 
; Georgia le^al weittbf), not prepaid, $1.75; 10 bushels, not prepaid, 
$5.00* Ifreikbt rate to Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma points is 
Truitt - Culpepper - Christopher cwpTbTrbm^^'v’^rt™^^^^ 
that were mu)'h I'lanted before the intro)lucti6n of Mortgag'o-LlPtet and 
Sure Crop. Plants of eacli of these are vigorous growers and wlthiitain) 
drought well. They are all fair croppers i)i favorable seasons. Prtce nf 
each, 20c lb., postpaid: :i lbs., 5oc. Not prepaid, pk ,50c; bn.,81.25; 10 bus, 
811.00. 100 lbs.. 84.60. - Write for large quantity prices. 
_Asplendid drougnt-reffsttng C 01 ,on.'TTAivv 
X eterKin iB^rpTeU bearer; open growth; fine .-laple. Lb.,.f0i:. 
3 lbs., 50c. Nbfe^|i&^(.pk., 60c; bu., 81.25 in any quantity. . 
No cotton grower can be financially successfuLwho i 
15 cents per pound. On the HASTINGS FARM our crops 
actually costs but little more to grow 1 to 2 bales per acre thaii i 
even with prices 12 to 
acre. We find that itri 
Cotton Bock is in ro 
ccessful cotton gro’^’- 
sei^^e ai price list or catalogue but a booklet containing our methods arid tl 
ers both in and out of the Boll Weevil district who are in the baleiper-a’cre 
• Where are yoii ? - If you are making less than a bale per crop this booklet can 
he|p, you. It contains only, solid farm facts that we and other practical, successful cotton growers have worked 
outv not on paper, but on the farm, 
' We clan and do make 2 bales per acre without spending a young fertune fer fertilizer. Others are doidg 
likewise. You can, if you wiU. Our Cotton Bock tells hew. If ycu will fcllcw the methods outlined in our 
^ Cotton Book you can grow just as many bales on half the number of acres, that is if you are making less 
a bale per acre now. If you want one cf these “Cotton Books” just write, asking for it. We send it free* With 
* all due respect to yoU and your present methods we believe that our methods are much better. Results count. 
Wetire’in the l-to-2-bale class, following our methods. Where are you at, fcllcwing yeurs ? > ' 
• i F 
wei (fan 
Tlie profit in cotton growing is a high yield per acre cn few er acres planted. You can do this as w ell as 
jrefvU 
We gladly tell you how. Write us today for it and we will send it, 
iiinoiu. s} 5. 
