COKER-CLEVEWILT Strain 4 
Productive 1 Cleveland Cotton for Wilt or Non-Wilt Lands 
More resistant than Dixie Triumph—more productive than Coker “5.” 
Cotton wilt is like the measles—there are 
several different kinds and you may be im¬ 
mune to “red measles” but become mighty 
sick with the “German” variety. Ordinary wilt 
resistant cottons react in the same way. They 
may be resistant to the common (fusarium) 
wilt or blight but will be mighty sickly and 
diseased when planted on lands infested with 
one of the new types of wilt which we have 
discovered. (See article, pp. 15.) 
The only way that we knew to breed a cot¬ 
ton that would stand these new wilts was to 
plant our wilt tests on soils infested with the 
new wilts. Clevewilt Strain 4 stood up and 
produced while many Dixie Triumphs (a va¬ 
riety highly resistant to ordinary wilt) and 
even some of our own Clevewilts, suffered 
badly and produced much less cotton. 
BEST CLEVELAND 
Clevewilt Strain 4 not only leads in wilt 
resistance, yield and money value on wilt soil 
but is an excellent cotton to plant on any soil. 
In 1933 it led Cleveland 5 Strain 5, 884 Strain 
4 and Farm Relief Strain 1 in our main variety 
test on non-wilt soil. If you want a Cleveland 
cotton, plant Clevewilt Strain 4. It will make 
more cotton and more net dollars per acre 
than any Cleveland cotton, according to our 
records—it led all Cleveland cottons in the 
1934 Pee Dee Experiment Station test. 
DESCRIPTION 
Picture at Extreme Left — 
The only plant that could 
stand the wilt—saved for 
future breeding. 
STAPLE—li/ie". 
LINT—37-39%. 
PLANT—Vigorous, erect, open. 
SEASON—Medium. Same as Cleveland 5 strain 5. 
PRODUCTION—Best of Clevelands. 
STORM RESISTANCE—Good. 
BOLLS—Medium. 68-72 to pound. 
PICKING QUALITY—Good. 
WILT RESISTANCE—Best. 
PRICES: (See Price List Enclosed.) 
Clevewilt 4 (at right) 
standing up and producing 
on new-type Sumter wilt— 
making 60% more than 
other good wilt varieties 
(shown at left). 
