RELIEF 
NEW STRAINS 
Better than Bale Per Acre Cotton—planted late. 
Most of your Farm Relief 2 seed comes 
from this field—807 acres, 860 bales. 
ONE BUSHEL SEED—3 BALES 
COTTON 
One man in north Georgia wrote us: “The 
bushel of Farm Relief 2 seed you sold me made 
three bales,” and another of our good custo¬ 
mers said: “You can’t sell me any Farm Re¬ 
lief 3—I don’t want anything better than my 
No. 2.” 
Here’s how Farm Relief 2 stacks up with 
its record-making parent: 
The following is an average of three tests: 
1932 Variety Test, 1933 General Test, 1933 
Farm Relief Variety Test: 
Pounds 
Lint 
Seed Cotton 
Per 
Pounds 
Money 
Per A ere 
Cent 
Lint 
Value 
Farm 
Relief 
No. 
1_2,044.2 
38.19 
781.25 
$83.12 
Farm 
Relief 
No. 
2___._.2,177.2 
38.44 
839.81 
89.91 
It possesses all desirable characters of the 
original (Strain 1) Farm Relief PLUS added 
vigor, extra production and greater uniformity. 
It has THIN FOLIAGE, it is EXTREMELY 
EARLY, it turns out 38 to 41% LINT, it 
staples FULL 1 EL" (under good conditions), 
it grows a BIG BOLL, it produces EXCEL¬ 
LENT CHARACTERED COTTON and it 
yields WITH THE BEST; besides, it puts on 
more fruit in the early part of the season than 
any other variety we know. If you plant early 
IT WILL MAKE A FAIR CROP IN SPITE 
OF ALL THE WEEVIL CAN DO. 
A summary of the above means that—if you 
are not satisfied with the cotton you are grow¬ 
ing, switch to FARM RELIEF for heavy 
yields of better cotton of the length that the 
mills want. (Farm Relief is not a wilt re¬ 
sistant cotton). 
PRICES: (See Price List Enclosed.) 
Page Five 
