710 Splendid for your land. The roots are 
crowded with nitrogen gathering nodules and 
it is truly a great crop to turn under for 
building up your soil. For hay, plants grow 
erect and bushy, not lodging except on rich 
bottom land. Grows 3 to 5 feet high, easily 
cut and cured—stock eat it clean with less 
waste than peavine hay. You can easily 
gather the seeds when ripe and the plants 
hold their leaves for 2 weeks after seed ma¬ 
tures, a big advantage over Cowpeas. The 
beans are good to eat. and make the finest 
kind of chicken feed. Yields run from 500 
to 1,000 pounds per acre. 
You can easily sell the seed to your 
neighbors. There is always a good demand < 
and usually at good prices. Mung Beans 
will stand even under conditions impossible 
for Soy Beans and Cowpeas. Plant 3 to 5 
pounds per acre in 3% foot rows, dropping 
seeds the same distance apart as you would 
Cowpeas. Broadcast 10 to 15 pounds per acre. 
For hay or turning under, plant in May in the' 
middle South. Matures in 90 to 120 days. Do 
well on sandy to heavy clay soil that will 
grow any kind of grain crop. Pkt. 8c; lb.v 
30c ; 2 lbs. 50c ; 5 lbs. $1.10. For larger quan¬ 
tities see price-list in back of catalog. 
ISI&el 
Treat your Seed 
. . 0 Cotton with 2% 
Ceresan—increases yield. 3 ounces treats a bushel 
Lb. 75 c; 5 lbs. $3.00, postpaid. 
DELTA AND PINE LAND No. 11 
It has the highest lint percentage of any 
Cotton ever developed with staple length of 
an inch and one-sixteenth. It has unusual 
hybrid vigor, slightly less foliage than D. & 
P. L. No. 10, and frequently gins out 40 to 
44 per cent lint on poor upland soil. 
Descriptive Characteristics 
| Plants: Yig-orous and 
spreading. 
| Maturity: Early. 
Picking Qualities: Good. 
Storm-resistance: Good. 
Boll-size: 70 to 80 per 
pound. 
Lint-percentage: 40 to 
44 per cent. 
Staple-length: 1 to llic 
inches. 
Foliage: Light. 
Not prepaid: 30 lbs. (bus.) $2.40; 100 lbs. 
(3% bus.) $7.50; 20 bags (ton) or over, at 
$7.00 per bag. 
DELFOS 719 (Deifos 6102-719) 
A large round-bolted selection from Dei¬ 
fos 6102 that made an excellent record at the 
Delta Experiment Station last season, and is 
well liked in the upland sections where Dei¬ 
fos Cotton is grown. 
Descriptive Characteristics 
Plants: Medium and 
vigorous . 
Maturity: Early. 
Picking Qualities: Good. 
Storm-resistance: Good. 
Boll-size: 60 to 63 per 
pound. 
Lint-percentage: 33 to 
35 per cent. 
Staple-length: V/ig to 
1 % inches. 
Foliage: Very light. 
Not prepaid: 30 lbs. (bus.) $2.25, 100 lbs. 
(3 y 3 bus.) $7.00; 20 bags (ton) or over, at 
$6.50 per bag. 
Regardless of what form of Cotton control or pro¬ 
gram we may have during the years to come, high 
yielding strains will continue showing the most 
profit. Low yields are not profitable at any price. 
Insure high yields with our Pedigreed Cotton Seed. 
The strains offered below are the heaviest yielders 
and average better than an inch in staple—always 
bringing premium prices. 
STONEVILLE No. 5 
Ranks at the top in practically all Experiment 
Station tests conducted in Arkansas, Mississippi, 
Georgia, Louisiana, and other states. Its large, 
round bolls, with nearly all having five-locks, make 
it an excellent picking Cotton. It is the earliest 
big-boll Cotton. Very productive, has a high lint 
turnout, stormproof, picks easy, and produces a 
good strong staple on the poorest hill lands. 
Descriptive Characteristics 
Plants: Vigorous and spread- Boll-size: 70 to 80 per po'und. 
ins'- „ , Lint-percentage: 38 to 40 per 
Maturity: Early. cent. 
Picking Qualities: Good. Staple-length: 1 to 1%» in. 
Storm-resistance: Good. Foliage: Medium light." 
Not prepaid: 30 lbs. (bus.) $2.40; 100 lbs. (3% 
bus.) $7.50; 20 bags (ton) or over, at $7.00 per bag. 
MISSDEL No. 5 (Deifos 631-2458-7376) 
Planters of the Cotton Belt have been asking for 
an extra large boiled, high lint percentage, early, 
storm-resistant Cotton of good body and character, 
for the old Cotton lands which will not grow a long- 
staple from any variety. MISSDEL No. 5 is the an¬ 
swer. Especially recommended to our Western 
Arkansas, Western Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma 
customers as the best Cotton we have ever offered 
for their conditions and soils. 
Descriptive Characteristics 
Plants: Semi-dwarf. 
Maturity: Extra early. 
Picking Qualities: Very good. 
Storm-Resistance: Best we 
know of. 
Boll-size: 55 to 60 per pound. 
Lint-percentage: 35 to 38 per 
cent. 
Staple-length: V/i e to 1 % in. 
Foliage: Light. 
Not prepaid: 30 lbs. (bus.) $2.25; 100 lbs. (3% 
bus.) $7.00; 20 bags (ton) or over, at $6.50 per bag. 
723 Scarbrough Dwarf. This type has less seed 
on it, and is on the upper one-third of the brush, 
allowing cleaner threshing. The bales weigh fully 
one-third more and make the finest parlor brooms. 
Plant 4 to 6 seeds in hills 30 to 36 inches apart, rows 
40 inches apart. This allows better air-circulation 
through the field. Thresh same day as pulled. Lb. 
30c; 2 lbs. 55c; 5 lbs. $1.25. For larger quantities, 
rice-list in back of catalog. 
t 
Cotton 
59 
REUTER SEED CO., Inc.. New Orleans 
