WOOD’S EARLY 
Treated 
LONG STAPLE COTTON SEEDS 
with Semesan which Increases Yields 
Our seeds grown at the top of the cotton belt are two weeks earlier, getting ahead of boll weevil. 
South Carolina Experiment Station says: “Treated Cotton Seed yields 430 pounds per 
acre or 28% more than untreated seed, and produced twice as many plants. 91% more 
came up when planted before a cold spell.” 
North Carolina Experiment Station says: “Treating’ cotton seed increased the yield 
$21.56 per acre. It prevents seed rotting, destroys anthracnose, boll rot and blight. In¬ 
creased the stand 146% . Checks seedling diseases in cold, damp weather. Allows planting 
ten days earlier, getting ahead of the boll weevil. You can plant a fourth less treated 
seed and get a better stand of stronger plants, more uniformly spaced, and avoid the high 
cost of planting over. It pays you dollars to sell your own seed and buy Wood’s high germ¬ 
inating treated cotton seed. You will get a larger yield of better length staple that brings 
a better price. 
Certified Farm Relief 
Yielded 2,562 pounds of seed cotton per acre in a Fee Dee, 
S. C., test, making- the highest yield and largest first pick¬ 
ing in the Early Foison test. 1-1/16 inch staple, 40% lint, 
and yielded 620 pounds of lint per acre in 1934 Goldsboro, 
N. C., test. 
Our strain made 34 bales on 29 acres and the best single 
plant at one of the N. C. State Fairs. Big bolls. Early ma¬ 
turity. Open type, thin foliage makes it less susceptible to 
boll weevil and boll rot. One of the most popular varieties 
in Eastern Carolina. 
Wood’s Ingold Cotton 
1-3/32 Inch Staple, 650 lbs. Dint, and 1,800 lbs. seed cotton per acre in 1934 Clemson, S. C-, 
test and one of only two varieties to average 500 pounds of lint per acre for five years, 
averaging the highest lint per cent; longest staple; earliest maturing, and most cotton 
in the first picking. It was able to germinate and thrive at temperatures so low fifty other 
varieties could not live. Yielded 2,221 pounds of seed cotton per acre in a Pee Dee, S. C., 
test. 
The only variety to average 500 pounds of lint cotton per acre in the six-year Virginia 
State test, making the highest ginning per cent, 1-1/16 inch staple, 64 bolls per pound, and 
one of the first to mature. 
40% lint of 1-1/16 inch staple in the 1934 Goldsboro, N. C., test. Highest average turn¬ 
out of lint for three years in the N. C. State tests. 
Upright, sturdy, medium bush. Very heavy fruiter, often five bolls on one limb. Bolls 
are larger than Cleveland or Mexican Big Boll. Small seed. Bolls open wide. Easy to pick, 
but lint does not shed out, even if not picked until February. Fairly dis¬ 
ease-resistant. Most state experiment stations report it two weeks 
earlier than other varieties, maturing before boll weevil damage. 
In a seven-year far Southern State Experiment Station test it made the 
highest yield of lint and length of staple and averaged 39% lint. 
Boll of Wood’s Ingold Cotton 
Wood’s Certified Trice Cotton 
1-1/16 inch Staple, 34', Lint, yielded 1,900 pounds per acre 
in 1933, and made the highest yield of seed cotton in the 
six-year Virginia State test. There is no earlier variety. It 
has yielded as high as 2,700 pounds of seed cotton per acre. 
R. T. Jackson, Harnett Co., N. C.: “It opens ten days be¬ 
fore other varieties and can ail be picked before October 15, 
getting ahead of the boll weevil. It yields 150 pounds more 
lint per acre than any other variety in my section.’’ 
A Tield of Wood’s Ingold Cotton 
Certified Mexican Big Boll 
1-1/16 inch Staple, 38% Lint, Highest Yield Most N. C. Tests 
Developed by the North Carolina Experiment Station and 
recommended by them above ail other cotton, especially for 
the Piedmont Section, where it has consistently outyielded 
all other varieties, and because of its earliness, uniform 
1-1/16 inch strong staple with high spinning Qualities, 38% 
turn-out of lint and large boll (55 to pound). It is easy to 
pick, yet storm-resistant. Well-branched open-type stalk 
with medium foliage. 
Wood’s Coker Cleveland 884-4 
1-1/16 Inch Staple, 39% Lint, and yielded 1,620 pounds of seed cotton 
and 628 pounds of lint per acre, the highest yield of seed or lint cotton 
in the 1934 Goldsboro, N. C-, test. 
It made the highest yield of lint. 614 pounds, and 1,624 pounds of seed 
cotton per acre in the Georgia Coastal Plains tests. Thin foliage. Small 
plant. Large bolls. Picks easily. Fluffs and gins well. Storm-resistant. 
Wood’s DixieTriumph Wilt Resistant 
1-1/16 Inch Staple, 38% Lint, Positively Wilt-Resistant 
From the strain that yielded 2,843 pounds of seed cotton 
per acre, the highest yield in the history of the Pee Dee, 
S. C., Experiment Station. Dixie Triumph has made the 
highest yield in the North Carolina Wilt Variety tests, and 
is recommended by the Alabama Experiment Station as the 
best wilt-resistant variety. It tested 1% inch staple, long¬ 
est in the Virginia State test and took the smallest number 
of bolls to make a pound of seed cotton, 63 bolls. It is easy 
to pick, yet storm-resistant. 
PRICES—NOT POSTPAID—P. O. B. RICHMOND 
Wood’s Ingold 
100 
590 
100 
500 
Certified Trice 
Peck 
y 2 bus. 
BUS. 
Lbs. 
Lbs. 
NOT CERTIFIED 
Peck 
y 2 Bus. Bus. 
Lbs. 
Lbs. 
Certified Farm Relief 
Certified Mexican Big Boll 
Certified Coker Cleveland 
884-4 
Dixie Triumph Wilt 
60c.. 
. .$1.00. 
.$1.75. 
.$5.50. 
.$5.25 
Farm Relief 
. . 55c. . 
. . 95C. . . .$1.60. 
. $5.00. 
. $4.75 
Mexican Big Boll 
Coker Cleveland 884-4 J 
Resistant 
T. W. WOOD & SONS 
SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 
