Cotton Seed 
PURE BRED SEED ARE HALF THE BATTLE 
Higher and higher yields are possible for you if you 
take advantage of the tireless, painstaking, scientific 
work that is constantly being carried on by the most 
efficient cotton Experiment Stations in the various 
States. Old varieties are being constantly improved 
through new strains, and new varieties are being de¬ 
veloped—all of which mean more money in your pocket 
if you sell your old seed to the gin and plant each 
spring one of the pure-bred high yielding strains de¬ 
scribed herein. 
We keep constantly in touch with this work all over 
the South, and as soon as a new variety has proven its 
worth and its seeds are available in commercial quan¬ 
tities, we offer them to our customers. We buy from 
breeders direct, and from growers who get breeders’ 
stock and plant an entire plantation in one variety, 
and gin on their own private gin. Even our Half and 
Half Cottonseed is privately ginned, grown from 
originator’s stock last spring. 
MACHINE CULLED, GRADED AND CLEANED 
After trying out all the cotton seed cleaners on the 
market, we felt better work could be done and built 
one of our own. Results have justified the expense. 
We take out hulls, loose cotton, trash, dirt, light weight 
immature seed. You would be amazed at what we re¬ 
move from a ton of seed, even when the seed look very 
clean at first glance. 
Therefore, the seed we ship are plump, full weight 
uniform seed, clean of all trash; easy to plant, no clog¬ 
ging of planter which means a uniform stand of strong, 
vigorous plants (plump heavy seed produce strong 
plants, light weight seed produce weak, sickly plants, 
and we remove them). Our culled and graded seed 
require less seed per acre to obtain a stand, which is a 
saving, and they produce more cotton per acre, which 
means more profit to you. 
INCREASED YIELDS POSSIBLE 
With some form of acreage control or cotton produc¬ 
tion control in prospect for the next few years, it be¬ 
comes more and more important to produce the most 
cotton on the least acreage. You can help a lot by 
planting winter legumes and turning them under, and 
by more thorough cultivation of your growing cotton 
crop, but bear in mind, first and foremost—PURE 
BRED SEED ARE NECESSARY. 
Vs Inch 
1 Inch 
1W Inch 
V/s Inch Commercial V/s Inch 
1 Vs Inch Full 
