STONEVILLE 4-A 
Our seed of this variety from one of the best known 
growers in the Delta section of Arkansas—one of the 
organizers and a former President of the Arkansas Pure 
Seed Growers Assn. His entire plantation is planted 
to this variety, his seed coming direct from the origi¬ 
nator. Our grower’s crop lived up to the claims made 
for this strain by the originator as an outstanding extra 
early, big boll cotton for very fertile soil, making about 
the biggest yield the plantation has yet produced. 
A dwarfy, rather spreading plant, extra big, round 
boll, 50 to 60 to the pound; very prolific yielder, with 
lint outturn of 35 to 38 on hill land; 33 to 35 on valley 
land, staple of 1 inch to 1 3/32 inch on good soil, storm 
proofness excellent, foliage medium, resistant to wilt. 
Very popular in north half of Arkansas and southeast 
Missouri. Enormous yields have been obtained on up¬ 
lands, with narrower rows and reasonably thick spac¬ 
ing, and some fertilizer if very thin soil. 
STONEVILLE No. 5 
Our grower of this variety owns one of the big planta¬ 
tions in North Mississippi Delta—planted a car of pedi¬ 
greed Stoneville 5 on one entire place. Cutworms took 
his first planting and was very late getting crop up to 
a stand—was considerably worried but he’s smiling now 
—Stoneville 5 produced a splendid crop of cotton for 
him. 
An extra early semi-dwarf type, light foliage with 
large lint outturn, 38% to 40%, big boll, 70 to 75 per 
pound, length 1 1/32 to 1 3/32, picking qualities good, 
storm resistance excellent, picks easy, produces a good 
strong staple on poorest hill lands. 
Ranks right close to D. P. L. 11, and one of the best 
cottons for upland soil conditions. Splendid for North 
Arkansas and Missouri, popular everywhere. 
ROWDEN No. 1049 
Our seed of this variety were produced on rich, Delta 
soil in Mississippi County, Arkansas. Plenty of mois¬ 
ture and pedigreed seed obtained from Experiment Sta¬ 
tion made possible an enormous crop—better than a 
bale per acre. Fine grade of tough texture lint of full 
1 1/32 staple brought a good premium in price, mak¬ 
ing a most profitable crop. Our grower expects to plant 
his entire place in Rowden No. 1049 again next spring 
for this improved strain has brought him improved 
money returns per acre for past two years. 
A very big, round boll variety, 63 bolls to the pound, 
the kind that pickers like to pick, yet extremely storm 
proof; lint percentage 34 to 36; 1 to 1 1/16 inch staple, 
early maturing and a wilt resistant variety. The pret¬ 
tiest big white seed of any variety we know. 
Field of Imp. Rucker Rig Roll 
IMP. RUCKER BIG BOLL 
This is another Georgia developed variety that has 
made many friends over here, and the description be¬ 
low tells why. Rucker has a decidedly big boll, and is 
a very quick making cotton; the plant is small and light 
foliage allows sunlight to get in. Cotton pulls about 1 
inch with a good grade of fibre, picking qualities very 
good, gin outturn average 40 percent. 
Our grower obtained his seed this last spring from 
the originator and look what he did—picked 111 bales 
from one field of 72 acres before end. of October. Our 
seed ginned on private gin, seed very uniform, small, 
and go a long way in planting. 
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