T. W. WOOD & SOWS 
SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 
77 
WOOD’S TREATED COTTON SEEDS rsa 
Treated Free with 2% Ceresan to produce better stands of more vigorous plants—Grown at the top of the 
cotton belt—Matures two weeks earlier, beating the boll weevil—Average 
germination over 90%—Ceresan treated free 
South. Carolina Experiment Station: “Treated Cotton seed produced 
about twice as many plants as untreated seed and yielded 430 pounds 
more per acre, or 28 per cent increase.” 
North Carolina Experiment Station: “Treating - Cotton seed increased 
returns $21.56 per acre. Two and one-half times as many plants came up 
as untreated seed. Treating - prevents seed rotting - and seedling diseases 
in cold, damp weather, makes stronger plants, evenly spaced, and avoids 
planting over. It allows planting ten days earlier, getting ahead of boll 
weevil. It prevents boll rot, blight and many other diseases.” 
Virginia Experiment Station: “Treated cotton was ready to pick ten 
days before untreated seed planted at the same time. No untreated seed 
should be planted in Virginia.” 
DO NOT BUY COTTONSEED 
Without a Red “Ceresan Treated” Stamp on the Tag 
A Field of Wood’s Ingold Cotton 
Wood’s Certified Farm Relief 
It made 1 1/16-inch staple, 40.8% lint, 1,666 pounds seed 
cotton, 680 pounds lint, and $105.00 per acre—the highest 
yield and money value in the 1933 Goldsboro, N. C., test. 
2,562 pounds of seed cotton per acre in a Pee Dee, S. C., 
test, making the highest yield and largest first picking in the 
Early Poison test. It made the first bale marketed in Wayne 
County, N. O., for five successive years. Five locks per boll; 
big, round bolls, 68 per pound; 6, 8 and 10 bolls per limb. 
Easy to pick; bolls open wide, but won’t shed. Free from 
black seed; open type, thin foliage. 
We also offer Pedigree Farm Relief strains 4 and 3, grown 
from certified seeds. 
The difference when treated with 2% Ceresan. 
Wood’s Certified Early Trice 
Grown for us at the Virginia Experiment Station 
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. 
Wood’s Ingold Cotton 
1 3/32-inch staple, 650 pounds lint, 1,800 pounds seed cotton per acre in 
a 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; highest ginning per cent, 1 l/16-inch staple, 
64 bolls per pound, and first to mature. Forty per cent lint in a Golds¬ 
boro, N. C., test. Highest average turnout of lint for three years in the 
N. C. State tests. Bolls are larger than Cleveland or Mexican Big Boll. 
Open wide, but lint does not shed out, even if not picked until February. 
Most State experiment stations report it two weeks earlier than other 
varieties, maturing before boll weevil damage. 
Pedigree Mexican Big Boll 58-14 
1 1/16-inch staple, 38% lint. Highest yield most N. C. tests. 
Developed by the North Carolina Experiment Station, who recommend 
it for the Piedmont Section, where it has outyielded other varieties. It is 
early, uniform staple with high spinning qualities; free from black seed. 
Large bolls, 55 to pound; bolls have five locks; easy to pick, yet storm- 
resistant; short, small, well-branched, open-type stalk. Our stock was 
grown from certified seed. 
W. F. Jackson, Harnett Co., N. C.: “It yielded 5,000 pounds 
of seed cotton on three acres—over double the average yield 
in my section. It has large bolls, is easy to pick, yet stays 
in the burr well. Ten days earlier than other varieties; it 
can be picked in September, ahead of boll weevil, and leave 
time for fall crops. Its open type plant lets sunlight check 
boll weevil. Does well on good or poor land.” 
It has yielded 2,700 pounds of seed cotton per acre. 
Wood’s Dixie Triumph Wilt-Resistant 
1 1/16-inch staple; 38% lint. Highest yielding, absolutely 
wilt-resistant cotton in the N. C. tests. 
Won First Prize at the N. C. State Fair. It yielded 2,843 
pounds of seed cotton per acre—the highest yield ever made 
at the Florence, S. C„ Experiment Station, making the high¬ 
est average yield of forty varieties for four years. It made 
the highest yield of seed cotton of thirty varieties in five 
tests in Alabama with the longest staple in their State Col¬ 
lege test. Best staple (iy 8 inch) and smallest number bolls 
per pound (63) in the Virginia test. Large bolls; five locks, 
easily picked; storm-resistant; medium early. Heavier yield, 
longer staple, less weed and closer fruiter than ordinary 
Dixie Triumph. Dependable in both wet and dry seasons. 
Not Postpaid 
100 500 -lb. Lots 
Peck V 2 Bus. Bus. Lbs. Per 100 Lbs. 
Wood’s Ingold ) 50 C. ... 80 c. . .$1.40. . $4.65. . . $4.50 
Certified Farm ReUef 4 1 By Mail Postpaid 
Certified Trice.) 85c. . .$1.40... 2.50 
PR irFS Include treatment 
r 2% Ceresan 
Not Postpaid 
100 500 -lb. Lots 
Peck y 2 Bus. Bus. Lbs. Per 100 Lbs. 
Farm Relief 3 or 4 ) 50c. ... 75c. . .$1.30. . .$4.00. .. $3.85 
Mexican 58-14 f By Mail Postpaid 
Dixie Triumph.. .) 85c. . .$1.35. . . 2.40 
