Page 4 
T. W. Wood & Sons 
High Germination. Ceresan Treated Free to Produce 
Better Stands of More Vigorous Plants. 
DO NOT BUY UNTREATED COTTON SEED 
Wood’s Seed Cotton Grown at the Top of the Cotton Belt, Matures 
Two Weeks Earlier, Beating the Boll Weevil. 
Plant 45 pounds of treated seed per acre in 3-foot rows. Apply 500 
to 600 pounds per acre of WOOD’S STANDARD 4-12-4 FERTILIZER. 
WOOD’S INGOLD 
1 3/32-inch staple, 650 pounds of lint, 1,800 pounds 
seed cotton per acre in a Clemson, S. C., test, and 
one of 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 a temperature so low fifty other 
varieties could not live. 
The only variety to average 500 pounds of lint 
cotton per acre in the six-year Virginia State test; 
highest ginning per cent; 64 bolls per pound and first 
to mature. Larger bolls than Cleveland or Mexican 
Big Boll. Open wide, but does not shed out, even if 
not picked until February. Two weeks earlier than 
most varieties, maturing before boll weevil damage. 
Does well on any soil not wilt infested; 40% lint. 
CERTIFIED FARM RELIEF 5 
NORTH CAROLINA COTTON TEST 
UPPER COASTAL PLAIN EXPERIMENT STATION, 
ROCKY MOUNT, N. C., 1938 
Lbs. Lint Per Cent Per Cent Open 
Variety Per Acre Flint 1st Picking 
D. & P. L. 11-A. 545 42 72 
Farm Relief 5 . 515 39 39 
Coker 100 . 507 37 74 
Clevewilt 7 . 489 37 45 
Carolina Foster. 473 36 74 
Ambassador . 439 35 70 
Certified Coker 100 
1 1/16 to lj/s-inch Strong Staple; 37% Lint; 7 to 10 Days 
Earlier Than Farm Relief and Outyields it on Good Land. 
One of the heaviest yielding cottons on non-wilt land. 
Has made high yields in ten state experiment station tests, 
probably due to escaping boll weevil damage by its extreme 
earliness; semi-dwarf with small leaves; thin, dark green 
foliage; symmetrical spreading, long, well-boiled branches; 
70 to 75 bolls per pound. Bolls slightly pointed, open wide; 
fluffs beautifully, yet storm-resistant. 
The difference when cotton is treated with Ceresan 
Certified Foundation D. & P. L. 11-A 
l/s-inch Staple; 41 to 43% Lint; Semi-Wilt Resistant. 
It is selected from a cross between Foster and Express. 
Because of its extreme earliness it is planted almost exclu¬ 
sively in the northern section of the Cotton Belt in Tennes¬ 
see, Kentucky and Missouri. Its medium size open weed and 
earliness helps it escape boll weevil damage. It is easily 
picked, yet storm resistant. In the 1937 South Carolina test 
it yielded 728 pounds of lint per acre, considerably higher 
than any other variety. It made the highest yield and money 
value in N. C., Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas and 
Texas State Experiment Station tests. Seed is delinted. 
Certified Mexican Big Boll 128-6 
1 / c -inch Staple; 38% Lint. Highest Yield Most 
North Carolina Tests. 
Developed by the North Carolina Experiment Station, 
who recommend it for the Piedmont Section. 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. 
One of the fields producing our D. & P. L. 11-A Cotton Seed on the 
Delta and Pine Land Farm, where 10,000 acres of this variety aver¬ 
aged 650 pounds of lint cotton per acre for 3 years, with 1 !/ 8 inch staple 
Certified Dixie Triumph 25 Wilt-Resistant 
1 l/16-inch Staple; 38% Lint. Highest Yielding, Wilt-Resistant Cotton 
It yielded 2,843 pounds of seed cotton per acre—the highest yield ever made at 
the Florence, S. C., Experiment Station, making the highest 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. Best staple (1% inch) and smallest 
number bolls per pound (63) in the Virginia test. Large bolls; five locks; easily picked. 
WOOD’S STANDARD FERTILIZERS for Bumper Crops 
1 l/16-inch staple, 40.8% lint, 1,686 pounds seed 
cotton, 680 pounds lint, and $105.00 per acre; highest 
yield and money value in a North Carolina test 
2,562 pounds of seed cotton per acre in a Pee Dee, 
S. C., test; highest yield and largest first picking in 
the Early Poison test. It made the first bale mar¬ 
keted in Wayne County, N. C., for five successive 
years. Five locks per boll; bP, round bolls, 68 
per pourd; 6 to 10 bolls per limb. Easy to pick; 
bolls open wide, but don’t shed. Free from black 
seed; open type, thin foliage. 
Prices F. O. B. Richmond. 
25 lbs. 
50 lbs. 
100 lbs. 
200 lbs. 
Ton 
WOOD’S STANDARD CORN 2-12-4. 
.$ .40 
$ .75 
$1.40 
$2.50 
$23.50 
WOOD’S STANDARD VEGETABLE 4-8-4. . 
. .45 
.80 
1.45 
2.60 
25.00 
WOOD’S MARKET GARDEN 5-8-5. 
. .50 
.90 
1.55 
2.90 
28.00 
WOOD’S STANDARD POTATO 5-7-7 _ 
. .50 
.90 
1.55 
2.95 
28.50 
WOOD’S SUPER STANDARD 4-16-4. 
. .50 
.90 
1.65 
3.10 
30.00 
WOOD’S STANDARD 4-12-4. 
. .45 
.80 
1.50 
2.85 
27.50 
WOOD’S STANDARD BONE MEAL 3-22.. 
. .75 
1.15 
2.00 
, , , , 
38.00 
NITRATE OF SODA. 
. .60 
1.10 
1.80 
.... 
37.00 
16% ACID PHOSPHATE . 
.75 
.70 
1.10 
1.75 
1G.5C 
HYDRATED LIME, 10 lbs., 20c. 
• ... 
.00 
1.C0 
17.00 
VIGORO (Swift’s Plant Food) . 
. 1.50 
2.50 
4.00 
. . . . 
V. C. FAIRWAY 6-6-4 (100% Soluble) - 
. .75 
1.30 
2.50 
.... 
4 8.00 
HYPER-HUMUS, Cultivated Peat Humus.. 
. .50 
.85 
1.50 
2.75 
25 . 00 
WOOD’S HIGH GRADE SHEEP MANURE 
. .65 
1.15 
2.10 
4.10 
40.00 
G. P. M. PEAT MOSS, 175-lb. bale, $3.25- 
. .75 
1.35 
2.45 
10 bales 
31.50 
A Boll of Wood’s Certified Farm Relief 5 
WOOD’S TREATED COTTON SEED 
