66 
T. W. WOOD &® SONS 
- RICHMOND, 
- SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 
VIRGUNIA 

WOOD'S TREATED COTTON 
Ceresan Treated to produce better stands of more vigorous plants. 
S. C. Expt. Station: “Seed treatment al- 
lows earlier planting, hastens maturity, pro- 
duces many more plants and yields 430 
pounds more per acre than untreated seed, 
or 28% increase.” N. C. Expt. Sta.: ‘“‘Treat- 
ing cotton seed increased returns $21.56 per 
acre, 2% times aS many plants came up as 
untreated seed. It avoids disease and plant- 
ing over.”’ 
Pra. 30 lbs. of treated seed per acre in 
38-foot rows when the ground warms. Ap- 
ply 600 Ibs. Wood’s Standard’ 4-12-4 Ferti- 
lizer. Our seeds are grown at the top of the 
page belt, mature earlier, beating the boll 
weevil. 
mT = 
: 1940 N. C. TEST : 
: North Carolina Lbs. Lint Lint ! 
: Coastal Plain PerAcre % ! 
5 Deltapiney 12. ai...) sliaaes eee od: 44 4 
5 @okersudein= lad cae niet 735 39 5 
= Cokers 4-in-1 38-5.......... 722 46 « 
a White Golds2-Ai so sac crores 688 38 5 
» Cleveland Wilt-Resistanft 1. 686 40 8 
s Cokersi4-imqte 3 cris ato lsiereiese ers 669 388 
w COKE LOO 03 sen. eecyaim eaokoreiediags 659 A0t Ts 
» Carolina Big Boll 4......... 658 39 5 
4 New S. & C. Early Wilt 2... (656 Bele ty 
8 COKER 10 0038-2 Sir. ape hereto. om OOe 39 4 
a Cokers2 00H ois Stasis tre eee 627 40 & 
= Coker-Clevewilt 7-2 ........ 606 387 8 
S Mexican 8/18 2..c.s1acrereieniet ¢ 585 38 of 
© GoOkeri10042 ssa. wees 579 88 & 
HEEL ELLLELLLOL LLL ECE CECE CELE C LEPC Err Eee rer E rr rrr 

“Wood’s 
i 
NOT POSTPAID 
Bus.= 30 lbs. POSTPAID 
Ceresan Treated 14 Bus. 
PRICE 
Deltapine 12 .......... 
Wood’s Ingold ............  1.25.... 2.15 
Farm Rellef 4. 6¢:...0%.... 1:20.... 2.06 
Certified Farm Relief 4.... 1.30.... 2.25 
Coker 4-In-1 Wilt-Resistant 1.20.... 2.05 
Mexican Big Boll 58-14..... 1.20.... 2.05 
Dixie Triumph 25 Wilt- 
Resistant Ji43/0 082.40. 135 ember ooo 
Coker l00s225575. tt. Se ieee 25). is 285 
Certified Coker 100-2....... 1535.5. . 2230 
Certified Coker 200-1..... Pee T35 . ike.35 
Ingold made 24 bales on 20 acres.”—W.A. Burnette, Martin, N.C. 
Bus.|'4 Bus. Bus. 
ea pe GletO 2, pS.05.|$1.25. $2150. ¢ 
A worthy successor to 
DELTAPINE 12 the famous D. & P. L. 
11-A. It averaged 8% more lint for 4 years, 
better lint turnout, more disease resistant, 
as good staple, equal in spinning value. It 
has made highest yields in experiment sta- 
tion tests throughout the Cotton Belt, in- 
eluding the 1940 N. C. Coastal test, with 
44.13% lint and 781 lbs. lint. per acre to 627 
for Coker 200, 659 for Coker 100-3, and 579 
Ibs. for Coker 100-2. It has 1% inch uniform 
staple of good character and high-grade, 
easy to pick, good plant type, wide adapta- 
tion, storm and disease resistant, outyield- 
ing all cottons on wilt land. Seed is very 
small, delinted and treated. Plants 144 more 
acreage than other cottons. 
For 29 years the D. & P. L. farms of 52,000 
acres have been one of the world’s largest 
cotton producers and breeders.. We are ex- 
clusive agents for their seed. They have al- 
ready sold out of their 1940 seed crop. 
Deltapine is very prolific. Its extreme 
earliness and open weed helps it escape boll 
weevil damage. It requires fewer bolls to 
make a pound of lint than most varieties. 
It is used on more farms than any other cot- 
ton, almost exclusively west of the Blue 
Ridge. Rapidly replacing other varieties in 
Carolina and Virginia. 
In Scotland Co., N. C., it produced 911 lbs. 
of lint per acre, first picking 570 lbs., for Jim 
Taylor, and nearly 30 bales on about 20 acres 
for Wm. Strother, 
to mature. 
i 
| 
| 
| 
a tee. Se 
Wood's Ingold 
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 germi- 
nate and thrive at temperatures so low fifty other varie- 
ties 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 the first 
Large bolls; open wide, but do not shed out, 
- even if not picked until February. Earlier.than most varie- 
ties, maturing before boll weevil damage. 
any soil not wilt infested; 40% lint. 
Certified Coker 200-1 
form type, thinner foliage, 
spacing on fertile non-wilt soil. 
thin foliage, quick fruitage. 
fluffs beautifully, storm and weather resistant. 
Certified Coker 100-2 
Relief and outyields it on medium or good land. One of 
the heaviest yielding cottons on non-wilt land, due to es- 
eaping boll weevil damage by its extreme earliness; thin, 
dark green foliage. 
fluffs beautifully, yet storm-resistant. 
Certified Farm Relief 4™ aN. c. testit made 1 1/16-inch 


Deltapine Cotton on the D, & P. L. farms 
in August, where it averaged 631.5 lbs. lint 
per acre for 5 years on 10,000 acres. 
13/32-inch staple, 650 pounds of lint, 
1,800 pounds seed cctton per acre in a 
Does well on 
1144-inch staple, 38% lint, a new 
Coker 100-2 selection, more uni- 
earlier. Superior for close 
Small stalks and leaves, 
75 bolls per lb. Open wide, 
13/32-inch strong staple; 38% 
lint; 10 days earlier than Farm. 
Bolls slightly pointed, open wide; | 
staple, 40.8% lint, 1.666 lbs. seed 
cotton, 680 pounds lint, and $105.00 per acre; highest yield 
and money value. 2,562 lbs. seed cotton per acre in a Pee 
Dee, S. C., test; highest yield’and largest first picking in 
Early Poison test; first bale marketed in Wayne Co., N. C., 
for 5 years. 5 locks per boll; big, round bolls, 68 per lb.; 6 to 
500-Lh.., 
100 Lbs. Lots 
- $7.10... . $6.75: 
.80., 1.40.... 4.25.... 4.00 
7S 71:30 3.640 4.005 om 3.75) 
85.. 1.50.....4.50.... 4.25) 
275 So 1:30) 40005 ce uaa 
TSE Oris 400025,.. .. ATS 
Expt. Sta. for Piedmont. 
.90.. 1.60.... 5.00.... 4.75 
80: ; 1:40...) °4.25<... 4.00 J 
90 °.'1.557.'5.4,75.) 2. 4.50 a8 20k 
590. 160. O00. ATS 
10 bolls per limb. Easy to pick; bolls open wide, doesn’t 
shed; open type, thin foliage. N. J. Jenkins, Montgomery 
Co., Ala., says: “It yielded over 2 bales per acre and made 
money for me when others lost.” 
Coker 4-In-1 Wilt-Resistant ee of the heaviest yield- 
and earliest wilt- 
resistant cottons. In a Ga. Exp. Sta. test it had the long- 
est staple, 11/16 inches, 86% lint, and yielded 526 lbs. lint 
and 1,470 lbs. seed cotton per acre to 1,321 lbs. for Coker 
100 and 1,237 lbs. for Farm Relief 5. Thin foliage. 
CERTIFIED MEXICAN BIG BOL 58-14—Grown from cer- 
tified seed, 11/16-inch staple. 
38% lint. Bred by N. C. 
Early; large bolls, 55 to lb. 5 
locks; easy to pick; storm resistant; short open stalk. 
DIXIE TRIUMPH 25 WILT-RESISTANT—1 1/6inch staple; 
Highest yielding absolutely wilt-resistant cot- 
ton in N. ©, tests. Yielded 2,843 lbs. seed cotton per acre, 
highest, Florence, S. C. 
SURE NORE RE REAR EERE RR ARORA R ERR GY RRR REE SB REA RAR EOE ATIFRPACL TAME SCRAPE SRAR RO AIAACI AIT ARS SERRE RRR 
