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PUNTED 
JUNE-I2m 
Coker 100 PROVES Its Worth In Many Sections 
Prominent Cotton Factor Reports . . . 
“We planted a trial plot of Coker-100 in 1936. 
The bolls are large and easy to pick. It is a very 
early variety—we planted May 11th and had bloom 
July 1st. You have in this cotton a variety of 
exceptional merit.” 
DILLARD & COFFIN, 
Dec. 22, 1936. Memphis, Tenn. 
Well Known Banker and Planter Says . . . 
“My test plot of Coker-100 cotton last season was 
very satisfactory . . . picked slightly more than 
3,000 lbs. seed cotton from one acre.” 
SAM E. RAGLAND, 
First National Bank, 
Dec. 22, 1936. Memphis, Tenn. 
Stands First in S. C. Tests at Florence and Clemson 
In the Pee Dee Experiment Station Test at 
Florence, S. C., in 1935, Coker-100 led the test of 
31 varieties with a yield of 1809.5 lbs. seed cotton— 
picking out 1171.7 lbs. by August 20th. In the 
Clemson College Test it led in both pounds of seed 
cotton and money value per acre. 
Leads N. C. Tests . . . 
In Tests conducted by N. C. Experiment Station 
at Statesville, Goldsboro, Woodville and Woodard, 
in 1935, Coker-100 (breeding No. 33-12) led all 
varieties with an average yield of 633 lbs. lint per 
acre, classed 1 % 2 " and turned out 38.7% lint. 
Mississippi Banker and Planter Reports . . . 
“Your Coker-100 has proved satisfactory. Does 
not fall out of bolls during late storms like the 
Delfos varieties. Will increase our acreage in this 
cotton materially the coming season.” 
E. L. ANDERSON, 
King & Anderson, Inc., 
Dec. 24, 1936. Clarksdale, Miss. 
A Fine Showing in the Delta . . . 
“With very little rain after July 3rd, a crop of 
1135 acres at Tribbett, Miss., produced 1335 500-lb. 
bales, averaging slightly less than l 1 /^" staple. The 
first thousand bales ginned turned out 35.8% lint 
and the entire crop sold for more than 200 points 
premium.” 
B. R. (“Uncle Bob”) Smith Reports on Test . . . 
“I think Coker-100 is a wonderful cotton. My 
small test plot yielded at the rate of 865 lbs. lint 
per acre, with hardly a stalk of cotton up before 
Tune 15th.” 
B. R. SMITH, 
Dec. 1. 1936. Johnston, S. C. 
Shows Up Well in Georgia . . . 
Coker-100 ranked first in the 1935 Georgia Variety 
Test at Athens over thirty-six other varieties with 
a yield of 2107 lbs. seed cotton per acre. 
