COKER 100 36-3 
A New Coker 100 Cotton With a Longer Staple 
Coker 100 36-3 will fill the demand for a slightly 
longer cotton, having all the good qualities of the 
Coker 100 variety. It has produced more pounds of 
lint per acre than Coker 100 Strain 1 in spite of 
the fact that it averages % 2 " to Ho" longer staple 
and has yielded slightly less than Coker 100 
Strain 2. 
Coker 100 36-3 is taller, more erect and open 
growing, thinner foliaged and earlier than Coker 
100 Strain 1. Its vigor enables it to get off to a 
quick start and set and mature an early crop. 
During 1938, Coker 100 36-3 ranked high in 
money value per acre in our Variety Tests, pro¬ 
duced 904.7 lbs. of lint per acre with an average 
staple of l-Vs" in the Pee Dee Experiment Station 
test at Florence, S. C., and led all varieties in pounds 
of seed cotton per acre in a test conducted by the 
General American Farms Company at Bragg City, 
Missouri. This cotton is especially recommended for 
the Deltas of Mississippi and Arkansas, the Red 
River Valley of Louisiana, the Northern Edges of 
the cotton belt and on all good cotton lands not 
infested with wilt, where extra staple, earliness and 
heavy yield, is desired. 
COKER 100 
36-3 
DESCRIPTION 
Plant: Erect; semi-determinate; 2 
to 4 vegetative branches and well 
spaced, more erect, heavily boiled 
fruiting branches. 
Foliage: Very thin; leaves small. 
Season: Very early. 
Bolls: Medium, 70 to 80 to pound; 
round ovate, slightly pointed, 
open very wide; fluff beautifully; 
storm resistant. 
PRICES: $12.50 per 100-tb bag; 
Lint Length: l-% 2 " under good 
conditions. 
Lint Per Cent: 36 to 38%. 
Lint Character: Most excellent; 
uniform; strong. 
Production: Among the best. 
No. Seed Per Bushel: Approxi¬ 
mately 129,000. 
$200 per ton, f.o.b. Hartsville, S. C., 
Atlanta, Ga., and Memphis, Tenn. All seed treated with Ceresan. 
Photo on left: Showing well developed bolls and open type of Coker 100 36-3. 
Photo below: Coker 100 36-3 in first year increase—1936, note wide, 
fluffy opening and storm resistance. 
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