fl nil" Coker -wads 11 
Plant: Semi-dwarf, open, 1 to 3 vegetative branches, 
well spaced fruiting branches. 
Foliage: Thinnest of the Wilds Strains. 
Season: Very early. 
Bolls: Round ovate, slightly pointed, 65 to 70 to pound. 
Open wide, fluff beautifully; storm resistant; looks 
and picks like short cotton. 
Lint Length: 1%" to 1^" under good conditions. 
Production: Excellent. 
Lint Per Cent: 33 to 35%. 
Character: Best—strong—silky. 
In Wilds 11, we have to offer the best long staple 
cotton that we have ever bred, tested or introduced. 
It traces its ancestry back to the now famous Wilds 8 
line but is as superior to Wilds 8 as the 8 was to the 
previous Wilds strains. It sets a crop quicker than any 
variety tested. 
708 lbs. Lint—$154.50 Value 
In the 1938 test it produced 2,076 pounds seed cot¬ 
ton and 708 pounds of lint per acre and led the test 
in money value with $154.50 per acre, the next highest 
being $136.75. 
It is superior in earliness, yield, staple, weather 
resistance and money value to all other Wilds strains. 
PRICES: $12.50 per 100-lb bag; $200 per ton, f.o.b. 
Hartsville, S. C., and Memphis, Tenn. All seed 
are treated with Ceresan. Orders accepted 
subject to crop out-turn and germination. 
Coker-Wilds 10 
Coker-Wilds 10 is the earliest maturing and thinnest 
foliaged of all Wilds strains except Wilds 11. The staple 
averaging under good conditions l-%" to l-Vz" is the 
same as Wilds 9 and ^ 2 " to He" longer than Strain 8. 
Its flat topped, medium open type and semi-dwarf stalk 
combine to make it an excellent cotton for fertile soils. 
See Price List. 
Coker-Wilds 11. Planted April 14th—Photo July 29th. 
Note dwarf type, large bolls and heavy fruitage. 
