Coker’s Pedigreed 
Gold Dollar 
Strain 13 
Our Gold Dollar Strain 13 is very similar in type, 
quality and habits of growth to the recent strains which 
we have offered. This variety has been inbred for more 
than a dozen generations in order to maintain and improve 
the good qualities of Gold Dollar and to furnish our cus- 
tomers with a dependable, uniform, widely adaptable 
cigarette tobacco. 
Strain 18 comes from the most outstanding plants of 
the parent strain which have proven their superiority 
through the careful analysis and scientific tests of our 
tobacco experts. It is of remarkable uniformity, which 
results in a low percentage of trash or waste. It is perhaps 
the most widely planted variety in the flue-cured area 
extending from Southern Virginia to Northern Florida, 
which is evidence of the results it is giving. 
DESCRIPTION 
Weight: Among the best of high quality cigarette types. 
Curing: Easy to cure, very few blue butts. 
Texture: Excellent. 
Stalk: Medium to tall; leaves well spaced, admitting maxi- 
mum sunlight and insuring uniform ripening. 
Leaf: Long, rather broad; fills out to a good tip. 
Uniformity: Probably the most outstanding characteristic 
of this tobacco. Resulting from long years of inbreed- 
ing and selection, Gold Dollar Strain 13 is remarkably 
uniform in size and shape of leaf, height of plant and 
time of ripening. 
Waste or Trash: Minimum, less than 10% with fair sea- 
sons and proper handling. 
Adaptability: Will give good results on practically every 
type of tobacco soil in the flue-cured belt from Vir- 
ginia to Florida. 
Gathering: Can be left longer in the field after yellowing 
with less burning than many other varieties. 
Packing: Bulks down with less danger of “reddening”’ 
than most other varieties. 
PRICES: $1.00 per oz., $7.00 per half pound; $13.00 per 
pound, postpaid. 
CAUTION: Growers of Coker’s Mammoth Gold, Gold 
Dollar, Yellow Mammoth and Jamaica Wrapper are cau- 
tioned to permit these varieties to ripen fully before 
gathering. When the tobacco leaf is fully ripe and ready 
to pull, all of the veins and fibers will show a white or 
transparent color when the leaf is examined looking toward 
the sun. These varieties usually require a slightly longer 
yellowing period during the process of curing. 
Top: Coker’s Gold Dollar tobacco growing in our 1942 
Tobacco Variety Test. This plot averaged $691.63 per acre. 
Bottom: C. F. Price, successful farmer of Marion County, S. C., 
and his tenant, Abraham Kennedy, are well pleased with their 
sales ticket on this lot of Gold Dollar tobacco. 

