COKER 200 
STRAIN 4 
A Cotton With Extra Early Maturity, Thin 
Foliage, Small Stalk Growth Best Suited 
For Planting On Fertile Soils. 
Coker 200, due to its extreme earliness, 
thin foliage and small stalk growth, has few 
equals for planting on fertile soils or for 
close planting on average soils not infested 
with fusarium wilt. It has proven well suited 
for those growers with rich soils near the 
coast where weed growth and weevil con- 
trol is a problem and its extra early matur- 
ity is especially beneficial along the northern 
limits of the cotton belt where the growing 
season is short. 
Coker 200 Strain 4 has made a greater 
production of both seed cotton and lint than 
preceding strains in our cotton variety tests 
—it averages 114,” or longer staple under 
good conditions and a lint turnout of from 
38% to 40%. The leaves are small and 
deeply lobed and the plant is determinate, 
open and of spreading type. The bolls are of 
medium size, averaging 70 to 75 to the 
pound. 
Description 
PLANT: Small, determinate, very open, symmetrical 
spreading, 2 to 4 low set vegetative branches 
and well spaced fruiting branches. 
FOLIAGE: Very thin, leaves small, deeply lobed. 
SEASON: Very early. 
BOLLS: Medium, 70 to 75 to pound, open very wide, 
fluff beautifully, storm resistant. 
LINT LENGTH: 1-1/16” to 1%” under good con- 
ditions. 
LINT PER CENT: 38 to 40%. 
CHARACTER: Excellent, uniform, strong, full 
bodied. 
PRODUCTION: Excellent. 
PRICES: $12.50 per 100 pound bag, $220 per ton, 
f.0.b. Hartsville, S. C., and Memphis, Tenn. 
All seed treated with Ceresan. 
HOW GROWING CONDITIONS AFFECT YOUR 
COTTON—tThe length, percentage of lint and boll 
size of every variety of cotton will vary under vary- 
ing conditions of soil fertility, culture and rainfall. 
Our descriptions are based on the actual records 
that our cottons have produced in our tests, and 
they will show the same characteristics elsewhere 
under the same conditions. Drought or poor condi- 
tions will result in a shorter staple, reduced yields 
and smaller bolls—no matter what variety is planted. 
7 
