GROWERS PLEASED WITH COKER’S GOLDEN CURE 
Mr. Graham Monroe, right, and Henry Max- 
well, left, stand in a field of Golden Cure 
planted on the farms of the Johnson Co. of 
Raeford, N. C. ““We are very well pleased with 
Golden Cure tobacco,” writes Miss Agnes M. 
Johnson of the Johnson Company. “It is one 
of the best tobaccos we’ve ever planted.’ On 
7 acres of Golden Cure, the yield was approxi- 
mately 2,000 pounds per acre which sold for 
$1160.00 per acre. 
This early-season view of a 3.7-acre crop of Golden Cure at 
Moultrie, Ga., grown by Ralph Powell, right, produced 1977 pounds 
per acre which sold for an average of 60.3 cents per pound. Shown 
wae Mr. Powell is Robert Stalling of the Trimble Seed Company of 
oultrie. 
Raleigh A. Holt, successful farmer 
of Nesmith, S. C., displays a leaf 
of Golden Cure grown on his farm 
in Williamsburg County. On 21.1 
acres of Golden Cure, Mr. Holt pro- 
duced over 45,000 pounds of tobacco 
which sold for in excess of $24,800. 
“T don’t believe there’s any tobacco 
grown that will make as much 
money as Golden Cure,” he writes. 
“T like its curing qualities, the 
large number of leaves on each 
stalk, and because it doesn’t sucker 
as badly as many varieties.” Mr. 
Holt’s 1953 crop grew to uniform 
tall height as shown in picture on 
page 4. 
[6] 
