Page Four 
Coker’s Pedigreed FULGRAIN DATS 
A New, More Uniform Strain With 
Higher Yield Record 
BEST OF THE FULGRAINS 
In Coker’s Fulgrain Strain 6, we have 
been able to virtually eliminate the occa- 
sionally beards or awns which have been 
noted in earlier strains. It has made the 
best yield record of any Fulgrain oat we 
have ever bred or tested, and combines 
early maturity with a stiff, storm resistant 
straw and a high degree of resistance to 
leaf or crown rust. 
LONG AND WELL BALANCED HEADS 
Fulgrain Strain 6 is somewhat taller 
than Fulgrain Strains 4 and 5 and about 
90% as tall as Fulgrain Strain 3. The 
heads are long and well balanced and the 
grains are beautiful, plump, heavy and of 
high feeding value. 
In addition to its satisfactory showing 
in our increase fields and tests here, the 
parent strain of Fulgrain Strain 6 came 
second in the 1940 Delta Experiment Sta- 
tion Variety Test with a yield of slightly 
over 90 bushels per acre and led all varie- 
ties in the 1941 Variety Test of the North 
Louisiana Experiment Station at St. 
Joseph, La., with a yield of 93.5 bushels. 
UNIFORM IN TYPE 
As a result of the ten years of selection 
and testing which have gone into the 
breeding of this oat, it is remarkably uni- 

