^Jioffmans 
★ 58 “Want your seed as the corn 
and everything I ever got from 
you did fine. Some of the men here 
laugh at me paying your price. But I 
notice they want some of the corn, 
etc., to seed for themselves the next 
year.” (Fall, 1934.) 
A. McClelland, 
Toronto, Ohio 
WHY A SI LO — 
if you don’t get 
the corn to fill it? 
Here are five kinds that have been 
doing the silo-filling job in fine 
shape: 
“Lancaster County Sure Crop” 
“Eureka Ensilage” 
“Long’s Champion Yellow” 
“Red Cob White Ensilage” 
“Johnson County White” 
“WHITE CAP YELLOW DENT” CORN 
One of the most successful varieties on our list. Ears are white, 
but when shelled the sides of the grain show a good healthy yellow. 
A big yielder. Gives plenty of shelled corn. Rows seed closely on 
cob. Compact ears. Cob not large. Fourteen to eighteen rows to 
the ear. Fairly large grains. Fong and wide. 
DOES WELL ON POOR SOILS 
Can be planted on rich soils, but will do better than most corns 
on soils of average fertility. 
Medium early variety. Will mature in the southern sections of 
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio and all southern states except in 
mountainous sections. Each stalk produces good ears. 
FAMOUS PRIZE-WINNING STRAIN 
This corn has won many first prizes at various local and national 
shows. You will not be disappointed in this "White Cap Yellow 
Dent.” It is one of our most valuable corns. 
★ 59 “ White Cap Yellow Dent Corn—surpassed any 
other corn we have ever had, both as to quality 
and yield.” 
J. H. Colkitt 8C Son, 
Bordentown, N. J. 
“LONG'S CHAMPION YELLOW” 
A fine big-eared yellow corn. This is just the corn for those in 
search of large-eared, deep-grained varieties. Such corns require 
richer land, more careful culture, and a longer season than do 
smaller-eared sorts. 
If you have good ground, and put on enough stuff to feed it 
well—you can do something with this corn! If you will fertilize 
—prepare the land well—see that there is a full, even stand—and 
cultivate after you have the stand, you will grow a real crop! This 
variety has yielded 100 bu. shelled corn per acre. A good ear is 
truly a mass of corn. This corn is too late to mature good, hard corn 
in the more northerly sections, but is grown right here in Lancaster 
County season after season. 
“LONG’S CHAMPION” FOR THE SILO 
Fast becoming a favorite ensilage corn. Very popular in the 
Northern and New England States especially. Rich in feeding 
value. Produces extra heavy tonnage. Is preferred by many to 
the regular silage varieties. 
“EARLY LEAMING” CORN 
A very early yellow corn. Small ears. Good-sized grains. Cobs 
low down on stalk. A handsome, rich golden yellow corn—unsur¬ 
passed in color. Does well in northern Pennsylvania and in sec¬ 
tions of high altitude. 
“EUREKA ENSILAGE” CORN 
This is special Silage Corn. Our sales of "Eureka” are getting 
heavier each year. It is today the most popular straight ensilage 
variety on this list. Grows to great height and is very leafy. A 
favorite variety in many sections where the Silo must provide feed 
for an extra long time. "Eureka” surely gives tonnage. It is used 
on many hundreds of dairy farms, and known for its ability to 
produce a large quantity of ensilage. Ears will not mature in Penn¬ 
sylvania, except in very favorable seasons, but the folks using 
"Eureka” don’t want ears—they want stalk and leaves—and they 
surely do get them when planting this favorite variety. 
