YES GEORGE, AND IT'LL MAKE 
40 BUSHELS TO THE ACRE 
ANYHOW/ 
REDHART 
No-3 
LEAPS 
PROLtFIC 
Photo top left taken in mid-April. David R. Coker explains difference 
in earliness—both varieties planted same date. George Gilmore’s wheat, 
shown above, averages 62 pounds per bushel in spite of the drouth. 
MR. ADAMS, THIS REDHART N0.3 
WHEAT HAS’NT HAD A DROP OF 
.RAIN FOR SEVEN WEEKS / 
GLAD YOU RECOMMENDED 
COKER'S REDHART NO. 3 
MR.SMITH* IT'S EXTRA EARLY 
AND A GOOD YLELDER. 
V 
YES! AND IT YIELDS 
10* MORE HIGH 
QUALITY FLOUR 
THAN THE AVERAGE 
COKER’S REDHART STRAIN 3 WHEAT 
A Safe Wheat for the South 
\7"OU Southern Farmers want a wheat first of all that makes wheat. Second, 
I you want a wheat that is safe and reliable. Third, you want a wheat that 
makes high quality flour. 
We have it—Redhart Strain 3, which has proven its ability to answer these 
needs. 
1. A 40-acre field on our farms (in 1936) averaged better than 29 bushels— 
planted Vz bushel seed per acre—no rain during last month and a half before 
harvesting. Wheat weighs 69 pounds per settled struck bushel. 
2. “It’s in the bag” sooner—extra early, stiff strawed, storm resistant and 
highly resistant to loose smut. 
3. According to what many reliable flour millers have told us, ordinary wheat 
averages 65% flour and Redhart Strain 3, 72%. It’s good and hard and makes 
fine white high quality flour. 
DESCRIPTION 
PLANT—Erect in type, broad leafed, good stooling, 3" shorter than Strain 1. 
STRAW—Stiff, storm resistant. 
HEADS—Beardless, erect, square with 4 full rows of grain; cream to yellow 
glumes that fit snugly over grains, and reduce loss from shattering. 
SEASON—Earliest (8 to 10 days earlier than Redhart Strain 1, escaping most 
rust injury). 
GRAINS—Plump, horny, high gluten content, high milling value. 
YIELD—Highest. 
SMUT RESISTANCE—Highly resistant to loose smut. 
PRICES 
$3.00 per bushel, $2.75 in ten-bushel lots, $2.50 per bushel in fifty-bushel lots. 
F.O.B. Hartsville, S. C. 
I ji- 
