★ CORN ★ 
“EXTRA EARLY CLARAGE” 
A NICE type ear, rich golden color. This 
seed was produced in Central Pennsyl¬ 
vania. It is a very good cropper, consid¬ 
ering that it isn’t the large, thick ear com¬ 
mon to so many of the heavy yielders. If 
you seek an early corn, and have been dis¬ 
appointed with others tried, we feel you 
can safely trust this "Extra Early Clarage.’’ 
It will provide quite a satisfactory crop of 
good hard corn well to the North. 
Above: Martin L. Shaffer, Bedford, Pa., 
says: ”I have used Hoffman's Seeds 
for 25 years. They were always as ad¬ 
vertised. When you work hard in pre¬ 
paring the land and go to the expense 
of fertilizer and lime, you must use 
good seeds to get good results.” 
See arrow below. 
Winner of Pennsyl¬ 
vania's First Corn 
Husking Champion¬ 
ship, Nov. G, 1937, 
Stanley Stauffer, 
Quarry ille, Lancaster 
County. 21.06 bu. of 
clean corn in 1 hr., 
20 min. Just about 
equaling the 1937 
National Champion's 
net amounf. 
^^RED COB WHITE ENSILAGE” 
This is a special ensilage Corn grown in 
Virginia. ... A white corn grown on a 
red cob. Very popular throughout the East 
and North. A New York State user wrote: 
"One 7-acre field of your 'Red Cob White 
Ensilage’ produced one-third more jodder 
than a 9-acre field of another variety.’’ 
This popular variety makes sweet, tender, juicy ensilage. 
Short joints, abundance of leaves, grows to a good height 
—leafy throughout, and yields an almost unbelievable ton¬ 
nage of just the kind of feed you would expect. 
"Red Cob White Ensilage’’ does well most anywhere. 
Won’t mature ears in the far North. In average to long 
seasons, makes considerable good hard grain. This is well- 
cleaned, sound, tested seed. . . . See Price List. 
