Insures Full Stands—Heavy Crops 
Hoffman't 
SEED CORN 
Silo-filling time on the farm of 
C. B. Allshouse, Wyominq 
County, Pa. 
• 
‘*1 planted your Long 
Champion Corn beside my 
own. Yours produced 20 
bushels more corn per acre 
than my own seed. It was 
almost all No. 1 corn, very 
little No. 2 .”—Oscar B. 
Shoemaker, Mullica Hill, 
N. 1. 
• 
Soy Bean 
Corn Silage 
Soy Beans are frequently 
planted with silo corn. Most 
experiments have shown it eco¬ 
nomical to grow the two in 
separate fields and mix them 
in the silo on the basis of three 
or four loads of corn to one of 
beans. The increase in the pro¬ 
tein would be very helpful foi 
your stock and would reduce 
the necessity of feeding quite 
as much high-protein feed. 
"LONG'S CHAMPION YELLOW" 
Fine, big, smooth ear . . . rich yellow . . . 
deep grain . . . very productive. If you 
have good ground, prepare it well and put 
on enough stuff to feed it well, then culti¬ 
vate properly, you can do something with 
this corn! It has yielded 100 bushels shelled 
corn per acre. 
Too late for maturing good hard corn in 
the more northern sections. But it grows 
fine here in Lancaster County season after 
season. . . . 
"Long’s Champion” for the silo. Widely 
used for silage, in the northern and New 
England States especially. Rich in feeding 
value. Produces extra-heavy tonnage. Pre¬ 
ferred by many to the regular silage types. 
"EUREKA ENSILAGE" 
A FAVORITE silage corn in many sec¬ 
tions. Virginia-grown seed. Very leafy— 
grows to a great height. If your silo must 
provide feed for an extra-long time, you 
will find that Eureka will supply it. Be¬ 
cause "Eureka” gives high tonnage, it is a 
favorite on hundreds of dairy farms. You 
will be unable to mature ears in northern 
sections, but for silage this is a variety that 
you can depend on. 
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