"TRUMBULL" Wheat 
Beardless. Chaff — white. Grain — medium size, red, hard. 
Ripens early. Straw — long and stiff. Sow IV2 fo 
13/4 bushels per acre. 
A good dependable wheat that holds a local record for heavy yield — 51)^ 
bushels per acre; 1135 bushels from 22 acres. Bred in Ohio, from a strain 
of the old Fultz wheat. Used in all eastern states. 
Grows a nice uniform stand — tall straw that ably carries its load of grain. 
It has made good yields of both straw and grain. It should please you. 
"LANCASTER-FULCASTER" Wheat 
Bearded. Chaff — white. Grain — hard, large, dark red. 
Straw — stiff, long. Ripens early. Sow 1 % bushels per acre. 
An old reliable bearded wheat that does well in most any soil, gives good 
yields even in the “off” years. Good size, plump, hard grain. Good stools, 
stiff straw, hardy. Can be depended on for a satisfactory crop of grain and 
straw year after year. 
— What Does New Hoffman Seed Cost? — 
Suppose you plant 18 acres to wheat. That will take 27 
bushels of Hoffman “Leap’s Prolific” seed. (Not more — 
that’s enough of this extra-graded, extra-stooling seed). 
See Price-List — figure the cost. 
Your 18 acres would have taken about 40 bushels of your 
own wheat (before cleaned). . . . Sell that 40 bushels to 
your mill. The money it brings you will go a long way 
toward paying for the new seed. . . . You’ll soon find out 
that your total cost — freight paid, figures to only around 
70c an acre! 
Next harvest you’ll have many more bushels of wheat to 
sell ... it has been proven thousands of times these 40 years. 
. . . Each 70c now will mean $5, $8, or maybe $10 to you 
next harvest! 
This is no fairy-story . . . it’s a fact! Every year more 
and more people are experiencing it. They buy new Hoffman 
Seed for every wheat-acre they put out . . . because it pays 
them! 
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