Grown Right—Cured Right—Dependable 
It takes more than a cutter, a 
blower and a man to till a 
silo. . . . Let Hoffmans Quality 
Seed Corn work for you this 
summer. It will play a real 
part in your silo filling work. 
“Your Eureka Ensilage corn 
yielded very well last year 
and it was as tall as 16 feet. 
4 inches.”— Alan Day, Chat¬ 
ham. N. J. 
gan to 
cut 
much.”—/ 
Crawford, 
Yel- 
for me 
chance it 
it be- 
were 
it very 
Mt 
“Your Improved Learning 
Corn produced the most ears 
of any ensilage corn I ever 
planted. Germination was 
fine. It grew very fast. Stalks 
were stocky and stood up 
well.”— H. E. Palmer, Wayne 
County, Pa. 
“Your Eureka Ensilage proved 
very satisfactory. Planted four 
acres and filled a silo 12 x 40 
to the very top. Ears were 
well formed, and the silage is 
of the highest quality.”— L. 
L. Gadd, Centerville, Md. 
*JIoffman’s 
“LONG’S CHAMPION YELLOW” 
O. B. Shoemaker, Mullica Hill, N. J., reports that our "Long 
Champion,” planted beside his own corn, produced 20 more 
bushels per acre. We have other reports running as high as 
100 bushels of shelled corn per acre. . . . Not for poor soil. 
. . . But take good soil . . . feed it well, and "Long’s Cham¬ 
pion” will give you a crop you’ll be proud of! 
It’s a little too late for Northern sections, although we get 
good crops here in Lancaster County. It produces a big, 
smooth ear, yellow deep grains—and plenty of them. In 
Northern and New England States, it is a favorite for silage, 
producing heavy tonnage, rich in feeding value. In fact, 
many growers prefer it to the regular silage types. 
“IMPROVED LEAMING” 
Called rough and ready” by some folks because it is reliable 
for almost any soil. Surprising yields from poorer soils—fine 
results from well-drainea, fertile land. Grain is rich yellow, 
wedge-shaped and of good depth. The ear is well filled at 
both ends and between the rows. Red cob, medium size 14 
to 18 rows to the ear. Good for fodder because of numerous 
wide leaves and thick stalks, though not extra tall. 
“EARLY LEAMING” 
One of the earliest yellow corns, well adapted for higher 
locations. Small ears, small cobs with grains of good size, 
coming low on the stalk. 
“JOHNSON COUNTY WHITE” 
Late—good silage because of its heavy leafy growth—big 
tonnage. Good husking variety. Produces well on poorer soils. 
“EARLY BUTLER” 
This is the true type strain and our supply is limited, so if 
you rely on this for your early corn, don’t delay. We have 
good reports on it—J. A. Sutton, Warren County, Pa., 
husked 110 bushels from one measured acre. The ears aren’t 
large, but you’ll get a crop! If you live in Northern sections, 
you can rely on it. 
35 
SEED CORN 
