Jloffman's. 
Valuable Varieties Through Many Years 
O 
KJ 
“EXTRA EARLY CLARAGE” 
Produces crops of good hard corn in Northern sections. Is 
really dependable as an early variety. If you’ve tried the 
others unsuccessfully, trust this one. The ear is of nice type, 
rich golden color. D. Lenker, Northumberland County, Pa., 
reported 170 bushels ear corn to the acre from "Early Clarage." 
“We husked around 150 bush¬ 
els from two acres of your 
Extra Early Clarage Corn, 
and many more bushels were 
left on the stalks that went 
into the silo. Produces lots 
of ears, and makes good corn 
for silage purposes .”—Irving 
E. Skinner, Mohawk, N. Y. 
"RED COB WHITE ENSILAGE" 
HI 
Ul 
V* 
Special Virginia-grown ensilage corn that produces sweet, 
tender, juicy feed. Big tonnage producer, stalks have short 
joints, plenty of leaves. It grows a white corn on a red cob. 
Gives good hard ears in long seasons. You won’t get ears 
from this corn in the North. 
“GOLDEN QUEEN” 
Rich yellow corn, high in feed value, good-sized ears with 
nice even rows. Grain is medium sized. This is a good show 
corn that matures in mid-season and is quite popular in South¬ 
eastern Pennsylvania. While it has tall, well-leafed fodder, 
it won’t produce matured ears in the Northern counties. 
“8-ROW YELLOW FLINT” 
Grow this corn where your season is too short for the stand¬ 
ards—in higher or colder sections you’ll find it profitable. 
Eight rows of yellow grains to ears which run 9 to 11 inches 
long—often two ears to a stalk. If you like to grow "Flint’' 
corn, here is a good producer. 
Runs 
acre f 
ear 
Red Cob 
for four 
much, 
the 
fine 
“I bought your Golden Queen 
seed corn and am very well 
pleased with it. I had a real 
nice crop despite the dry sea¬ 
son .”—Howard W. Burtner, 
Keedvsville, Md. 
These twins look mighty 
proud of their daddy's corn. 
And well they should be, for 
those ears came from another 
set of twins you'll find on the 
farms of a great many Hoff¬ 
man customers — we mean 
Good Seed Corn—Good Corn 
Crops. They go together! 
36 
