
WHEREVER YOU FARM 
m Flat Country 
-- Folling Ground 
-.- feiwer Bottom 
oe - Or Upland 
It does make a difference where your farm 
is located. Soils can be so different. Seasons 
even more so. If your farm is hilly, you’re 
concerned with crops that root well, that 
stand up in the wind. If you have bottom 
land, you may have to figure on excessive 
wetness. Questions, such as higher fertility, 
even acid soils, have to be reckoned with. 
Your own farm has its own problems, and 
you know that the character and type of seeds 
you plant, tied up with intelligent farming, 
will determine the crops you get. 
One big step toward licking these prob- 
lems is picking the right seed, to produce 
crops that will fill your barn. And that’s 
exactly what Hoffman has been helping farm- 
ers do for 42 years. We've been piling up 
experience, supplying the right seed for farm- 
ers on flat land, on rolling land, on river 
bottom and upland. Effort has been confined 
to about a dozen States, learning the different 
seeds which do best on the hills of New 
York as compared to the hills of Pennsyl- 
vania or West Virginia and in their valleys, 
too. Trying and introducing emergency crops 
adapted to these various sections. Checking 
and rechecking actual results. All so that 
you may know which will do best in your 
locality, on your land. 
It’s natural that all this experience long 
ago taught us to think of seeds in terms of 

