
Look at this multiplication 
of orders for 1940 over 1938 
—over 70 times. Evidence 
that Funk “G” Hybrid Corn 
is PROVING to farmers that it’s 
the corn to plant! 
“My ‘G’ Hybrid Corn was 
very good. One reason is, it 
stands up better; second rea- 
son is, because it has very 
few stalks that don’t have 
ears; third, it shells more 
corn per bushel; and fourth, 
it husks so easily.”—Thomas 
D. Logue, Cameron County, 
Pa. 
“I could not wish for better 
corn than the Hybrid I 
bought from you. It stood up 
under a severe northeastern 
storm. My other corn in the 
same field went down and 
was tangled so that it was a 
problem to cut. Your Hybrid 
stood straight enough to use 
a cutter. I expect to use all 
Hybrid next spring. The 
beetle damaged other corn, 
but did not bother my 
Hybrid. I praise the Funk 
‘G’ Hybrid whenever and 
wherever I am.”—Delbert 
McGuire, Kent County, Md. 
“Have a beautiful stand of 
Funk ‘G 7’ for husking and 
‘G 63’ for silo.”—Graydon 
Franklin, Bradford Co., Pa. 
“I planted three varieties of 
your Funk ‘G’ Hybrid Corn 
this spring and all with good 
results. The husking Hybrid 
yielded fine, no waste or 
moldy ends. Our own open- 
pollinated had several times 
as much waste as did the 
Hybrid. We had a late wet 
spring and an early wet fall, 
but the Hybrid matured good 
and made a fine crop. I will 
want some more next year as 

oe 
the corn not only yielded 
good, but husked easy and 
the fodder handled fine.”— 
John R. Patrick, Salem, N. J. 
“T have a field of the finest 
Funk ‘G’ Hybrid Corn. Would 
be glad to show to any one, 
as I think it is the finest 
around.” — Maurice Knerr, 
Chester County, Pa. 
“Corn looking fine. The field 
man for a canning factory 
was here and said it was the 
best field of corn he had seen. 
He covers practically the 
whole county.”—C. H. Deck, 
Ripley, N. Y. 
“We won first prize at Lang- 
horne Show with your Funk 
Hybrid, in competition with 
thirteen other brands of Hy- 
brids. Our ‘G’ Hybrid was 
planted about June 5th and 
matured very well in spite of 
the backward season. Your 
Hybrid Corn filled two silos. 
size 1] x 32 and 10 x 32 from 
seven acres, making very 
fine quality silage.”—Austin’s 
Farms, George H. Yerkes, 
Langhorne, Pa. 
“Have fine Funk ‘G’ Hybrid 
Corn—14 acres.”—Clark Mc- 
Cutcheon, Muskingum Co., 
Ohio. 
“Take my order for 2 bushels’ 
‘G 55’—no other number will 
be accepted. We have tried 
3 kinds of Hybrid. ‘G 55’ is 
the only one satisfactory on 
our soil.”—Stanley C. Belles, 
Berwick, Pa. 
“T planted your four Hybrids 
all side by side. The fodder 
was about the same, and as 
large as my regular corn was. 
The Hybrid stood up so we 
could cut with a cutter, and 
the regular corn had to be 
cut and thrown in piles—be- 
28 
from this corn. 
ing blown down by storm. 
The Hybrids averaged 10 to 
15 bu. more an acre than the 
regular corn did.”—V. R. 
Frazier, Felton, Del. 
“This has been a poor corn 
year in Crawford County 
(Pa.), but my corn is cer- 
tainly good. It is worth the 
extra cost of seed when it 
comes to cutting, as it stands 
up well. I wish to order 
‘G 7 for the crib, also ‘G 94 
silage, for spring delivery. 
Don’t have any data on yield, 
but it is better than my other 
corn.”—Frank L. Head. 
“Have looked at a good many 
Hybrids the past two weeks 
and I can only say that I wish 
you would book my order for 
15 bushels of Funk’s ‘G’ Hy- 
brid.” — W. C. Wolfinger, 
Washington County, Md. 
“IT planted three fields of 
your Hybrid corn. Observa- 
tions here during the summer 
prove that the Hybrid corn 
stands up better under wind- 
storms and produces a su- 
perior grain. It is extra well 
grained and the grain so deep 
that the production shelled, 
will be excelling.” — B. F. 
Colebank, Greene County, 
Pa. 
“Please reserve for me two 
bushels of Funk ‘G 46’ Hy- 
brid. I got excellent results 
Made 100 
bushels of shelled corn to the 
acre. Fifty bushels to the 
acre is considered an excel- 
lent yield of open-pollinated 
corn in this community. My 
field of corn was the talk of 
the neighborhood. In _ the 
poorest corn season we have 
had in several years.”—E. 
O. Holcomb, Blue Sulphur 
Springs, W. Va. 

Thousands 
farmers 
* Hybrids 
eorn eribs 
