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he ERE S 
CLAUDE E. STUCKER, 
Attica, ind., farmer 
and cattle feeder, 
says: 'G-169 ts the 
best corn i've ever 
grown. lf stood drouth 
and wet weatherioo. 
His 1943 crop aver- 
aged 9@ bushels — 
even under heavy 
corn borer attack. 

ITS BIG EARS ARE 
EASY TO HARVEST 
To produce ears as long, as sound, as well-loaded 
with deep-kerneled feeding quality as those of 
G-169 . . . and to produce up to four of those 
splendid-type ears to the hill—that’s a job for 
a ‘“‘he-man”’ hybrid. Funk’s G-169 does just that 
kind of a job, and it does it even when the going 
is tough. It’s a fast starter even in unfavorable 
spring weather... and it’s highly drouth resis- 
tant late in the season. It keeps right on work- 
ing in the face of chinch bug or rootworm 
attack, and it resists disease well. To top it off, 
Funk’s G-169 stands well and husks easily. 
CORN BORERS CAME, but they didn’t conquer! James 
Waldren, Gibson City, Ill., farmer, says this field of 
Funk’s G-Hybrids made the first 100-bushel crop of 
corn he ever raised. It was planted on June 4 and 
was laid by on July 5. Second brood corn borers 
attacked if so heavily that several of them could be 
found in almost every stalk—but there were few 
broken shanks and practically no lodging of stalks. 

