^CONDON BROS, S EEDSMEN ^WS'mV'^Fs.^BP^^ 
Stalks with Ears On are What Count 
It is not the missing hills alone that cause the low yield per 
acre, but those stalks produced from kernels of low vitality. They 
are small, weak, puny and unproductive, and they stand as living 
monuments to the evidence of poor seed. 
Let us send you some seed that has been tested, some seed 
that has life and vigor and that will start to work as soon as 
planted to produce a good, big, healthy stalk with an ear on it. 
PEDIGREE SEED CORN 
Condon's Pedigree Seed 
Corn is bred for High. Tield, 
HlpH Oil, High Protein, 
Hi?li Prepotency. 
The yield of high bred 
Corn is from 10 to 40 per 
cent greater than of ordi- 
nary Corn. In pedigree Corn 
the per cent of barren 
stallis is reduced to the 
minimum, while the per 
cent of good ears is raised 
to the maximum. 
High Oil Com finishes 
beef and pork more rapidly 
and requires fewer bushels 
than ordinary Corn. 
High Protein makes Corn 
a balanced ration for grow- 
ing cattle. Ordinary Corn 
contains 10 per cent pro- 
tein, pedigree Corn 22.80 per 
cent, increase 12.80 per cent. 
Prepotency increased by 
breeding. 
Purity maintained by se- 
lecting for seed only ears 
which are true to type; and 
by isolation. 
One hundred bushels and 
more of high bred Corn 
have been produced where 
ordinary Corn yielded sixty 
bushels. 
BEID'S YE££OW SENT 
The Standard 120-Da7 Com for Middle 
and Central Belt 
CONDON'S IMPROVED 
GOLDEN GLOW 
The cedigreed Corn that outylelded all others at the Winnebago County 
Corn Contest conducted by Professor Ten Eyck. 43 varieties competed. 
Condon's Improved Golden Glow made a yield of 83% bushels shelled corn 
per acre on IWCr. Burch's farm in Seward township, outyielding even the 
large late varieties such as Reid's Yellow Dent and Silver Mine, which 
are risky sorts in northern latitudes in normal seasons. When you can 
Set safe sure Pedigreed Seed Corn like Condon's Improved Golden Glow, 
that makes an average yield of 83% bushels per acre in this county, you 
can't afford to be without some of it on your farm. This Corn has a proud 
history It has been fostered by Prof. Moore, the famed Corn specialist 
of the Wisconsin University. It is a cross of Wisconsin No. 8 and the 
famous North Star Corn, combining the extreme earliness of the former 
with the larger ears and heft of the latter. „„ ic t„ io ^„^^/> 
The ears are of very attractive appearance, quite large, 16 to 18 rowed, 
of symmetrical shape, well filled from butt to tip with good sized kernels 
of pure golden-yellow color which are slightly rough on the outer end and 
are entirely free of any tendency to flintiness. The stalks are about 7 feet 
high produce a large amount of foliage, making a splendid fodder and 
silage corn. Everybody seems to be very enthusjasUc about it V^^^^^ 
oomon's uofboted aoKDsn oiiow 
ISoi^poxuid," ascTs^poundiBriOOf poitpald. 
larger quantities. 
109 
See wholesale list for prices In 
