OLDS’ OPEN POLLINATED SEED CORN 
(Plant 7 to 12 lbs. to the acre.) 
SILVER KING (Wisconsin No. 7) 
NORTHWESTERN DENT 
Wisconsin Murdock Yellow Dent. 
Another early variety, very popular in the 
Northwest. Reddish in color, with a fairly good 
sized ear, inaturiuK ordinarily in 80 to 8.5 days. 
We recommend it for extreme northern Wisconsin 
and Minnesota and for North Dakota a.s a silo 
corn and in favorable seasons for husking. 
Wisconsin—By mail: 1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., $1.00, 
postpaid. By freight: Vz pk., 35c; pk., 65c; bu., 
$2.35; 3 bus. at $2.30; 10 bus. at $2.25. 
Wisconsin No. 8 Early Yellow Dent. 
Typical Ears of Wisconsin Silver King. 
OUR CORN GROWN BY SPECIAL¬ 
ISTS. \Ve have our corn grown, selected, 
sorted, dried and graded by a group of 
expert corn men in different parts of the 
state who grow the different Wisconsin 
varieties on a large scale. All our Wis¬ 
consin corn is fire-dried and it is all from 
select ears, ilost of our growers use the 
new Wright Corn Dryers. The corn is 
either tipped before shelling or thor¬ 
oughly graded after shelling. 
HIGH YIELDING STRAINS. Olds’ 
seed corn will not only grow but it will 
produce high yields. Do not be careless 
about the seed you plant. Plant the best 
seed corn you can get as the cost an 
acre for good seed is slight. 
CERTIFIED CORN. The Wisconsin Ex¬ 
periment Association certifies stocks of 
seed corn of the approved Wisconsin va¬ 
rieties grown by careful growers in ac¬ 
cordance with their requirements. The 
corn must be grown at least 40 rods from 
any other variety, must be true to type, 
practically free from mixture and show at 
least 95 per cent germination. 
WISCONSIN. This is all high testing 
Wisconsin Grown Corn but is not State 
Sealed or Certified. 
PLANT SOME WHITE CORN 
White corn today is bringing more than a 
10% premium over yellow kinds. There is no 
surplus of white corn. 
Murdock Yellow Dent 
(WISCONSIN NO. 13.) 
SWEEPSTAKES CORN OF THE NORTH¬ 
ERN ZONE. 
Description: Murdock Yellow Dent is of a 
deep yellow color, ears 8% to 9^/4 inches in 
length, hard and solid, just slightly rough and 
very uniform in type. It makes a targe heavy 
growth of stalk and leaf and so is a good silage 
variety. Murdock is not a lot different from 
Golden Glow but it grows a trifle larger both in 
stalk and ear and yields a trifle more. Not quite 
as early. Better for silage than Golden (llow. 
BRUECKNER MURDOCK. We handled Mr. 
Brueckner’s Idurdock Yellow Dent for 13 con¬ 
secutive years up to the time of his death in 
1922. and he was selecting and further improv¬ 
ing the corn each year during all that time. 
Since his death his son. Leo Brueckner, has 
continued the work of developing and improv¬ 
ing, using his father's methods. -411 the Brueck¬ 
ner Jfurdock we offer was grown by him. 
Certified (Brueckner Stock)—By mail: 1 lb., 
25c; 5 lbs., $1.00, postpaid. By freight: Vs pk., 
40c; pk., 70c; bu., $2.50; 3 bus. at $2.45; 10 
bus. at $2.40. 
Wisconsin 
GOLDEN GLOW (Wisconsin No. 
MOST POPULAR VARIETY OF CORN IN 
WISCONSIN. 
Golden Glow is the most popular variety of 
Wisconsin corn. It is grown more largely by far 
than any other. In fact, the statement has been 
made by our agronomists at the Wisconsin Col¬ 
lege of Agriculture that probably at least half of 
all the open pollinated corn grown in Wisconsin 
now is Golden Glow. It certainly is well adapted 
to all sections of the state as far north as north- 
central Wisconsin. It is a little earlier than 
either Murdock or Silver King, hence safer in 
an unfavorable season. 
Description. Golden Glow is a pure golden 
yellow corn, ears fairly large, the standard 
official length being 8% to 9% inches. It is 
strictly a Wisconsin corn developed at the Wis¬ 
consin Experiment Station. 
Certified Wisconsin—By mail: 1 lb., 25c; 5 
lbs., $1.00, postpaid. By freight: Vz pk., 40c; 
pk., 70c; bu., $2.50; 3 bus. at $2.45; 10 bus. 
at $2.40. 
Wisconsin: Bu., $2.35; 3 bus. at $2.30; 10 
bus. at $2.25. 
Nebraska Grown: Vz pk., 30c; pk., 55c; bu., 
$1.75; 3 bus. at $1.70; 10 bus. at $1.65. 
COLD RESISTANT 
GOLDEN GLOW 
EARLIER THAN GOLDEN GLOW AND 
THE BEST GOOD-SIZED COEN FOR 
CENTRAL AND UPPER WISCONSIN. 
Cold Resistant Golden Glow is a gen¬ 
uine Golden Glow with all the good qual¬ 
ities of that variety and in addition with 
the cold resistant features bred into it 
so it will stand unfavorable weather. 
Owing to the cool weather which fre¬ 
quently prevails during the early part of 
the growing .season and retards the 
growth of corn, a strain was bred which 
will continue to grow under conditions 
too cool for ordinary varieties. This work 
was begun in 1914 by germinating six 
kernels from each of a large number of 
ears, in an ice box kept at a temperature 
of 42 to 45 degrees P. After six years of 
selection, a strain of l^lden Glo\v Corn 
was produced which will grow at a soil 
temi)erature several degrees lower than 
that required for Golden Glow. 
Wisconsin—By mail: 1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 
$1.00, postpaid. By freight: Vz Pk., 35c; 
pk., 65c; bu., $2.35; 3 bus. at $2.30; 10 
bus. at $2.25. 
Wi 
isconsin 
No. 8 
(Early Yellow Dent) 
Best Husking Variety for Northern 
Wisconsin. 
Wisconsin No. 8 is probably the earliest of 
all dent varieties except Wiscon.sin No. 25. It 
came originally from Minnesota but has been 
developed and improved at the Wisconsin Ex¬ 
periment Station, the ears being materially 
lengthened without sacrificing the extreme earli¬ 
ness. Ears average 7 to 8 inches in length. 
Wisconsin—By mail: 1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., $1.00, 
postpaid. By freight: Vz pk., 35c; pk., 65c; bu., 
$2.35; 3 bus. at $2.30; 10 bus. at $2.25. 
BEST YIELDER OF ALL OUR WISCONSIN VARIETIES AND BY 
FAR THE BEST WHITE DENT FOR SOUTHERN WISCONSIN AND 
NORTHERN ILLINOIS. 
Silver King is not only the best white variety but one of the best and 
heaviest yielders of all varieties of corn. It came from northern Iowa 
to Wisconsin in 1904. We first offered it in 1907. Now it is well known 
and a standard variety. It is a big yielder and specially fine for the silo. 
It has yielded at the Wisconsin Experiment Station 98 bushels per acre 
and the average yield for the whole state for three years was 57 bushels 
as compared with 33 bushels, the average of all other varieties. 
The greatest yield for Silver King thus far reported and the yield 
record for Wisconsin, all varieties, so far as we know, is 137-6/10 
bushels per acre. This yield was in Racine County. 
This variety is a uniform creamy white in color and has a slight 
roughness of kernel. The cob is glistening white. The length of ears 
varies from 7 to 10 inches. The standard length is from 8% to OM 
inches. 
Certified Wisconsin—By mall: 1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., $1.00, postpaid. 
By freight: Vz pk., 40c; pk., 70c; bu., $2.50; 3 bus. at $2.45; 10 bus. 
at $2.40. 
Nebraska Grown: Vz pk., 30c; pk., 55c; bu., $1.75; 3 bus. at $1.70; 
10 bus. at $1.65. 
WISCONSIN NO. 25 
(NORTHERN YELLOW DENT.) 
EARLIEST OF ALL WISCONSIN VARIETIES. 
This is. the corn for the extreme north and for late plant¬ 
ing farther south. Earlier than any other dent variety and 
pronounced by the Wisconsin Experiment Station as ’ ‘well 
adapted to the northern sections as a seed and silage variety.” 
It originated at the Ashland Station, a cross of Wisconsin 
No. 8 and a very early yellow dent which was secured from 
northern Michigan. 
Certified Wisconsin—By mail: 1 lb., 25c; 5 lbs., 
$1.00, postpaid. By freight: Vz pk., 40c; pk., 70c; 
■bu., $2.50; 3 bus. at $2.45; 10 bus. at $2.40. 
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