WOOD’S SEED OATS 
99% Pure—90% to 100'% Germination. 
Triple-cleaned over the most complete machinery to remove all 
light grains and noxious weed seed. They cannot be compared with 
ordinary seed oats which are usually of low germination. 
The S. C. Department of Agriculture reports: “Field inspections 
showed 25% to 45% untreated seed oats were destroyed by smut last 
spring while Wood’s Treated Seed Oats were entirely free of smut. 
Seed treated by others showed 5% smut.” 
All of Wood’s Seed Oats are treated with Ceresan. This free serv¬ 
ice insures good stands, vigorous growth, taller stalks, larger heads, 
eliminates smut and other diseases, and increses the yield 20%. 
Certified Lee Cold-Proof Oats 
Will produce more hay or grain than any oth§r spring sown oat 
in the Piedmont or mountain sections of the South. Its tremendous 
heads are laden with extra heavy grain that weighs over 40 pounds 
per struck bushel. It combines the earliness, high yield and stiff 
straw of Fulghums with the tall straw and cold resistance of Win¬ 
ter Turf. It grows a foot taller than Fulghum, Red Rust-Proof or 
Norton and produces considerably more hay. Its superior stooling 
and vigorous growth in very cold weather makes it a fine oat for 
early spring planting. In a four-year test at the Arlington Experi¬ 
ment Station it averaged over 70 bushels per acre to 50 for Vir¬ 
ginia Gray and 62 for Fulghum. It made more hay than any other 
spring-sown oat in the N. C. Coastal Experiment Station, yielding 
a fourth more than Fulghums. 
By mail postpaid, peck 60c; y 2 bushel $1.00. 
Not postpaid, peck 35c; y 2 bushel 55c; bushel 88c; 5-bushel lots 
85c per bushel. 
Cheat free, large, plump, meaty kernels of Wood’s Pedigree 
Winter Turf Oats weigh 40 lbs. per struck bushel. 
Wood’s Pedigree Winter Turf Oats 
The hardiest and tallest of all oats, a foot taller than Fulghum. 
No oat makes more hay when planted very early. Its spreading, 
vigorous growth in cold weather makes thin stands stool out to a 
full crop. Our improved pedigree strain is much more prolific and 
heavy yielding than ordinary winter turf oats. It has enormous 
heads and heavy, rich kernels. It frequently yields 75 bushels per 
acre when neighboring oats freeze out. It should be planted in 
February or early March two weeks before ordinary spring oats. 
By mail postpaid, peck 60c; y 2 bushel $1.00. 
Not postpaid, peck 35c; y 2 bushel 55c; bushel 88c; 5-bushel lots 
85c per bushel. 
Burt or Ninety-Day Oats 
It makes a good growth of early feed; is free from rust, and 
what is of equal importance, when plantings are late, it is of early 
maturity. The Burt is a favorite for growing on the light sandy 
soils of "the coast sections of the South Atlantic States, where the 
results have been uniformly good. 
By mail postpaid, peck 55c; \ 2 bushel 95c. 
Not postpaid, peck 30c; y 2 bushel 50c; bushel 78c; 5-bushel lots 
75c per bushel. 
Wood’s Pcd igree Fulghum Oats 
The most popular oat for spring planting because of its quick 
growth, maturing before other standard varieties and withstand¬ 
ing more heat while heading. It makes a bumper crop of hay or 
grain in hot weather when other varieties burn up or go down 
with rust. Our I’edigree strain is free of disease and has much 
larger, heavier heads and grain, stiffer straw and higher yield than 
ordinary Fulghums. 
“Wood’s Pedigree Fulghums had large, heavy heads and made 
half again as much feed on one acre as two acres of Tennessee 
grown seed which was almost a failure and made practically no 
grain.”—J. C. Ammons, Dunn, N. C. 
By mail postpaid, peck 60c; y 2 bushel $1.00. 
Not postpaid, peck 35c; y 2 bushel 55c; bushel 88c; 5-bushel lots 
85c per bushel. 
Coker 30-50 Smut-Proof Oats 
About as early as Fulghum. Its quick growth, splendid, long, 
large, well-balanced head, big, plump, beautiful grain, stiff straw, 
storm and smut resistance make it one of the heaviest producers j 
for spring planting. It won the Chesterfield Co. contest for Lex B. 
Watts, Pageland, S. C., yielding 120 bushels per acre. 
By mail postpaid, peck 65c; Vs> bushel $1.10. 
Not postpaid, peck 40c; y 2 bushel 65c; bushel $1.05; 5-bushel lots 
$1.00 per bushel. 
Sweedish Select Oats 
The heavier yielding, extra heavy, 
plump, white oat for which cattlemen and 
horse breeders always pay a substantial 
premium. Although too late for Eastern 
Virginia and the Carolinas, its tall stalks 
and tremendous heads yield heavy crops 
of both grain and hay in the cooler moun¬ 
tain sections. By mail postpaid, peck 55c; 
y 2 bushel 90c. 
Not postpaid, peck 30c; y 2 bushel 45c; 
bushel 73c; 5-bushel lots 70c per bushel. 
White Spring Oats 
A good strain of white oats that makes 
good yields of feed and grain in higher 
altitudes and in the North. It makes big 
heads, large grain of excellent quality, 
and tall straw. By mail postpaid, peck 
55c; y 2 bushel 90c. 
Not postpaid, peck 30c; V 2 bushel 45c; 
bushel 68c; 5-bushel lots 65c per bushel. 
SOW OATS 2 bushels per acre for grain 
or 5 bushels for hay in February or 
March. (Bushel=32 pounds.) 
Wood’s Pedigree Fulghum Oats make bumper crops when sown in the spring. 
ALL WOOD’S SEED OATS ABE TREATED WITH CERESAN FREE OF CHARGE 
T. W. WOOD & SONS 
SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 
