68 
T . W. WOOD & SONS 
SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 
R I C H M OND, VIRGINIA 
WOOD’S TREATED SEED OATS 
99/2 Per Cent Pure—90 to 100 Per Cent Germination 
To prevent smut ana other diseases, insure good stands, vigorous growth, taller, stronger stalks, larger heads, plumper grains and to 
increase yield, all of Wood’s Seed Oats are treated with Ceresan. 
A Bumper Crop of Wood’s Treated Oats 
Improved Pedigree Fulghum 
New Earlier Heavier Yielding Strain 
We offer for the first time a much improved strain of Ful- 
ghums, the most popular oat for spring planting. It yields 
more, is taller, more erect, has larger heads, more uniform, a 
week earlier, and can be planted later, still maturing before 
lot weather and rust damage. Yielded 78.6 bushels per acre 
while other spring planted oats yielded 40 to 55 bushels. Large, 
leavy well filled grain, reddish gray color; awnless. It makes 
a bumper crop of hay or grain in hot seasons when other varie¬ 
ties burn up or go down with rust. 
Fulgrain Cold and Smut Resistant 
Best Oat for Spring Planting in the South 
We offer the strain which yielded 87.3 bushels per acre, high- jj 
est yield in the South Carolina Experiment Station test. More j 
disease resistant, larger, heavier grain, and yields more than ■ 
ordinary Fulghums. Earlier maturing than Fulghum and two ■ 
weeks earlier than Winter Turf, maturing before hot weather ; 
and rust damage. Stools well; vigorous growth; superior for ; 
pasturing; tough straw; large, well balanced heads; beautiful, ; 
long, heavy grains with a rich reddish yellow color, thin hull, ; 
high per cent of meat and heavy test weight per pound. Inspec- : 
tors found no smut rust or other disease or varietal mixture ; 
in our fields. ! 
Pedigree Virginia Gray Winter Turf 
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 kernels. It frequently yields 75 bushels per acre 
when neighboring oats freeze out. Plant in February or early 
March. 
Burt or Ninety-Day 
They make a good growth of 
early feed; they are free from 
rust, and what is of equal impor¬ 
tance, when plantings are late, they are 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. 
VV/I . r* . A good strain of white oats that makes 
Vv hltp Snrino good yields of feed and grain in higher 
tt ■»»"< altitudes and in the North. It makes big 
heads, large grain of excellent quality, and tall straw. 
The heavier yielding, extra heavy plump, 
white oat for which cattlemen and horse 
breeders always pay a substantial pre¬ 
mium. Although not adapted to Eastern Virginia and the Caro- 
linas, its tall stalks and tremendous heads yield heavy crops of 
both grain and hay in the cooler mountain sections. 
PP|/~PQ They include treatment with Ceresan. 
i IMV.CO See page 93 about postpaid prices. 
NOT POSTPAID—P. I 
Fulgrain Cold and Peck 
Smut Resistant. 40c. . 
Improved Pedigree 
Pulghum .30c. 
Pedigree Virginia 
Gray Winter 
Turf.40c. 
Burt or Ninety- 
Day .30 c. 
Swedish Select. . . .35c. 
White Spring.30c. 
). B. RICHMOND 
5 Bus. 
% BUS. Bus. Dots 
,65c. . .$1.05. . .$1.00 
.50c... 75c... 72c 
,65c. . . 1.05. . . 1.00 
,45c... 73c. . . 70c 
.55c. . . 93c. . . 90C 
45c... 73c... 70c 
3Y MAH. POSTPAID 
Peck y 2 Bus. Bus. 
65c. . .$1.10. . .$1.80 
55c... 95c... 1.50 
65c... 1.10... 1.80 
55c. . . 90c. . . 1.50 
60c. . . 1.00... 1.70 
55c. . . 90c. . . 1.50 
