Wood's MEW ¥AIRBiirni$ 
AIMP SPiOAErlTDiS 
WOOD’S CERTIFIED No. 23 SUDAN GRASS g,eV°st 
quick ffrowing" summer hay or pasture crops, relished by all live¬ 
stock, including' hogs and poultry. It makes much more growth 
than regular Sudan Grass from which it was developed. Sometimes 
100 stems stool out from one seed. It frequently can be pastured 
three weeks after sowing, or cut for hay 3 or 4 times a season. 
Hugh MacRae, of Wilmington, N. C., a leading Southern pasture 
crop authority, recommends Sudan highly for summer pasture: 
“This valuable grass may be sown from April 1st to August. It 
grows faster than soylieans. One acre will pasture one cow from 
June through October.’’ (See picture and description on page 53). 
By mail postpaid, lb. 2Sc; 5 lbs. 75c; 10 lbs. $1.35; 25 lbs. $2.65; 
50 lbs. $5.15. Not postpaid, 5 to 24 lbs. lOo per lb.; 25 to 99 lbs. 8o 
lb.; 100 lbs. 7c per lb. 
1 ADINO Cl OVFR A mammoth strain of White Dutch Clov- 
round pasture crop 
•where moisture is plentiful. Supports 4 head of cattle per acre. 
Grows luxuriantly, 12 inches tall. Runs on the ground, one plant 
covering two feet. Can be pastured in spring and hay cut three 
times in summer. Produces a heavy tonnage of rich succulent feed 
relished by all livestock. 12 to 24% protein. Lasts 4 to 8 years. 
Lime, phosphate and manure help it. Seed in spring, 5 lbs. per 
acre, followed by light harrowing. It is better seeded 3 lbs. per 
acre with dallas grass, carpet grass, red top, meadow fescue, Ken¬ 
tucky blue, orchard grass and timothy. By mail postpaid, lb. $1.15; 
5 lbs. $5.25; 10 lbs. $10.35; 25 lbs. $24.25. Not postpaid, 5 to 24 lbs. 
$1.00 lb.; 25 to 99 lbs. 970 lb.; 100 lbs. 95c lb. 
STRAWRFRRY CORN m days. Genuine strain. Barge 
I sound grain, copper colored 
outside and -white inside. Popular in -the South for early feed, 
roasting ears, and snow white corn meal in the summer when old 
corn is used up. Long tight shuck. Resistant to weevil, ear worms, 
heat and drought. The South Carolina Experiment Station says: 
“It is extremely early, produces good heavy ears on a small strong 
stalk and is excellent for fattening hogs for early market.” By mail 
postpaid, qt. 30c; peck 75c; peck $1.15; bus. $2.00. Not pos'b- 
paid, peck 75c; bus. $1.30; bus. $2.25; 5-bus. lots $2A0 bus. 
WOOD’S HYBRID SWEEPSTAKES ENSILAGE 
Stronger Stalks, Greater Tonnage, More Grain and Feed¬ 
ing Value. 
■WOOD’S HYBRID YELLOW SWEEPSTAKES —100 days. Earliest 
and best ensilage corn for West Virginia and northern states. 
D. H. Kuhn, Hardy Co., W. Va., says: “It was a good success, the 
finest of all corn grown in our valley.” B. H. Allen, Burlington 
Co., N. J., says: “It surpassed any corn I ever planted and was 
more resistant to corn borer. The stalks and ears were very 
large, foliage thick and started right at the ground.” 
WOOD’S HYBRID RED SWEEPSTAKES —110 days. Produces 
more feed per acre than any other ensilage corn in Middle At¬ 
lantic States. It outyielded the leading local variety and 37 
hybrids in a Newark, Del., test, had no barren stalks; 99% sound 
corn. A Kentucky customer says: “Year after year about 9 acres 
of Hybrid Sweepstakes has filled my 200-ton silo. Many stalks 
16 feet tall. It also yields about 120 bushels of grain per acre.” 
In the Cotton Belt, Use Wood’s Mammoth Ensilage, page 46. 
One row of WOOD’S GIANT WILT-RESISTANT RAMSHORNS 
with a vine spread of 14 feet, completely covered -with pods a foot 
long. Ordinary blackeyes were planted in the row on tJie extreme 
right (where hat lies), but were destroyed by -wilt. 
WOOD’S WILT-RESISTANT RAMSHORN PEAS 
Doubles Your Yield; More Pods per Vine; Peas Twice as Large; 
Better Eating Quality; Longer, Better Filled Pods. Resistant to 
Wilt, Nematodes, Charcoal Rot, etc. 
We offer for the first time two improved wilt-resistant strains 
of our famous Early Ramshorn Blackeye Peas. They were devel¬ 
oped on wilt-infested land by crossing Ramshorns and Iron Wilt- 
Resistant Cow Peas ten years ago, and backcrossing the resistant 
strains on Ramshorns 4 to 6 5 "ears. Out of many resistant strains 
tested under different conditions, we have selected two strains with 
everything desired in edible blackeyes for the South. 
The EARLY strain is about 5 days earlier than ordinary Early 
Ramshorns and is the pea for early market. The GIANT strain 
is a week later, but yields more peas, makes a larger vine growth, 
and peas are nearly twice as large. 
Price: Both strains—By mail postpaid, lb. 25c; 5 lbs. 90c; 10 lbs. 
$1.65; 25 lbs. $3.40. Not postpaid, lb. I5c; 5 to 24 lbs. 13o per lb.; 
25 to 99 lbs. 11c lb.; 100 lbs. lOc lb. 
Long tight shuck of Wood’s Hybrid Golden Prolific. It out- 
yielded all other hybrids in tests throughout Mississippi, 'with only 
2% weevil infested ears to 15% for the others. 
WOOD’S HYBRID FIELD CORNS 
“I am well pleased with all of Wood’s Hybrid Corns. The stalks 
are large, each with two nice ears. I am sure many of our farmers 
will plant them next year and obtain very excellent yields.”—H. S. 
Lippincott, County Agent, Warwick Co., Va. 
Large Solid Ear of Wood’s Hybrid Golden Dent 
WOOD’S HYBRID "WHITE PROLIFIC—125 days. It made the 
highest average yield of any white corn in Cotton Belt State Ex¬ 
periment Station tests. E. M. Morgan, McCormick Co., S. C., 
says: “I am well pleased with your hybrid corn. It is producing 
10 to 1 compared to a neighbor’s field planted under the same con¬ 
dition with a different variety.” 
WOOD’S H'YBRID WHITE DENT—115 days. Largest ear and 
highest yielding white hylirid corn for Middle Atlantic States, 
and the section north of the Cotton Belt, and for early feed and 
roasting ears farther south. J. R. Wray, Henry Co., Va., says: 
“It surely made fine corn, running 80 to 100 bushels per acre.” 
WOOD’S HYBRID GOLDEN PROLIFIC—120 days. The only yel¬ 
low corn to consistently outyield all white varieties in experi¬ 
ment station tests throughout the South. It produced 120 bushels 
per acre for R. H. Russell, the best yield ever made in Shelby Co., 
Ala. I. S. Newton, Granville Co., N. C., says: “It yielded 124 
bushels per acre, had a tight shuck, strong uniform stalk, and no 
disease. Neighbors said it was the best they ever saw.” 
WOOD’S HYBRID GOLDEN DENT—115 days. Best yellow hybrid 
for the Mid-South, or for early feed and roasting ears in the deep 
South. W. A. Reel, Edgefield Co., S. C., says: “It outvielded my 
other corn 30% in the same field, same care and fertilizer.” 
WOOD’S HYBRID YELLOW DENT—110 days. Highest yielding 
yellow hybrid developed for Middle Atlantic Section. J. T. C. 
Hopkins, Cecil Co., Md., says: “It stood up under two severe 
storms that blew down other corns, and made a fine heavy yield 
of large uniform ears with very few nubbins.” One of the best 
early feed corn for hogs in the South. 
WOOD’S HYBRID EARLY YELLOW—100 days. Our best hybrid 
for West Va., Mountains of Va., Western Md., Eastern Penn., and 
N. J, Developed from Lancaster Surecrop and Early Learning 
with the same adaptation, but higher yield. It outyielded Reid’s 
Yellow Dent 45% in a Virginia Experiment Station test. 
WOOD’S HYBRID EXTRA EARLY—90 days. Earliest maturing 
yellow hybrid for high altitudes in West Virginia, Western Mary¬ 
land and Pennsylvania or for early feed and roasting ears in the 
South. T. M. Elliott, Raleigh Co., W. Va., says: “It made a record 
yield of excellent corn. I advised everybody to buy this seed.” 
PPI^pC treated free 
■ -with Semesan Jr. 
Wood’s Hybrid Field CdWis. 
Hybrid Sweepstakes Ensilages. . .. 
NOT POSTPAID—F. O. 
^ Peck Peck 14 Bus, 
$1.00.$1.75.$3.25. 
.75. 1.25. 2.25. 
B.—RICHMOHD 
5-Bus. 
Bus. Lots 
. . . . .$6.00.$5.75 
.4.00. 3.75 
BY matt. POSTPAID 
*4 Feck Peck H Bus. 
$1.25_$2.15_$3.95 
1.00. . . . 1.65. . . . 3.45 
2 
