T. W. WOOD & sOoNsS - SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 
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RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 

OATS for Greater Yields of Grain, Hay and Pasture 
S seven hat % 
Wood’s Treated Seed Oats make bumper crops when sown in the spring. 
COLUMBIA SPRING OATS 
An Outstanding Yielder of Grain and Hay 
An early maturing and heavy yielding spring oat. A selection from Fulghum. 
Seven to ten days earlier, more uniform, taller, more erect, larger heads, heavier, 
plumper grain, and can be planted a week later and still mature before hot weather 
and rust damage. It yielded 79 bushels per acre while other spring planted oats 
yielded 40 to 55 bushels. Large, heavy, weil-filled heads, reddish gray color, awn- 
less. Already the leading spring oat in the South. Far superior to Burt for both 
hay and grain. 
Fulghum Popular for spring planting; quick growth, withstands heat while 
heading. It makes a bumper crop of hay or grain. Our strain is free 
of disease and has large, heavy heads and grain. 
Fulgrain Cold and Smut-Resistant. One of the best oats for spring planting in 
the South. It yielded 94 bushels per acre in a 1939 Southern experiment 
station test to 50 bushels for Fulghums, is more disease-resistant, has larger, 
heavier grain, and matures earlier, before hot weather and rust damage. Stools 
well; vigorous growth; superior for grazing; tough straw; large well balanced 
heads; beautiful large heavy grains with a rich reddish yellow color; thin hull, 
high per cent of meat, and weighs 49 lbs. per bushel. 
is Strain No. 5. Grown from Certified Seed. Its extreme winter 
Lee Cold Proof resistance allows earlier planting than other oats. It pro- 
duced more hay than any other spring sown oat in a North Carolina test, a fourth 
more than Fulghum, and grows a foot taller. Its tremendous heads are laden 
with extra heavy grain weighing 40 lbs. per bushel. Our strain yielded 95 bushels 
per acre in one test to 51 for Fulghum. ; 
+ 1 A good strain of white oats that makes good yields of feed and 
White Spring grain in higher altitudes and in the North. It makes big heads, 
large grain of excellent quality, and tall straw. 
i ~ The heavier yielding, extra heavy plump, white oat for which 
Swedish Select eattlemen and horse breeders always pay a substantial pre- 
mium. Its tall stalks and tremendous heads yield heavy crops of both grain 
and hay in the cooler mountain sections and northern states. 
PR ICE Oats and Barley NOT POSTPAID POSTPAID PRICES 
Treated with Ceresan 30-Bus,| Oats in 3-Bus. bags 
OATS—Bus. 32 lbs. Peck 144 Bus. Bus. Lots} Peck 1%Bus. Bus. 
Columbia Spring.............. 30c....50c....80c....75c} 55c....$ .95....$1.55 
WUC RUM 5.50 oe tere ee be ste ade) USDC ws DDC 1. .90C. 22° 85cl 6OC.. <. 1:00. cen 16S 
ISAM Sire sy esis eee wes ore Me SOC. OC. 90G., ..o5C), GOC.. .. 100i. .2).00 
Lee Cold Proof—Strain No.5... 35c....550....900....85c} 60c.... 1.00...., 1.65 
White Spring............- eisehe) | BOCs DOC.) 2. G0C....75C) 550,.;. 1.955.245. 15S 
Swedish Select ...........++... 35¢....55c....85c....80c} 60c.... 1.00.... 1.60 
Winter Turf.........-+2++e-00- 35C....60C....95c....90C} 60c.... 1.05.... 1.70 
BARLEY—Spring ............ 45¢ 70c.. $1.15.. $1.10] 80c. 1.300, . co eneo 
PEAS—100-Ib. bags 5to 25 to 5 Lbs. 10 Lbs. 25 Lbs. 
24 Lbs. 99 Lbs. 100 Lbs. 
PANERA ELSA Fein wei 25} 9c..... 70..... 6 | 700....$1.25....$2.40 
VETCH—HAIRY ..........-. 14c.....12¢.....11¢ |$1.95.... 1.75.... 3.65 

PLANT WOOD’S 
TREATED SEED OATS 
Wood’s Seed Oats are treated 
with Ceresan to prevent smut 
and other diseases, insure good 
stands, vigorous growth, tailer, 
stronger stalks, larger heads, 
plumper grains, and to increase 
yields up to 20 bushels per acre. 
They are heavily recleaned, 99% 
pure, over 90% germination, have 
large heavy kernels, and require 
¥% less seed per acre. Sow 2 
bushels per acre for grain, 3 
bushels for hay in early spring, 
as cats thrive in cool weather. 
Seed bed should be well prepared, 
firm beneath, mellow on top. All 
our seed oats are packed in 3- 
bushel red-striped bags, all treat- 
ed and ready for planting. Apply 
400 lbs. WOOD’S STANDARD 
GRAIN FERTILIZER per acre. 
GROW MORE OATS 
More farmers should grow oats in order to avoid 
feeding horses corn all the time. It is much better 
to change the diet. The high value of oats for feed- 
ing to horses and mules is generally understood, 
Oats are particularly valuable for feeding to colts 
and to other young and growing stock. The value 
of this grain for feeding to young animals is due to 
its high proportion of ash, or bone-forming ma- 
terial, and of protein, or muscle-forming material. 
Oatstraw is a better feed than the straw of any 
other kind of grain. It is a valuable roughage for 
feeding te all kinds of stock not at hard work, but 
contains too much waste material to make up the 
entire ration. When fed with cowpea hay or other 
hay high in feeding value it gives bulk to the ra- 
tion and lessens its cost. Vetch and oats together 
makes good pasture, particularly for sheep and 
hogs. ; 
. One of the hardiest, tall 
Winter Turf Oats growing varieties —taller 
than Fulghum. Its spreading, vigorous growth 
in cold weather makes thin stands stool out toa 
full crop. Produces large heads and heavy ker- 
nels, frequently yielding 75 bushels to the acre. 
Plant in February or ol March, : 
7 uickest grazing and 
Bearded Spring Barley earliest maturing 
spring grain. Can be cut in about two months, 
making very nutritious and palatable hay. Heads 
up in about 65 days and matures in about 80 
days. Can be grown on a greater variety of soils 
under a wider range of climatic conditions than 
almost any other grain crop. It yields 25 to 40 
bushels per acre of grain equal to corn in feed- 
ing value. Sow 2 bushels per acre in February 
or March. Bushel=48 lbs, 
1 For heavy crops of early 
Canada Field Peas hay or grazing to fatten or 
produce milk. Stock eat it greedily and thrive 
on it. Grows 4 to 6 feet, but can be grazed when 
6 to 10 inches high. If not grazed too closely it 
makes a second growth. Its roots gather nitro- 
gen and improve the land. Adapted to a wide 
variety of soils; thrives on land too poor for 
grain. Sow 75 lbs, to the acre with one bushel of 
oats, with a grain drill 3 inches deep, from Janu- 
ary to March, Inoculate. See page 63. 
1 1 —An excellent soil im- 
Austrian Winter Peas oye Garay ibe. nes 
acre in early spring or fall. 
Hairy Vetch —For hay, grazing and soil im- 
ty provement. Sow in early spring 
or fall, 25 lbs. per acre with. one bushel of oats. 
RESSSRRRRES EERE R RRR R TERR EERE R EERE 
Inoculate Canada Peas, Austrian Peas, 4 
Hairy Vetch. See page 63. H 
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