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- Avoid Expensive Feed 
"4 _ Plant Wood’s Grain Pasture & Hay Mixtures 
___ Feed prices are the highest on record. Feed purchases can 
be avoided by grazing Wood’s Grain Pasture Mixture all 
____ fall, winter and spring, and filling your barn with. Wood's Hay 
es 
__ Grain Mixture next summer. These low cost feeds are high 
___-in feeding value and will keep all of your livestock in greater 
__ production. These mixtures are much more productive and 
nutritious than oats, barley or any other crop sown alone. 
_ They produce a balanced ration of proteins, vitamins and 
___ other food elements. They furnish fine winter cover crops 
_____ that improve the soil and protect it from erosion. 
Sow 100 Ibs. per acre. Early seedings give longer grazing 
+ ormore hay. A good application cf complete fertilizer while 
ae planting, and a top dressing of nitrogen when the grain is 
_ 2 or 3 inches tall pays well. Hither mixture sown 50 lbs. 
__ per acre is an ideal nurse crop for seeding grass or clover. 
WOOD'S GRAIN PASTURE MIXTURE 
FF urnishes more grazing in less time and at less cost than 
de _ any other fall crop. The grains are balanced with legumes 
__to supply protein for growth and warmth during the winter. 
Includes every ingredient for continuous grazing through- 
out fall, winter and spring. Contains the ideal proportions 
of hairy vetch, Austrian winter peas, crimson clover, rape, 
__abruzzi rye, winter barley, winter oat sand smooth wheat. 
Relished by all livestock it is particularly popular for poultry 
and hogs as it contains rape properly balanced with grain 
so it cannot cause bloating. Its use has increased enorm- 
ously in all sections of the South and Hast, proving its won- 
_. derful value and dependability. 

Wood’s Permanent Hay Mixtures produce tremendous 
yields of the finest quality hay, which is easily cured. They 
continue to bear abundantly for many years, minimizing the 
original seeding cost. They contain Ladino Clover, Alta 
__ _Fescue and a wide assortment of the finest grasses and cloy- 
_ ers which mature together for hay and can be depended on 
for several big cuttings each year in good or bad seasons. 
_ The grasses are properly balanced with alfalfa, clovers and 
lespedezas, increasing the palatability, protein and feeding 
value. The hay is relished by all livestock. 
ALTA or KENTUCKY 31 FESCUE 
The Best Pasture or Hay Grass for the South or East 
Clemson, S. C.: “Most promising grass in our generation. 
A very heavy producer, extremely winter hardy. Gives year- 
: round grazing. It grew 6 months under water in S. C. In 
Fla. 300 acres on poor,.sandy soil furnished green grazing 
c in a long drought that killed weeds and briars. Alta and 
' Ky. 31 Fescue are identical.” 
Azan At N. C. State it made 5 cuttings per summer, yielding 
5,161 Ibs. dry matter per acre, nearly double orchard grass. 
It made the highest hay yield of all forage crops in a 6-year 
_ state test. It furnishes pasture in winter, producing heavily 
in early spring and late fall when other grasses are dormant. 
50 dairy cattle could not graze down 10 acres from April to 
July, giving a wonderful milk production. They are plowing 
_ up the best blue grass sods in Ky. to seed it. It is palatable 
to all livestock and equal in food value to the best grasses. 
It is darker green and stays greener in summer or winter 
than orchard grass, and is far more disease resistant. It 
takes a season to get established, then crowds out weeds. 
Stands 30 years old still produce vigorously. Plowing de- 
stroys it. Its roots go down 9 ft. in hard soil finding mois- 
ture in severe droughts. It produces abundantly in cold or 
hot weather, in dry or wet seasons, on acid, dry, poor or 
rich soils. It does very well on wet soils. It is a bunch 
grass but forms a heavy dense sod when seeded heavily. Sow 
alone 15 lbs. per acre. It does best sown 5 to 12 Ibs. in 
mixtures with alfalfa, lespedeza, ladino or other clovers to 
furnish nitrogen. A well prepared firm seed bed is best. 
Can be sown on old firm sods by scarifying them. Sow in 
any month, but Sept. to early Nov. seedings are best. Lime 
very acid soils. Heavy complete fertilization pays. 
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Grazing Wood’s Grain Pasture Mixture in early spring 
before other pastures are ready. Small grains, combined 
with winter legumes furnish fall and winter grazing, which 
saves labor, reduces grain requirements, provides cheaper 
feed, makes healthier animals and returns greater profits. 
Pasture is the most economical feed for livestock. 
WOOD’S HAY GRAIN MIXTURE 
The best early hay mixture possible to sow. Makes a 
much heavier yield that is far more palatable and nutritious 
than oats or any other crop sown alone. Hay is easy to 
cure and relished by all livestock. It contains winter oats, 
smooth wheat, beardless barley, properly balanced with hairy 
vetch, Austrian winter peas and crimson clover. The le- 
gumes increase the protein and feeding value of the hay 
and enrich the soil. 
Sow Wood's Special Grass and Clover Mixtures 
For Permanent Hay and Pasture Crops 
Contains Ladino Clover and Alta Fescue 
Fall is the Best Time for Seeding Grass and Clover. 
Plants make a strong root growth during the cool months 
and are better established to withstand summer heat than 
if sown in the spring. They can be seeded safely until the 
middle of October, but early fall seeding is best if weather 
permits. Soil should be limed and well prepared, fine but 
firm. If a cultipacker is used more seeds will come up. 
Heavy applications of fertilizer at seeding time and as a 
top dressing each year, pay big dividends. 
Sow 30 to 35 lbs. per acre of Wood’s Special Grass and 
Clover Mixtures, For over half a century they have proved 
their superiority as economical, heavy arid permanent pro- 
ducers of nutritious hay and pasture crops. We have added 
Ladino Clover and Alta Fescue to insure vigorous growth 
in cold or hot weather, in dry or wet seasons. They are slow 
in becoming established, but are long lived and increase in 
productivity with age. Other ingredients in our mixtures 
grow quickly, assuring good crops from the start. Our mix- 
tures are far superior to seeding these two crops alone, 
WOOD’S PERMANENT HAY MIXTURES Nos. 6 to 8 
Contains grasses and clovers which mature at the same 
time, making bumper hay crops, which are easily cured. 
No. 6. For light gravelly or sandy soil. 
No. 7. For good loam or clay soil. 
No. 8. For moist’ bottom land. 
WOOD’S PERMANENT PASTURE MIXTURES Nos. 1 to 3 
Contains grasses and clovers which make their maximum 
growth at different times throughout the year, furnishing 
abundant nutritious, year-round grazing. 
No. 1. For light gravelly or sandy soil. 
No. 2. For good loam soil. 
No. 3. For moist bottom land, 
Wood’s Southern Permanent Pasture and Hay Mixture No. 12 
A fine mixture for hay or pasture in the Southern Coastal 
and Gulf States. Suitable to both light and heavy soils. 
LADINO CLOVER 
The Wonder Pasture Clover. Produces a heavy tonnage 
of rich succulant feed relished by all livestock. Furnishes up 
to 12 months’ grazing. Many purebred stock growers use 
it for hay exclusively for its excellent quality, rich in protein 
and food value. A giant strain of White Dutch Clover, it 
grows faster, over a foot tall, and recovers quickly when 
mowed or heavily grazed. A perennial it reseeds and thick- 
ens each year but is not a pest. Thrives best on fertile low- 
lands. Grows well on fertile uplands if limed. Use a heavy 
application of balanced fertilizer. Inoculate and seed in 
early fall, 4 to 6 lbs. alone. It is better to seed 3 lbs. in 
grass mixtures on well prepared seedbeds and cover with 
cultipacker, or broadcast on old sods, harrowing before and 
after seeding. Adapted throughout the South and Kast. 
