
pre 
oduee 
1 Sh} 


uit 
- grow tall enough to interfere with shooting. Our for- 
Pauvermaveo OD. & SONS.» 

WOOD'S QUAIL PLANTING MIXTURE 
Why Hunt All Over the Woods 
To Find Birds? ... 
Go to Patches of Wood's Quail Planting Mixture. 
Old-time bird hunters know where to find birds—in patches of cow peas, 
millet, etc. However, food from one of these crops lasts only a short 
while. Then quail must range elsewhere for food. We have examined 
hundreds of quail ‘'craws'' many years to study their food habits. 
QUAIL LIKE A VARIETY OF SEEDS. Our mixture contains 17 kinds 
most frequently found in quail stomachs. These mature at different 
times, furnish seed and greens the year round, enables a farm to grow 
more quail and attracts them from other areas. It assists young birds to 
grow quickly and keep plump. It contains six weeks and mid-season cow 
peas and late peas to hold birds during hunting season. It has early, 
medium and late millet, Brown Top Millet, so popular with southern 
hunting preserves. It has dwarf early and late com- 
bine milo, early and late small seeded soybeans, 
bene, lespedeza, sudan, sesbania, Alyce clover and 
buckwheat, relished by birds. Rape furnishes green 
food in winter and spring. 
The mixture furnishes low cover, so important to 
protect birds from their natural enemies, yet does not 
mula is based on years testing on our own hunting 
preserve, and cooperative tests on some of the largest 
Southern hunting preserves. Only seeds of highest 
purity and germination are used in our mixture, yet 
it is priced lower than the seeds could be bought 
separately and mixed by individuals. Plant it in 
patches where you hunted last fall and find more 
birds next season. 
HOW TO PLANT. Broadcast 30 Ibs. per acre May 
to July on prepared land. 300 lbs. per acre of 5-10-5 
or other fertilizer is desirable. It pays to disk, har- 
row and sow every year. The legumes enrich the soil’ 
more than the cost of seeding it. For Quail sow in 
long strips, near the cover or hedgerows, or in open- 
ings or fire lanes in woods. Wild Turkeys or Pheas- 
ants can be attracted and multiplied by sowing in 
wider strips in secluded spots. Doves, plant in | or 
2-acre plots in the center of open areas. 
BENE » 
Makes enormous amount of nutritious fattening seeds 
loved by game birds and poultry. Adapted to most 
soils; upright growth, covered in fall with long okra 
like pods. These’ gradually open all winter, dropping 
the seeds which attract quail and other game birds. 
Drill 5 Ibs. per acre in 2!/> to 3-ft. rows and cultivate; 
or broadcast 15 lbs. per acre. 
JAPANESE BUCKWHEAT 
A good summer poor land or soil improving crop to 
smother weeds, or for bees. No grain crop can be 
grown easier or in less time, maturing in 2 months. 
Its flour makes delicious cakes. June through August 
broadcast 50 Ibs. per acre. 
SEEDSMEN SINCE 


Tennessee 
German Millet 
Tritt itt itt FOR PRICES SEE LIST IN FRONT OF CATALOG PTIETI TCT r iti ti itt i ttt ii titi) 
Og 
We :9 eee Rt CH M:Oc;N Di cv DR GUN EA 
WOOD'S BIRD SCATTER FOOD 
Attracts doves, quail, turkey and other poe 
game birds to your farm, ducks and 
geese to your marshes, or song birds to 
your home. Feed it regularly in winter, 
especially during snows when little na- 
tive food is left. Birds range far to find 
it. It furnishes nourishment and warmth 
in the coldest weather. Native birds will 
remain and repay you many times over 
killing insect pests. Migratory birds will 
return to your marshes the following 
winter. Birds never forget where they 
found food when they needed it. 
Birds need a variety of food to keep 
healthy and able to withstand the hard- 
ships of winter. Our formula, prepared 
by highest authority, has a wide assort- 
ment of seeds sought after by wild birds. 
It is used by many bird clubs and other 
wildlife conservation organizations. 
SONG BIRDS. There is no greater 
pleasure to children or grown-ups in 
cold weather than to watch through the 
window song birds fussing with one an- 
other over which will eat the most 
Wood's Bird Scatter Food. 
SESBANIA 
Excellent for quail, duck marshes, or 
soil improving in Southern Coastal 
Plains. Made more seed than any other 8 
crop in, a 5-year Georgia test. Game = ror 
birds are attracted oe a distance by Pearl or Cat-Tail Millet 
the seed. Does well on any soil if cultivated, but best 
on rich bottoms if broadcast. Makes a quick vigorous 
growth and furnishes excellent cover. A superior soil- 
improving crop. With moisture it creates more nitro- 
gen and humus than most other plants. Sow 20 to 25 
lbs. per acre after ground warms, April through July. 
PEARL OR CATTAIL MILLET 
Grows 10 to 12 ft. tall. For greatest amount of nutri- 
tious green feed or hay cut at 3 to 4 ft. Stools out lux- 
uriantly; gives 3 or 4 cuttings a season, growing till 
frost. Does well even on poor land and in dry seasons. 
All stock eat it greedily and flourish on it. When 
land is warm, plant 8 lbs. per acre in 3-ft. drills, near 
the feeding lot. Cut some daily. 
BROWN TOP MILLET 
Draws doves many miles, relished by quail and tur- 
key. Excellent bird cover. Similar to Tenn. millet, but 
taller, has larger heads, produces more seed, hay and 
grazing. Can be grazed constantly in dry summers, 
starting when 3 in. tall. One plant stools out about 30 
stems, relished by poultry and livestock. Makes more 
hay than Sudan, equal to Timothy in feeding value, 
allows several cuttings, yielding 5 or 6 tons per acre. 
Broadcast 20 lbs. per acre, April through July. 
TENNESSEE CULTIVATED 
GERMAN MILLET 
Big head, large yielding type. Makes a bumper crop 
of easily cured hay in 60 days. One of the easiest 
grown summer catch crops when feed is short. Smoth- 
ers out weeds, leaving ground in fine condition for 
fall crops. Drill 50 lbs. per acre on harrowed wheat 
or oat land, May to July. Apply 300 lbs. per acre of 
5-10-5 fertilizer. Broadcast 25 lbs. with bus. of soy- 
beans or cowpeas for higher yield, more nutritious 
hay and better for land. Cut when the millet blooms. 
We also have ordinary German Millet and Hog Mil- 
let, which are earlier, not as tall, have smaller heads, 
less hay or seed. 

