d en a Wood’s S-240 Yellow 
Our Most Weevil Resistant, Heaviest Yielding 
Yellow Hybrid in the Southern Coastal Area 
Long Tight Shucks. Hard Flinty Grain 
Superior for grain or silage. High vitamin, protein and feeding value. 
Later than S-210, flintier, more prolific and weevil resistant. Best shuck. 
Vigorous. Resists disease and drought. It made 118 bu. per acre, win- 
ning Emanuel Co., Ga., corn championship and $100.00 for B. C. Hall 
Fla. experiment stations: It made the highest yield in 
1947 tests; in 1948 it outyielded local corns 51% in 5 tests; 
Fla. agronomist says: ‘You can be justly proud of S-240.” 
In 5 N. C. coast experiment station tests it averaged 99.5 
bu. per acre, making 106.2 in Currituck and averaged 124 
bu. 2 years in Camden, with best shuck, insect resistance, 
grain quality, and least suckers. 
At the S. C. Coast Experimtnt Station our highest yield- 
ing strongest stalk, most weevil resistant hybrid. 
All who saw the big S. C. field we grew for seed de- 
a clared it the best they ever saw. 
* Made 96.9 bu. per acre, with 
very little weevil damage or 
lodging at Alabama Expt. Sta, 























Wood's 8-360 
Weevil Resistant 
White Hybrid for 
Southern Coastal Plain 
High yield. Very prolific 
Bred in the Deep South, where weevil de- 
stroy softer corns with poorer shucks. Bred 
from most popular weevil resistant Southern : 
varieties. Similar to Fla. W-1, but has a ¢ | 
wider adaptation from Southern N. C. to 
Texas. It outyielded all white corns at the 
North Florida experiment station. More wee- 
vil proof than S-350. Its hard grain makes 
the finest pure white corn meal. 
It makes as many good sound ears per stalk as 
the fertility and moisture permit. It resists drought — 
and disease. Deep spreading roots. Big, strong, 
leafy stalks. Vigorous. Dark green. Excellent 
combination grain and fodder or ensilage corn. 
It is a good poor land corn. A farmer in S C. lost his 
regular corn due to drought and lack of labor and fertilizer, 
but made a good crop of S-360. At the S. C. Coast Experi- 
ment Station it was our highest yielding hybrid. 
It averaged 102.6 bu. per acre in 5 N. C. Coast expt. sta. 
tests, making 104.5 in Currituck, and 133.1 in Camden in 
1947 and 125.6 in 1948, with extra good grain and shuck. 
It made 119.8 bu. per acre, with very light weevil damage in one Alabama Expt. 
Sta. test, and 100.2 bu. in another, with very little weevil damage or lodging. 
Ne No 
Wood’s Southern Aeneas Z 
Bred and Grown in the South 21 Years. Prolific, 
High Yield, Deep Roots, Long Tight Shucks, Flinty. 
Strong Stalks. Resist Weevil, Heat, Storm, Drought 
To be adapted and resist southern insects and diseases we breed, test and 
grow hybrids in each Southern region. For 2 years our S-210 made the high- 
ast average yield in the Orangeburg S. C. 3-acre contest. The official 1948 
report shows it averaged 5 bu. per acre more than N. C. 27 and says: “The 
above hybrids were reasonably free from weevil damage in the field. N. C. 27 
seemed to be more susceptible to fungus trouble. One N. C. 27 plot was seri- 
ously damaged by the fungus or blight, known as Helminthosporium.” 
S-360 is prolific, Long, thick, tight shucks Our hybrid dryer and seed plant is most complete. We TREAT our seed. 


