Wood's V-50 
Our Best Yellow Hybrid for Upper South 
Mekes bumper crops of big sound ears with deep grain, 
high m feeding value. It has everything desired in a hybrid: 
strong, vigorous stalks and roots, excellent fodder; ears low. 
V. P. I. recommends V-50 for Eastern Va., where it aver- 
aged 107 bu. per acre 2 years, highest yellow corn in 9 tests, 
making 162.2 bu. per acre in 1947 and 117.7 in 1948 at Nor- 
folk, 113.1 at Williamsburg, 108.4 at Holland and 115 at 
Onley, outyielding Dixie 17 and all recommended hybrids. 
It averaged 93.4 bu. per acre, highest of any recommended 
hybrid tested in all 3 Va. regions in 1948, 10.6 bu. more than 
U. S. 357. It made the highest average yield in Middle, Va. 
tests. In Western Va., at Glade Spring, V-50 averaged 107.3 
bu. per acre for 2 years, 5 bu. above other regular hybrids. 
N. C.: It made 144.8 bu. per acre in Camden, the highest 
yield of any yellow corn in 1948 experiment station tests and 
highest average in the 5 Coastal tests, 112.4 bu. in Currituck 
and 101.4 in Guilford. In county demonstrations it outyielded 
N. C 27 30 bu. per acre in Davie, 8.5 in Union and 8.6 in 
Hertford, making 116 bu. per acre. 
At Clemson, 8. C.: V-50 made the highest average yield 
of yellow corns in the four 1947 and 1946 tests. 
One of the highest yielding and strongest stalked yellow 
corns in North Georgia Experiment Station tests 2 years. 
Wood’s V-25 Extra Early 
100 Days. Our Best Yellow Hybrid for Short Mountain 
Seasons or for Extra Karly Feed or Hogging in the South. 
In 1947 eleven N. C. farmers joined the 100 bu. corn club 
with V-25. Ears low. Short strong stalk. Popular in East- 
ern Carolina for planting after early potatoes. Made 87.4 
bu. per acre of dry corn by Sept. 1st for Ed. Armstrong, 
Tyrrell Co., N. C. Roasting ears 75 days. V-25a made 110.1 
bu. per acre in the Winchester, Va., early hybrid test. 
“Tt has given excellent results at 2,650 ft. for four years. 
Short stalks, early, storm resistant. It outyielded our best local 
corn 17% bu. per acre.”—T. M. Calhoun, Grayson Co., Va. 
“It was the best corn we ever raised in every way. Stood 
adverse weather conditions much better and yielded 100 bu. 
per acre.”—A. McCutcheon, Fayette Co., W. Va. 
“My County Agent and everybody said it was the best 
they ever saw. Some hills had 6 ears, 10 inches long. 
It made way over 
100 bu. per acre.” 
J. H. Price, Ral- 
eigh Co., W. Va. 

7 
D. W. Cope, Davidson Co., N. C., holds 
a Stalk of S-315 with 2 Big Solid Ears 

Sound flinty ears. It’s big pure white 
grain brings a premium for milling, 
Small cob, high shelling %. Strong, 
vigorous stalk and root, resists disease. 
N. C: Highest yielding pure white 
corn in the 5 Coast experiment station 
tests 3 years, averaging 131.5 bu. per 
acre in Camden 2 years; best shuck pro- 
tection, ears low, few suckers, very pro- 
lific. In 1948 county demonstrations: 
It outyielded all white corns in Rowan, 
13.5 bu. per acre more than Tenn. 10. 
Outyielded all pure white and yellow 
corns in Union and Caswell. Outyielded 
Dixie 17 at Burlington. Made 119 bu. 
10 more than Tenn. 10, at Waxhaw. 

Wood’s V-50, 2 Large Sound Ears on a Short Stocky Stalk 
Wood's S-315 Red Cob Prolific 
Heavy Yielding White Hybrid for the Cotton Belt. 
Very Prolific. Long Thick Shucks. Resists Weevil 
S C.: Made highest yield at Edisto 
expt. sta. Made 102.1 bu. per acre, 
highest pure white corn in Clemson Up- 
land test, and 113.9 bu. in lowland test. 
Won Orangeburg negro 3-acre contest. 
Georgia experiment stations: Upper 
Coastal Plain 1948 tests S-315 outyield- 
ed all white corns and was rated equal 
to Dixie 18 in weevil resistance. It out- 
yielded Tenn 10 and all pure white corns 
2 years in 6 Mountain tests. Made 119.5 
bu. per acre in one, 13 above Tenn. 10. 
At Alabama expt. sta. it made 113.2 
bu. per acre with little weevil damage. 
A Louisiana expt. sta. says: ‘“S-315 
looked very good in our tests, made 
top yields with little weevil damage.” 
