V-45 has large solid ears, big golden grain tightly packed on small cob, high shelling %, 
Wood’s V-45 Yellow 
Popular in Upper South Many Years 
Makes big yields of highest quality feed 
corn. It’s heavy root system and strong 
compact stalk helps it resist drought, 
heat, storm and disease. It grows luxu- 
riantly with dark green color. Excels 
for grain or silage. scl Nate han? 
Va. One of the highest yielding yellow 
corns in Piedmont and Mountain experi- 
ment station tests, outyielding U. S. 357, 
UsSe262= Uns 13 and Ind? 750," “It is 
by far our best adapted and heaviest 
yielding hybrid. It made 18 to 20 bar- 
rels per acre on 17 acres, far more than 
other leading hybrids grown beside it.’””— 
A. L. Phillips, Sussex Co. 
Md.: Averaged 132% of check, best 
yellow corn in 1949 Eastern Shore tests. 
N. C. experiment stations: In 1949 
Lower Mountain test V-45 made the high 
yield of 101.1 bu. per acre, 6.1 more than 
N. C. 27 and 11:8 more than U. S. 138. It 
had good grain quality and very few 
lodged plants. It has outyielded N. C. 27 
in Cleveland Co. and in the 5 Coastal 
tests making 131.8 bu. per acre in 
Camden Co. test. 
Ga. experiment stations: It outyielded 
all yellow corns and had the most erect 
plants 2 years in 8 north Ga. tests. 
W. Va.: “V-45 made a heavy yield and 
stood the storm well. We were well 
pleased with it.’”—W. S. Law, Lewis Co. 
“Despite a bad drought V-45 averaged 
2 ears per stalk grown 8 stalks per hill, 
yielding 187 bu. per acre. It has sturdy 
stalks and -deep- roots.”—J. D.-Skidmore, 
Webster Co., W. Va. 
“V-45 is the only corn I grow as it 
almost doubled the yield of other corns. 
It has hard flinty grain and withstands 
weevil, storm or drought.’”—J. A. Sum- 
rellmaCuLrmcuckmCos Nh GC. 
“V-45 has big ears, often 2 per stalk, 
deep grain, small cob. It outyielded 6 
hybrids I grew.”—-D. W. Cope, David- 
son! Co;, N.C: 
pees 
Wood’s S-350 White 
Prolific Milling Corn for Cotton Belt 
Bred from highest yielding Southern 
corns. Resists weevil, storm or drought. 
Ne Cl Madesi32.9e bussper acre, in) au 
expt. sta. test, with gocd shuck and grain 
quality, low in moisture, ear height and 
lodged plants. “S-350 had longer ears 
and nearly double the yield of other 
corns.”—C. O. Batchelor, Nash Co., N. C. 
S. C.: Made a record yield in Chester- 
field Co., 104 bu. per acre for Dan Jordan, 
76 years old. ‘20 acres of S-350 is the 
best I ever grew. Withstands drought or 
storm.”—J. P. Knighton, Greenville Co. 
Ala. expt. sta. made 98.7 bu. per acre 
with little weevil damage or lodging. 
S-350 with 2 big sound ears per stalk, 
with deep grain closely packed on a 
small cob, long tight shuck, dark green 
foliage, strong vigorous stalk. Deep roots. 
Makes finest quality corn meal. 
sires 
vitamin, protein and feeding value 
Wood’s V-35 and V-36 
Superior Early Yellow Feed Corns. Low 
Ears, Strong Stalks. Easy to Harvest. 
“V-35 made the best yield and fodder 
of 5 leading hybrids I tried on 20 acres; 
best in 6 counties. It had 1014 in. ears, 
18 to 22 rows. Stalks stood up well.”— 
J. W. Ricketts, Jr., Dickerson Co., Md. 
W. Va. cxperiment stations: V-35 aver- 
aged 91.3 bu. per acre, highest 2 years 
in the Gilmer Co. test. Made 104.7 bu. 
per acre, tops in Marion Co., 1,100 ft. 
N. C. experiment stations: For 6 years 
V-35 has made high yields in Mountain 
tests, with few lodged plants and satis-~- 
factory medium early maturity. It made 
113.7 bu. per aere in Camden Co. test. 
V-36 should become the most popular 
early feed corn in the Upper South as 
it yields with the best, has lower stalks 
and ears, is earlier, dries quicker for 
harvest in time to plant fall grain. 
Wa. All 11 experiment station tests: 
-26 yielded with U. S. 357 and U.S. 262 
but was much earlier and drier at har- 
vest. It was as early and dry as U.S. 13 
but yielded about 5 bu. per acre more. 
It had much lower ears and stronger 
stalks than either. 
WN. ©. expt. sta.: V-36 had good stalk 
strength and grain quality and fairly 
good shucks and weevil resistance all 
over N. C. It was outstanding in a 
Coastal test with big ears placed low 
on short stalks standing erect when ad- 
joining hybrids were blown down by the 
hurricane. 
Wood’s V-40 and V-41 
Early Yellow Corns for Mountains or 
Hogging in the South. High Yields 
N. C. expt. sta.: V-40 has outyielded 
all corns two years in Upper Mountain 
tests, with best grain quality, strong 
stalks and satisfactory early maturity. 
V-41 is an improvement in yield, shuck, 
resistance to insects and diseases and 
sounder ears. 
