S-210 and S-211 often have 2 or 3 ears per stalk. Note long, 
tight shucks, big beautiful golden grain, strong, stocky plants 
Hybrid Yellow Sweepstakes Ensilage 
Silage 108 days. Fast vigorous growth, producing more com- 
bined silage, grain, protein, vitamins and feeding value per acre 
than other silage corns of similar maturity, from the South to 
New England. It has big strong stalks and roots. It’s long 
wide leaves are close together and stay dark green after the ears 
ripen. It’s silage is extremely palatable and nutritious. It 
yields as many ears as the best grain hybrids but has larger 
ears and grain, with deep golden color. If left to mature it 
makes a wonderful husking corn. Many farmers use it for 
grain as well as silage. 
It averaged over 20 tons of silage per acre in 2 Southern ex- 
periment station tests, 1414 to 42% more than other corns, mak- 
ing the highest green or dry weight. It made 26% tons per 
‘acre, highest in the Rhode Island test. It was one of the highest 
yielding and strongest stalked yellow hybrids at the Georgia 
Mountain Experiment Station. 
N. J. Expt. Sta.: “In our silage tests your Hybrid Sweepstakes 
was one of the highest yielding varieties in green weight.” 
“We tried it against other silage corns 3 years and will plant 
all our crop in it. It withstood storms that ruined nearby corn. 
2 ears per stalk.”—S. S. Dairy, Moore Co., N. C. 
Wood’s S-210 and S-211 
Hybrid Golden Prolific 
High Yielding, Weevil Resistant, Main Crop Corns in the 
Cotton Belt, or Early Feed Corn in the Deep South 
Bred from leading Southern yellow varieties 22 years 
in the South. Flinty. Long tight shucks. Extremely pro- 
lific. Ears placed low on strong compact stalks. Deep 
roots. Wide leaves. Dark green color. Resists heat, 
drought and storms. Mature early. Big golden grain, high 
protein, vitamin and feeding value. Small cob. High 
shelling per cent. 
S-211 is an improvement on S-210 in yield, shuck pro- 
tection, weevil and disease resistance. Prominent N. C. 
seed growers declared it “the best eared up” and highest 
yielding corn they ever saw, 2 to 3 good ears per stalk. 
It is tested and approved by the N. C. and Ga. experi- 
ment stations. Outyielded N. C. 27 in several tests. 
S-210 has excelled many years in experiment station 
tests throughout the South. Auburn, Ala. reports: “Your 
S-210 looked quite good in the test,” with little lodging or 
weevil damage, outyielding N. C. 27 with less lodging. It 
was the high yielding early corn in Florida tests. 
N C. S-210 made 111.6 bu. .per acre in a coast experi- 
ment station test, with very little insect damage and good 
grain quality. In 1948 county demonstrations: It made 
103.1 bu. per acre, highest yield in Chowan. It outyielded 
all yellow corns in Union, and in Hertford, making 109 bu. 
per acre. S-210n outyielded all yellow corns in Davie. 
It made the highest yield at Davie Co. Training School, 
outyielding Dixie 17 10 bu., and N. C. 27, 45 bu. per acre. 
“My S-210 yielded over 100 bu. per acre. I will plant all 
my 1949 crop in it. It made 124.2 bu. per acre, winning 
ist prize in Anson Co. for my son.”’—-W. W. Lowry. It 
made 110 bu. per acre, winning the Gaston Co. 4-H contest 
for D. Rhyne. It won 2 prizes in Rowan Co., 107.3 bu. 
for A. C. Fluck, and 104.7: for I. C. Shulenburger. 
S. C.: Despite a severe drought, S-210 made 82.2 bu. 
per acre, highest yield of any yellow corn in 1947 Clemson 
experiment station tests, 8.1 bu. more than N.. C. 27, and 
at the S. C. Coast expt. sta. it made 5.3 more than N. C. 27. 
It won the Edgefield Co. 3-acre corn contest. 
Georgia experiment station, 1948: S-210 outyielded all 
yellow corns in the Piedmont test at Experiment; made 
100.8 bu. per acre, outyielding Tenn. 10, N. C. 27, etc., in 
a North Ga. test and yielded at the top in Upper Coastal 
tests. It won the 5-acre corn contest for Ben Wright, 
Jefferson, Ga., making 120 bu. per acre. 1949: S-211 was 
one of the highest yielding and most weevil resistant yel- 
low corns in 8 Ga. Coastal Plain tests. 
Hybrid Yellow Sweepstakes has stocky compact stalks 
deep roots, stands up and is easy to harvest by hand or ma- 
chine. “It is a real silage corn. Ina very dry season it made a 
good growth and eared out well. I can’t see how it made such 
a yield with so little rain.”—G. L. Broaddus, Caroline Co., Va. 
