Paves VOOD & SONS - 
WOOD'S ENSILAGE CORNS 
Virginia Grown. Makes More Tonnage, Grain and Feeding Value 
HYBRID YELLOW SWEEPSTAKES 
Silage 108 days. Fast vigorous growth, pro- 
ducing more combined 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. Its long wide leaves are close together 
and stay dark green after the ears ripen. Its 
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 won- 
derful husking corn. Many farmers use it for 
grain as well as silage. 
It averaged over 20 tons of silage per acre 
in 2 Southern experiment station tests, 14!/> to 
42% more than other corns, making the high- 
est green or dry weight. It made 26]/2 tons per 
acre, highest in the Rhode Island test. It was 
one of the highest yielding and_ strongest 
stalked yellow hybrids at the Georgia Moun- 
tain Experiment. Station, 
"We tried Hybrid Yellow against other si- 
lage corns 3 years and will plant all our crop 
in it next year. It makes as much tonnage, 
with better quality, more ears and feeding 
value than taller corns. It was not damaged 
by a bad storm that nearly ruined nearby corn. 
Most stalks had 2 big ears.''—Silver Springs 
Dairy, Moore Co., N. C. \ 
"| like Hybrid Sweepstakes fine for silage." 
—J. J. Anderson, Monongalia Co., W, Va, 
"It is a real silage corn. In a very dry sea- 
son it made a good growth and eared out well. 
| can't see how it made such a yield with so 
liftle rain.""—G. L. Broaddus, Carolina Co., Va. 
Pamunkey 16!/-ft. Stalks, 15-inch Ears 
WOOD'S S-240 Yellow Hybrid 
Silage 120 days. Best ensilage corn for the 
deep South. It has thick stocky stalks with 
huge root systems. Its broad leaves are 
close together making a compact growth. 
It stands up despite storms. It is easy to 
harvest and put in the silo. It makes tre- 
mendous yields of silage with high pro- 
portion of grain and feed value. It is most 
prolific with superior shuck, and weevil re- 
sistance. It takes only a few acres to {ill 
your silos and what is left to mature quickly 
fills your cribs. (See page 50.) 
YELLOW SWEEPSTAKES 
Silage 108 days. Very large, broad grain; 
deep golden color. Large ears a foot long. 
Averaged 23 tons of silage per acre for 3 
years in N. Y. tests. Earlier than Eureka, 
has more vitamin and feeding value, and 
averaged 15 bu. more grain for 6 years in 
9 states. Made much more silage per acre 
than Eureka in N. C. Mountain tests. 
VIRGINIA EUREKA ENSILAGE 
Silage 115 days. Our strain had larger 
ears, more grain, and yielded 20% more 
silage than ordinary Eureka in the Mass. 
Experiment Station test. At the Conn. Sta- 
tion our strain made 22 tons per acre, to 15 
and 13 tons for Eureka from other growers. 
In a hurricane, ordinary Eureka was blown 
down, but ours was not damaged. It made 
the highest weight of grain and stover in a 
3-year N. J. Test of 75 varieties. 
LANCASTER SURECROP 
Popular in the North for silage, 105 days, 
or grain, 113 days. Heavy yield of large 
ears a foot long. Stocky leafy stalk. 
BLUE RIDGE ENSILAGE 
Silage 111 days. Broadest grain; early ma- 
turing; very popular with dairymen who 
want lots of grain in their silage. 13 to 15 
ft. tall. Matures earlier, has a thicker stalk, 
wider blade and more compact growth 
than Eureka; is easier to harvest and yields 
more grain. 
WOOD'S PAMUNKEY ENSILAGE 
Silage 115 days. Averaged 23 tons per 
acre for 6 years in 9 state tests. Has an 
abundance of nutritious ears, usually a foot 
long, and broad thick foliage. Grows 13 to 
16 feet tall with strong roots and sturdy 
stalks which stand up when shorter corns 
blow down, making it easier to put in the 
silo. Silage is nutritious and palatable. 
"For 3 years it yielded more than any other 
corn; 8 acres fills a large silo; stalks 16 feet 
tall; big around as an ear of corn. Two 
large ears per stalk; sound grain.''—M. B. 
Smith, Spartanburg Co., S. C. 
"For years Pamunkey has made outstand- 
ing yields of silage in the N. C. mountains." 
—P. R. Elam, Co. Agt., Madison Co., N.C. 
PRICES IN FRONT OF CATALOG 
N. J. Expt. Sta.: "In our silage tests your Hybrid Sweep- 
stakes was one of the highest yielding varieties in green 
weight." It has wide leaves, stocky compact stalks, 
deep roots, stands up and is easy to harvest by hand 
or machine. 
EARLY EUREKA ENSILAGE 
Silage 110 days. Similar to Va. Eureka,-but preferred 
by many as it is earlier, yields almost as much silage 
with more grain, making the silage more nutritious and 
palatable. 
WOOD'S MAMMOTH ENSILAGE 
Silage 120 days. Out-yielded other open polinated va- 
rieties 3 years in experiment station tests, making 35% 
to 50% more silage than 24 other corns in one test. 
Was taller; had 4 to 9 more leaves per plant. Heavy 
grain producer, large ears, deep grain, high feeding 
value. 
WOOD'S OLD VIRGINIA ENSILAGE 
Silage 115 days. Heavy yield of silage and grain. High 
feeding value. Leafy, stocky, compact, easy to harvest; 
large white ears; deep grain; good for silage or husk- 
ing. ‘Best silage we ever had.""—G. H. June, Huron 
Co., Ohio. 
WEST BRANCH SWEEPSTAKES 
Silage 104 days. Early ensilage corn for the Northeast. 
Red grain, long, large ears In a Mass. test our strain 
made 22 tons of siiage per acre. 26% more than ordi- 
nary West Branch, 
e505] ~~ ~~~~~~~-~~~_-------_-___. 
