WOOD’S PERMANENT PASTURE and HAY MIXTURES Make Bumber Forage Crops 
More Economical, Productive, Nutritious and Palatable Than Ladino with Orchard Grass or Tall Fescue. Sow 25 Ibs. Acre 
Experiment station tests show yields of pasture and hay 
increase as more seed per acre is sown, up to 25 lbs., and as 
more different compatible clovers and grasses are added. 
Mixtures of many grasses and clovers, including Ladino, 
Orchard, Alfalfa and Red Clover yielded about a third more 
than one clover and one grass. Ladino with Ky. 31 yielded 
5,435 lbs. dry weight in 1950 but only 1,561 lbs. in 1951, as 
the Ladino winterkilled, leaving no legume to furnish nitro- 
gen to the grass. The quality and feeding value was also 
cut. They concluded: “Using more than one legume in a 
mixture is a good insurance investment because species differ 
in adaptability to soil, climate and biological growth factors.” 
Our mixtures, proved superior for 3 generations, contain 7 
legumes and 9 grasses, with Ladino Clover and Orchard 
Grass as a base. Disease Resistant Red Clover, Alfalfa, Alsike, 
Dixie White, Bur and Reseeding Crimson Clovers, Paspalum, 
Kentucky Blue, Red Top, Ky. 31 or Alta and Meadow Fescue, 
Timothy, Perennial and Domestic Rye Grass. They grow off 
faster and flourish in dry summers, crowding out weeds that 
retard Ladino, Orchard or Tall Fescue sown alone. They bear 
abundantly many years, minimizing the seeding cost. They 
are well balanced, high in protein, extremely nutritious and 
palatable. Animals eat more and grow faster or produce 
more milk, saving feed bills. 
LADINO CLOVER—California Grown 
The most nutritious, palatable and productive year round 
pasture legume. Its peak growth is in early spring and fall 
when native grasses are short. It is so rich it may cause 
bloating unless grasses are grown with it. Sow 1 to 2 Ibs. 
Ladino with 10 Ibs. of orchard grass or tall fescue, in early 
fall. Add 2 Ibs. of Red Clover and 5 lbs. of Alfalfa for more 
summer pasture. Wood’s Permanent Pasture and Hay Mix- 
tures contain all these with additional grasses and clovers for 
maximum year ’round production and highest feed value, but 
can not cause bloat. 
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80 Acre Field of ATLAS 66 making enormous yield in east- 
ern Virginia where it has outyielded all wheats for 2 years in 
experiment station tests, including it’s sister Atlas 50. In 
Essex Co. Va., a 95 acre field of poor light sandy soil that 
never yielded over 1,800 bu. made 2,800 bu. of Atlas 66. 
Atlas has made record yields and is recommended from 
Ala, to Md., except in high elevations. It has very dark green 
foliage, vigorous fall and winter growth, and is the best wheat 
for winter pasture. It has stiff medium tall straw, easy te 
combine. It stands up on rich land where other wheats lodge. 
It is beardless, has large solid heads packed with big sound 
grain, high in food value. It is medium early, rust and mil- 
dew resistant. Atlas 66 is more rust proof, has stronger 
straw, better milling quality, is earlier and more winter 
hardy than Atlas 50 which is more mildew resistant. 
Price f.o.b. $39.00 per 100-Ib. bag; 25 to 99 Ibs. 41c. per Ib. 
PERMANENT PASTURE MIXTURES 1 to 3 
Contain grasses and clovers which make their maximum 
growth at different times throughout the year for abundant 
nutritious year-round grazing. They cannot cause bloating. 
Thousands of prize cattle have died bloating when one grass 
was planted and disappeared, leaving only Ladino to graze. 
No. 1. For light gravelly or sandy soil 
No. 2. For good loam soil 
No. 3. For moist bottom land 
WOOD’S PERMANENT HAY MIXTURES 6 to 8 
Contain grasses and clovers which mature at the same 
time, making bumper hay crops, which are easily cured. 
They recover quickly, giving several big cuttings of the 
finest hay every year. 
No. 6. For light gravelly or sandy soil 
No. 7. For good loam or clay soil 
No. 8. For moist bottom land 
WOOD’S SOUTHERN PERMANENT PASTURE and HAY 
MIXTURE No. 12 produces tremendous yields of the finest 
pasture and hay on both light and heavy soils in the South- 
ern Coastal Area from Virginia to the Gulf. 
CRIMSON CLOVER 
The best winter legume for soil 
improvement, hay and pasture, 
nutritious, high in protein, rel- 
ished by all livestock. It con- 
serves soil fertility. Turned un- 
der it adds valuable nitrogen and 
humus, holds moisture during 
droughts, and improves follow- 
ing crops tremendously. We 
handle only the brightest, high- 
est quality seed, purer, freer of 
weed, with stronger germina- 
tion, producing better stands and 
more vigorous crops. Our im- 
ported and Tenn. seed both meet 
P.M.A. requirements. Inoculate 
and sow 25 pounds per acre, 
August to October. It may 
cause bloat if grazed alone. It is in Wood’s Grain Pasture 
Mixture. A highly nutritious, balanced diet that cannot 
cause bloat and is better for winter grazing as small grains 
make more growth in cold weather. 
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Arlington Oats sown thinly in 3-ft. rows stooled out vig- 
orously, almost touching rows. For 6 years it has made 
outstanding yields of grain, hay and pasture in U.S.D.A. and 
State tests from Piedmont Georgia to Va. and Md., making 
170 bu. per acre in one test. 
