WOOD’S QUAIL PLANTING MIXTURE 
“This wildlife border attracts game birds, providing both feed and cover.” 
WOOD’S QUAIL PLANTING MIXTURE 
Follow the advice of the Va. Game Commission and plant the 15 to 30 ft. 
of field next to the woods in wildlife food. In formulating our planting 
mixture we have spent many hours studying the kind of food and cover 
game birds need in order to survive and multiply. In order to obtain a 
mixture that will furnish the best feed and cover the year ‘round we have 
incorporated 13 kinds of seed including Bicolor and Sericea Lespedezas. 
How to Plant. Broadcast 25 lbs. per acre, May to July, on prepared land, 
using 400 lbs. of fertilizer. It pays to disc, harrow and sow each year. For 
Quail, sow in long strips near cover, fences, ditches, or hedgerows, in old 
tobacco beds, or in openings or fire lanes in woods. For a 15 by 400 ft. 
strip, use 5 lbs. For Wild Turkeys or Pheasants sow in wider strips in se- 
cluded spots. For Doves sow one or two acres in an open area. 
WOOD'S BIRD SCATTER FOOD 
Attracts doves, quail, turkey and other game birds to your farm, ducks and 
geese to your marshes, or song birds to your home. Furnishes nourishment 
and warmth in the coldest weather. Birds will range far to find it. Native 
birds will remain and repay you many times over by killing insects. Our 
formula, prepared by highest authority, has a wide assortment of seeds 
sought by wild birds including hemp and sunflower. Used by many bird 
clubs and other conservation organizations. 
JAPANESE BUCKWHEAT 
A good summer grain crop for feed or flour, poor land or soil improving 
crop to smother weeds, or for bees, maturing in 2 months. Its flour makes 
delicious cakes. June through Aug., sow 50 lbs. per care. 
BICOLOR LESPEDEZA No. 101, Perennial 
Ideal Quail Food. Stands up in winter storms, shedding seed on snow. 
Bark and leaves relished by rabbits, blooms attract honeybees. Grows 
well on all but wet or very acid soils. Use as field’ border or hedgerows. 
1 Ib. plants strip 15 by 400 ft. Broadcast or plant in 2 ft. rows on pre- 
pared soil. 500 Ibs. complete fertilizer desirable. Sow April to July as 
far north as southern Pennsylvania after ground warms. 
BENE, Game Birds Love It. 
Adapted to most soils, upright growth, covered in fall with long okra like 
pods. These gradually open all winter, dropping seeds which attract quail 
and other game birds. Relished by poultry. Drill 5 lb. per acre in 22 ft. 
rows and cultivate, or broadcast 15 lbs. 
BROWN TOP MILLET 
Draws doves many miles. Relished by quail and turkey. Excellent bird 
cover. Makes more hay than Sudan, equal to Timothy in feeding value, 
allows several cuttings, yielding 5 or 6 tons per acre. Broadcast 20 Ibs. 
per acre, April to July. 
CERTIFIED GERMAN MILLET 
A tall leafy variety of foxtail millet, adapted to the Southern half of the 
U. S. Matures in 68 to 70 days and has a potential yield of 2,000 Ibs. or 
more of grain, and 21/2 to 3 tons of hay. Valuable catch crop to be planted 
late after small grain. Drill 50 Ibs. per acre on harrowed wheat or oat 
land from May to July. Apply 300 Ibs. fertilizer. 
BROOM CORN 
Easily grown on any land. Yields 300 to 600 Ibs. of fiber and 3 to 6 bush- 
els of seed per acre. 
Standard Evergreen. Best for the South. Grows 8 to 10 ft. tall, a long 
heavy brush, free from heavy center stems and crooked brush. 
Early Dwarf. Best for the North. 10 to 15 days earlier, makes a finer and 
heavier brush, growing 61/2 to 7 ft. tall. 
PEARL OR CATTAIL MILLET 
Does well even on poor land and in dry seasons. For greatest amount of 
nutritious green feed or hay, cut at 3 to 4 ft. Grows till frost. Makes ex- 
cellent silage. When ground is warm, April to July, plant 8 Ibs. per acre 
in 3 ft. drills, near feeding lot. Fertilize heavily. 
MAMMOTH RUSSIAN SUNFLOWER, poultry, game, hogs 
Good grain crop. Profitable cash crop as it yields 1,000 to 1,500 lbs. per 
acre of seed rich in oil and protein. Plant and cultivate like corn in 2Y/2 
foot rows. For feed or silage plant 15 to 20 lbs. per acre; for seed pro- 
duction, plant 12 inches apart in the row at the rate of 8 lbs. per acre. 
When ripe, cut off the heads and pile loosely under cover to dry. 
Wood’s Bird Seed & Fish Food 
SONGSTER FOOD 
A well yalanced mixture of plain canary and bird rape. By mail postpaid, 
I-lb. pkg. 50c; 5 Ibs. $1.50; 10 Ibs. $2.70. Not postpaid, I-lb. pkg. 25c; 5 Ibs. 
$1.10; 10 Ibs. $2.00. 
PLAIN CANARY SEED 
By mail postpaid, 1 lb. 50c; 5 Ibs. $1.50; 10 Ibs. $2.70. Not postpaid, 1 Ib. 25c; 
5 Ibs. $1.10; 10 Ibs. $2.00. 
LOVEBIRD AND PARAKEET SEED 
By mail postpaid, 1 Ib. 50c; 5 Ibs. $1.50; 10 Ibs. $2.70. Not postpaid, 1 Ib. 25c: 
5 Ibs. $1.10; 10 Ibs. $2.00. 
HEMP SEED 
By mail postpaid, 1 Ib. 50; 5 Ibs. $1.50; 10 Ibs. $2.70. Not postpaid, 1 Ib. 25c; 
5 Ibs. $1.10; 10 Ibs. $2.90. 
BIRD MILLET 
By mail postpaid, 1 Ib. 35c; 5 Ibs. $1.40; 10 Ibs. $2.50. Not postpaid, 1 Ib. 15c; 
5 Ibs. 65c; 10 Ibs. $1.30. 
BIRD RAPE 
By mail postpaid, 1 Ib. 50c; 5 Ibs. $1.45; 10 Ibs. $2.65. 
Not postpaid, | Ib. 25c; 5 Ibs. $1.00; 10 Ibs. $1.90. 
BURNETT’S UNEXCELLED BIRD FOOD 
(A Song Food)—By mail postpaid, 3!/2-0z. bottle 45c. 
Not postpaid 35c. 
BURNETT’S LIGHTNING BIRD FOOD 
By mail postpaid, 3!/2-0z. bottle 45c. 
Not postpaid 35c. 
FISH FOOD—For Pools 
By mail postpaid, 1-lb. carton $1.00. 
Not postpaid, 75c. 
FISH FOOD—For Aquarium and Bowls 
By mail postpaid 34-0z. pkg. 15¢. Not postpaid 10c. 
54 T. W. WOOD & SONS : 
Seedsmen Since 1879 ° 
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 
