4 , Saturday, March 171917 I off our Ven- tlolex Collar Pads, with five cents in stamp's to pay postage, and we will send you a regular 4 x 14 inch Ventiplex a - Housing Without Charge Send the full labels. We make this offer to widen the circle of Ventiplex Collar Pad users. There Is nothing offered that Is just as good. We want your verdict. Ventiplex Collar Pads are sold by dealers every whereIf your dealer does not carry them send us his name and we will see that you are promptly supplied. Makers of the fa-1 mous 'Burlington STAYrON Stable Blankets. Durilngton Blanket Co. Durilngton WIS. Make Longer Cream Shipments This Sturges refrigerator can has a special heat and cold proof insulation between its inner and outer walls. In a test It lost only eight decrees "cool ness" in twelve hours In a steady heat of ninety-two degrees. 24-hour hauls safely made. Just the thing for sweet cream shippers. Widen your market save work of "ng ien jacJteta, conea, ete. Write for Booklet No. 6 7 Sturges & Bum Mfg. Co. EitablUhed 1865 . Chicago, 11L S-'X- More Money from Purebred Cottonseed . There is always a big demand 0r the hen m-nAr. r ri. t wse the best purebred seed for IZ 8Ulce lt 13 Jst as easy and twice as profitable to feed a r4.CDre? cotton Plant as it-is to low-grade Lint Producer. Ltont forget that Nitrate doubles Lint. ' Cottonseed and Grow iw V w w M oiner crops, out select your seed for all with . greatest care. If you pmw a t ' get a longer price for your Snd tost card for fiie literature WILLIAM S, MYERS, Director ft a sn Madison AwVNew Yet HIGH PRICES PAID FOR HORTH LAKUUHA DAIRY CATTLE Judge Spencer B. Adams of Greens boro, N. C, Sells CloTerdale Dairy Cattle at Public Auction MOTWITHSTANDING the bad wea 1 ther, a large crowd attended the sale of the Cloverdale Dairv cat tle owned by Judge Spencer B. Adams at Greensboro, N. X., on March 1. The total number of animals offered for sale was 8650 milk cows. 2 bulls and 34 calves. Dairy equipment was also sold, and the grand total of the sales amounted to $8,597. Quite a bit Of advertising had been done and there were a number of bidders from South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and a few from other states. There were three different breeds of cattle sold Jersey, Holstein. and Guernsey. The 50 milkers sold aver aged $122 each, and this is an ex ceedingly good average when one considers the fact that all except six of these were grade cows. The 10 Holsteins sold were decid edly the best bred cows in the lot. and they led in price, averaging near ly $200 each. Most of these were in excellent condition and were heavy milkers. - The highest priced cow in the lot was a Guernsey "Galaxy of Edge wood" No. 39799 and she sold for $230. She was a fine type of the Guernsey breed and a heavy milker. The 23 cows of the Guernsey breed sold averaged $130. Seventeen Jersey cows were of fered. These were of a ;very poor type on an average, as Judge Adams had neglected the Jerseys in his herd. Despite this, however, they brought an average price of $78. Only one Jersey cow was registered. Altogether a fine lot of calves was offered, the total number being 34 These were of different breeds all grade animals and brought an aver age price of $30. Two bulls were sold, and both of these were registered. One of the bulls was a Guernsey, a young am mal, and brought $130 ; and the other, a Holstein, with considerable age, brought $160. There were probably about 500 peo pie at the sale, and the number would probably have been much greater had not the rain "poured" all day. The sale was conductedin a large tobacco warehouse, however, and the crowd suffered no inconvenience. Although the crowd was not as large as it would otherwise have been, those who were present came to buy cattle, and the bidding was rapid. On ac count of the delay caused by bring ing the cattle from the. farm to the warehouse in the. rain, the sale did not begin until 11 o'clock, yet the bid ding was so rapid that the sale was finished in time for people to catch , trains leaving Greensboro at o'clock. With a herd of mostly grade cows- cows, calves, bulls, and all averag ing $99.96, who can say there is no sale for livestock in the South? There has never been a time in the South when farmers were so much inter ested in livestock. South Carolina farmers are especially interested in this industry at present on account of the coming of the boll weevil, as was shown by their large representa tion "and quick bidding at this sale. It's a good thing to be interested in too. . r. T. H. Sales Dates Claimed The Progreaaivo Farmer li glad to an nAunc. and claim for tha breeders the fol lowing- dates upon which gales, of pura-brsd livestock will be held. , SHORTHORNS Mar. S3, 1917 East Tennessee Shorthorn Breeders, Knovllle, Tenn.- POLAND-CIITNAS ' Mar. 20, 1817 H. C. Lookab&usjh, "Watonf a, Oklahoma. . Make your neighborhood 'a reading neigh borhood. . "V . (15) 359 FERTILIZER" FACTS No. 38 The Corn Belt va,' is ieacnmcr uown South to The biggest Corn Yields are being made in Dixie with the aid of Fertilizers. Nearly 50,000 Corn Club Boys in the South are producing more , than 50 bushels of corn per acre with an average application of 500 pounds of fertilizer. The Country's Poorest Corn Yields are also made in Dixie "without the useN of fertilizer. ' Uncle Sam's records show an ad vance in average yields in the South each year each advance tallying closely with increased use of fertilizer. It is a plain argument for Plant Food. Biggest yields of corn can't be made unless the hungry Plants are sufficiently fed. Dixie will establish a clear title to be included in the Corn Belt when it supplies its soil what it needs with proper fertilization and practices the best cultural methods. Write lor Bulletin No. 19, "CORN PRODUCTION IN THE SOUTH". Put your Soil Fertility Problems Up to Us SOIL IMPROVEMENT. COMMITTEE Southern Fertilizer Association Rhodes Building Atlanta, Ga., U. S. A. I - ''-II f Gfo ap (Bus &ms The three elements your stock must have are these Protein, Fat and Carbohydrates. In your corn and your silage you have an aDunaant sup ply of fats and carbohydrates. Uut these crops are lckln in protein. To properly nonrun your nocjc to nuke milk, beef, baner fu, pors na mnnon, piowui matt be boubt. or too must feci roar rtlaable grain. Gottozv teed Meal Cot of Feed srs toPaSs SS'Sfri: Comnared JSMiiTi.i.i. VIA fbbu TTk!r-w IS I SfJfD -f coat 16 cti. ner ooond. Tne protein In bran cotti 13 cu. per pound. But Cotton Seed Meal tuppliet protein for 5 cu. per pound. Can yon afford to feed protein cottlnr 13c to 20c per lb. when you can ret lt in Cotton Seed Meal for S cents Pperpoundl II I "ij FREE BOOK ON FEEDING Our interettlnf booklet profuiely inurtrated thowlnf the best formula to feed hortet, cat tle, bop. thee? and poultry, u written by bit practical farmer and stockman, It will be cat free upon requett Publicity Butmu m Inter-State Cotton Seed " Crushers Association A08 Main Street ' Dallas, Tsoas uL It li extenilrely uted i. h.a Tti. Km war to ret the benefit! li to raite lje itock and feed ibe meaL From 80 to 90 of the fertilizlnf value remain! In the manure and enriches the soil. Vou f ct the fertilizer and pay almost nothlnr ior KU TonVakorfManiMffom S25.8G - When writing to advertisers say: "l am writing you as ah advertiser in The Progressive Farmer, which guarantees the reliability of ail tne me aavernstng v carries.