GOOD THINGS COMING IN THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER IN 1918-Page 5 : : w, BASTB&J EDITION ' .- : '4k fGT'lz! A Farm anJ jie Weekly for The CarolMas, VirgiriGeorgia, and Florida. -jam ; : FOUNDED 1886, AT RALEIGH, N. C r : : i : ; i ; . Vol. XXXII. No 49. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1917 $1 a Year; 5c a Copy The South Can Lead the Nation in Agriculture , A 5,000 BULL-BORN AND .RAISED THE COTTON BELT . Vernot Prince 36th, Sold by Estate of W. J. Davis & Co., Jackson, Miss., to Fred Huyler, Gladstone, N. J. YI7 YV 'HEN recently 120 head of Here- fords belonging to the estate of the late' W. J. Davis brought $116,- ,000, or an average of nearly $1,000 per. head, and when the champion bull of this herd was sold to a New Jersey breeder for $5,000, some agricultural history was made. More recently, still, all of Missis sippi, ; large parts of North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas have been cleared of the cattle tick. . Add to this the . fact that this year the South is raising two billion dollars worth of cotton, one and one-half billion dollars worth of corn, and peanuts, velvet beans and tobacco worth more than in any previous year of our history, and we can sec a good deal of justification "in our DON'T FAIL TO READ The Best Seed Potatoes. . . . . . . Farm Tenantry and Soil Fertility . A Spray Calendar for Orchard Fruits . Southern Berkshire Association Organized at Pinehurst . V. . . The South Needs More Farm Machinery. . Dog Tax Laws: Right and Wrong Kinds . . Go to Wilson January 1-4 Save the Leaves for Fertilizer ... . . A Remarkable Success in Cooperative . Mar keting . . . . . Pace 4 7 8 9 9 12 12 12 13 Rules Ready for Standard Cotton Warehouses 1 3 What About Oleomargarine? . What Are Our , Ideals? . . . 14 14 claim that the South is potentially' the garden spot of the Nation. And why shouldn't it be? Nature may not have given us the richest soil in the world, but she has given us an incompar able agricultural climate. An abundant rainfall and mild winters make it possible to grow nearly all the crops of the tem perate zone, and to have some crop grow ing, every month in the year, a fact that makes it comparatively easy to solve the food, feed and fertility problem. With crops selling for two and three times normal prices, this is a day of opportunity for the Southern farmer who mixes brains and brawn. The reading, thinking farmer is in the saddle, headed straight for independence. Let us all resolve to travel with him fn -19 18.