Thai* huslty Spring fryt w«r« 

 f*d BLUE S£AL Chicle Starter. 



GUn VInion, right, and part of hit flock of 7'/] waab old 

 Whita and Barred Rocb. Harold Davis, laft, is with the 

 Champaign County Livestock Marketing Association. 







''Blue Seal Chick Starter and 

 Growing Mash Beat Them All, 



// 



says Glen Vinson, Champaign County Farm Bureau Member 



. . . and Mr. Vinson knows his feeds and poultry. For 

 several seasons, he has raised from 800 to 1000 chicks. 

 He says he's tried about all the different chick mashes 

 made . . . and BLUE SEAL beat them all! 



Glen says that his "chicks feathered completely . . . de- 

 veloped sturdy, yellow legs and straight breast bones. 

 They made steady gro^vth from the start. At 71/2 wreeks 

 of age the pullets weighed 1 ^/j pounds, the cockerels, 

 2 pounds. All have solid meaty bodies." 



About May first, Mr. Vinson plans to get 700 more chicks 

 — these, too, will be fed the BLUE SEAL way. 

 If you want to grow money-making birds, feed them BLUE 

 SEAL CmCK STARTER. Your chicks will grow faster and 

 keep healthy because BLUE SEAL CHICK STARTER gives 

 them the proper balance of protein, vitamins and mineral. 



You can feed BLUE SEAL feeds with confidence — BLUE 

 SEAL users say so. "One Blue Seal feeder brings 

 another." 



"There's nothing that will equal BLUE SEAL LAYING 

 MASH." says Russell Pulllan of Mahomet (above) 

 who purchased the first bag of BLUE SEAL feed sold 

 in Illinois. Since then he has fed BLUE SEAL LAYING 

 MASH regularly. He gets 40 to 45 eggs daily from 

 58 hens. 



Illinois Farm Supply Company 



608 South Dearborn Street 



Chicago 



