Georgia Farmers
T ove Linder Commissioner
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1954
NUMBER 18
brial By TOM LINDER
is now pending before the Su-
urt of the United States certain
ing the highest tribunal to de-
segregation in public schools is
tional because of the Fourteen-
ent to the Federal Constitu-
newspaper editors in Atlanta
Ophesized that the Supreme
hand down a decision declar-
epation unconstitutional, Perhaps
shful thinking on the part of
. It may be they hope the
: ourt will hold segregation un-
ional.
ne awyers involved in defending
; requiring segregation have
in their opinion the Supreme
will outlaw segregation. Any law-
o has a case in court and who de-
fore hand that the court is going
cide against his client is either say-
at his client ought to lose or else
saying that the court will not go
ing to the Constitution and the
us see what is petra the Court
hat the record and history of the
; and then lets assume that the
irt will be guided by the Constitution
legal rules of interpretation and
history of the point at issue.
first place, *segregation in
did not originate with the white
Orgia or any other state. The
neral of Virginia placed be-
ie Court a number of most inter-
acts in this connection. Segre-
as a legal requirement originated
as enacted into law in Georgia dur-
dministration of Governor Rufus
by a Legislature consisting al-
ntirely of scalawags, carpet-bag-
ewly enfranchised Negro Repub-
and just a few white native Geor-
. The native whites were in such
| minority they had no effective
ce on the acts of the Legislature.
1e Georgia House Journal of 1870,
74, the Senate Journal of 1870, Vol-
a Page 74, and Georgia Laws 1870,
59, show that after the Fourteenth
ndment was ratified by the Georgia
lature, this same Legislature of
aggers, scalawags, and Negro
blicans, passed the first law which
vided that children of the white and
races should not be taught to-
in-any sub- district of the State.
"purpose of the Law ia: th
RAE
beginning was to guarantee that colored
children should not be required to at-~
tend white schools. If the Fourteenth
Amendment was intended to protect Ne-
gro children against being forced to at-
tend mixed schools,-then by the same
Amendment white children cannot be
forced to attend mixed schools.
Other states, North and South, at
about the same time passed segregation
laws with regard to public schools. This
makes it crystal clear that the States did
not understand or intend that ratifying
the Fourteenth Amendment. was intend-
. ed to abolish or prohibit saree aon in
public schools.
It is certainly clear that with the
Radical Republican Congress in Wash-
ington in 1866 passing the Fourteenth
Amendment they wotild not have per-
mitted the setting up of segregated
schools in the states if that Congress had
intended the Fourteenth Amendment to
prohibit segregation. This is especially
true as to the Southern States. Here in
Georgia the white people were under
- control of Federal Military and had noth-
ing to do with the adoption of the Four-
teenth Amendment, the passage of the
segregation law, nor the setting up of
segregated schools.
The United States Congress in 1866
that proposed the Fourteenth Amend-
ment (39th Congress) passed two stat-
utes recognizing and approving segre-
gation in the public schools in the Dis-
trict of Columbia (14 Stat. 342 and 14
Stat. 216). The Congress has sole con-
trol over the District of Columbia. Every
Congress since that time has provided
for segregated schools in the District of
Columbia. This shows unmistakably that
the Congress that proposed the Four-
teenth Amendment knew and intended
that it did not prohibit segregation in
public schools.
The history and evidence now before
the Supreme Court shows that in numer-
ous other Southern States the situation
was practically the same that it was in
Georgia.
was ratified by State Legislatures com-
posed of scalawags, carpet-baggers, Negro
Republicans with very few white natives
as members. All of this is before the
Court together with the definition of
scalawags and carpet-baggers.
The study and consideration of Con-
stitutional Law, in its_last analysis, is a
shady, of the nistory of the country, the /
|Stirrounding circumstances under which
given actions were taken and other evi-
dence to show: the intent and purpose of
The Fourteenth Amendment #
| COURT
the framers of the Constitution at the
time each Constitutional provision wags
adopted.
The best constitutional lawyers with
whom I am acquainted and with whom
I have discussed these matters agree that
in all cases where the Constitution it-
self and its contemporary history makes
certain the intent of a provision at the
time adopted all Courts are bound there-
by. No Court has authority to put any
other, construction on a provision. that
explains its own intention. As an illus-
tration, the Constitution provides that
there shall be two Senators from each
state. This is so clearthat no Court could
construe the meaning as including three
. Senators or one Senator, but all Courts
are bound by the provision two Senators
from each state.
The Constitutional provision that au-
thorizes Congress to regulate commerce
is indefinite and requires court construc-
tion of its meaning because authority to
regulate is an indefinite. authority. Also
changing conditions such as the increase
in railroads, the invention of heavy
freight trucks on highways, air transpor=
tation, ete. may require progressive in-
terpretation of the meaning of an in-
definite authority such asthe regulation
of Commerce. ,
In the case of the Fourteenth Amend-
ment however, the immediate action of
the same and succeeding sessions of Con-
gress to provide segregated schools in the
District of Columbia, together with the
action of the several states under Federal
Military control in adopting and setting
up segregated schools, show beyond any
question of doubt that neither the Con-
gress proposing the Fourteenth Amend+
ment nor the States ratifying the Four-
teenth Amendment intended or under-
stood that it prohibited segregation. The
actions: proved clearly and beyond ques-
tion that they understood and intended
the Fourteenth Amendment to require
#hat colored children should have the
same privilege as white children by hav-
ing separate schools provided for the
blacks the same as was provided for the
whites. Any other construction of the
Fourteenth Amendment does violence to
the rules of legal construction and does
violenes-to the factuar fiscory.
~~ Any decision of the Supreme Court to
outlaw segregation because of the Four-
teenth Amendment would necessitate the
Court doing violence to its own decisions
aver a period of fifty-eight years. In ad-
(Continued on page D
Re
we
PAGE TWO
MARKET BULLETIN
on the
REAU
ATIONAL
GFORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
Address all items for publication and requests to be
jling list and for change of address to STATE
oF MARKETS 222 STA
[assbclari@n
a
U-
CAPITOL, Atlanta,
EDITORIAL
Notices
under posta
and repeate
of notice.
Under Legislative Act the
of farm produce
regulations inse
only when reques
notices.
Tom Linder, Commissioner
Published Weekly ai
Notify on FORM 3578--Bureau
Ailanta, Ga.
not assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin, nor for any transaction resulting from published
Limited space vill not permit insertion of notices contain-
ing more than 35-40 words, not including name and address.
114-122 Pace Si., Covington, Ga
By Department of Agriculture
Markets, 222 State Capito]
and appurtenances admissible
rted one time on each request
t is accompanied by new copy
Georgia Market Bulletin does
0!
at Covington, Georgia under A
of June 6,
provided for in Section 1103 A
of October 8, i917.
Entered as second class matter
August 1, 1937 at the Post Office F
1900. Accepted for F
mailing at special rate of postage
ct F
ct
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
Executive Office Siate Capito.
Editorial and Executive Offices
114-122 Pace Si. Covington, la
FLOWERS AND SEED
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE FOR SALE
African Violets, var. evergreen Sipireas, Kerria Japonicas,
Red Barberry, Snowball, $1.00|Azeleas, Xmas Star Jasmine,
ea.; Water Oaks, Silver Maple,
25c-50c; Butterfly Bush, Scotch
Broom, Flowering Quince, 50e;
Feb. Cacti, budded $10.00; Blue
Violets, -25c doz.; Hollyhock
Plants, 6, 50c. Plus postage. Mrs.
Otis Mashburn, Cumming.
Large prize winning Chrysan-
themums, Silver Wedding,
(White), Golden Wedding Yel-
low, Smith Enchantress Pink,
Homestead Lavender Ball
Cream, Sunset Bronze, Indian
Red, 25 plants, $3.00; All colors
Button and Daisy type, 20, $1.00.
ae R. L. Silver, Cuthbert, Rt.
Blue Grape Hyacinths, Purple
Tris, Orange Day Lilies, Ophio-
ogon, Sweet Williams, Rose cut-
ings, Bridal wreath, 50c doz.;
Blooming Pear, Purple Lilacs,
Jasmine, Pink Running Roses,
25c, 50 ea.; Large Globe Shaped.
Boxwoods. Mattie Duran, Cum-
ming, Rt. 1.
Thrift; Pink, Lavender, Fuch-
sia Red, $1.00 C; Blue, White,
Giant Red, 15, $1.00; 4 doz.
Shasta Daisies, $1.00; Nandinas,
3, $1.00; Pomegranates, 3, $1.00;
Old Fashion Pink Moss Rose, 4
$1.00; Hydrangeas, $1.00 clump;
Gardenias rooted, $1.00. Add
postage Mrs. AnnieWest Craw-
fordville. .
Extra nice blooming size Jon-
quils, and Daffodils, mixed, $1.00
C. 25 postage; 4 large clumps
Pink Thrift or Rose Colored
Hardy Phlox, $1.10, plus 25c
postage. Mrs. Clarence McMil-
lian Dacula, Rt. 1.
Nice large Dahlia Bulbs, asst.,
$1.50 doz.; Yellow Cannas, $1.25
doz. PP Miss Betty Lou Hunni-
eutt, Dial.
Native Glad Bulbs, Azaleas,
Trailing Arbutus, Sweetpeas, $1
doz.;; Rhododendrons, Kalmia
Laurels, Mtn. Laurels, White
Pines, Dogwood, $1.50 doz.; Li-
lacs, Snowball, Balm of, Gilead,
50c ea.; Holly, Honeysuckle, 25c
ea.; Fall Pinks, 75c doz. Add
Re cee. Mrs. D. M. Holloway,
ahlonega Rt. 1.
Biota Bonita Globe Arborvit-
ae, 1-3 ft. 02.00-$10.00 at my
home. Cannot ship. Mrs. Alonzo
L. Cain, Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box
101. Bee See es
Rome Blue Single Hyacinths, |
12, $1.00; Shrubbery, Rosemary,
Abelia, Oakleaf Hydrangea,
Flowering Quince, Eng. Nog-
wood, Wisteria, Forsythia, $3.00
doz.; 25c ea. Self rooted Roses,
50c ea.y Violets, $1.00 C. Add
postage. Miss Mary C. Florence,
Goldenbells Altheas, Red Honey-
suckle, Almonds, Rhododend-
rons, Oak Leaf Hydrangeas, Li-
lacs, Snowballs, English Dog-
wood, Spruce and White Pines,
Mtn. Laurels, your collection 12,
$1.50; Dbl. Day Lilies, mixed
colors, $2.50 C. Mrs. F. M. Eaton,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
Catalpa Trees, 2-3 ft., 50c ea.;
$5.00 doz. Add postage. H. P.
Aderhold, College Park, 510 W.
Vesta Ave.
Rooted Rose Bushes, bloom in
cluster, scarlet color, $1.15; Yel-
low Cluster Narcissus Bulbs,
C; White, $1.25 C; Red and
White Thrift, 3 doz., $1.25; Yel-
low Irish with brown, 6, $1.15.
eg Mrs. Lon Ashworth, Dacula,
51:
Mtn. Laurels, 18 in. up, 50
ea.; White, and Spruce Pine, 8-
25 in. 35c ea.; Holly Bushes,
kind with berries, 75c_ ea.;
Chimney Vine, green the year
around, 3 cuttings, $1.00; 35c ea.;
Guar. to live. Mrs. Ethel Mincey,
Dahlonega, Rt. 3.
Red Hot Poker, 25 clump;
Lavender, Purple, Cream Iris,
35c doz.; $2.50 C: Purple Violets,
25c doz.; $2.00 C; Running Pink,
and Red Roses, 25c ea.; Small 3,
25c. Add postage. Mrs. E. J. Mc-
Connell, Demorest, Rt. 1, Box
143.
Large Mixed Colored Dahlia
Bulbs, $1.50 doz.; Yellow Can-
nas, 75e doz.; Dahlia Seed, 25c
pkg. Mrs. Eunice Woody, Dial.
Nice large Dahlias, asst. colors,
few Pompoms, also Yellow Can-
nas, $1.50 doz. PP. Mrs. Jessie
Hunnicutt, Dial.
Violets; 15, $1.00; Lemon Li-
lies, $1.00 doz.; Single Blue Hy-
acinth Bulbs, 30, $1.00; Anthony
vale Red Spirea, rooted, 4,
$-.00; Pink Thrift, 3 doz.; $1.00.
No order less $1.00. Add 30c
postage, Mrs. R. P. Steinhim-
er, Brooks.
Chrysanthemums Verbenas,
mixed bulbs Flags) Thrift, Dusty
Miller, Day Lilies, z3c doz.; Iris,
|Cannas, Lilacs, Almonds, Althe-
jas, 15c ea.; 2, 25c; Other shrub-
bery cheap, Add postage. Exch.
for feed sacks. Ardell Meller,
Bishop, Rt. 1, Box 222.
Deep Red and large White
Oleanders, 75c ea.; Imp. Garden-
ias, 75c ea.; weed Red Thrift, 15,
$1.00; Variegated and Solid Red
Pomegrate, 75c; Fine Iris, 7, $1:
Mrs. W. E. Johnson, Crawford-
ville, Rt. 2. i
Pink, Orange, and Yellow
Glad Bulbs, large bleoming size,
50c doz. Add postage. Mrs. John-
Durand.
nie Harman, Calhoun, Rt. 2.
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
Wednesday, J anuary 6,
FLOWERS AND S$
FOR SALE
,
Pink Thrift Plants with roots,
$1.25 C; 300, $3.00; 500, $4.50;
$8.00 M. PP. Alma Mosley, But-
ler, Rt. 2.
50 M Privet Hedge, rooted
(stay green type), small 200, $1.;
3 ft, $2.00 C; 8ft., 012.00 C; Wax
Leat cue Boxwood (small
leaf). Golden Bells, Snow Bells,
Flowering Almond, rooted. $5,
orders PP. Mrs. B. T. Thornton,:
Bowdon.
King Alfred Jonquils, pel
Narcissi, $2.00 C; Orange Day
Lilies. Dbl. Yellow, Red Canna,
White 2 Tone Purple Iris Li-
lies, 750 doz.; Yellow Button,
and large Yellow Mums, 50c
doz.; Snowdrops, 25 doz. Exch.
for print sacks. Martha Womack,
Bremen, Rt. 2, Box 89.
Booking
shipments to begin
orders for Dahlia
eb. Ist. All
Rooted Semperviren Box-
wood Plants, 4-6 in. $8.00 C;
6-8 in., $16.00 C. Also Dwarf
Boxwood. Mrs. Edna Sims, Ac-
worth, Rt. 1.
Exhibition Mum _ Plants,
Bessie Clark, Snow Bank,Sun-
set Gold, Lavender Lady, Pink
Perfection, Bronze, 17 plants,
$1.50; Hardy Mums, many varie-
ties and colors, 40 plants asst.,
$1.50. PP. Mrs. W. S. Griffin,
Adel, Rt. i.
Orange Day Lilies Hemero-
eallis), 50c doz. Add postage.
Exchange for Lemon Day Lily,
or Blue or Yellow Iris. Each
pay postage. Mrs. J. D. Moore,
Americus, Rt. 3, Box 79.
'
40 nice size Cherry Laurels,
3-4 ft., 75c; Bunch Nandinas, 75
ea. Come after. Mrs. T. L. Tim;
merueax, Augusta, 1016 Holden
Giant varieties. First 20 orders! St
received will include one Silver
Glamor (sells for $1.00 ea.),
blooms 14-16 in., $3.00 doz. Mrs.
Lovelle Ownbey, Blairsville, Rt.
3, Box 82.
Boxwood, well shaped, 10-14
in., $3.00 doz.; Eng. Juniper,
Globe and American Tree Ar-
borvitaes, 15-20 in., $4.00 doz.;
Rhododendrons, Mtn Laurels,
Spruce and White Pine, Holly,
$3.00 doz. All colors Wild
Azaleas, Dogwood, $2.00 doz.
Sadie Wilson, Blue Ridge.
Chrysanthemums, pink, yel-
low, white, orange, 5 colors Iris,
Per. Pink Phlox, Goldenglow,
each 50c doz.; Dbl. Hollyhock,
Sweet William, mix color, dbl.
Pink Poppy, Cockscomb, Flow-
ering Cherry Pepper Seed, ea.
20c pkt. Add postage. Mrs. C. C.
Gentry Calhoun, Rt. 3, Box 137.
8 colors Cannas, Tube Roses,
Glad Bulbs, $1.00 doz.; Amaryl-
lis, Day Lilies, Red Seven Sis-
ter Running Rose, Pink Seven
Sister Rose, Umbrella Palm,
Lantana, Pink Crape Myrtle,
Coral Berry 25 ea. Add postage
Mrs. W. E. Wooten, Camilla.
Catalpa Bushes, 2-3 ft., 50c ea.;
$5.00 doz. Plus postage. H. P.
Aderhold, College Park, 510 W.
Vista Ave.
Star Fish Cacti, rooted, 40c;
Cuttings, 30c; Pink Crape Myrtle
$1.00 ea.; Pink Running Roses,
40c ea. Add postage. Mrs. Sam-
uel Caine, Cumming, Rt. 5.
Yellow Thornless Rose, Yel-
low Brown Willows, Mixed
Colored Altheas, Purple Butter-
fly Bush, Purple Lilacs, White
Spirea, Baby Snowball, Sweet-
shrub, White Dogwood, 25c ea.;
5, $1.00; Cannas, 25 doz.; Tiger
Lilies, 2, 35e. Add postage. Mrs.
Noel Payne, Canton, Rt. 3.
Nandinas, 6-12 in., 20c ea.; 12-
15 in., 300 a:; Abelias Lyr;
plants, 15c ea.; 2 yr., 25e ea. Add
postage. Min. order $1.00. Mrs.
W Hz. Guill, Camak.
White. Spireas, Bridalwreath,
Easter Rose, White or Purple
Lilac, Yellow Jasmine, Holly,
Cedar, Sweetshrub, Dogwood, 3,
$100; 8, $2.00; Mixed col. Sweet
William, Iris, Orange Day Lilies,
Rose cuttings, 40c doz. Plus post-
age. No Fla. orders. Gladys Du-
ran, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Camellia Plants, asst. sizes,
some full of buds to bloom this
winter, Sara Frost, Pink Per-
fection, and Jarvis Red varieties.
Miss Martha Plyler, Claxton, Rt.
1;
Cannas: Eureka White, Gold,
City of Portland, and Madam
Canard Pink, Gaint and King
Humbert Red, $1.50 doz.; $10.00
C; $40.00 M; Shasta Dasies, fine
plants, $10.00 M. Mrs. J. R: Camp,
Cordele.
African Violets, 75 var. to
choose from, 25c up depending
On variety and size of plant. No
plants mailed but will mail
leaves. Hattie Marsengill, Cor-
nelia, 234 Galloway St.
Snapdragon Seed, colors red,
white, pink, yellow, bronze mix-
ed, 15 teaspoon, plus 3c stamp.
L. A. Thonipson, Cumming Rt.
4,
Shasta Daisies, $1.25 doz;
pigoming size Geranium and
Carnation, Orange and White
Striped Amaryllis Bulbs 3.
$1.00; Boston Ferns, Aeroplane
House Plants, 25 ea. Add post-
age. Mrs. Jessie Howard, Albany,
400 S. Cleveland.
Silver Leaf Maple, 50c. Ex-
change for Pink Dogwood. Con-
tact Mrs. Clyde Logan, Austell,
Rt. 2, Hill Crest Dr.
Small 3 ft. rooted Althea
Plants of various colors, 10c ea.
not shipped. S. L. Meiere, At-
lanta, 1354 N. Highland Ave.
African Violets, Blue Velvet,
Ice Girl, Sailor Girl, Norseman,
Fairy, Scoop, Red Bird, Bronze
Girl, Marine, Amethyst, Painted
Girl, Blueeyed Beauty, 50c ea.
Plus 20c postage. Mrs. T. R.
Sweatmon, Atlanta, 17 Louise
PIS SN. We
Bleeding Heart, large clump,
$1.00; African Violets, all colors,
doubles, singles, variegated, 3,
$1.25; 7, $2.25; $3.50 doz.; Jumbo
Caladiums, 12 colors, 75c; 2, $2;
Achimenese, Red, White, Blue
Lavender, Purple, Pink Cerise,
$1.00 doz. Mrs. N. B. Wilson, At-
eines 943 Greenwood, N. E. El,
904.
Hardy Per. Verbena Plants, in
10 colors, including reds, blues,
-| white purple, pink, and varie-
gated, 30, $1.00; Large Pink
Thrift, 50, $1.00. PP. Rooted. Mrs.
A. M. Grier, Alto, Rt 1, Box 155.
Abelia cuttings, 20e doz.; Yel-
low Rambler Rose cuttings, 45c
doz.; Xmas and Easter Honey-
suckle, White Hedge Rose, 35c
doz.; Eng. Dogwood, Forsythia,
Pink Spirea, 30c ea. rooted;
Yellow Bell, 20c doz.; Vinca
Minor Vine, nice bunch, 50c.
Mr. Clyde Logan, Austell, Rt. 2.
Hillerest Dr. *
Boxwoods, 10-14-in., Forsythia,
Holly, Pink Rhododendrons,
Laurels, Hemlock, Spruce, $3.00
doz.; Globe and Pyramidal Tree
and American Tree Aroborvitaes,
14-20 in., $4.00 doz. Bob Wilson,
Blue Ridge.
Pink Running Roses, 20c ea.;
Blue Dutch Iris, Rose Delta, 8,
$1.00; Deep Blue, White Iris, 70c
doz.; Red Woodbine, White
Spirea, 6, $1.00; Yellow Jon-
quilla Simplex, White Narcissi,
Long Trumpet Golden Harvest,
60c doz. PP. Mrs. C. B. Robin-
son, Bowndon.
Several hundred well shaped
boxwoods, 2-10 yrs. old, 10c-$7.
50 ea.; Also small Forsythia, Li-
gustrum, Gardenias, 25c-$1.00.
A. F. Jackson, Atlanta, 435
Ridgewood RD., N.. E. Tel. De.
5495. :
Booking orders for Clairdend-
ron (oriental tree), 50c-$1.00 ea.
Plus postage. Very Ornamental
from July until frost. Write.
Mrs. Mamie B. Watson, Atlanta,
1380 Newton Ave., S. E.
Star of Bethlehem Bulbs, 35
doz; 50, $1.25; Boxwood, 1 large,
and 3 or 4 small, 10 in. cuttings,
10c ea.; $1.00 doz.; Small Water
Cress Plants, 35 doz.; 2 doz., 60c.
PP. Mrs. J. E. Stone, Adairs-
ville, Rt. 2.
Large Shrubbery, Day Lilies,
Pink Thrift, 4 kinds Verbena,
Rube Roses, Everberaing
Roses at my home, end of
Crew St. No mail orders. Con-
tact Mrs. B. H. Carter, Atlanta,
35 Weyman Ave. SW Tel. Al.
5040.
Few Small Magnolia Trees
(grow fast variety), also Magno-
lia Limbs. Contach. B. O. Fus-
sell, Atlanta, 889 Edgewood Ave.
Pink Thrift, 50 C; $3.00 M.
Exch. for white sacks. Mrs.
David Parkgt, Alto, Rt. 1.
| flake Per. White Can@y Ti
_cinths,
Pink Blooming Weigela:
ft, 25 ea. Unrooted Box
cuttings, $7.50. At garden.
Boxwood with good roots. |
see. T. E. Eason, Atlanta,
pri bs Rd., N. W., Rt. 14)
Red Hot Poker, 25c ea.;
teria Vine, $1. ea.; Pink T!
50c doz.; Old Fashion Sunt
er Seed, 10 pk. Exch. for sa
Mrs. Willie Turpin, Gaines
325 S. Green St. x
Evergreen Privet H
Plants, one cent ea.; Pu
Iris, Orange Day Lilies,
White Narcissus Bulbs, 50c
Add postage. No. chks. Mrs
T. Haynes, Gainesville, Rt,
Red Hot Poker, $1.7) |
Add _ postage. Mrs. | '
Blackwell, Gainesville, Reg
Red Verbenas, $1. doz.; ]
Thrift, $1.50 C; Red, White, |
doz; Pink Oxalis, 2 clum
Blue Iris, $1.50 doz.; Re
biscus, Jap. Sunflower
Tbls., 50c Dahlia Roots.
colors, $1.50 doz. Add post
Mrs. Janie Ellis, Grantville. |
Royal Robe Violets, $1.
$6. C; Iberis Supervirens Ss
Dixie Red Thrift, $1.50
| $10. C; Old Fashion Sweet Y
lets, 4 doz., $1725; Add post
Exch. for Old Fashion M:
chalniel Climbing Reses. 1}
L. H. Cousins, Greenville, R
\
Giant Royal Purple Vio
long stems, sweet scene
blooms, 3 doz., $1.25; Dark R
and Scarlet Verbena, $1.
2 doz., $1.75; Chinese Ta
Trees, large size, $1.; or 3 st
$1. Add postage. Mrs. J:
Cousins, Greenville.
Large Red Berried Pyraca
tha,-8 and 10 in., 25 ea. 1
postage. Mrs. Geneva E. C
er, Griffin, Rt. C. 4
Royal: Robe and Rubra
Violets, Purple King A
menes, Hardy Phlox Subul
Red, White, Blue Ligustri
Cherry Laurels, Photenias, |
ca Minor, English Mums, Er
i
lish Ivy, $1. doz.; $5, C, Blanc
i
aa
'
Woodruff, Greenville.
}
|
Mimosa Tree Seed, (App
125 seed) 1 level teaspoon,
and 3c postage stamp. Mrs,
L. Scott, Hephzibah, Rt. 1,
15. coy |
Azaleas, Ferns, Hydrang}
Amaryllis, August Lilies, 1
Honeysuckle,- Silver J
Vines, Pussy and Weeping
lows, Bo&Xwoods, Rose A
Crabapple, Sweetshrubs, G
denias, Dogwoods, Cedars, ]
Maple, Forsythia, Mtn. Law
Holly, Roses, 2, $1.; Oleand
$1. ea. Add postage. Mrs. J
Myers, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Teaolives, Red Holly, U
brella China, Yellow Hemlc
Snowberry, Yellow Jasn
Gooseberry, Sweet Myrt
Sweet Bay, Shoemake, 1-4
10c ft.; White Rain, Easter
ies, Yellow Narcissi, 35c d
Red Verbenas, 15c cut.
postage. Mrs. David Cols
Hazlehurst, Rt. 1, Box 256. |
Blue, Pink, Red Thrift,
doz.; Bird of Paradise, $1.25
White and Yellow Jonq
Butter and Egg, Trumpet D
fodils, $1.50 C; Hollyhoe
$1.50 doz.; Blue, Single Hy;
$1.25 doz. Exch.
print sacks. Miss Mattie |
Curley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Bird of Paradise, $1.25 |
White and Yellow Jonqu
Long Trumpet Daffodils,
short cup, $1.50 C; Blue
Hyacinths, $1.25 doz.;
Red, Pink Thrift, 65c doz.
for print sacks. Cecile McC
ley, Hartwell, Rt. 2. :
Field grown White Thi
Plants, $3.50 C; $25. M; Lag
field grown Calif, Violet Plan}
$2.50 C; $15. M; Pink Thi}
$1. C; $8. M. Add postage. Bf
Wilkerson, Hogansville, Rt
Phone 8541. aa
Purple Lilacs, good roots,
plus 10c postage; Gardenia:
yrs. old, $1. ea.; 3 yrs. old, $:
ea. Plus 15 postage. Well pa
ed; Rooted Red Quince,
plus 10c postage; Red and
Monthly Roses, 40. C y
White, Leesburg, Rt. 1. :
Dbl. White Feverfew, 200, $
$8. M. Prompt del. Miss Ve
Brown, Hartwell.
D
=
nxt
Weigelas,
C; White and
cuttings, 3, $1;
Pink, White,
rican Beauty,
Add postage.
amson, Lula, Rt. 2.
; Plants, $2. C; 300,
M. Bobo, Hartwell,
n t Lemon. Lilies,
White, Maroon
i Var.
Pink, White
rooted, 20c
it: 1.
e, and Red
ize, 45 ea.;
Old Fashion
White Wax
old, $1. ea., plus
t packed; 2 yr.
ate, 50c ea.
age. Polly White,
ie Hwy.).
ansies, $2.25 C;
ink, Scarlet Sweet
umbine, 2 doz.,
2 Annes Lace,
Thrift, Purple
C. $2. orders PP.
ones, Madison.
ww Dogwood, Mtn.
rokee Rose, Tulip
le, 2-3 ft., $2.50
Shasta Daisies, $2:
PP, Edna Rukat,
Myrtle, Butter-
Spreading Ce-
casts
x Ligustrum, Gardenia, |
; Yellow Bell,
LY; See
Dogwood, isteria
American Holly.
Mrs. Thurman
and 4 small Glo-
Superba), many
' this year, 70c
aenese Bulbs, pur-
ue, 3 doz., 50c PP.
2 Dugger, Oliver.
dd
Boxwood, 16 in.,
postage. M. M.
is, White, Blue Li-
er, Purple Violets,
ill mixed colors, $1.50
Pider Lilies, 21, 50c.
i: Pass, Point
hemums, mixed,
st included, $1.25 C;
Caladiums, 35c ea.;
is, 10, 15c, 20c ea.;
angeas, Nandinas,
aoc ea, Add
n Terry, Quit-
Daffodils, $1.
ilies, Sweet
{ Spirea, For-
onia Japonica, Abe-
smine, Winter Hon-
25c Mixed Iris,
dd 25c postage for
C. Jones, Rome,
aquils,
mid r
ansy Plants, 2c ea.;
Mixed Iris, 1c ea.;
: n
3 Red,
3 jiant Pansy Plants,
$C Pink Thrift $1.
ysanthemums, yellow,
50e doz. Mrs.
yroa, Rt, 2,
x t
Mrs. Leco.
i, 20, $1.; Jon-} Sh
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
Amazon, Hybrid Amaryllis
Lilies, 2, $1.25; Pink, White,
Blue, Red, Purpie, Variegated
and Rose Salmon Achimenese,
in mixtures, $1. doz.; 25, $1.50;
| New Day Lilies, 12, all differ-
ent, $3.50; 8 dif. named Crin-
iums, shades of pink, etc. Mrs.
Maude Granger, Reidsville.
_Angelwing, and Rooted
Strawberry Begonias, 25c ea.;
Yellow Thornless Roses, rooted,
3, $1.; Orange Day Lilies, $1.
doz.; Med. Red Dahlia Tubers,
$1:50 doz. Mrs. Freeman Long,
Roy. .
Guineawing, rooted, 50c ea.;
Mums, yellow, pink, white;.and
egg, 35c clump; Tiger Lilies,
abr red Dahlias, $1.50 doz.;
Day Lilies, Grey Iris with blue
falls, $1. doz.; Everviooming
Rose cuttings, 25c ea. Mrs. W.
W. Lowman, Roy.
Rose, Pink Sultanas, 5 ea.;
Red Geranium cuttings, 15c ea.;
Rosebud Angelwing, and Guin-
eawing Begonia, 25c ea. cut;
Red Conch and Strawberry Be-
gonia, Xmas Cacti, Pink, White
Oxalis, rooted, and Pot Hy-
drangeas, 25c ea. Mrs. H. A.
Chastain, Roy.
Pink Thrift, Yellow Jonquil
Bulbs, $1. C; White Iris, Orange
Day Lilies, 40c/doz.; Yellow
Daffodils,
Poppy Seed, i5c Tbl. Del. Mrs.
Leilar Phillips, Royston, Rt. 1.
Dbl. Pink Mamon_ Cochet
Roses, an everbloomer, 65c ea.
Mrs. J. R. Brannen, States-
boro, Rt. 1.
Giant Pansy Plants, 50, $1.50.
Parcel Post prepaid in Ga. Mrs.
Calvin Harman, Stovall.
Dbl. Pearl Tuberose Bulbs,
blooming size, $1. doz.; Med.
size, 65c doz.; 2 doz. $1.20; Do-
mestic Nandina Seed, 53 crop,
75c lb.; 2 lbs., $1.40 del. to 3rd
zone, 5c on checks. Miss Mittie
Collins, Smithville, Rt. 1.
Rooted Dbl. Geraniums, light
ink, salmon, red, 40c ea.; 3,
1. PP. Can furnish the red in
large quantities: Mrs. D. E. Ca-
son, Savannah, Rt. 4, Box 292.
Red Geraniums, rooted, very
hardy, 40c ea.; 3, $1. PP. Mrs.
W. R. Cason, Savannah; Rt. 4,
Box 282.
Boxwoods, dif. sizes, from 1
ft.-6 ft., reasonable. Ready
for immediate sale. Miss Lou
Brown, Suwanee.
1 M. mixed col. Amaryllis
Bulbs, $6. doz. PP.; $45. C. Exp.
Col.; Rooted Sage Limbs, $1.50
doz. PP.; About 50 rooted Cape
Jasmine, over 2 ft., 50c eas
Approx. 500 Catalpa Trees, ov-
er 3 ft., 25c ea. at my place. W.
. Bass, Swainsboro, Rt. 1, Box
174, :
Cuttings of 3 colors of
Monthly Rose Bushes, 50c per
cutting. Mrs. J. B. Poole, Sum-
ner, Rt. 2, Box 51.
Day Lilies, Iris, Thrift, Glad
Bulbs, 60c doz.; Pink Peachtree,
Yellow Thornless Roses, Bridal-
wreath, Red Honeysuckle, White
Pines, Lilacs, New Year Vine,
$1.40 doz.; Jonquils, Narcissi,
Star of Bethlehem Bulbs, $1.50
C. PP in Ga. Mrs. Martha White,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 60.-
Lily Bulbs: Madonna, @5c ea.;
Lemon, 50c doz.; Red Spider,
40c doz.; Also Black Narcissi,
25 doz. Plus postage. Mrs. Roy
Entrekin, Douglasville 41 Bow-
don St.
Thrift, Hedge $1.25 C; Siber-
ian Iris, Dbl. Day and Dewberry
Lilies, Red Speckle Hollyhocks,
Reb Verbenas, Boston Ivy, Glads,
Trailing Arbutus, Button and| Rp
Cushion Mums, $1.00 doz.; Star
of Bethlhem Bulbs, 50c C; Grape
Hyacinths, 50c doz. Mrs. M. L.
Eaton, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
Native Azaleas, 25c ea.; $2.00
doz.; White Hydrangeas, Pink
Weigelas, Altheas, Rose of
aron, Red Locust, Snow Ball,
Mtn. Holly, Black Haw, White
k}|Pines, Wild Dogwood, 50c ea.;
Tris, 50c doz.;.Bubls, 50c doz.
Add postage. Mrs. Presley Fow-
ler, Diamond.
Dbl. Crimson Japonicas, 50c
ea.; Jap. Iris, King. Alfred Jon-
juil, Dbl. Cannas, Easter Lilies,
all Pinks, each 50c doz.; Dog-
wood, 4, $1.00. Mrs. Earl Keen-
er, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
25e doz.; Red Dbl. |
Pe MRE R EDT PODER CIN
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
Sweetshrubs, Silver Maples,
Magnolias, White Dagwood, Ce-
dar, Cherokee Roses, Crabapple,
all 50c ea, Plus postage. Mrs.
Gilbert Landrum, Dublin, Rt. 4.
Nandina Berries for planting,
3 lbs., $1.50 del. in Ga. Larger
amounts shipped exp. collect,
35c lb. Mrs. B. C. Perry Dawson.
White and Purple Lilacs, Aza-
leas, Rhododendrons, Mtn, Laur-
els, Goldenglow, $1.25 doz.;
Spruce White Pines,
Oaks, Cedars, $1.00 doz.; Crape
Myrtle, 4, $1.00, Add postage.
de James. Water, Dahlonega,
te
Blue Violets, $1.00 C; Glden-
glow, Mixed Large Mums, Sweet
Williams, Foxgloves, mixed
color Iris, 60c doz.; Mixed Col.
Blooming Size Glads, 30 doz.;
Pink Peony, 40 ea. Add postage
less. that $3.00 Exch, for sacks.
hs W. D. Ralston, Ellijay, Rt.
King Alfred Daffodils, 60c
doz, $1.00; Mums, several dif.
colors, 75c doz.; 3 doz., $2. 10;
Orange Day Lilies, 2 doz: $1.00.
Dennie M. Froglin, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Lilacs, Texas Morning Glory
Seed, 25c tbl. PP. No chks. Mrs.
Ople Goble, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Red Flowering Dogwood, $2
ea.; Ligustrums, Buford Holly,
Magnolia, Red Buds, Red, Pink
Spireas, mixed Dbl. Altheas, G.
Bells,Rose, Pink Weigelas, Mock
Orange, blooming size, 50c ea.
Add postage. No orders under
2 Mrs. Grace Webb, Ellijay,
be ay
Blood Red Woodbine and Yel-
low Jasmine, both vines with
trumpet shaped flowers, April
blooming, also Red Cedar Seed-
lings, 25c ea.; 3, 50c. Damp pack-
ed. Mrs. Archie Rousey, Elber-
ton, Rt. 4. :
Yellow Marguerite Daises,
Per. Candytuft, Red Yellow Car-
nations, Yellow, Yarroy, Dbl.
mixed Hollyhocks, Lirope, $1.00
doz.; D. Pinks and Williams, 35c
doz.;. Per Scabiosa, 50c doz.;
Rabbit Tracks, Peperomias, 20c
ea. Add l5ic*postage. Mrs. H. H.
Stalnaker, Elberton, Rt. 5.
Dbl. Camellia Japonicas, 50c
ea.; Jap. Iris, Tiger Lilies, King
Alfred Jonquils, Easter Lilies,
Foxgloves, 50 doz. Exch. for
print sacks. Mrs: Clyde J. Keen-
er, Ellijay, Rt. 3. &
Dbl. Japonica, Easter Lilies,
King Alfred Jonquils, Jap. Iris,
Foxgloves, all d0c doz.; Dog-
wood, 4, $1.00. Miss Etta Bar-
rett, Ellijay, Rt. 3. ;
Dbl. White Feverfew, 40c doz.:
All colors Hollyhock Seed, 10c
Tbl.; Pink Queen Spider Lily,
10c tsp. Add postage. Mrs. Ed
Childs, Elbertson, Rt. 1.
6 Box Bushes, 4 yrs. old, $5
ea. at my home. Will not ship;
Blooming size Glad Bulbs, 25c
doz or exchange for print sacks
(Dozen bulbs per sack). Mrs.
Avery Davis, Ellijay Rt. 3, Box
79.
Rhododendrons, Hemlock,
White Pines, 35c ea.; Arbor-
vitaes, Junipers, Dbl. Altheas,
50c; Roses, Strawberry Bush,
Sweetshrubs, Hibiscus, rink,
Red Spirea, Pearl Bush, White
Lilacs, Weigelas, Forsythia, 35c;
Phlox, Iris, Foxglover, Lemon
Lilies, 50c doz. Add postage. Mrs.
Lee Eller ENijay, Rt. 2. ;
White Dogwood, Tuberose, all
colors, large mixed Gald Bulbs,
large bulms, $1.00 doz.; Mimo-
sia, Purple, Pink, Altheas, Dbl.
White Easter and Dbl. Yellow
Thornless Rose, Jan Jasmine, 50c
ea. Add postage. No Florida or-
oo Maude Farist, Ellijay,
teed:
Old Fashion Curker Bur Rose
Bush Plants, rooted (American
Beauty Color,) Also Crape Myr-
tle, pink, white, purple, 25c ea.
Mrs. A. R. Britt, Sycamore, Rt.
1 Ox 272;
-Per Phlox, Artemisia, Altheas,
Easter Lilies, Gerberia Dasies,
Baby Breath, Dbl, Feverfew,
| Forsythia, Eng. Dogwood, Pink,
White Oxalis Clumps, Red Hot
Poker, Columbines, 4, $1.00 Dbl.
Stock, Per Candytuft (purple),
Vinca Minor, 65c doz.; Nandinas,
10e ea.-$1.00. Mrs.. Johnson
Usrey, Stapleton.
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
2 Jarvis Red and 2 Pink Per-
fection Camellia Plants, 6-7 ft.
high, well branched, full of buds
to bloom this winter. Several
Sara Frost Camellia Plants, asst.| 3
sizes. Mrs. James A. Clay,
Savannah; Rt. 4, Box 508.
7 kinds Cactus cuttings, white,
pink Oxalis, 4 diff. colors Ger-
aniums, Tuberose, 10c ea.; Ma-
donna Lilies, 35c ea.; Purple,
and, Mixed Iris, 35c doz. Add
postage. Mrs. Williams, Suwanee
Water|R 1
Per dozen: Tiger Lilies, large
bulblets, $2.50; Small, $1.50 Yel-
Tris, $1.00; Galds, large $1.25;
Small, $1.00; Orange Day Li-
lies $1.00, and yellow thronless
roses, 3 for $1.00. Add postage
Mrs. Jemima Crump, Talking
Rock, Rt. 2.
Cacti: Christmas Uafttial Peanut
Glory, Elephant Ear, Jointed,
Cob, Multiplying, 35c ea. Add
postage. No COD. Mrs. Warren
McDaniel, Talking Rock, Rt. 2.
Mimosa, Red, Pink, White
Crapemyrtle, Bleeding Heart,
Trumpet, Teaolive, Cherry Lau-
rels, Magnolia, Red Holly, Red
and White Dogwood, Flowering
Almond, Thornless RLose, Red,
White, and Pink Rose, 50e ea.
Add postage. Mrs. J. G. Combs,
Toomsboro, Rt. 2.
Magnolia, White, Red Dog-
wood, Running Honeysuckle,
Sweetshrubs, Crape Myrtles,
French Mulberry, Crabapple,
Teaolive, Red Holly, Running
Yellow Jasmine, Running Chin-
as, 1-5 ft, 10c. Exch. for print
sacks. Add postage. Mrs. Betty
Boone, Toomsboro, Rt. 1.
Magnolias, White, Red Dog-
wood, Running Honeysuckle,
Bunch Honeysuckle, Sweet-
shrub, Running Pink Roses,
French Mulberry, Crape Myrtle,
French Mulberry, Teaolives,
Holly, Umbrellia China, Run-
ning Yelow Jasmine, 1-5 ft,. 10c
ft. Exch. for print sacks. Add
postage. Mrs. Henry - Loyd,
Toomsboro, Rt 1.
Orange Day Lilies, Purple
Iris, 3 doz., $1.00. Add postage.
Exch. 3 doz for 4 print sacks
alike. Ea. pay postage. Mrs. M.
L Priest, Talking Rock.
Eng. Beauty Bush, Blue But-
terfly, Dbl. White Almonds, 30c
ea.; Alligator Cacti, 75c ea.; Dbl.
Larksptrs, 10c doz.; Heartease,
Queen Anns Lace, Winter Oxa-
lis, Blue Sweet Violets, Shasta
Daisy, 3, 25c. Plus postage. Mrs.
Wavy Lewis, Toomsboro.
Magnolias, Teaolives, Red and
White Dogwood, Pink Crab-
apple, Red Holly, Pink Birdi,
Red and White Crape Myrtle,
1-5: ft., 10c ft. Add postage.
Exch. for print sacks. Alma Col-
son Toomsboro, Box 93.
Magnolias, Teaolives, Red
and White Dogwood, Purple
Birdi, Red and White Crape
Myrtle, Pink Crabapple, 1-5 ft.,
10c ft. Add postage. Exch. for
print sacks. Mrs. Mattie Lou Col-
son, Toomsboro, Box 93.
Granny. Greybread, Pink,
White Dogwood, Red, orange
Pyracanthas, Watermelon Red
and White Crape Myrtle, Pink
Crabapple, Teaolive, Red Holly,
1-6 ft., 10c ft. rooted and moss
packed. Add. 50c postage. Exch.
for sacks. Mrs. R. G. Connell,
Toomsboro.
Growing Plants; Hogs Ear
Begonias, 75c-$.300 ea. Will exch.
Jonquils, few pink Phlox, Blue
Roses for any monthly Rose,
Hollyhock, mix. Poppy Seed,
Pink Hyacinths, and Johnn-
Jump-UP Seed. Mrs. N:; T. Ry-
an, Tallapoosa.
Red King Carnations, $1.00
doz:; Jerusalem Holly, Aspara-
gus Fern, Oak Hydrangeas, 40c
ea. Miss Susie Andrews, Thomas-
ville, Box 641.
Mixed bulbs Yellow Cluster
Narcissus, Yellow Jonquils, But-
ter and Eggs, Daffodils, $1.00 C.
Plus postage; 500, $5.00 del. Mrs.
E, Fountain, Ft. Valley, Rt. 1.
White and Pink Thrift Plants,
full count, 4 doz, $1.00: Add 20
postage in Ga.; 30c out of state.
Money preferred. No chks. Mrs:
an - overby, Flowery Branch,
he ks
Rooted Evergreen Privet Hed-
ge Plants, 12-36 in., lc ea. PP. on
orders of $1.00 or more. R. H.
Clark, Gainesville, Rt. 7.
PAGE THRE:
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
Purple Iris, 3 doz., $1.00; Old
Fashion TigerLilies and Yellow
Daffodil Bulbs, $1.00 C; Add
postage. Henry Eller, Ellijay, Rt.
Easter Lily Bulbs, $1.50 doz.;
Red spirea, large size, $1.00 ea;
Pink and White Weigelas, large
size, trimmed, ready to set out,
$1.00 ea. Govt. insp. No order
less $1.00. Del. Mrs. Adel Wil-
liams, Ellijay, Rt. 2. ,
Thrift, Purple, Grey, Blue Iris,
Glads, 50 doz.; Tame Violets,
Red and Pink Running Roses,
Tiger Lilies, mixed Dahlias, Mul-
lein Pinks, 25 ea.; All colors
Mums, Sweet williams, 50c doz.;
Boxwood, rooted, $1.25 ea. $1.00
PPin Ga. Bettie Owen, Ellijay.
Globe arborviate, 30 in. tall,
$2.00; Pfitsfer- Juniper, Irish
Juniper, 18in and dbl, red flow-
ering. peach, budded, $1.00 ea.
All Insp. PP in Ga. Mrs. Louis
Tilley, Ellijay. Rt. 3.
Genuine al Robe Sweet
Violets, 20 plants, $1.25, PP;
Dazzling Red, Pure White, and
Apple Bloosom Verbena Plants,
20, $1.25. PP. Mrs. Kate Harrell,
Fayetteville, Box 173.
Honeysuckle, Trumpet, Ivy,.
White Rose, other vines (name
unknown, 15e ea.; Privet Hedge,
11/2 ft., 20c ea. Excange - for
feed sacks, at 25 ea. Sold only
ing Ga. Lizzie A. Mills, Folks-
ton, Rt. 2, Box 1.
Bridalwreath, Pink Almond,
Eng. Dogwood, Sweetshrub,
Crabapple, Holly Azaleas, Mix-
ed col. Velyet Roses, Forsythia,
Bridal Bouquett, 25e ea.; Purple
Iris, White and Yellow Narcis-
sus, 50c doz. Add postage. Mrs.
J. W. Jackson, Farimount, Rt. 2.
Flowering Peach, Red Pepper-
mint and Pink, 75 ea.; Hyper-
cum, 50c ea.; Pauls Scarlet and
Pauls Neyron Rose, 50c ea. Feb.
del. Pay postage on order $3.00
or more. Pearl Hudgins, Flow-
ery Branch.
White Killarney rose, $1.00;
pink Killarney, 50c; crimson
verbena, trailing vinca, rooted,
10c ea.; thick leaf ligustrum cut-
tings, 10 ea; rooted, 25c; Sweet
William seed, red Touchmenot,
all colors, seed. Mrs. Annie Hub-
bard, Fortson.
Mamon Cochet Rose cuttings,
pink, cream, pink, cream varie-
gated, little old fashion white,
pink. Radiance, Etole D. Holland,
all monthly, $1.00 doz.; Yellow
Jasmine, large plants, rooted,
25 Per. Sweetpea, $1.00. No
orders less tha $1.00. Add post-
age. Mrs. W. T. Caldwell, Grif-
fin, 725 E. Chappell St.
Little Speckled Hollyhock, 75
doz.; Butterfly Bushes, White
and Purple Lilac, 6, $1.00; Blue
Hyacinths, $1.50 doz. bulbs. Add
postage. Mrs. Mae Turner, Gain-
esville, Rt. 6.
Red, White Thrift, White Per.
Candytuft, Turf Lily, Per. Sweet
Williams, Mums, mixed, 75c doz.;
Pink Thrift, $1.00 C; Amaryllis
Lilly, Pink Almond; Boxwood,
Forsythia, Abelia, 40c ea.: Pink
Dbl. Oleander, $1.00 ea. Add 20e
postage. Miss Lee Crow, Gaines-
ville, Rt, 2.
Flowering Peach, 25 ea;
Purple Weeping Mary, Forsy-
thia, Golden Bell, 60c ea; 2,
$1.00; Unrooted Abelia cuttings,
15, $1.00 PP, damp packed; 8 yr.
old, rooted Gardenias, 50c-$2.00
ea. Will not ship. Mrs. Wallace
Wilson, Gainesville, Rt. 4,
Good tender Old Fashion
Cornfield Cutshort, and White
Half Runner Garden Beans, 50
cup. Add postage. Exchange 2
cups beans for 4 print sacks.
= Andrew Wilson, Carters,
Beds
Imp. Purple Hull Crowder
Peas, prolific, weevil treated
gathered without rain, $1, half
gal, fruit jar full at my home;
$1.50 by mail postpaid. No chks.
nor stamps. Mrs. Valley Bear-
don, Royston..
White and Colored Bunch
Butter Beans, 25c cup; Ex-
change 1 cup beans for | print
sack; Also Butter Peas, 40e
cup. Add postage. Ethel Crowe,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Large Dble.
Orange Poppy
Seed, 25 tsp. Add 3e stamp ~
envelope. Mrs, Della Crowe,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
\
Ee, NAPUS al ee san been
ine run, $5.25 bu. for lot. O.
erm. 90 pct. or better, com-
f Crawford, Goggins.
Old Time Little White -Ten-
der Half Runner and Cutshort
Cornfield Garden Beans, $1.
we Plus postage. Mrs. TH.
ade, Talking Rock, Rt, 1.
100 bu. Clay peas, $4. bu.;
also 10 tons shucks, $16. ton;
and 500 bu. Fullgrain Oats,
combine run, 90c bu. All at my
barn. . W. Hadden, Louis-
ville. Clarks Mill Rd.
' Greybeard, Paw Paw, Mimosa
Dogwood, Cherry Cedar, Holly,
Maple, Oak, 7, $1.; Sweetshrub,
Plum, 75c doz.: Pink, Ted
Thrift, 25c doz. Add postage.
Mrs. Thos. J. Watson, Lithonia,
Rt. 3, Box 217.
5 colors Altheas, Baby Snow-
ball, Rose of Sharon, Forsythia,
Brides Wreath, 6, $1.; 4 col.
Thrift, 25 doz.: Pink, Blue
poe ey. Bush, Perfume Vine,
; 50c; Honeysuckle, 2, 25c; 25
var. Rose. cuttings, 50c doz.
Add postage: Mrs. C. H. Low-
gon, Lithonia, Rt. 3, Box 216.
Pink, White Mimosa, Dog-
wood, Holly, Cedar, Cherry,
Catalpa, Plum, Chinaberry, Al-
theas, Honeysuckles, Weeping
Willows, Lombardy Poplar,
Winter Jasmene, Red Pink Run-
nig Roses, Oak, Maple, 7, $1,;
Sweetshrubs, 75c doz.; (Jan.
Only) Pink Thrift,, 20c doz.
dd postage. Mrs. D. C. Ledbet-
er, Lithonia, Rt. 3. -Tel. 2208.
Abelia, Bridalwreath, Catal-
pa Goldenbell, -Spirea, Thun-
ergi Enonymus Vegetus, Eng-
lish Ivy, Mock Orange, Old
ashion Rose, Winter Jasmine,
Xmas Honeysuckle, Flowering
Quince, many others, large
plants, 50c ea. Plus _ postage,
and tax. $2.50 orders PP. Jo-
gan Geia, Lawrenceville.
Pink Thrift for yard borders,
25c doz.; $1. C roots; Purple
Altheas, 25c ea. Pink Crape
Myrtle, and Date Trees (edible
fruit) 25c ea; Yellow Day
Lilies, 25c doz. Send postage
for less than $1. Mrs. R. J.
Fleming, Lincolnton.
Rhododendrons, Mtn. Laurels,
Azaleas, 3 colors, Red Bud,
Tulip Poplar, Coralberry, Cher-
okee Rose, Creek Hemlock
Cream, Yellow Dogwood, Crab-
apple, Strawberry Bush, White
Pine, 3 ft. rooted, moss packed,
$2.50 doz.; Pink Phlox, Shasta
Daisies, $2.25 C. PP. Roy Wil-
son, Mineral Bluff, Rt.~1. Box
173.
Azaleas, red, pink, yellow,
Mtn. Laurels, Rhododendrons,
Tulip Poplars, Red Buds, Coral-
berry Bush, Creek Hemlock
~ Cherokee Rose, Cream, Yellow
Dogwood, Crabapple, Straw-
berry Bush, White Pines, root-
ed, 234-3 ft., $2.25 doz,; Shasta
Daisies, Pink Phlox, $2.25 C.
Mrs. Virginia Black, Mineral
Bluff, Rt. 1.
Rhododendrons, Mt. Laurels,
3 col. Azaleas, Cream, White
Dogwood, Pink Cherokee Rose,
Creek Hemlock, Coralberry,
Redbud, Tulip Poplar, Straw-
berry Bush, Red Maple, 2-3 ft.,
$2.50 doz.; Phlox, Shasta Dais-
jes, $2. C. Rooted. PP. Mrs.
Boon Wilson, Mineral Bluff.
3 col. Azaleas, Coralberry,
Red Bud, Rhododendrons, Mtn.
Laurels, White, Cream Dog-
wood, Tulip Poplar, Red Maple,
Creek Hemlock, Strawberry
Bush, Cherokee Rose, 2-3 ft.,
$2.50 doz.; Phlox, Shasta Dai-
gies, $2..C. Mrs. E. J. Mill-
hhollon, Mineral Bluff, Box 173.
Magnolias, Teaoclives, Red,
White Dogwood, Pink Crab-
apple, Red, Piik Crape Myrtle,
Sweet Myrtie, Red Bud, Run-
ning Bunch Honeysuckle, Ever-
reen Oak, Sweetshrubs, Um-
rella China, Holly, Yellow Jas-
maine, 1-5 ft., 10c ft. Add post-
age. Exch. for sacks. Ea. pay
ostage. Mrs. Grady Brewer,
comsboro.
Mtn. Laurels, Rhodedendrons,
White Pine, Red Maple, White,
,end Red Dogwood, Crabapple,
Holly, Pussy Willow, Azaleas,
Poplar, Red Bud, $2.50 doz.
FP. Mrs. Glover sbercrombie,
Mineral Bluff,
r Ta
Connell,
Lace Seed,
wood, - Tulip Popfar, 3. cols.
Azaleas, Crabapple, Holly, Red
Maple, Rhododendrons, Sweet-
shrubs, Cherokee Roses, Hem-
lock, Strawberry Bush, Pines,
Pussy-willows, 2-8 ft., rooted,
$2.50 doz.; Arbutus, Galax, Mtn.
Ferns, Heartease, 40c doz. Mrs.
W. D. Davis, Meneral Bluff.
April blooming Narcissus
Bulbs, also Narcissus and Daf-
fodils mixed, all $1.25 C. Mrs.
John Weaver, Temple, Rt. 2.
Large Dbl. Red Poppy Seed,
25c isp. Add stamped addressed
envelope. Mrs. C. R. Henson,
Thomasville, Rt. 4.
Hollyhock, Touch-me,-not
Sweet. williams, Queen. Anns
Late, Hibiscus, 15c Thi.) seed.
Add stamped. envelope; Also
Fairy Lily Bulbs, 25c doz.
Enough for a good start of all
for $1. Mrs. W. H. T. Acree,
Toccoa, Rt. 3.
Magnolia, Red and White
Dogwood, Teaolives, Pink Crab-
apple, Red Bud, Red Holly,
Sweetshrubs, Watermelon Crape
Myrtle, Unbrella China, 1-5 ft.,
10c ft. Add 50c postage. Exch.
for print sacks. Mrs. Leonard
Toomsboro, Rt. 1!
Nicely rooted Ornamental Al-
mond Shrubs, 35c ea. Add post-
age. Mrs. J. N. Davis, Marlow,
Rt. 1, Box 112:
Pink. Cherokee Recess, Rho-
dodendrons, Mtn. Laurels, Red,
Yellow Azaleas, Crabapple,
Coralberry, Red Bud, White
Pine, Red Maple, Tulip Poplar,
Creek Hemlock, Holly, 2-3 ft.,
$2.75 doz.; Day Lilies, Blue
Tris, Pink Phlox; FaH Pinks,
Snowdrops, $2.50..C. Bonnie
Abercrombie, Mineral Bluff.
Azaleas, White
and English Dog-
$2.. doz.; Crab-
apple, 25c ea. Moss packed.
Add postage. Mrs. Dorothy
Saine, Murrayville, Rt.- 1.
Rhododendrons, Mtn. Laurels,
Azaleas, Pink Cherokee Roses,
RedBud, Crabapple,
White Dogwood, Holly, White
Pines, Creek Hemlock, Tulip
Poplar, Yellow Easter Belle,
2-3 ft., $2.75 doz.; Orange Day
lilies, Pink Per. Phlox, Blue
Iris, Purple Violets, $2. C,
Gladys Robinson, Mineral Bluff.
White Dogwood, Tulip Poplar,
3- col. .azaleas, Mtn. Laurels,
Crabapple, Red Maple, Holly,
Sweetshrubs, | Rhododendrons,
Cherokee Roses, Strawberry
Bush, Pussywillow, Pine,.Hem-
lock, 2-3 ft., rooted, $2.50 doz.;
Galax, Arbutus, Mtn. Ferns,
Heartease, 40c doz. Mrs. Clif-
ton Davis, Mineral Bluff.
3. colors
Blooming,
wood, 2-3 ft.
Red Maple, White Dogwood,
3 col. Azaleas, Tulip Poplars,
Mtn. Laurels, Rhododendrons,
Sweetshrubs, Crabapple, Straw-
berry Bush, Pine, Holly, Chero-
kee~Roses, Pussywillow, Hem-
lock, 2-3 ft., rooted, $2.50 doz.;
Arbutus, -Galax, Min. Fern,
Heartease; 40c doz. Mrs. Ruth-
ford Davis, Mineral Bluff.
Steels. Jumbo Pansies, $2.25
C; $15. M; Snapdragons, Car-
nation, Statice Foxglove, Co-
jumbine, Giant Shasta Daisies,
Sweet Williams, Dianthus,
Dwarf Feverfew, English Dai-
sies, Royal Robe and Pink
Rosino Violets, 60c doz.; $3. C.
Mrs. Will Wise, Wadley, Rt. 1.
Large quantity Queen Annes
15 tsp; Bulbs of
Yellow Glads, also mixed Glads.
(mostly white with pink edges),
50e doz.; Mixed type and color
Glad Bulblets, 5 doz., 25c. No
less sold. Add postage. Mrs. C.
W. Mathews, Woodland.
Pink Thrift, 75c C; 200, $1.25;
Orange Day Lilies, 25 doz.;
Nandinas, 4, $1. All rooted,
shipped damp packed. Add
postage. Mrs. Milton T. Phillips,
Wrens.
Mtn. Shasta, pure white, dbl.
daisies, $1.75 doz.; Snapdragons,
Stocks, Hardy Carnations, Red
Verbena, 75c doz.; Pyrethrum
(painted. daisies) 2~ yr. plants,
$2.50 doz.; Booking orders for
50 dif. mums. Add 25c postage.
Stamped envelope for list. Mrs.
J2. M. Combs, Washington,
Maples, |
PAGE FOUR MARKET BULLETIN
FLOWERS AND SEED FLOWERS AND SEED FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE
150 bu. Gatan Soy Beans,} Mtn. Laurels, hite Dog-| 2 large Arborvitaes, cheap.
Buyer will have to dig them
up. Mrs. Archie Jenkins, Young
Harris,
Dahlias, $1.50 doz.; Mums,
mixed, 15c-50c doz. Come after.
Henry Whitfield, Marietia, 330
Roselane St.
Snowball Bushes, rooted,
$1.50 ea. PP. G, M. Moseley,
Menlo.
4 yr. old Cape Jasmine, white
wax blooms, rooted in pots, $2.50
ea. Add postage. Miss Bessie
Martin, Gainesville, Rt. 5.
Snapdragons, Stocks, Imp.
Queen Annes Lace, Red, Pur-
ple, Rose Verbena, Pink Achil-
lea, Rich Colors Petunias, 65c
doz.; Adml. Byrd. Daisies, 50c
doz.; 36, $1.25; 8 cols. Cushion
Mums, $1. doz. 25c postage. Mrs.
M. P. Combs, Washington.
Sweet heart roses (bush type,
small pink blossoms continu-
ously from spring until frost),
$1. ea, 6 for $4.50 including
packing and postage. Mrs. Rosa
G. Poole, Valdosta, 1610 Marion
St.
FLOWERS AND SEED
WANTED
Exch. Mimosa, Jan. Jasmine,
Spruce, White Pine, Red Maple,
Tame Cherry, Plum, Hibiscus
and Blue Iris, blooming size,
for Buford Holly, Phitzer Jun-
iper, Magnolias, Abelias, Crape
Myrtle, Nandina; - Pyracantha,
Cherry Laurel, Gardenia, other
shrubbery. Mrs. R. A. Dyer,
Blue Ridge.
Want plants of tiny pansy
called. Johnny Jump Up or
Heartease, purple, and yellow
with purple. A. R. Boutin, Co-
lumbus, 2215-17th. Ave.
Want Monthly Gardenia
Plants, and Cuttings. Advise
price. Mrs. Lewis Bradfield,
Douglasville, Rt. 4, Box 162.
Want Thyme Plgnis. Robert
G. Reynolds, Savannah,.Rt. 5,
Box 478.
Want Calyera Japonica Seed.
State price. Calvin Harman,
Stovall.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
Athens 10 Disc Pull Type
Harrow, wheels with rubber
tires mounted on top. See at:
my farm: one mile west Stone-
wall at Valley Lake. Joe B.
Phillips, Stonewall,- Box 197.
David Bradley Garden- Trac-
tor, 2% Hp, 2 all equipment, used
about 20 hrs., 1953 model, $235.
J.D LeaVell, Powder Springs.
Phone 2983.
Farmall F-12 (on rubber)
with cultivators, cyl. head
cracked, $125.; 3 Dise Tiller,
$100. Sell separately. Glenn
Trazier, Milledgeville, Rt. 6.
Phone 8527,
Good 1 H Wagon, 2 sets har-
ness, 2. one horse turn plows,
horse drawn fertilizer distribu-
tor, Gee Whiz, and single stock
plow, $35. Wade C. Ussery, El-
lenwood, Rt. }.
3 used Oil Brooders complete,
gocd cond,, $37.50. Roy Crowe,
Gainesville. Phone Le. 2-6672.
Super A Tractor, cultivators,
planters, distributors, Beamus
transplanter, lift type, oat. drill,
good shape, and 6 row cotton
duster, for sale. C. E. Morris,
Surrency, Rt. 2.
Model B John Deere Tractor,
good shape, starter, lights, good
rubber, J. D. 4 disc tiller, 16
disc smoothing harrow, drag
harrow, 8 row J. D. duster,
Army Wagon, pea huller, C. L.
Bennett, Jefferson.
J. D. 9 Tractor with Bycrus
Erie Bull Dozers, good shape, 2
yrs. old, reasonable offer. See
at my farm 10 miles, Macon
Rd. Jack Clason, Columbus,
1115 Broadway.
20 in, Mill, 2 elevators, 1
conveyor. David Bradley Shel-
ler, belts, pulleys, shafts, 15
horse elec. motor and tools for
sale. H. C. Singleton, Tucker.
Phone Clarkston 6119,
AMENDED |
RULES And REGULATIONS)
ig
The Bulletin, approximately 290,000 circulation we
ly, created for and financed by the Georgia Farmer, ;
mailed under provisions of Act of June 6, 1900, =
conform to ceriain RULES. er
These rules prohibit noticeseither wanied or |
sale for Dealers, Commercial Nurseries, Hatche:
Rabbitries Business Men (engaged in trade of commodif
listed), Farmers, or even Housewives, who buy farm co)
modities for the purpose of re-selling in any for ,
prohibits notices for Non-HesidentsOnly notices
permitied that are absolutely essential to Agriculture
the furtherance of the Agricultural Indusiryand n
be accepted for publication only from FARMERS or o:
parties actively engaged in farming. This inclu
Farm Products, Farm Machinery, actually used o:
and absolutely essential to farming, and STR
FARM WORK ON FARM notices.
Notices must have personal name and address
tached and must-be from parties of LEGAL AGE
Minors, Box Numbers, Farm Names, Initials, In Ca
of General Delivery as addressare NOT accepted |
publication .... notices of similar nature from indiv:
uals or members of same household (except where pi
OWN INDIVIDUALLY, GROW and RAISE individ
the products and commodities listed), are not inte:
ally published in same issue: notices not to exceed fort
one or iwo words to give proper meaning. NEW COE
must be sent for each time published. WE RESERVE TH
RIGHT TO RE-WRITE ALL NOTICES. 2 2
The following items and items of similar nature
classification are STRICTLY PROHIBITED:
i
Tin, pipe (except for irrigation), electric at
fencing, concrete mixers, shingles, timber (except as
ing on, and sold as pari of land in special farm k
edition, lumber, cord, pulpwood, roofing, auiomobi
trucks, busses. jeeps, trailers, saw and shingle mills,
er units unless absolutely essential for farming), e
drills and presses, feather picking machines, feather |
pillows (feathers alone may be listed), waterers, fe
water heaters, ranges, shelters, stalls, stanchions:
equipment not absolutely essential to pouliry,
livestock raising in connection with agricultural indust
bug catchers, rabbit hutches, health products, remedi
cures, earthworms, fishing poles, other fishing
ment, bamboo (except roots as growing), charcoal, bro
cotion-picking sheeis, hog oilers: dogs, cats, rats, hai
sters, ferrets, mice, canaries, other birds, parrots, m
keys, foxes, owls, coons, fish, squirrels, OPossums, |
pet and wild animals of any kind. skins, pelts; cotic
other poisons, coffins, musical instrumenis, antiques,
dian relics, corn beads, pine cones, eic., ice boxes,
freeze uniis, refrigerators, (excepi dairy equipmen), v
ing. sewing machines, electric and other irons, st
home furnaces, baby carriages, bicycles, motorcycles, i
shrinkers, shop tools, except Blacksmith tools used
farm, butter molds, tarpaulins, tenis, jewelry, qui
scraps, crocheting, knitting, cloth, clothing. sewing n
chandise, store fixtures, home and office furniture, hed
es, lamps, pictures, barber shops, meat market Homma
valid chairs, businesses of any kind, lost or sirayed
siock, addresses of parties, together with notices of
ING SOLD OUT of certain items; boitles, cans, jars, ca
toons, baskets, crates, pistols, shotguns, matrimonial,
cial, other similar items, Christmas decorations, nate
wreaths, mistletoe (except as growing in ground and :
as ornamental nursery siock for transplaniing) on
other similar. items.
Powers: flower seed, bulbs, ornamental nurse
stock published once a month only, and notices must
received noi later than 20th:of month preceding public
tion: One sack notice monthly for individualFarm Lan
Notices twice yearlySpring and Fall. 4
No charge for publishing notices nor ee
rateNon-residenit subscribers acceptable. All eligik
notices published according io classification as peor
as Rees
The Bulletin dees not assume any responsthilnne t
notices (published or unpublished) nor for ee
resuliing from prinied notices, bui we use every po:
means within our jurisdiction to preven? fraud.
TOM LINDER, Commissioner, : =
STATE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Bee
- Blizabeth Hynds _
& 4 ee me Editor-Notices. q
tee Georgie Farmers! Market Soa
Ch ee
dnesday, Janugry 6, 1954
MARKET BULLETIN
oe T. M. Gillis, Broxton,
BicLId.: *
One Heavy 2 H Wagon, good
eond., $50.; Old Fashion Grist
Mill, 36 in., top runner with
}ift shaft and pulleys complete,
10, W. M. Burton, Screven.
No. 10 Oliver Plow, Fertili-
zer Distributor, King Corn
tan all mule driven; Also
Regular F-20. Intl. Tractor,
o. 10 B, A. Harrow. Robert
- J. Williams, Albany, Vander-
ilt Dr., Rt. 2, Box 373.
Intl. Walking Cultivator, A-1
sone $20.00. Cy. W. Hadden,
uisville, Clarks Mill Rd.
_ Allis-Chalmers G Model
Tractor, hydraulic lift, cultiva-
__ tors, distributors, never used.
_ Joe Sikes, Glennville, r
_ -214 HP Bready New Model
AR Garden Tractor with re-
verse, cultivator, disc harrow,
plow with coulter, 32 in. field
mower, 42 in, bulldozer blade,
spike harrow, power driven
mower. Used 1 season. W. R
Beck, Jr., Sandy Springs, 145
*~ -Mt. Vernon Hwy. Tel. Ch. 8883.
- -D-7 Caterpillar and TD-14
Intl, both with straight. dozer
- blades, for sale or exchange for
beef type cattle or late model
_ Ford or Ferguson Tractor in
~? good cond. John W. Grapp,
tatesboro, Box 266. * Phone
162-R-1.
-- One WC Allis-Chalmers 2
Row Tractor, 1946 model, good
shape, 2 dise turning plow, cul-
tivators, all $900, T..B. Head,
Rockmart, Rt. 3. -
- 8 ft. x 8 ft. Cypress Water
Tank Windmill and Pump al-
ready down; 1 and-2 H plows,
planters, steel wagon with
hitch, for sale or xch. for Su-
-. per A or C Farmall attach-
- ments, seeds, or Kudzu erowns.
oS Ge ess Columbus, 958
: ve. :
_ Almost new 2 disc Plow, No.
151 for Farmall Super A, hy-
-draulic control, $100. FOB. E.
T. Spieks, Decatur, 5185 Cov-
ington Hwy. Cr. 5333.
: Two 2 H Chattanooga 23
_ Plows, 2 Oliver Middle Busters,
Stalk Cutter, cheap, or exch.
for equal form value used on
farm. O. S. Duggan, Eastman.
_ Late Model Case LA Tractor,
excellent cond., Rome B & B
low, Graham Hoeme scarifier,
andem harrow, other plows,
_ for sale or trade for 1953 Mod-
el 2 or 3 Plow Tractor with
Fo Stal cultivators, plows.
= aoe W. Veal, Cedartown, Rt.
~
One new set of 11-38 wheels,
xims, tubes, and tires for Farm-
ail H, $250. Or make offer. O.
Pe aoe Folkston, Rt. 1. Tel.
John Deere Tractor M, excel-
Jent cond:, cultivator, bottom
plow, disc harrow, scooter
gees $650. Complete outfit.
_ Milton Bryant, Bluffton.
- One 10x28 Tractor Tire, %
worn, $25.; 1-3 Disc Plow for
M or H Farmall Tractor, new
condition, $200. Carlton Goldin,
Draketown. k
1946 Allis-Chalmers Tractor
W/C with some equipment,
motor just worked over, new
yings installed, pulley, wheel
weights, excellent for harrow-
ing and ecu d Any offer
considered. W. T. Upchurch,
Clyattville.
oe
Tractor, and 6 Disc J. D. Dise
Tiller for sale. Charles W. Car-
ter, Winterville. |
_ Super A Farmall Tractor,
ouch control, with all equip-
~Yent, A-1 cond. Mrs. John
- Powell, Register, RFD No. 1.
cultivators, guano distributors,
harrow, bottcm plow, cheap.
W. Q. Touchton, Valdosta, Rt.
2, Box 160, White Water Rd.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY WANTED
_ Want one cultivating outfit
for Farmall A Tractor, also
planting and fertilizer attach-
ment, Within 50 mi. Atlanta.
Quote best price. Leonard T.
ilkins, Sr., College Park, Ri 1.
.| Crowder Peas,
1938 Model A John Deere.
1950 Ford Tractor, planters, | ;
lift on draw bar. Or exchange
Bradley Bottom Plow for same
(or sell). A. H. Nesmith, Man-
chester. . Z
Want to buy for cash Peach
Orchard Sprayers. No junk. O,
E. Crawford, Goggins.
Want 1 set of planters and
cultivators for 1946 B John
Deere Tractor with power lift.
Write. State price. James T.
Boleman, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
Want two oil brooders with
thermostat control. State con-
dition and price. -Fred Stahl,
Ellijay, Rt. 4.
Want to buy a 1000 cap. gas
brooder, preferably Woods. Let-
ters ans. O. P. Foster, Good
Hope. Phone 5246.
SEED AND GRAIN
FOR SALE
Red Multiplying Onion Sets,
-|$1.10 gal. Del. in Ga. Prompt
del. Miss Martha Bennett, Cof-
fe,
4000 lbs. Brown Top Millet,
tecleaned, 8c lb. in 100 Ib.
bags. FOB. John C, Reid, Ze-
bulon. Tel. 85511. _
White Lady Peas, ireated,
for planting only, 25c Ib.; 18c
Ib. 10 lbs. or more. Add 25c
for postage on all orders. Mrs.
R. T. Blalock, Adairsville, Rt.
2, Box 111.
Victor Grain Oats, Chancellor
Wheat; Abruzzi Rye, Brown
Top Millet,
all top quality,. combine run,
for planting. Sample on request.
C, W. Finney, Haddock.
Calhoun Barley, combine run,
extra clean, $1.65; Martins
Combine Milo,recleaned, $6.20
Cwt.; Victor Grain Oats, re-
cleaned, 90 pct. germ., $1.05.
FOB farm; Also want Korean
Lespedeza. State price and
germ. test. W. M. Nixon,
Thomaston, c/o B & B Ranch.
Tel. 2412,
Recleaned Reseeding Rye
Grass, 12%c Jb. 100 Ib. lots.
FOB. Joel H. Sanders, New-
nan, RFD 2.
10,000 Ibs. Cattail Millet,
cleaned, in 100 Ib. bags, 8c
Ib.; 500 Ibs., Brown Top Mil-
Jet, cleaned, 100 Ib. bags, 10c
Ib. Purity and germ. guar,
See at farm, Sankie Powell,
Wrens, Ga. or contact. M. T.
Courson, Hazlehurst.
15 tons Brown Top Millet,
germ. 87 pct., purity 99 pct., no
noxious. weeds. J. P. Alexan-
der, Louisville.
Old Time Tender White and
Striped Half Runner, Pink Pea-
nut, and Speckled. Cutshort
Bean Seed, 60c cup;s White
Salet Peas, 85 cup. PP. No
oS Mrs. Ople Goble, Ellijay,
toe :
Purple Hull Peas, 50c cup;
Striped Runner,and Pink Pea-
nut Bean Seed, 60c cup; Cream
40c cup. No
chks. Martin M. Gentry, Elli-
jay, Rt. 3.
Red Shallots, $1.35 gal.; Red
Hot Pepper, 50c qt. in pod;
English Pea Seed, 50c cup. Add
postage.. Mrs. Samuel Caine,
Cumming.
Va. Gold and 402 Tobacco
Seed, germ. test 90 pct., grown
from certified seed, 50c ea.;
4 oz., $1.50; 1 Ib. or more,
$5.50 Ib. PP. Prompt del. Geo.
Y. Fletcher, Tifton, Rt. 3.
1953 crop Ky. 31 Fescue Seed,
State tested, $18. Cwt. Cecil
Travis, Riverdale, c/o Pine
rest Acres. Tel. Fayeiteville
5581.
1 bushel of Pink Skin Mui-
tiplying Onions, $1. gal. Plus
postage, Mrs. Ellen Whitehead,
Maysville, Rt. 1,
Long, Wide Leaf, Bull Face
Tobacco Seed, 75c Thl.; Okra,
$1; 1b.; *Martin, Dipper Giant
Gourd Seed, 35c and 40c pack
Martin Gourds, $2.50 doz.; Mas-
todon Everbearing Strawberry,
$1. C; Sage and Catnip, $1. doz.
Add postage, L. J. Ellis, Cum-
toing, Reb. fe
Kobe lLespedeza,|
Seed, early dwarf, gray sugar,
40c cup; Large type Martin and
Dipper Gourd Seed, and Strip-
ed Cushaw Seed, 2c pkg. Add
postage. Mrs, C, D. Sellers,
Ellijay; Rt. 2,
5000 Ibs. clean, bright Chapel
Hill Rescue Grass Seed, from
foundation stock, 10c Ib. del.
in Ga. Harrison Summerour,
Duluth, Rt. 2. Tel 3983 nights.
Clean White Multiplying
Nest Onions, $1.50 gal. PP. No
COD. Mrs. A, Browning,
Ailey, RFD No. 1.
Clean Old Fashion White
Nest Multiplying Onion Sets,
$1.35 gal. PP in Ga;
Dried Leather Britches Beans
for eating, 50c lb. PP in 4 Jb.
lots. Miss Annie Ruth Weeks,
Dial.
White Mush Peas, Green
Okra Seed, 40c. cup; 3. cups,
$1.; Red Speckled Crowder and
White Blackeyed Peas, 35c cup;
4, $1. Add postage. s. Carl
Smith. Hilijay, Rt. 3.
4000 bags Brown Top. Millet
Seed, germ. 80 pct. and better
99 pct. pure, nO noxious weeds,
$10. Cwt. Richard Harvill, Mil-
len. c/o Bousa Farm. Tel. 428W.
Tobacco seed, cleaned, tested,
2 lead. var., Chambers Special
No. 402, $1. ounce; $10. Ib. 3
lbs., $25.; 5 Ibs., $35. PP. Earl
Stuckey, Blackshear,
_ PLANTS FOR SALE
Big Red Jumbo Plants, bears
early, $1.00 C; $9.00 M. Add
postage. Full count. M. L, Clark,
Gainesville, Rt. 8, Box 14.
Mtn Huckleberry, bearing size,
2 doz.; 75c; Large Klondike
Strawberry, 75c C; Large Field
Dewberry, bearing size, 50c doz.;
Muscadine Vines, 4 ft., 45c ea.;
Also Colored Bunch Butter-
beans, 35c teacup. Add postage.
'Rosie Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Everbearing Strawberry, $1.50
C; 500, $7.00; $10.00 M; Red.
and Yellow May Plum, $1.00 doz
Brown Turkey Everbearing Fig,
5 ft., 75c; Mtn Huckleberry, 50c
doz.; Blackberry, 25c*doz.; $2
C; Peach and Apple Trees, 4, $1
$5.00 orders PP. Mrs. B. T.
Thornton, Bowdon.
Bearing size Strawberry
Plants, Tenn. Fiverbearers, pro-
lific, $1.00 C; $7.00 M. PP. Mrs.
J. W. Edwards, Springdale.
Chas. and Early Jersey Wake-
field and Early Flat Dutch Cab-
bage, 500, $1.00; $1.50 M. Full
count: Prompt shipment. Mary
C. Lovell, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Chas. and Early Jersey Wake-
field, and All Season Frostproof
Cabbage, also White Bermuda
Onion. Plants, ready, 300, $1.00;
500, $1.50; $2.50 M. Del. Otis
Conner, Pitts.
Charleston Wake field and
Golden Acre Frostproof Cab-
bage, also White Bermuda ee
Plants, 300, $1.00; 500, $1.50;
$2.50 M. Prompt del. PP. R.
Chanclor, Pitts. <
Chas. W., Jersey W. Cabbage;
or more, $1.50 M. J. P. Mullis,
Baxley, Rt. 4.
Frostproof Cabbage, 50c C;
500, $150; $2.10. M; Klondike
Strawberry, $1.00 C; 300, $2.25;
$6.00 M. Plus postage. Miss Lee
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Strawberry planis from cer-
tifed Missionary and Mastodon,
$1.00 C. PP. Damp packed when
mailed. Tom Kittle, Carrollton,
Rt. 5.
G. Collard Plants, ready, $1.25
M. Count and statis. guar. F.
Carter, Baxley, Rt. 4,
Genuine Blakemore and klon-
dike Strawberry, $1.00 C; $7.00
M; Lawton Blackberry, $7.00 C;
ae doz. T. H. Graves, Fayette-
ville.
Large Red Jumbo Strawberry,
$1.00 C; $8.00 M. Full count. Add
postage. Mrs. Elmer Clark,
Gainesville, Rt. 8.
Non-Stop Everbearing Straw-
berry, $1.00 C.. Plus -postage;
75e C in Jots of 500 or more.
pies C. L. Estes, Lincolnton, Rt.
Good Rt.
A.} plants, 75c ea.; 2 of each, $2.50;
M; Red Cane, stalks average 3
ft., $3.00 C; and Ga. Callard
Seed, 1953 crop, 65c Jb. PP . in
10 Ib. lots. A. W. White, Lees-
burg Re. 1, Box 84.
Klondike. Strawberry, 80c C;
500, $3.00; $4.50 M; Apricot
Plum, and Plum Peach Sprouts,
3, $1.00. Add postage. Mrs. Guy
Crowe, Cumming, Ri. a
Blakemore Strawberry, $1.00
C; 500, $4.50; 9.00 M; Mastodon,
70c C; 500. $3.00 $5.00 M; Klon-
dike, 60c C; 500, $2.75; $4.75 M;
Mtn Huckleberry, bearing size,
75e doz.; Catnip, 25c doz.; Scup-
pernong Vine Cuttings, 50c doz.;
Peppermint, 25e doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. Lee Hood, Gainesville,
Frostproof Chas. Wakefield
and Early Jersey Cabbage Plants
500, $1.50; $2.50 M. Del Promt
shipment. Dewey Mathis, Ganies
ville, Rt. 2,
Strawberry Plants, 85 C;
Black Raspberry, Red Rasp-
berry, Sage, Horse Radish, $1.00
doz.; Peppermint, 50c doz. Add
postage. Mrs. Lona Blackwell,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 54.
Blakemore Strawberry, $1.00
C; $9.00 M; Mtn Huckleberry
Bushes., $1.00 doz. PP in Ga.
John Howard, Cleveland,
Klondike Strawberry, $1.00 C;
Blakemore Blackberry, - Rasp-
berry, 6, $1.00; Muscadine Vines,
35c ea.; Mtn. Huckleberry, 50c
doz.; Kuduz- plants, 10c_ ea.
plus postage. Mrs. Otis Mash-
burn, Cumming.
Chas. and Jersey Cabbage, and
Flat Sweet Bermuda Onion
(white) Plants, 500, $1.25; $2.00
M del. PP; 5000 onion $7.50 ex-
press. I. L. Stokes, Fitzgerald,
Copenhagen, Chas Wakefield,
and Early Jersey Cabbage, also
White Bermuda Onion, 500, $1.
25;; $2.00 M_ prepaid; 5000,
7.50 exp. collext. Mix orders ap-
preciated. Full count and quali-
ty guar. E. L. Fitzgerald, Fitz-
gerald, Box 662
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Niece 1 yr. Apple and Peach
Trees, 35c; Large 2 yr. size,4
45c; 1 yr. Pear, Cherry, Plum,
Apricot, 65c; 2 ft. Chestnut and
Pecan Trees, $1.50. State insp.
T, M. Webb, Ellijay.
Concord Grape Cuttings, 2
yr. gow, rooted, $1. ea.;. 6,
= P. E, E. Kurtz, Marietta,
ted.
Chinquapin, $3. doz.; Hazel-
nut, Raspberry, $1. doz.; Sassa-
fras, 4, i Garlic and Yellow
Root, 5 doz. Add
Mrs. D. M. Hollaway,
ega, Rt. 1.
Blight resistant Chinese
Chestnut Trees, State insp., 18-
24 in., $1. ea.; 3, $2.50. COD.
R. G. Largin, Eas* Point, 311
N. Randall St. Tel. Ca. 4970.
Apple: Red, Yellow June,
Red, Yellow Delicious, Ever-
bearing, Shockley, Pound,
Horse, Yates, Winesap, Black
Twig, Grimes, Tenderine; Jarge
June Pear and Blue Damson
Plum. Grafted, inspected. All
40c ea. Orders $3. up prepaid.
Small size, 20c ea, A. J. Wil-
loughby, Waco.
Stewart Pecan Trees, 4-5 ft.,
FOB. M. F. Jones, Metter, Rt. 1.
Fig Plants, 25c, 50c,
ee.
ahlon-
1, sizes.
Add postage. Mrs. W. E. Woot-
en, Camilla.
Sweet Purple Fig, White
Bunch Grape; rooted, 2 ft.
Home grown Rabbiteye Blue-
bepry, 4 (2 dif. var.) $1.50;
Thornless Boysenberry, good
plants, $1.25 - doz; Native
Gooseberry, $1.25 for 4. J. E.
Granger, Reidsville.
PECANS FOR SALE
Large, soft shell pecans, fine
quality, 10 Jbs.; $3.60 PP.; 35
Ibs. up, 30c Ib. by Exp.; Shell-
ed, 90 pct, halves, 2 Ibs. or
more, $1.25 lb, PP, D, J. Harri-
jerines ee PAGE FIVE
_ SECOND HAND SECOND HAND SEED AND GRAIN PLANTS FOR SALE PECANS FOR SALE
MACHINERY FOR SALE MACHINERY WANTED FOR SALE oe
Good 1 and 2 H farm tools,| -Want Disc Plow, independent| Tender Pods English Pea|,, Mastodon Strawberry, $6.00) Large Paper Shell Frotchg,
Pecans, 25 Ibs. or less, 20e lb
Over 25 Ibs. up to 50 Ibs., 1774
M. F. Gaddis, Quitman, Bo:
50-75 lbs., 15 Ib. 100 Ib. lot
or more, 15c, FOB here. M
ph F. Gaddis, Quittman, Bo
300 ibs. soft shell large #4
cans, 35 jb. prepaid in Gy
Exch. 1 tb. for washed prix
100 Ib. cap. sacks, or half J
for ea. white washed sack. Al.
free of holes, stain, etc. Ea. pr.
pay postage. J. D. Powell, Fi
gerald, Box 529. {
HAY AND STRAW |
FOR SALE s
50-75 tons good quality Coax.
tal Bermuda Hay, also abou
200 bales mixed grasses, Ber,
muda, Crab, ete. Price based 0
quantity of purchase. Exch. fo
good grade of stocker heifer,
or cows. Rassell C.* English,
Wahira, Rt. 22. 2 J
30 to 40 tons Bermuda, Leggy
pedeza and Sericea hay, bale
without raln, 80. ton FOB ba
9 mi. So. Barnesville on HE
341. W. PS Elder, Jr., Culloderk
About 8 tons good mixe
grass thay, $80. ton: About
tons good oat hay, $35. ton,
my farm. R. L. Estes, Rex, Rt.
Sun cured Lespedeza Hay ~
with some oat straw, 65c p
bale. Will load anytime. Jack
Barnette, Colbert. Tel. 4372. 4
80 tons best bright Lespedey
Hay, $35. ton; Good Gruss Hay
$30. ton: Also 4000 Ibs. Bro
Top. Millet, recleaned, No.
in 100 Ib. bags, 8c Ib. John
Reid, Zebulon. Phone 85311. |!
100 tons bright aled hayt
baled without rain, combin
tion Bermuda, Crab, and Dale
las Grass, no weeds, $25. tom,
FOB my barn. J. Lynwoogt
Bentley. Thomaston, Rt. 7
Phone 3697. \
3 tons Runner Peanut Hay
never rained on, $25, ton. Wi
deliver 25 mile radius. Milton
Terry, Ellaville. )
Coastal Bermuda Hay, $30,
ton; Brown Tep Millet Hay
$25. ton. FOB, farm. Richa
Harvill, Millen, P.O, Box 78:
i
e/o Bousa Farm. ;
d.
if
Yr
1952 crop Peanut Hay,
in. trailerload lots. Write
prices. Marvin A. Burke, Ash
burn, Rt. 1, \
30-40 tons
Lespedeza a
Brown Top Millet Hay, no ral
$30. ton at farm near Palmetto,
For appointment phone Atlant;
Fa, 6694. F, M. Jones, Palmetto,
SACKS FOR SALE
eS
100 Jb. ap. smooth weav
white feed sacks, no holes no
mildew. Not washed. 18c e
and postage, or 24c ea. PR,
Prompt shipment. Mrs, M. i, ~
oe Gainesville, Rt. 8, Bo
Good, white sheeting sacks,
100 Ib. cap., free of holes, let
ters and mildew, all Ar grace
$2.45 doz.; 25 for $4.75; 50, $9
Postpaid threugh 8rd zone. Ng
chks. Mrs. Lizzie Mathi,
Gainesville, Rt. 5.
100 lb. cap., white bags, 1
ea. plus postage: Mrs. Ot
Mashburn, Cumming, Rt. 5. -
100 Jb. cap. smooth aa
solid white feed sacks, no ho.
nor mildew washed, ripped, 2
ea. Add postage. No COD nO,
Chks. Mrs. Walter M, Clarky
Alto, Rt. 2.
100 Ib. cap., smooth weavi
white feed sacks, no holes n
mildew, nor washed, 18 edy
and postage, or 24c ea. PP. Mrs,
Elmer Clark, Gainesville, Rt. 8
MISCELLANEOUS ||
- FOR SALE |
ne errno anette}
CORN: {
Old fashioned yellow corny
large ears, hard flinty, very
strong, for sale in truck load
son, Blackshear,
lots in shuck. No small lots. W,
EB. McCart, Lawrenceville, Rt,
- PAGE SIX
MARKET BULLETIN= OC
Wednesday, Tend
Hog Prices Paid At Various Markets
ioe
December 7 _NO.1 NO.2 NO.3 NO.4.| Bartow L/S Com. Co., Cartersville 23.40 22.75 22.50
Japeway Craig Com. Co., Dublin 22:28. 20.78) 21.50" 21.18 besonha
-December 8
Emanuel Co. Stockyard, Swainsboro 22.00 21.15 20.50
Jones-Neuhoff Com. Co., Macon 22.10 21.80 21.00 20.00 |. cs t i
. December 14 ;
Farmers L/S Auction Co., Nashville 21.26 20.38 20.88 20.08 Woyeross L/S Mkt., Walcross 22.00. 21.87 21.00 20.80
perepber Bleckley Livestock Auction, Cochran 22.10 21.50 21.00 24.00
d, 1.30 20.80 | FE : :
scaodiaast ebene coms dtiteidee 2 ae meet ucenans 1/5 a 22.00 21.63 21.18 20.00
laski Stock Bara, Hawkinsvill 21.70 21.40 20.60 20.00 : a
eee Japeway Craig Com. Co., Dublin 22.00 21.57 21.00 20.80
Coosa Valley Com. Co., Rome 23.70 22.50 21.50 20.00 Millen L/S Mkt., Millen 22.25 21.50 21.00 21.00
Ragsdale-McClure Com. Co., Rome 22.98 21.40 20.00 18.00 | Muscogee L/S Co., Columbus 23.50 23.10
December 10 Columbus Stockyard, Columbus 22.10
Bulloch Stockyard, Statesboro 21.92: 21.50. 21.50 Osilla L/S Company, Ocilla 21.51 21.10 21.05
Effingham Co. $/Yd., Springfield 22.02 21.60 21.00 21.00 | Swainsboro Stockyard, Swainsboro 22.19 21.80 20.80 20.37
Bainbridge Stockyard, Bainbridge 21.30 20.85 20.10 19.10 Dodge Co. Stock Barn, Eastman 21.45 20.68 21.00
Dublin L/S Com. Co., Dublin 22.01 21.38 21.21. 21.10 Seminole L/S Auction, Donalsonville 22.05 21.70 21.10 19.80
Ragsdale-Long Com. Co., Quitman 21.86 21.11 20.01 19.68 | Jesup Stockyard, Jesup 21.91 21.00 20.51 19.36
Pelham Stockyard, Pelham 21.38 20.96 20.05 Carroll County Sales, Carrollton 23.80 22.80 22.30 21.00
Valdosta L/S Co. Inc., Valdosta 21.12 20.78. 19.81 19.40 | December 15
December 12 Elbert L/S Auction, Elberton 21.78 20.50. 19.00
Wrightsville Stockyard, Wrightsville 22.01 21.68 Mitchell Co. L/S Co., Camilla 22.01 21,80 20.95 20.30
Smith Bros. Stockyard, Bartow 22.02 21.25 Jones-Neuhoff Com. Co., Macon 22.00 21.50 21.00 19.70
Chatham Co. Stockyard, Savannah 22.10 21.40 20.95 Appling Co. L/S Mkt., Baxley 21.53 21.73 20.81 2018
Tifton Stockyard Inc., Tifton 21.40 20.92 21.00 Coffee Co. L/S Company, Douglas 22.30 22.02 21.20 20.25
Sylvania Stockyard, Sylvania 22.00 21.60 21.10 21.10 | Tattnall L/S Co., Glennville 22.05 21.35 20.90 18.90
Co-op L/S Exchange, Statesboro 22.36 21.54 21.39 Farmers Co-op L/S Assoc., Sopertn 21.38 20.90 20.38 19.25 -
Flint River L/S Auction, Bainbridge 21.30 21.00 20.00 Smith Stockyard, Augusta 22.20 21.50 21.85
Toombs Co. Stockyard, Lyons 22.00 21.50 21.00 20.75 | Troup L/S Sale, LaGrange 24.170 23.00 21.00 20.60
Smith Stockyard, Augusta 21.50 21.00 20.50 Farmers Stockyard, ane 21.50. 21.00 19.75 :
Cordele L/S Com. Co., Cordele 21.50 21.60. 21.44 December 16
Thomasville Stockyard, Thomasville 22.10 21.50 Peoples L/S Mkt. Inc., Cuthbert 22.15 22.00 22.00 21.20. ;
Candler Livestock Mkt., Metter 21.83 21.25 20.55 22.50 Union Stockyard, Albany 22.59 22.01 21.90 21.60 ~-
MISCELLANEOUS CATTLE FOR SALE CATTLE FOR SALE POULTRY FOR SALE POULTRY FOR SALE
FOR SALE : / =
One 12-14 mos. old Reg. Poll- Full blooded Jersey Bull, 5 Small bantam roosters, mix- 40 or more W. L. hens, $1.
GUORDS: ed Hereford Bull, $150. or trade| mos, old, for sale. See J. F.| ed breed, asst. colors, 60c ea.| ea. pie singing chgs., or at
Martin and Dipper guords, 25c
ea; large sizes, 50c and $1.00 ea;
small mixed sizes, 10c ea., also
shelled pecans, $1.20 Qt. Mrs.
W. E. Wooten, Camilla.
HONEY:
10 lb. pails only, No. 1 table
honey, Ext., $3.00 for 1 pail del.
trogh 3rd zone; 4-10 lbs. $10.00
Collect Chgs; 2-55 gal, cap.
BBLs. older honey, FOB my
Station. Rev. Curd Walker, Ad-
rian. Rt. 1.
SYRUP:
125 a old syrup in glass jars
50c gal. W. M. Burton, Screven.
WALNUT AND WALNUT
MEATS:
Fresh walnut Meats, $1.00 lb.
Dahand postage. Mrs. D. M. Hol-
loway, Dahlonega. Rt. 1.
Walnut Meats, nice, clean,
shelled in large piecces, bright
col., $1.00 lb. Half of postage
paid in 2 lb. orders. M. M. Coch-
ran, Pisgah. Star Rt. :
CATTLE FOR SALE
Bred and Open Grade Here-
ford Heifers, from disedSe free
herd, of good type, excellent
cond., for sale or trade for hay,
oats, or corn. P. T. Patton, Sha-
dy Dale. Tel. Monticello 5123.
One Jersey, 3 gal. Milch Cow
when fresh, due to freshen Jan.
~27th., with 4th calf, 4% yrs.
old, good cond. H. W. Thur-
mond, Farmington.
| Riverdale,
for grade heifers or cows of
good breeding. Russell C. Eng-
lish, Hahira, Rt. 2.
One reg. Guernsey Bull, 18
mos. old, for sale or trade for
fresh cow and calf. Leonard T.
Wilkins, Sr., College Park, Rt.
Tiel Ree 11s.
Reg. Horned Herefords: A
few. choice young bull pros-
pects of BACA-R, Domino 33
and WHR True Mold 12 breed-
ing, for sale. Mrs. W. A. Ward,
Jr., Marietta, Rt. 3, Paper Mill
Rd., c/o Ward Meade Farm.
Phone 8-8772.
Reg. Hereford Cattle, horned
type, highest quality, bulls 12
mos, old, for sale. Cecil Travis,
c/o Pine Crest
Acres. Tel. Fayetteville 5581.
Jersey Milch Cow, about 800
lbs., 2 gal. now, 4 gal. when
fresh, to freshen again July,
has 4 mos. old calf, $69. 4 mi.
SW Villa Rica on Happy Hol-
low Black Top Rd. W. W. Mc-
Pherson, Villa Rica.
Reg. Guernsey Bull Calf by
Skyline Grettas Challenger, an
artificial used sire; The bull
out of Nejasco Emorys Edith
prize winner at SE Fair (calf
itself placed 4th), about 250
lbs., 4 mos. old, weaned, $60.
FOB farm. Max Tom Hardie,
Greensboro, Rt. 1.
Jersey Milch Cow, fresh, Ist.
Feb., 3rd calf, $125. at my barn.
Ernest Alex, Decatur, 141 New
St. Teh Cr. 3020.
Greenway, Gainesville. Or Dial
2-6672.
One extra good butter cow,
freshened Dec. 22, 1953 with
2nd calf, fine qualities, and rea-
sonable price. C. B. Huie, For-
est Park, RFD No: 4, Box 175.
Phone Jonesboro 678.
Reg. Jersey Cattle, fresh in
cows, close springers and bred
heifers, some have HIR test
records. W. P. Chappel, New-
nan, RFD No. 1, Box 133.
2. purebred Jersey Bull
Calves, excellent prospects for
herd sires, also few heifer
calves, 4-6 mos. old, dams clas-
sified, official records, sires
have records up to 12,000 Ibs.
milk on daughters, reg. and
transferred. S. B. Vaughters,
Lithonia, c/o Evergreen Farms.
Phone 6181.
POULTRY FOR SALE
BANTAMS:
Quality bantams in. R.- I.
Bs and White Leghorns, $5.
, $7. trio; white Hornet pit
eG: stags, $3.
Ringneck doves, $4. pr. L. L.
Murphy, College Park, Rt. 3,
CA 1617.
35 or 40 Bantams, 7 hens,
rest 1953 hatch, large enough
to lay, also some nice roosters.
Hens, 75c ea.; frying size pul-
lets, 25c ea., and give roosters
if lot taken. H. M. Bates, Ken-
nesaw, Rt. 2.
and $5. ea.;!'W
FOB. E. H. Jones, Waycross,
611 Reynolds St.
CORNISH, GAMES AND
GIANTS: ,
10 pure Dark Cornish pullets,
large big bone type, $25. H. W.
Thurmond, Farmington.
Purebred Cornish Indian BB
type, Rose Comb, long yellow
legs, well developed, Mrs. T.
W. Newsome, Sandersville.
1 Red pit Black Breast game
rooster, about 2 yrs. old,
S. R. Wade; Alto, Rt. 1.
1 pr. pure Gordons pit
games, cock and hen, 2 yrs. old,
$5. for pr. also 3. good stags,
half Gordons and half Clarets,
ready for a walk, $3. ea. Cash
or M.O. R. L. Griffin, Gaines-
ville, Oak St.
oe Cornish: 1 cockerel,
my home.
land, Rt. 2.
20 Babcock str. direct ped,
W. L. cockerels, sib-tested and
Gar Ges:
tube test. Excellent breeding.
Very reasonable prices. Harry
L. Poole, Warwick. phone 411.
18 big type W. L. hens, 15
mos. old, $1. ea. at my home.
Mrs. Troy Staten, Dalton,
Chatsworth Rd, City 10.
PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS,
$3.| PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC.
Bob White quail, $3.50 pr.
FOB. J. E. West, abel.
151 Ellawood Ave.
Large Bob White quail, any
arrett, Cleve-
pullorum elean by
number of pairs. Letters ans.
Joe Collier, Arlington.
Chukar Partridge breeders,
large fine birds, $3.00 ea. FOB
$2.50; 1 ergs enough for serv-| Atlanta. (Increase in price as
ice, $3.7 yr. old rooster, $3.}.season advances.) C. D. Ward,
Trade as 2 cockerels, same| Marietta. phone Marietta
breed of equel value. Mrs.
Maude Granger, Reidsville.
LEGHORNS:
35 large type Best Egg Str.,
. L. hens, some now laying
and others soon, $40. or $1.25
ea. Cant ship. Also 2 purebred
Golden Sebright bantam cocks,
small size, $1. ea. Nellie M.
Mingledorft, Douglas, Rt. 3.
8 Show Type Danish Brown
Leghorn S. C. roosters, some
crowing now, largest type, 10
wks. old, $1.50 ea. plus PP or
Exp. chgs. No personal chks.
Mrs, Sarah Weems, Riverdale,
Rt. 1. phone Jonesboro 3126.
9-6986, or Office, Atlanta AT
4710. :
Sev. hundred good, mated.
pairs of pigeons, also plenty of
pheasants, quail, doves, ban-
tams and rabbits. Mrs: Helen
Street, Atlanta, Rt.
CH 1777.
REDS (N.H., R.L,
PARMENTERS):
1 R, I. production Red roost-
er, 8 mos. old, $2.50 plus Exp.
chgs. or $2. at my home. Mrs.
Mary Shrum, Tsay Hes Bei e
Box 108,
oe
2. phone -
i
MARKET BULLETIN
PAGE SEVEx
January 6, 1954
HE SUPREME COURT
AND SEGREGATION
(Continued from page 1)
dition to this, any decision outlawing
segregation would necessitate the Court
setting itself up as a legislative body
instead of a judicial body. The Court
would be forced to usurp the powers of
the Federal Congress and of the State
Legislatures to construe the Fourteenth
Amendment as prohibiting segregation
of colored and white children in the
public schools.
Since the year 1896, the Supreme
Court of the United States has repeat-
edly held that where educational oppor-
tunity is equal, segregation was not in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
With so many previous decisions by the
Supreme Court upholding segregation in
public schools as not violating the Four-
_ teenth Amendment, I see no good reason
to assume that the present Supreme
Court will undertake to say that all the
eminent jurists who have graced the
supreme tribunal of the United States
were incapable of understanding and cor-
rectly interpreting the meaning of the
Fourteenth Amendment. I see no rea-
son to believe that they would fly in the
face of sixty years of the history of the
question during the life times of Con-
-federate Veterans, Sons of Confederate
Veterans and Grandsons of Confederate
Veterans.
I believe we should be more confident
and hopeful that our Constitutional Gov-
ernment will survive; because if the
Court should decide that it has the power
to over-ride the intention of the framers
of the Constitution, then Constitutional
Government is at an end, and the Court
becomes all-powerful and capable of not
only over-riding the Legislative and Ex-
ecutive branches of Government, but also
of over-riding the will of the people, in
whom all sovereignty resides under our
Federal and State Constitutions.
Until the Court hands down its rul-
ing, I believe we should confidently ex-
pect segregation to be sustained. Should
we find ourselves confronted with a rul-
ing contrary to those of the past, then
the very existence of the white race in
this Nation will be threatened. It will
then be time to reappraise in the light
of todays conditions the very system of
our government.
In the light of todays experiences, it
will be time to consider whether or not
the very union of the states, with their
mingled populations today,' constitutes a
threat to the existence of all the races.
A great deal more than segregation
in schools is involved in this decision.
This decision may well clear the atmos-
phere and provide for long years in the
future of progressive and happy citizens -
of all races in the United States or it may
well set the ground work to turn the
United States into another Santo Do-
mingo or Haiti.
It is time that all true Christians,
black and white, ask the Good Lord for
protection because the future welfare of
negroes depends upon continued segre-
gation even more than the future welfare
of the whites. The future welfare of
Jews in America, the future welfare of
citizens from Latin countries, from Euro-
pean countries, and even from Asiatic
countries, are bound up in this funda-
mental proposition that each shall have
the right under our Constitution to pur-
sue its own happiness without inter-
ferring with the right of people of other
races and without having its own rights
interferred with by other races. We can
only live happy together so long as each
maintains its own purity and integrity
and does not seek to impose itself upon
others.
Let us, therefore, look with confi-
dence that the Constitution will be up-
held and ask Divine guidance of the nine
men who hold our fate in their hands.
TOM LINDER
Commissioner of Agriculture
HORSES AND MULES _ |
FOR SALE
HOGS FOR SALE
LIVESTOCK WANTED
POSITIONS WANTED
POSITIONS WANTED
2 mare mules, well matched,
aboue 900 lbs., $1.00 pr. or $50
ea. L. J. Walker, Milan, Rt. 2.
3 mare Mules, 11 or 12 yrs old,
1000-1100 Ibs., excellent workers
$200.00. Ralph D. Smith, Sand-
ersville, Warthen Rd.
8 yr. old Stallion, gentle, broke
to saddle, good natured, work
any where, boys can handle, $75
at my barn. B. J. Housend, Mc-
Rae, Rt. 2. Tel 8522.
"25 good farm mules, for sale
aft my place 71/2 mi. W. Powder
Springs. See any morning. Bud
Norris, ustell.
Reg Black and White 4 yr. old
Shetland Pony Stallion, 34 in.
tall, $25.00 4 Small, 2 Yr. Old
Mares, good colors, $200.00 ea.;
5 nice Geldings, reasonable. Jess
Holbrook, Jonesboro. Tel 6771.
1 pr. black mules (a horse and
mare(, 8 yrs. old, 1050 Ibs., with
harness; lso 2 H 94 Chattanooga
Plow, No. 6 McCormick Mowing
Machine, 2 H Rake, all good
cond. See to apperciate. W. A.
Weathers, Rossville.
Good mules, around 8 yrs. old,
Wt. 1000 lbs., $30.00 at my place
at 3 Bridges Rd: Van House,
Fayetteville, Rt 3.
HOGS FOR SALE
Booking orders for reg. Tam-
worth Pigs, our of litters of 11
and 16 pigs, on production re-
cord test, $25.00 at 8 weeks; Al-
so Service of Belfair Jack and
Belfar King available. John P.
pe: Rome, Rt. 2, % Bel-
fair Farm.
| banded, mated prs.,
Nice blocky type Essex Shoats
treated, reg. buyer's name; $22.
50. A. P. Cnapman, Moultrie, Rt.
ae
. Purebred Duroc Pigs, either
sex, 2-4 mos. old, med. blocky
type; Wavemaster stock, $25.00-
$35.00 ea.; Also 1 male, 15 mos.
old, 400 Ilbs., $75.00. Or ex-
change for same. M. M. New-
some, Sandersville.
1 yr. old. Duroc Boar, wt. 300
lIbs., $50.00 or trade for thin
fresh heifer or soon to freshen,
test guar. on both animals. Car-
ter Williams, Senioa.
2 nice Black Big Bone Male
Pigs, 3 mos. old, $18.50 ea.; Will
ship for $20.00 ea. FOB. No
gilts. Mrs. Gertude Howell,
Mitchell, t. 1.
RABBITS AND CAVIES
FOR SALE
Hwt. Chinchilla Rabbits for
sale or exch for. pure breed
White King Pegions, seamless
working.
O. P. Foster, Good Hope. Phone
5246. ae
1 Sr. Pr. Black Dutch Non-Re-
lated Rabbits, perfectly marked,
ready to breed. Ped. furnished.
$7.50. R.. Lamar _ Brantley,
Wrightsville, Rt. 2.
Full furred Chinchillas, datibe.
blue, NCBA reg., ped., litters
guar. L. L. Hudson, Savannah,
P. O. Box 414. Dial 22869.
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
- Rg. Black PC Herd Boar,
from Byrd stock, $100.00 E. H.
aS Waycross, 611 Reynolds
Reg. SPC Males and Gilts,
wormed, treated, for sale. H.|
Talley Lyons, Rt. 1. (Res. Oho-
opee, Ga.
OIC Pigs, 6-9 wks old from
champ. bloodlines, some ready
to go, $22. 50..ea. $1.50 extra for
crating and shipping, reg. buy-
ers name. J. Senate,
an RFD No. 2. Phone
Year Old Toggenberg Male
Goats, casterated; naturally
hornless, $8.00 ea.; 2, 15.00 Can-
not ship. H. D. Guthrie, Pine
Lake, Box 82 Phone 4-37710.
Any type milk goat for sale.
Bob Hill, Lakeland.
LIVESTOCK WANTED
Want good reg. Jersey Bull
ready for service. Mrs. C. C.
Benals, Savannah, Rt. 5, Box
Want purebred Polled Here-
ford Bull old enough for light
service. Will buy if reasonable
or exchange Jersey of Guern-
sey Heifers, near Macon. Hilton
P.- Minchew, Jr., Macon, Rt. 3.
Tel. 37030.
HORSES AND MULES:
Want one good work mare.
Will pay cash or trade cow;
Also want equipment for 1 H
farm. J. D. Spooner, Douglas.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want middle age settled farm
couple for work on farm with
vegetables, etc. Both to work
for pay. Tractor and truck driv-
er preferred. No drifters or
drinkers wanted. Good 2 R
house with bath. Write -or
phone. E. T,. Spieks, Decatur,
no Covington Hwy., Rt. 3. CR
a ss
Want reliable farmer for 1 H
farm in Gwinnett Co. on stand-
ing rent basis only. Good land,
school bus rt., good 5 R house
with elec., plenty of water.
Contact. Mrs. W. A. Pate, At-
ey 1019 W. Peachtree St.,
Want reliable farmer, 50-50
basis. Prefer colored. New
home, water, lights, small fam-
ily. Dr. Robert E. Latta, Atlan-
ta, 905 Medical Arts Bldg.
Want farm couple on shares.
Prefer truck farmer. Nice vine-
yard in production, ample live-
stock and tractor, one broiler
house. Nice 4-R residence, wa-
ter, elec. -3 mi. town. W. C.
Murden, Avondale Estates, P.
O. Box 132. De. 1069.
Want good farmer (1 or 2 H)
on 50-50 basis, with cotton,
peanuts, tobacco acreage. Must
be able to handle tractor. No
drunks need apply. G. W. Ross,
Eastman, Rt, 3, Box 66.
POSITIONS WANTED
~
White single man and moth-
er want job on farm or dairy.
Experienced. Reasonable salary.
Robert IL. Smallwood, Jones-
boro, Rt. 1. % Mrs. John Wilson.
Small family wants job help-
ing raise chickens on farrh. No
experience but willing to learn.
Honest, dont drink or smoke..
Prefer North Ga. Write. Claude
Thomas, Blairsville.
Want a 1H crop on 50-50 basis.
Need 4 R_ house, with lights
good smooth land. 4 row crop
preferred, good stock, and tools,
near store. Can finance self. See
or write. Consider working for
wages if suitable. Charles
Stevens, Atlanta, 136 Estoria St.,
S. E.
|
Want small crop for 1954 with |
some day work. Have to be}
moved and furnished. Jessie |
Redden, McDonough, Rt. 3.
Man with wife, 2 children, |
wants light farm work on farm, |
such as tending hogs and poul-
try, etc. Both can work. Need
house, elec. Near school bus rt.
Can Exchange references. Letter
ans. Floyd Brown, Smyrna, Rt. 1.
Want job on stock farm Have
wife, 2 children. I. J. Mote, Al-
bany, RFD 20, Box 180.
Want work on farm tending
cattle, hogs, etc. 3 men to work.
Can drive truck and _ tractor.
Need good-4 or 5R house, lights,
water, wood. Have to be moved.
Jim Dotson, Jonesboro, Rt. 1,
Box 397 D.
Refined white man with wife,
2 girls, want work on cattle, hog,
or poultry farm. Can furnish
references. 15 yrs. experience.
Wesley Flow Mars, Norman
Park.
White woman with 8 children
wants job on farm; one tractor
driver, 4 others to work peanuts,
cotton, tobacco, etc. Mrs. Addie
Mae Tomlin, Lyons, Rt. 4.
Man with Small family wants
retainers job on farm in Chat-
ham, Bryan or Evans Co. Can
keep farm implements repaired
Also care for stock. H. L. Ennis,
Ellabell. Tel. 42879.
Singleman, 40 yrs old wants
job on farm. Can drive truck and
tractor. Room, board, laundry,
and prevailing hie White
sober, non-smoker. B. J. Scott,
Barnesville, Zebulon Rt.
Man with small family, wants
'1H or small 2 H farm on halves.
| Hogie Smith, Fitzgerald, P. O.
| Box 574. (Or inquire 211 Sul-
}tanna Dr.).
Want job on farm in Fulton
Co. Can drive truck and tractor.
4 in family old enough to work.
Robert Martin, Atlanta, 293
Washington St., S. W.
White, single man, 43 yrs. old,
wants job on dairy farm. Ex-
perienced. Reasonable salary,
home, board. Prefer near Atlan-
ta. Sanborn Cooper, Atlanta, 200
Montgomery Ferry. Em. 6909.
Experienced farm overseer
wants job on farm. Can handle
farm labor operate and keep up
farm machinery, raise and look
after livestoek, keep up and im-
prove farm and farm bulidings.
Must have good house and de-
cent offer. Phone 64857, or see or
write. Roy J. Moon Augusta,
3143 Beach Orchard Rd.
BULL
Ga. Each sale starts 1:00 P.
mack, Atlanta, Georgia. 599
TWO REGISTERED HEREFORD
The Ga. Hereford Assn.,
quality bulls (horned and polled) in two sales, 50 in each
sale. Thursday, Jan. 14, W.
Ga. Friday Jan. 15 Ragsdale-
service age (mostly 18 to 30 months) and carry plenty
of bone and scale. For catalog write, Ralph W. Cam-
SALES
will sell at auction 100
C. Holton Yard, Camilla,
Long Stockyard, Lakeland,
M. These bulls are strong
Morningside Dr., N. E.
o>
ember 11, 1942, or more than 11 years ago. Th was based on facts
The following article was written fet the Market Bulletin of Noy
known to me at the time as shown i in the article,
fixed policy of the National Administration for years to gradually
destroy the American farmer in the i interest of International trade. : :
X
It has been the
HAT
PRESEN
Not long ago I wrote an article in
The Georgia Market Bulletin telling
how the United States Department of
Agriculture had organized a Department
of Agriculture in South America. I told
how Mr. Bennett, the head of the Soil
Conservation Unit of the United States .
Department of Agriculture had been in
South America clearing land, building
terraces and setting out crops in South -
America to compete with the crops of our
_ American farmers.
About three weeks ago, I was on a
_ train between New Orleans and Atlanta. |
A geatleman whom I had. never seen be--
fore and who had never seen me before,
came into the smoker-car and recog
_hized me. He had evidently seen my pic-
ture in The Market Bulletin,
He called my name. He told me that :
he had seen what I had said about the -
United States Department of Agriculture
clearing land-and building terraces in
South America. He said I'll tell you
something now that will astound you.
He said I am employed by the United
States Department of Agriculture in
South America, and I am bringing a num-
ber of. people from South America to
give them an agricultural education.
I told the gentleman that it was my
idea that the purpose of the Department
of Agriculture was to foster and encour-
age agriculture here at home.
He stated that this was no agricul-
tural country. He said there was no rea-
son for US to pay an American farmer
more for wheat or cotton or corn than
we could buy it for in South America.
4 asked the gentleman what they ex: ,
United States.
pected to do with the thirty million
people who live on the farms in the
cant sell what they are making on the
farms.
let them make automobiles, radios, and
other industrial commodities that can be
sold. He said that this country should be
be like England; that weshould be pure-
ly an industrial nation buying all our raw
materials and selling only the finished
product. This was an eye-opener to me.
This caused me to begin to under-
stand what was behind the present farm |.
policy of this country.
A few days later I saw in the papers
where it had been determined in Wash- |
ington to throw cotton overboard as a
fabric for automobile and truck tires in
favor of rayon. a
I saw where the Government was go-
ing to use vital war materials to build
plants to manufacture rayon to be used
in ee of cotton,
I found, upon investigation, that the
DuPont family and a British Corpora-
tion had been in control of the largest
rayon mills in the country. Some time
ago the British concern sold their hold- |
ings in this country to the Viscose Com-_
pany, a subsidiary of Doeeeae and Com- |
pany.
With this transfer of British interest
to Morgan interests, DuPont and Mor-
gan now own. the largest ee plants.
in the countr y.
The Board which recommended the
use of rayon as against cotton was ce
| posed of. nine men, seven
Why, he said, They
We are going to convert these |
ex: esident of a
war factories into industrial plants and -
: railroad. This r
: enced by them.
who have taken
sat the United States
Most of ithe: ee
terests or ihe st ngere
have been mee 2 the
countries, and the cheap p labor i
ountries - the basis of ,