Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1954 January 13

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Editorial By TOM LINDER

5 In the year 1924 the American people
were settling down following the up-
_heaval oceasioned by World War I and
its aftermath. Seven years earlier in
1917, the Bolshevists of Russia financed
_ by international money had overthrown
the Government of Russia and put to
death the Czar and many members of
- the royal family and other ruling fami-
_jies in that country.















The purpose of th Internationalists
in promoting the Russian Revolution by
_ the Bolshevists at that particular time
was to get Russia out of the war on the

side of England and France and to force
-the United States into the war. By this
_ strategy, International money forced





_ American taxpayers to pay the total cost

5 of World War I including the debts to
- the Internationalists of Britian, _ France,
: S italy and Holland.

It was this manipulation by the In-

ternational bankers that brought about

_ conditions in America which culminated

in the stock market crash of 1929 and
_ the panic which followed.



The New Deal which necessarily was
_brought into being by conditions created
by the Internationalists made a favorable
- Soil in the United States for bringing in-
to political activity the Russian Bolshe-
_ viks, whom President Roosevelt recog-

nized under the polite term of Commu-

nists. They were not Communists then;
- they are not Communists now. They

were Bolsheviks then, and they are still
ot :

_: It was in this setting of developing
y venis in. the year 1924 when Hon. Hen-
derson Hallman, a renowned Georgian,
_ made an historic address in Memphis,

oe















_ United Confederate Veterans, the Sons
. of Confederate Veterans and the.Confed-



held under the auspices of the Sons of
_ Confederate Veterans on the occasion of
_ the then recent annual reunion of the
=U. C, V. and the S. C. V, in that city.

~ In subsequent issues I- want to give
you the story of how this splendid his-
toric address was received over the Na-
fion, as well as additional information
yf the statue, patriotism and scholarly
bility of Mr. Hallman,

: However, before doing that, I tay
you to read the address itself, The fol-














_ Tennessee, to the joint assembly of the-

erated Southern Memorial Association,

Georgia Farmers

Pom Linder Comm missioner

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1954



NUMBER 19,

GIVE US BACK THE CONSTITUTION
OF OUR FATHERS



e

lowing is installment I of that historic
speech.

ADDRESS BY HON. HENDERSON
HALLMAN, MEMPHIS, TENN., 1924
* "Give Us Back The Constitution

Of Our Fathers

I Salute you, of the blood royal of the
Anglo-Saxon race, and the blood royal
of our liberties and of the Constitution.
I, too, am of the blood royal, the son of
a Southern soldier, born in the hills of
North Carolina, of Revolutionary stock
and Christian parents, but a Georgia vol-
unteer, Company E, Fourteenth Georgia,
Thomas brigade, Wilcoxs division, A.
P. Hiils corpsone of Stonewall Jack-
sens men.

I greet you, men of the Constitution
and of the Confederacysons and daugh-
ters of the Constitution and of the Con-
federacyfellows all,-of the Constitution
and of the Confederacy.

I have taken as my subject tonight,
a theme that will tell you of the deeper
significance of the greatest monument
of this day, and it is my hope to unfold
before you the vision, and the living,
breathing embodiment of the sublimest
memorial of all timean eternal vindi-
cation of the men who wore the gray.

In past geologic eras, due to the si-
multaneous depression of the coastal
plain region and the elevation of the
Piedmoni plateau and the Appalachian
areas, the Archaean rocks, the oldest
physical structure of the earth, were
bared to the weathering and disiniegrat-
ing agencies of sun, frost and winds, and
the granites of this old formation endure
as one of-the ribs of Mother Earth, ex-
tending from the New England coast to
where they bury themselves in the al-
luvial clays of Alabama and dip beneath
the foundations of the Capitol of the
Confederacy at Montgomery. This old
formation in its right hand holds the
coastal plain to the blue waters of the
Atlantic. In its left, it lifts to the blus
sky of heaven, the glories of the White
and Green Mountains of New Hamp-
shire and Vermont and the Blue Ridge
Mountains of Virginia, the Carolinas and
Georgia. On its breast, it bears the ira-
ditions of American liberty. There is not
one mile along the line of these old
granites but that some blood was spilled

and some blow struck by our forefathers





for the sovereigniy of the thirteen orig-
inal staies.

RICH IN HISTORIC INCIDENTS

It was of and on these old granites,
that our Pilgrim Fathers bended their
knees in their first prayer of thanks-
giving for freedom of body and faith on
Plymouth Rock. It was these same rocks
that struck the fire from the hoofs of
Paul Reveres steed as he sounded that
never-dying call to arms; and, at a later
day, it was the same rocks that caught
the flecking foam from Sheridans horse,
with Winchester tweniy miles away. The
rapids of the James, by whose waters the
Cavaliers landed at Jamesiown, are of
the ledges of these rocks. It was on the
same old formation that the men, whose
blood of the Revolution flows in our
Southern veins, met and drew the first
document of American freedomThe
Mecklenburg Declaration of Indepen-
dence,, in Mecklenburg county, North
Carolina. And we are of the same pure
Anglo-Saxon strain cf the men of the
hills and plains of the Carolinas, who
reached above their fireboards for their
squirrel rifles and, swinging their pow-
der horns across their shoulders, went
down to the battles of Cowpens and
Kings Mountain along the line of this
living rock, and turned back the tide of
red coats on Southern soil and gave to
the American colonies their freedom.

And from this old fermation Stone
Mountain rises, as if with predestined
knowledge of its security and nativity in
the lap of the Southland, a symbol of our
liberties and a monument to that immor-
tal instrument which was the culmina-
tion of the great strugglethe Consti-
tution of the United States.

THE SLAVERY AGITATION

Under its covenants and inspired by
the lives of the great men who framed
it, their sons lived in the strength and
fortitude of their own righteousness and
in the love and admonition of the Lord,
until. there came industrial changes
whereby certain people found themselves
with enough money and time to initiate
and carry on an agitation against the in-
stitution of slavery. Everyone familiar
with the study of the human race will

- know that the evils of the African slave

trade have existed throughout all history
and that every nation has at some time
shared in them, England being one of

(Continued on page 4)

PAGE TWO





MARKET BULLETIN

A





on th
REAt

GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN

Address all items for publication and oS ae to
1 lips ligt and for change of address to S'
OF RKETS, 222: STATE CAPITOL, o eae

ore a pet





seg) |

neo"

RIAL
Tle





and repeate
of notice.

Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissible
under postage regulations inserted one time on each request
only when request is accompanied by new copy



Under Legislative Act the

notices.

not assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin, nor for any transaction resulting from published

Limited space will not permit insertion of notices contain-
ing more than 35-40 words, not including name and address

Georgia Market Bulletin does



Tom Linder, Commissioner
Published Weekly at

Atlanta, Ga.

114-122 Pace St.,: Covington, Ga

By Department oft Agriculiurc

Notify on FORM 3578--Bureau 0
Markets, 222 State Capito]






of June 6,

of October 8, i917.

Entered as second class mattel
August 1, 1937 at the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia under Act f:
1900. Accepted for
mailing at special rate of postage |
provided for in Section 1103 Act







State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office



Executive Office State Capito!
Editorial and Executive Offices

114-122 Pace St. Covington, ta Be









PLANTS FOR SALE

PLANTS FOR SALE



Chas. Wakefield Cabbage
Plants, 50c C; 300, $1.; Klondike
Strawberry, 75c C; 500, $3. PP.
Mary Ruth Phillips, Royston,
Riek.

Klondike Strawberry Plants,

$1. C; Blakemore Blackberry,
Raspberry, 6, $1.; Mtn Huckle-
berry, 50c doz.; Catnip, 25

bunch; Kudzu Plants, 10 ea.;
Also Elberta Peach Seed, 25e
doz. Plus postage. Mrs. Otis
Mashburn, Cumming.

Good Klondike Strawberry,
80c C; $4.50 M; Apricot Plum,
Peach, and Limber Twig Apple

Sprouts, 3, $1. Prompt ship-
ment. Mrs. Guy Crowe, Cum-
ming, Rt. 1.

Red Jumbo Strawberry, $1. C.
Add postage. Mrs. E. E. Clark,
Gainesville, Rt. 8.

Large, rooted Quince Fruit
Sprouts, 2, $1. Hettie Stewart,
Rising Fawn, Rt. 1.

Imp. Premier ee
State certified, tops, $4. C; 500
$16.65; $29. M. No less 100 sold.
Add postage. Mrs. R. F. Terrell,
Greenville.

Charleston Wakefield and
Golden Acre Frostproof Cab-
bage, also White Bermuda On-
ion Plants, 300, 1.; 500, $1.50;
$2.50 M. Prompt del. Prepaid.
R. Chanclor, Pitts.

Chas. Wakefield and Golden
Acre Frostproof Cabbage, and
White Bermuda Onion Plants,
pondy, 300, $1.; 500, $1.50; $2.50

. Del. Otis Conner, Pitts.

Chas. Wakefield, E. J. Wake-
field, Early Flat Dutch Cab-
bage Plants, 500, 1.3; $1.50 M.
Full count. Prompt shipment.
Mary C. Lovell, Baxley, Rt. 4.

Frostproof Copenhagen,
Wakefield Cabbage, 45c C; 300,
$1.10; $2.10 M; Klondike Straw-
berry, $1. C; $2.50 per 300;
$6.50 M. Add 5c postage. Miss
Lee Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Frostproof Chas. Wakefield
and Early Jersey Cabbage, 500,
1.50; $2.50 M. Del. Full count.
E. C. Waldrip, Flowery Branch,
ae: 1;

Mtn. Huckleberry, 2 doz,
%5c; Large Klondike Straw-
berry 75c C; Imp. Dewberry,
and Blackberry, bearing size,

50c doz.; Black Muscadine
Vines, 4 ft., 45c ea.; Also In-
dian Peach* Seed, 50c doz.;

Colored Bunch Butterbeans, 35
cup. Add postage. Rosie Crowe,
Cumming; Rt. 1

Condon Giant Mastodon Evyer-
bearing Strawberry Plants, $1.
C; Black Raspberry Plants,
Black Walnut Trees, and Mus-
cadine Grape Vines, each 6,
$1. Add ostage, rs. Ma
Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.



Klondike and Mastodon
Strawberry, $1.25 C; Muscadine
Vines, 45c; Raspberry, 2, $1.;
Tame Dewberry, 2, $1.;, Also
Red Hot Pepper, in pod, 50c

qt.; Eng. rea -Seed, 50 cup.
Add postage. Mrs. Samuel
Caine, Cumming, Rt. 5.

Blakemore trawberry, $1.
C; 500, $4.50; $9. M; Mastodon,
70 C5005 $3.: $5. M; Klondike,
60e Cc; 500, $2. 15: $4. 75 M; Mtn.
Huckleberry, bearing size, 75c
doz.; Catnip, 25c bunch; Scup-
pernong Vine Cuttings, 50c doz.;
Peppermint, 25c doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. Lee Hood, Gainesville,
Rieck

Mtn. Huckleberry, bearing
size, 75c doz.; Hazlenut Bushes,
85c doz.; Yellow Root Plants,
65c doz.; Yellow Roots, washed.
clean, 4 lb. lard box, $1. Add
postage. Exch. for print sacks.
Mrs. Nancy Henderson, Ellijay,
Rt. 3, Box 49.

Strawberry Plants for cert.
Missionary and Mastodon, $1.
C. PP. Mailed damp packed.
Tom Kittle, Carrollton, Rt. 5.

Copenhagen, Chas. Wakefield,
Early Jersey Cabbage, and
White Bermuda Onion Plants,
500, $1.25; $2..M prepaid; 5 M,
$7.50 exp. collect. Will mix or-
ders. Full count and quality
guar. E. L. Fitzgerald, Fitzger-
ald, Box 662.

Jersey, Charleston, and Co-
penhagen Cabbage, and White
Bermuda Onion, Flat, Sweet,
Pencil Size, 500, $1.25; $2. M
del. PP; 5000, $7. Express. I. L.
Stokes, Fitzgerald.

White and Yellow Bermuda
Onion, $6. crate of 6000 plants;
10 crates or more, $5. per crate.
Express prepaid in Ga. Tobe
Milner, Cuthbert, Rt. 3, Box 31.

Genuine Blakemore and
Klondike Strawberry, $1. C; $7.
M; Lawton Blackberry, $7. C;
$1. dog TH: Graves, Fayette-
ville.

Frostproof Early Jersey Chas.
Wakefield Cabbage, 500, $1.50;

SEED AND GRAIN
FOR SALE

are I

SEED AN D GRAIN







Colored Bunch Butterbeans,
50c Ib.;; About, 4 cups White
Velvet Okra Seed, 50c cup; 125
thimblesful Squash Pepper

Seed, 10 ea. Plus postage. Mrs.
A. G. King, Bowdon, Rt. 4.

Yellow Meat Watermelon
Seed, 40c 10c and stamped en-
veldge Half. pound, $1.25; $2.

earts of Gold Cantaloupe,
Also Okra 25c cup; White Mul-
tiplying Onion Sets, $1.. gal.
Add postage. Mrs. P. E. Tray-
lor, Rebecca,

Va. Gold and 402 Tobacco
Seed, cleaned, germ. 90 pct. 40c
oz.; 4 oz., $1.50; 1 Ib. or more,
$5.50 lb. PP. Prompt shipment.
Geo. Y. Fletcher, Tifton, Rt. 3.

Ky. 31 Fescue, 12 lb.; Chap-
el Hill Rescue, 8c: lb.; Rescue,
6c lb.; Dixie Crimson Clover,
15e lb.; Brown Top Millett, 9c
lb.; Star Millet, 20c 1lb.; Kobe
Lespedeza, 28c lb. Tel. 2131. C.
D. Wood, Bowdon,

Good tender White Half
Runner Bean Seed, 60c cup.
PP, Exch. several cups for pe-
cans. Eula Beal, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

White Bunch Butterbeans,
30c lb.; Colored and White mix-
ed, also White Peas, 25c lb.;
Multiplying Onions, $1.25 gal.
Plus postage. Exch. for print
sacks. Mrs. W. H. Belk, Dan-
jielsville, Rt. 2, Box 160.

Fresh Calif. Multiplying
Beer Seed, 20c start; 12 starts,
$1.00. PP.. Mrs. Earl Fincher,
Rockmart, Rt. 2. .

White, frost-proof, tender
English peas for Feb. planting,
75c cupful, 2 cups, $1.25; little,
white, half runners, tender gar-

den bean seed, 55 cupful;. 2:

cups, $1. Add postage. Mrs.

Care Smith, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

3 tons combine milo, $5.
Cwt.; 100 bu. combine peas, $5.
bu.; Kobe Lespedeza Seed, $25.
Cwt. at barn, not shipped. R.
W. Warren, Dewy Rose, RFD
Nuberg.

Seed of Dipper, Nest Egg and
other small gourds, 15c pkg.;
Exchange for seed of small
gourd that is half green-leaf
yellow. Mrs. John Weaver,
Temple, Rt. 2.

Long Green Okra, does not
stick, ist. yr., bears until frost,
30 half Di: Old Time Running |.
Eng. Pea Seed, 50c pt. Add
postage. Miss Cozette Simmons,
Baldwin, Rt. 1.

White and Colored Bush But-
terbeans, 25c cup; Ky. Bush
and Pole, 30c cup; Pole Cat
Crowder Peas, 25 cup; Also
large Red Peanuts, 2-4 in hull,
$1.50 pk. Add postage. M. L.
Adams, Newnan, Rt. 2, Box 318.

3000 lbs. Crimson Clover, re-
seeding, recleaned, $15. Cwt.;
200 bu. Arlington Oats, com-
bine run, $1. bu, You furnish
sacks; 1500 lbs., Kobe and Ko-
rean Lespedeza, combine. run,
$22. Cwt. Pat Hearn, Palmetto.
Phone 5281.

Long Wide Leaf, Bull Face
Tobacco Seed, 75 Tbl.; Okra,
$1. lb.; Martin Gourd Seed, 3
pks., $1.; Giant Gourd, 4 ft.
round, 40c pack; Also Martin
Gourd, $2.50 doz. (Come After);
And Sage and Catnip Plants,
$1. doz, Add postage. L. J. EL
lis, Cumming, Rt. 5.

New White Half Runner Gee
den Bean Seed, 45c cup; 3 cups,
$1. Free of weevils. Add post-
age. Mrs. Frank Parks, Ellijay,
Riel a:

6 lbs. Collard Seed; $1.50 1b.;
10 lbs. Ga. Mustard, $3. lb.; 25
oz.; Also 50,000 Green Ga. Sug-
ar Can, 4-6 ft., 4c per stalk;
50,000 (6-7 ft.), 6c stalk; 5000 solf
10c stallk.

$2.50 M. Del.- Good count. Green White Cane,
Prompt shipment. Guy Waldrip,|S. J. Foss, Brooklet, (P.O. Den-
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1. mark, Ga.). Hwy. 67.
Klondike and Missionary Old Fashion White Nest
Strawberry, blooming, $1. .| Onions, $1.25 gal. PP. Mrs.
Exch. for feed sacks at 25 ea.| Kate Harrell, Fayetteville, Box
od ee or Pen washed. | 173.
ac ay postage old, only
Old Fashion Bunch Okra, 35c
in Ga. Lizzie A. Mills, Folkston, cup: Senne Sh; Onled Aus.

Rt. 2 Box 1.

SEED AND GRAIN
FOR SALE



Clean Onion Sets, $1.35 gal.;
Leather Britches Beans, 50e 1b.
PP.; Cornfield Bean, 15- ou:
Add postage. Frank Weeks
Dial,



-|tard Seed, 35c cup. Del. Mrs.

Leilar Phillips, Royston, Rt. 1.

Imp. Long Green Okra Seed,
hand picked, cleaned, from se-
lect pods, 65 Ih Ibs. up, 50
1Dg='3>-4bs,, imp. White Half
Runner Garden Bean, 65c lb.;
2.50 lot. Add postage, or COD.
a L, ee Lawrence-
ville,



FOR SALE
Clemson Okra ' Seed, 1953 |"
crop,\ $1. lb. ,Miss Annie E.
Jones, Fayetteville, Rt ose

No. 1 Kobe Lespedeza Seed,
25 Ib.; No. 2 Kobe Lespedeza,
15e lb.; Brown Top Millet, 10c
lb. No Johnson grass. All in|

100 lb. bags. Del. anywhere in
Ga, Mark T. Warren, Dewy
Rose. ~

White and Speckled .Butter-
beans, 4 teacups, $1.; Scullion

Onion Buttons, $1.25 gal; Gar-
lic Bulbs, 50c doz.; Bull Face
Tobacco Seed, 40c tsp.; Also

Strawberry Plants, ripen early,
$1SC. PP: Minnie Sain, Mur-
rayville, Rt. 1.

CORRECTION:

1953 hand saved, round, dark
green yellow meat watermelon,
50c teacup; Purple Hull Black-
eyed Crowder Peas; treated,
20 lb.; White Multiplying. On-
ions, $1. 25 gal. Add postage.
Mrs. Johnnie Harmon, Calhoun,

ie

2000 lbs. Chapel Hill Rescue
Grass, free of noxious weed,
recleaned, 10 Ib. Ralph Sewell,
Carnesville,

Kobe Lespedeza Seed, com-
bine run, clean, 15e lb. L. A.
Caldwell, Gay.

100 bu. Arlington Oats, $1.15
bu. at farm. Vernon D. Judy,
Franklin, Rt. 3.

White Rice Popcorn, $1. per
10 lbs.; Also fine Red Peanuts,
2-4 in hull, $2. pk.; $7. bu. Add

postage. Mrs. Marie Holland,
Dalton, Rt. 2.
Good tender Bean Seed:

White Striped, Pink, Cream
Half Runner, and Cornfield,
65c cup. Add postage. Exchange
2 cups for 5 print or 6 white
sacks. Dessie Vick, Ellijay, Rt.
3. , . :

1000 bu. Southland Seed
Oats, clean, bright, 95c bu. at
my farm. Bring sacks, 2,mi. W.
Newton Hwy. 200. Weyman E.
Rooks, Newton.

- Cowhorn Hot Pepper, 8-10 in.
long, 25c large Tbl.; 5, $1. Send
stamps or money. Robt. Waters,
mee Rte 2, Box, 212.3.

~ 10,000 Ibs. Cattail Millet, 8c
ibs 500 Ibs. Brown Top; 10c Ib.
All cleaned, 100 lb. bags, germ.
and purity guar. See Sankie
Powell at farm. near Wrens, Ga.
or contact. M. T. Courson, Ha-
zelhurst.

Yellow Meat en tebrecion: 40,
10c and stamped envelope; Half
lb., $1.25; $2.00 lb.; Green Pod
Okra Seed, 25c cup; White Nest
Onions, $1. gal. Add postage.
Mrs. P. E. Traylor, Rebecca.



FOR SALE
BEANS AND PEAS



Good tender White Half Runer |

Garden Beans, 50c cup. Plus
postage. Eula Beal, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

-Good tender Old Fashion Cut-
short Cornfield and White Half
Runner Garden Beans, 60c cup.
Add postage. Exch. 2 cups for 4
print sacks alike. Mrs. Pearl Wil-
son, Carters. ..

Imp. Purple Hull Crowder
Peas, 1953 crop, gathered with-
out rain, 14-to 18 peas per pod,
prolific, weevil treated, $1.00
half gal. fruit jar at my home;
$1.50 PP by mail; Clemson
Okra, gathered without rain,
50c teacup. PP No chks. Mrs.
Valley Bearden, Royston.

Red Speckled Crowder Peas,
for eating or planting, 4 cups,
$1.25. PP. No less orders sold.
ee M. L. Priest, Talking, Rt.

Imp. White and Striped Half
Runner, Little Pink Peanut or
6 Weeks Beans, 60c cup. PP.
Mrs. Viola Stover, Ellijay, Rt. 2.

Lady peas, 20 Ib: 10 or more
Ibs. 18c lb with 25c postage on
all orders also some old time
seedling peach trees, 1 and 2
yrs. old. Red or yellow, 6, $1.25
PP. in Ga. Out.of State add 25c
postage. Mrs. Vada_ Blalock
Adairsville. Rt. 2. wee

Cream Crowder Peas, 40c
cup; Old Time Tender Striped
Half Runner and Pink Peanut
Beans, 60c cup; Purple Hull
Peas, 50c cup. No chks. Mrs.
Annie Gentry, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

a

| Ellijay, Rt. oe ee

.Grady Brewer, Tcomsboro.

-doz.;

prepaid. All















































let Eng? Deas 75 cup. aye
age. Mrs. Preston Souther ss s

Old Time Tender White. and |
Striped Half Runner, Pink
Peanut Speckled Cutshort Beans
60c cup;, Whit Salet Eng
Peas, 85c cup. No chks. M
Ople Goble, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

25 logs Colored Bunch. Butter: .
beans, 25 lb.; Mint, 25 doz. ~
plants: Also Garlic Bulbs, 25e-
doz. Add postage. Me :
Fuller, Hiram. :

White Tender Half Rife :
and White Cornfield Beans, 55
teacup; Red Speckled Crow:
and Blue Java Peas, 25c 1b; 5 Ib
lots. or more; Also large Ret
Peanuts, 2-4 in hull, $6.00 b
$2.00 pk. Add _postage. G.
Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.

Early. Brown 6 Weeks 2 ca
Peas; 25) cups, alow Cream
Crowders, 4 cups, $1. 25: Tend
Blue Pole Beans, Streaked Hi
Runners, and Frostproof Eng.
Peas, 2 cups, $1.15; Large Run.
ning Colored Butterbeans,
cups, $1.25. PP in.iGa> M
oe McMillian, Dacula,



*

Velvet beans, 95. pet. cae
thrashed, $10.00 bu. FOB. Wi
liam Horton, Dry Brahch, RE 2:

ate size White Half Run.

all ae 35 1b.;

Crowder Peas,25c lb. Add post-

gee: Fig Estelle Payne, Canton,
t



PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SA

x

Muscadine, Peach, Plum, Wild
Gooseberry, 6, 1.00 Hazelnut, R:
Raspberry, $1. 00 doz.; Blac
berry, Dewberry, Mtn. Huckl
berry, .85c doz.; Sassafras,
$1.00; Garlic Bulbs, Yellow Roo
50c doz. Add posatge. Mrs. D.
Hollaway, Dahlonega, Rt fp

200 Walnut Trees, 18in.,
ea. packed in moss, fob, Tuc
Decatur, or my home; So
taller Walnut Trees at "reaso :
able prices. W. L. Cousins, Tuck-
er, 3001 Coledge Rd. ee

Purple Fig, Old Fashion ress
and Red Indian Peach, Ri
Yellow. Sugar, and Chica
Plum, Black, and French Mul-
berry, Wild Cherry, and Catal
Trees, Muscadine, Scuppernong
Vines, all 50c ea. Plus postage.
ae J. G. Combs, )

te o2s
Scuppernong, Musca
Grape, rooted vines, 4, $2.00.

PP. Cultural instructions 1 fi
Annie G. Whatley, Helena.

Crabapple, 6, $1.00 Muscadine,
15, $1.00; Red and Yellow Plum,
5, $1.00; Fig, 50c ea. and $1.00 ea;
Huckle. berry, 2-4 ft., $1.00 do:
Old Time White Press Peac 4
75c ea. Add postage. Exch. for 3

sacks. Each pay postage. Mrs.



Old Fashion Sugar Pear Trees
(pears ripen in Aug.), 45 ea.
3, $1.00: White Scuppernong, 12
cuttings. 50c: 6 sage, $1.20; Silv-
er Maple, 25c ea. Mrs. Clyde
Hogan; Austell, Hillerest tes



Currants, Black and Red Haw ;
Black walnut, Catawba, . we
berry, Cherry, Himalaya Blac
berry, 40c ea. Add postage. M:
Thurman Todd, Mitchell. ~~

Muscadine Grape Vines, S15 50
Scuppernong and
Grape Vines, 6, $1.25; Red an
Black Everbearing Respberrvs,
$1.50 doz.; Blueberry and Hezle- :








nut $1, 25 doz.; Early
Cherry, Blue Damson ES
Crabapple, .6, $1.

Dal setae
Crowns, $1.25 C. Mrs. Ma.
ton, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Walhut Trees, 3-4 ft., Tbe
plus postage? 5-6 ft, $e 50 ea. |
branched, _ g00
trees.: Prompt del. Mrs. H.
Richarcson, Bowdon, Rt. 2

1953 Celestial Sweet Fig:
tings, 4-5 ft.,
$1.50; 2-3 ft, $1.00, also


i



\ Edgewood Ave.





size Lemon, same price; 250 imy
Stewart Pecan, 5c ea. B. O. Fus-

sell, Atlanta, Tel. La. 8902. ee5






































































ore -| Herman
i |velt Hwy.). .

it. Phone mae, or
e K Jones, Dawson..

tons Peavine Hay, no
ass nor rain, plenty of peas,
| $35. FOB. my* barn. Fred
ce Viena. Phone 3246.



"CATTLE FOR SALE



| Two Cows: one to freshen Ist.
Feb: with 2nd.
}|}Other with her Ist. calf 7 mos.
-Jold for $130. an All good cond.
el, Palmetto. (Roose-

| Black Angus Springer, $90. 00;
-}2 Jersey Springers, $75.00 ea.;
15 gal. Milch Cow, $150. 00. {Glenn
ones. Fairburn. Hwy. 138.

Several good Sone Hulls;

aes ready for service, 1 and 2 yrs.

old, Domestic Mischief and HSF
eau Victor bloodlines, $150.00-

ton, Rt. 3.

| Reg. Aberdeen Angus Bulls,
.|calfhood vaccinated, $100.00 up.
| Atlanta Phone Ga. 6396. Zee
Lee, Red Oak.. :

ate reg. abl. standard, Saas
Hereford bulls, 1 and 2 yrs old,

ino strain, $100. 00-$225. 00.
; Paul O. Carpenter, Tifton, Rt.
Se, Phone 1523-R4.

12 Black Angus Cows; 1 Bull,
| 8 yearlings, all registered, 4

4

in, | Heifers, 4 Bulls, all outstanding

| ploodlines. Contact. oe ce.
Golia, Jefferson, RFD 3.

Reg Jersey Bull Calf, 4 mos.





calf, $135.00;)

200.00. John T. caw Coving-/| do





small farm; Broilers layers,
small beef herd, other farm
| chores,. for $80. eee thly, 22 ft.
| trailer for living quarters. Do
not answer if not seriously in-
terested. Personal interview re-
quired, S. C. Strickland, Con-
oe Ried,

, nt farm couple on shares,
prefer truck farmer. Nice vine-
yard in production, ample live-
stock, and tractor, 1 broiler
house; Nice 4. BR residence,
water, elec. 3 mi. town. W. C.
Murden, Avondale Estates, P.
os ie 132. Tel. Atlanta, Hee

_ Want white or ctored fam- | -

ily able to finance self, for 1-
130 acres land; 5 R house on
hard road and Warner Robins
bus line, near town, good land
to cultivate, peanut acreage
"@7.3 A): Make offer. Come see.
J. Van McCollum, Rochelle. -

- Want -white single man to
work on farm. Have tractor
and horses. Live in home with
me, board, Jaundy, wages, or
part crop. Write what you will
oO. in my family. Buddy
Phillips, Soperton, Rt. 3.

Want experiencd man to
oversee dairy and farm. Must
have reference. W. W. Walke,
Dublin. *

Want healty. white woman,
40-60 yrs. old to live in farm
home, and do light farm work
on farm, Claud W. Johnson,
moet) Re. 2 tis

Dacula, Rt



=



oe

Want woman to help with
light work on farm. No objec-
tion to one child, Small salary.
Roy West. Newnan, Rt. 4, Box
237, :

Want farmer for.small farm
in Gwinnett Co., 23 mi. Atlanta,
large dwelling, barn, suitable
truck farm, standing rent basis.
Available for immediate oc-
cupancy. REA, RFD school and
bus route, pavement , near. 5
mi. E. Stone Mountain. J. E.
Britt, Grayson, Rt. 1.

Want woman for light farm
chores on f No milking.
Children accepted. Letters ans.
T. L. Powell, Lake Park, Rt. 9,
Box. 32,

Want farm family on 3rds.
and 4ths. (might consider stand-
ing rent). Have cotton acreage
if desired, on 2 different sized
farms, RED, REA, school bus
route. Vacant, now available.
Wood, pasture, near pavement,
Gwinnett ee. Paul T. Stowe,



Want. couple with tractor to
farm 25 or 30 (or more) acres
good land, and share 6 R- furn-
ished home with owner. Al]
modern conveniences. Located
on railroad half mile depot in
small tow Mrs. Madge : B.
McRee, Buckhead. 2

Want reliable white woman
to live as one of family in home
of three adults and do light
farm chores of farm, in ex-
change for room, board, rea-
sonable salary. Need at once.
Mrs. J.C. Noles, Eastman, Rt. 1.

HELP WANTED |

ie PAGE THRE:

FARM HELP. WAN TED

Want elderly couple, white
or colored, or single man to
do odd jobs on farm, tend
hogs, chickens, flowers, etc.,
for board, small wages. Joseph
Gibbs, Rebecca, Rd. Om Oue

Want sober, dependable man
with family (no small children)
for work on farm. 7500 cap.
chicken house. Prefer sonieone
to drive . tractor. Mail and
school bus rt. J. O. Lunsford,
Talking Rock, Rt. 1.

Want unencumbered white
with family of 3 adults and do
light at work on farm for
$10. weekly, room, and board,
Give date-can report for work.
Mrs. Eva Knowles, Byron, Rt. 2.

Want young couple, GI or
ish self with good reference, ex-
perienced~ and able to make
good, to raise chickens. No
poultry house nor equipment.
Good house, Elec. lights, near

| paved Hwy. G. M. Williams,

Covington. Rt. 2:

Want wman with 2 or 3
boys large enough to work by
day and run tractor, for farm.
Good 3 R. house, water, lights,
7 mi.
Bus Route. No cotton. WM.
| Manshela. Washington. Rt. 2.







et

POSITIONS WANTED

<= a

Want job on farm. 10 in fam-
ily to work. Need 3 or 4 R
house. Must have steady work.
A. L. Conley, Tifton, Rt. 2.



Cattle Prices Paid at Georgia Markets


































































































































old, by Very Good 4: Star Bull, GRADE Poor a Athens stan Gainesville
from dam with, ROM- record of cee Ts - - < 2
480 Ib. fat, $50.00. Dr. J. H _ :
Arnold, Newnan, Box 393. STEERS 2% HEIFERS : &e
| Good _ 17.50-20.75 -16.50-18.30 -16.50-20.10 _-18.00-20.20
: ae young, eae te com. 15,00-16.00 14.00-17.50 13.50-16.00 _14,0017.00 _13.75-17,00
eS aq apat form reg. Polled Bull, \Utility ~ 14,00-13.75 -11.00-13.75 '11.00-12.50 -11.00-14.00 _10.75-13.50
"| $875.00 for lot if ecld immediate | cutters _9.09-10.58 9.00-11.50 9.00-10.50 9.00-11.25 9.00-11.00
ly. Terrell Swindle, Nashville. i Poe e- me x ;
|Phone 6701. | CALVES: : :
1 Good & Choice 17.25-20.00 -15.50-21.50 15.00-20.25 -15.00-21.50_15.25-20.50
eck} Reg Polld Hereford Bull,linu @ com. 100.1850 G75 1675 10.00-17.00 10.60-16.50 _10.00-16.75
oe yet ne ee Good & Ch. Vealers 20.00-24.50 19.75-25.25 -19.75-27.00 _'19.75-28.00 20.00-27.00
| $200.00. Trad for. hay or cows|
+|at market pachty Also BREE cua cOWws 2 ; F
White Spotted Stallion. 6 yrs. | Utility 10.00-11.75 9.50-11.75 _9.50-11.00 _-9.50-11.00 9.00-11.00
lold, 42 in. tall, gentle, $175.00/. & 7.00-10.25 7.00-10.25 6.00-10.00 . 6,00- 9.75 6.50-10.00
1 | Dick Fuller, Abbeville. Phone i T
1/9005... BULLS cle
ce - | Util. & Coml. 14.50-12.50 11.75-14.4011.00-14.25 11,75-14.50 11.75-14.00
ogae HELP WANTED Cutters 10.00-11.50 9.00-10.50 9.00-10.50 9.25-11.00
STOCKERS e
eet reliable Fagen of fam. |Steers & Heifers 18.00-12.60 10.00-18.00 10.00-17.90 _10.00-16.00_13.00-17,00
- lily and do light gardening and! Calves 10.50-16.50 10.00-16.25 9.75-17.00 10.00-17.75 9.50-15.00
other farm chores on farm. : EME ee aa v
.|Small salary and board. Ref-| Source of Information <
.| erences requested. Miss Nell a . Federal State Market News Service
es Le: : eBox _50 Seventh Street, N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
e
NO.1> No. 2 NO. 3 NO.4 ccc 5
24.10 23.00 23.00 : Metter L/S Market, Metter 22.00 21.00 20.15 18.70
Rees : ts : Tattnall L/s Co., Glennville - 22.25 21.50 20.35 19.95
Elberton 23.75 + 22.00 20.00 15.00 | Mirchell Co. L/S Co., Camilla 21.77 20.60 19.30 19.70
er - | Elbert L/S Auction Barn, Elberton 22.75 22.00 20.00 15.00
26.00 24.50 24.00 20.00 | Formers Stockyard, Sylvenia 22.00 21.50 20.25 20.50
x 25.00 23.00 21.00 Farmers Stockyard, Arlington 21.92 21.45 19.54: 19.09
ee eee. ae McRae Stockyard, McRae 21.50 20.50 19.00 17.00
: =o 23.30 22.15 Jonuary. 6 t
oe ae eee cong ek Stockyard, Colquitt 22:45 22.40 20.65 19.95
grees eas Peoptes L/S Mf. Inc., Cuthbert 21.50 21.30 20.00 18.10
2. ae, ces isnt s . Wilkes County S/Yd., Washington 23.80 23.30 21.80
2 aa i u : = ~ 73
aed 23.11 7213 - at Blezichurst L/S Mkt, Haxtchurst 22.50 22.00 20.76 ~ 19.65
24.00 24.00 ; Regsdale-Long Com. Co., Lakeland 22,36 21.40 -19.60 19.20
eer. : ~_ | Turner Co. Stockyard, Ackivre 22.35 22.55 - 21.50
ie oe Riss ee oo Union Steckyard, Albony 22.24 21.75 20.60 20.30
i ada ee Claxton Stecky%rd, Claxton 22.25 21.60 20.80
PS : | N. E. Ge. SIs. Bern, Athens 23.50 22.00 19.00 22.00
oe 2a7O. 24.00, 23.50 22.00 8 22.50 20.00 25.00
andersville 23.45 _ 22.10 2.64 _| January 7-
25 22.25 23.25 | Wayne Co. Stockyard, Jesup . 22.25 21.00 20.35 20.08

Woman to live in home on farm

other reliable party able furn>

Washington. School and

at





























PE ST



@AGE FOUR

MARKET BULLETIN



Wednseday, Tenwary 13, oi





GIVE US BACK

(Continued from page 1)

the worst of all offenders. Therefore, it
was but natural that the traffic in slaves
should have flourished in New England.
Due, however, to the limited agricultural
regions and the rigorous climate in the
New England states, the holding and
working of slaves there proved imprac-
ticable and unprofitable, and the slave
barons began exploiting the South and
her agricultural possibilities as the logi-
cal outlet for the slave traffic, with the
result, well known to history, that with-
in the lapse of comparatively few years,
the slaves of the states were held and
worked by Southern planters. But I
want you and all the world to know to-
night that no Southern man and no
Southern ship was ever engaged in the
transportation of slaves and that never
a Southern bottom transported a single
negro from his African home to America
or any other shore.

4

i Georgia, as a colony, founded and
represented the first attempt of any gov-
ernment to end the slave tirade, and the
Constitution of Georgia, as a staie, af-
firmatively prohibited its infamies. I
want the world to know again that there
mever was but one nation in the world
that frownd upon, and in its Constitu-
tion forbade, the African slave trade
from the very day of its storm-cradled
birth until it went down with spotless
record on the field of Appomattox, and
that nation was the Confederate rates
of America.

However, the Constitution of the
United States was a covenant entered
into by the representatives of the North
and South, and it established at cone and
the same time, the institution of slavery
and white citizenship, as held by the
Supreme Court of the United States in
the Dred Scotti case in 1857, to wit: That
the Constitution recognized slaves as

property: that Congress was bound to
protect slavery, and that no slave, or the
descendant of a slave, could be a citizen
of the United States or have any stand-
ing in the Federal couris. I mention this,
mot in defense of slavery, but that you
may know that slavery and white su-
premacy and white citizenship were of
the woof and warp of the Constitution
of the United States, and I want you
further to know that less than ten per
cent of the people of the South owned
slaves at the outbreak of the War.

VOICE OF REASON NOT HEARD

But when fanatics and then-organized



minority fanned the passions of America
into unquenchable fury, little thinking or
caring in their fanaticism whether re-
formations reformed or deformed, or
whether a Christ was crucified, or witch-
es were burned, or rivers ran red with
the blood of brothers, they poured upon
the people of the South, in that awful
brothers war, the pent-up and concen-
trated wrath that had been engendered
against slavery in all the years since
Moses. Had the voice of reason been
heard, that awful tragedy would have
been averied and the good men of the
South and. the good men of the North
weuld have worked out the problem to
a great and good end. But I say, not-
withstanding the small percentage of
slaveholders, all of the men and boys
who were able to bear such arms as they
could find, followed Lee and Jackson in-
to the bloody conflicinot for the pres-
ervaition of the instiiuiion of slayery
perish the thoughi!but to defend the
principles of siates rights and to uphold
white supremacy.

The men of the Revolution won the
Constitutionthe men of the South de-
fended it.

We knew the result of that awful
struggle. Victory perched on Norihern
arms, and as a birthright of their con-
quest the ciiy of Washington, and every
public building within the shadow of its
Capitol, evety function of government
and this imperishable Union itself, is a
fitting memorial for the men who wore
the blue. But fcr the Confederate soldier
nothing survived to champion the valor
that was spent and the cause that was
lost.

_ Many years ago, Gordon McCabe,
speaking in the batile-crowned Capitol
of that ancient Commonwealth, said of
Virginia, that: No Painted Porch is
hers, like that of Athens, where, for half
a thousand years, the descendants of the
men who had followed Miltiades to vic-
tory might trace the glories of their
Marathen; no gleaming Chapelle des In-
valides, with the light flaming through
gorgeous windows on tattered flags of
battle; no grand historic abbey, like that
of England, where hard by the last rest-
ing place of her princes and her kings
sleep the great soldiers who have writ
glorious names high upon their counirys
roll with theepoint of their stainless
swords. Nay, none of this is hers. Only
the frosty stars tonight keep solemn

THE CONSTITUTION |
OF OUR FATHERS

yielded uv their lives that they mig






i
a |

watch and ward above the wind-swe
graves of those who, from Potomac
James, from Rapidan to Appomatic



transmit to their children the _
of their fathers.

A PREDESTINED MONUMENT

And, inspired by these words,
greatest natural monument under So if
ern skies, Stone Mountain, the Rock
the Constitution set by an all-kno vi
God in a plain in the land of its defe1
ers, was dedicated to the memory of |
bravest warriors in the sublimest ci
flict ever waged on God's footstool.
great and noble work of carving
images of Lee and Jacksen and their
tered regimenis upon the face o:
mouniain is carrying on, notwithstan
ing the mental and moral attitude of 7
people who appear to have turned t
backs upon the principles of states rig
and the covenants of the Constitution :

While this is a monument of the Spz
ian heroism and fortitude of the South er
soldier, it is more than that. It is a mon
umeni to the cause for which he took
armsa monument to the principles h
fought to preserve. For, far greater th
the record of how he fought is the reas
why he foughtto preserve the inv
bilify of the home, the freedom off
individual and the soversigniy of 3
state. These principles today are as vi
to the North as they were to the Sor
in the sixties, and they are as vita
the West as to the East; and, this
a monument to the mn who defendet
the true faith as embodied in the Co
stitution, it is, therefore, fundament
a monument to the Constitution it:
as it stood white and pure in all
strength and virtue at the sound of
ters guns and before it had been m
lated, manhandled and outranged
time-serving opportunities, hypoc:
and fanatics.































It therefore behooves every lover
states rights and of the Constitution

give of his heart's love manyfold to the
new coinage to be issued commem
tive of this patriotic project, that we ;
each of us may have silver thieadl 5
that memorial tapestry on the escap
ment of the Rock of the Constitution,

Read the rest of this historic sp :
next week,

TOM LINDER >

Commissioner of bis dese ]

POSITIONS WANTED

Want job around a dairy look-
fing after cattle, etc Self, 24 yrs.
old, wife and 3 children. Earnest
Mashburn, Douglasville, Rt. 1,
Box 236, % Charlie Priest.

Want job on farm. 5 in fam-
ily, 2 to work. Experienced
driving truck and tractor, look-
ing after farm machinery, other
farm work. Located Chamblee,
Ga., Johnsferry Rd., 1st. house
on left. Or write. Eugene Mc-
Daniel, Doraville, RFD 2, Box
292.

4 adults want 1 H crop on
halves for 1954; No cotton;
Houses, wood, water, lights
Near mail route Send stamped
envelope for answer. Luther
Craine Folsom, Rt. 2, % Ed
Adcock Store,



POSITIONS WANTED

Elderly. couple want job on
poultry farm~ doing odd farm
chores. No plowing. Need 2 or 3
room house with lights, water.
Hove to be moyed. Located Reid
Hampton Dairy, Hwy. 129. W.
H. Chappell, Gray, Rt. 2. =

Want job on farm doing light
farm chores. Can drive truck
or tractor if necessary. Wife to
work also. 3 in family. Also
experienced in green house
and nursery work. L. E. Pat-
terson, Douglasville, 119 Broad
St.

Want job on farm with Chris-
tian family for home and board.
Pay according to work. Send
stamped. envelope for reply.
Write Phema Potts, Dallas, Rt.
4,



POSITIONS WANTED

Refined, settled, white wo-
man, no bad habits, wants home
and light farm work on farm
near Macon, or anywhere south
of Macon. Dont come or call
Write. Letters ans. Ruby Wil-
liams, Macon, Rt. 4.

POSITIONS WANTED

Elderly couple (white) want
vo on farm looking after cat-
, poultry (500 or more laying
ve etc. Experienced. 50-50
basis or wages. Honest, depend-
able, but unable to do hard
work. 2 or 3 R house, lights,
water, wood. E. T. Habers, At-

48 yr, old man, sober, honest, | janta, 3114 Clairmont Rd., N. E;,

with wife and daughter all able
to work, want job on farm at
reasonable salary. Experienced
raising chickens, cattle, etc. Con-
sider crop on 50-50 basis. Have
to be moved. Bill Shirley, La-
vonia, Rt. 1, % Velma Wright.

Want to ie 1 H crop on
sati8factory basis, or will work
for wages. ixperienced, Three
in family. Can drive tractor.
Tommy Barnes, Chamblee, B-
FD 2, Shellowford Rd.



Rt 13;

Want a job on farm driving
tractor, etc. Experienced almost
any farm work. Notify at once.
Prefer near Austell. Fred Heath,
Austell.

Want job on dairy farm or
tending cattle farm. 8 yrs. ex-
perience. Hard worker, sober,
honest. Can drive tractor. Have
wife, 2 children. J. A. Chapman,
Cordele, Rt. 3. s



POSITIONS WANTEI D

Want job on farm looking ai
goat and sheep. Honest, so
Ralph Weatherby, Buchanai an.

Experienced deieasks
job milking (machine or har
Good references. Can start
at once. James Wilson, Eat
ton, Rt. 3. oe 4

Woman with 2 boys, 15 an
yrs. old, and 14 yr. old
wants job on dairy farm. Ak
6. yrs. exp., Have to be mo
Letters ans. Clara B. Thomp
Covington. RFD 1. Collum |

2 single men want jobs
dairy or reg., farm. Room, pd
and salary. Contact Carl Ha
Atlnta, 863 Washington, |
S. W. Apt. 4.