.
3
ss
* GE PARTMENT of
EUGENE TALMADGE
PUBLISHED Lit the BUREAU OF MARKETS Oe
STATE CAPITOL
: a =
oe eeeene of Diente of the Bite of Georgia will be held
June Ist, at 10 A.M, in the Legislative Hall, State Capitol, on
the questions of farm aid, now pending before Congress,
___In practically all of the States of the Southeast there have
been meetings of farmers held in reference to the proposed
farm relief measures for which the present extra session of
Congress was called. Most of the Commissioners of Agriculture
nt extra session of Congress i in reference. to these farm relief
measures.
Practically all of the Commissioners of the Southenet have
greed that the best farm relief for our section of the country
table oils that come in competition butter, ou, and
cotton seed oil. 3
Jute is not only ~used for covering cotton but is used for.
making bags, and is used in earpets, rugs, some kinds of cur-
tains and in linings for clothing. It has been estimated that
|{ jute takes the place of 2,000,000 bales of low grade cotton. A
country prohibitive would give an additional market for 2, 000, g
000. bales of cotton.
Vegetable oils come into this cotinitry from the tropics. A
large proportion of them come from the Philippine Islands.
: ey are all Peay, pee free. The oils from the Philip-
5
sountry aes cooking, Ib. si epee ss a
a
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, a 23, gs
~ Meeting of Farmers, June. Ist, 1929 es ee.
s pines ee Likeut any duty at all and the vgetable ite from |
of the United States have been to Washington during the pres- .
s to secure a high tariff on jute and a high tariff on all vege-_
ariff high enough to ake the importation of jute into this
Provailing Wholesale Prices, May 23, 1929.
AUGUSTA
= ATLANTA. MACON
spect > ctataes (Yellow) Kiln Dried ..$3.00 _ $3.00" $3.00
Jabbage, (green), crated, _ ib te : 2.00 2.00 t
s, Ga., Extra, doz. ......---------+-- ee con : 682
tggs, Ga., Standard, doz. ....-.------ BG, 4.380 30
ges, Ga., Trade, doz. cr SB 88 28
Eggs, Yard Run, doz. 2 a ee 30 ae 30
paar ee en .26 =O 2s
ee 26 = 29 a
eo ae ae
Se ees 40
ee ee 20 25 25
2 Eh & = ee ee
arkeys, Ib. .....-..-2--+-e-et eee .28 : 30. , .380
ield Peas, mixed, bu. oe ae B00 8 Ge 3.00
Field Peas, not mixed, bu. ..-.------ . 8.25 3.00 2 B25
sountry Butter, best table, ie 40 as 40 = 40
BOs a 50 j S00
other sections carrying a very low duty. !
Should we secure a tariff on all vegetable oils that would
be high enough to prohibit the importation of these oils into
this country, the tariff that we now have on peanuts would
-thelp-us, but it will not help us as long as we allow them to
come in duty free to compete with eediad oil, cotton seed oil,
hog lard and butter.
We are living in a country whose: policy is Protedtive Tar-
iff: It has made the manufacturers of our country rich. The
practical farm relief is to get'a high tariff on the two things
Just namedjute and vegetable oils. If we could do this, in
five years time the mortgages from our farms would be lifted.
There have. been various agricultural meetings called in
Georgia. They are generally attended by everybody else but
the dirt farmers. There is an old joke going the rounds that
the. Georgia Agricultural Society once had a meeting, A very
_noted speaker was performing. There was a disturbance at
the door, It interrupted the speaker. Finally someone wanted
to know the trouble. The doorkeeper informed them that a
damned farmer was trying to break into the meeting.
On the first day of June, at ten oclock, in the Lenislatgs
Hall of the State Capitol I hope the joke ean be reversed. Far-
mers this is your business, COME.
EUGENE TALMADGE.
age eee eee
2 Tg ee weeded a
OF GEORGIA PRODUCTS : eee
Always subject to variation.
SAVANNAH COLUMBUS
$8.00 98.26 aoa:
ee INDEX
30 32
eee fe
Sg G86 .28 eS
28 ee EG | Par
98 2 Sy ae Poultry For Sale and Wanted _ 2 5
98 eae OB Eggs For Sale and Wanted __. 2-3 eS
AB : aR Farm Employment aeee h Sgemet as 383i.
40 hig Georgia Products _.._-._._- 3-4-7-8|
30 25 Editorial Matter ---.----------- 4-8]
45 = 99 & Plants For Sale ----- One
ae ie Live Stock For Sale and Wanted 6-7
S00 0 26 Seed For Sale __--_- eee Boe a8
22e- . 8.00" Miscellaneous ea ne 8
G0 a ls :
ee
Basie No. 1, Hogs Sold for, 10. 52. last weele: at the Coaeiratee Sale held at Tifton, Ga.. .
i.
PAGE TWO |
- ; Poultry For Sale
ANCONAS
15 Sheppard strain Ancona 12 wks.
clad pullets, $1 ea., also 15 White Rock
pullets, 10 wks. old, 75c ea. Weldo
Burns, Calhoun, Ga., Rt. 4. :
> 7
ti BARRED ROCKS
2 yr. old pure bred Thompson B
eock. Sell or exch for turkey eggs. Mrs.
P. B. Stephens, Austell, Ga., Rt. 1.
_ Pure bred Thompson B. R., March
and April cockerels, $1.25 ea., also eggs,
same strain, $1 per 15. Mrs. C. R. Sor-
yells, Monroe, Ga., Rt. 1.
- Few B. R. cockerels and pullets from
the best stock of a leading Missouri
Poultry Raiser, to be del. about June
ist, at 8 wks. old, $2.50 ea., or 1 cock-
erel and 4 pullets, $10 FOB. J. H.
Greene, Elberton, Ga.
Holterman (stock direct) Aristocrat
B R. chicks, $2 and $2.50 ea., 1 cock
(paid Holterman $10 for him) used him
2 yrs. but not used him this season, $3.
' . G. Williams, Swainsboro, Ga., Lock
Box 318. ;
BUFF, WHITE AND OTHER ROCKS
_20 White Rock pullets and 2 (no akin)
cockerels, 8 wks. old. Pure Fischel st.,
from 10 and 11 lb. hens, $1.25 ea., or
lot for $25; youn cockerels, $1.50 ea.,
eggs, $1.50 setting, el. Cash with order.
Mrs. J. L. Wallace, Bowman, Ga.
GAMES
Choice Game cocks and hens for sale
or-trade. Write. L. M. Carney, Macon,
Ga., Rt. 3.
GIANTS AND LANGSHANS
20 J. B. Giants, 6 wks. old, 40c ea.,
$7 for lot. L. E. Williams, Ty Ty, Ga.
LEGHORNS.
Tancred strain W. L. pullets, well fed
and developed, 10 to 12 wks. old, 80c
ea., 14 wks. old, selected extra quality,
$1 ea., 5 point comb cockerels, same]
age, $2 ea., Everlay S. C. Brown Leg-
horns, same age and price. All FOB.
J. H. Beasley, Lavonia, Ga. ;
_,/ Extra fine Tancred Leghorn 12 wks.
old cockerels, $1 ea., FOB, or exch for
rabbits or value. J. R. Bowen, Black-
shear, Ga. Rt. 1.
_Tancred W. L. hens, high producers,
$1.75 ea. No culls. Roosters, $2.50 ea.
Cockerels, and pullets, not stunted, 70c
and 90c ea., also eggs, $1 for 15. FOB.
Glenn E, Finley, Dalton. Ga.
Pure bred Ferris W. L., 6 hens, 2 yrs.
cld, and 1 rooster, 1 yr. old, $7.50 for
lot. Unrelated stock. Cash with order.
W. A. Johnson, Alto, Ga., Rt. 1.
100 W L, 3 mos. old, 50c Ib., 200 W L
7 wks. old, 60c ea. J. M. Grubbs, Ho-
gansville, Ga.
Tancred W L, 4 to 6 wks. old cock-
erels, from high record egg stock, 75c
ea., $8 a doz. Mrs. C. E. Dell, Syca-
- more, Ga. os
Ferris Best egg strain, W. L., 8 wks.
old cockerels, Direct, from 260 to 300
egg strain, $1.25 ea. H. S. Carpenter,
Tunnel Hill, Ga. ;
100 W. L. 3 mos old pullets, English
strain. No culls. 75c ea. Mrs. Grady
Thompson, Cochran, Ga.
13 W L hens and 1 rooster (very fine)
$15. Mrs. L. L. Adams, Hapeville, Ga.
40 March 6th cockerels; Tancred-
Morgan strain, from 270 to 300 egg re-
cord. $2.50 to $5 ea. Worth more. W.
K. Davis, Carrollton, Ga.
2 pure bred Brown Leghorn 2 yr. old
cocks, $1.50 ea., or exch for dried fruit.
Mrs. W. B. Hester, Brinson, Ga.
75 W L, 6 wks. old cockerels from 250
to 300 ege stock; pedigreed, trapnested
records. Hollywood strain, $1 ea., or $10
coz. Cash with order. -Mrs. Oscar D.
Price, Monticello, Ga.
_ 100 Tancred S C W L pullets, Janu-.
ary and February hatch. June Ist del.
$2.ea. Sol Odedn, Blackshear, Ga.
Ferris S C W L March cokerels and
pullets, 75c ea., also 1 and 2 yr. old
hens, 85c ea. Mrs. J. E. Steadam, Bain-
bridge, Ga., Rt. 2.
Pure bred W L cockerels, 8 to 12 wks
old, from extra good breeding, trapnest
record (given on request) hens. Sell
fo y. J. B. Parrish, Graymont,
x a.
MINORCAS AND LAKENVELDERS
3 ea., pure blood Black Minorca cock-
erels and pullets, 10 wks. old, 75c ea.,
FOB here. Mrs. B. F.: Duncan, Sum-
merville, Ga.
Pure bred March hatch Lakenvelder
- cockerels, 75c ea. Mrs. L. A. Youmans,
Mershon, Ga,
Genuine Pape strain Black Minorca
12 wks. old cockerels, $1 ea., or 4 for |
$3.75; eggs from special matings, $1 per
a
| setting. Woodrow Wilson, Martin, Ga.)
as 28
go Red REDS: ech Gao
2 yr. old pure bred Donaldson RI
Red cock. Sell or exch for produce. R.
A. Hester, Atlanta, Ga., 31 Pine St., NE.
R I Reds, 8 wks. old pullets and
roosters, 25 ea., 60c ea., also 25 Barred
Rock 8 wks. old roosters, 60c ea. No
personal checks. Either Cashiers
checks or money order. Mrs. J. L.
House, Conley, Ga., Rt..1. ee
Quality Reds: 2 males, Exhibition
quality, 1 yr. old, $15 ea., or both for
$25; 4 hens and 1 male, $50 or exch.
for Tancred strain: 1929 pullets; also
cther exch. for W. L. pullets. Mrs. C. E.
Dell, Sycamore, Ga. :
50 R. I. Red, pure bred pullets, 10 wks
cld, $1 to $1.25 ea. Sell 50 or less. W.
J. Proctor, Dublin, Ga.
: WYANDOTTES
Select March pullets and cockerels,
from best winter layers, Regal Dorcas
White Wyandottes, thoroughbred stock
$1 ea., 3 pullets and 1 cockerel, Feb-
ruarv hatch, $5. Mrs. W. L. Guillebeau,
Lincolnton, Ga., Rt. 6.
Thoroughbred January hatch Wyan-
dotte cockerel, $1.30, or $1.50 del. J. N.
McGouirk, Douglasville, Ga., RFD 2.
MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
Nice, fat hens for table use, 25c Ib.,
FOB. Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruitland,
Ga.
2 lb. fryers, butter milk fed, 40c Ib.
FOB. Mrs. J. O. King, Lavonia, Ga.,
RFD 3.
- Blue Andalusian cockerels, February
hatch, $1.50 ea. James S, Douglas, Al-
bany, Ga., Dixie Heights. .
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, ETC.,
FOR SALE
Trio turkeys, 1 yr. old. Mixed breed.
Tom, yellow hens (now laying) black,
$12 or exch for 10 hens and cockerel,
any pure breed except Leghorns. Prefer
S L Wyandottes. Ea. to pay chgs. J. J.
Hart, Pitts, Ga., RFD 1. ;
Wild Mallard ducks, $3.50 ea., for
ducks and drakes, or $6 per pr. Bona
Allen, Jr., Buford, Ga. :
1 large Bourbon gobbler, $10. Dr. G.
H. Dunlap, Madison, Ga.
4 White Pekin laying ducks and . 2
Grakes, 1 yr. old; 12 ducks, 2 wks. old,
and 4 six wks old. Lot for $18. Mrs. L.
L. Adams, Hapeville Ga. -
Muscovey 6 wks. old ducks,
L. E. Williams, Ty Ty, Ga.
10 geese, $1.25 ea., or $12.50 for the
we Mrs, J. A. Martin, Mize, Ga., Rt.
3 M B toms, raised 1929, ea. wt. be-
tween 20 and 25 lbs., 35c Ib. Mrs. N. L.
Green, Powersville, Ga., Peach county.
3 pure bred Muscovey drakes, for
sale or exch. J. E. Booker, Sylvester,
Ga., Rt. 4.
Baby Chicks For Sale
Quality day old chicks: Reds and
Rocks, $12.50 per 100; W. L., $11. Or-
ders less than 100, add 25c to above
prices. Delivered. 100 per cent live ar-
rival guaranteed. Hatch ea. Thursday
D. M. Clark, Garfield, Ga.
Donaldson strain Red baby chicks,
from dark flock, $15 a 100 del. Hatch
off ea. week. Mrs. T. J. Ray, Stone Mtn.
Ga oR. As
Baby chicks, Pure Everlay dark
Brown Leghorns from Blue Ribbon
wimners: $12 a 100; R. I. Reds, and
Barred Rocks, ea., $13 a 100; Hatch ev-
ery week. Live del. guaranteed. D. J.
McCurley, Canton, Ga.
Baby chicks from State accredited
flocks, tested for T. B. and W. D. with
high egg production qualities bred in
them. Write for prices. Chas. F. Howe,
Ft. Valley, Ga.
.Donaldson strain chicks from nice,
dark Reds, $15 a 100 del., live del. guar-
anteed; also eggs, select dark stock
Reds, $1.50 per 15, gr exch for peas,
first class sugar cane syrup or honey.
25c ea.
a
Pure bred S C Red chicks, $12 a 100;
Heavy breed mixed, some pure bred,
$11: hen hatched chicks, 12c ea., also
Custom hatching, 3c per egg; $4 per
tray. Trays hold 150 eggs, ea. Mrs. J.
H. Jones, Brooks, Ga.
_Pure bred Partridge Wyandotte
chicks, from 6 and 7 lb. hens and 8 lb.
cocks. Berry strain, $16 a 100. 100 per
cent live del. Mrs. L. M. Dunn, Chaun-
cey, Ga:, Rt. 2.
R. I. Red day old chicks, $12.50 a 100
for May. 28th del. Tompkins and Don-
strain. W. W. Hendrix, Marlow,
a.
100:
Mrs. H. G. Brown, Stone Mtn., Ga., Rt. |-
Tancred White and Everlay Brown
Leghorns, $10 del. 100 per cent live
jel. guaranteed; also a limited num-
ber 3 wks. old B. L., at 25c ea., FOB.
D. F. Thomas, Odum, Ga. \
Thompson Ringlet B. R., day old
chicks, $15; large breeds mixed, $12.50
per 100, del. Mrs. J. B. Elliott, Coch-
ran, Ga. ;
Day old chicks: B. R., and R. x. Reds,
$14 a 100 or 15c ea., Mixed Heavies, $13.
J. B. Giants, $16'a 100, C. A. Burge,
Macon, Ga. oo
Mixed, day old chicks, 10c ea. Mrs.
J. S. Berryhill, Cochran, Ga., Rt. 5.
Baby chicks: Anconas, W. L., B. R.
Reds and Buffs, at low prices. Raleigh
Fay Gunter, Atlanta, 274 Haas St.,
Phone Huntley 7270-J.
Custom hatching: $3 per tray of 154
eggs. Set any time. E. A. Storey, Val-
dosta, Ga., Rt. 3, West Hill Ave. Rd.
- 5M chicks every Tuesday: Barred
Rocks and R. I. Reds, $14 a 100; W. L.,
$11. From blood tested flocks. G. D.
Fain, Edison, Ga.
Reds, Barred and Buff Rocks, $11 per
100; W. L. and Heavy Mixed, $10; Pre-
paid live del. Prompt service. Hatch ev-
ery Wednesday. R. H. Fechtel, Way-
cross, Ga. :
Barred Rocks (nearly full _ blood)
Thompson Imp. Ringlets and Donald-.
scn R. I. Reds, $11 a 100; Big Breeds
cnly, mixed, $10. 1-2c more a., less
than 100 lots. From large, pure,
healthy, country chickens. E. R. Bailey,
Harlem, Ga.
PIGEONS FOR SALE :
6 young, light colored, common pilg-
eons, for raising or eating, $1. Clar-
ence Brown, Helena, Ga. es
10 prs. mated, banded and_ working
Homer pigeons, $2 pr. <A. D. Lucas,
Hahira, Ga.
Poultry Wanted 2
CHICKENS WANTED
Want white top-knot chickens, early
hatch; 6 pullets and 1 cockerel. Prefer.
full stock. Pay cash. Nancy Priddy,
Upton, Ky., Rt. 3, Box 43.
Want 20 White or Brown Leghorn
hens for cash. Must be cheap and not
over 18 mos. old. Martha Cheatham,
Mtn. View, Ga.
Want W L, 4 to 8 wks. old pullets.
Quote best price. Mrs. G. G. Adair,
Rutledge, Ga., Rt. 2.
Want to exch. 1 or 2 good shoats for
R I Red or S L Wyandotte chicks, 3
wks and older. R. E. Tomberlin, Sur-
Jrency, Ga.)
Want to exch nice, clean State insp.,
fruit trees for Barred Rock and R I
Red, March and April hatch, pullets.
T. M. Webb, Ellijay, Ga.
Want to exch. value for 10 laying
hens (no Bantams). Mrs. J. G. Jinks,
College, Park, Ga., 406 E. Columbia
Ave.
Want 60 W. L. pullets (to be 10 wks.
old by the middle of June) good strain,
heavy layers, blood tested and free of
W.D., no culls; to be del. by June 15th.
Write prices, strain, etc. Mrs. J. M.
Terry, Suwanee, Ga., Rt. 2.
Want 50 Brown Leghorn or Plymouth
Rock 8 wks. old. Write prices. Mrs. E.
L. Cranford, Newnan, Ga., Greenville
St.
Want 300 to 500 Tancred W. L. pull-
ets. April 1929 hatch. No culls. Must
be cheap for cash. Write what you have
to offer. W. B. Culpepper, Lavonia, Ga.
Want 25 or 50 Holterman strain Aris-
tocrat Barred Rock 6 wks. old pullets.
Must be pure bred, blood, tested stock
and reasonable in price. Mrs. Florence
F. Sturin, Statesboro, Ga., Rt. 2.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, ETC.,
WANTED :
Want White African guineas. Quote
lowest cash price for one or more. Mrs.
J. E. Sims, Ellabelle, Ga., Rt.
Want 30 turkeys to raise on halves;
20 little ducks; 100 Cornish Game day
old chicks. Raise to 10 wks. old. Best
attention. Mrs. John Burnsl Vidalia,
Ga Rt. 3:
Want trio Muscovey ducks; a pr.
Chinese geese and any number of Wht:
Guineas. State prices. Mrs. E. L. Cran-
ford, Newnan, Ga., Greenville St.
Want baby turkeys to raise on halves.
Fine range and best of attention. Would
like to get them :as soon as possible.
Ss W.-M. Sanders, Albany, Ga., Rt.
Want 10 to 15 day old turkeys, any
breed, with chicken hen, reasonable for
cash. State what you have in first let-
ag oo J. W. Wade, Eastman, Ga.,
Want peafowls. Will pay cash for
High powered chicks from high pro-
ducing flocks: Reds and B. R., $12 a
eo B. R. Woodliff, Flowery Branch,
a. :
raise on halves, 50 to 200, to 8 wks.
"Thursday, May 23, 1929.
PIGEONS WANTED
Want White Kings, Red Carneaux,
Giant Homers. Must be good stock. also.
large birds, Very cheap. State number
and price in first letter. A. L. Haden,
Columbus, Ga., 1905 13th Ave. | ee
ed
a
BABY CHICKS WANTED
Want 100 chicks to raise on halves to
10 wks. Prefer R I Reds, Barred Rocks
or any large breed. By June Ist. Mrs, ~
Mae Turner, Cleveland, Ga., Rt. 4, -
Want 100 or so chicks to raise on
halves to 10 wks. Prefer Anconas, Write
before sending. Mrs. Minnie L. Riggins,
Plackshear, Ga., Rt. 3, Box 74. ae
Want any number baby chicks to ~
also 1 or 2 turkey hens, or more, with _
young ones to raise until grown for
half of young ones. Fine range and
special attention. Mrs, S. G. Rogers,
Hagan, Ga. eee 3
Want to exch. value for chicks. Write _
for information. W. G. Kelley, Forest
Park, Ga. =
Want to exch Govt insp. Porto Rico
petato plants for baby chicks. Donald-
son R. I. Reds preferred. Mrs. Bud
Sweat, Alma, Ga., Rt. 1, Box 26.
Want baby chicks to raise on halves _
to 3 mos. Any amt. from 25 to 500. Bar-
red Rocks and Reds, but will accept
any good breed., also want cee white
Fekin ducks (other breeds also); gos-
lings, turkeys and guineas to raise the _
same way. Best of care and good feed.
Mrs. Pearl Dixon, Odum, Ga., Care T.
L. Fulton. ae
Want 100 chicks to raise on halves to
8 wks. Prefer large breed: J. B. Giants
or Wyandottes. Write. Mrs. Mary ~
Weaver, Protection, Ga. a
Want 50 or 100 chicks to raise. on
thirds. Prefer B. L., or Anconas. Will |
jet you hear from them every week,
3est of care and feed. Wrie before send-
ing. Tommie Powell, Oconee, Ga. Rt.
a Ge
Want 100 chicks to raise on_halves
to 10 wks. Any pure breed. Del. In
May. Mrs. J. W. Brassell, Acworth, Ga.
Ret, 1. : Bese
Want 200 chicks to raise on halves to
8 or 10 wks. Prefer R. I. Reds, Barred
Rocks, or White Leghorns. Mrs. G. C.
Prickett, Commerce, Ga., Rt. 2.
Eggs For Sale
Eggs from Donaldson and.Butts st,
matings of Reds, during the summer
mos., $1 per 15; $4.50 per 100. Mrs. John
S. Clark, Jacksonville, Ga. oa
_S C RI Red eggs from large dark
even colored hens, $1 per 15, del. Cs.
to be ret. Exch. for dried fruit (peach-
es preferred,) or Triumph or Banna
Yam, potato plants, del at once. Mrs.
H. E. Alderman, Wrightsville, Ga. =
Royal purple J. B. Giant. eggs from
culled hens, $1. per 15, also dark S C
Reds, 75c Mrs. R. S. Simpson, Waverly
Hall, Ga. ie
Case lots of White infertile eggs for
sale. Mrs. C. E. Dell, Sycamore, Ga.
Eggs now ready from the Worlds
largest and best layers of Big Bone
Giant Bronze turkeys (originated~ in
the Mtns. of Calif.) $18 doz., prepaid in
Ga. L. J. Ellis, Cumming, Ga., Rt. A.
Thoroughbred Light Brahma fresh
and fertile eggs, $1.25 for 15 del. Mrs.
Cecil Whitaker, East Ellijay, Ga. 3
Want to exch 15 or 30S L. Wyandotte
ecgs for pure bred dark Indian Cornish
Game eggs, af once. Would also exch
1 O. I. C. Game cockerel about 1 yr.
cld for baby chicks, of same breed. Write
best offer at once. T. N. Farmer, Hol-
ly Springs; Ga, Rui. - =
Pure bred Donaldson R. I. Red eggs,
$1 per setting, or exch for June corn
seed, or White -African Guinea eggs.
L. B. Rountree, Swainsboro, Ga., Rt. 5.
Thompson Ringlet hatching eggs, $1
per setting. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin, |
Cra, 2. oe
Carefully selected Marcy strain JB
Giant eggs, $1 per 15,.$1.75 for 30, $5
a 100 del. Prompt shipment and satis- __
faction guaranteed. R. P.. Bannister,
Ball Ground, Ga., Rt. 1. o
Big Bone M B turkey eggs: May del.
$6 doz., June del., $4 doz. Cash with or-
der. Will Hart, Alto, Ga., Rt. 1. -- See
Bronze.turkey eggs; $3 doz, also day
cld turkeys, 40c ea. Leola Foy, Butler,
Gas Ree. a
Hatching eggs from heavy laying ~
Ae
s
Thompson Barred Rocks, $1.50 per 15,
$5 a 100 postpaid. Mrs. A. C. Spence,
Blakely, Ga. S
Holterman Aristocrat B. R. eggs, $l.- |
50 per 15 postpaid. Cash with order.
John B. Nix, Dahlonega, Ga., Rt. 1.
White Australian Guinea eggs, $1.25 -
per 15 del. L. E. Williams, Ty Ty, Ga.
fice R I Red-eggs from pure bred
en. strain hens, 90c per 15. Mrs. R.
D. Raulerson, Rockingham, Ga. -
Thompson Imp. Ringlet eggs, stock
d direct, $1.25 per 15 del. Cash with
eS C. A. Wilbanks, Commerce,
rancred .W IL eggs, $1 per 15, FOB,
so young cockerels and pullets, same
in, 75 to $1 ea., hens, $2 and roost-
's, $2.75. No culls. Glen Finley, Dal-
Ga. ;
ure bred White Rock Fischel strain
res, $1.10 per 15; $2 for 30, $2.75 for
del. Cash (money . order _prefer-
dad) with order. Mrs. C. C. Payne,
ifton, Ga., Rt. 6.
Pure bred R I Red eggs, direct from
onaldson Yards, 80c per setting, 70c
a doz., $5 a 100. H. Dorsey King, La-
vonia, Ga., Rt. 3.
Thompson B R and Donaldson R I
Red eggs, each, $1 per Cartons
to be returned; also baby chicks, day
, 15c ea., to be del. every Wednes-
ST Milton Sumner, Sylvester,
a., Rt. 3.
A few 12 doz. cS., strictly fresh eggs
ped by. parcel post at reasonable
e. If interested, write what you can
-del. at your post office. Mrs. C. A.
n, Loudsville, Ga.
hompson Imp. Ringlet B R select-
| eggs, from heavy laying strain, $1.-
25 for 15 del. Cartons ret. $5 for 100.
rs. A. J. Collins, Demorest, Ga., Rt.
R I Red eggs and cockerels for sale:
om $1 to $1.50 per 15; March hatch
kerels from Star pen, $2.50 ea. Mrs.
J. Fleming, Lincolnton, Ga., Rt. 6.
Pure M .B turkey eggs. Write for
ices. Mrs. E. S. Ward, Fayetteville,
a j i
Thoroughbred Thompson Imp. Ring-
t BR, also Ferris S C White Leghorn
s, $1 per 15, $1.75 for 30; larger
ts, 4 1-2c an egg del. Mrs. J. E.
adam, Bainbridge, Ga., Rt. 2.
lue Guinea eggs, 4c ea. No order
cepted for less than 25. Bill Steed-
y, Coffee, Ga., Rt. 1.
Pure Holterman (dark strain) B. R.
es, $1.50 per 15 del. Money order with
der. Margaret van Dyke, Jefferson-
lle, Ga.
elect eggs from6 and 7 lb. every
y layers, THompson B. R., $1.25 per
or $2 per 30, or exch. 1 setting for
potatoes. Ea. pay chgs. J. R. Bow-
Blackshear, Ga., Rt. 1.
lect Thompson Ringlet B. R. eggs
$1.50 per 15, postpaid, or exch for. good:
d apples, or for Spanish peanuts.
e N. R. Wilson, Canon, Ga., Rt. 2.
ees from Aristocrat B. R. heavy
rs, $1 per 15; $4.50 a 100 del. J. S.
elot, Statesboro, Ga., Rt. B, Box 14.
Buff Rock eggs, $1.10 per 15. Mrs.
/, P. Whitworth, Adairsville, Ga.
S. C. Black Minorca hatching eggs,
ape strain, $1 per 15 del. 5 yrs..a
clusively. L. B. Milliams, Newnan,
'C RI Red, Owen strain, eggs, $1
er 15, $4 a 100, Cs. to be returned. Mrs,
M. B. Scroggs, Alto, Ga.
Pure bred Brown Leghorn eggs, $1
er 15. P. O. Reid, Bremen, Ga., Rt
EGGS WANTED
ant pure bred dark Cornish Indian
ame eggs. State price. H. E. Barnes,
nklin, Ga.
Want to exch 1 yr. old J B Giant
ck for 3 settings any heavy breed
gs, also 2 yr. old R. I. Red, Donald-
n strain, cock, to exch for 2 settings
avy breed, or White Face - Black
panish eggs at once. Mrs. C. D. Sat-
rfield, White, Ga.
Want to exch 1 Black Hawk corn
ller, good as new, for 4 settings of
ure bred R I Red eggs for setting
poses. Write before sending. Mrs.
_M. Smith, Elza, Ga., Rt. 1, Box 29.
nt pure bred Indian Runner duck
Ge
F arm Help Wanted
Want at cnce 2 men to plow. Good
ages. W. P. Clay, Lorane, Ga.
Want someone to live in small farm
eme as one of the family and help
h the poultry and cows. I sell eggs
and cream, etc. Good home and small
Salary. Must be reliable, honest, etc.,
Ref. Miss Jessie Jameson, Talbotton,
a.
Want several farm hands, also man
) run tractor and one to run binder.
tate age and salary expected. S. C.
velace, West. Point, Ga. -
breeder of Papes S C Black Minorcas
Mrs, A. Youmans,-Mershon,
tractor
fant young man of good moral
| character to live as one of family of
two and-help with farm work. For a
good consideration. Near Hiram, con-
ee church. J. T. Olay, Hiram,
a, Rt. 1. =
Want boy, 16 or 17 yrs. old to work
ou farm. Begin June 20th. $15.00 mo.,,
hoard and washing. Not over 100 mi.,
from Axson. Clyde Gurley, Axson, Ga.|
Want by middle of June a white, sin-
gle man to live in home-with family
and help with general farm work. Write
and state salary expected. Ref. exch.
R. W. Mobley, Glennville, Ga., Rt. 1.
Want an industrious, reliable old cou-
ple to live-in home and take care of
1 1-4 acres with chickens, milk goat,
nice orchard\and garden. Write for par-
pcuials Mrs. T. E. Wilson, Vinings,
7B. :
Want a reliable man with own help
and able to finance self to take care
cf 35 acres corn and velvet beans with
soy beans in middles; 10 acres soy bean
pea hay; 2 acres early Irish -potatoes,
and put in additional acreage of peas
and corn. Will furnish all working
equipment but no. cash. Write for fuli
particulars. R. J. Holliday, Blythe, Ga.
Want strong, healthy, industrious
man to work on farm, one thats hon-
est, can keep up a Ford car ,a good
salesman with vegetables, etc., with real
good ref. 24 yrs. or older ,and single.
$1 day and board to begin with, regu-
lar time. W. H. Waddelle, Pearson, Ga.
Want man or boy for general farm
work. Pay. reasonable wage and board.
P. C. Reid, Bremen, Ga., Rt. 1.
_ POSITIONS WANTED
Want place on farm in Ga. for wages
for rest of yr. Can do any kind of farm
work. State salary per mo., board and
laundry. Herman L. Spearman, Pooler,
Ga., Box 37. 2
Want job as Inspector or shed fore-
man. 12 yrs. exp., peach work. Ref. if |
desired.
Write. 4H.
Valley, Ga., RFD 1.
Want place at once for large family
of.7; 4 regular workers; self, 17, 12 and
14 yr. cold boys. Would consider wages
or share crop, or $25 ea., for self and
older boy, and $1 per day for younger.
es Edgar W. Fowler, Reynolds, Ga.,
Rt. 4. ,
* Want a place with good man in Mid-
dle or South Ga., on dairy or poultry
farm with good house and garden. Wife
and child. Ref. E. K. Johnson, Reynolds,
Ga Rte 34 5 d
Want job as Inspector and teach
crackers at peach packing house. Miss
Tucile Brown, Macon, Ga., Rt. 6.
Want work on farm for rest of yr.
Would prefer a dairy on share basis,
with chickens and trucking. Want to
locate permanently with good party.
Will consider wages. O. E. Crawford,
Barnesville, Ga. | d :
. Want job looking after poultry, hogs
and cattle. Both wife and self exp.,
especially poultry with incubator, etc.,
C. Howard, Ft.
also exp., in buying cattle by the car.
load; good judge of cattle, etc., 45 yrs.
old, honest, sober, and can give~-ref.
L.: F. Fowler, Thomaston, Ga., 318 No.
RB St. a
Exp. pecan budder, reliableand hon-
est, wants job for whole sason. Give
full details in first Jtter. Eugene
Johnson, Helena, Ga., Rt. 1. _
Want place with Christian people on
dairy or poultry farm. Settled widow
with 11, 9, and 6 yrs.; old boys. Small
salary and cottage. AMrs. W. Cantrell,
Mt. Vernon, Ga.
Want to get plac on farm in-Ga., to
help with tobacc, etc. Have 2 hoys
about grown and 1 grown girl, self and
wife. Have grown tobacco 2 yrs. Best
of ref., want -work for all family for}
the rest of yr., with privilege of getting
crop another yr. Prefer South Ga.,
near Valdosta, O. W. Hall, Plant City,
Fla.,, Rt. & :
Want -position on poultry farm in
Ga., to raise all kind of poultry, also
would like 6 or 8 brood sows to raise
pigs from. Plenty exp., and good ref.
Other party to furnish and go 50-56
basis. John Grayson, Madisonville,
Tenn. ee
Exp., tobacco man wants job. 10 yrs.,
exp., curing, toping and grading tobac-
co. Prefer taking charge of crop. Wire
cr write at once. Wm. Maine, Manor,
Ga. 2
Want position on farm. Can drive.
most any kind truck, etc. and can .do
any kind, and not afraid of farm. work.
Wm. E. Dean, Fairburn, Ga., Rt. 1. _
Want position on farm, or in dairy,
at $30.00 mo., and a good home. Honest,
sober, reliable, young married man.
Can drive understand, and repair any
Springvale, Ga. =o
EWant job with man who has large
-References. Artemus Law, |.
crop tobacco and cotton and plenty of |
general farm work. Would like a i
horse crop, or truck patch in with my
work. Have family of 10; 6 regular
bands, 4:men, all large enough to plow.
Mrs. L. K. Kersey, Stillmore, Ga,
RED Fee 3 :
BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE
10 lbs., white crowders, hand picked,
$1.00; 3 bu., Iron clad, in A 1 cond., $4
oe J Worley, Ball. Ground, Ga.,
10 bu., bright and sound mixed peas.
Make best offer. W. A. Arrington,
Bartow, Ga.
Few cream sugar crowder peas, 30c
lb., FOB., Purple Top Globe turnip
seed, new crop, 50c ib. del. in Ga. Mrs.
M. J. Smith, Mtn., View, Ga.
Several Ibs., Red Speckled Crowder
peas, 30c lb. Claude Roundtree,
Thomasville, Ga.
3 bu., Brabs, $4 bu., 5 bu., Eras, $3.65;
26 bu., St Clays, $3.65; 5 bu., Irons,
o0 and 5 bu., Mixed Irons, $3.60. C.
. Cheeley, Mitchell, Ga.
O-too-tan soy beans, $7 per bu., $2
peck. J. W. Cook, Stone Mtn., Ga.
12 bu., O-too-tan beans, absolutely
sound and recleaned, $7 bu. FOB. Wal-
ter Moore, Jenkinsburg, Ga.
Half Runner garden beans, striped,
30c lb., fine early running beans, pro-
lific, 25c lb., solid white and green
cucumber seed, ea., 10c spoonful. Add
postage. Mrs. C. R. Sorrells, Monroe,
Ga., Rt..1. 3
Sound, clean, weevil treated seed
beans: tender cornfield beans, 35c Ib.,
3 lbs., $1.00; Ky. Wonder pole beans,
30c lb., white bush lima and Hastings
speckled bush butter-beans, 30c lb., 4
Ibs., $1.00 del. C. F. Maddox, Flowery
Branch, Ga.
35 bu., pure Brab peas, $4.50 FOB.
C. B. Hicks, Reynolds, Ga. >
Genuine, sound O-too-tan beans,
$6.00 per bu., just as come from the
thrash. FOB. P. P. Patrick, Locust
Grove, Ga., Rt. 1, Box 70.
0 bu:, pure Brab peas, $5.00 bu., in
21-2 bu., lots, or all. A. D. McNair,
Mitchell, Ga., Rt. 1. ;
Sugar crowder table peas, 1 lb., 30c;
2 Ibs. 50c; black-eyed peas, 1 lb., 25c,
6 Ibs. $1; field peas, $4 bu. B. R. Wood-
liff, Flowery Branch, Ga.
7 bu. Otootan soy beans, $6.75 bu.,
FOB.: J. B. Settle, Jackson, Ga.
speckled variety, $1.75 bu. Sef check
o1 exch. 2 bu. for 1 bu. goGd hay peas.
L. B. Scoggins, Omega, Ga, :
BEANS AND PEAS WANTED
Want to exch nice size Red Bliss po-
tatoes for goo ' seed peas, any kind that
will make hay7 L.
Want to-xch 6M Porto Rico potato
plants, for 3 bu. hay peas. Ike Tomber-
lin, Surrency, Ga. :
- Want 2 bu. Laredo Soy beans. Make
oie cash price. Olin Griffith, Talona
re.
Want velvet beans, soy beans, peas
and beggarweed seed. Prevatt & Co.,
Seville, Fla. -
Wanted to exch Porto Rico plants.
$4.00 bu., and Brabs at $4.50 bu., Ship
immediately after receipt of bill of
lading for peas. S. E. Hollis, Baxley,
Ga., Rt. 1. eran
Want to exch. Govt insp., Porto Rico
plants for any variety field peas. 3 M.,
plants for 1 bu., peas. J. B. Hyers,
Coffee, Ga. :
Want to buy cow peas, all varieties,
also velvet beans. Send samples and
state quantity of ea., variety and low-
est price. Robinsons Seed Whse.,
Cairo, Ga.
Want to exch. good Porto Rico potato
plants for peas. 1 M., ea., for 1 pk., each
L. Johnson, Helena, Ga. |
Want Hastings or Burpees string-
less Green Pod bean seed. Advise quan-
tity and best price. Hemptown Or-
chards, Hemp, Ga.
Want cow or field peas, any variety,
State quantity and best price in first
letter. Mrs. Addie Waddelle, Pearson,
Garo
Offering highest prices for cow peas
and kes beans. D..F. Moore, Brun-
son, S. C.
preferred, but will consider other va-
rieties. Quote lowest cash price FOB
ycur station. J. L. Budreau. and Co.,
Savannah, Ga.
PECANS AND PEANUTS FOR SALE
White Spanish peanuts, 5c lb., in the
hull; shelled, 9c lb. Mrs. M. J. Driskell,
Cumming, Ga., Rt. 5. ees
. Imp. red Spanish peanuts, 8c lb. Mrs.
. J. A. Wilson, Martin, Ga,.; Rt. 2.
Spanish peanuts, 100 Ibs,, $5.00: 200
Runner velvet beans, small black pea-
E. Byrd, Bristol, Ga. '
at $1.75 M., collect, for field peas, at
good sound Crowders and speckled. S.|
Want 100 bu. peas, Brabs or Irons |
Ibs., $9.50; 500 Ibs., $22.00. J. H. Lever- |
ett, Parrott, Ga. Rt. 1. Box10l
Red Spanish peanuts, 8c lb. Wood- |
row Wilson, Martin, Ga., Rt. 2..
White Spanish seed peanuts, 51-2c_
lb., for order not less than 75 lbs. R. C. .
Couch, Turin, Ga. St
50 bu., N. C. Runner peanuts for sale.
Carl E. Melton, Dawson, Ga. eRe
1-2 bu., imp., Spanish peanuts. Make :
best offer. C. M. Stanley; Vienna, Ga.,
410 5th St. ' s es
Stewart and Money. Maker pecans,
30 and 35c lb. L. P. Strange, Swains-
boro, Ga., Rt. 5. :
PECANS AND PEANUTS WANTED |
Want Spanish peanuts. Will exch,
S. C. Black Minora eggs at $1.25 per 15.
Mrs. Geo. M. Gable, Canon, Ga., RFD 4.
Want all varieties, any amount ~
pecans. Neon W. Buchanan, Americus,
Ga.
Want from 100 to 200 Ibs., imp., big
white Spanish peanuts; 50 to 100 Ibs.,
little white Spanish. 1928 crop, clean
and sound. Send sample and_ lowest
price. H. C. Burnsed, Sr., Ellabelle, Ga.
Want red Spanish peanuts, 3 and 4
in hull kind. Send sample and cash
price per Ib. A. P. Sanders, Tignall,
Ga., Rt. 1. oy
Want Spanish peanuts at $1.50 bu.
Will exch. State insp., Porto Rico pota-
to plants at $1.50 M., for same. Ea, to _
pay postage. Exch. any amount from
8 ihe to 4 bu. J. W. Gay, Baxley, Ga., -
Want 1 bu. peanuts; kind that has 3
and 4 in hull; also 4 bu. Brabham peas
pure and sound. Send samples of both
and prices in first letter. C. W. Meeks,
Swainsboro, Ga., Rt. 3, Box 65. be
Want all varieties, any amount, pe-
cans. Neon W. Buchanan, Americus,
Ga. :
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
New crop, Prize Tater onions no oS
hampers, 6c lb=~J. T. Ponder, Whig-
ham, Ga. Pe : pres
7 M., ea., Red and White, Hastings
Bermuda Qfiions, from size of walnuts
to teacup w. F. Bowie, Abbeville, Ga.,
He 4. Box 107. ; oe
Some Snap beans, 8c lb.,FOB. Mrs.
L. F Dykes Baxley, Ga. eo
Crystal Wax Bermuda onions, by
fuck or shipped; also roasting ears,
ready June 10th. H. E. Tomberlin,
Abbeville, Ga., Rt 4. .
Several hundred lbs. dry and Crystal
Wax Bermuda onions, shipped in bu.
hampers or sacks, for sale. Leon Ed-.
mundson, Ray City, Ga., Rt. 2. Les ae
About 2M large yellow Bermuda on-
ions, 4c lb., cash with order, or exch
for Brabham, or black-eyed peas at $5
bu., or any large breed.chickens at 25 |
lb. or fore home cured bacon or lard. |
J. G. Altman, Blackshear, Ga, P.O.
Box: 122. ee
Snap beans, Valentine variety, 8c lb. es
Mrs. L. F. Dykes, Baxley, Ga.
Fancy, stringless beans, $1.50 per bu.
hamper, Cukes, same price, also squash,
$1.25 per bu.-hamper. All FOB. B. B.
Eiverson, Damascus, Ga. j a
400 crates straw Bermuda onions, 4c
lb., 100 hampers fancy Bliss Irish pota- ee
toes, $1.75 per hamper, and 200 crates oe
sclid head cabbage, $1.35 per crate. All ~
FOB. A. T. Milteer, Quitman, Ga. \ =
i
'
be
POTATOES FOR SALE ae
Lookout Mtn., irish potatoes, $3.00
bu.. FOB. J. E. Martin, Flowery
Branch, Ga., Rt. 3. - Of
Lookout Mtn., seed potatoes, the kind
to plant for late crop, $1.00 bu. FOB.
nee. A. J. Collins, Demorest, Ga., Rt. ;
New Red Bliss potatoes, 3c lb, FOB.
G. T. Knowles, Broxton, Ga. a
8 or 10 bu. Green Mtn. seed Irish po- ae
tatoes, $1 bu., at my home, or $1.25 bu.. oe
FOB Clermont. J. C. Truelove, Cler-
mont, Ga; ey
Imp. Lookout Mtn. seed Irish pota-
toes, shallow eyed and heavy yielders,
5c bu., in 25 bu. lots, 90c bu. Ross E.
Clement, Cornelia, Ga. . Eee Cee
Lookout Mtn. Irish potatoes for seed.
Kind to plant for late crop, $1.00 bu.
here. Cash with order, A. J. Collins,
Demorest, Ga., Rt. 1.
a
CORN FOR SALECAR LOTS
1 car ear corn, $1.25 bu., of 80 Ibs., :
FOB here. Elmer Horne, Metcalfe, Ga. oe
CATTLE WANTEDCAR LOTS
Will buy car load heifers, 6 mos., old
and. older, from good stock. I. Goldberg,
Savannah, Ga., 23 East 48th St. ue
_CATTLE FOR SALECar Lots |
__2or 3 cars Range cattle for sale, Alex
K. Sessoms, Cogdell, Ga. 2
_ Thursday, May 23, 1929.
: Beorgia. .
_ Market Bulletin:
Published weekly by The
BUREAU OF MARKETS
Arthur D. Jones, Director
_ Department Of
Agriculture
| Eugene Talmadge, Commissioner
ee Thursday, May 23, 1929.
Entered as second class matter Feb-
- ruary 15, 1922, at the Post Office at
_ | Atlanta, Georgia, under the act of
| June 6, 1900. Accepted for mailing
| at special rate of postage provided
| for in section 1103. Act of October
3; 1937;
Advertisements of farm produce and
appurtenances, -admissible under
postal regulations, inserted one time
on each request and repeated only
when request is accompanied by
new copy of advertisement.
Limited space will not permit inser-
tion of unimportant advertisements.
Under legislative act the Market
Bulletin does not assume any re-
| sponsibility for any advertisement
| appearing in the Bulletin or trans-
action resulting therefrom.
- WARNING TO GEORGIA SHIPPERS
OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
It is called to our attention almost
__ Gaily that some sixigper has been fleec-
dealers or commission merchants. A
ing and selling farm products are hon-
est, upright, and reliable, but there are
some in almost every city of any im-
_ portance in the United States who will
_ rs produce and then not give him a
_ square deal or honest returns.
The: Bureau of Markets is always
glad to give you any information you
_Gesire regarding the honesty, reliabil-
ity ,or financial standing of any pro-
duce dealer. Dont take a chance when
you can get this information only for
the asking.
e A. D. JONES, Director. -
PEACH STANDARDS
_ Under date of May 15, 1929, Com-
missioner Talmadge announced that
_the same rules and regulations used for
the peach crop of 1928 regarding the
grading, marking, packing, and inspec-
_tion of peaches would apply for this
_ years crop, with the exception of Hil-
eys. On this variety he has reduced
the size requirements from 1 7-8 inches
n diameter to a minimum size of 1 3-4
_inches for U. S. Fancies, U. S. No. 1s,
and U.S. No. 2s.
a Commissioner Talmadge, on May 15,
estimated this years peach crop at not
over ten thousand cars. Mr. W. C.
Bewley, General Manager of the Geor-
gia Peach Growers Exchange, esti-
mates this years crop at 9,611 cars. Un-
der date of May 20, the United States
Department of Agriculture estimated
this years crop at 9,500 cars. It is an
undisputed fact that we will have the
: shortest peach crop since 1923.
A. D. JONES, Director.
: PRESQUARE POISONING OF
a. COTTON
The emergence of the boll weevil
sxromises to be unusually heavy this
year in many sections of Georgia. The
weevil went into winter quarters last
year in a very good condition, and the
ed out of his produce By-unscrupulous,
large majority of firms engaged in buy- |
go to any extreme to secure the farm- |
| winter was. unusually mild, Reports: or
| have. already been. received from: parts
| of South Georgia of very AeAN pre-
square infestation.
If an average of one weevil can She
found in a 200 foot row before the
squares appear it will pay to poison.
Two hundred feet should be stepped off
at five or six places in the field and
every plant in the row examined. Some
people advocate presquare poisoning
when there are only about half as many
weevils as this per acre.
should be made at the first indication
_of squaring.
There are several methods. of apply-
ing poison. Perhaps the quickest and
easiest method is to use a dusting ma-
chine. A good duster will apply as lit-
tle as two pounds of calcium arsenate
per acre and cover the plants thorough-
lv when they are small. The applica-
tion should be made early in the morn-
ing, late in the evening or during the
night.
A home made mixture of one pound
ot calcium arsenate, one gallon of mo-
lasses (unfermented) and one gallon of
water may be used. A few drops of this
mixture are applied with a mop to the
| tip of the plant. The work can be done
in the day.
The cost of presquare poisoning is
low and often the returns are large. It
may happen that dry weather later in
the season will check the weevil and
is not wise to depend on this.
It often happens that the boll weevil
enters a field from one side. Areas next
to woods, or a house, or any place that
will afford winter protection to weevils
should be watched. In such localities
it will sometimes pay to presquare pois-
en when it is not necessary to poison
the whole field. If punctured squares
sre found later they should be remoy-
ed and- oison applied to a small area
around the piace where the punctured
squares are fourd. |
R. P, BLEDSOE, .
Agronomist,: Georgia Rode
ment Station, Experiment,
ag. . Georgia.
hr,
=>.
SS
GROW YOUR OWN PEAS
,
In every store in Georgia you can
for sale. Nearly everybody buys them)
They are not grown in Georgia.
We can grow California Black-eye
peas here in Georgia as good as they
can in California or anywhere else.
Lets grow some this year. Have them
inoculated. Work them, Put a little fer-
tilizer on them. You will find that it
will pay you about as well as cotton.
\ DON'T BLISTER YOUR TRISH
POTATOES
\ Sh
- Trish potatoes in Georgia are har-
must be taken to guard against exces-
sive exposure of the potatoes to hot
sunshine or they will arrive at the mar-'
ket in a damaged condition. When the
temperature is above 90 degrees Fah-
renheit, the potatoes should not be al-
lowed to remain fully exposed to the
sunshine for over 30 minutes. When
the temperature runs above 95 degrees
digging should be discontinued for sev-
eral hours during the heat of the day.
Where the potatoes are harvested
and put into sacks, the tops of the
sacks should be folded over so as to
exclude direct rays of the sun when it
is necessary to allow the bags of pota-
toes to remain in the field through the
heat of the day. It is better to have
sufficient labor to bag the potatoes
promptly and haul them to shade at
Treatment.
rallow a good crop to be made, but it
see sacks of California Black-eye peas.
vested when the weather is hot. Care
i h potatoes leaving the
field apparently uninjured will arrive
in. the market several days later show-
ing brown discoloration under the skin:
or a breaking down of the tissue, caus-.
ed by exposure to hot sunshine back in
the field at harvest time.
THE MEDITERRANEAN FRUIT FLY
- One of the most destructive pests
known to agriculture has recently made
its appearance in the citrus groves of
Orange, Seminole, and other. counties
cf that. section of Florida. This pest
is one of the most widely distributed
and one of the most dangerous known.
According to the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture, it occurs through-
out the tropics and sub-tropics of the
new as well as old world. Up to the
date of the Florida outbreak, however,
it had not appeared in lad Unitea
States.
Immediately this fly was discovered,
a quarantine was put on within the
state and. the most vigorous steps taken
to stamp it out. The matter was also
taken up by the United States De-
partment of Agriculture. To carry the
fight on, four and a quarter million
dollars will be made available to sup-
plement that available in Florida. Noth-
ing is being left undone to bring this
pest promptly and definitely under con-
trol to the point of complete extermi-
tation. : i
So much has been said about this
newcomer that we are glad to give
here 2a, statement by J. Francis Coop-
er; editor for the Agricultural Experi-
ment Station and University of Flor-
ida. :
The Mediterranean fruit fly, one of
the most dreaded European pests of
fruits and vegetables, has finally gain-
ed entrance into the United States. The
Florida State Plant Board; on April 15,
announced that the pest had been dis-
covered in Orange and Seminole coun-
ties of that state. Another announce-
ment, on April 19, stated that the fly
had been found in Lake and Osceola
counties,
State and federal authorities lost no
time in starting a program of eradica-
tion. Dr. Wilmon Newell, plant com-
niissioner of the Florida Plant Board,
was> appointed as agent of the United
States Repartment of Agriculture, thus
being putin charge of both state and
federal eradication forces. By April 20
niore than 70 state and federal inspect-
ers and specialists. had been marshall-
ed in the work.
Orange and Seminole and Set of
Lake counties were quarantined by the
State Plant Board, at its meeting on
April 15, and it is expected that other
areas will be quarantined as they are |
feund infested. Georgia authorities
placed a quarantine against the move-
ment, by truck or rail, of ungraded bulk
citrus fruit from Florida into or
through Georgia. Properly graded and
inspected shipments bound for inter-
state commerce will be allowed passage.
The Mediterranean fruit fly is a|
potential pest of far-reaching impor-
tance. It is apt to attack a large num-
ber of fruits and vegetables, having
been found on 72 different host plants
in other countries. It is a possible men-
ace throughout the warmer part of the
United States, from Florida to Califor-
nia.
Tt was first discovered in Florida
by J. C. Goodwin, nursery inspector
of the State Plant Board. As soon as
adult flies were located, they were
quickly identified.
This fly is about two- thirds as large
as a@ common housefly, lays its eggs in
fruits and vegetables. These eggs hatch,
causing the fruits and vegetable. to rot . :
and fall to the ground. The larvae
then enter the ground and later emerge ee
as adult flies. The entire life cycle may
be completed in 22 days in warm wea-
ther and with favorable conditions. It
may require two months or longer in |
unfavorable -
cool weather and under
conditions.
Among the fruits which it is Nicely ipa)
to attack are all varieties of oranges
and grapefruit, peaches, pears, apples, s
plums, berries, bananas, figs, and oth- _
ers. Green beans, peppers, egg plants,
pumpkins, cucumbers, squash and can-
taloupes are among the vegetables ae a=
tect to serious damage.
Florida and federal authorities are _
sparing no effort to eradicate this fly
wherever it is found. They are apply-
ing poisoned attractants to kill the ad-
ult flies, they are destroying all fruit
found infested; and--are taking vigor-
cus measures to prevent the spread of
the insect into areas where it is. na
already prevalent.
In the foregoing Mr. Cooper has quite ok
definitely and clearly given the essen- __
tial facts.
the general apprehension felt through-
What he has said warrants
cut the South since the fly was dis- :
covered, as well as the vigorous meas-
ures that are now being taken to pre- ae
vent its spread and to stamp it out.
We would urge our readers, both in
Florida and without the state, to co- 2
cperate to the fullest possible extent
with those in charge. We would cau-
tion especially that truck shipments of _
fruit be carefully watched. That, it
seems to us, is the greatest remaining S
As far as possible, all truck
menace.
shipments should be traced and noth-
ing left undone to clean up every. Pe
Sible point of infestation.
C, A. COBB
In Southern Ruralist. _
CORN, SEED CORN AND CORN |
MEAL FOR SALE
100 bu., selected ear corn, $1.50 te ae -
FOB. T. N, Hurst, Luthersville, Ga.
Hastings Prolific seed corn,
well
selected, nubbed ears, $1.25 per peck;
1-2 bu., $2.25: $3.50 bu., del. Cash with
order.
Rt. b;
_ Few bu., shelled corn, $1.50 bu. Mrs.
R. L. Greene, Cuthbert, Ga., Rt. 4.
Pure Mexiean June seed corn. White
and Blue mixed. Nubbed and shelled,
$1.00 peck del., $3.00 bu., FOB. C. G.
Oliver, Barnesville, Ga., Rt. 2.
'C. A. Wilbanks, Commerce, Ga., a.
Pure Blue Mexican June corn, $3.50
bu., or $1.00 pk. W.H. Huff, Buckhead,
Ga. Rie 2:
2 bu., Imp., Golden popcorn,
shelled and pops soft. Make best offer,
in first letter for entire lot, or will fill
small orders 15 cup, or 2 cups for 25c.
E. L. Johnson, Flowery Branch, Ga.
240 bu. Ga. white corn, shelled, in.2
bu. sacks; $1.35 bu., FOB; less than 20
bu. $1.40 bu. E. G. Matthews, Atlanta,
Ga., RFD 8,
-Hastings Prolific corn, first yr. from
originator, selected for seed, $3 bu., $l.-
25 peck; Hastings imp. Golden Dent,
same price. All FOB. J.
Layonia, Ga,
1 bu.. genuine yellow corn, selected
and nubbed, front real ears, $1 pk., $3.-
50 bu., FOB. Jas.
boro, Ga.
Yellow rice seed popcorn, ears, 6 to
8 in., 4 to 5 to stalk, sound and good,
10c cup, 3 for 25c; 50c for 1-2 gal., 75
oat postpaid for orders of 25c up. Mrs.
CORN, SEED CORN AND CORN
MEAL WANTED
Want to exch. Porto Rico plants ton
shelled corn, clear of weevils. 10 M.,
easily
. Beasley,
B. Sproull, Stiles-
Smith, Clarkesville, Ga., RFD 5.
plants for 10 bu., corn. Ship corn by = =
freight, and I will exp., plants on re-
ceipt of bill of lading. S. E. Hollis,
Baxley, Ga, Rt. 1.
Porto Rico plants, Gov't insp.;
r lots. Cash with order, Money or-
preferred. L. D. Kimbrel, Alma,
Rt. 3.
yenui skin Porto Ricans,
ate insp., $1.50 M, del. or exch for
ly Triumph or Banna Yams, or dried
uit. Mrs. H. E, Alderman, Wrights-
Mi Indiana Baltimore tomato plants
M. lL. Vincent, College Park, Ga.
Box 140.
Brimmer tomato plants, 25 doz., 50c
100; cabbage collard plants, 20c a 100
P. Mrs. W. J. Smith, Mtn.
, Ga.
Insp and treated pink skin Porto
co plants, $1.50 M, del. J. W. Bailey,
le, Ga., Rt. B,
np. Porto Rico plants, Govt insp.
treated, now ready, $1.25 M, del.
H. Gordon, Rochelle, Ga., Rt. 2.
e cuttings from Govt insp. Porto
otato plants, $1.75 M, 5M or more
Cash with order. A. H. Lynch,
ley, Ga.
id time Nigger Killer Boon Span-
ly Triumph, and pink and pur-
hull Porto Rico potato plants, $1.75
OD. Special price on large lots.
fitch Boatright, Coffee, Ga.
y Stone and. Baltimore tomato
, 85c, 500; $1.50 M, damp moss
_E. J. Goins, Seville, Ga.
pink skin Porto Rico plants, $1.-
ovt insp. and treated. Guaran-
plants. S. P. Hutto, Surrency, Ga.
ouquet pepper plants, 10c doz, 25c
$2.50 M. Large plants, now ready,
id. -J. H. Wood, Sr., Anderson-
Bh.
tified Porto Ricans, $1.25 M, Red
Greater Baltimore and Stone to-
plants, $1 M. All del. B. F. Mal-
MVver, Cia; >
hsp. and treated Porto Ricans,
, del, also Wakefield and Flat
cabbage, and Heading collard,
100. Now ready. J. M. Bailey,
vordele, Ga., Rt. B.
Genuine red skin Porto Rico plants,
ovt insp. and treated, $1.25 M, FOB.
OD orders filled. W. G. OQuinn,
rency, Ga., Rt. 2.
Rico plants, $1.50 M, or exch
kens, geese, seed beans and peas
hing can use. Mrs. Clayton
, Alma, Ga., Care Gen. Del.
ns Govt certified potato plants,
$1 M, also tomato plants, $1 M.
Mullis, Alma, Ga.
mato plants, $1 M, or exch for seed
L. A. Brannen, Jr., Baxley; Ga. ~
ater Baltimore tomato plants,
M, del. Walter Johnson, Baxley,
ore, Bonnie-Best, Stone tomato
60c, 500; $1 M, 5M, $4.25; large,
bbage plants, 75c M, 5M_ or
ce M. certified Porto Ricans,
Ruby King and pimiento pep-
50M. R.-S .Burgess, Pembroke,
to Ricans, Govt insp. and treat-
0 M, 5M up, $1.25 M, FOB. Spe-
Ree on larger iots. Cash with or-
x 47,
J.. Wakefield cabbage, 25c a 100,
collard, 25c; Add postage. Mrs. Ul-
Barrow, Claxton, Ga., Rt .2.
huine imp. Porto Rico and Nancy
Plants, $1.25 M, Govt_insp. and
d. Over 5M, $1.M. Royal King and
nto-pepper plants, $1.50 M. Good
@ plants and prompt shipment.
Smith, Baxley, Ga., Rt. 4, Box
. Porto Rico plants, $1.10 M, FOB
el. O. L. Mobley, Baxley, Ga.
red skin Porto Ricans, $1.10
$1.35. del, Ga. No personal
__Cash or money order with or-
W. Sellers, Baxley, Ga., Rt. 4,
e cuttings, $1.60 M, 5M or more
M, del. $1.25 M, at the bed. D. W.
n, Cordele, Ga., Rt. D, Box 109.
Rico plants, Govt insp., $1.25
a more, $1 M. W. J. Boyett,
a,
ine Porto Rico plants, Gov't
grown from selected seed, $1.50
repaid. May and June del. W. E.
ale City, Ga., Rt. 2.
~ insp. and treated Porto Rico
$1.25 M, FOB, or $1.50 M, del.
ith order. Lonnie
huine Porto Rico plants, Govt in-
ed, $1.75 M, prepaid or $1.50 M,
U; Over 5M, $1.25 M, cabbage and
lants, $1 M. Prompt service
: SM and 10M lots; $1.25 M, in|
ked; onion plants, $1 M. All post-
J. Murray, Patterson, Ga., Rt.
ink skin Porto Rico plants|G
Johnson,
Govt insp., imp. red skin Porto Rico
plants, $1.75 M, postpaid. C. D. Free-
land, Gainesville, Ga., Rt. 2. |
Carpet grass plants, well rooted, fine
for pasture and lawn. No pest. 40c a
100, $2 M. Send money order. No checks
: L. Denison, Screven, Ga., Rt. 1, Box
Gov't insp, pure Porto Rico plants,
$1.25 M, in 5M or more lots; smaller
lots, $1.50 M. All del. Cash with order.
C. H. Parish, Tifton, Ga., Rt. 6:
Treated Porto Rico potato plants, $1.--
50 M. FOB Dublin. Cash with order.
L. E. Harrison, Dublin, Ga. a
Porto Rico potato plants, State insp.
and treated, $1.75 M, 5M or more, $1 -
50 M, del. Cash with order. T. C. Ben-
nett, Flowery Branch, Ga., Rt. 1.
Porto Rico potato plants, $1.25 M.
Ferry Dean, Surrency, Ga,
Hastings Big Brimmer tomato plants
15c doz., 3 doz. 25c, 40e a 100; also little
Bouquet Hot, Ruby King, pepper and
temato plants, 15e doz. 3 doz. 25c. No
stamps accepted. Miss Edna M. Will-
kanks, Commerce, Ga., Rt. 5.
Hastings Extra Early, Redfield
Beauty, Brimmer: and other tomato
plants, 10c doz. 30e a 100; pimiento
pepper, also Hot mixed pepper plants,
0c doz., 20c a 100., $1 M, FOB. Wilson
Carson, Griffin, Ga.
Porto Rico potato plants, $1.40 M,
del. in 3 or more M, lots. J. T. Holland,
Lenox, Ga.
1 bed of purple skin Porto Ricans, 10
|x 32, now ready, $2 M. Will pull 10M
plants, $15 for the bed. Cant ship. Not
treated. E. O. Williams, Lyons, Ga.
Chas., E. Flat Dutch cabbage plants,
5c, 500; $1.25 M, earliest of all toma-
tc plants, pink skin New Stone, 90c,
500; $1.50 M. All del. Open field grown.
Satisfaction guaranteed or money re-
funded. Prompt service. A. R. Holl-
and, Braselton, Ga., Rt. 1.
Hastings extra early, prolific Earlia-
na Stone, Greater Baltimore, Norduke,
Wilt Resistant Brimmer and Redfield
Reauty tomato plants, 30c a 100 plus
postage. S. B. Brewton, Claxton, Ga.,
Rt. 2, Box 46. ;
Pimiento pepper plants, 45c a 100;
Hot pepper plants, 30c a 100. Mrs. Min-
nie Law, Eastman, Ga., Rt. 7.
Florida Special tomato plants, 75c a
M, E. J., Chas. Wakefield, Flat Dutch
and Succession cabbage, 50c a 100. Nice,
healty plants that will live. FOB. Wm.
N. Golden, Moultrie, Ga, P. O. Box
125.. :
- Porto Ricans, $1.75 M. Guaranteed
good plants and full count. J. P. Mullis,
Baxley, Ga.
Genuine Porto Rico plants, $1.25 M,
FOB. Cash with order. H. R. Williams,
Baxley, Ga. , ee
Imp. Porto Rico plants, Govt insp.,
$1.25 M, FOB. J. R. Thomas, Surren-
cy, Ga.
Certified Porto Rico plants, $1.25 M,
FOB. E: V. Kinsey, Lake Park, Ga.,
Rt-35* : Bs
Yellow skin Porto Rico plants, Govt
insp., $1.50 M, del. May del. Send mon-
ey order. Harvey Story, Morven, Ga.
Rt. 4. :
-. Purple skin Porto Ricans, Govt insp.,
$1.75 M, postpaid. I. H. Elliott, Jesup,
Ga.. Rt. 2, Box 1st. =
Imp. Porto Ricans, Govt insp. and
treated, $1.25 M, FOB. Full count and
prompt shipment guaranteed. J. M.
Williams, Baxley, Ga., Rt. 5.
a 100, or exch. for 100 lb. size white feed
sacks. Miss Agnes Walker, Fairburn,
Ga RED Oo
~ Red and Black raspberry plants, $1
doz., Everbearing and Lady Thompson
strawberry plants, 35c a 100; garden
horsemint, 25c doz. Exch for Porto
Rico or Nancy Hall potato slips, or good
large. tomato plants. Big Baltimore or
other large variety. Ea. to pay chgs.
Rt. 4.
Red skin Porto Rico potato plants,
$1.25 M, FOB. S. P. Boatright, Coffee,
a.
&. J. Wakefield cabbage plants, L5G
a 100; garden gooseberry and pie plant
roots, 10 ea. Mrs. Henry. Eller, Elli-
jay, Ga., RFD 3. :
Pure pimiento pepper plants from
Grade No. 1 selected seed, 15c doz., 40c
a 100, $2.50 M, Royal King, Rwby King
and Bell pepper, and Hastings extra
early, Brimmer, Redfield Beauty and
New Stone tomato plants, all 15 doz.,
40c a 100. All postpaid. J. N. Carson,
Griffin, Ga.
Leading variety tomato plants, $1.25
M, Black Beauty Egg plant, and Ruby
King pepper, $2.50 M, or 50c a 100. All
open field grown and del. Alice E. Gib-
son, Folkston, Ga., Rt. 1, Box 46.
Hot pepper and cabbage. plants, 25c
Miss Nellie Kate Turner, Cleveland, Ga. |
50c a 100: Hot mixed pepper, 15c doz. | 66
8 eheeae sommdrre Or
guaranteed, W. H. Boatright, Coffee,
State certified imp. red and pink skin
and Early Triumph potato plants, $1.50
M, FOB. Prompt shipment guaranteed.
E. L .Turner, Alma, Ga...
Red Skin Porto Rico Potato plants,
M, FOB, J. H. Taylor, Coffee,
+8.
_ Porto Rico plants, Gov't insp., genu-
ine purple and yellow skin, $1.50 M, 5M
or more, $1.35 M. Count guaranteed.
Good strong plants. May and June del.
Lovin E. Deal, Patterson, Ga.
Porto Rico plants, State inspected,
20c a 100; $2 M, 5M or more, $1.75 M.
Cash with order. No checks. L. A. Yar-
brough,. Fitzgerald, Ga., RFD 4.
- Porto Rico potato plants from vine
cuttings, $1.50 M, 5M or more, $1.25 M,
FOB. G. W. Turner, Baxley, Ga.
Porto Rico and Nancy Hall potato|G
plants, $1.50 M. Cash with order. Mrs.
W.H. Ahl, Alma, Ga., Rt. 3.
Pure certified Porto Rico plants, $1.-
25 M, del., or $1 FOB. J. M. Chapman,
Chula, Ga.
Pure red skin Porto Rico plants, 1 to
5M, $1 M, over 5M, 90 M, FOB. Guar-
anteed count and good plants. J. M.
Campbell, Surrency, Ga., Rt. 2.
Millions Porto Rico plants, Govt in-
spected, $1.75 M, del., or $1.50 M, FOB.
5M or more, $1.50 M. T. W. Bowles, Al-
ma, Ga. :
All leading. varieties cabbage plants,
now ready for prompt shipment. Moss
packed. 500, 50c; 85c M, del., 500, 40c;
70c M., COD. S. C. Rowe, Fitzgerald,
Ga., Rt. 2,
Greater Baltimore, New Stone, Ear-
liana tomato plants, postpaid, 75c, 500;
$1.25 M, Exp. collect, 5M, $4.50; pepper
and Porto Ricans, $1.50 M, cabbage, 3M
ew up, 60c M. J. S. Burgess, Pembroke
a. -
Porto Ricans and old fashioned Boon
potato plants, State insp. and treated,
$1.75 M, del. ,also tomato plants, 25c a
100, $1.25 M, del. G. E. Waldrip, Flow-
ery. Branch, Ga., Rt, 1. rs
Chas. W. cabbage, 50c, 300; 75c, 600;
$1 M, postpaid; Heading collard and
New Stone tomato, same price; Long
Hot pepper plants, 25c a 100; Egg
plants 40c a 100, or 70c for 200. No
checks. Mrs. F. E. Happoldt, Lewiston,
Ga., Box 3. seeattg
Chas. J. Wakefield and Flat Dutch
cabbage and Ga. Collard plants, 40c,
200; 65c, 500, $1 M, postpaid. Miss Rosa
May, Lewiston, Ga.
Porto Ricans, $1.50 .M, del., 4 or 5M
lets, $1.45 M. Cash with order, $1.15
M, FOB. E. O. Butler, Baxley, Ga.
Imp. Porto Ricans, $1.50 M, 5M_ or
more, $1.25 M, tomato and _ pepper
plants, $1.50 M, or exch for seed peas.
Mrs. C. L. Smith, Baxley, Ga.
Porto Ricans: under 5M, $1.40 M,
above, $1.25 M. Special price on larger
lets. All FOB. Exch for peas, or 40 lbs.
dried apples, clear of core, peeling and
worms. 1M plants for 10 lbs. D. W. Car-
ter, Hazlehurst, Ga.
Govt insp. Porto Ricans,
or more, $1.25 FOB here. Zonnie Car-
ter, Bristol, Ga., Rt. 1. a
Well rooted Napier grass plants. Will
cut from 30 to 60 tons green forage per
acre according to quality of land. $7.50
M, FOB. S. T .Smith, Cuthbert, Ga.,
607 College St.
Porto Rico plants, insp. and treated,
$1.25 M. Exch some for 5 bu. hay peas.
Mrs. Addie Evans, Graham, Ga.
Nancy Hall and Porto Rico potato
plants, Govt insp., $1.65 M, del. in Ga.
J. J. Glossom, Alma, Ga., Rt. 3.
Porto Rico potato plants, inspected,
$1.50 M. Albert Harris, Ty Ty, Ga., RFD
Porto Rico plants, now ready, $1.20
M, FOB, Cash with order. J. D. Whit-
field, Ty Ty, Ga. Rt. 2.
Genuine red skin Porto Rico plants,
from vine cuttings, insp. and treated,
$1.50 M, del. Ga., also collard plants,
20e a 100, $1.50 M, del. J. W. Haman,
Sumner, Ga. ee
Porto Rico plants, Govt insp., $1.50
M, 5M and up, $1.25 M. Special prices
on larger quantities FOB. Cash with
order. L. E. Wever, Baxley, Ga.
Govt insp.. Porto Rico plants, $1.50
M, 5M and over, $1.85 M, FOB. Cash
with order. Mrs. L. F. Dykes, Baxley,
Ga.
Porto Rico: plants, now ready, $1 M,
del in Ga. Cash with order. O. A. Lew-
is, Baxley, Ga. :
Farliana and Norduke, wilt resistant
tomato plants, 15c doz., del. pimiento
pepper plants, 15c doz., 2 doz., 25c. Mrs.
J. T. Patillo, LaGrange, Ga., Rt. 6, Box
Early cabbage plants, 20c a 100; gar-
den huckleberry plants, 15c doz. Now
ready. Add postage. Mrs. Mollie Hen-
derson, Ellijay, Ga., Rt. 3, Box 44.
Pimiento pepper plants, 25c a. 100,
$1.50 M, Hot pepper, 75c a 100; Hast-
ings extra early Brimmer, Redfield
$1.50 M, 5M.
PAGE FIVE
Beauty and New Stone tomato plants, : ae
25c a 100, $1.25 M, FOB. All from very
best, selected seed. Exch for peas, pea-
| nuts, or potato plants. Mrs. Ida Carson,
Griffin, Ga. eae = s
New Stone, Greater Baltimore and
Bonnie Best tomato plants, postpaid:
"5c, 500; $1.25 M, pimiento and Ruby
King pepper, $1.75 M. Exp, Collect, to-
matoes, 5M, $4.50; large new cabbage
plants, 75c M, 5M or more, 60c M, Por-
to Ricans, $1.75 M.
R. S. Burgess, Pembroke, Ga,
Late Flat Dutch and: Chas. Wakefield
cabbage 5 Ga. collard plants, 15c a
a toe . Major Crowe, Cumming,
xa., Rt. 4.
Greater Baltimore tomato plants, 90c
a M, postpaid. E. B. Travis, Riverdale,
a.
Gov't insp. and treated Porto Rico
plants, $1.50 M, del. G, L. Durand,
Gainesville, Ga., Rt. 2. San
Imp: Porto Rico plants, $1.50 M, Exch
for peas or dried apples. Mrs. E. A.
Lambut, Denton, Ga. S
Stone and Baltimore tomato plants,
65c, 500; $1 M, Ruby King papaes plant
90c,. 500; $1.75 M, Moss packed. Post-
paid. W. A. Chanclor, Seville, Ga,
Pure potato plants: Early Triumph,
$1.75 M, pink skin Porto Ricans, $1.50
M, 5M or more, $1.25 M, all postpaid.
Walter J. Dowdy, Pitts, Ga., Rt. 2. .
Pimiento and Royal King pepper, 80c
200; $2.50 M, Bermuda onions, collards, .
and cabbage plants, 45c, 300; $1.20 M,
Porto Rico potato and Greater Balti-
more tomato plants, 40c a 100, $1.25,
500; $2.25 M, prepaid, P. P. or Exp. Col-
lect; cabbage or collard, 85c M, on-
ions, 2M or more, 95c M, pepper, $2.10
M, 2M or more, $1.90; tomatoes, $1.50 ~
ne Rufus Riner, Tifton, Ga.,
Chas. Wakefield and E. J. cabbage
plants, 50c, 200; $1 M, 5M, 75c M, Head-
ing collards, 65c 500; $1 M, Baltimore
tomato, 25c a 100; $1.25 M. Prompt
shipment. W. R. Stephens, Flowery -
Branch, Ga. : .
Gov't insp. Porto Ricans, and old
fashioned Boon potato plants, $1.75
M, 10M or more, $1.50 M. J. C. Cham
bers, Flowery Branch, Ga., Rt. 1. |
State insp., Porto Ricans, now rea-
ay, pee M, del. S. J. Ray, Seville, Ga.
Porto Ricans, 85c, 500; $1.50 M, Ruby
King pepper, same price; Stone and
Baltimore tomato also cabbage and
Bermuda plants, all 70c, 500; $1 M, All
postpaid: Prompt shipment. R. Chanc-
lor, Seville, Ga.
Chas., J. Wakefield, Flat Dutch and
Copenhagen cabbage,
more and New Stone tomato, and Ber-
muda onion plants, 65c, 500; $1 M, 5M
$4 postpaid. Mrs. Gertrude Branan,
Lewiston, Ga. Sa
Purple skin Porto Ricans, insp. and
treated, $1.60 M, del., also E. J. cabbage
plants, 25c a 100, 75c, 500, or $1.25 M,
W. GC. Waldrip, Flowery Branch,
a. , S
Porto Ricans, State inspected and
treated, $1.75 M, 5M, $1.50 M ,del. Ga.
May and June del. Geo..W. Register,
Vienna, Ga. : ;
Genuine Porto Rico plants, Govt in-
spected from: selected seed, $1.25 M, for
5M or more; less, $1.50 M. Cash with
order, J. S. Todd, Baxley, Ga., Rt. 2.
Hot and Sweet pepper plants, 25c a
100 del. Ida Wright, Alto, Ga., Rt. 1..
State insp., Porto Rico plants, $2
M, del., 5M, $1.75 M, collect; 10M _ or
more, $1.50 M, collect. Good plants, full
count and satisfaction guaranteed. D.
W. Davis, Dewyrose, Ga.
Everbearing red raspberry plants, 30c
doz.; Himalaya blackberry, 25c doz.,
Exch for cabbage, tomato and potato
cee Mrs. S. T. Smith, Austell, Ga.,
Imp. red skin, insp. and treated Por-
to Rico and old fashioned Boon potato
plants, $1 per 500, $1.75 M. May and |
dune del. M. M. Martin, Flowery Branch
Ga., Rt. 1, z
Govt insp. and treated Porto Rico
and Boon potato plants, $1.75 M, 10M,
or more, $1.50 M, or 20c a 100. R. E.
Chambers, Flowery Branch, Ga., Rt. 1.
Imp., purple: and yellow. skin Porto
Ricans. Healthy, long rooted plants.
Prompt shipment and full count, $1.50
M, 5M. or over, $1.25 M, FOB. James A..
Olliff, Bristol, Ga.
_ Pure purple skin Porto Rico, State
insp. and treated plants, $1.25 M, 5M .
or more, $1 M, FOB. Prompt shipment.
J C. Tyre, Bristol, Ga. ,
Insp., Porto Ricans, inspected, $1.50
M. J. W. Phelps, Tifton, Ga., Rt. 7.
Porto Rico plants, Govt-insp and
treated, good count and quick del., $1.-
eA = J. M. Tomberlin, Surrency, Ga.,
Porto Rico plants, $1.25 M, $1.50 M,
del. I. E. Clayton, Tifton, Ga.
fs
compt shipment.
Greater Balti-
PAGE SIX... 3.
a
- PLANTS FOR SALE
- Hot pepper plants, 25c a 100; Ever-
bearing strawberry plants, 35c a 100.
xch for tomato plants, begonias or ge-
raniums. Mrs. S. A. Miller, Finleyson,
GAS Te
- Yellow skin Porto Rico, Govt insp.,
$1.50 M, del. Ga., New Stone and
Greater Baltimore tomato plants, $1.25
M, or 25c a 100; Ruby King pepper, $2.-
25 M, 50c. a 100. All now ready. Send
money order. D. Story, Morven, Ga.
Red skin Porto Rico and Baon pota-
to plants, $1.75 M, del., 10M, $1.60 M,
collect. W. O. Waldrip, Flowery Branch
- Ea to pay.
- Tomberlin, Surrency, Ga.
Me
Ga.
Open field grown tomato plants: New
Stone and Greater Baltimore, now rea-
dy, tough plants, also E. J., and Chas.
W. cabbage plants. Water moss pack-
ed. Prompt shipment. All, 30c, 200; 60c
500, $1 M, del. by mail, J. O. Stokes,
Fitzgerald, Ga., Rt. 3.
New Stone and Greater Baltimore
tomato plants, open field grown, free
from root knot; also E. J. and Chas.
W., cabbage plants, strong and tough
from Long Island seed; moss packed,
all, 30c, 200; 60c, 500, $1 M, del. by par-
co pet W. C. McLeod, Fitzgerald, Ga.
Genuine Porto Rico, Govt inspected
plants, $1.50 M, FOB. Full count, strong
plants and prompt del. A. J. Whiddon,
Titton, Ga., Rt. 7.
Imp. pink skin Porto Rico plants, 30c
500; $1.75 M, postpaid, or $1.50 M, Exp.
collect; New Stone Marglobe and Great-
er Baltimore tomato plants, 20c a 100
postpaid; 75c M, collect; Ruby King
pepper plants, 25c a 100 prepaid. H. C.
Sumner, Omega, Ga.
Potato plants from vine grown pota-
toes, certified and treated, Porto Ric-
ans, purple skin, $1.75 M, Triumph, $2
M, del. in Ga. Write for prices on lg.
amts. of Porto Ricans, H. G. Bartlett,
Cordele, Ga., Rt. D, Box 185.
Imp., red skin Porto Ricans, Govt.
insp. and treated, $125 M, FOB, or
exch. for pure bred S. L.,Wyandotte
hens or pullets. 1M plants for 1 hen.
chgs. W. R. Hutto, Surrency,
Ga., Rt. 2. x
Porto Ricans, $1.25 M, FOB, or exch
for chicks from 3 wks. old up. R. E.
Porto Ricans, Govt insp., $1.65 M,
del., $1.40 M, collect. Remit by money
order. S. E. Hollis, Baxley, Ga., Rt.
Greater Baltimore tomato, and Head-
ing variety collard plants, moss pack-
ed, postpaid, 50c, 300; 75c, 500; $1.25
M, also E. J., cabbage plants, $1 M. T.
_D. Rycroft, Cordele, Ga., Rt. 4.
- Purple skin Porto Rico plants, Govt
insp., $1.45 M, FOB or $1.70 M, del. Ex-
change for peanuts or hay peas. R. B.
McDonald, Alma, Ga.. Rt. 3.
State insp. and treated Big Stem Jer-
sey and Porto Rico potato plants, $1.-
-50 M, FOB. Can ship any day. J. C.
Kemp, Lyons, Ga.
Greater Baltimore and New Stone to-
mato plants, moss packed, postpaid:
50c, 300; $1.25 M, Chas. cabbage plants,
$1 M. J. H. Walker, Cordele, Ga., Rt. 4.
Gov. insp., and treated Porto Rico
plants, $1.50 M, del. J. W. Waldrip, Cor-
dele, Ga., Rt. B.
E. J. and Chas. W. cabbage plants,
cpen field grown. Well rooted and moss
packed, 60c, 500; 90c M, del., or 40c,
500; 70c M, COD. Prompt shipment.
H. C. Rowe, Fitzgerald, Ga., Rt. 2.
Genuine, imp. Govt insp. Porto Rico
- plants, $1.50 M, del. R. M. Cox, Moul-
trie, Ga., Rt. 5.
Porto Ricans, good size -plants, full
count, $1.25 M, 5M lots, $1.10 M, FOB.
R. J. Boatright, Coffee, Ga.
Porto Ricans, Govt insp., from vine
cuttings, $1.25 M. R. H. Mangham, Tif-
ton, Ga., Rt. A.
Genuine, imp. red skin Porto Ricans,
Govt insp. and treated, $1.10 M. J. G.
Herrington, Graham, Ga., Rt. 1.
Imp. and pink skin Porto Ricans, in-
~ spected and treated, $1.50 M, New Stone
tomato plants, $1 M, cabbage, 75c M,
5M or more, 50c M, Long Pod Hot pep-
per plants, $140 M. J. R. Boatright,
~ Coffee, Ga. :
Greater Baltimore tomato plants, 10
in. or longer, $1.25 M, del. Porto Ric-
ans, $1.75 M, del. H. L. Williams, Bax-
ley, Ga. ;
Imp. Porto Ricans, $1.25 M. E. W.
Sellers, Alma, Ga, Rt. 3. 2
Genuine, imp. red skin Porto Ricans,
Govt insp., and treated, $1.25 M. D. J.
Herrington, Graham, Ga. |
Porto Ricans, State insp. and treated
$1.25 M, for prompt service, send cash
with order. P. T. Herndon, Surrency,
Ga.
Hastings All Head cabbage plants,
now ready, 20c a 100 del. Have-3. or
4 hundred. Mrs. J. S. Crowe, Cumming
Ga., Rt. 4. s
-Imp., red skin Porto Ricans, Govt
__ MAREE
time through May and June. J. H. Lee,
Surrency, Ga., Rt.-2. Pag /
Porto Ricans, Govt insp., from vine
cuttings, $1.25 M, FOB. Cash with or-
der. H. M. Beckworth, Baxley, Ga..
Imp. Porto Ricans, Govt insp., $1 M,
5M, up,.75c M, FOB... S. F. Hilton, Bax-
ley, Ga. ee
Pure Porto Ricans, Govt insp., $1.60
Ty Ty, Ga., Rt.
M, del. N. W. Davies,
OX, 822.0 tse a
Imp. Porto Ricans, $1.50 M, 5M or
more, $1.25 M. Now ready. T, P. Mus-
selwhite, Arabi, Ga. Rt. 1. 0
Bird Eye pepper plants (for making
Now ready. Mrs. S. M. Swearingen, Vi-
enna, Ga., Rt. 2. Box 93. -
Porto Ricans, State insp. and treat-
ed, $1.75 M, del., 5M, $1.65 M. del., or
$1.50 FOB. Erskin Waldrip, Gaines-
ville, Ga., Rt. 2.
Genuine, good Porto Ricans, now
ready, $1.75 M, 5M or more, $1.50 M,
New Stone and Greater Baltimore to-
matoes, 65c M, 5M or more, 50c M. L.
R. Boatright, Coffee, Ga.
Genuine Porto Rico plants, grown
according to instructions of the State
Entomologist. Prompt shipment. $1.15
M, FOB. Ernest Greene, Thomasville,
Ga., Rt. 5.
Millions Porto Rico plants, grown
from vine cuttings on fresh land ea.
year, absolutely pure and free from di-
sease, $1.25 M, $1 M, for 2 Mor more,
oe Eldon L. Joiner, Thomasville,
a. :
Pure, certified, imp. Porto Rico plants
$1.25 M, 5M $6. E. Y. Stokes ,Macon,
Ga., RFD 3.
Early Detroit tomato plants, 25c a
100; dill plants, 50c a 100; Guinea
squash plants, 30c a 100; Postpaid. Cash
with order No stamps. Mrs. T. B. Thom
as, Thomasboro, Ga.
Certified sweet potato plants, Nancy
Hall and Porto Rico, $1.25 M, FOB.
John W. Berryhill, Lakeland, Ga.
Porto Rico potato slips, $1.65 M, 5M
$7.50; Boons $1.65 M. Guy Crow,
Gainesville, Ga.. ;
Several M pimiento and Royal King
pepper, $2.50 M, or 50c a 100; tomato
plants, $1.35 M, 35c a 100. All open
field grown and well rooted. Bert G.
Harden, Folkston, Ga.
Tomato plants, 35c a 100, $1.35 M, 5M
$1 M., cabbage, 20c a 100, $1.35 M, pi-
miento and Royal King pepper, 50c a
100, $2.50 M. Well rooted plants, Sat-
isfaction guaranteed. Lewis E. Gibson,
Folkston, Ga.
Imp. Porto Ricans, insp, and treated,
$1 FOB, or $1.40 M, del. C. F. Orr,
Fiowery Branch, Ga., Rt. 1..
Porto Ricans, insp. and treated, $1
M, Sweet pepper and tomato plants, 15c
a 100, $1 M, All FOB. Exch for field
peas or hogs. W. J. OQuinn, Jr., Odum,
Ga, Rt. 2.
~ Porto Rico potato plants, $1.65 M,
5M, $7.50; Boons $1.65 M. Bill Crow,
Gainesville, Ga.
A few more tomato. plants, 25c a 100;
some early ones and some crop toma-
oe, Mrs. Frank Jones, Sale City, Ga.
Chas. Wakefield and E. Flat Dutch
cabbage plants, 45c, 200; 75c, 600, $1.10
M, postpaid; pimiento pepper plants,
40c a 100 del. Mrs. F. E. Happoldt,
Lewiston, Ga. A
Red skin and old fashioned Boon po-
tato, insp. and treated, $1.75 M, toma-
toes, $1.25 M, and Broad Leaf tobacco,
25c a 100, $2 M, cabbage plants, $1.25
M. Del. G. E. Waldrip, Flowery
Branch, Ga., Rt. 1. a8
New Stone Wilt Resistant tomato,
and collard plants, 40c a 100 del. Few
fine Hot long pod pepper plants, 20c
doz. Prompt del. and moss packed.
Mrs. S. G. Rogers, Hagan, Ga. ;
Nice, fresh E. J. and Chas. W. cab-
bage plants, ready for prompt ship-
ment, 50c, 500; 85c M; New Stone and
Greater Baltimore tomato plants, 60c,
500, $1 M. All del and moss packed: S.
C, Rowe, Fitzgerald, Ga., Rt. 2..
Chas., J. W. and Flat Dutch Georgia
Heading collards; New Stone
500: $1 M, postpaid. Miss Rosa May.
Lewiston, Ga. ;
Pimiento pepper plants; 10 doz., long
hot cayenne, 5c doz., large variety
strawberry, 50c a 100, postpaid. Mrs. N.
R. Wilson, Canoh, Ga., Rt. 2. -
Jerusalem or Xmas cherry plants, 2
large ones, or 3 small, 25c postpaid; 6
parsley plants added to ea., pkg. for
ne. Mrs. B. F. Duncan, Summerville,
Ga. or
Imp. pink skin Porto Rico potato
plants, $1.25 M, Govt insp. and treat-
ed. D. P. Hutto, Surrency, Ga...
pink skin potato plants, $1.50 M, or
$1.35 in 5M or larger lots. C. C. Deal,
|insp. and dipped, $1.50 M, to 8M, all Patterson, Ga.
over 8M, $1.40 M.~ Can furnish any |
pepper sauce) 25c doz., and postage. |1
100, or: 12e. fors 25,
and |
Greater Baltimore tomato plants, 65c,
Gov't inspected Porto Rico red or
asa
plants, Govt insp. and treated, $1.25
M. L. T. Burke, Surrency, Ga. es
- Wakefield and E. Dutch cabbage,
Short Stem collard and Stone tomato
plants, 20 a 100, $1 M, del Hot pepper
plants, 30c: a 100, $1.50 M, postpaid. A.
C. Garrett, Oakwood, Ga.,. Rt,.1..
_E. J. and Wakefield cabbage plants,
$1 M, $4for 5M, Baltimore tomato
plants, $1 M.. W. R. Stephens, Flow-
ery Branch, Ga. f ;
Govt- insp: Porto -Rico potato plants
$1.75 M,-5M_ or more, $1.50 M, also old
fashioned Boons at same price. Clar-
ence Waldrip, Flowery Branch, Ga., Rt.
Nice sage plants, good roots, 18c doz.
Norduke wilt resistant tomato plants,
15c for 50, 30c a 100; 1 doz. pimiento
sweet and 1 doz. strong pepper plants,
18c. Exch for seedling pecans at 12c
lb. or peanuts at 8c. L. J. Vollrath,
Winston, Ga. f
Porte Ricans, Govt insp. and treated,
$1.60 M, del. C. J. Tomlinson, Ty Ty,
Ga., Rt. 1.
Genuine Porto Rico plants, $1 M, del.
in lots of 5M or more. Full count and
prompt del. B. M. Overstreet, Surren-
cy, Ga.; Rt. 2.
Imp. Porto Rico plants, $1.25 M, FOB
$1.50 M, del. Ga. L. O. Morris, Surren-
cy, Ga.
-Pure Porto Ricans, insp., $1.25 M, 5M
$1.10 M; Greater Baltimore tomato
plants, 90c M, 5M up, 70c M, FOB. Exp
parcel post, add postage. J. D. Shiver,
Omega, Ga. : : ;
Beauty, New Stone, earliest of all and
some large yellow tomato plants, 15c a
160, also Kudzu vines, 6 for 25c.
Seow Mrs.. J. S: Greene, Curryville,
TOs
Long pod Hot pepper plants, 30 a
Miss Jessie Cash,
Flowery Branch, Ga., Rt. 3. pe
- Himalaya blackberry plants, 25c doz.
Gordon gooseberry, 15c ea. Carl James,.
Talking Rock, Ga.,'Rt. 2. -
Matchless tomato plants, 40c a 100
del. Ready. Mrs. Mattie Sue OKelley,
Comer; Ga., Rt... I.
Govt insp., genuine, imp. Porto Rico
and yellow skin plants, $1.50 M, 5M or
more, $1.25 M. Count and quallity guar-
anteed. Lovin E. Deal, Patterson, Ga.
Govt insp., Porto Rico potato plants,
$1.25 M, FOB. W. S. A. Beckworth,
Baxley, Ga. : \
Porto Rico plants, $1.35 M, FOB. O.
B. Bleiler, Ty Ty, Ga. a
Govt insp. Porto Ricans, $1.50 M,
cver 5M, $1.35 M, FOB. Cash with or-
Ger. Mrs. L. F. Dykes, Baxley, Ga. .
Lady Thompson and Klondike straw-~
berry, $3 M, Mastodon blackberry and
Geep red raspberry, ea., 50c doz., Jeru-
salem artichokes, 10c per doz., Kudzu
roots, $10 M. Exch. for field seed. Mrs.
F. Spence, Chamblee, Ga., Rt. 3, Res.
Roswell Rd.
Long pod Hot pepper plants, 10c doz.
Matchless and Earliana tomato, 15c for
2 doz., or 25c for 5 doz., Flat. Dutch
and All Season cabbage, 20c a 100. Add
postage on orders less than 30c. Mrs.
Ralph Williams, Cummings, Ga., Rt. 6.
New Stone tomato and Hot pepper
Matthews, Plainville, Ga.
Flat Dutch and All Season cabbage
plants, 20c a 100; long Hot pepper, 10c
Ldoz., Matchless and Earliana tomate,
15c for 2 doz. or 25c for 5 doz. Add
pestage on orders less than 30c. Mrs.
ee Edmondson, Cumming, Ga., Rt
_Ruby King pepper, $1 per M, G. Bal-
timore and Livingston Globe tomato,
75c M. Moss packed. Clarence Sutton,
Adel, Ga.
PLANTS WANTED.
Want 1 M., genuine Bunch variety,
Resemble the Norton Yam (do not
know name), but are Bunch. Exch.
genuine Gov. insp., red. or pink skin
Porto Rico plants, or pay cash if rea-
sonable. C. C. Deal, Patterson, Ga.
Want to exch. dill plants for sage,
thyme or onion plants. Mrs. E. S. Ham-
mock, Collins, Ga., Rt. 3.
Want 100 to 1M vineless pea yam.
W. L. Jones, Cedartown, Ga., Rt. 5.
;
~ Live Stock For Sale
CATTLE FOR SALE
~ Tyr. old, 1M Ib. reg. Jersey bull, Ber-
muda Evernent E. No. 198947, $100 or
exch for 3 reg. heifer and 1 male calf,
1 to 3 mos .old , or 1 reg. heifer and
male, 11-2 to 2 yrs. old. Exceptionally
fine individual. Furnish photos on. re-
quest. Miss Mamie Youmans, Baxley,
Ga., Star Rt.
Dairy cows: part reg., Jerseys and
E ee i
part good Grade cows, also 5 fine Here-
Imp. pink skin Porto Rico. potato}
Good |
plants, ea., 10c doz., 50c a 100. Minnie |:
yellow skin and meat potato plants. |
oe Thursday, May 23, 1929.
fords. A. E. Treadwell, Culloden, Ga. -
| 1 mo. old Jersey bull calf for sale.
P, B. Stephens, Austell, Ga., Rt. 1. ~~
1 reg. 15 mos. old bull, Oxfords Dol-
lies King Ben, No. 281778. Ready for
service, Blue tongue, black switch and
dark cream color. Crated for shipping,
$175; also Some Grade heifers, bred by
bull mentioned above and dams giving
5 1-2 to 6 gals per day for sale L. J.
Ellis, Cumming, Ga., Rt. 5. eee Sa
1 lot: Holstein and Jersey, 1-2 ea., and
1 lot of Guernsey and Jersey, 1-2 each;
bulls and heifers. Write for cheap
prices. C. E. Watt, Camilla, Ga.
1 reg..7 mos, old Jersey male, $50.00
FOB. H. V. Bates, Tunnel Hill, Ga.,
Rt. 2. a
10 or 12 nice, Jersey heifers, spring-
ers. Prices. on request. J. W. Glass, La-
Grange, Ga. Rt. 6. - es
1 reg. Jersey heifer, bred to a Ral- |
eigh-Oxford bull, $100; reg. Jersey bull
calf, extra good breeding, 8 wks. old,
$35. John A Goforth, Gainesville, Ga.
1 reg. Jersey bull calf, $15 FOB. F.
R. Edwards, Experiment, Ga., Care Ga.
Experiment Station. z oe:
14 mos. old full blood Jersey bull
(grandsire won grand champion of this .
state) $35 at my barn,not reg. H. W.
Law, Eastman, Ga. 3
60 Grade Jersey heifers, good colors,
from 250 to 500 Ibs., 60 steers, from 300
to 600 Ibs., 20 average cows. If inter-
ested, will make an attractive price. H. |
Cc. Kimbrough, Chipley, Ga. Ais
2 yr. old Jersey bull, entitled to reg.
for sale, also want cows to pasture. R.
&. Wright, Lizella, Ga., Rt. 1.
Fine Jersey cow, freshen within 10
days with 3rd calf; with proper care
should yield 4 gals. or more, rich milk
per day. Must be sold. C. H. Shan-
non, Austell, Ga. :
8 wks. old heifer calf, Guernsey and ~
Holstein, 1-2 ea., $25 or exch for 25
hens, any breed except Bantams. W. T.
Adams, Lavonia, Ga., Box 381. a
1 red Jersey bull, 1 1-2 yrs. old, de-
horned, entitled to reg. gentle, and
easy to manage, $40; also 1 Jersey bull
1 yr. old,. large for age, bred from good
stock, $25. Exch for pr. reg. Berkshire -
pigs. Mrs. Lowe Smith, Maxeys, Ga.
1 pure bred Jersey bull calf, 2 wks.
old, from good producing dam, entit-
led to reg. Write for particulars. A. L.
Thompson, Cochran, Ga.
Holstein and Jersey ( 1-2 each) 3 ~
yr. old cow, with 2nd calf. Will fresh
the last of this mo., gave 3 gals. per
day with first calf, $75 before calf in
cr $85 after. Good cond., but cannot
ship. At barn prices. Mrs. I. H. Boles,
Duluth, Ga., Rt. 1. : ee
Guernsey and Jersey mixed, heifer
calf, 7 or 8 mos. old, $35 FOB my ship-
ping point. LL. M. Kennedy, Collins,
a.
Fine, young grade Jersey cow and
calf, 5 wks. old, $75 or $55 without calf
act here. R. P. Steinheimer, Brooks,
a. ff
1 reg. Jersey 12 mos. old bull, $50 or
exch for reg. heifer about same age. B.
C. Pope, Buchanan, Ga., Rt. 3. f
ce
fase
HOGS FOR SALE
..1 thoroughbred Duroc Jersey 8 mos.
old male, good size, $20; 1 thoroughbred
PC, 6 mos .old male, $20. Exch. for
goats, sheep or cattle of equal value.
T. A. Bowen, Blakely, Ga., Rt. 1. Se
Full stock Big Bone Guinea pigs, sol-
id black in color, $6 ea., FOB my sta-
tion. L. B. Toler, Glenwood, Ga., Rt.
& BOX 93,7. 4 = 2
1 large reg. B P C brood sow and 8 ~
pigs, 7 wks old, $60 if taken at once;
1 black brood sow, farrow 1st of June,
$30. Dr. G. H. Dunlap, Madison, Ga.
S PC 6 wks. old pigs, subject to reg.
$12 ea. L. J. Ellis, Cummings, Ga., Rt.
50 to 80 Ib. pigs, $6 to $10 at farm.
E. H. George, Madison, Ga. ee ee
Duroc sows bred to reg. Hampshire,
$20 ea., also bred and open gilts, $10
a., FOB. E. E, Hardie, Ivey, Ga.
4 reg. 3 mos. old Duroc boars, and
Club Boys and Girls Duroc Jerseys,
reg. gilts and_ boars. Write for prices.
D.W. Hinson, Hazlehurst, Ga. oe
1 pr. pure bred P C pigs, about 2
mos. old, $10 per pr., subject to reg., in -
khuyers name: H. C. Roberts, Chipley,
Ga., Rt. 2. ee
_ Reg. Big Type P C, 2 yr. old male,2 _
yr. old sows, and 10 wks. old sow pigs.
Sell reasonably ,or exch for pure bred
Tancred W L pullets or 1 yr. old hens,
from good, heavy producing stock. J.
i, Parrish, -Graymont, Ga. =
6 Berkshire pigs, 6 wks. old, $4 ea., ~
at barn. Will not ship. C..J. Atkinson,
Madison, Ga., Rt. 2. ;
-1 mixed breed 100 Ib.-shoat, $15, Joe
|M. Chafin, Atlanta, Ga., Riverside, Rt.
7, Box 407. ae
lbs. 8., . a "Puarouebbieds and
-right. Will trade for young tur-
t 50c ea., at 1 day old, or $1 ea.,
o. old. K. S, West, Cuthbert,
Suroc ene sow pigs, (no boars) wt.
ea. FOB my shipping point. L. M.
cennedy, Collins, Ga.
Reg. P. C. boars, $20 ea. FOB. 30
ead. T. J. Luke, Fitzgerald, iG ee
uroc: Jersey boars, 125 lbs., $18 ea.,
ks. old Duroc Jersey pigs, $8 ea.,
15 pr.. 1 male and 1 female 50 Ib,
hoats, $20 for pr. All reg. in puyer's|
. Cash, or exch for anything can
ise: Cow peas, soy beans, syrup in
bls., or cans, poultry, etc. or large
lue huckleberries. be "Edenfield,
tillmore, Ga., Rt. 3.
Well bred 5 mos. old shoats, 3 for $25.
Ww. L. Maples, Cohutta, Ga, Rt. 1. |
About 300 hogs, various sizes, good
oss breeds and some thoroughbrbeds.
Sell or exch for cattle, sheep, or goats.
dvise what you have. E. L. Carpenter,
pigs. Sell or exch for field peas:
rabs, Irons or New Eras. AP. Sand-
rs, Tignall, Ga., Rt. 1
10 Feeder pigs, 630: 40 Ib. gilt, $4;
Ib. gilt, bred to Blue Guinea boar,
20; 1 Blue Guinea boar, $15. If entire
-is taken, will cut price. Mrs. Cc. O.
_ Sikes, Sylvester, Ga.
pure bred S P C 8 wks. old pigs;
males and 1 female, $6 ea., or for:
ot. All true to color and type. R . Co.
axter, Graymont, Ga.
1 Sorrell mare, extra fine riding horse
or lady or children, also trained for
attle herding, very gentle, $100. R. A.
rk anywhere, $40 at my farm, or exch
or calves, corn, or anything can use.
a Ss Giles, Stockbridge, Ga., RFD 2.
Jack, 16 hands high Chis colts are
ine) for sale, or trade for a good mule
r mare. J. H Trice, Barnesville, Ga.
yr. old black. farm horse, wt. IM
bs., $70 or exch for brood sow, cow,
oie O. W. Wilmot, Ashland, Ga.
Taleck saddle 5 yr. old pony, ae or
ech for cows or corn. F. L. Wynn,
Temple, Ga.
a doe
oa & fine breeder); All papers f nighed.
t 50 Ibs., reg. in buyers name, $12.-]
HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE |
Snyder, Savannah, Ga., 1327 E. Rene |:
1 good farm mule, wt. about 800 Tbs.,
%
kid, also a pure pre, eg. |
Write for Prices. E. C sBlark,: Com-
merce, Ga. .
BO fat mutton sheep, $5. ea. Cash
with order. R. 8. Anderson, Hawkins-
ville, Ga. 2.5
'Toggenberg: nannie goat, fresh in one H:
mo., $15. Roy Jordon, Rochelle, Ga.
65: Graded ewes and lambs. at reason-
able prices. J. W. Glass, LaGrange,
Gay Rt. 6:-2.
4 "good, gentle, well broke Butt-head-
cs BR 2 $4. FredG. Fouts, nGEAON,
sa
Live Stock Wanted _
CATTLE WANTED >
Want to exch 30 Tom Barron yr. old
W L hens out of 306-339 egg stock, for
a yearling heifer calf of good stock, or
will consider trading for a cow, fresa
in, or soon to freshen, and pay the dif-
ference. A G. Bledsoe, Savannah, Ga.,
P O. Box 1215.
Want young Hereford or Black An-
gus bull, ready for service. Give full)
particulars in answering. J. C. McGee,
oe Ga., Care Mansfield Dray: Line
Want 1 or 2 reg. heifer calves. Buy
or exch reg. Jersey bull 12 mos. old.
B. C. Pope, Buchanan, Ga., Rt. 3.
Want to exch 1 Duroc shoat from reg.
stock, wt. between 40 and 50 Ibs. for
can of good lard. Mrs. J. J. Blount,
Hawkinsville, Ga. \
HOGS WANTED |
Want 1 Black or Blue = Bone
Guinea male. No scrub. E. D . Powell,
Fitzgerald, Ga., Box 444.
Want 50 to 100 young shoats, wt. :
from 20 to 50 Ibs. Quote best price FOB
Macon. Dr. Wm..G. Lee, ee as Ga.,
655 3rd St.
- RABBITS WANTED
- Want bargain price on Standard wt.
Flemish Giant does. State age, etc. L.
a Fant, Augusta, Ga., 1016 DAntigrac
Want: Chinchilla rabbits. Must be
Rene a J. R. Bowen, Blackshear,
a
~~ SHEEP AND GOATS WANTED
Want 500 head stock goats, Pay Tic a
head del. my farm. W. J. Morgan, Still-
more, Ga., Rt. 3.
Want 2 pure bred Angora billys, Make
best price. L. Aspinwall, Screven, Ga.
RABBITS FOR SALE
9 does and 2 bucks, 6 N. Z. Red does,
LN.-Z. buck; 2 pink-eyed white does,
_ grey buck and 1 grey doe, 8 12 mos.
Id. Sell cheap for cash, or exch for
ckens, or anything can use. J. J.
E hridge, Auburn, Ga. ~
Chinchillas from ped. stock: Soe
with 7 young, 6 wks. old, $10; 1 trio, 5
to 7 mos, old, $10; does, "4 mos. old, $2
sa., bucks, 4 mos. old, $1.75 ea. Wooten
fanning, Washington, Ga.
-Chinchillas: pedigreed does, $10 ea,
jucks, $3 up; Reg. does, $12.50; does
ith 5 young, $20; Youngsters, aed
y recent Winner at Atlanta Fair, 4
or $15. Miss Martha Simonton, Green-
ille, Ga.
1 pr. reg. N. Z
ubject to be Lee, $6 ea., or $10 for
he pr. Exch for 1 trio, 10 mos. White
mish Giants, that are guaranteed
ree of disease. "Harold Smith, Baxley,
a... Rt. 4, Box 9.
3 grown Chinchillas: 2 bucks and 1
red doe (she found 8 in first litter).
edigrees furnished. $18 for. all.
ohn S. Clark, Jacksonville, Ga.
3 pure bred Chinchalla bucks for sale
exch for 2 young bucks and 1 doe
f pure Chinchilla stock. H. L. Marvil,
rdele, Ga., Box 89.
Finest quality Chinchillas at lowest
ces. Write for information and
rices. O. L. Calhoun, Atlanta, Ga., 286
asAve., SE, Phone De-4371-W, or
juntley. ""479- J.
5 New Zealand Reds, 2 mos old, from
edigreed stock, $2.50 ea., New Zea-
id White does, bred, $10 ea., White
oe with 5 young, $15; 5 young Chin-
hillas, 2 mos. old, $2.50 ea., 1 doe, 1-2
ant and 1-2 Red, $5. Cash with or-
. Joe M. Chafin, Atlanta, Ga., Rt. 7,
ox 407 Riverside.
Pedigreed Chinchillas: bucks, anes
| qualifications, 5 mos. old, ea.,
ces, $3.50 ea., trios, $7.50; 2 fine "aoe
2 mos. old. with litters of 6 young, ea,
A fe oa ns L. C. Rhodes, Grays-
eC; ra.
SHEEP AND GOATS FOR SALE
00 fine stock goats, $1 ea., FOB.
has. A. Abt, Mount Vernon, OP en
2 fine reg. Toggenberg does, ea.
. Reds; 16 mos .old doe, |
Seed For Sale
-10 lbs. pure hand selected Stone Mtn
melon seed, 75c Ib. or exch. for Whi
peas ,or heavy breed hens. Mrs. W.
Chasteen, Locust Grove, Ga. ~
40 lbs. pure Thurmond Grey. seed,
| from 40 lb. melons. 60c lb.. FOB. Add
postage. Mrs. J. A. Akins, Tifton, Ga.,
hes:
60 lbs. selected Stone Mtn. melon seed
80c lb. H. H. Riley, Butler, Ga.
Collard seed. Make best offer for any
amount you may want. L. A. Ragan,
Cairo, Ga.
Choice Watson melon seed, 75c Ib.,
FOB. W. B. Clifton, Oliver, Ga.
Few more Sugar Crowder peas. for
seed, while they last, 25c lb., FOB. E.
L. Johnson, Flowery Branch, Ga.
New crop Ga. collard seed, in lots of
100 Ibs or over, 15c Ib., in less lots, 25c
Ip. < J.T Ponder, Whigham, Ga.
Fresh cabbage collard seed, 55c Ib.,
COD. A. F. Megahee, Coolidge, Ga,
Genuine Wilkins melon seed, 75c lb.,
"| postpaid. E. B. Travis, Riverdale, Ga.
Rocky Ford and Honey Dew canta-
loupe seed, 60c Ib. Jno. M. Stevens, |
Bairdstown, Ga.
Absolutely pure, clean hand-saved
Stone Mtn. melon seed, 80c lb., 5 Ibs.
or more, 75c Ib., recleaned Orange cane
seed, 50c gal., cabbage heading collard, |
60c Ib., Prolific June Eng. peas, 25c Ib.
postpaid. GF: Maddox, Flowery
Branch, Ga.
Especially selected Watson melon
seed 1-2 Ib., 30c or 50 Ib. Add Portage.
Rufus Riner, Tifton, Ga., Rt.
White Bermuda onions, "50c oa 90c
peck, white nest onions, new crop, same
price; hot cayenne pepper plants, 15c
doz., or 2 for 25c. No personal checks.
Cash or stamps. Mrs. Myrtle Collins,
Mcintyre, Ga., Rt. 2.
All varieties select melon seed, 50c
lb. E. E. Hardie, Ivey, Ga.
100 lbs. pure Jones mee seed, $50
for lot, or 75c per single lb. H o Sand-
ifer, Locust Grove, Ga., Rt.
300 or 400 Ibs. collard sa first yr..
from Hastings. Make best. offer. 3. Ri-
dlehouser, Donalsonville, Ga. :
Martin gourd seed, 10c cupful; dill.
puck seed; 100. en
pickling purposes, 25 for 15.
|W.
and dill mr for
B. Thomas, Thomasboro, Ga.
_ Imp. Kleckley watermelon seed, ge
for 1-4 Jb., long green. okra seed, -35c
Ib., Rocky Ford cantaloupe seed, ape
for. tbls. Add postage, _ Mrs. F,
appoldt, Lewiston, Ga. |
Dill. seed for planting or pickling, 10
thls.,2 for 15c postpaid. Mrs. R. H.
Mitchell, Carrollton, Ga., 8 Sims St. .
33 Ibs. Stone Mtn. melon seed, 40
Jb., guaranteed all first grade, 5 1b. lot.
50 lb. First check gets them. Pp. Cc.
Watson, Mauk, Ga. pe
8 Ibs. Thurmond. Grey melon seed, |
50c Ib., 2 Ibs. Watson, 50c; 5 Ibs. Stone |
Mtn., 75c, COD parcel post. Ross An-
derson, Haddock, Ga,
. About 30. Ibs. selected, hand saved.
white seeded Excel melon seed (a fine
shipper, also fine home melon, grows
very large) 75c lb., or exch for pure
bred chickens, turkeys, or ducks, any
breed. E. C. Stark, Commerce, Ga.
Seven Top turnip seed, 40c lb. Eng.
pea seed to be planted in November,
35c lb. Mrs. J. T. Manry, Goggans, Ga.
400 lbs. collard seed, about 100 lbs. of
lot, cabbage oe first yr. from Hast-
ings, for sale. . Ridlehoover, Donal-
sonville, Ga.
70 lbs: pure Stone Mtn., Pride of Ga.
melon. seed, sound and clean, $1 1b., 10
Abs. or more, 75c Ib., or the first "$35
gets the lot. H. F. Price, Locust Grove,
Ga.
Cane seed for planting, 10c lb. Mrs.
J. S. Greene, Curryville, Ga.
6 bu. Thompson cane (fine for syrup
or hay) seed, $1.65 bu., or $9.50 for the
lot, FOB. Gash with order. Personal
checks not accepted. L. D. Carson, Jr.,
Farmington, Ga., Rt. 2.
300 lbs. pure Ga. collard seed, cab-
bage heading variety, pure stock, 29
grown, 20c lb., FOB. Cash with order.
W.-U.. J. Draughn, Whigham, Ga. -
Sugar sweet pumpkin seed, 50 for 10
also Jumbo pumpkin seed (said to grow
to wt. over 200 Ibs) 25 seed 12c. All post-
paid. L. J. Vollrath, Winston, Ga.
each, 4 Ib.lots, 40c Ib., also cabbage. seed
$1.25 lb. W. R. Stephens, Flowery
Branch, Ga.
SEED WANTED
Want a few .bu. good, sound Brab
peas, not over $3 bu., also want some
ci the old fashioned Goose Neck va-
riety cane seed, or Hastings syrup cane
seed. Price must be reasonable..L. T.
| Newsome Dover, Ga.
Want to exch 1 cup of Rocky Ford
cantailoupe seed for 1-2 cup of cucum-
ber seed. Mrs. Walter L. Carter, Bax-
ley, Ga., Star Rt.
Want "2 or 3 bu. Sorghum cane seed
for hay purposes. Make best price, sta-'
ting the variety. C. G. Oliver, Barnes-
| ville, Ga., Rt. 2.
Want good field pea seed. Exch. Por-
to Rico potato plants for same. R. D.
Raulerson, Rockingham, Ga.
Want tender cornfield bean seed: Pay
cash or exch fruit for same. R. J. Os-
born, Roy, Ga.
Want 1-2 bu. good, sound Chufa seed.
Quote cash price. J. H. Newnan, Pem-
broke, Ga., RFD 1, Box 81.
FOR SALE
Good, bright honey, 111-2c lbs put
up in lard cans. J. T. Holland, Lenox,
Ga.
Large crop of gum and _= gallberry
honey, finest quality and = excellent
flavor, being left on hive until thor-
oughly capped and ripened. 70c per gal.,
FOB. Can ship in 35 and 50 gal, bbls.
R. T. Irish Savannah, Ga., 1307 Seiler
Ave.
151-2 Ibs., beeswax, 37c lb., postpaid.
Mrs. R. H. Greer, Hampton, Ga., Rt. 2.
Bright, pure, strained 1929 honey, 13
Ib., $1.35 gal., also Comb, 12 1-2c Ib.,
$1.30 gal., FOB. J. A. Peel, Milan, Ga.
New crop fresh, bright honey in
glass front shipping cases, 32 lb., per
cs., $5 FOB. . Check or money order
with order. Prompt /shipment. W. W.
Futch, Lanier, Ga. .
New, No. 1 comb honey in 24 pecsiees
Display cs., $4.00 per cs., FOB. J.
White, Groveland, Ga., RFD 1.
Choice, new Ty Ty or Galberry
honey: chunk or strained, in new 5 lb.
pails, $1.00 ea., del., in 3rd. zone. Carl
Southwell, Pineora, Ga.
Bright ehunk honey, 10c lb., in 60 Ib.,
a FOB. W. W. DeLoach, Brooklet,
Bis
Pure Ext., honey 12-5 lb., pails to cs.,.
Tupelo Blend Ext., $7. 00; 6-10 Ib.,
Tupelo Blend Ext., $6. 50; 1- 10 Ib., post-
paid and insured, $1.60; 2-10 lb., post-
paid and insured, $3.10; 6-10 ib., Comb
and Ext., 97.50; several bbls., of about
50: gal., $45. All FOB here, except, par-
Seed beans, white. Creaseback; pole,
HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES |.
cel poe in DAIS as ue. Ino,
T.|.Crumney, Doctortown, Ga.
Bright, new Gallberry honey, Ext.
12c: chunk, 18c 1b.,. FOB; seokione:
$4. 80 per cs. of 24 sections, FOB. ie F.
Thomas, Odum, Ga.
-New Ext., honey. in bbls.,. No. 1 erase,
$7.00 cs., FOB; single pail del., by mail,
$1.50; Fancy Gallberry, in 10 Ib. pails,
6 to cs., $8.50 cs., FOB; 5 Ib, pails, 12
te -cs., $9. 00 FOB. Can furnish with
comb, or al! Ext., a single 10 1b., pail
fancy, del., by. mail, $2.00; single 5 Ib.,
{ $1.10: John W. Berryhill, Lakeland, Ga.
Chunk and strained honey, in 2 1-2
jars. Write for prices, H. L. Whidden,
Stockton, Ga.
Pure new crop iey, bright and
clear, labeled, in 5 lb., pails. 1 prepaid,
$1.00; cs., of 6 collect, $4.25. J. qT.
Mullis, Alma, Ga.
New crop honey, chunk in bulk, 15
| lbs. to can, 15c Ib., del. in No. 10 buck-
ets, $1.85 del., parcel post; Ib. sections,
24 to CS.,
$5 del. Exch. for cow peas, soy beans,
etc., and anything can use thats agreed
ey L. H. Edenfield, Stillmore, B.,
R
New crop white honey in:comb, pack-
ed in,lard cans, 50 to 65 Ilbs., Be Ib.
pone check. L. B. Scoggins, Omega,
a
Nice, bright, new chunk honey; 5 Ib.
pail, 15e; 10 lb., $1.50. Cash with or-
der. Add postage. Send money order.
L G. H. Scott, Ludowici, Ga., Rt. B.
70 Ib. can good new chunk honey,
$7.70 FOB. W. J. Joiner, Garfield, Ga.
Rt. 2; Box 62.
Bright comb honey, 10 lb. buckets,
$1.75; Ext., $1.75; White Bay honey, in-
comb or Ext., 10 Ib. buckets, $2. All
del. Cash. R. W. Browning, Dublin, Ga.
RFD 3.
. Nice, bright, new Chunk honey, 7 Ib.
pail, $1.05; 6-7 lb. pails, $6; 4 Ibs. 65c;
6-4 Ib. pails, $3.50. All FOB. "David Mer-
ier, Douglas, Ga., Rt. 1.
; Nice Comb and Ext. Honey, and 45
hives of Italian and Caucasian bees,
mixed, for sale cheap. Mrs. J. M. Pope,
Norman Park, Ga., RFD. 2.
Display cs., $4 per cs., FOB. J. M. White
| Groveland, Ga., Rt. 1.
Fine Ext. honey in 5 Ib. pails, $1.25
del. Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruitland, Ga.
Choice honey, Chunk or strained, in
new 5 Ib. pails, $1 ea., del. in 3rd zone.
Quality assured. Carl W. SOurey
Pineora, Ga.
HONEY, Bens AND BEE SUPPLIES
WANTED
Want to exch large amt. catnip, hore-
hound and other plants for honey.
ae Mrs. John Fe R. Turner, Concord,
3
Want beeswax in any quantity.
Write for prices paid and state amount
you have. J. Tom White, Dublin, Ga.
Want to exch. several settings of
pure bred B. R. (fine strain) eggs for
bright, strained honey. 1 setting for 10
ibs. Ea. to pay postage. W. L. Shiver,
Camilla, Ga., Rt. 4. Box 26.
Want to buy honey bees. Preferably
ha Ala., P. O. Box 58.
GRAIN FOR SALE
-2 or 3 lbs., of A No. 1 grass, clover
and peavine hay, .$1.35 del., at barn.
Exch for meat, lard or corn. 100 lbs., |
hay for 1 bu., good, sound white or
vellow corn. ch Bennett, Jesup,
Gar ht: box 23.
Heavily headed oat hay, $25 per ton,
FOB. J. D. Means, Elko, Ga.
ly baled, $15 ton, FOB Pelham.
Cates, Meigs, Ga., Rt. 4.
J. Eu
x COTTON SEED FOR SALE
u.
FOB. Cash with order. Mrs. G. J. Hol-
| comb, Bremen, Ga.
Pure Cokers in 100 Ib. bags, also oth-
er varieties cotton seed for planting,
sired. H. H. Geer, Greensboro, Ga.
20 or 25 bu. College No. 1, $1 bu., FOB.
M. C. G. Oliver, Barnesville, Ga., Rt.
Pure Wannamaker, recleaned see eae
$1-bu. R. C. Couch, Turin, Ga.
Fairburn, Ga.
< BUTTER FOR SALE
Nice, fresh country butter, 40c Ib.,
ville, Ga., Rt. 7:
S Tbs., putter (free from coloring),
40c lb. Ship butter the year a eee
Pierce Worley, Ball Ground, Ga., Rt. 1
in So. Ga. Harvey Parker, Fort De-
Cokers long staple, # bu.,
10c Ib. FOB, in 10 Ib. pails, 6 to Cs.,
Ib., 5 Ibs., and gal cans, also in 16 oz, _
in standard glass front cs., -
ae
ae
Le igh
Add postage. Lonnie Rundles, Gaines-. i
2 tons bright Crab Grass hay; tight- ==
The Salisbury cotton, staple, 1 and 2 =
i 16 in; $1.50. bu. Brings 1 1-2c per
premium when selling. M. P. Word,
2
New No. 1 Comb honey in 24 sections oS
:
Write for prices, stating quantity de-
GROWING LEGUMES was _
vested the. previous -year.
AGE EIGHT ee
ANSWER HERE
By W, H. Barton, Edgefield, S. C.,
County Agent
B. R. Smith's farm, on which he has
won two premiums in the South Caro-
lina cotton contest, and on which he
produced over 500 bushels of corn on
five acres; was built up principally with
O-too-tan and Laredo soy beans.
He plants his corn in six-foot rows
and soys in the middles. All grain
lands are planted to soys, and a horse-
drawn harvester is used to gather seed
aS @ money crop and the bean vines
eu back to the soil to give it fertility
and ability. Twenty years ago this
farm was a very poor, white sandy-
Now it is a dark brown
in color, averages around a bale of
loam. soil.
= cotton per acre arid 40 to 50 bushels
of corn. | :
This legume is a common. crop
_. among our best farmers and consti-
tutes a nice money crop as well as a
soil renovator. Hogs live throughout
the winter, grazing on the waste beans
and green cover crops in many in-
stances, and soon this form of hog pro-
duction will obtain throughout the
county, especially on the sand hill
type of soil, which will not puddle}
_ when grazed through the winter. Chu-
fas planted in adjoining fields for
_them to root up, or soys in the corn
rews and chufas in the middles will
produce pork at a profit at almost any
price. Of course, such hogs should be
finished on corn and tankage or corn
and fish-meal before marketing.
This kind of winter grazing is feasi-
_ ble with O-too-tan, Laredo and Pine-
_ dell soy beans, especially; for they will
jie onthe ground all winter and then
- germinate to a stand the ~ following
spring.
J. M. Vann and B. B. Bouknight, of
_ Trenton, S. C., have had this experi-
ence with these beans for two years or
more. Mr. Bouknight cut a heavy hay
crop from O-too-tan soys last year.
which volunteered in an oat crop sown
on corn land where beans were har-
Mr: Vann,
with a similar experience, is leaving a
_ balk of such volunteer beans in his
- corn middles this spring. In fact, this
type of soy beans has proved that they
- can be treated much as sweet clover
or Canada field peas and drilled in the
grain fields each spring about April 1st,
_while the grain is growing, and produce
a summer hay crop
harvested. ~
_ Soy bean: hay, when cut and properly
cured at the proper stage, is practically
after the grain is
as good a cow feed as wheat bran,
pound for pound, and experiment sta-
tion tests show soy bean hay to be a
fraction better in milk-producing re-
gults than alfalfa, which is usually re-
garded as the best hay in the world.
For hay, soys are usually planted, in
rows and cultivated. My observation
here is that best results are obtained
when land is deeply turned to bury
ees grass seeds and the soys thickly sown
or drilled. Probably best results are
cbtained from sowing a bushel per
aere: and the best method of harvest-
ing, when they stand erect, is to bind
- them with an ordinary grain binder
and shock as are oats, allowing to cure
_ @bout three to six weeks, depending up-
- on'the weather. t
The best time to cut for hay is when.
the seed are just beginning to form in
the pods before so much. indigestible
woody matter is formed.
Dean Vivian, of the State College
of Ohio, recently wrote the writer that
ae all the successful agriculture of the
~X
the same class of plants.
world has been built around the le-|
| gumes. He might have added, fur-
| ther, that the agricultural millennium
| will be ushered in and maintained with
The South Carolina Cotton Market-
ing Associations first principle is
economic production, and legumes
are the Souths best means of securing
the best results in ow cost of produc-
tion. : <
-With such a God-given means ai
hand we have no right, by neglect of
such a practice, to produce at a high
cost and then expect the millions of
poor consumers of the world to pay us
a profit because of our indolence.
Through the proper use of legumes.
our cost of production can be lowered
50 per cent, 100 per cent, and even
more. Varro, Cato and Calumella all
understood this principle hundreds of
years ago, but they failed in their
writings to influence farmers of their
day to practice that principle. They
said: Grow more vetch, more clover
and more lentils and plow them under
for the rejuvenation of the soil. >
\
CAN THE OX GADFLY
BE ERADICATED?
By Dr. C. A. Cary,
Editor Veterenary. Department,
Professor of Veterinary Medicine,
Auburn, Ala.
The federal authorities have started
tests to cover definite areas in order to
develop methods by which the cattle
gadfly pest may be eradicated.- One or
more localities have been selected and
the work is now in progress.
The mature female gadfly deposit
nits or eggs around or on the hair of
the lower part of the legs or heels of
cattle. This big fly is about the size of
and looks like a honey bee. It makes
a buzzing noise very much like a honey
bee. -Cattle hear this noise and run
because they fear the gadfly will sting
them like a bee; hence, the name
gadfly. ees ;
The little worms or larvae are
liatched on the heels or lower part of
the legs. Some authorities say they
pass under the skin and migrate
directly under the skin to the back.
Others say the larvae crawl on and
irritate the skin. The cow or ox licks
the irritated skin and with her tongue
carries the larvae to the gullet (eso-
phagus) and here the larvae penetrate
the wall of the esophagus and there
make further development. Then the
larger larvae migrate through the body
eennective tissues to the back of the
cow or ox. Here they live and grow
for eight to ten months and form large
grubs.
They may be pressed out or pass out
ef the small openings in the skin over
each grub. When out they drop on the
ground, go into the soil or under some
protective cover and there pass the
pupa stage and then change into a fly
The federal workers plan to destroy
the grubs or wolves or warbles in the
back. It seems that they believe this
grub stage is the easiest place to- break
the chain in the life history of this
cattle pest. During the active dipping
of cattle once every two weeks to de-
stroy cattle ticks, most of the cattle
kad very few or no grubs in their backs.
This cattle pest destroys every year
the value of hides for the leather in
the United States to the extent of mil-
lions of dollars. It also retards the
growth of infested cattle and injures
and infests tissues during its migration
and at times it excretes toxins which
injure its host. = =
When the grubs or nodules in the
sene over each nodule in the back of
reach infested cow, ox or heifer, and
this will kill all the young grubs or
varbles while they are small. No
Coubt, when all cattle owners kill all]
the grubs in the backs of all the cattle
in a county or state, there will be no
more gadflies to deposit eggs on the
hair of cattle. In other words, the pest
will be eradicated.
MIDSUMMER SETTING OF.
STRAWBERRIES
After the bearing season is over and:
along about the latter part of June or}
July first, a good many runners have
set. good-sized plants in the middle of
the rows and along the edge of the
main row, all which have to. be cut out
in working the old plants. :
As I had heard and-read about sum-
mer setting of strawberry plants, last
summer I thought I would give it a
trial. x
I experimented with one of my own
iceas of setting the plants (and it was:
a good one, too), as I didnt pull them
yup. After a good rain I took a long-
bladed knife and cut all around the
plant so as to take up as much dirt as
possible with the plant and not disturb
the roots, and then set each plant in a
hole large enough to take the entire
plant and dirt.
These plants never stopped growing
nor wilted, and I had to cut off the
runners several times before frost, just
as I did with the old plants. Using
the above method of setting is why the
plants lived so well. If I had pulled
each plant as you would a cabbage
plant or potato slip, most of them
would no doubt have died, as the sun
shines so hot and drying at this season.
I find, if you set the plants right,
mid-summer is an ideal time for doing
the job, when one has the plants from
the runners of the old ones. In this
way the plants do not get a setback.
When one has to buy the plants I.
find it is best to set the plants in early
September, soas to get a good start
in growth and get them well-rooted be-
fore: cold weather sets in. Sometimes
from fall set: plants we can get a fair
supply of berries the first year, but if
you take the time and trouble to pick
cff the blooms the first season you will
lave a far better show for more berries
the. second season.
W. H. Harrison.
Disputanta, Va.
The lambs mother should have all
the legume hay she wants, because le-
gume hay makes milk.
4
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
- FOR SALE
Smoked and dried hams, 30c Ib. sides
-and shoulders, 25c Ib. Cash with or-
der. R.S. Anderson, Hawkinsville, Ga.
Want any quantity cured meat. Exch
keney and Duroc hogs for same. L. H.
Eedenfield, Stillmore, Ga., Rt. 3.
Hams, smoked with oak wood, guar-
anteed good and sound, 28c lb. All cash
re L. R. Strange, Swainsboro, Ga.,
Niece, country cured shoulders, from
corn fed hogs, from 7 to 20 Ibs., 77 Ibs.
in all, 20e Ib., FOB, or 22c del. Mrs.
J. M. Lewis, Warthen, Ga.
25 Ib, ham cured ~with Hickory
smoke, 35c ib., del., parcel post. Send
money order to postmaster as guaran-
fee of shipment. J. F. Robinson, Wiley,
a. rie ;
Smoked, and cured. hams, 60 Ibs., 30c
lb. J. G. Brown; Summit, Ga. __
_ Country cured Hickory smoked meat;
hams, 35 Jb., shoulders, 25 Ib. BR. C.
back are small (in January and Febru-
Couch, Turin; Ga.
a
ry) apply a mixture of lard and kero-|_
FOB. Depot. J. F.
___ Thursday, May 23, 192%
_ SYRUP FOR SALE
/ $5 cans of Ga., Cane syrup, 75c pe
10: Ibs., can at my home, 2 mi., west o
Climax on the Bainbridge Rd., D. L
Curry, Climax, Ga,., Rt. 38. ae
thick, prepared for table use, 75c per
16 lb. can, packed 6 cans to cs. Send
check. E. F. Worley, Omega, Ga.
FRUITS FOR SALE
Now booking orders for huckleberries
commonly called Goose berries, 80c gal.
FOB, or $1 del. June and July del. Mrs.
Cora G. Harrison, Madras, Ga., RFD 1.
ide Ib. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin, Ga.,
Rts2.
Nice, dried apples, 10c Ib., or Iic Ib.,
Gel. Cash: with order. Mrs, R. J. Os-
horn, Roy, Ga. So ee
FRUIT WANTED
Want 90 lbs. large mtn. blue huckle-
honey for same.
more, Ga., Rt. 3. se
Want to. exch, 1M Porto Rico potato
plants for 10 lbs. dried apples. Ea. to
L. H. Edenfield, Still-
burn, Ga., Rt. 1.
for 6 lbs., fruit.
Fitzgerald, Ga., Rt. 2. z
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Nice, long straw brooms, 10c ea., $1_
doz., or exch. for potato plants. Lorena
Vollrath, Winston, Ga., Rt. 1. cata
Williams, Griffin, Ga., Rt. C. :
Red and white vinegar in 50 gal,
bbis., 16 gal, FOB. Cash with order.
L. E. Harrison, Dublin, Ga. an
Ground oyster shell for large and
small chickens, $1.00 per 100 Ibs., FOB.
St., East.
del.
Rt. 4.
frey, Alvaton, Ga., Rt. 1. Box 24.
20 or 25 Ibs.,
exch. for any kind of pure bred 5 or 6
yr. old pullets, at 50c ea. Mrs. C.
Riggins, Molena, Ga., Rt. 2.
age. Cash with order. Mrs. G. J
Holcomb, Bremen, Ga. oe
15 Ibs., new geese feathers, $1.00 Ib.
Sell any amount. Mrs. J. L. Garrison,
Kite, Ga.
| 90 gal. bbl., churn, same as new, $5.00
if party comes and gets it. Chas. Stan-
Sledge hammer handles, 20c ea., $2.00
doz. M: Bowen, Norcross, Ga.
Good apple vinegar, 40c gal.,
gal, in 5 or more gal, lots. J. J.
Ethridge, Auburn, Ga. ae
2 Peafowl plumage for sale. Mrs.
Henry Soloman, Jeffersonville, Ga. a
pure apple vinegar, $15
Robinson, Wiley, Ga.
60 gal. bbl.
Good, white feed sacks, 100 lb. size.
Fxch cabbage plants; 1M for 10 sacks.
Ea to pay postage. Mrs. F. BE. Happoldt,
Lewiston, Ga. es
About 75 Ibs. pure white geese fea-
thers, used some, 50c lb. Sell any quan-
Mrs.
a.
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
Want white feed sacks. Will exch.
Lady Thompson strawberry plants at
30c a 100, $2.50 M. Ea. to pay shee
Mrs. Nora Nix, Dahlonega, Ga., Rt. 1.
Priddy, Upton, Ky., Rt. 3. Box 43.0 |
Want to exch. value, $30.00 for corn
or cows. 1]
Ga. Care Gen. Del, -
Want: home raised flour. Write best
offer. J. H, Leverett, Parrott, Ga. ~~
Ga. sugar cane syrup, bright and
$e
Nice, dried apples, free from worms,
pay postage. Mrs. Mattie Wilson, Ash=
Want 5 Ibs., nice, sundried peaches. |
Mrs. J. S. Morton, Lumpkin, Ga., Rt. 1.
Want to exch. E. J., and Chas. W.,
cabbage plants, at $1.00 M., for nice
fruit: apples or peaches. 1 M., plants
Mrs. H. C. Rowe,
100 Purina feed sacks, 100 Ib. size, 5c
ea. or exch for Spanish peanuts. J. P.
W. A. Smith, Savannah, Ga., 102 Bay ~
Sun cured tobacco, slightly damaged, fe
fine for stock tonic, 4 lb. pkg., $1.00
Wm. Nunn, Lawrenceville, Ga.,
100 Ib. feed sacks, 8c ea. C.R. God-
geese feathers, 75c lb., or
or 35. 3
Want carpet grass for lawn. Nancy
300 gals., pure apple vinegar, 35c gal.
in 30 or 50 gal., bbls. FOB, and $1.00
for bbl. also 25 white chicken feed
sacks, 100 Ib., size, 3 for 25c, plus post-
ford, Atlanta, Ga., 312 SinClair Ave.
N. L. Green, Powersville, ee
Mrs. Clayton Douglas, Alma,
perries. Pay cash or exch. 90 lbs.comb