AGRICULTURE.
COMMISSIONERS
PUBLISHED BY THE BUREAU OF MARKETS A. D. JONES, DIRECTOR.
STATE CAPITOL
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1981.
will
= ek
The following is a letter I received yesterday from Mr. H. G. Ma-
this, of Valdosta. Mr. Mathis enclosed.a letter that the Co-ops had .
written him on April 8th, which I am also printing below. Read them
both carefully: 4 :
Hon. Eugene Talmadge,
Commissioner of Agriculture,
Atlanta, Georgia.
- Dear Sir: *
. 7
Have been reading your letters in Market Bulletin on the manage-
ment of our Co-op Association here in Georgia. ;
aa Please note next attached letter from them on six bales of cotton.
_. I could have sold this cotton at ten cents when I pooled it with them.
My membership was solicited from the point that. members of the
ce Association would get more money for their cotton than non members.
I borrowed 7 1-2 cents on this cotton at the time I turned it over
- . to them. My membership was to cost me $10.00 which was to be paid
when my cotton was sold.
This cotton all graded middling and better.
Please advise:
: Your supporter, a
H. G. MATHIS.
Atlanta, Georgia.
April 8, 1931.
s
GEORGIA COTTON GROWERS CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION
Mr. H. G. Mathis,
Valdosta, Georgia.
Dear Member :
Contract No. 562017
2 i
The American Cotton Cooperative Association advises us the price
be fixed on your 6 bales of Optional Pool cotton when the New
York futures market reaches 9.74 for May delivery, unless you have pre-_
_ viously furnished us with additional margin.
#
$17.50 will give you 1c per pound margin and we suggest that yay
send us this amount at once in order to prevent the necessity of the
American Cotton Cooperative Association selling your cotton.
: 2 Se: Yours very truly,
GEORGIA COTTON GROWERS
CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION
_ Copy: Massey _
What does this mean?
Oe Are the Co-ops going to sell everyone out at 9.74 who put cotton in
ae the optional pool? ss
4
Of course, out of this 9.74 they will deduct freight, warehouse char-
- named it Provisional Settlement.
deduct this one cent per pound out of the 9.74 basis or. not.
will bring.
: Are The Co-Ops Selling You Out ?
ges, insurance, one per cent reserve fund, $10 for joining the Association
In previous settlements they have also deducted one, cent per pound and
I do not know whether they will |
Who is this American Cotton Cooperative Association?
Who is E. F. Creekmore? Where does he hail from?
What have they got to do with telling us Georgia farmers when
to sell our cotton? :
I thought the Georgia Cotton Growers Co-operative Association was
a bunch of Georgia farmers who grew cotton, and were holding it in >
the Association together. . :
The letter from the Georgia Cotton Growers Co-operative Associa-
tion is the best sign that I have seen that cotton is going up. They are
wanting to kick out the poor farmers at the cheapest price that cotton
When was H. G. Mathis cotton sold?
The Co-ops were selling lots of cotton last fall at ten cents and over.
Dont you reckon Mr. Mathis cotton was in some of those lots? If it:
was, it is wrong for them to pick out the lowest price and want to settle -
with him on that. < :
What were they doing with the margin between what they received
from the cotton when they were rushing it to the mills and the 9.74 they
are talking about now?
Are they gambling with this margin?
When any man or set of men yo gambling crazy they are going to
sting everybody connected with them, SOONER OR LAT#R. :
How long is the Government going to back up such MONKEY
BUSINESS as the above letters indicate?
The following is a letter that I received from a bird lover.
joonaty me to task for advising poisoning larks when they are pulling up
e corn.
Birds are useful. They are beautiful.
They do destroy insects, but we dont want them to destroy our corn.
*- BP, On Box 1116,
Johnson City, Tennessee.
April. 7, 1931.
Hon. Eugene Talmadge, :
Commissioner of Agriculture,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Sir:_
It was my privilege to cast a vote for you each time you offered for
the office which you now hold. I appreciate your efforts to be of ser-
(Continued on page six)
MARKET REPORT,
OF- GEORGIA PRODUCTS
Prevailing Wholesale Prices Apr. 14, 1931. Always Subject to Variation
_ Atlanta Macon
Ga. Extra. idoz. .css35 225s 2 $ 22 $ 21 $ .22
Standard. GOs, 2.27: 19 .20 19 20
Ga. trade. doz os a I, 415 14 15
werd Rwn,-doz. 222 2=-. : 20 19 .20
Eggs,
Eggs,
Eggs,
Eggs,
bees, 1b. ese oe : ; 18 18
Bens 4) oe oe eee ee 18 .20 .20
Roosters, lb. : 12% 12 \12
Briere ly oe ee ee 35 36 2
Beows. 1b. : 20 \ 18 .20
eeet, 10. 222 Lah ee as : : 18 15 ALD
@erncys. 10, oe el : 28 25
Capons, lb. (95 ; cee os
Wield. Peas, mixed, bu. --.----. 1.60 1.25 1.25
Field Peas, not mixed, bu. ----. 1.80 1.50
Country Butter, Best Table, lb.-. 30 : : 35
Ear Corn (80 lbs. to bu) bu. <-. .83 Sy 3 --
Peavine Hay, No. 1, per ton ---22.00 . . a
Peanut Hay, No. 1, per ton ---.16.00 an
Soy .Beans, Otootan, bu. ------. 3.00. 3.00
Soy Beans, Biloxi, bu. ---------- 2.00 1.75
Hogs Sold During Week Beginning April 6, 1931, at
No. 1, Grade Spanish Peanuts, $80.00 per ton - Delivered,
Savannah Augusta
16,
INDEX
Baby Chicks for Sale
- Baby Chicks Wanted
Eggs for Sale
Eggs Wanted
Farm Help Wanted
Flowers and Seed for Sale ----.-- 6
Ga. Products for Sale
Ga, Products Wanted
Live Stock for Sale
Live Stock Wanted
Miscellaneous for Sale
Miscellaneous Wanted
Positions Wanted
Poultry for Sale
mes Poultry Wanted
80 : Plants for Sale
= : Plants Wanted
-- : Seed for Sale
=< Seed Wanted
Columbus Valdosta
2I~ $ .20
19 18
14 aoa:
19 18
15 CaO
20 16
12. 10
35 .30
.20
25
1.50
Cooperative Sales Brought 6.80 per cwt., Basis No. 1.
Subject to Correction. =:
He -
They add something to life.
E TWO
Plants For Sale
State insp Portoricans, $1.50 M.
er Baltimore and Beefsteak tom.
80c, 500; $1.30 M. Wakefield cabbage
40c, 500; 60c M. Mrs. C..C. Beecher,
Baxley.
- Portoricans' and Nancy Hall, $1.50 M
5M up, $1.40 M; Beefsteak, Marglobe
and Baltimore tom. 35c C. $1.25 M.
Cash with order. Mrs. J. R. Upchurch
Baxley, Rt. 1. ;
Imp. Portoricans, Gov't. insp. $1.50
/ Exch for Iron or Brab
K. C. Mayers, Baxley.
- Pure Portoricans, Govt insp. and
treated, $1.75 M del. Cash. T. M. Mul-
lis, Odum, Rt. Box 134.
Pink skin Portoricans, insp. and
treated, $1.50 M. Over 5M _ $1.40;
Wakefield cabbage, 60c M, tomato, $1.-
35 M. Cash. Mrs. J. L. Norton, Bax-
ley, Rt. 5.
_ Portoricans, $1.50 M, 5M $1.40 M.
Jill contract large quantities. Toma-
to, $1.25 M. Wakefield cabbage, 60cM.
. H. Morris, Baxley, Rt. 5.
Porto Ricans, Govt insp: $1.50 M.
iB. Harold Watson, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Imp. Portoricans, State insp. Ready
April 20th, $1.50 M. Over 10M $1.25 M
B. S. D. Graham, Surrency, Rt. 2.
Imp. Portoricans, now ready, $1.35
M. Over 4M $1.25 M. Guar. Money
or O. D. Lightsey, Surrency, RFD
_ Hastings extra early tomato plants,
~ %5e, 200; 500, $1.40; $2.40 M. Mrs. -J.
_W. Harrison, Blackshear.
Hastings early June pink, Marglobe,
-Gulf State Market, and other var. to-
mato, 35 C. 500, $1; $1.75 M. Calif.
onder pepper, 50c 100. Postpaid. D.
J. Harrison, Blackshear, Rt. 3. .
_ Earliest tomato plants, highest qual-
ity grown for own use. Surplus of sev
. 25 a 100. John Crone, Philomath.
. Special price plants; cabbage, new
spring plants and Bermudg onion, 50c,
500; 75c M; 3M $2.10; 5M $3. J. A.
_ Mitchell, Thomasville.
Pure Imp. Govt insp. Porto Rico po-
tato plants, 1.50 M, FOB. May 1st ship-
ment. E. E. Carter, Hazlehurst.
. Pure Portoricans, postpaid, $2 M;
Collect, $1.50; Tomato, $1.75 M. post-
paid; $1.25 collect; pepper and N. Y.
Purple, Black Beauty Egg plant, post-
- paid, $2.50; collect, $2; John W. Ber-
ryhill, Lakeland.
Cabbage, tomato and onion plants,
-$1 M. Write for prices on potato pep-
_ per, lettuce plants. Andrew Clark,
~ Thomasville.
: Klondike strawberry, 25 C. Exch.
_ for turkey, large breed hen, or White
L. eggs. Mrs. Fuller Joiner, Tennille,
RFD A,
Kudzu crowns, $1.25 C. $10 M, FOB
other things.
Vista.
Sev. hundred Ga. collard plants, 60c,
: - postpaid. G. G. Rackley, Camilla,
4 :
Wm. L. Helms, Buena
Insp. pure Portoricans, $2 M del. I
give 1100 to the M. Cash with order.
Dan A. Campbell, Baxley, Rt. 2.
- Portoricans, $1.50 M FOB; $1.75 del.
Ga Small orders shipped COD. M. J.
Lewis, Baxley, Star Rt. |
Chas. W. Jersey cabbage, 50c M.
Portoricans, Marglobe, Greater. Balti-
more tom. $1.75 M, 5M $1.50 M. Ruby
ng pepper, $3 M. 5M $2.50 M. Mor-
ris W. Deen, Alma.
Imp. Portoricans, Govt insp. $1.75
M. Abive 5M $1.50: FOB. Sat. guar.
Cash with order. Clifford Altman,
Jersey cabbage, 10c C;
Vanzant, Abbeville, Rt. 2.
Genuine yellow skin Portoricans.
State insp. passed and treated, $1.75
M. del. Ready April 20th. T. H. Gor-
don, Rochelle, Rt. 2.
Imp. red skin Portoricans, Govt. insp
Guar $1.40 M. FOB. S. P. Hutto, Sur-
ency.
_ Greater Baltimore, New Stone _ to-
mato, ready April 20th to 25th. $1.75
M. Above 5M, $1.50 M. L, C. Brown,
Alma.
- Portoricans, pimiento pepper, Earlia-
na and Burpees earliest tomato plants
$1.50 M FOB. D. F. Thomas, Odum.
- Kudzu, horehound and spearmint, 6
for 30c del. Large quantities if want-
oe _Mrs, H. H. Sullivan, Carrollton,
bb: :
- Govt insp. Portoricans, purple skin
$1.50 M. FOB; 10 to 20M $1.40 M FOB.
Miss Vivian wee, eae pe i.
a Ee cans, from vine, $14
ee
Exch. some for Golden Seal plants and
5M
ome me ee
MARKET B
Imp. Porto Ricans, yellow and pink
skin. Govt insp. treated, and post-
paid. $1.75 M. Express collect, $1.50 M.
J. U. Sewell, Pitts.
Ready; guar. pure Portoricans plants
from selected Govt insp seed. Extra
early hot bed del: $2.50 M later, $2.25
M del. Special prices large quantities.
Jas. A. Chauncey, Screven.
Pure red skin Portoricans, Gov't insp
$1.50 M, FOB; $1.70 M del. to 3rd zone.
S. L. Norris, Quitman, Rt. 1.
Sa.ge, 15c bunch; peppermint, 10c
doz. 50c 100; Balm catnip, 3 large bun.
25c; St. Regis raspberry and horse ra-
dish, 50c doz. Mrs M. L. Eaton, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.
Napier grass roots and- plants. Im-
ported from Africa. Produces more
green forage per acre than any known
grass. Stock and poultry like it. S. T.
Smith, Cuthbert, 607 College St.
Red skin Portoricans, $1.50 M, FOB
or $2 M postpaid. Money orders. J. E.
Scruggs, Bristol.
Portoricans, $1.40 M. Exp. collect;
$1.70 M del. Tomatoes, 60c M collect;
$1 del. S. J. Lindsey, Omega.
Old field strawberry, $1.50 M. Huck-
leberries 25c doz. $1.50 a 100; Hazle-
nut, 90c doz. Exch. for anything can
use. R. L. Blackwell, Cleveland, Rt. 4.
Huckleberry, 25c doz. Hazlenut 75c
doz. Old field strawberries, $1 M. Add
postage. Exch for anything can use.
John Blackwell, Cleveland, Rt. 4.
Kudzu, rooted joints, $4.50 M post-
paid. 2-3 yr.-old plants with crowns.
$10 M. Exp. gollect. L. G. Sanders,
Dewyrose, Rt.2..
Finest var. heavy bearing strawber-
ry, 40c C del. Mrs. J. R Hillis, Mill-
haven. | :
Pure |Porto Ricans, State insp. $1.50
M. Marglobe and Baltimore, $1.25 M,
500, 75c. All FOB. J. P. Mullis, Bax-
ley, Rt. 4. ; care
Porto Rico plants, $1.75 M del. Ga.
J. S. Murray, Odum, Rt. A.
Portoricans, Govt insp. and treated,
$1.50 M. Cash with order. E. N. O-
Quinn, Odum, ( :
Heading collards, $1.25. M postpaid.
Mrs. N. B. Brady, Cairo, Rt. 4.
Frost proof E. J., Chas. W. cabbage,
25 C; 45c, 500; 75c M del. COD. 50c
- S. C. Rowe, Fitzgerald, P. O. Box
2. -
Imp. Portoricans, $1.50 M FOB. Cash
with order. C. V. Willard, Douglas.
Govt insp. Portoricans, $1.40 M del.
Ga. April and May del. No~ chks.
Geo. Griffis, Odum, Rt. 2.
_Govt insp. Portoricans, $1.50 M del.
Money order only.
Odum, Rt. 2. ee
Insp. dipped, imp. red skin Portoric-
ans, $1.50 M tel Ga, May, June; New
Stone-tom. $1 M. Ready. No chks. W. D.
Lightsey; Odum, Rt. 2. ~
Yellow skin Portoricans, Govt insp.
treated, $1.75 M April, May and June
del. Money orders. D. Story, Pavo,
RFD 1. f
State insp. chemically treated Por-
toricans, $1.75 M. Over 5M, $1.50 M.
Cash. No personal chks. G.' L. Ne-
Smith, Ashburn, Rt. 4.
300 Kudzu roots, 75c a 100. Mrs. A,
N. Thornton, Camilla.
Imp. red skin Portoricans, Govt in-
spected, $1.50 M, 5M lots, $140 M.
Sat. guar. D. T. Herrington, Graham.
Strong Marglobe tomato plants, $1.-
50 M del. Ga. A. P. Wheeler, Americus,
201 Dodson St.
Portoricans, $1.50 M. Exch. = for
Spanish peanuts: 2M plants for 2 1-2
bu. or for large breed baby chicks. R.
E. Tomberlin, Surrency.
Cabbage, ready now, $1.50 M. Toma-
to, 35c C. $1, 300. Leading: var. Cash
with order. Mrs. J.D. Smith, Sa-
vannah, Rt. 3.
Red skin Portoricans, $1.50 M FOB.
Ready April 20th. Guar. Frank Wheel-
er, Alma, Rt. 1. eS
Red and yellow skin Portoricans,
Govt. insp. and treated, $1.50 M. FOB.
5M up, $1.40, FOB. H. F. Johnson, Al-
ma, Rt. 4.
Portoricans, Govt. insp. and treated,
$1.50 M. FOB, $1.75 M prepaid. L. D.
Dean, Alma, Rt. 3.
Imp. Portoricans, $1.50 M. Early Tri-
wens $1.75 M. EB. L. Anderson, Alma,
Himalaya. blackberries, red hot pep-
per, garlic bulbs for sale. Exch. for lar.
var. strawberry, Lucretia or Premo dew-
berry, corn, peas, or beans at market
price. C. W. Page, Norcross.
Portoricans, Govt. insp. $1.50 M. J.
H. Girtman, Denton. a
A. C. Thornton, |
| yrs.
ULLETIN :
Cabbage and collard plants, 25c C,
$1.25 M. Tomato, $2.00 M. Add postage.
W. J. Morgan, Stillmore.
Tomato, 30c C, $1.50 M. 5 M, up,
$1.30 M. Portoricans, $1.50 M. 5M _ up,
$1.25; Cabbage, 50c, 500; 80c M. Cash
J. P. Morris, Baxley, Rt. 1.
Pure Portoricans, $1.50 M. 5M _lots,
$1.40. Cash or money order. Mrs. Sallie
Perry, Baxley, Rt. 4. :
Govt. insp. purple skin potato plants,
April 20th del. $1.50 M. 5M or more,
$1.35 M, FOB. in Ga. R. A. Harrington,
Baxley, Rt. 3. pe
-Portoricans, insp. $1.50 M, FOB. No
personal checks. Cash with order. J. B.
Patterson, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 86.
-Cabbage, collard, ready, 15c C. $1.50
M, FOB. Add postage. Cash with order.
C. H. Monroe, Kingsland.
Imp. Portoricans, Govt insp and
treated, $1.75 M del. $1.50 M FOB. Cash
No checks. O. L. Mobley, Baxley, Rt.
4, BOX 42.00 A 3 :
Portoricans, $1.50 M prepaid; 5M up
$1.25 M FOB. Cash with order. Robt.
F. Lewis, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Portoricans, Govt insp. $1.50 M FOB
$1.75 M del. Cash. Grady Cauley,
Baxley, Rt. 4. Sf.
Portoricans, Govt insp $1.50 M FOB;
$1.75 M del. Cash. Grady Cauley,
Baxley, Rt. 4. :
State insp. Portoricans, $1.50 pre-
Lewis, Baxley.
Portoricans, $140 M FOB. J. W.
Herndon, Surrency. \
Portoricans, $1.50 M, 5M up,.$1.40 M
FOB. R. M. Morris, Surrency, Rt. 2.
Govt insp. from vine grown potatoes
$1.50 M. April, May and June del.
Cash. N. F. Williams, Baxley, Rt. 4.
State insp. Portoricans, $1.50 M FOB
'P, T. Herndon, Surrency.
Tomato plants ready: Burbank, Pro-
jlific, Avon, Stone, Marglobe, Living-
ston Globe, Prizetaker and Tree; Pi-
miento, Bell pepper, 50c C. $3 M del.
Mrs. H. V. Franklin, Register.
Kudzu plants, well rooted, $2.50 M,
ees M. A. Moore, Crawfordville. Rt.
Cokers golden skin Portoricans,
State insp. and dipped before bedding,
$1.75 M del., April 20th to June del.
E. D. Paulk,'Fitzgerald.
Horseradish sets, 3 for 20c; Hima-
laya blackberry, 20c doz. Add postage
on orders less than 60c. Exch for seed
or other plants. Mrs. Sam Smith, Aus-
tell; Rt. 2.
Imp. red skin Porto ricans, treated
ed insp. April 20th del. Also tomato.
h $2 M Cash. J. L. Courson, Bax-
ley, Rt. 1. A
Mastodon everbearing and Lady T.
aC te ee ane eerey.
oz, Mrs. W. N. Turner, Dahlons
Rt. 1, Box 54. =
Big Stem Jersey potato plants, af-
ter 18th April, $2.50 M. Govt insp. W.
ce eran eas Lyons.
ortoricans, Govt insp. and treated,
$1.50 M del. April and May shipment.
Money order only. L. H. Brand, Mon-
tezuma, Rt. 1. ;
_Genuine pink skin Portoricans, from
ae a and treated for 9
$1. ES AL -
So Arabi Ri | r 2
ortoricans, $1.75 M, 5M up, $1.50 M
White Bermuda onion, $1.25 M. foe 8.
and Greater B. tomato, $1 M. -All
FOB. _John R. Boatright, Coffee.
Hite Mase now ready, $1 M.
fimiento pepper, $1.50 M. B. L. f
Waycross, Rt. 2. : eee
_ Frost proof Chas. W., E. J., Success-
lon cabbage, 500, 60c; $1 M. Del. C. B.
Griner, Brooklet.
Horse radish, 50c doz. sage, 15 bunch
catnip, 10c; garden ditney, 3 bun. 25c
garlic, 3 for 20c. Exch for white feed
ee Mrs. Elvie Waters, Dahlonega,
Extra early J., Chas. W. cabbage,
Rowe, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.
oes eae and June pink to-
iC . Mr eo 2a
Sp nner es
one, June Pink, early prolific. an
Norduke tomato, $1.65 M, 25 ae.
oney order. J. D. ~
faa. McLeod, Jr., Al
J. Wakefield cabbage, $1 M. Ex
for dried fruit, or B. R. aoe or pune
ee bean seed. W. E. Goodwin, Wad-
Portoricans, Early Triumph potato
$1.75 M. 5M up, $1.50; tomato, $1.25 M.
_ pe. Altman, Alma,
ortoricans, Govt insp. $1.75 M del.
6M up, $1.65 del. or 1.50 collect.
si iMG uo 20 MM Fou, Greer Gr fea
er; Tif On,
Sees > x
Annis Alexantier} Valdosta, Rtv 1.
~ em Sm mee
M. Cash with order.
paid; 5M up, $1.25 M FOB. Cash. J. F. |
now ready. 50c 500; 80c M del. H.C.
: Mrs. t
Thursday, April 16, 1931.
er B. and Marglobe tomato, $1.50 M
del. Walter Johnson, Baxley. .
Portoricans, certified, $1.75 M. 5M up,
$1.65 M del. Exp. collect, 5M up, $1.50
Wm. McDonald,
Valdosta, Rt. 1. 55
Lady T. strawberry, 20c C. Goose-
berry, and Fox grape vines, 10c each,
90c doz. No chks. Mrs. Henry Eller, |
Ellijay, RFD 3. : *
Raspberry, 10c ea Yellow root, lic |
lb. Dbl Tanzy, 10c bunch. Exch for
white feed sacks. Mrs. J. B. Jones,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1. \
Lady T. and Everbearing strawberry
plants, $1 per 500 del. A. D, Call, El-
lijay, Rt. 4.
C. W. cabbage and cabbage-collard,
65c, 500; $1 M del. Money order. Mrs.
F, E Happoldt, Lewiston.
Greater. B:-and Marglobe tomato, 40c
C. 500, $1; $1.75 M del..J. C. Johnson, |
Baxley. es
Leading var. cabbage and tomato
plants. postpaid, 500, 60c; $1 M. Pink
and yellow Portoricans, $1.50 M collect;
$1.75 postpaid. John B. Pope, Fitzger:
ald. < 2
Pure, certified Portoricans, 1st of
May del. $1.75 M. 5M up, $1.50 FOB
E. Y. Stokes, Macon, Rt. 3. et
Portoricans, State insp. $1.50 M. FOB |
June pink tomato, $150 M, A. Q.
Sweat, Alma, Rt, 2, Box 39.
Genuine Portoricans, Govt insp. $1.-
15 M. 5M up, $1.50 M. W. L. Taylor,
Alma. ec
Genuine Portoricans, ready April 20.
$1.50 M. FOB. G. W. Coleman, Tifton.
Plants Wanted c
Want to contract with reliable grow-
er, on 250M Porto Rico plants. Ref. fur-
nished; also exch. trio bloodtested Wht.
Orp. for potato plants. Insp. and trea-
ted. R. R. Duffey, Carrollton.
Want to give'2 1-2 bu. sound Brab-
ham. peas for 5M. Porto Rico plants,
April del. Ea. del. L. J. Farmer, Mat-
thews. Poe
Want pure Porto Rico plants in exch
for pure Barred Rock eggs. Write first
B. C. Plyler, Manassas, Rt. 2. ee
Want genuine purple skin Porto Rico
plants, and new crop Otootans. Exch
Marcy str. J. B. Giant chicks, del. May
prepaid. L. B. Landrum, Adairsville.
Miscellaneous For Sale
Sassafras root, green, 20c lb. wild
cherry bark, and root, poke root, 15
lb. Yellow root, 20c lb. Mrs. A. H. Ca
Clarkesville. = eS
30 good cotton sacks, 100lb. 10c ea.
or exch for baby chicks.. Mrs. H. O.
Medlin, Fairmount. ae
Yellow root, 50c dry, sassafras, 15c lb
black haw, 10c; wild cherry 10c poke,
15c, other roots and barks. Lizzie Smith
Gibson, RFD B. :
2 bu. black walnuts, hulled. Miss -
A. Brobston, Madison. ee
- Wintergreen, 50c lb. Heart leaves, 15
bunch; persimmon bark, 20c lb. Fox
grape vines, 60c doz. Dewberry plants
35c doz. Postpaid. Miss Mardell Stan-
cil, Alpharetta, Rt. 2. :
About 20 Ibs. tobacco, $2 for lot, or
12 1-2c Ib. FOB. S. D. Graham, Su
rency, Rt. 2. : ois
38 lbs. goose down feathers, used very
little, $25 FOB here. First money Or-
a gets them. H. L. Howell, Woodbury
Rt. 1. :
Catnip, and sage, ea. 5c bunch; Sas-
safras roots, 10c lb. Add postage. J. J.
Teague, Waco, Rt. 2. :
Yellow root, cherry bark, Black Haw
15c Ib. 2 for 25c; ratsbane, and heart
leaves 25c lb. Exch for white feed sacks
Willie Geo. Anderson, Murrayville, Rt.
1, Box 93. m
25 Speramint plants, 50c; cherry
bark, 20c; poke root, 10c; yellow root
30c. Mrs. H. M. Blockover, Culloden.
Ratsbane, heart leaves, horehound,
catnip; Stems, leaves and roots (state
which when ordering), 25c lb.1 1-2 to.
3 1-2 lb. shipments del. Stamps ac-_
cepted. Miss L. A. Hamilton, Carnes
ville, Rt. 1. 2
Catnip, horehound, garlic, 5c bunch;
Exch for seed peanuts or tender garden
bean seed. Mrs. Furman Samples,
Cumming, Rt. 6. Box 19. es
Sassafras, poke root, wild cherry
sweet gum and dogwood bark, All 10c
Ib. del. Green. J. T. Savage, Dublin,
RFD 5. ens
Hot pepper sauce, 25c qt. glass Jars,
Mrs. W. A. Lewis, Toomsboro.
Good, hulled black walnuts, M
Portbritans, $1, 500; $175 M. Grent-
be er. Annit Lou Evans, Bow
x
MARKET BULLETIN
ers Supply Co. getting
-- gre.more interested in turning out good
~~ them excessive and that we are :
why anyone outside the organization should have any right to make any
a Letter Received, Anda Reply
OFFICE OF J.M. LOTT
TAX RECEIVER COFFEE COUNTY
DOUGLAS, GA. ce
April 1, 1931.
Mr, Eugene Talmadge; Comm. of Agri. _
Atlanta, Ga, er see e
Dear Sir: . ee oe |
_ During the past several months you have made several malicious
Charges against the Ga. Cotton Growers Coop. Assn. of which I am a
member. I would like to give you credit for being sincere but I have
about reached the conclusion that you were malicious rather than sin-
=e COre. ;
Your first charge was that Mr. Black-was on the pay roll of the
Assn and that the Assn. was spending thousands of dollars foolishly
when they could use a safe deposit box to hold receipts as collateral
rather than pay a Bank to act as custodian of documents. The Assn.
has answered this criticism in the Cotton Pool News. Mr. Conwell, our
president, explained why it was necessary that the Assn. have a Cus-
todian and also why Mr. Black was financial agent during the. early
life of the Assn. Mr. Black negotiated the first loan the Assn. ever
secured. Mr. Talmadge, I wonder if you have ever negotiated a loan
for a million dollars? I imagine it takes a rather good financial agent
to negotiate such a sized loan at fair rates of interest and one deserves
compensation for this ability.
- You have lots to say regarding the 1 percent reserve that the Assn.
withholds from sales of our cotton. This is the only amount that is
charged against a members cotton above the actual cost of handling
\his cotton. This is not such a large cost being only 50c on,a $50.00
bale of cotton, 75c on a $75 bale and $1 on a $100 bale. This reserve
does not amount to any more than your department charges for in-
- spection of fertilizers, your tax being 30c per ton which the farmers
-. pay into your department. Fertilizer must cost $30. per ton for this to
figure only 1 percent. d : aa :
This reserve is credited to each members account and he owns this
a much interest in the permanent assets of the Assn. It is the policy of
the Assn. that this reserve be paid back to a member at expiration of
his contract provided he was loyal to the organization. Frankly I be-
lieve the Assn. made a mistake by ever calling this a reserve but it.
called a Loss and Adjustment Fund. This fund is
should have been
used by the Assn.
es to further cooperative marketing in all its phases.
The Growers Supply Co.
and the Growers Finance Corp. which are
subsidiaries of the Assn. have been organized from this fund. These .
two organizations have come in for a good bit of criticism at your hands
mainly because they are parts of the Assn. which you ignorantly and
maliciously charge with being rotten. ;
I have borrowed money from. the finance Corp. for a number of
years which enabled me to pay cash for my fertilizer which meant a
- saving to me of $4 to $7 per ton. I bought my fertilizer from the Grow-
aes it at the cash price and I have always received
a substantial dividend check back which were the profits that the Sup-
ply Co. made on fertilizer sold at the cash price. I have saved 10 times
over the amount of my reserve by help from these.two organizations.
I understand the Assn, has helped members build gins in different
parts of the state from this reserve and I understand that these gins
ginning. The customers of these gins get better prices for their seea
for they are given the car load price rather than wagon price. ;
: Mr. Talmadge, you state that the officers of the Assn. get high
salaries. We members are paying these salaries and if-we do not think
getting value received I see no reason
objections. Our Board of Directors are elected by members and they
fix them and I believe we have an excellent Board. The officers are
- all under bond which is for our protection. I understand even field
men are under $50,000 bond. :
Do you know the purpose
President, being the Public Welfare director.
and work of the Public Welfare Director? When farmers first began -
to organize it was feared that they would become a monopoly and
make the public pay unreasonable high prices for their products and
this director or directors were supposed to look out for the Publics wel-
fare to, see that they were not made to pay extortionate prices. In
what other way can the public director look out for the public as op-
posed to the members? aes es = :
You state that the Assn. has not paid back any reserve. In this
you are wrong. I understand that you have Claude Eubank out on
your pay roll soliciting members to sue the Assn. Personally I believe
all of this reserve should remain in the Assn. to make it stronger and
better but the Board of Directors voted to pay this back to members
who did not rejoin in, five annual payments to those who were loyal
-to their membership agreements. _ e fe ae
= The total amount is immediately payable on death Ol a j
This seems to be the proper way to Handle the whole reserve. Let it
accumulate as insurance and only be paid on death. This reserve fund
is vital to the life and progress of the Assn. for without it they have
no financial stability, organized as it is with no capital stock and op-
erating for no profit. but on an actual cost basis. In time it may be
possible for the Assn. to accumulate enough reserve to be able to fi-
nance itself without borrowing money a dance oe ebeloetlon nck
Personally, I think you are injuring you
only by your unwarranted attacks on the Cotton Assn. but by your oe
ployment of Eubanks to solicit members to sue the Assn. He is a dis-
charged employee of the Assn. and who would credit a discharged em-
-ployees argumients when they know the reasons for which he was dis-
charged. SS 5
Your attacks on the Assn. are the most childish, feeble and ignor-
ant I have ever read. If a seader of your articles had never been a
member of the co-ops he could so Loss no = ee lee
= in :
oh eo ce ee ea ees gain. Any farmer knows
_ that such is not the case for if you hold cotton it will lose weight. sake
know this and everyone else knows it so why say cotton gains by hold-
ing. I wish to state that I have always ia peas weights on my
cotton shipped to the Assn. and everyone else Nas.
I soled for you against Brown but never again and furthermore I
&
ae
_ tion. You are doomed for defeat in your next race.
ee
Conwell. :
sampls rather than speed in|
ee ~ Co-ops have been selling cotton cheaper than the farmers.
You have a good bit of criticism to make about Mr. Conwell, our .
shall do all in my power to show you up in your true light at next elec- _
Bulletin?
Yours ery
Will you publish this in the Market ;
M LOTR: s 34
convictions.
P. S.I havent been paid to write this and it represents my honest.
April 2, 1931.
Hon. J. M. Lott, eae
Tax Receiver Coffee County,
Douglas, Georgia. >
My dear Mr. Lott:
Your letter of April 1st, received.
I note the first paragraph of your letter accuses me of being ma-_
licious, and insincere.
| [ am publishing your letter in the Market Bulletin and I am an-
_ Swering it herewith. s
it
Why should an official, who is elected by the people, jump on any 5
_ big organization maliciously?
Dont you know that I have sense enough to know that the officers
and directors and members and field agents of the Georgia Cotton
Growers Cooperative Association can vote and do vote and are as ac-
tive in politics as anyone else? .
Dont you know that an official who holds his office by virtue. of
the votes of the people dislikes to make any move against an organiza- '
tion unless he is inspired by some sincere motive?
What about you as tax receiver?
in and ask for a fair return. :
I grant you what you refuse to grant
In answer to your second paragraph in regard to the charge that
Mr. Eugene Black had been receiving $10,000 a year from the Georgia
Cotton Growers Co-operative Association as financial agent:
I stated in the Bulletin that Mr. Black denied this charge. eee:
stated he was not the financial agent of the Georgia Cotton Growers
Co-operative Association. Mr. Black admittedethat the checks were .
made out to him personally and he received them every two weeks for
a proportionate amount of this $10,000. He further stated that he en- zm
-dorsed these checks over to the Atlanta Trust Company. He further
stated that the Atlanta Trust Company was Custodian of Collateral
for the Georgia Cotton Growers Cooperative Association .
It was indeed strange that this same Eugene R. Black appointed
J. E, Conwell, public welfare director of the Georgia Cotton Growers
Co-operative Association. :
I made the further charge that Mr. Blacks explanation of this
$10,000 was worse than the original accusation. I can see some excuse. _
for Mr. Eugene R. Black being financial agent of the Co-ops but Mr.
- Black denies this. I can see no excuse for the Georgia Co-ops throw-
ing away $10,000 a year for some institution to handle their warehouse
receipts and notes when they_could put them in a safety deposit box
a great deal cheaper.
Furthermore, I can see no excuse for any intelligent man to ap-
point Conwell to watch Conwell, check up on Conwell and report on
The duty of a public welfare director is to check up on the Officials,
to make reports as to whether they are obeying the charter and by- |
laws and treating the members right. 3s :
-Your explanation of what a public welfare director is, is ludicrous.
You seem to think that a public welfare director is a man to sit up in
the Co-ops office to keep them from charging too much for cotton.
Man, what are you talking about?
Do you mean to say that Conwells\ job since he has been public |}
keep the Co-ops from cnarging too much is :
welfare director has been to
for cotton? | : : ;
I think you have accidentally stumbled across a great truth. I be-
lieve that is exactly what Mr. Conwell has been. doing, because ine
In other
words, they have been under-bidding the farmers.
Your statement that you have been buying your fertilizer from four :
to seven dollars a ton cheaper from them because the Growers Supply
Company handles fertilizer is also noted.
In that connection I wish to say that if they have been Selling you
fertilizer from four to seven dollars per ton cheaper than you can
myself. I want to state to you that it cost me more than I could have
bought it from other fertilizer companies.
you that some fertilizer dealers have told me that the greatest stabil-
izing force on the price of fertilizer in Georgia was the handling of
guano by the Georgia Co-ops.
did not cut prices.
I have argued with Mr. Conwell on this proposition myself. Mr.
Conwell stated to me that it would be a mistake for them to figure on
selling fertilizer at the cheapest price, but the proper thing for them
to do was to sell at the average price and then refund any profit they
made, in rebates and dividends to the purchaser. :
I got no dividends on that I bought. Very few of the farmers of
Georgia have received any dividends that amount to anything on the
fertilizer that they bought through the Co-ops. ;
What about the price of the Co-ops fertilizer this year?
Are they offering a 9-2-3 for $19.00 per ton delivered? And are
the prices for their other brands on the same proportion? Some of the
These dealers stated that the Co-ops
fertilizer companies, that are not cooperatives are selling at this price.
Do you think you can save from four to seven dollars per ton at
this price?
I note where you say you borrowed money from the Growers Fi-
nance Corporation: >
You had to buy stock and pay 10 percent. of the amount you bor-
rowed for this stock, didnt you?, This 10 percent that the stock cost
you and the interest that you paid and the other expenses made this
money cost you around 18 to 20 percent, didnt it?
- You know that money came from the Federal Land Bank at Co-
lumbia, South Carolina. Dont you know that this is indirect usury
that they are charging?
Have you, ever tried to Sell that stock?
The Growers Finance Corporation boasts that they buy this stock -
(Continued on page four)
Y want to further state to-
You dont maliciously make some __
one turn in their taxes for more than they are worth. You only step |
me, Mr. Lott, sincerity.
Uy Ese
it anywhere else, I understand why you have written this letter defend-
ing them. I have bought fertilizer from the Growers Supply Company
PAGE FOUR :
_ Live Stock For Sale
CATTLE FOR SALE
6 mos. old full breed Black Angus
bull, $40. J. J. Smith, Gray.:
Guernsey calves, both sex, 60 days
to 1 yr. old. Fine breeding. From
$50 up. Good notes accepted. Ad-
dress: F. S. Bailey, Secretary, Atlanta.
35 Linden Ave. N. E. j
Pure Jersey male calf, 3 mos old,
a or exch. G. C. Edmondson, Tem-
ple.
-. GradeJ. milch cows and
springers. Q. M. Rogers, Barney.
Fresh in J cow. T. B. tested. Good
cond. F. D. Hogans, Conyers, Rt. 4.
_ Close grade J. cow, 3rd calf, by reg.
bull, 3 gal. and more with proper feed.
$60 at barn. J. H. Mathews, College
Park, Rt. 1, Box 45. ce
3 young cows, fresh, 2 Jerseys and
1 Guernsey. Reasonableat my barn.
Won't ship. H. L. Casey, Canon, Rt. 2.
- 16 grade J. milch cows, $50 and $60
ea. Exch. for equal values L. P. Hick-
man, Forsyth, Rt. 1, Box 14.
_ 2 nice heifers, freshen in about 2
_ weeks, $35 each. H. G. Burroughs, Can-
on.
_. 4 yr. old full blood Holstein cow, ent.
to reg. 22 quarts a day and five lbs.
butter a week, $135.00. Sam Jones
Stratton, Point Peter. Zz
Fine J. heifer, 3 months old, ent. to
reg. Sell or exch for 20 hens, any
good: breed, except Leghorns. Mrs. W.
A. Wright, Calhoun, Rt, 3.
3 fresh young high grade Jerseys,
s *, apt $35. Jesse Reagan, Newnan,
some
15 mos. old J heifer, $20 cash. Ap-
ply: 591 Bankhead Ave., or 34 Antone
St. after six oclock evenings. O. P.
~ Pope, Atlanta. -
_ Fine milch cow. Gives 36 lbs. milk
~ per-day if fed. right. = Short. Horn
and Holstein. Fresh in July. $75.00
3 ct W. R. Pearson, Reidsville, Box
> Dark J. cow; about 3 1-2 -yrs. old,
fresh, 2nd calf (heifer, week old), four
gal. with plenty of feed. $60.00. W. V.
Gibson, Temple, Rt. 2.
_ Heifer, fresh in September; 6 mos.
old calf full blood Holstein, Not reg.
but ent. to, $67 for both. ~Sam Jones
_ Stratton, Point Peter.
HOGS FOR SALE
Duroc boar, wt. 350 lbs.. Reg. $35.00.
J. J. Smith, Gray.; .
~ 16 thrifty, 10 wks. old pigs, 10 bar-
_ rows and 6 gilts. Good stock. $3.00
be ae 5 for lot. B. J. Olliff, Summit,
Reg S. P. C. pigs from Champion
blood, $10 ea. 3 for $25. F. H. Bunn,
- Midville. : aes
Guineas: 6 wks. males, $8 each; one
bred gilt, farrow April, $50; service
boars, 12 -14 mos. old, $25, $35; 18
memos. P< C..-Ssow, $25.2 R.. Bs Barnes,
Summit. :
2 P. C. stock gilts, not bred. Wt.
- 125 lbs. ea. gross, $25 for both at my
-- place. W. M. Fortner, Meansville, Rt.
}: :
_ 8 pure S. P. C. 7 wks. old pigs, five
males and 3 females.
lot. C. D. Williamson, Plains.
; S. P. C. pigs, with papers, $10 ea. at
'barn. Miss Jamye C. Hooks, DeSota.
Essex boar, about 200 lbs. With pa-
pers, $20. Joe M. Brown, McRae.
& Duroc J. boars: 225-1b.-~$30 ree. .2,
90 Ibs. $12.50 ea. Exch. 1 for 6 bu.
_ Brabhams; 1 for 10 M Nancy Hall or
' Triumph potato plants. L. H. Eden-
field, Stillmore, Box 31. |.
Duroc-Jersey 3 to 5 mos. pigs. Im-
in buyers at low prices. L. M. Ken-
nedy, Collins. ; Co
= 1 little bone Black Guinea male, $25.
Lon Barnes, Graymont, Rt. 1.
; 1 gilt shoat, half P. C. - Hampshire,
7 mos. 125 lbs. $18; gilt, half Duroc-
P. C. 4 mos old, 65 lbs. $6.50 ea. Sam
Jones Stratton, Point Peter, Rt. 2.
HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE:
1 good workhorse, 1M_ lbs.
8 yrs. old. Gentle, work anywhere,
$100 at my place. Exch. for mule or
horse, about 900 Ibs. W. M. Fortner,
Meansville, Rt. 1.
Real good, 10 yr. old, 1150 lb. mare
mule, Extra good qualities. Good
cond. For sale. Riley CC. Couch, Tu-
rin.
SHEEP AND GOATS FOR SALE .
Toggenburg milk goat, fresh, 5 qts.
Alpine Cleota No. 34881. Dehorned,
-. with waddles, $65.
-. Gainesville, 12 Hudson. ages
1 natural hornless Nubian milk twe
Be
$10 ea., $70 for:
mune for life against cholera and reg..
About |~
R. Q. Thompson,
yr. old goat and an 8 month old 7-8
Tog. $15, or exch. Ganaway Williams,
Palmetto,-Box 12. moe
9 ewes, 1, 2 year old ram and 1 1 yr.
ram, 6 lambs. All Southdowns. Sell
or exch for cattle. J. M. Freeman,
M. D., Lavonia.
Tog. ~milk goat, av. 2 quarts daily.
freshened in January, $25.00... Mrs. W.
O. Shaw, Decatur, 2677 Pharr Road,
Nu En ae
8 ewe goats, $10 or ook R.. E.
Barnes, Summit.
RABBITS FOR SALE
5 prs. 1 1-2 mos. old, cross, N. @.
Reds and Whites, $1.00 pr. H. E. Stew-
art, Ft. Valley, Box 246.
8 mos old N. Z. White buck, Masto-
dian strain. Subject to reg. Does, bred
to-reg. buck, $2, or $3 pr. Miss Clar-
a Wynn, Dublin, Rt. 3. -/
Pure bred Chinchillas. Reg. Stock,
8 wks. old, $5 pair. DeLos Turner,
Griffin, Rt. C. ;
Large Red Chinchilla doe. Papers
furnished, $3.00 or exch for 25 R. I.
Red baby chicks. Geo. Berry, Jones-
boro, Rt. 2. _
5 ped. Chin. 7 mos old does, bred
and reg. and Chin. buck, unrelated. |
$15 for the 6. A. A. Marshall, Wash-
ingten. :
1 chin. doe, $1.00; 2 mixed does, 3
little ones, $2.00. Wilson Carson, Hamp-
ton, RFD 2.
Ped. Chin. Bred does, $5, $12.50.
each; bucks, $7.50-$20 each; meat rab-
bits, 17 1-2c lb. dressed, 50c Ib. Miss
Rivers, Atlanta. 1364 Hardee St., N.
| E. phone De.-1430 J.
Live Stock Wanted
CATTLE WANTED
Exch. value for good milch cow, giv-
ing 3 to 4 gal. per day. Arnold Hop-
kins, LaGrange, 116 Highland Ave.
' Want some Hereford yearling, 4 to
6 mos. old: Exc.h. 1930 hatch Ancona
or B. R. pullets, or will buy. Daris
Raulerson, Rockingham. :
Want Jersey or Guernsey heifer
calves. Reg. stock. Must be healthy...
Quote bst price del. _W. J. Morgan,
Stillmore.
Want to pasture 100 head of thin
young cattle. Write if interested.
Jos.. Freeman, Blakely.
Exch. 15 W. L. pullets and 1 fine
Barron cockerel and baby chicks for
a young cow or heifer, full blood
Guernsey or Jersey. Mrs. L. S. An-
drews, Ochlocknee.
Want 1 bull to pasture until Sep-
tember ist for his service.
or del. to my pasture. R. Brasiel, The
Rock, Rb ak
Want 1 good, young milch cow, not
under 3 gal. Exch. W. L. hens, baby
chicks, or hogs. A. V. Halloway, Gray-
mont. ee
Trade field peas, $2 bu. for a reg.
Guernsey heifer. Cheap. E. E. Hil-
liard, Bowersville. | Soke
Want a good 3 gal. milch
cow. R.
. Brewer, Lula, Rt. 2. : =
Want to buy a Jersey cow with
young calf, 4 to 5 gal. and cheap for
cash. W. B. Cadle, Mt. Vernon.
HOGS WANTED
Want 2 or 4 pigs to raise on halves
until December lst. Other party to
pay frt. Also 1 or 2 cows to milk for
their feed. Ref. Edd Young, Ross-
ville, Rt. 1.
Want 1 thoroughbred Berkshire
male, not over yr. old cheap. Or will
exch. value. J. D. Stratton, Point Pet-
er, Rt. 2.
Want Reg. S. P. C. gilt, already bred,
wt. 150 to 200 lbs. 8 to 10 mos. old,
Manly Davenport, Dial.
~ Want Red Berkshire hogs, thorough-
bred. State what you have, age and
price. M. A. Belflower, Empire, Rt. 1.
Exch. baby chicks for young pigs,
just weaned. Some good breed. No
runts. Write what you have. Mrs. L.
S. Andrews, Ochlocknee.
Want 2 guinea pigs, the stay-fat.
kind. Must be pure and no a-kin. C.
Milner, Shiloh.
Want 100 to, 200 lb. Duroc Jersey
boar, del. cheap for cash. J. E. Powers,
Lorane. .
Pigs wanted, any breed, 8 to 12 wks.
eld. Exch. cabbage plants at 50c M.
W. R. Head, Baxley.
Want Hampghire or Berkshire boar,
9 mo. old, or young pig. W. W. Wil-
son, Savannah, Box 569.
Will take 2 pigs to raise on halves..-
Mrs. D. C. Foley, Avondale Est.
HORSES AND MULES WANTED
Want good, cheap work horse. De-
Los Turner, Griffin, Rt. C. _ es
Exch. value for cheap mule. Write.
MARKET BeUl p EeT I Nye
_ Thursday, April 16, 1981.
change.
Close by |
A Letter Received, And a Reply
(Continued from page three)
~ pack as cheap as they can and dont say anything about where the
difference in the price of the stock goes. ;
At their last meeting they approved of amending their charter so
as to provide for the sale of a million dollars more stock. Why did
they need this million dollars more stock? They needed it to get usur-
ious rates of interest on government money.
Your comments. on the reserve fund are also noted.
I believe you say that where a member dies they do pay his fam-
ily immediately. = St
I wish you would allow me to put in the Bulletin that all widows
and orphans may apply to you as special agent who will collect the -re-
serve fund that is due them by- the Co-ops.
You remember that I began this letter with the grant that you were
sincere in your efforts in defending the Co-ops. Now wont your sin-
cere interest in the brother members make you accept the proposition
to collect this. money for the widows and orphans of your dead broth-
ers? I have several claims now in the office that I can furnish you.
In regard to short weights and under grades on cotton, by the Co-
ops: . ! \
I have received numerous letters from all over the State complain-
ing of this. I think that I have served the farmers of the State a good
purpose by calling attention to this publicly. You know where you come
right out and tell folks to look out for under weights and grades by a.
certain place it is pretty hard for them to get gypped after. that.
I have not rectved any complaints in the last two weeks
weights and grades of the Co-ops.
PEC es As long as lights hold out to burn
The vilest sinner may yet return.
I brought certain definite, specific charges against the Co-ops.
They -are as follows:
1st: Conwell was appointed public welfare director to check up and
~ report on himself.
2nd: The Co-ops paid either to Eugene Black or the Atlanta Trust
Company, $10,000 for apparently no service. 3 \
rd: The Co-ops are not generally paying back the reserve fund
that is due the first five year members. .
- 4th: The Co-ops are holding $69,000 of the 1923-24 crop of cotton
that belongs to the farmers that shipped them their cotton at the rate
of 69 cents per bale. This $69,000 was an error that was made in |
- the Co-ops favor.
were mailed out. | .
Do you approve of their holding this money?
_ 5th: The charge of underweighing and undergrading cotton.
6th: Rushing the cotton to the mills at Be prices and gamb-
ling with the farmers and the governments money on the cotton ex-
This was not discovered until after final checks
Do you approve of the Co-ops being guilty of this?
Mr. Lott, you are tax receiver of your county. You are not only an
educated man but you are a thoughtful man. You could not hold your
office unless you were. What- about these charges that I have listed
above? eae . ,
Dont you know if some poor farmers were to beat the, Co-ops out
of $5.00 that a jury in your county would send them to the chain-gang?
Mr. Lott, I live pretty close to you. Are you the same Mr. Lo
who used to be in the turpentine business at Jacksonville, Georgia? |]
If you are the same Mr. Lott you and I did some heavy mule swapping ||
about 20 years ago. You impressed me then as being a fair man who
about the
knows what is right and_ would be willing to stand up for it. If you
are the same man that I swapped mules with down on the river
swamps, I know you are fair and just. If you are the same man you
belong to a pretty strong family in that section of the State. You are
holding a position of trust. The farmers of your county have honored
you. Z eo .
I will not threaten you as you threatened me, Mr. Lott, but I hope
you get down on your knees and pray, do the right thing, and holk
your job until you die. I am not going to try to beat you, I am goin
-to try and reform you. =
You know you and I have some visible relief in the shape of the
jobs we hold. My salary helps keep me from going broke farming and
I imagine your fees as tax receiver help keep you from going broke
farming. ; : :
| Dont try to inveigle your neighbors into doing business with the
bits, any age, size, or color, Write. W.
} Claude Rivers has to jump over.)
ET:J
Co-ops. They may feed you a little red corn on account of your influ- |[
ence but they are gutting the average farmer in Georgia. :
Come in to see me, and let me show you astack of evidence to prove
the above charges that would take one of the best fox hounds that
With best regards to you, I am, :
Sincerely, i Bs
Commissioner of Agriculture. ef
John W. Vinson, Wellston.
Want to rent 2 good farm mules.
with chance to buy in the Fall. Pre-
fer mares. J. H. Marhews, College
Park, Rt. 1, Box 45.
ant a mare mule for $25. Exch.
firle white onion sets at $2.25 bu. C.|
M. Dwight, Clarkston.
Want 1 pony for boy of 10 yrs. Must
be perfectly gentle and cheap for cash,
or will exch hens or pigs. Mrs. W. T.
Maynard, Newton.
SHEEP AND GOATS WANTED
Exch. Tog. buck for buck not re-
lated to E. R. Swindlers herd of Cush-
man, Ark. Or 2 doe kids, 4 to 8 mos.
old. R. Q. Thompson, Gainesville, 12
Hudson St. ;
Want sheep of any kind, $2 and up,
within 75 miles Adel. G. M. Roberts;
Sparks, Box 7.
Want 1 young Nubian billy, horn-
less preferred. Must be reasonable.
L. I. Patterson, Savannah, RFD 3.
~ RABBITS WANTED
In market for domestic rabbit meat:
|D. Martin, Atlanta, 415 Mathewson
Place, S. W.
3 Miscellaneous For Sale |
Good ripe tobacco; chewing, 12 1-2c;
smoking, 10c. Add postage. No orders
for less than $1. Cash with order.
Mrs. Christine Harper, Baxley, Rt. 4. /
4 lbs. good, dark red tobacco, del.
Ga. $1. J. W. Gay,. Jasper.
PIGEONS FOR SALE
6 pure bred White Kings (5 roosters
and 1 hen), $5.00 for lot; $1.25 each.
James Simpson, McDonough, Rt. 3,
Box 2, :
Muff Tumblers and Homers, Mat-
ed and working, $1.50 pr. Other fan-
cy stock. Exch for baby chicks OF
hens. E. E. Smith, Atlanta, 20 Ger-
trude Place.
4 prs. mated, banded Red. Carneaux.
All working, mated. $1.50 pr. Young-
sters, 50c each. Exch for White Kings.
F. S. Taylor, Vidalia.
10 prs. mixed pigeons, good. layers,
for sale or exch. for bantams or other
See
Can use limited number of meat rab-
chickens. H. E. Stewart, Ft. Valle
Box 246. Los ge
_ 2
Thursday, April 16, 1931.
Georgia Products For Sale
- BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE
10 bu. straight Irons, $22.50 for lot.
F, Fagan, Martin. :
50 bu. Irons, slightly damaged, $1.50
. FOB. J.C. Boling, Canton, Rt. 3.
White bush butter beans, 50c at.
ack-eye crowders, brown eyes, each,
10c lb. Add postage on small_ orders.
Mrs. L. M. Aderhold, Lavonia.
15 bu. Brabham peas, $2.25 bu. W. H.
iagan, Morrow. - :
Purple Hull white table peas, 40c qt.
prepaid. Exch. 1 gal. for pk. Otootan
ns. Mrs. Steve) Howard, Flowery
~ 20 bu. Red Rippers, slightly damaged
by rain, $2 bu. FOB. C. E. Jenkins,
Flowery Branch.
. W. O. Birdsong, Gordon.
_ From 2 to 100 bu. Velvet beans, $2.50.
bu. About 75 per cent sound. Jas. W.
Smith, Reidsville.
Cream sugar -crowders, 3 crops per
season, 5 lbs. $1. Miss Kate Lancas-
ter, Sylvester. .
32 bu. 90-day velvets, $2.90 bu. FOB.
Cash only. Y. S. Gibbs, Abba.
8 bu. Crowder. Clays, slightly mixed,
$2.50 bu. Money order. Steve Wright,
Ellijay, Rt. 4, Box 76.
Lady Finger peas, 15c lb. 10 lbs. $1;
okra seed, 4 lbs. 48c; also P. R. and
Boons potato plants, $2 M. Cader Ste-
phens, Flowery Branch.
Otootans, $3.50; Clays, $1.80 bu. Also
Thurmond Grey melon seed, 50c Ib. |
Remittance with order. W. O. Norton,
Vahey. i ae $
_ Mixed peas, $1.75; Clays, $1.80; Brab-.
hams, $2.25; Otootans, $3.50; Biloxis,
$2.50. Remittance with order. D. C.
Strother, Ft. Valley. oe
10 lbs. pure white bunch butter beans
18c lb. Mrs. J. H. Floyd, Chipley.
_ Genuine Otootans, $3.50; Brabhams,
$2.25; Clays, and Whippoorwills, each,
$1.80; Mixed peas, $1.75; Also Petty-
Toole cotton seed, 75c bu. G. A. Fagan,
Ft. Valley. i
Unknown Cow peas, 40 bu. Sound,
broken, on Cars, $2.15 bu. 6 wks. peas
30 bu. $2.15 bu. J. Van Pelt, Augusta,
22521 3-4 Central Ave. ~
10 bu. Bra sound and clean, $2.50
bu. FOB.. C. E. Reiser, Gly... 2
_Cream sugar crowders, 15c lb. No less
than 5 lb. order accepted. Postpaid.
Cash with order.. Mrs. L. O. Stewart,
sper.
Mathews Imp. Soys, $5 bu. FOB. R.
Broadhurst, Americus.
_ Few bu. New Eras and Red Rippers,
ee bu. W. T. Adams, Lavonia, Box
Pure No. 1 Brabs, $2.25 bu. Cash. No
chks. Taylor Hooks, Unadilla, Rt. 2.
Brown Sugar Crowders, 5c lb. in 20
Exch. 2 Ibs. for 1 of white
. Mrs. H. C. Roberts, Chipley,
_ Mung beans, 5 lbs. $1 postpaid. EB. N.
Eslinger, Ringgold.
_ 25 lbs. Turkey Toe peas, 15c Ib. Exch
for M. B. turkey, Indian Runner duck
or Parks B. R. hen eggs. Write. Mrs.
W. J. Butts, Cochran.
Sound, recleaned peas: Brabs, $2.50
ou. Red Hulls, $2.25 bu. C. H. Cooke,
Sandersville. se
Good, tender streaked Half Runner
ean seed, 20c cup, 2 for 35c, or 30c lb.
No stamps. Brown 6-wks. peas, same
price, postpaid. Mrs. J. S. Greene,
Plainville, Rt. 2.
25 bu. sound Conch peas. Grown on
_ Own farm, 8c Jb. FOB. B. C. Boatright
Tennille.
66 bu. No. 1 Otootans. Hand gather-
ed and thrashed. In 3 bu. sacks, $15
oe sack, FOB. W. L. Houser, Ft.
alley.
20 bu. New Eras. Sound, pure and
recleaned. $2.50 bu. C. T. Miller, Leo.
20 bu. sound, mixed Clay and Iron
peas, $1.75 bu. Robert Humber (color-
ed), Richland.
Bc BUTTER FOR SALE
_ Fresh butter, 2 or 3 lbs. per week, 30
Wb. del, R. H. Wood, Dacula, Rt. 1.
CORN AND SEED CORN FOR SALE
Neals Paymaster, 1st yr. Selected,
Rubbed and hand shelled. 75 pk. $2.75
bu, FOB. Exch. for pigs or shoat of
good breed. Sat. guar. James D. Wig-
_ ley, Lyerly. ;
_ _Whatleys red cob, 2 ear, field select-
ed, hand nubbed and shelled, $2.50 bu.
FOB. J. L. Thomas, Madison, RFD 1.
50 Ibs. seed corn, field selected, shel-
led, 5c Ib. Rice pop corn, 15 cup. Not
aot Charlie H. Smith, Roopville,
hite rice pop corn, 10c lb. Not less
han 3 lbs. in lot. Postpaid. Cash with
rder. Mrs. L. O, Stewart, Jasper. |
By
MARKET BULLETIN
100 bu. good shelled corn. Sound and
weevil free. $1 bu..FOB. Also corn
meal, same price. See or write. J. B.
Lewis, Nacoochee.
Whatleys prolific. Certified by Ga.
Crop Imp. Assn. $2.50 bu. Over 2 bu.
$2.40; less than bu. at rate of $3 bu.
Extra postage for parcel post ship-
ments. H. O. Lovvorn, Carrollton.
Whatleys seed corn, $2 bu. G. A,
Fagan, Ft. Valley. - a
Seed corn and peas. Sell or exch for
90-day Velvets. Bu. for bu. Must be
sound. Peas little mixed but all right
co hay. Guar. sat. R. S. Sparks, Shi-
oh.
Excellent corn, kept in ceiled cribs,
well treated against weevils. Slipped
shuck. Car lots or less. J. G. Dean,
| Dawson.
Snapped corn finely ground through
1-8 in. screen. 100 lb. bags, $30 ton;.
car lots, $28 ton. FOB. Cash with or-
der. .O. K. David, Marshallville, RFD.
100 to 150 bu. extra good _ slipped
Shuck corn, 85c bu. 80 lbs. to bu FOB.
G. He Tuttle, Tifton; Rtx 2:
400 bu. extra good corn, 75c bu. FOB
W. W. Bryan, Tifton. |
_.Corn in car lots, or less, slipped
shuck. Sound, well seasoned, and
practically free of weevils. 80 lbs. to
bu. Prices upon request. Chas. F.
Howe, Ft. Valley.
Marlboro, nubbed and shelled, $2 bu.
Exch, for Otootans. R. L. B. Shirley,
Lavonia, Rt. 2. =:
Whatleys imp. from prize winner.
Send remittance. D. C. Strother, Ft.
Valley.
Whatleys Ist yr. Unmixed, $2.50 bu.
FOB. Nubbed and shelled. M. M. Wil-
liams, Monroe. -
Shelled pop corn, 10c Ib. Add post-
age. Ruby Carter, Winder, Rt. 3.
GROUND CORN FOR SALE
Ear corn, ground fine to corn cob
shuck meal in 100 lb. bags, $1.50 per
os FOB. W. B. Collier, Ft. Valley,
RFD:
\
COTTON SEED FOR SALE
Cokers 5, $1 bu. Exch for shelled
corn. Bu. for bu. W. T. Adams, La-
vonia, Box 381.
Half and Half, 2nd yr from Sun\-
merour. Rolls cleaned ea. yr. $1 bu. 10
Bi oles 80c bu. E. N. Eslinger, Ring-
gold. ; a
Pure Piedmont ped. 1st yr. No black
seed. Rolls clegned. $2.50 cwt. FOB.
Joe C. Brown, Commerce, RFD 6.
500 bu. Mathis wilt resistant, 1st yr.
Privately ginned 3 bu. to sack. $2.50
FOB. W. L. Houser, Ft. Valley.
15 or 20 bu. Cooks Wilt resistant,
"5c bul FOB. Harrison M. Phagan,
Rebecca. Sy )
1M bu. Ruckers, Wannamakers, Hea-
vy Fruiter, $1 bu. FOB. Exch. for Vel-
vet beans, peas, corn, etc. M. Reed,
Smyrna.
1600 lbs. pure clean:Salisbury, 90c bu. |
Julian J. Floyd, Chipley. .
Imp. Toole, Mathis strain. Recleaned,
-80c bu. J. G. Dean, Dawson.
Woods Big Boll, 2nd yr. $3 cwt. Frt
paid. J. H. Davis, Milledgeville, Rte.
1500 bu. Wannamaker Cleveland, 1st
yr. Ginned with care. Reduced. 85c bu.
Second yr. seed, 75c bu. L. P. Bran-
denburg, Senoia. 3
- 20 bu. Half and Half, 85c bu. in 10
bu, lots. Exch for corn. W. T.. Simp-
son, Norcross. :
Marretts Cleveland, No. 7, $2.50 cwt
FOB. G. Z. Maxwell, Toccoa, Rt. 1,
Box V7.
10 bu. Wilson type. Sound and pure.
$1 bu. $3 cwt. Will exch. FOB. T. O.
McLendon, Carrollton, Rt. 3. ee
Lee Wilsons big boll, Cokers 5, Wan-
namakers Cleveland. All 1st yr. Gin-
ned privately. 75c bu. FOB. J. L. Thom-
as, Madison, Rt. 1.
Wannamakers for planting, pure and
sound, 75c bu. B. F. Fagan, Martin.
Gokers 2 bales per A. $2 bu. or exch
for pure bred pigs. Sidney Aderhold,
Lavonia.
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
2 country cured hams, 30 and 34 lbs.
25c Ib. Money order. No chks. E. V.
Laudermilk, Mt. Airy, RFD 1.
Country cured ham, wt. 30 lbs. 25c
Ib. R. H. Wood, Dacula, Rt. 1.
_. FRUIT FOR SALE
10 Ibs. sundried apples, $1.50 - del.
Exch for Porto Rico pot. plants. Mrs.
J. S. Greene, Plainville, Rt. Ks
36 Ibs. dried apples, 15c lb.
der filled for less than $1.
oyd, Hiawassee.
S raried apples or. peaches, 15c lb.
or exch. for red Spanish peanuts, at 8c
lb. shelled, or 5c in hull. Mrs. John-
nie F. Myers, Hartwell, Rt. 4
No or-
Mrs. F.
_ Dried peaches and apples, 15c Ib, also
led, $1.50 M.
i white Rice peas, 12 1-2c Ib. Mrs. J. A.
Wilson, Martin, Rt. 2. :
15 Ibs. dry peaches, 12 1-2c lb. Add
postage. Mrs. W. J. Snider, Gibson,
RFD 2.
GRAIN FOR SALE
460 bundles corn fodder, $2.50 per
100 bundles, near Gainesville. W. E.
Jackson, Gainesville, RFD 4.
Cattail millet, 15c lb. FOB. Shipping
point. Cash with order sufficient to
cover purchase and postage or express.
J. H. Hamrick, Unadilla.
\ HAY FOR SALE
Baled hay, $20 ton; velvet bean, pea-
vine, soy bean and crab grass and vel-
ss beans mixed. T. L. Williams, Sau-
ee, =)
HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES
FOR SALE
Bright new Ty Ty honey. Ext. or
ehunk. $1.50 per 10 lb: pail del. D. F.
Thomas, Odum.
New strained honey, $1.20 per gal.
FOB. Cash with order. No chks. John
L. Bennett, Screven, Rt. 2, Box 31.
7 lbs. good beeswax, 25c lb. Cash
with order. No chks. Geo. Mason,
Alto, Rt. 2.
1 lb. beeswax, 30c; 3 small squares,
Rta
Very good grade honey. Write for
reasonable prices. B. E, Sheppard,
Savannah, 1222 E. Henry St. .
40 pat. hives. Cypress, Hoffman
frames. Also few old fashioned straight
hives, $1.50 to $4. Exch for corn at 80c
bu. G. F. Adams, Leary, Rt. 2, -Box
124.
New Ext. honey, 6 ten to cs. $6.30; 12
5 cs. $6.60; 2 10, $2.75 postpaid; 1 10,
$1.50.. Jno. A. Crumney, Doctortown.
10 hives bees, $1.50 per hive here in
my Bee Yard: Write or come. J. J.
Knowles, Patterson, Rt. 1.
SYRUP FOR SALE
Few val.. sorghum syrup, $1 gal. G.
Z. Maxwell, Toccoa, Rt. 1, Box 77.
Ga. cane syrup, No. 10 cans. Sell or
exch for 3 mos old Jersey calves. Y. S.
Gibbs, Abba.
Georgia Products Wanted
BEANS AND PEAS WANTED
Want crowder peas. Send sample and
state best price. G. F. Adams, Leary,
Rt. 2, Box 124. ; zs
Exch 1 1-4 bu.Whatleys prolific corn
for 1 bu. sound, pure Otootan soy beans
to extent 5 bu. beans. H. GQ. Lovvorn,
-Carroliton. y
Want 20 bu. Brabham or Clay peas.
Exch Cokers No. 5, or Piedmont cot-
ton seed. R. D. Tatum, Palmetto.
Want 10 to 20 bu peas. Exch 1M P.
R. potato plants per 1 bu. Both del.
S. E. Hollis, Baxley, Rt. 1. s
Exch value for snap beans, white
bunch butter beans or white cornfield
beans. Mrs. John Tinsley, Arlington,
Rt. 1.
Want Brabs or Irons. Quote best
price. Jacob Vickers, Willacoochee.
CORN AND SEED CORN WANTED
Want old fashioned Shoe Peg corn,
and. white cornfield beans. J. Ben Ad-
ams, Dewyrose, Rt. 2.
ee -. FRUIT WANTED
Want 10 lbs. each dried peaches and
apples, free from worms. Pay reason-
able price or exch potato plants. I.
Boatright, Alma. ;
HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES
WANTED !
Want 1 or 2, 1 1-2 story 8 or 10 frame
pat bee hives, with shallow frames.
Cheap for cash. State price del. Paul
McGaughey, Monroe, RFD 4.
Want used honey Extractor; 2 frame
Sheppard, Savannah, 1222 E. Henry St.
PECANS AND PEANUTS WANTED
Want seedling and paper shell var.
pecans. Send sample. Geo. M. Prince,
Columbus, P. O. Box 1160.
Plants For Sale
Portoricans, Govt. insp. and_ treat-
5 M. up, $1.35 M. del.
Cash with order. O. K. Kerrin, Win-
okur.
Portoricans, $1.50 M. FOB, or $1.75
M. PP. in Ga. Gov't. insp. and treat-
ed. B. O. Googe, Baxley.
Govt. insp. Portoricans, red and
pink skin. $1.50 M. del. Ga. Exch.
some for Ga. cane syrup; also Mar-
globe tom. 25c C.
Odum. Rt. 2.
postage.
5e each. Mrs. J. G. Weeks, Sparks, |
reversing, slip gear and brake. B. E..
W. J. OQuinn, Jr.
Imp. red_ skin Portoricans, Gov't. Rowe, Fitzgerald. Rt. 2.
insp. and treated, $1.50 Be e i
axley. F
chks. W. D. Addison,
Box 60. ;
Mint plants, enough for good b
25c. Mrs. J. R. Hillis, Millhaven.
Genuine red skin Portoricans, from
ine. Gov't. insp. $1.50 M. ady
April 15th. No checks. Cash. Mrs.
F, E. Kesler, Baxley. Rt. 4. se
Avon Early and Marglobe tomato
E Iceberg lettuce and early Flat
Dutch cabbage, 15 C. $1 M. Add
Mrs. J. B. Paul, Leesburg.
Missionary strawberry, $2 M. 3 M.
$5; del. Rhubarb plants, 35c doz.
Cash or money order. Mrs. M. C. M
Lane, Hartwell. Bist
Missionary strawberry, $2 M. 4 M.
$5 del. Rhubarb, 35c doz. Cash or
money order. Mrs. Thornton McCur
ley, Hartwell. Rt. 5. Seay
Genuine Gov't. i ar
$1.50 M. Cash with order. Postage
prepaid. George Vaubhn, Baxley. |
Govt. insp. Portoricans, $1.60
Also Stone and Baltimore tomai
ve price. B. E. Daniel, Ty Ty, R
Genuine Portoricans, from vine cut.
on fresh soil ea. yr. $150 M. FOB.
Ready April 20th. Cash with orde
Mrs. Eldon Joiner, Thomasville.
Portoricans, $140 M. 10M.
more, $1.35 M. S. L. Crosby, Baxl
Portoricans, insp. $1.75 .M. 5 M. or
more, .$1.65 M. All del. $1.50 M. Exp.
collect, FOB. Valdosta. ively ceaneg
Alexander ;Valdosta. Rt. 1. Be
Portoricans, Goy. insp. $1.50 |
FOB. J. H. Arnold, Baxley, RFD
Box 88, - Hees
C. O. D. cabbage plants, E. J., Chas.
W., Copenhagen and Plat Dutch.
Open field grown. 50c M. White
Bermuda, 75 M. Robt. McCook,
Fitzgerald. Pi eae !
Best Early tomato, $1.75 M; 500, 90c;
25 C. del, Mrs. Ouida Harper, Osier-
leld. ues
10 M. Napier Grass Roots. Pro
duces 40 tons good feed acre. $1 pe
C. FOB. R. S. Broadhurst, Americus.
Portoricans, State insp. $1.50 M.
postpaid. No checks. G. W. Owen,
Hawkinsville. Rt. 3. Le TS
Gov't. insp. Portoricans, $1.65 |
del. Greater B. tomato, $1 per 500
T. A. Stowers, Tifton.
$1.75 M. Del.
Rie: : Ae
Portoricans, $1.65 M. del. Ga. 5
15 M. $1.50 collect; Inspected. Exch
for 10 gal.Ribbon Cane syrup and 50
baby chicks. Write first. L. E. Byrd,
Bristol. Es eee
Pure red skin Portoricans and
Spanish Boon, 500, 90c; $1.75 M. ae
10 M. $1.60 M. collect. Ready May 5t
W. O. Waldrip, Flowery Branch. |
Norduke wilt -resistant tomato, 30
C; $1.75 M. New Stone and Greater
B. 25c 'C. $1.50 M. Cash with order.
Grady Bruce, Jakin. | & ae
Pure Portoricans, Govt. insp. $1.50
M. 5 and 10 M. lots, $1.40 M. Post-
paid. No chks. S. M. Sinyard, Ha
kinsville. Rt. 1. pes
Portoricans, Goyt. insp. from vine
potatoes. $1.75 M. del. Tomato, $1.4
M. Del. A. W. Parsons, Abbeville.
Cabbage-collard, Copenhagen cab-
bage, New Stone tomato. All 20c C;
60c, 500; $1.10 M. del. in State. Mh
J. L. Parrish, Nashville. Rt. 2. ie
E. J., Chas. W. cabbage, $1 M. Swe
pepper and New Stone Greater
and Marglobe tomato, $1.25 M. d
B. F. Mallard, Rincon. ae
Dill plants, 35c C. 20 for 50. Not
less than 50 sold. No stamps. M:
T. B. Thomas, Thomasboro. 2
Lucretia dewberry, 10c. doz. $7
Miss Helen Daniel, Greenville. |
_ Spearmint plants, 3 for 10c inclu
ing postage. Mrs. W. L. Stevenson,
Sharpsburg. Pe Lee
Lucretia, dewberry, 10c doz, $7 M.
Miss Fletcher Reid, Greenville. ae
Purple skin Portoricans, $1.50 M.
M. $7; 10 M. $13.0; New Stone toma
to, $1.50 M. Willie Stewart, Alma
Govt. insp. imp. red and yellow skin
Portoricans, $1.75 M. Over 5 M. $1.50
M.. Cash with order. A. J. Willia:
Alma. P. O. Box 54. * pee
Chas. W., J. Wakefield cabbage, $
M. del. 5, 10 M. lots, 75 M. Re
skin Portoricans, $1.75 M. Old fas
ioned Boones. Imp. G. E. Waldri
Flowery Branch: Rt. 1. 4 2 33-
White, Heading collard, $1, 500;
75 M. prepaid; Napier grass,
joints, 50c FOB. Miss Kate
caster, Sylvester. ef the
State insp. Portoricans, $1.50 M.. del.
Ga. last April and May; New Stone
tomato, 25c C.. $1.25 M. Ready. Le-
land Lightsey, Odum. Rt. 2. Dees
Portoricans, State insp. $140 M
FOB. J. G. Herndon, Surrency.
E. J, Chas. W. cabbage, 40c, 50
50c M. COD. Sat. guar. Mrs. R. L
Georgia .
Market Bulletin
Published Weekly By The
BUREAU OF MARKETS
Arthur D. Jones, Director
ae
Department Of
Agriculture
_ Eugene Talmadge, Commissioner
_ THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1931.
- Entered as second class matter
: February 15, 1922, at the Post
| Office at Atlanta, Georgia, un-
der the act of June 8, 1900. Ac-
cepted for mailing at special
rate of postage provided for in
ee 1103. Act of October 8,
- Notice of farm produce and ap-
_ purtenances, admissible under
postal regulations, inserted one
time on each request, and re-
| peated only when request is ac-
companied by new copy of no-
tice. :
- Second-Hand Farm Machinery,
f Flowers and Seed, Incubator and
- Ornamental Nursery Stock no-
|| tices are published in Monthly
ji} Supplement which appears on
the -first..Thursday of each
month.
| Farm Land for sale editions are
- published at intervals during the
ti year. Advance notices of these
editions appear from time to
time advising advertisers when
| to mail us these types of notice.
Limited space will not permit
insertion of unimportant no-
_ tices. Under Legislative act the
| Market Bulletin does not. as-
sume any responsibility for any
notice appearing in the Bulletin
or transaction resulting there-
_ from.
Sed
BLACK STRAP MOLASSES
Parties who are in the market for
Blackstrap molasses should get in
touch with the State Bureau of Mar-
ets, State Capitol.
COTTON SEED FOR SALE
750 bu. Lee Wilson Type Big Boll
- cotton seed. Seed close to Breeder.
roduced bale to acre last yr. * 150
Boy
eres. 90c bu. FOB Byromville.
yrom, Byromville.
Eggs For Sale
pure bred
W. Wyandotte, Regal
Dorcas, $1.25, 15; $6 C. E. L. Coch-
an, Lavonia.
S.C. W . Leggs, $1 per 15. del.
Crates ret. J. W. Miller, Patterson.
Buff Cochin bantam eggs, $1.50 per
(15. O. H. Wright, 515 Peters Bldg. At-
anta.
Tompkins Red, direct. $1.50 per 15.
lock eggs, $1; $1.95 per 50; $3.75 C.
el. C. F. Matheson, Alto. Box 121.
Indian Runner duck, $1 per 15. W.
BE. Goodwin, Wadley.
_ Parks B. R. Reg. Per. 64-C-31. $1.25
Pper 15;: $2,. 30; $5 -C. Mrs. Mamie
voach Plyler, Manassas.
Pure bred Sheppard Ancona. Dir-
ct from Lindstrom. Prize winning
tock. $1 per 15. Exch. for turkey:
( : W. L. Stonecypher, Forest. Glen.
Pure bred White Cornish and White
rock (Fischel str.). $1.25 per 15 del.
is. PP. W. D. Joyner, Roberta. Rt. 2.
Pure Thompson B. R., $1 per 15 del.
*s. Roscoe Nicholson, Rome. Rt. 7.
Mi turkey, $2 per 13; White
ock hen, 75c per 15. Carton ret.
firs. Ben F. Tanner, Axson.
20 yr. old bred-up R. I. Reds, $1.50
per 14. Exp. paid. Mrs. W. T. Strick-
land, ee
Regal Dorcas W. Wyandotte, select-
d, $1 per 15 postpaid. M. L. Snare,
ainesville.
Hatching eggs, Reds, Rocks, W. Wy-
andottes, Tancred W. L., Everlay B.
. 75c per 15 del. D. F. Thomas, Odum.
B. R. eggs, $1 per 15. $1.50, 30; $4
Cc. Crates ret. Mrs. J. W. Woodruff,
illy.
mixed toms, $3.50 ea.
MARKET BULLETIN
Mammoth Bronze turkey eggs, $3
doz. April and May del. F. S. Bailey,
Secretary, Atlanta. 35 Linden Ave. N.
E
Pure bred W. Rock, 50c per 15, plus
postage. 90c per 2 set. and postage.
Mrs. Calon J. Hamilton, Baxley.
Black Minorca, pure Pape str. $1
per set. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin.
Rt. 2.
Everlay B. L. sired by cocks direct
from Tormahlen. $1 per 15; $2 for
45. Postpaid. Charlie E. Smith,
Braselton.
Scientific crossed chickens and
Tancred W. L., B. P. R. and Reds, se-
lected eggs, $1.50 per 30, del. H. A.
Neal, Carnesville.
Select S. L. Wyandotte, $1 per 15.
J. J. Stephens, Luthersville. Rt. 1.
Eggs: Mallard duck, Eng. Ringneck
pheasant, each, $3 per 15; J. B. Giant
and Red, $1. Mrs. Fred Creswell, At-
ee Roswell Road, phone, Cherokee
Mammoth Pekins, $1.25 per 14; Ma-
hood Red, $1 per 15. Add postage.
Mrs. J. B. Paul, Leesburg.
Toulouse goose, 25c each. Pure bred.
Mrs. C. A. Black, The Rock. Rt. 1.
Mammoth Bronze, pure bred. $3
doz. Mrs. Claude Hill, Clarkesville.
Pure bred B. R., 75c per 15. Exch.
2 set. for 1 M. potato plants. Maud
Lee, Clermont. Rt. 1.
Pure bred S. C. Buff Orp. for sale.
-| Also hens, $1.50 ea. biddies, 12c each.
Miss Ronie Johnson, Shellman. Rt. k.
paid. J. H. Loyd, Milan, Rt. 3.
Pure bred Tancred, $3 a 100 del. or
75c per 15. Exch for good, sound peas
or potato plants. Mrs. F. Cowart, Sum-.
mit; -Rt<2.
Pure bred Partridge Rock, $1.25 per
15. Mrs, T. E. Stephens, Cordele, Rt.
C..
Fischel White Rock, $1 per 15. Crate
ret. Mrs. J. R. May, Oconee, Rt. 1.
Pure bred Brahma, $1 per setting
plus postage. C. E. Cagle, Maysville.
Dark Cornish Indian game. Berry
str. 75c per 15. B. C. Pope, Tallapoo-
sa, Rt. 3.
R. I. Red eggs, selected, 75c per 15
del. Mrs. J. A. Brown, Locust Grove.
Large White Indian Runner eggs, $1
per 13. $6 C. W.H. Hagan, Morror.
Pure bred Turken eggs, $1.25 per 15,
del. PP. Carton ret. Miss Rebecca
| Campbell, Atlanta, 869 Boulevard, S. E.
Pure Marcy strani eggs, $1.25 per 15
del. Mrs. Belle Joiner, Soperton, Rt. 2.
Donaldson Eggs, $4 per 100; April
del. Also Black Giants, $1.25 per 15.
R. A. Yeager, Zebulon.
Cs. weekly good, infertile eggs, W.
L. and Minorca. FOB. 30c doz. D. R.
Brock, Bremen.
Thompson B. R. $1 per 15 del. Mrs.
J. R. Hillis, Millhaven.
Nugget Buff Rock, $1.25 per 15; $2.-
25, 30; Also baby chicks, April 15th
and 28th. 18c each; May chicks, 10c
ne Mrs. G. L. Trimble, Adairs-
ville.
Selected Ancona, fine stock records,
$1 per 15 del. $3.25 C. Also Parks
B.R$.25- per 15; $4.-C... Ree. Per:
D-31. Daris Raulerson, Rockingham.
Eggs from high producing, blood-
tested B. R. $1 per 15; $4 C. Also
day old chicks, $12 C. del. Hatch
oS Mrs. J. A. Howell, Meigs.
Selected fresh R. C. S. L. Wyan-
dotte, 50c per setting. Carton ret.
Money order. Mrs. W. L. Gayler, Ly-
lerly, Rt. 1.
Giant Mammoth Bronze turkey, $5
per 15; Lots, 50 to 100, 30c each. Mrs.
W. H. Williamson, Bremen. :
Silver L. Wyandotte, also Reds, all
pure. 75c per setting. Mrs. J. L. Par-
rish, Nachville. Rt. 2.
Mallard duck eggs, $1 per 15 post-
paid. Clark H. Cook. Mansfield.
Mixed Bronze turkey, $2.250 per doz.
plus postage. Roy Brooks, Newton.
Dark Cornish game eggs, $1 per
15. Cash with order. Crate ret. O.
N. Storey, Sylvester, Rt. 1.
Selected eggs of ped. matings Parks
B. R. Rating, D-31, $1.25 per 15; $2,
30; $5 C; del. Mrs. J. S. Raulerson,
Rockingham. RFD 3.
Pure bred Parks B. R. 75c per 15
del. until June 1st. Permit, No. 26-
D1-31. Mrs. H. L. Odum, Daisy. Rt.
1. Box 14-A.. :
Pure M. B. turkey, $3.50 per 12; $15,
60, del. FOB. Also 2 M. B. and 1
Mrs. R. L. Ar-
nall, Columbus. 2321 17th Ave.
Black Game bantam eggs, $1 per
15, del. Crate ret. Mrs. Geo. Max-
well, Washington. Rt. 3. :
Pure S. L. Wyandotte, 75c per set.
Crate ret. Mrs. W. E. Kirk, Rock-
mart. Rt. 3. Box 146. E
Aristocrat Imp. Ringlet B. R. $1 per
Cash with orders.
idge, Auburn.
set. Carton ret. Exch. sweet potato,
tomato, pepper and Egg-plants. Mrs.
Josie Jenkins, Dahlonega. Crossways
Fresh eggs, prepaid and ins, in 6 or
12 doz. cs. cheap. C. A. Allen, Louds-
ville.
White Pekin and Indian Runner
duck, mixed, 75c per 15. del. Mrs. C.
F. Lyles, Rex. Box 4. :
Fine turkey eggs from mixed Bronze
hens and pure
tom, $2.25 per doz. del. $2 not del.
Money order. C. A. DuPre, Powder
Springs.
Pure M. B. turkey, $3.50 doz. Mixed
with Grey turkey, $3 doz. Exch. for
potato slips, or Otootan beans. Mrs.
E. S. Ward, Fayetteville. :
Giant str. green sheen Black Minor-
ca, $2 per 15 del. L. B. Millians, New-
nan.
Donaldson Red eggs, 75c setting; 30,
$1.40, postpaid; also 5 Red hens and
cock, $6, collect. No exch. Mrs. R.
P. Steinheimer, Brooks.
Pure Donaldson Red and Thomp-
son B. R. 95c setting del. Carton ret.
No chks. Cash with order. Taylor
Hooks, Unadilla. Rt. 2.
Turkey eggs, $2.25 doz. R. I. Red
eggs, 85c doz. Del. No chks. Mrs. C;
H. Capel, Molena,
Sunflower str. S. L. Wyandotte, $1
per 17; $1.50 per 30./R. B. Williams,
Eastman. Rt. 1. (
Pure Regal Dorcas W. Wyandotte.
Stock direct from Martins. $1 per 15.
Mrs. J. T.. Owens, Covington. Rt. 2.
Pure bred Buff Orp. 75c per 15 pre- |. 5 : gt
J. B. Giant, $1.25 per 15. Exch. for
Porto Rico plants, peas, Otootans or
eane seed. Mrs. W. E.
Rutledge. Rt. 2. a
Pure bred R. C. dark Cornish game,
$1.10 per 15. Mrs. Fred Johnson,
Dawson. Rt. 6.
Ferris S. C. W. L., 75c per 15 post-
paid. Carton ret. Miss Gool Fleming,
Lylerly. Rt. 2.
Partridge Rock, pure bred. Excel- |
lent stock. .$1 per 15. Mrs.. Jesse
-Mixon, Ocilla. ;
Superior W. L. eggs, 60c per set. del.
Also pure bred duck, 75c doz. Exch.
for potato plants. F. A. Rovers, Wash-
ington, E. Rt. 1. Box 261.
Eggs from State tested S. C. R. I.
Reds, 75c per 15, $1.25 per 30; $4 C.
del. C. P. Colclough, Maxeys.
Bourbon Red turkey eggs, 200 ea.
week. Reasonable. Guar. safe del.
Mrs. Julian F. Pruitt, Lavonia.
W. L. eggs, 75c per set. or exch. for
90- day velvet beans or good pig. Mrs.
H. C. Carter, Carl.
Everlay light B. L. eggs, direct
stock. $1.25 per setting; $3.50 for 45.
Ernest P. Ether-
-Pure bred dark Cornish game,
per 15; $3, 50; $6 C. Also 1 cock, $1.50.
bred Bourbon Red
Whisnante, |
$1
Thursday, April 16, 1931.
10 Tancred str. yr. old hens, for best
offer. Mrs. C. O. Sikes, Sylvester.
Special mating Parks B. R. eggs.
$2.50 per 15; $5 per 50. High record
stock. F. W. Voight, Blackshear.
J. B. Giant, Royal Purple str. $1.25
per 15 del. Carton ret. Fertility guar.
W. H. Richardson, Elberton. Rt. 3.
Thompson eggs, $1 per 15, PP. Exch.
for potato slips, or anything can use;
Yr. old.cockerels, $1.75 each. Mrs. J.
P. Mabry, Canon. :
Quar. pure S. C. W. L. eggs, 75c per
15. del. AAA quality. Direct from
Booths. Mrs. Susie, Smith Wayside.
Eggs Wanted
Want turkey and geese eggs. Quote
best price. W. J. Morgan, Stillmore.
Want Mammoth Bronze eggs, guar.
highest quality. Quote prices on 50 or
100 eggs del. Exch. finest quality chicks
Mrs. J. C. Baston, Milledgeville.
Want pure bred Indian Runner eggs.
Exch Tancred L.. Egg for egg. W. Av | =
Vandiver, Martin, Rt. 2.
Want 1 set goose eggs. Exch. 10 lbs.
lima bunch beans for 12. Mrs. C. W.
Garrison, Fitzgerald, Rt. 40
Exch 1 peck of Ga. black-eyed peas
for 1 set of 15 Golden Sebright or Ja-
pan Silkies, at once. Dewey Nelms,
Bowman. Rie
Want 200 eggs to hatch on halves:
White L., Anconas, White Rock, or W.
Wyandotte. Mrs. Frank Gray, Doerun,
Rt. 2, Box 102. :
Want 1 set. of pure bred Black Leg-
horn eggs, from high producing hens.
Quote strain and best price. Or will
exch. 4 mos old N. Z. White rabbits.
Eddie Wideman, Broxton.
Want eggs: goose, guineas, Swan,
pheasant and peafowl, for setting on
halves. John Bell, Alpharetta, Rt. 2.
Exch. value for setting of White Af-
rican guinea eggs. Write. Mrs. Sam
J. Phillips, Royston. Rt. 1.
FLOWERS AND SEED FOR SALE
Dahlia bulbs, Hastings double, also
canna bulbs, 10c ea, $1 doz. cape-jas-
mine 25c, 50c ea. mums, 3 for 25c. Add
postage orders under 50c. Miss Bes-
sie Martin, Gainesville. Rt. 9. :
PIGEONS WANTED
Want White Kings, large healthy
and reasonably priced. Claude Griffin,
Jr. Carrollton, 6 So. St.
Want to hear from party havingg.
White Runt pigeons. V. J. Yeomans,
Savannah, 524 E, Bolton St.
Trade 2 prs. Plymouth Rock Homers
for 1 pr. large Kings, or White crosses. _
ae Thompson, Atlanta, 929 Pulliam
be.
crime and a shame.
protection.
sects each year.
tection. Thanking you, I am,
Are The Co-Ops Selling You Out?
(Continued from page one) ;
vice to the farmers of the state. Especially do I appreciate your efforts
in unearthing the apparent corrupt practices of the Cotton Co-ops.
Generally I have favored your policies but with
to destroying birds I can not concur.
In your letter published in the State Market Bulletin of April 2, 1931,
you set forth three different means for preventing larks from pulling
corn, to-wit: by baiting with poisoned corn, by baiting with corn to which
a horse hair is attached, and by shooting.
If it is not a violation of the law to poison birds in Georgia it should
Were the larks the only birds that would suffer it would not be so
horrible, but regardless of intention doves, quail, and other useful birds
will be destroyed in proportion to the larks. A few years ago one of my
neighbors in South Georgia used cracked corn to poison larks. There
was a wholesale destruction of everything from sparrows to crows.
I can hardly conceive of anyone employing such inhumane means,
as horse hairs tied to particles of food, being used to destroy anything.
You cannot be wholly unaware of the agony the poor creatures would
suffer, besides other birds would fall victims to this scheme just as
much so as the larks. It is true that larks pull a little corn and oats
during the spring and a few peanuts during the season but at, all times
they welcome and almost live on bugs,-beetles, and other insects. Should
they be destroyed because they are mischievous for a very short portion
of the season and given no credit for their good traits or will their good
qualities over balance their bad features?
I am positive, Mr. Talmadge, that you are not in favor of quail,
doves, and other useful birds being slaughtered without cause.
ever, that is exactly what you advocate when you suggest poisoning and
using horse hairs to destroy any class of them. Surely you wrote this
article without due consideration. Birds are supposed to be the farm-
ers best friends.. They destroy more than their weight in harmful in-
They are Gods creatures and should have our pro-
your suggestion relative
A
If so they are entitled to
How-
Yours very truly,
B. R. BURNSED.
April 14, 1931.
So heres hoping the meadow larks will still twitter oer the lea!
EUGENE TALMADGE.
e Plants For Sale
Fine raspberry, 6 for 35c, 55c doz.
dd postage. No chks. Edgar Duvall,
llijay, Rt. 3, Box 50.
Raspberry, 35c doz. Mastodon straw-
erry, 25c C. May cherry trees, 15c
ach May peach, 20c; seedling apples,
0c; huckleberry, 15c bunch; Add pos-
age. Mrs. B. W. Ashe, Dahlonega, Rt.
Purple skin Portoricans, $1.50 M del.
State insp.. May del. Mrs. G. D. Na-
ion, Hawkinsville, Rt. 1. St :
Genuine red and pink skin Porto-
icans, $1.25 M. FOB. Govt insp. May
nd June del. W. G. OQuinn, Sur-
ency, Rt. 2.
Marglobe, Greater B. and Matchless
om. $1.75 M. Pimiento pepper, $2 M..
ceberg lettuce, and Eclipse beets, $3
M. Cabbage, and onion plants. Har-
old Smith, Baxley.
Pure Portoricans, vine grown. Govt. |.
insp. $1.60 M. 5M up, $1.50 M. 25M up,
140 M. D. W. Black, Cordele, Rt. 1.
Genuine red skin Portoricans, Govt
insp_ $140 M. FOB. April and May
lel. Willie Pearce, Surrency, Rt. 2:
Thomas,
Portoricans, Govt insp $1.50 M 5M
p, $1.40 M del. April 25th. K. V. Light-
ey scurrency, Rt. 2.
_Portoricans, Govt insp. $1.50 M del.
$1.25 M FOB. April 20th shipment
R. L. Griffis, Cecil.
Imp. red skin Portoricans, $1.50 M,
FOB. $1.75 M del. No chks. Cash. J. W.
Sellers, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 69.
Purple skin Portoricans, $1.50 M.
Gov't insp. April and May del. B. M.
ratcher, Alma, Rt. 1.
Genuine imp. Portoricans, Govt insp
Grah M, 5M up, $1.40 M. H. G. Evans,
aham.
_ Genuine imp. red and pink skin Por-
oricans, $150 M. Big Stem Jerseys,
ee M. Govt insp. Ralph Miles, Bax-
_ Genuine imp. red and pink skin Por-
ricans, also Early Triumph, $1.50 M.
Big Stem Jerseys, $1.75 M. Ready. Sat.
aa Govt insp. J. J. Miles, Baxley,
_ Portoricans, Govt insp. $1.50 M del.
OM lots,1.40 M. del. April, May and
June del. L. C. Tyre, Surrency, Rt. 2.
Tomato, 500, 75c; $1.25 M. Flat Dutch
abbage, white Bermuda onion, Head-
= oS Gause ore 60c;
CM. del. Pepper, Egg plant, 15c doz
Walter W. McEver, Braselton.
Flat D., Wakefield cabbage, 60c, 500;
1 M. Lewis Mathis, Gainesville, Rt.
Leading var. cabbage, collard, onion
and tomato plants, 500, 60c; $1 M. post-
paid. Mrs. Gertrude Branan, Lewiston.
_iImp. red skin Portoricans, $1.50 M.
FOB. Exch hogs, hens or cow, or any-
eee use. I. N. Campbell, Surren-
_Lady T. strawberry, 25c OG: Cherry, |
(0c each; Black raspberry, 95 doz.
rse radish, 3 for 25c; Tanzy, 40c doz.
Dees nlums, 4 for 20c. FOB. T. L. Hix,
Genuine imp. red skin Portoricans.
Gov't insp. Chemically treated. $1.50 M
1.40 M for 10M or more. Del. after Ap-
ril 25th. Alvin C, Johnson, Fitzgerald.
_Portoricans, $1.75 M del. Ga. J. S.
Murray, Odum, Rt. A.
Genuine Portoricans, Ready April 20.
1.75 M. 5M up, $1.50 M, FOB; Cabbage,
0c M. Tomato $1.50 M. Cash or COD.
Mrs., Cora C. Baxley, Baxley.
Genuine Portoricans about April 20th
1.75 M.. 5M up, $1.50 M, FOB; cab-
bage, 50c M. tomato, $1.50 M. Cash or
OD. A. M. Overstreet, Baxley.
_Pink skin Aroma strawberry, 40c C.
Sudzu, 50 C. Himalaya blackberry,
Oc C. Mrs. L. H. Coe, Eastanollee.
_Portoricans, from vine cut Govt insp.
50 M. 5M up, $1.40 M. FOB. Cash
wn order. L. O. Morris, Surrency.
Now ready, pure to name Portoric-
ms, $1.50 M. Alexander Campbell,
urrency.
ure Portoricans, insp and treated,
150 M. Ruth Spivey, Surrency.
_Genuine Portoricans, Ready April 20.
5 M, 5M up, $1.50 M. FOB. Cabbage,
Tomato, $1.50 M. Cash or
S. A. Yeomans, Baxley.
Tomato, $1.75 M. Pepper, $2
Chas. J. W., and Flat Dutch cabbage,
ading collards and Onion plants, 60c
00; $1 M, postpaid. Miss Rosa Lee.
May, Lewiston.
Amp. Portoricans, $1.50 M. FOB; $1.-
M. del. Govt. insp. Cash. No chks.
. L. Mobley, Baxley. Rt. 4. Box 42.
Genuine imp. red skin Portoricans,
150 M. FOB, $1.75 M. del. Cash. O.
. Miles, Baxley. Rt. 4. Box 69.
MAREK BT 2 ULL ET DN
Portoricans, $1.50 M. Cabbage, 50c
M. Onions, 75c M. Tomato, $1.45 M.
Pepper, $2 M. Leading var. Insp.
in name of C. L. Smith. Darcy Smith,
Baxley. a
Cabbage plants, Drumhead and J.
Wakefield, 65 M. del. Ready. Mrs.
Mary F. Williams, Hephzibah.
Govt. insp. Portoricans, $1.50 M. 5
M. up, $1.40. April 20th del. W. H.
Walker, Baxley.
Imp. Portoricans, Govt. insp. $1.50
Dedge, Alma. :
Partoricans, $2 M. del. 10 M,. $1.75
M. collect. May and June del. Guy
Waldrip, Flowery Branch.
Govt. insp. imp. Portoricans, $1.50
M. 5 M. up, $140 M. R. S. Wolfe,
Baxley.
Portoricans, Govt. insp. $2 M. to 20
M. del. Special price on 50 -M. lots
or more. Sat. guar. S. E. Hollis, Bax-
ley. Rt. 1.
Spring.cabbage plants, leading var.
900, 60c; $1 M. P. P. paid. Mrs. Lil-
lie Stokes, Fitzgerald. Rt. 2.
Millions frost proof cabbage, 508
M. White Bermuda onion, 75 M. To-
mato, $1 M. All leading car. Ship-
ped COD. F. F. Stokes, Fitzgerald.
Cabbage and onion, $1 M. Portoric-
ans, $2 M. 5 M. $1.50 M. Leading
var. tomato, $1.25 M.. Cash. Mrs. R.
e Hackle, Valdosta, 603 E. Savannah
ve.
Certified pink and yellow skin Por-
toricans, Nancy Hall, Early - Triumph,
Pattesaw Yam, Japanese Yam, Pump-
kin or Yellow Yam, $1.75 M. 5 M. up,
$150 M. FOB. H. F. Stair, Valdosta.
Govt. insp. Portoricans, $1.75 M. 5
M. $150 M. All FOB. W. L.. Tay-
lor, Alma. a
Greater B. and New Stone tomato,
35c, 200; 500, 75c. W. L. McClellen,
Doerun. Box 27. ,
Portoricans, insp. $150 M. 5 M.
$1.40 M. Stone tomato, 80c M. 5 M.
65c M. April shipment. James Wil-
liams, Rockinham. =
Pontoricans, $1.75 M... 5 MM. $750;
Tomato, $1 M. Bermuda onion, 75c M.
cabbage, 70c, 500; $1 M. Ruby King
pepper, $1.75 M. Millions ready. C.
M. Sims, Pembroke. :
Iceberg lettuce, 35c C. $2 M. del.
Mrs. O. E. Browning, Doerun.
Portoricans, Govt. insp. $1.50 M. 5
M. up, $1.40 M. FOB. Cash with or-
der. B. F. Kimbrel, Baxley. Rt. 3.
Certified Portoricans, $1.50 M. 5 M.
up, $1.35 M. FOB. Cash with order.
No chks. Joe Kimbrel, Baxley. Rt. 4.
Guar. Chas. W. cabbage, 300, 50c;
600, 75c; $1 M. Postpaid. C. R. Bu-
rell, Auburn.
Imp. purple skin Portoricans. Rea-
dy about April 20th. $1.50 M. del.
Ga. $1.25 FOB. F. N. Bray, Cecil.
Greater B., New Stone tomato, $1.75
M5. WE. <- up, $1.60. -. Open . feld
grown. Ready about April 20th. Exch.
for peas. L. C. Brown, Alma. :
Plants Wanted
Exch. 100 strawberry for 100 early to-
mato plants, or peanut seed: 100 plants
Want few M. Early Triumph and
Nigger Killer pot. plants. Exch pure
Donaldson Red eggs or sorghum syrup.
Mrs. G. R. Harper, Cutcane.
Want pimiento pepper, Earliana to-
mato, celery, parsley, cauliflower and
potato slips. Exch value. Mrs. Ida Sat-
terfield, White, Rt. 1.
Want Porto Rico potato plants. Exch
value. Mrs. L. E. Wiggins, Doyle.
Want 25M Porto Rico plants. Make
best cash price. Howard Dorsey, Sun-
nyside. ae a
Quote best price on 45M Porto Rico
potato plants, del. 15M per week. Start
May ist. W. L. Hogsed, Chamblee, RFD
i
Exch okra seed for tomato plants, or
cabbage, or pumpkin seed. Mrs. John
Tinsley, Arlington, Rt. 1.
Exch value for 100 large type cab-
bage and early tomato plants. Mrs W.
T. Stephens, Adairsville.
Want 10 to 20M Govt insp. Porto
Rico plants from May 1st to 10th. State
best price. E. K. Hilton, Bremen, Box
206.
Exch Mung beans at 15c lb. for po-
tato plants. P. M. Thompson, Bogart,
Rts:
Want to contract for 20 or 25M imp.
pink skin Porto Rico plants. Quote best
price del. Gainesville, not later than
April 25th. F. W. OKelley, Murray-
yille.
Exch. 10 bu. Cleveland cotton seed,
planted 3 yrs. for 3500 Porto Rico po-
M. FOB. April and May del. G. H.
Rentz, Baxley..Rt. 4. :
Portoricans, $150 M. Greater B.
tomato, $150 M. FOB. Mrs. F. M.
for 5 lbs. J. M. Adamson, Bowdon, Rt. |.
3 :
tato plants.
F. Elliston, Rupert.
Live Stock For Sale
CATTLE FOR SALE
Cream col. J. cow, fresh in, 4 gal.
milk and 1 1-2 or 2 lbs. butter with
good feed. Mrs. H. B. Ford, Lavonia.
4 mos. old J. bull, out of 4 1-2 gal.
strain. Make best offer. A. B. Mc-
Neely, Albany. Rt. C.
Jersey bull calf. Excellent . type.
Dropped Oct. 10th, 1930. Sire, Re-
leigh breeding; dam, granddaughter
of Gold Medal bull. For ped. and
price write. C. L. Batchelder, Colum-
bus.
Good cow, now milking. 3 gal. when
fresh. $20. Can be seen on_River-
dale Road, College Park, Opposite
Livestock Farm. Inquire for Mrs. Grif-
fin.
Pure bred Guernsey cow, cheap.
Now milking. Can be seen at B. L.
Curseys Nursery, Brunswick. Owner,
Alfred Harris, St. Simons, Box 49.
High grade young J. cow, with 2nd
calf. Fresh in. 3 gal. or more. -W.
B. Winslette, Eatonton. Rt. 2.
Reg. J. bull, 4 mos. old. Well mark-
ed. From heavy milking strain. $25.
E. P. Cheek, Gabbettville.
5 good milch cow,s from 3 to 4 1-2
gal. $75 and $100 or exch. for good
cows or heifers to freshen in the Fall.
W. N. Davenport, Acworth.
5 mos. old J. heifer, $10 at barn, or
$12.50 crated. H. B. Moore, Daniels-
ville.
Jersey cow with 3rd calf, $60 FOB.
W. F. Bentley, Stone Mtn. Rt. 2.
1 Grade Jersey male, 9 Wks. old.
Sell or exch. for field peas or Velvet
beans. R. H. Wood, Dacula. Rt. 1.
HOGS FOR SALE
Fine young Duroc sow, $35 at barn;
450 lb. Berkshire boar, $25; 9 mos.
Duroc boar, $20. Exch. for peas, O-
tootan or Velvet beans. R. D. Ta-
tum. Palmetto.
Duroc Jerseys, 5 mos. 90 to 110 Ibs.
Reg. triple treated. Popular
lines; Duroc-P. C., cross, 5 mos. gilts.
a es each. S. B. McNeely, Albany,
Rt._C. i
HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE
9 yr. old, healthy, good cond. bay
mare mule, wt. about 950 lbs. for sale.
W. B. Winslette, Eatonton. Rt. 2.
SHEEP & GOATS FOR SALE
7 Nubian milk goats, 7 yearling kids
and 1 reg. billy. Greatly reduced
price. $75 at pasture for the 15. Dr.
J. P. Morgan, Columbus. 3207 2nd Ave.
RABBITS FOR SALE
1 White buck, $1.25 not prepaid.
Charlie H. Smith, Roopville. Rt. 2.
Chinchillas, $1 up. M.
lanta. 76 Aster Ave.
Chinchillas, 1 buck and 2 does. $7,
or $2.50 each; 2 small,7 mos. old, $1.-
25 ea. $2.25 for both. Reg. papers
on grwn stock. Mrs. T. A. Stowers,
Tifton, Rt; 1;
Stahls Gold Cert. 5 - 9 mos. old,
$3 pr. 17 - 4 mos. $2 pr. 10 - 2 mos.
50c each. R. R. Gailey, Baldwin. Rt.
1 ;
Ped. Chinchilla does, bred or open,
$3 ea. does with young, $3.50 ea. up.
Exch. for baby chicks, pure stock, or
hens. A, Ll. Heape, Nashville. Rt. 2.
Box 60.
Chinchillas, 1 pr. 1
Si1- WES: 010, $9; Ol
Hartwell, Rt. 5.
White N. Z. doe, about 1 yr. old, $1.
Joe Caldwell, Kingsland. Rt. 1.
Chinchillas, from reg. stock, 1 to 2
yr. old does, bred to reg. buck before
shipping, $1.75 each; 3 to 4 mos., 50c
each. G. A. Jolley, Fitzgerald.
Chinchillas from Stahls very best
Gold Cert. All ped. and papers fur-
nished. 8 to 12 wks. 65c each. Do not
guar. sex in above stock. D. E. Mc-
Kinney, Blackshear.
PIGEONS FOR SALE
Red and Yellow Carneaux from best
Show strains in Country. Reasonable.
Also- White Kings and Mondains. J.
H. Deaton, Columbus. Box 853.
/Squab breeders. Fancy show stock.
8 varieties. Write for prices. Go-
mailyou Sirman, Valdosta. P. O. Box
r. old; litter of
ey J. Herring,
622.
Few solid Red Carneaux youngsters,
$12 doz. $1.25 each. Large, blocky
stock, above the standard in wt. R.
F. Eaves, Decatur. Lawrenceville Road
Red skin, Govt insp C. |
Grade cow, sired by Reg. bull, Noble |'
blood
Keith, At-|
PAGE SEVEN
Live Stock Wanted __
CATTLE WANTED
50c and $1 per head. Good Bermuda
J. Belcher, Adairsville, Rt. 3.
2 for 1. O. C. Duggan, Chester.
Hereford calves. 2 wks. to 2 mos. old.
Make best offer del. L. D. Spriggs,
Rockmart, Rt. 25.) i
Want best price 2 reg. Pole Here-
ford or Angus bulls, 6 mos. old; 1 reg.
Hereford or Angus bull, 18 mos to 3
yrs. old. P. S. Knox, Thomson.
summer at $1 per head per mo. Pas-
ture now ready. C. H. Capel, Molena.
Want J. milch cow, 2nd or 3rd calf.
Hogsed, Chamblee, RFD 1. ie
Exch. reg. J. cow, bred to reg. J. bull
2 good oxen. L. B. Gaskins, Nash-
ville. ; :
growing to dbl. wt. of sev. car loads of
finance it? J. T. Deese, Cochran.
HOGS WANTED
Want reg. Berkshire gilt, bred. State
-size and best. price.
R. V. King, Forest Park.
Exch 5 pure bred B. R. 18 mos old
hens for 2 pigs. H. A. Griffin, Lavon-
ia. i
ready for service. Write what you
have. J. W. Lampp, Scott.
S. B. McNeely, Albany, Rt. C.
Want 1 big guinea boar, 4 to 8 mos
old. Name best price.
Thomson.
SHEEP & GOATS WANTED
Want 1 milk. goat.
Lawrenceville.
-SPECIAL MISCELLANEOUS ADS
-FOR SALE
good var. Sound. $3 bu. Also few
bu. Javas, $2.50 bu. FOB. G. L. Gro-
verstein, Oliver. Rt. 1. :
Little Rice peas, 2 cups, 30c; also
garden gooseberry, $1 doz. $4 M. Miss.
Claudia Henderson, Ellijay. Rt. 3.
peas, 20c pt.
tato or tomato plants.
Silvers, Ellijay. :
White Rice peas, 75c gal. parsnip
seed, 15c- pt. Add postage.
Se Southerland, Ellijay. Rt. 3. Box
Ech. for Porto Rico po-
Ruckers, 75c bu.
few bu. small running speckled vel-
vet beans.
10 bu. Ruckers, $2 cwt. FOB; also 1
bu. Cane seed, $1. Exch. for good
pet Lester Frix, Talking Rock. Rt.
"About 75 bu. 1930 crop Wannamak-.
ed especially for planting.
FOB Gainesville. F. W. OKelley,
Murrayville. es
Seed: About 50 lbs. pure Stone Mtn.
offer on lot. Walter Harper, Osier-
field. Rt. 1. *
cabbage, $20 per ton by truck load at
my farm. Cash. No chks. H. S. Bax-
ter, Blackshear.
country cured; 50 lbs. and 2 - 43 Ibs.
30c lb. del.
Corn: Golden Dent, 60c pk. $2 bu.
$1.50 bu. in 10 bu. lots. Postage not
included. P. T. Dyer, Covington.
seed, 60c lb. 5 Ibs. 50c lb. 10 lbs. or
more, 40c lb. J. O. Ashton, College
Park, 1106 No. Main St.
Corn: Piedmont 2 ear seed corn,
$1 pk. del. mail.
Woolsey. Rt. 1.
Positions Wanted
derly farmer in good health. Can do
any light work. Price no object. Benj.
Gardner, Atlanta, 501 Seminole Ave. N.
E. Ja-0428.
Widow with 3 boys want home with
good Christian people on farm. Assist
with light work. At once. Mrs. L. V.
oan Ft. Valley, Care J. M. Hayes,
ie te
Want about 8 head cattle to pasture.
pasture with running water. Mrs. S.
Exch weaned pigs for weaned calves. ~
Want 1 each, male and female Reg.
Want 25 cows to pasture through the _
Fresh in. Quote best del. price. W. S.
Already, April 9th, have enough feed
weanlings and yearlings by frost. Wholl
Consider pig, reg. *
Want a pure bred Duroc J. boar, just
e
Want 1 Duroc boar, best feeding type
Ro Ss Knox
PicPy Pinkie
Beans and Peas: 100 bu. \late peas, a
Speckled crowders, Calif. black eyed
Mrs. Lucean ,
No chks.
Cotton Seed: Neelys 90c_ bu. also
Exch. Neelys for
C. R, Wisdon, Waco, Rt:
er Cleveland. Kept pure at gin. Say- =
70c. bu.
hand selected, 50c lb. or make best
Vegetables: Thousands of Wakefield
Fresh and Cured Meats: 3 hams, _
( Mrs. F. M. Hamby, Cum- _
ming. Rt. 7. Box 36. / ae
Rhett Steinheimer, _
Want a good home on farm\for el-
Seed: Select Stone Mtn\ watermelon
=> + pr. Brown
Poultry For Sale
BANTAMS
Buff Cochin bantam mother with 10
little chicks, $5; 3 fancy young cock-
6S . O. H. Wright, Atlanta.
515 Peters Bldg. e
Red bantam cocks, 50c each. Fred
Beverly, Moultrie.
L. bantam hens and
: rooster, 50c each. Mrs. J. E. Wisen-
ee
*
No culls.
Rt
baker, Valdosta. Rt. 4. Box 78.
BARRED, BUFF, WHITE & OTHER
A ROCKS
Barred Rock cockerel, April
hatch. $1 del. Exch. for
plants. Venor Ray, Kensington.
10 B. R. and 10 Buffs, 3 mos. old,
45c each. Mrs. Kate House, Douglas-
1930
potato
- ville. Rt. 5.
Pure bred B. R. hens, $1.25 each.
Mrs. J. A. Howell, Meigs.
eck:
Utility stock R. B. May 1930 hatch.
$2 pr. $1 each at my residence, or
express collect. Miss L. A. Hamilton,
Carnesville. Rt. 1. }
- 6 B. R. from Shinns heavy laying
stock. also 6 young hens; and pullets
- slightly mixed, cockerel, $12.50 for the
13. M. Thornton, Palmetto, Box 72.
Pure bred B. R. young hens and 1
: cockerel, yr. old, $16; eggs, $1 per 15.
for lot; eggs, $1.25 per 15.
old
lets,
_ Hardie, Gordon RFD 3.
eG BRAHMAS
2 pure bred Brahma _ roosters, $1
Carolina Blue cock, 1 Ginn Grey |}
54
W. N. Turner, Dahlonega, Rt. 1. Box
"5 wks. old Ringlet B. R. 30c each; 4
wks. old, 25e each; also 4 wks-old
Reds, 25c ea. Money order preferred.
Mrs. Kucian Berryhill, Cochran. ~
-. 6 yearling hens, Parks Ped. stock.
Reg. Per, D-2. 1 same age cock, $12.50
Crate ret.
Mrs. Jno. A. Watson, Graymont, Rt. 1.
1 pure bred B. R. Aristocrat rooster,
1 yr. old, $1.50. Mrs. A. N. Thornton,
Camilla. ;
Fine Buff Rock cock, 6 hens, $10;
cock and 10 hens, $15. Nugget str.
-trapnested stock. Mrs. G. L. Trimble,
Adairsville.
_ 4 Fischel White Rock roosters, 1 yr.
old, ready for service, $1.25 ea. Mrs.
J. R. May, Oconee. Rt. 1.
40 pure bred, blood tested, 3 mos.
White Rocks, cockerels and pul-
$28 for lot, 75c each. Emory
each; 3 pullets, 80c ea. April 1930
hatch. Mrs. J. G. Suggs, Rocky Face.
_ Extra nice pure bred Brahma 10
mos. old rooster, $2 ea. G. J. Martin,
Cohutta. ~
GAMES
stag, 4 Bacon Warhorse 2 yr. old
brood hens and 1 stag. Write for
price. Robt. Westmoreland, Toccoa.
Rt. 3. Box 92.
Roundhead
Spangle and Texas
_ Reds, trio, $5, or exch. for Grist Gra-
- dys or Shawlnecks.
Eggs, $1.50 per 15.
Grady Payne, Cave.
- for hogs.
_ H. G. Burroughs, Canon.
GIANTS: AND LANGSHANS) -
J. B. Giants: 4 hens and 1 rooster.
Marcy str. $10; also eggs, $1 per 15.
Exch. eggs for tomato plants. Mrs.
O. E. Crumley, Soperton. Rt. 2.
, -LEGHORNS
- 200 pure Tancred L. yr. old hens,
laying well, $1 each; 100 or more, 80c
a gee H. L. Death, Stockbridge,
- 2 W. 1. April 1930 cockerels, 75c ea.
$1.25 for both. Venor Ray, Kensing-
ton. Rt. 2.
14 mos. old Tancred str. hens, $1
ea. Now laying. John G. Adams,
Social Circle.
25 pure Tancred April 4th 1930
hatch hens, $25; eggs, $1, 15; $4 C. W.
A. Vandiver, Martin. Rt. 2.
20 pure bred, Everlay B. L. hens,
laying, $1 each; with every_10 hens, 1
pd B. L. rooster given. Mrs. G.
W. Paulk, Willacoochee.
- 9 pure bred B. L. hens, 80c ea. FOB.
oT Mrs. L. H.. Hutto, Graymont.
. di.
_ 2 extra fine S. C. W. L. cockerels,
$2; $ ;
Kerlin str. C. W. Page, Norcross.
8 L. hens, 1 yr. old, also 1 cockerel,
epenered str. $8 FOB. H. M. Healon,
arl, ;
_ Sev. fine ped. cockerels, at bargain
prices. All Bloodtested, Quality W.
Leghorns. M. W. Kantala, Elberton.
20 young W. L. hens, $1 each. Exch.
Big Bone Guinea preferred.
, - MINORCAS & LAKENVELDERS
~ 50 head 6 wks. old Pape str. Minor-
cas, $15 for lot. A little undersized |.
MARKET
from neglect on account of sickness.
_| Mrs. C. L. Rehberg, Cairo.
10 Black Minorca hens, now laying,
Pure Pape str. $1.25. H. A. Wilson,
Martin. Rt. 2. i
8 Golden Buff Minorca 6 1-2 mos.
old direct from Otto C. Churcher. $1.-
50 each. Morgan Holloway, Gray-
mont, Rt. 1.
MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
FOR SALE
Partridge Cochins, 1 rooster and 3
hens. Direct from Neubert. Pure
blood. $15. Rooster wt. 9-12 lbs. hens,
8-9 lbs. Kittie Bruce, Tunnel Hill. Rt.
a: <
200 fine broilers, 1 1-4 to 1'3-4 each.
Make best offer FOB. Mrs. J. E. Har-
rell, Quitman. Rt. 6.
15 mixed hens, $1 ea; 10 hens and 1
rooster, $1. Mrs. W. J. Snider, Gib-
son. RFD 3.
Speckled Sussex: A few young 12
mos. hens, cocks and hatching eggs.
Also some pure bred Buff Rock eggs,
$1 per 15. Mrs. C. R. Sorrells, Mon-
roe. Rt. 1.
ORPINGTONS
3 hens, 1 cockerel, March 30th
hatch, from bloodtested White Orp.
$12.50 or exch. for potato or tomato
plants. Also have $50 value to exch.
Mrs. Rufus R. Duffey, Carrollton.
2 W. Orp. roosters, 51.50 each, 10
hens, $1 each; 4 golden Buff roosters,
$1.15 each. 1930 hatch. Thoroughbreds
Mrs. J. G. Suggs, Rocky Face.
: PIGEONS FOR SALE
10 pr. pure bred Homer pigeons.
Well mated. and working. Special
price, $2 pr. C. H. Overby, Columbus.
22 1ith St.
R. I. REDS
Donaldson red pullets, 80c each,
Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin. a
5 hens, 1 yr. old, 3 hens, 24 mos.
old, 1 cock, same age. All pure bred
Eichelman Reds. $15 FOB. Mrs. Lil-
lie W. Poarch, Calhoun. RFD 2.
Large Mayhood str. Reds, cockerels,
yr. old, and 1 fine 2 yr. old cock, $3
each; hens, $2 ea. Miss Belle Tim-
merman, Bronwood. Box 83.
6 lb. R. I. Red rooster, 10 mos. old,
$1.50, Cash with order. H. F. Hol-
land, Cochran. Rt. 3. Box 128.
2 Tompkins Red cockerels, Blue Rib-
bon pens, $3 each; 2nd generation,
hens and pullets, $2 ea. C. W. Page,
Norcross.
Pure bred Owen Red pullets, 8 wks.
old, April 21st. 50c each; cockerels
same age and price. Mrs. J. F. Dru-
ry, Waynesville. Rt. 1. Box 74.
Donaldson Red cockerels, last spring
atch, $1 each; also young Buff,
White cock and 2 hens, laying, $5.
Eva Haynes, Buford.
Yr. old Donaldson Red hens, $1.25
each. J.T. Harrell, Tifton. Rt. 6.
Pure bred Red cocks, 1930 and 1929
hatch. $2.50 and $1.50 ea. Mrs. R. J.
Fleming, Lincolnton.
TURKEYS, GEESE, GUINEAS,
DUCKS, ETC. FOR SALE
2 yr. old gobbler, $5 cash, or 3 bu.
Brabham peas. L. H, Oden, Black-
shear.
Pure bred tom, $6; 3 hens, $4 ea.
Cash with order. Mrs. Claude Hill,
Clarkesville.
Extra nice Bronze tom, wt. about
25 lbs. 1930 hatch. $5 collect. Mrs.
W. T. Jenkins, Sumner..
1 pr. young Toulouse geese, $4 FOB.
Mrs. J. C. Johnston, Hogansville. va
Bourbon Red 18 lb. tom, $3; Bronze,
25 lb. tom, $5. Cash with order. P.
W. Wigley, Dallas. Rt. 1.
3 big bone toms, about 22 Ibs. $6
au Mrs. Roscoe Nicholson, Rome.
Mammoth White Pekins and Mal-
lard baby ducklings, 35c each, $7.50;
25; $15 for 50. Cash with order. Mrs.
J. D. Smith, Savannah. Rt. 3. Coffee
Bluff. | :
Pr. Black Muscoveys, $3; $1 per 13.
Crit Beverly, Moultrie.
2 pure white African guinea roost-
gether. Mrs. J. E. Wisenbaker, Val-
.| dosta. Rt. 4. Box 78.
3 pr. Big Blue Toulouse geese, $7.50
pr. $20 for lot. Eggs, 30c ea. Over.
6, 25c each. C. W. Page, Norcross,
Pr. White Pekins, $2 FOB. Mrs. E.
B. Warren, Toomsboro. Rt. 2.
4 turkey hens and 1 tom. M. B.
Bird Bros. 30c lb. Mrs. A. H, Strick-
land, Chipley. :
me * WYANDOTTES
Martin str. 2 mos. old pullets, -75c
each. Mrs. J. C. Sorrow, Griffin. P.
O. Box 335. oe
Well dev. 2 mos. old Fishel str. pul-
| than 25.
Del.
more, 2c ea.
ers, $1 ea. $1.50 for both crated to- |
BULLETIN
lets, 75c ea. Mrs. Hugh Bowling, Ex-
periment. P. O. Box 148. pee
2 8. L. R. C. Wyandotte roosters,
Feb. 1930 hatch. $2.25; 7 mos. old
cockerel, $1.25. Exch. for 1930 Sugar
cane syrup. J. M. Aldridge, Doerun.
Poultry Wanted
BANTAMS WANTED
Exch. trio pure Japanse Black-Tip
bantams for pr. pure Japanese Silkies.
Mrs. John S. Burnett, Ft. Gaines. Box
103.
CAPONS WANTED
Want large breed capon, already
trained to carry a bunch of baby
chicks. Buy or exch. Reasonoble.
Mrs. C. R. Sorrells, Monroe. Rt. 1.
LEGHORNS WANTED
Exch. dark Cornish game _ pullets,
lb. for Ib. for pure bred W. Leghorns,
lto 2 yr. old hens. Ea. del. Mrs.
Tom Brown, Rhine, Rt. 3.
Exch. pure dark Cornish game roos-
ter, bow-legged type for 2 White L.
ns, 1 to 2 yrs. old, or sell rooster, $2.
Irs. B. W. Smith, Rhine. Rt. 3.
Want 11 pure bred B. L. hens, 1
rooster, at once. Pay $10 cash.
tis Mathis, Jefferson. cs
Exch. trio pure Japanese Black Tips
pbantams for pure University str. W.
L. hens, not over 1 yr. old, or pullets.
Mrs. John S. Burnett, Ft. Gaines. Box
103. :
MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
WANTED
Exch. $30 value for heavy breed
chickens at not more than $1.10 each,
or part in baby chicks and rest grown
stock. Dewey Nelms, Bowman. Rt. 1.
WYANDOTTES WANTED.
Want Columbian Wyandottes, Big
Type and thoroughbred. M. A. Bel-
flower, Empire. Rt. 1.
Baby Chicks For Sale ,
Scientific crossed chicks, also Tan-
cred W. L., Reds, and B. R. Any, $12
a 100. H.R. Neal, Carnesville. |
Marcy str. J. B. Giants, $14 a 100.
April del. Moline M. Landrum, Ad-
airsville.
Day old mixed breed chicks, 10c ea.
Ready April 21th. Also 75, chicks, 4
wks. old, 20c each. No order for less
Mrs. J. S. Berryhiill, Coch-
ran, Rt. 5:
Mayhood str. Reds, and Buff Minor-
cas, day old, 13c each. 100 per cent
a Mrs. L. M. Dunn, Chauncey.
Dark Cornish Indian games, $3.50
for 20 del. $4.40 for 25; also eggs,
$1.25 per 16. Miss Leona Simpson,
Culverton, Rt. 1. Box 38.
Quality chicks from bloodtested
culled: Donaldson Reds, Thompson
Ringlet Rocks, Fischel W. Rocks, $9
C. Tancred L. $8. W. S. Shields,
Thomson. _ :
Thoroughbred B., Buff Rocks, Orp.
L. from bloodtested stock, $8.50 C.
Heavy mixed, $8. Prepaid. Live del.
Custom hatching, 3c an egg. R. H.
Fechtel, Waycross. :
_ High ~powered chicks from pure
blooded: Donaldson Reds, Rocks, $10;
W. Wyandottes, $12; W. and B. L., $9.
D. F. Thomas, Odum. 5
S. C. W. L., $8; B. R. $9; Started
chicks, 1 week, 15c ea. 2 wks. 20c ea.
R. M. Blackwell, Dunwoody. :
Red baby chicks, Donaldson str.
$12.50 and $15 del. Exch. for corn.
Mrs. H. G. Brown, Stone Mtn. Rt. 1.
State bloodtested pure bred Reds,
Rocks, Tancred-Hollywood L: $12 C.
$6.50, 50; $3.50, 25; Extra chick with
ane erder. Mrs. J. C. Baston, Milledge-
ville. i
Rocks and Reds, 8 1-2c C. Custom
setting, 2 1-2c ea. less 100;.100 or
) 10 extra for box cap. 50
chicks. E. R. Bailey, Harlem.
Day old B. L. chicks, 10c ea. 5 wks.
old, 20c ea. Tormahlen Everlay. Mrs.
J. F.. Newman, Cochran. Rt. 3.
Quality chicks, Tancred W. L. $8 a
100; $35 per 500. Exch. for a good
milch cow. <A. V. Hollaway, Gray-
mont. Rt. 1. ee
Pape str. Minorcas, $10 a 100; $5
per 50; Del Mrs. C. L. Rehberg,
Cairo. ;
Red chicks ea. Tuesday and Satur-
day. Star chicks, now, 20c each. Ex-
hibition, 12c ea; Utility, 10c ea. Dir-
ect Donaldson. Mrs. R: J. Fleming,
Lincolnton. Rt. 5. :
Pure Russell L. B. L. chicks, day old,
10c ea. PP. 3 wks. old, 15c not PP, 6
wks, 20c not PP. Mrs. C. G. Giddens,
Cochran. Rt. 3.
Healthy and vigorous 4 wks. old
2 2S 2
Cur- }
to 10 wks.
Thursday, April 16, 1931,
Dunlap str. Reds, 30c each. $27 per
100, FOB. F. A. Rovers, Washington,
E. Rt..1. Box 261. Ss
Pure Tancred W. L. from selected 2
and 3 yr. old breeding hens from high
producing stock. 100 per cent live
del. Reasonable. M. W. Kantala, El-
berton. 4 ee
Baby Chicks Wanted _
Want 100 to 200 chicks to raise on
halves to 8 wks. Reds preferred. Fred
Eller, Cumming. :
Want 100 to 200 blood tested B. R,
to raise on halves to 8 wks. Write
first. Miss Ruby Kate Tatum, Daw-
sonville. Rt. 1. eee
Want 2 or 300 B. R. to raise on hal-:
ves to 8 wks. 50-50 on feed. Also
some turkey poults raise same wa:
Mrs. W. Samuel Brown, Calhoun. R
4. Box 64 B.
Want 300 W. L. to raise on halves
to 8 wks. by last of April. J. W. Wat-
kins, Cornelia. Rt. 1. a
. Want 100 chicks to raise on halves,
large breed, to 8 wks. As early as
possible. Party pay shipping chgs. I
pay feed. Mrs. R. A. Knight, Yarry-__
town. Rt. 1. _ Shae
Want 200 chicks to raise on halves
to 8 wks. Plymouth, B. R. or Golde
Buff Orp. Mrs. A. G. Mosley, Bain-
bridge. RFD Box 348.
Want 400 chicks to raise on halve
to 10 wks. Reds preferred, or any
heavy breed. Write first. Mrs. J. P.
|Lynch, Jackson, Rt. 4.
Want 100 W. R. to raise on halves
to 8 wks. Write first. Mrs. Wealth
Tomlinson, Homerville. Rt. 1. Box 35.
Want 1 to 200 large breed chicks to
raise on halves to 10 wks. Mrs. Rub
Lawton, Savannah. Rt. 4. eae
Want 100 chicks to raise on halves
No games nor Bantams.
Write first. Mrs. Nannie Rushton,
Midville. Rt. 2. - s
Want 300 to 400 pure bred chicks.
S. C. W. L. preferred, or Reds, raise
on halves to 10 wks. old. M. M. Mur
ray, Americus. Rt. C. ee
Want 100 pure bred Reds or B. R.
50 ea. or 100 of a kind. Pay market
price. I. Boatright, Alma. eye
Exch. potato or tomato plants for
Red or B. R. chicks: 100 or more for
oS hatch: Make best offer. Mrs.
. H. Boatright, Alma, 3
Want at least 150 chicks to_raise
on halves to 8 wks. Reds or Rocks.
Nora Richardson, Flowery. Branch. Rt.
1 foe
Want 500 chicks to raise to 8 w
old, on 50-50 basis. Reds or S. L. Wy
andottes. Mrs. J. F. Murray, Odum
Want 150 chicks, most any kind ex-
cept bantams to raise on halves to
8 or 10 wks. old by April 25th. Sallie
Harvey, Dacula. Rt. 2. : eo
Want 50 Red chicks to raise _ 0
halves. Must. be pure bred. SS
Beulah Frey, Dallas. Rt. 3. aS
Want 100 chicks to raise on halv
to 8 or 10 wks. Mrs. Maud Lee, Cle
mont. Rt. 1.
Exch. Govt. insp. P. R. plants f
baby chicks. Golden Buff or Reds,
full breed, preferred. Bessie Urs
Hazlehurst. Box 224. *
Exch, 3 M. P. R. plants for 50 thor-
oughbred Cornish Indian games. 5 M
plants for 100 Anconas, shipped April
15th. (No name and address given)
Want baby chicks to raise on hal
ves. Winton Bell, Alpharetta. Rt. 2.
Want 100 Reds or Buff Orp. to raise
on halves to 8 wks. Pay postage 1
way. Mrs. Agnes. Jones, Jesup. Rt.
~ Want any kind baby chicks, to raise
on halves. Mrs. D. C. Foley, Avondale
Est. 16 High St. ee
Want 50 to 100 Buff Rocks to raise
on halyes to 10 wks. Would take
Aristocrat B. R. Last of April, first of
y
May. Mrs. S. A. Spann, Adrian. Rt. 1.
Want 200 pure bred W. L. chicks to
raise on halves to 6 wks.. Del. .
April. Mrs. George Dekle, Register.
Eggs For Sale
-Mahood Reds, selected, $1.25 per
set. postpaid; $3, 50; $5 C. Incubator
lots, $4 C. Cases ret. High fertility
guar. Miss Belle Timmerman, Bron-
wood. Box 83. ee
Eggs from choice Donaldson i
$1.50 per 15; $2.50 per 30. Mrs. H.
Brown, Stone Mtn. Rt. 1.
Ancona eggs, 50c doz. if 2 or mors
doz. taken: 10 ea. in 25 or 50 lots
Chas. Brown, Stone Mtn. Rt. 1. A
M. B. eggs, $3 per
Crates ret. Mrs. W. B. a
Parks B. R. Foundation stock dit
ect. Reg. permit, 27-C-31. Write fo
prices on eggs. Mrs. R. W. Ba
Doerun, Sa ee
ursday, April 16, 1931.
Georgia Products For Sale
"BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE
- 100 lbs. sound cream crowders, 9c lb.
FOB. N. C, Tutton, Buford, RFD 3.
10 bu. Irons, slightly mixed, $2.50 bu.
, A, Vandiver, Martin. Rt. 2.
Cream crowders, 8 lbs. $1. Calif.
black eyes, 12 lbs. $1; early Red Val-
Wee-
vi Grady Kelley, Sulphur Springs,
Rt. 1.
Pure cream Sugar Crowders, 12 1-2c
entine, Ky. Wonders, 4 lbs. $1.
Ib. not del.
ville, Rt. 3.
8 or 10 bu. Irons, $3 bu. Sound and
clean. .Money order. John B. Sim
mons, Cleveland, Ga. Rt. 2. 5
- Best var. cream sugar crowders, 20c
Vb. $2.25 pk. $3.75 per 1-2 bu. $6 bu.
J..S. Bartley, West Point.
_ Red and white speckled sugar crow-
rs, Red. Rippers, Calif. black eyes, all
15c Ib. 2 lbs. 25c prepaid. \Mrs. M. C.
Mrs. L. H. Cousins, Green-
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Tender cornfield beans, 35c lb. Jap-|
anese pop corn, 15c lb. Miss Jessie
ash, Flowery Branch, Rt. 3. =
_ New Eras, $2 bu. 5 bu. lots, $1.75 bu.
Also Late Orange cane seed, $1.75 bu.
J. H. Ward, Menlo, Rt. 1.
Mixed peas, $1.50 bu. FOB; white,
running and white bunch butter beans,
arid colored bunch, 12 1-2c lb. FOB, or
Mrs. W. M. Arrington,
, recleaned Crowders; white,
cream, yellow 2 crop and Lady peas.
7 lbs. $1; beans, tenderest_ cornfield,
Ky. Wonders, 35c lb. postpaid. C. F,
Maddox, Buford. S
25 bu. Bunch Speckled, 6 bu. bunch
Clays. Sound and weevil free, in even
wt. 2 1-2 bu. bags, $2 bu. FOB. A. W.
Trice; Hawkinsville, Rt. 2. ,
_ White and speckled bunch and pole
butter beans, mixed. For seed or ta-
ble use. 20c lb. del. in 1 1-2 or 2 1-2
Ib. shipments. Miss L. A. Hamilton,
Carnesville, Rt. 1.
-__Seed velvet beans, Sound, $3 bu.
75 pk. Money order. Mrs. J. D.
odge, Buena Vista, Rt. 4.
_ Mathews Soys, $3.50 bu. 5 or more
bu. $3 bu. R. J. Peel, Vidette.
_ Brabs, Irons, Speckled, $2.25 bu. Mix- | |
d, $1.75 bu. FOB; Also. Excell melon
ed, 60c lb. C. A. Walker, Ellaville.
_,Conch peas, $5 bu. FOB; less quan-
tity, 10c lb. plus postage. Red Rip-
Exch. some for State
Sp. P. R. slips. Mrs. J. F. Solomon,
effersonville. : 4
20 bu. Otootan Seys, 1930 crop. Re-
cleaned. Shipped in new bags, $3 bu.
Not less than 1 bu. sold. Sample on
request. Ben R. Tanner, Sandersville.
__ Osceola. beans, $2.50 bu. del. P. H.
Woodard, Chauncey, Rt. 2:
_ White Calif. black eyed peas. Weevil
free and pure. $5 bu. $1.25 pk. del.
also yellow pop corn, 20c/lb. No stamps.
. Mrs. Mary Humphreys, Conyers, Rt. 4.
Ga. black eyed peas, 3 lbs. 25c; lit-
tle mush peas, 25c pt. old fashioned
col. bunch butter beans, 2 cups, 25c.
Postpaid. Dewey Nelms, Bowman, Rt.
90 Ibs. seed bunch butter beans, any
quantity. 20c lb. del. C. L. Lunsford,
Shellman.
20 bu. blue speckled peas, mixed, $2
bu. at my barn; @ few Velvet beans,
~ bu. W. M. Fortner, Meansville, Rt.
a Mathews imp. Soy, A-1 for seed. No
rain on them since gathered, $4 bu.
FOB. H. M. Moorman, Lovett.
Few more Rice peas 10c lb. and few
Tunning Clays, 9c Ib. also green and
white cucumber seed, 10c spoonful;
white velvet okra, 12c cupful. Add
_ postage. Mrs. Sidda Sutherland, Elli-
_ jay, Rt. 3. Box 47. -
Sugar Crowders, and Clays, each,
$3 bu. Speckled bunch, slightly mix-
~ ed, $2.50; black eyed, $3 bu. Mrs. J.
_ L. York, Demorest, RFD 1.
__*. White bunch butter beans, 15c Ib.
- brown crowders, 2 crop, 10c Ib. 3 for
25; Ky. Wonders, 15c per 1-2 lb. 25c
Ib. Add postage. Mrs. Robert Dowdy,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 2. ;
- ._ Brown and Black sugar crowders,
15c Ib. $7 bu. Large Whips and Irons,
$2.25 bu. Cash. Exch. for P.. R.
a C. A. Wilbanks, : Commerce,
__ A few more of the new Guinea but-
~ ter vine or bean seed. Fruits 5 ft.
long. Wt. 15 Ibs. Good to eat. 20
oo for 12c. J. R. Bramlett, Ellijay,
60. lbs. bunch butter beans, 15c Ib.
ee S. M. Groves, Waycross, Rt. 2.
MARKET
Running var. large cream crowders,
1930 crop. Weevil free. Recleaned.
; Also Mush peas, 7 Ibs. $1; 25 Ibs. up,
12\1-2c lb. Cash with order. Nelms
Burell, Buford.
40 or 50 bu. Tillman peas, $2.50 bu.
W. M. Parker, Woodcliff.
CORN AND SEED CORN FOR SALE
Old fashioned yellow field Flint, $1
pk. del. $2.75 bu. FOB. Milton Sum-
ner, Sylvester, Rt. 3.
_300 bu. good, sound corn, weevil free,
5 miles Southeast Bronwood on H. A.
Welkinsons place. H.*M. Dobbs, Bron-
wood. D
Cuban Yellow Flint, 75c pk. del. 2nd
zones; Adams early (earliest of large
corn). 25c pt. del. Dewey Nelms, Bow-
man, Rt. 1. fs :
Banks Farm Relief. cound, firm
white seed corn. Selected. $2 per bu.
eae No checks. .S. S. Cash, Ayers-
ville. .
Whatleys. Ist yr. Nubbed and hand
shelled. $2.25 bu. P. H. Woodard,
Chauncey, Rt. 2. e
Whites Special seed corn. Cross with
Rockdale Tennessee red cob and Ban-
ce $2 bu. J. L. White, Adairsville,
Hastings Prolific. 1st yr. Pure and
sound. Selected. $2.50 bu. FOB. Exch.
for potato plants, cornfield bean or
pumpkin seed. J. H. Beasley, Lavonia.
Whatleys Prolific. 1st year. Selected,
nubbed and sheHed. $2 bu. FOB. Cash
with order. W. H. Cromer, Ideal.
Sound yellow pop corn, 10c lb. Exch.
for turkey or J. White Giant hen eggs,
feed sacks, lima beans or okra seed.
Mrs. John W. Carter, Soperton, Rt. 4.
Selected Marlboro,seed corn, $2.50
FOB. John G. Adams, Social Circle.
Imp. Marlboro Prolific corn, $2.50 bu.
or exch, . . Edmondson, Temple.
Hastings\ select, 75c pk. $2 bu. Exch.
for cane seed or potato slips. E. P.
Jackson, Canon. A :
00-bu._ corn, -$1~bu. W.M. Fortner,
Meansville. Rt. 1. Rai
- Hastings Hickory King, and Pro-
lific. Sound and pure, $1.95 bu. FOB,
or 80c pk. del.~- Fred Weeks, Dial.
200 lbs. feed pop corn, 5 lb. Less
200 Ibs. 8c Ib. Wm. Seago, Augusta,
Rt. le g
50 or 75 bu. pure Whatleys, in shuck,
85c bu. FOB. Exch. for thrifty shoats.
A, J. Shepard, Mitchell. Rt. 1.
- Neals Pay master. Crib selected,
nubbed and shelled. $2 bu. No less
than 1 bu. shipped. State prize win-
ner for past 2 yrs. W. W. Seaton, Co-
hutta. : 2
Pure Mexican June. Blue and white
grains on same ear. Nubbed and hand
shelled, $1 pk. $1.75 per 1-2 bu. $3.50
hpu. Del. Money order.
Hamilton, Carnesville, Re: ts
Field selected. $3 bu. $2.50 in 5 bu. lots.
Crib selected, $2 bu. Not less than 1
bu. Shipped. H. R. Staight, Demorest.
Hastings prolific. 60c pk. $2 bu.
FOB. Exch. for cow peas, bu. for bu.
Or for Otootans. 1 1-2 bu. corn for
1 bu. beans. C. M. Miller, Cornelia.
Cokers Ellis large ear white cob.
Marretts-Douthit, $1 pk. $3 bu. del.
H. W. Thurmond, Greshamville.
60 bu. Whatleys Prolific corn in ear.
Good cond. .
Beall, Louisville.
Pure bred Whatleys Prolific. Care-
fully selected. Bal. of season, $2 bu.,
$1.25 per 1-2 bu. J. E. Eubanks, Au-
gusta. 929 Heard Ave. :
Hastings imp. Prolific, Nubbed and
shelled. ist yr. 70c pk. 40c gal. FOB.
F. T. Brooks, Cumming, Rt. 2.
COTTON SEED FOR SALE
200 lbs. Bank Account. Recleaned.
$5 for lot,#2 1-2 lb. W. M. Fortner,
Meansville. Rt. 1.
25 bu. Addisons. Bale per A. la
yr. 75c bu. FOB. Loyd Keadle, Yates-
ville. Se
- Ruckers. Gin pure. Ist. yr. 85c bu.
WwW. A. Henderson, Norcross.
Crooks wilt resistant. 90c bu. 10 bu.
lots, 75c bu. W..S. Norton, Edison.
A few more Half and Half from
Summerour seed. $1 bu. FOB. F. H.
Jenkins, Perkins.
Piedmont Cleveland and Kangford
Heavy Fruiter, 75c bu, FOB. Exch.
for P. R. or Nancy Hall plants. C. A.
Wilbanksy Commerce. Rt. 5. :
Half and Half. $1.25 bu. Exch. for
Runner seed peanuts or seed peas. W.
J. Morgan, Stillmore.
12 bu. King imp. cotton seed, $1 bu.
C. M. Cantrell, Tate.
Wilson: Type. 1st. yr. Ginned pure.
"5c bu. FOB Eastman. P. H. Woodard,
Chauncey, Rt. 2. ~
Pure Cokers No. 5, $1 bu. FOB. Also
s
Miss L. A.}
Golden Beauty 2 ear yellow corn.
5c bu. FOB. Milton
BULLETIN
Neelys, same price.
Social Circle.
Cokers Super Seven, Ist. yr. For sale
or exch. Q.'M. Rogers, Barney.
Piedmont Cleveland, Neelys staple
Cleveland. 75c bu. or exch. G. C.
Edmondsond, Temple.
Rhynes Cook wilt resistant. Ist yr.
Pure and ginned on private gin. $1
bu. Exch. for Spanish peanuts. C.
D. Williamson, Plains.
Rhynes Cook wilt resistant, $1.25 bu.
by the breeder. Exch. for peas, Vel-
vet beans or syrup. C. L. Rhyne,
Plains.
Tooles. wilt resistant. $2 per cwt.
bag. Joe N. Brown, McRae.
Pure Piedmont ped: Cleveland. 1st
and, 2nd pickings. Privately ginned.
eo R. W. Stembridge, Milledge-
ville.
Manleys Heavy Fruiter and Acola.
Sound; $1 bu. del. 75c, FOB. H. W.
Thurmond, Greshamville.
Imp. Early Prolific King. Pure and
sound... 75c. bu... Exch for corn. -F...Hy
Bunn, Midville.
Ruckers. 2nd yy.
ea. yr. 50c bu. FOB Fairmount.
G. Craig, Apalachee.
Wannamaker Cleveland. Good for
So. Ga. lands. Clean and sound, 65c
John G. Adams,
I
Gin rolls cleaned:
W.
bu. H. G. Adams, Social Circle. *
15 bu. Neelys long staple, 75c bu.
Exch. 2 bu. for 1 M. P. R. or Nancy
Hall plants. L. W. Mason, Winston.
Piedmont ped. Ist. yr. $2.25 per cwt.
FOB. No personal chks. Mrs. J M.
Whitlow, Canon, Rt. 3.
Piedmont Cleveland. Gulled and
sound,- $1 bu. Exch. few bu. for peas
and cane seed for sowing. W. J. Thur-
mond, Commerce, Rt. 2.
Genuine Russell big boll, 75c bu.
FOB. Newton E. Reid, Hartwell, Rt. 3.
Box 179.
_.-Piedmont Cleveland; Wannemaker
Cleveland, Coker Cleveland No. 5. $2.25
per cwt. Write for quantity prices. G.
T. Ridgway, Royston.
Cokers No. 5, $1 bu. FOB. or. exch.
for Whatley seed corn. Ralph 8S. Col-
lins, Comer. he
Pure Ruckers. ist yr. Special care
at gin. Due to depressed conditions,
65c bu. G. L. Bramlett, Acworth.
Cokers Super 7. 2nd yr. Pure, &0
bu. FOB. No chks. Mrs. E. M. Jack-
son, Granite Hill.
Neelys Cleveland. Clean and sound,
"5c bu. H. Grady Adams, Social Circle.
(100 bu. pure Wannamakers reclean-
ed; 65c bu. Riley C. Couch, Turin.
Cooks imp. Guar pure and sound.
Privately ginned. $1 bu. J. T. Sills,
Ambrose, Rt. 1,
Neelys Cleveland, Recleaned and
guaranteed. 70c bu. Stoveville No. 2.
Bright foliage, 1st yr. 90c bu. All FOB.
Cc. N. Adams, Social Circle.
HONEY, BEES AND. BEE SUPPLIES
FOR SALE - |
1 1-4 lb. beeswax, 30c; 1-2 lb. Blood
root, 20c. Exch. for white feed sacks
or cabbage plants. Each pay postage. |
Mrs. Jno. H. Worley, Cumming, Rt. 2.
~ Honey, chunk just from hives, 75 Ib.
tin, $9.50; in No. 2 cans, $1.50 del. Exch
for Brabham peas and Otootan beans.
ie H. Edenfield; Stillmore, Rt. 1, Box
31, :
Comb and Strained honey, 5 and 10
lb. buckets, 20c Ib. del. 25 Ib cans, 15c
Ib, FOB. Will exch. C. G. Oliver, | yj
Barnesville, Rt. 2.
25 swarms bees, 10 frame modern
hives, 2 supegs to ea. hive, new, 2-frame
ext. differe accessories, etc. Com-
plete eutfit, $75 on account of sickness.
Chas. F. Hopwood, Hawkinsville.
PECANS AND PEANUTS FOR SALE
Splendid lot white Spanish seed pea-
St | nuts, $1.07 1-2c bu. FOB. H. D. Jones,
Brinson. a
Shell peanuts, No. 1, 8 1-2c Ib. Joe
M. Brown, McRae.
100 lbs Stuart pens, 25c lb. 25 Ibs.
Schleys, 30c lb. W.S. Norton, Edison.
Large, medium and small pecans, 25
15, and 12 1-2c lb. Exch for turkey or
large breed hen eggs. Mrs. Fuller Join-.
er, Tennille.
Aound; No. 1 Runner peanuts in 100
Ib. bags, FOB shipping point, 3 3-4c
Supply limited. W. R. Edwards, Daw-
son.
Georgia Products Wanted
BEANS AND PEAS WANTED
Want 50 bu. pure Whippoorwill peas
for planting. Quote best price. B.
Exch, 10 M. P. R. plants, Govt. insp.
| Lloyd Woodall, Milner.
pepper, Ic ea.
for 4 bu. No. 1. Brab peas. Ea. del.
W. G. Williamson, Bristol. Rt. 1. Box
88. * S :
Want 2 or 3 lbs. 6 wks. table peas.
Write what you have. R. A. Thomp=:
son, Chipley. : Sa
Want 25 bu. Brabhams,'and 10 bu.
Otootan Soys and 2 bu. common Les-
pedeza seed. Exch. Duroc J. boars and
honey. t. H. Edenfield, Stillmore. Rt.
1, Box 31.
10 Ibs. Otootans. Clean and sound.
25c Ib. Exch. for P. R. or Nancy Hall
pot. plants. Mrs. Tiney Phillips, Flow-
ery Branch.
Want bunch Velvet and Otootans for ~
seed. M. S. Walton. Tallapoosa, Rt. 2.
Box 78. 8
Want prices and sample of Brab-~-
hams del. in~ Moultrie. Mrs. T. N.-
Wells, Moultrie. 301 1st. Ave. N. E.
Want pigeon peas. Quote best price
and send sample. G. F. Zettron, Clyo.
Want Biloxi and yellow mammoth.
Exch. seed corn at $2 bu. or pay cash,
Submit sample. W. H. Cromer, Ideal.
Rebs See
Want the old time large white crow-
der field peas, about 2 qts. Sjtate
price or what you would wish to exch.
for. Mrs. J<C. Pittman, Lumber City.
Rt. 1. Box 8.
PECANS AND PEANUTS WANTED
Want 2 bu. red Spanish peanuts for
seed. Exch 1 bu. peas or Leghorn eggs.
W. A. Vandiver, Martin. : 2
Want papershell and-seedling pecans
Send samples and price. G. C. Swint,
Milner. se
Exch, 8 lbs. pure Golden Dent seed
corn for 8 lbs. Sound Spanish peanuts
for seed. Postage paid. 1 way. J. M.
Womack, Canton, RFD 2. at
Want N. C. Runner peanuts or Ga.
Runners for seed. Quote best price
and send sample. G. F. Zettwier, Clyo.
Want sev. hundred lbs. seedling pe-
cans. Quote best- price in 200 Ib. lots.
Mrs. Rhett Shingler, Ashburn. ON
Want 1 bu. N. C. Runner peanuts at
once. C. F. Coxwell, Milledgeville, RFD
ae s . }
Want the Va. or N. C. bunch peanuts
Quote lowest price on 100 Ibs. FOB.
C. R. Burell, Auburn, Rt. 1. . ee
Pay 25 lb. for choice Stuarts, and
|30c for Schleys, 8 to 12c for seedlings.
Send samples. B. Lloyd Woodall, Mil-
ner, ea
Plants F or Sale a :
1
Porto Ricans, $1.65 M, Over 2M $1.- |
50. Now ready: Nancy Hall, $1.65 M
del. Exch. for anything can use. Lo:
nie Moore, Alma, Rt. 4. ee oe
E. J., Chas. Flat D. cabbage, onio
and c d, 55c, 500; 90c M. Stone to-
mato, $1.20 M. Porto Ricans, $1.65 M.
Hot and sweet pepper, $1.45 M. post
paid. ; R. Chanclor, Seville.
Pink skin Porto ricans, $1.50 M.
FOB, No checks. S. Smith, Bristol.
Certified Portoricans, from vine
grown, potatoes, $1.50 M. 5 M. $7. J.
G. Owens, Pembroke, Rt. 1. ~ ae
Chas. W. cabbage. Ready, 65c, 500;
$1.10 M. T. C. Bennett, Flowery
Branchy Rt clo 7s Ng
Hastings extra early,
.| Last April and May del.
pepper, 20c C. in May.
Hampton.
Boone potato slips, 500, 90c;
J. N. Carson,
$1.75,
. Portoricans, $1.75 M. Cabbage, 500
75c; $1.10 M. del. Bill Crow, Gaines-.
ville, Rt. 2. ie
Pure Portoricans
treated, $1.65 M. 5 M. up, $1.50 M
All del. J. M. Chapman, Chula.
Pink or red skin Portoricans, Gov't.
insp. $1.60 M. 5 M. up, $1.50 M. FOB.
A. J. Whiddon, Tifton. Rt. 7. ee
Yellow skin Portoricans, Govt. insp.
and treated, $1.75 M. April, May and
June del. Money order. Jesse Touch
ton, Pavo, Rt. 1. oe
Hastings extra early prolific tomato
plants, now ready. 75c, 200; $1.40,
500; $2.25 M. Prepaid. Mrs. T.
Harrison, Blackshear, Rt. 3. o
Govt. insp. Portoricans, April 20t
Chas., All Season cabbage and head-
ing collard, $1 M. June Pink and
other tomato, Egg-plant, 50c C. Sweet
ep E. T. Clements, Ten-
nille.
Stone tomato, $1 M. 60c, 500. Post
paid. Roscoe Mays, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4
Portoricans, vine grown, insp. an
treated, $1.75 M. 5 M. up, $1.50 FO
Exch. for Brab or Whip peas. W.
Genuine red and pink skin Porto
ricans, Govt. insp. from vine cut, $1
50 M. 5 M. up, $1.35 FOB. G. HL
Lord, Graham, Rt.
Fes 4
insp. and seed
4 Douglas, Alma.
Plants For Sale
Portoricans, Govt. insp. $1.75 M. 5
M. up, $1.50 M. FOB. April, May and
June del. J. C. Tyre, Bristol.
Hastings cabbage-collard __ plants,
10 M. prepaid. Mrs. John E. Strick-
nd, Stillson, Rt. 2.
~ Genuine imp. Govt. insp. red skin
Portoricans, $1.75 M. Del. R. M. Cox,
Moultrie, Rt. 5.
Genuine red skin Portoricans, from
vines. Treated and insp. $1.65 M. Del.
Money order. J. W. Haman,
Sumner.
Earliana tomato, 30c C. $1.25, ae
pimiento pepper, 40c C. del. Mrs. L.
. Pearson, Blackshear. Rt. 2. 5
Imp. red skin Portoricans and Nan-
cy Hall. State insp, $1.50 M. FOB.
C. R. Redmond, Pelham.
Red and pink skin Govt. insp. and
treated Portoricans, $150 M. Ready
pril 20th. J. H. Whiten, Baxley. Rt.
a Cabbage, collard and onion plants,
500, 60c; $1 M. postpaid. Miss Rosa
ee May, Lewiston.
Pure Ga. Heading collard (ready)
O-=for .25; $1.10 M. M.-M. Davis,
- Guyton.
- Klondike and Lady T. oe
_ iree from black root. 25 C. $2. M
- del. 5 M. up, $1.75 M. Collect.
Crowe, Gainesville. Rt. 2.
~ Wonder berry, 10c doz. 3 doz. 25c.
Ready to transplant. Exch. for sugar
sacks. Cash with order. Postpaid.
Mrs. Alton Palmer, Arlington. Rt. 1.
Box 38.
Greater B. tomato; us M. 5 M. up,
15c M; cabbage, $1 M. D. M. Boat-
right, Coffee.
Baltimore toma , field grown, 75
_M. collect; $1 postpaid; Govt. insp.
red skin Portoricans, $1.30 M. collect;
$1.60 postpaid. April, May and June
del. J. H. Sumner, Omega. Rt. 1.
- Portoricans, insp. $1.50 M. FOB. 5
. up, $1.50 M. Del. Ga. Remittance
with order. C. H. PanED, Tifton. Rt.
bos
~ Fresh, spring grown E. Se Chas. W.
cabbage, ready, 500, 55c; 85c M. del.
by P. P. Mrs. Geo. Gaffney, Fitzger-
gid. Rt. 4,
Earliest, large imp. Klondike straw-
oe 30 C. Major Crowe, Cumming.
Govt. insp. Portoricans, $1.50 M,
Beene G. W. Owen, Hawkinsville.
Earliest var. im Klondike straw-
perry, 25c C. $1.25 per 500; $2 M. del
10c extra out of Ga. Mrs. S. Crowe,
Cumming. Rt. 4.
- Ga. cabbage, 50c M. Insp. Porto-
-Yicans, $1.50 M. Marglobe tomato,
oor Baltimore, $1; 6 M. white or
ellow Bermuda onion, prepaid, $4.25;
12 M. $8.25. Money order. _D. M. Bar-
Baxley. 4
Cabbage, 50c; Onions, 43 Del; Mar-
obe and Greater B. tomato $1; Ru-
by King pepper, $2; collard, 75c M.
L. Steedley, Baxley.
Few | Govt. insp. Big Stem Jer-
$1.50, M. del. at my farm. J. L.
ler, Patterson. .
~ Gov't. insp. pink skin Portoricans,
$1.75 M. up to 4 M; $1.65 M. 5 M.
up, Del. in 3rd zone. Money order.
Harvey Story, Autryville, Rt.
Portoricans, April 15th-20th. $1.60
. FOB. Money order Aen J. M.
Campbell, Surrency. Rt.
Genuine Portoricans, si 60 M. 5 M.
up, $1 50 FOB. John Herndon, ,Sur-
ency.
Genuine prtoneare, Gov't. insp:
April, May, June del. $2 M. del. $1.75
~collect; 5 M. $1.50 M.10 to 20 M.
40 exp. collect. Quality guar. W.
Boatright, Alma.
eine red skin Portoricans, Govt.
$1.50 M. Larger orders, $1 30 M.
eG: 2 Davis, Graham.
Gov't. ee and treated Portoricans,
1.50 M. 5 up, $1.40 M. Geo. Orid-
gen, Wray. Rt. 2. Box 36.
Gov't. insp. Portoricans, April and
May del. $1.50 M. Add postage. J.
Phelps, Tifton. RFD 7
x Heading collard, 15 co "200 for 25c.
s.0O.-B; Warren, Toomsboro. Rt. 2.
Early J. Wakefield and Succession
abbage, 40c M. FOB. Cash. Exch.
L. T. Beverly, Dixie.
$1.50; a King
Ovie
on, $1 M. C. L. Steedley, Baxley.
Yellow Skin Portoricans, Govt. insp.
April, May, June. $1.40 M. del.. by
arcel Post Ga. J. F. Gruber, Odum.
Govt. insp. Portoricans. April 20th.
50 M. 5 M. up, $1.25 M. FOB.
mnie Carter, Surrency. P. O. Box
154.
_Marglobe and Greater B. tomato,
1; Ruby King Pepper, i collard,
Marglobe
MARKET
75c; cabbage, 50 M. C. M. Thompson,
Baxley.
Missionary strawberry, $1.25, 500; $2
M. Rhubarb, 35c doz. yellow root,
aoc Ib. peppermint plants, 25c doz.
END 20c doz. Snow Bobo, Hartwell,
- Kudzu crowns, 30 M. to 40 M. From
Chambley, Ideal.
Govt. insp. pure Portoricans, $1. 50
M. 5 M. up, $1.25; June Pink tomato,
$1 M. E. J. Wakefield cabbage, 85c
M. L. E. Deal, Bristol.
Pure Portoricans, -Govt. insp. $1.65
M. 5 M. up, $1.45 M. Sat. guar. J.
J. Olliff, Bristol.
Genuine imp. Portoricans, insp. and
treated, not mixed. $1.50 M. FOB;
$2 M. del. J. A. Olliff, Bristol.
Plants Wanted
Exch. $10 value for 6 M. Porto Rico
potato plants. Write first. Mrs. V. C.
Ray, Kensington. Rt. 2.
Want Nancy Hall, Portoricans or
Triumph plants. Exch. Duroc 225. Ib.
boar for 20 M. A 90 lb. boar for -
M. L. H. Edenfield, Stillmore. Rt.
Box 31.
Want few M. pink skin Porto Rico
-| potato plants. Exch. good value. Write.
J. H. Beasley, Lavonia. RFD.
Slips. Exch. value. Write. Mrs.
Terrell, Greenville, Rt. 3. -
Exch. 1 qt. crowder peas for 300
Nancy Hall plants, also exch. for 100
each Bermuda onion, Ponderosa to-
mato and sweet pepper plants. Mrs.
L. R. Ashworth, Loganville. Rt. 4.
Want prices on 2 M. to 10 M. Porto
Rico potato plants, del... before May
ae es J. S. Taylor, Elberton.
Want 100 M. potato plants for April
and May del. Must be good plants
and State inspected:- B. N. Walters,
Martin.
Exch. 8 lbs. white brown eyed peas
E. W. Noles, Douglasville. Rt. 2.
Want. old time Pumpkin Yam pota-
to has a round leaf and runs low),
Also full stock Banana plants.
of each, or up to 2 M. J.C. Williams,
Soperton. e
fae For Sale
~ White Minorca eggs ces to $1.50
per 15. Were $5 set. Mrs. J. W. Mi-
lam, Palmetto, Rt. -1.
Pure Rel, Red eggs, $1 per set. J. H.
Barnhart, Greensboro.
Donaldson Red. Open range flock, $1
per 15 del. in 8rd zone. Mrs. O. S.
Greene, Cochran, RFD 3.
Pure bred Pape str. Black Minorca,
75c per 15, del. Mrs. J. R. Sauls, Shell-
Man.
Tancred L. 150 per 15.. Cartons ret.
Mrs. W. A. Lewis, Toomsboro. ~*
Giant Black Minorca, $2 per 15 post-
paid. L. B.Millians, Newnan.
Pure Donaldson Red, $1 per 15. Guar
fertility. Furnish 6 settings weekly.
Exch. for anything can use. A. B.
Parker, Plains.
Buff Minorca, Schmidt str. $1. 25 per
15; $2.25 for 30. Postpaid. J. D. John-
son, Thomasville, 226 West Jefferson.
Thompson B. R. Pen 1, $1.50; Pen 2;
$1 per 15; Donaldson Red, si. 25 per
15; All bloodtested for B. W. D. Gold-
en Sebrights, $1 per 15. Me Milton.
White and Black turkey, mixed, $1.-
75 per 12, del. by ie BE Money or-
der only. Mrs, C, E wiand, Ft. Val-
ley, Rt, 2.
|Sumner, Sylvester, Rt. 3.
per 15, not del. Exch. for tender pole
bean seed. TSN: Farmer, Woodstock,
Rt. 3, Box 145. :
M. 'B. turkey eggs, $2 per doz. Exch
2 doz. for 1M potato plants, or pig,
Buyer to furnish egg crate. M. D.
Autwell; Bremen, RFD 2, Box 58.
Pape str.S. C. Black Minorcas, $5 C.
$2.50 for 50 del.
Cairo.
R. I. Red, 75c for 15; $3.50 per 100.
Dark stock. Miss Florence Horne,
Grovetown.
Donaldson, direct Red: No. 1 and 2
pens, $2.00 per 15; $3.00, 30; Exhibition
pens, $1.50; $2.00, 30; Utility, $1.00 per
15:::$1,50, 30. Mrs. RB. J. Sines Lin-
colnton.
Spotted Indian miner duck, $1.00
per 13 del. Mrs. J. L. Erwin, Adairs-
ville.
Eggs from Gray and Black: turkeys.
$2.00 doz. Cash with order. Mrs. Boe.
BegsOn, ae Ril =
Pure bred B, R., T5c ae a. Exch,
x
e
2 - 15 yrs. old. Well rooted. J. L.
Want Portoricans potato (not pe
for 500 Purple Skin Portorican Slips. |
100 |
Pure bred S. L. Wyandotte eggs, 10c |
Mrs. C. L. Rehberg, ||
BULLETIN
for Jersey White Giant eggs, white
feed sacks, turkey eggs, bunch lima
bean and okra seed. Mrs. G. F. Mc-
Afee, Soperton, Rt. 4.
Owens and Thompkins Red. $1. 00
per 15, $3.75 a hundred. Del. Crates to
be ret. Mrs. M. B. Scroggs, Alto.
J. B. Giant, $1.00 per 15 and postage.
Mrs. Z. H. Anderson. Bowdon, Rt.4.
Thompson Ringlet. 1st pen, $1.00 per
15; $1.60. 30; 2nd pen, 85c per 15; $1.35,
30. Del. Cartons ret. Mrs. J. E. Steadam,
Bainbridge. :
Light Brahma, $1.10 per at $2.15
Pep 30. Mrs. D. B. Hooks, Shellman, Rt,
Ky. Dominecker pit game, $1.00 per
15 del. Crate ret. Differ in color. Eggs
all season. No personal chks. H. O.
Loyd, Covington, Rt. 2. /
Donaldson and Tompkin str. eee
98 per cent pure. $1 per 15.. Money
order. Mrs. G. R. Long, Amity.
Turkey eggs and baby turkeys for
Sale. W. L. Lowe, Cass Station.
White Minorca, Booth str. $1.25 per
15.. oS 2 set. for 1M Porto Rico
Thursday, April 16, 1931
Fischel White Rock, $1.25 per 15;
80, del. Mrs. F. E. Grubbs, Demorest
Rt. fe
Pure bred S. C. Buff L. 75c er 1B:
$4 C. Del. Also baby chicks, $10 a 100.
. L. Lynn, Waycross, Rt. 2.
bee bred Parks B .R. Highest fer-
tility assured, 85c per 15 PP. Mrs.
Sam Yawn, Milan, Rt. 3.
Sheppard Ancona, $1 per 15; pure:
C. Golden Sebright bantam, $1. 25 per
15. All del. and cartons ret. Mrs. J.
W. Anderson, Roy. 3
Bronze eggs, $2.50 per 12 del. A.
Southern, Tallapoosa, Rt. 3. j
Thompson Imp. Ringlet, $1 per
del. Cash. Take 2 lbs. pole beans, Mc-
Caslan or Ky Wonder at 25c lb. in exch
Mrs. C. A. Wilbanks, Commerce, Rt. 5,
R. C. S. L. Wyandotte, 75c per 15 del.
Exch. for tender garden or cornfield
bean seed at 25c lb. or potato plants, -
$1.50 M. W. R. Roper, Orange.
Pure White Rock, 75c per- 1% FO
Mrs. GC. J. Vickery, Canon, Rt. 2
Thompson Ringlet, $1 per 15. ~ Car
tons ret, Mrs. J. Ms Boyett, Morris
Station. : ; Ss
plants. . W. Sauls, Shellman. |
plied.)
First Spray:
When to use: Se
Spray to use: .
water.
Second Spray:
When to use:
peaches.
Spray to use:
Third Spray:
When to use:
Spray to use:
Fourth Spray:
When to use: ~
Spray - to use:
- Four webs
boiled lime
sulfur. |
carrying all the necessary materials
Third Dust: -
Time to use: .
Dust to use:
Fourth Dust:
When to use:
Dust to use:
80-5-15
80-5-15
hydrated lime.
mixture or about A lb. of the. dust.
fertilizer.
be picked up and destroyed.
The following concerns have for
mixtures needed for peaches:
The General Chemical ooo
J. W. Woolfolk Compa
Atlanta Chemical Co mane
A Spray and Dust Program for Home z
| _ >=. Peach Orchards oe
(NOTE: Where the first spray | or dust has been missed, it will be
advisable to apply the second spray or dust immediately, for Curculios a
are emerging in large numbers in the Middle Georgia Section. The em-
ergence date this year is extremely late and it is possible that no mater-
ial damage has vee done if the first spray or dust has not been. Ops e
- SPRAY SCHEDULE
When % or more of the petals have fallen...
1 Ib. powdered lead arsenate and lime water.
made of RAE lime in each 50 ) gallons .
When shucks are
nae as First Spray.
Two weeks after Second Spray. ee
8-8-50 self-boiled lime sulfur or some ready
: eepeee sulfur,
1 lb. powdered lead arsenate in an 8-8-50 self-
(For home orchard Owners who have had no experience in mixing ye
spray, materials for peaches, I would recommend a dust schedule. Dusts
eases attacking peaches are offered for sale by many~* concerns
State and need only to be applied. The 80-5-15 dust ean be used =f
during the entire season if sd desired). ae
DUST SCHEDULE
First Dust:
When to use: When % or more of the petals have fallen
Dust to use: Eger gs Ot Se 2
Second Dust:
- When to use: ~ When shucks are shedding, exposing the. small
= eache
Dust to use: Same as used in First Dust
Two seeks after second dust
Four weeks before the variety is due to ripen
The 0-5-95 dust contains 5 per cent lead arsenate and 95 per cent
~The 80-5-15 dust contains 80 per cent sulfur, 5 per cent arsenate
_ of- lead and 15 per cent hydrated lime. 4
AD bearing peach tree should receive about 144 gallons of the spray
If you have not fertilized your peach trees, do so at once, using :
either sulfate of ammonia, nitrate. of soda, or some good complete
All peaches that fall to the ground from now until June 10 should
XN
~
shedding, ey al .
ras
fete vatiety is due to ripen
sulfur solution or ready prepared "|
dis-
for the control of insects an
the
sale the spray materials and dust
ee oe Montemuima, Ga.
: Ft. Valley, Ga.
Atlanta, Georgia
Cornelia Hardware Company
Consolidated, Apple Growers Exchg.
additional i
432 mile aes
Carter Hardware & Supply Company
If you have a neighbor who is a commercial peach grower, possibly
he could furnish the materials needed. He is interested in controlling
the insects and diseases attacking peaches in the State.
The ee State Board of Entomology will be glad to furnish any
formation and distribute, free, t6 any citizen of the ee
bulietins on Peach Insects and diseases and How to Control Them.
M. S. YEOMANS, State Entomologist,
State Board of Entomology,
Cornelia, Georgia
ee cae fice soe SS Comena:s Georgia
Macon, Georgia
Atlanta, Georgia
Thursday, April 16, 1931.
EES
Seorgia Products For Sale |
BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE
15 bu. each, cream and _ speckled
owders, 10c lb. white sugar crowders
FOB. J. F. Johnston, Ash-
urn.
35 or 40 lbs. sound, clean Rice peas,
' 1-2c Ib. and postage; 5 lbs. post-
d.. Money order. EH. E. Tatum,
awsonville, Rt. 1. ae
35 bu. Brabs, sound and bright, $2.35
FOB. Sample on request. G. S.
y, Warthen. (
300 bu. good, sound 90-day runner
elvets, $2.50 bu. FOB. 1930 crop. W. A.
illcox, Rhine.
Red Hull speckled, $2.50 bu. FOB.
ash with order. Luther Norris, Wri-
tsville.
urpees stringless green pod beans,
Ib. 5 lbs. up, 20c Ib. FOB. Cash with
er. Clifford Williams, Locust Grove.
Cream sugar crowders, running var.
prolific, dbl. cleaned, 6. lbs. $1;
Ibs up, 15 lb. postpaid; Lady Fin-
er and mush peas, same price. C, R.
urell, Auburn. :
ew bu. nice and sound Otootans, $5
_J. J. Stephens, Luthersville, Rt. 1.
Genuine Otootans, recleaned, 1930
ck, $4 bu. FOB. R. M.'Turner, Roy-
on. f
ure, sound white bunch butterbeans
per 5 lbs. del. Special prices on lar-
er quantities. L. O. Meadows, Shi-
hite pole limas, and red and white
speckled crowders, 15c per cup, 2 for
-. No chks. Mrs. Henry Eller, Elli-
ay, Rt. 3:
50 bu. Brabhams $2.50 bu. FOB. No
rders less than 2 1-2 bu. Cash. J. P.
cDowell, Dawson.
ung beans, 6 lbs. $1 prepaid. Rufus
ostpaid Ga. Less not prepaid. P. W.
igley, Dallas, Rt, 1.
Few bu. early Red Hull speckled, $2.-
0 bu. W. E. Goodwin, Wadley.
90 day velvets, 65 per cent sound. $2
Cash with order. W. R. Jackson,
jenna.
5 bu. 2 crop Tillman peas, $2 bu
_ FOB: Not less than 2 1-2 bu. to
lot at this price. Mrs. W. T. Wall,
Jeffersonville.
bu. sound, clean brabs, $2 bu. Sam
Gable, Tallapoosa. 2
ure Whippoorwills, bright and clean
5 bu. No personal chk. A. D. Pope,
Haralson.
BUTTER FOR SALE
2 Ibs, Jersey butter ea. week. No |3
coloring. 30c lb. del.
pty; Alto, Rt 1.
__ 3 or 4 lbs. fresh butter ea. week, 30c
. plus postage. Cash with order. Mrs.
F. Henson, Mize, Rt. 1.
lbs. yellow firm country butter ea.
eek, 35c lb. postpaid. Mrs. G. A.
ely, Bowdon, Rt. 1.
ORN AND SEED CORN FOR SALE
Batts 4 ear prolific, field selected,
ubbed and hand shelled. $2.50 bu. FOB
xch for Otootans. Walter Lackey,
firam ,Rt.
__ Everetts Champion prolific. 1st yr.
ield selected, 75c pk. Write for pri-
Mrs. Dovie Ber-
Few bu. Hastings prolific and Gold-
ee $2 bu. E. E. Hillard, Bowers-
lle. =
Yellow, shelled pop corn, 7c Ib. $3 bu.
Exch. 1 bu. for 1 bu. Biloxi Soys. Add+
ostage to small amts. Harold Mor-
gan, Vienna.
_ Mexican June, Blue and White, mix-
d. Write for price and sample. S. B.
Kinard, Jackson. ae
__ Whatleys prolific. Carefully selected
and shelled, $2 bu. Grown from certi-
fied seed. R. M. Turner, Royston.
COTTON SEED FOR SALE |
Pure College No. 1, from reg. seed.
Kept pure at gin, 75c bu. Exch. for
good pigs. E. N. Hopper, Ranger.
Piedmont Cleveland, 75c bu. FOB. 1st
yr. R. M. Turner, Royston. zi
Long staple, full 1 1-8 cotton seed,
$1 bu. Yield as heavy as short staple
and sells 1-3 more on Market. M. D.
Owens, Atlanta, 60 N. E. 11th St. :
Pure Piedmont ped. Cleveland big
boll. Privately ginned. 75c bu. Jas. A.
Chauncey, Screven.
_Ruckers, 1st yr. 70c bu, FOB. H. R.
ennett, Adairsville.
- Pure Ruckers, Ist yr. Specially gin-.
hed for plantiny. Write for
&
pe
Eig co
MARKET BULLETIN
Imp. Cleveland, extra big boll. Pri-
vately ginned. $2.60 cwt. Money order
wih order. Willie Stone, Monroe, Rt.
Wilson Type, big boll. Ist yr. Kept
pure at gin. 90c bu. $2.75 cwt. sack. B.
Lloyd Woodall, Milner.
Pure Ruckers, direct. Kept clean at
gin. 75c bu. FOB. Mrs. W. A. Ben-
nett, Adairsville.
Half and Half, 47 per cent lint. 75c
bu. $2.25 per cwt. R. E. Tomberlin,
Surrency. .
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
2 cured hams, wt. 38 lbs. ea. 25c Ib.
FOB. A. J. Grant, Dallas. :
12 country cured hams, 8 to 12 Ibs.
25c Ib. Add postage. W. B. Clifton,
Oliver, Rt. 3.
Lot of 8, 10, 12 lbs. hams, cured, corn
fed. With loin bone cut off, 25c Ib.
J. D. Taylor, Vienna.
Country cured Hickory smoked meat,
hams, 35c lb. shoulders, 25c Ib. R. C
Couch, Turin.
Brooks county smoked hams, 25c Jb.
50 lbs. up, 24c Ib. 10 to 30 lb. sizes. Lee
Patrick, Quitman. %
Cured, oak smoked meats: hams, 25c
lb. Sides, 16c lb. Shoulders, 14c. Guar
Sound and to please, FOB. Noah D.
Hendricks, Metter, Rt. 1, Box 87.
Hickory smoked country sausage, old
fashioned seasoning, all pork. 4 Ibs. $1
postpaid to 3rd zone. Nick Lewis, Ar-
lington, RFD 1.
Old Plantation smoked sausage, all
pork, 4 lbs. $1 postpaid. R. F. Davis,
Arlington, RFD 2. . : (
1 shoulder meat, wt. 18 lbs. 20c Ib.
postpaid to 2nd zones. Dewey Nelms,
Bowman, Rt. 1. z
Oak smoked hams, 25c lb. shoulders,
20c. Guar. free of bugs and -worms.
Isaac B. Wilson, Garfield, Rt. 2.
State insp. apple trees, grape vines,
10c; pear trees, 40c; white Eng. peach,
2 ft. trees, 5c each. Exch. W. H. Alex-
ander, Cleveland.
Blue Damson plums, 3 and 4 ft. high
2 for 35 del.. Mrs. Cliff Booth, Kenne-
saw, Rt. 2. ;
POTATOES FOR SALE
Green Mtn. Irish potatoes. Good size
for planting. $1.50 bu. FOB. F. C. True-
love, Cleveland, Rt. 1.
Irish Cobblers and white star pota-
toes, $1.25 bu. FOB Blue Ridge: Quill
Weeks, Dial.
SYRUP FOR SALE
100 gal. Honey Drip sorghum in new
10 lb. pails, 75c or exch. for pigs, gilts,
good sow, or Wannamaker cotton seed.
H. G. Thomason, Rockmart, Rt. 2.
Want to contract with party to take
sev gal. sorghum syrup next fall. Wrt.
if interested. John C. Foster, Shiloh.
A-1 pure Ga. cane, 1 gal. cans, 75c.
Labeled and guar. G. W. Holt, Climax.
Pure sugar cane syrup. Best grade.
/ $3.50 cs, 6 No. 10 cans; $3.80 cs. 12 No.
5s. 10c cs. less on 5 cs, Quality guar.
Lee Patrick, Quitman. _
100 gal. syrup for sale or exch. Part
for 6 bu. small Spanish peanuts or pk.
chufas, 1 pk. velvet beans. Mrs. Mary
D. Stroud, Egypt, Rt.2. .
Want 35 gal. bbl. No. 1 bright thick
_Ga. Cane syrup, cheap for cash or will
exch. Whatleys prolific seed corn, at
once. P. H. Woodard, Chauncey, Rt. 2.
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Cabbage, ready to sell. 3/1-2c per Ib.
at garden, or del. Rochelle. M. G. Van-
zant, Abbeville, Rt. 2. ;
Georgia Products Wanted
FRUIT FOR SALE
Fresh strawberries, 20c qt. del. in 16
qt. crate. Now ready. T. H. Gotdon
Rochelle, Rt. 2.
-l_ Ibs sundried apples, $1 del. Mrs. J.
A. Brown, Locust Grove. :
Bright 1930 sundried apples, 15c lb.
del. 8 lbs or more in 1st and 2nd zones.
Manda Weeks, Dial.
Nice sundried apples, 15c lb. del.
Henry F. Weaver, Marion.
Nice sundried apples, 6 lbs. $1 post-
paid. Mrs. Elsie Heaton, Mineral Bluff.
15 lbs. each, nice, dried pears, 18c lb.
apples, 15c lb. Mrs. J. T. Tate, Whites-
burg, Rt. 1.
Nice, sundried apples and peaches,
15c Ib. Add postage. No chks. Money
order. Mrs. C. N. Kinsey, Winder, Rt.
"15 Ibs. clean dried apples, 12c Ib. Exch
for seed peanuts. Mrs. C. B. Meek,
Carrollton, Rt. 7.
apples. 15c and postage, per lb. lots
of 10 and 20 lbs. Money order. Mrs. B.
T. Osborn, Clermont, Rt. 1.
: GRAIN FOR SALE
_ Sagrain 303. New grain and hay
crop. Sure crop. Pure No. Ga. seed,
5 Ibs. $1; $6.50 bu. Del. H. A. Neal,
Carnesville, Rt. 3. :
300 bu. Bancroft oats, grown on own
farm, 75c bu. FOB. R. M. Turner, Roy-
ston.
500 bundles fodder, $3 per hundred.
J. H. Ward, Menlo, Rt. 1.
HAY FOR SALE
Velvet bean hay, $20 ton, FOB; in
car lots, $75 check with order. W. R.
Jackson, Vienna. :
5 tons peavine hay, $25 ton; 2 tons
peanut, $20; 2 tons baled oats, $15. Del
my home. Mrs. W. T. Wall, Jefferson-
ville.
PECANS AND PEANUTS FOR SALE
42 lbs. sound seedlings, $4.20; 5 Ibs.
large, sound Stewarts, Miss Belle Tim-
merman, Bronwood, Box 83.
300 Ibs. Spanish peanuts, hand clean-
ed, 4c lb. FOB. Money order prefer-
red. Jno. T.. Hammond, Cuthbert.
Papershells, 30c lb. FOB. Exch for
Otootans, Velvets, Brabs, Irons, or baby
chicks, 10c for samples. J. L. Burk,
Tifton, Rt. 7.
PECAN AND OTHER FRUIT TREES,
ETC., FOR SALE
State insp. true to name: peach, lead
var. $45 M, $5 C; $1 doz. Grape, $4 C.
Apricot, Raspberry, Cheap. EH. B. Tra-
vis, Riverdale.
Yates, Terry, Winesap, Delicious May
and June apple trees, 3 yrs. 25c; Elber-
ta, Indian Belle, Hiley ch, 10c; Con-
ces On |
amt. wanted. J. E. Store, A irsvill
Peord, Berckmay's; Nortons, Lutie, Jes-
Gore station EBS {Ue tel amie Cllre-
fin Austell.
Ren Rae 7
|for 2 Ibs.
40 or 50 lbs. dried fruit, peaches and
|; Add
BEANS AND PEAS WANTED
Want few lbs. genuine O-too-tans.
Exch. insp. Porto Rico plants. J. A. O-
llif, Bristol.
Want best prepaid prices on 1-2 bu.
Velvet beans, little kind. Large kind
not accepted. Leroy Ashworth, Lo-
ganville, Rt. 4.
Exch. 3 for 1: Ruckers cotton seed,
clean and selected, for Otootans. T. S.
McLendon, Carrollton, Rt. 8.
Want 75 bu. No. Brabham peas at $2
bu. W. R. Jackson, Vienna.
Want 1 bu Osceola velvet beans. Miss
M. A. Brobston, Madison.
Exch black 7 wks. crowder peas for
white bunch butter beans, 3 lbs. for 2.
Or exch. everbearing strawberry: 150
: Mrs. G. L. Pullin, Dublin,
Rt. 6. :
COTTON SEED WANTED .
Want 150 lbs. Broadwell dbl.-jointed
cotton seed. Pure and recleaned. State
price at once. Milburn G. Smith, Toc-
coa, Rt. 2, Box 133.
FRUIT WANTED
Want dried apples and peaches at
15c Ib. Exch. value. Write first. Mrs.
G. V. Norman, Elberton, Rt. 5.
Exch. cabbage plants for dried apples
or peaches: 500 for 4 lbs. 1M for 7 Ibs.
= del. Mrs. H, C. Rowe, Fitzgerald,
Rt. 2. s
GRAIN WANTED
Want seed oats at $1.10 bu. in exch.
for reg. Guernsey heifer, 8 mos old,
from 5 1-2 gal. cow, value $95. P. Neal,
St. Smions Island.
PECANS AND PEANUTS WANTED
Want 2 or 3 bu. N. C. Runner peanuts
oe L. Bennett, Screven, Rt. 2, Box
Want 15 bu. N. C. Runner peanuts.
Make best price. L. R. Langley, Co.
Agt. Milledgeville.
POTATOES WANTED
Want 10 bu. Porto Rico seed potatoes
at 60c bu. W. D. Watson, Loganville.
Seed For Sale
Extra fine Orange cane, 25c gal. 50c
pk, $1.75 bu. FOB; Also freshly dug
yellow, poke, sassafras root, 20c lb.
Ratsbane, 25c lb. Add postage. Mrs.
Will James, Ellijay. Rt. 3.
\Calif. beer seed, 10c thle. Albert
Baker, Norman Park.
Calif. beer seed, 10c per start post-
paid. Spencer, Teal, Waco. RFD 2. :
Lucy cane seed, 25c gal. $1.75 bu.
7 lbs. Royal King pimiento pepper,
50c lb. $2 for lot; Beer seed, 21
jostaige. Mrs. Ji E.
Forsyth, Rt. 4
H. L. Casey, Canon. Rt. 2.
Nancy Hank
0c start. ;
and Kleckley Sweet,|Rt
PAGE ELEVEN
15c per large cupful. Shade dried;
Bunch limas, sound, clean, 15c large
cupful, 2 for 25c. Mrs. N. D. Denney,
Calhoun, Rt. 1. Box 36.
Large amt. Stone Mtn. grown es-
pecially for seed. Disease free. 70c
Ib. 10 to 20 Ibs. 60c lb. Write for
prices on larger lots. J. D. Alexander,
McDonough. Bese
Clements imp. watermelon, and A-
merican Wonder. Each, $1 oz. $10 Ib
E. T. Clements, Tennille.
Stone Mtn. Texas Ribbon cane, 60
gal. $1 pk. postpaid; $3: bu. FOB; imp
Stone tomato, 75c per 1-2 lb. $1.25 lb
15 Ibs. $5. cabbage-collard seed, 90c 1b
-|postpaid. C. R. Burell, Auburn. Rt. 1
Golden Queen
$1 eg Honey Drip sorghum seed, $2.-
50 bu. T. O. Galloway, Barnesville.
Genuine Watson. 50c lb. del. 1930
crop. J. M. Chapman, Chula. ~~ es
Hastings Stone Mtn. 70c Ib. post-
paid. Exch. for white feed sacks at.
10c each, or baby limas beans. Mrs.
Clyde Cook, Pitts. zs
Round, long pumpkin, green striped
cushaw, summer crookneck squash
winter squash and martin gourd, 5c
pkg. No orders less than 25c. Mrs.
W. A. Lewis, Toomsboro. bes
Few Worlds
(cap, 7 to 9 gal.) seed, 15c doz. an
2c postage. No stamps. W. F. Wal
den, Tarrytown. RFD 2.
Hastings pure Stone Mtn. 75c Ib.
Texas Banana mushmelon 50c Ib. cit-
ron, 25c teacupful; good, clear sound
clearstone peach seed, 2 doz. 25c. Ma
jor Crowe, Cumming. Rt. 4. < ae
Imp. Jumbo watermelon, 1930 crop
$4 Ib. Exch. 1 lb. for 1 bu. Otoota
bean seed, 1930 crop. Cash with or
der. C. C. Burell, Buford. ce
Guar. pure Stone Mtn., Rocky Ford
cantaloup, selected. 75c lb. choicest
Honey Drip cane, 50c gal. Garden
beans, Half Runners, 35c lb. Postpaid
C. F. Maddox, Buford. :
Stone Mtn. hand selected, 40c Ib.
Include postage. L. Rodgers, Butler.
Watson, 40c lb. Cash, or exch. for
Toole prolific or Half and Half cot-
ton seed. A. H. Johnson, Valdosta.
Rt. 6. Box 55.
Mung beans, $6 bu. Okra, sunflow
er, and parma crystal seed, all 20
cupful; red pepper, 10c thls. Ad
postage. Mrs. Thos. Bagby, Flowery
Branch. Rt. 1, Box 106. @
Beat the Bee syrup cane seed, hand
threshed and winded, 65c gal, del. al-
so Whatleys red cob corn, 75c pk. $2.2
bu. FOB. C. R. Smith, Buford. Rt. 3.
3 lbs. Monte Cristo watermelon, 10c
oz. $1-1b. 2 Ibs. Lifsey, 10c oz. 85c Ib.
Cash. Geo. Brice, Cumming. Rt: 5.
Wilkins-watermelon seed, $1 lb. Exc.
Miss Annie E. Jones, Fayetteville. Rt.
Se x
Red Valentine bean seed, weevil
free, 25c lb. postpaid. Mrs. J. lL. Fer
guson, Winder. Rt. 3. i
._ Halbert Honey Sweet, dried an
hand cleaned. 50c lb. Exch. for pota-
to slips or tomato plants. Mrs. J. M
Poland, Lincolnton. =
White bunch butter bean seed, 25c
per large size cup, postpaid. Homer
Kimmons, Cartersville. Rt. 4. ee
Pimiento pepper seed, $1 1b. Glob
and Purple Top turnip, 30c Ib. Ex
for collard seed at 30c lb. L. A. Crov
Oakwood. si
Purple Hull white table pea, 50c qt.
prepaid; Stone Mtn. melon,
early corn (have roasting ears Jun
2ist), 30c teacup. Mrs. W.
Flowery Branch. : ;
Home grown swycard collard seed
10c oz. $1 lb. B. F. Scott, Dawson.
_ Thurmond Grey. 50c lb. J. B. Han
ner, Buena Vista. ee
150 Ibs, good Stone Mtn. or Lifsey
50c lb. Over 10 lbs. 35c Ib. 75 lbs
pure Excell, 50c lb. All del. J. H. Hol
ley, Buena Vista. Sap
Gherkin cucumber, 5c tbls. Russian
sunflower, green pod okra, white rice
pop corn, cantaloup, watermelon seed,
4 thls. 10c. 25c orders del. Mrs. Sam
Smith, Austell. Rt. 2. - iF
Mixed watermelon, 25c large cup-
ful; pomegranate, 10c tbls., 1 lb. dry
Sage, 40c; broom corn seed, 25c. 1-2
gal. Exch. for garden bean seed. L
C. Abernathy, Lula. Rt. 2. ve
Watson, 50c..lb. 20 Ibs. up, 25 1
custard squash, very large var.
per 15 seed; green sage dried in shade
40c lb. Hazel Crumley, Seville. Rt. 1.
Old fashioned muskmelon, 10c tbls
ims, Maysville. Rt. 2. se
Big Devil melon seed, 75c lb. (Large >
and fine shipper). Exch. for any-
thing can use. A. B. Parker, Plains.
Golden Sunshine sweet corn. Mc-_
Caslan pole bean, salad Eng. peas, |
long green, cucumber, Italian squash,
Martin gourd seed. All 1Uv. large. pkg.
ore postage. Jim Bramlett, aies,
pop corn, 1930 crop.
PAGE TWELVE
Seed For Sale
Vine okra, Giant tomato, 20 in. cu-
umber, earliest tomato, 3 ft. bean.
Giant. bean, Banana cushaw. Sample
of any above, 10c and 2c postage.
Chesley Rice, Columbus. 3316 3rd Ave.
5 lbs. Stone Mtn. melon seed, 50c
Ib. Exch. for potato plants. Mrs.
_ Tiney Phillips, Flowery Branch. Rt. 2.
Lucy Long cane $2 bu. FOB, 5c lb.
Mammoth okra, 1-4 lb. 15c; small
crooked wneck jsquash, 1-4 Ib. 25cs
meee Mrs. C. A. Wilbanks, Commerce.
-. Running butter beans, 20c lb. Exch.
for turkey, or large breed hen eggs.
Mrs. Fuller Joiner, Tennille.
3 Ibs. white velvet okra, 75c, or exch.
for cabbage plants, or white feed
sacks.. Ea. del. Mrs. Jno. H. Worley,
Cumming. Rt. 2: :
__ Pride of Ga. melon seed, 90c; also
E. J. Chas. W. cabbage plants, 25c C.
yi M. Mrs. Otis Kelley, Griffin. Rt.
_ Sunflower seed, 20c per cupful; col-
lard plants, 20c a 100. Mrs. C. W.
Sauls, Shellman.
-_ 10 lbs. Stone Mtn. for sale. Exch. 4
Ibs. for 1 M. P. R. potato or tomato
plants. Ea. pay postage. Mrs. Gus-
sie Adams, Oglethorpe. Rt. 2. )
Martin gourd seed, 25 for 15c; 15
for 10c. Exch. for onion sets, large
_ Kind. Mrs. W. Samuel Brown, Cal-
- houn. Rt. 4. Box 64-B.
_.Chufas, or grass nuts, for planting,
15c pt. 25c qt. 5 Ibs. $1. Add postage.
oot with order. Mrs. Nora Nix, Alto.
Few lbs. pure Pride of Ga., 50c Ib.
el. No stamps. Frank L. Carter,
McDonough, Rt. 1.
_. Guar. pure imp. Jones melon seed,
$1 Ib. Add postage. J. B. Smith,
Locust Grove. RFD 3.
New melon (will stand the hot sun;
Can plant it until July Ist), $1.50 lb.
or 1-4 lb. 50c. R. T. Hogan, Hogans-
ville.
Mexican Jun corn, mostly white,
sc pk. FOB; stringless green pod
bunch beans, 25c lb. cornfield beans,
ng s Del. Mrs. J. A. Howell, Meigs.
Guar. pure imp. Hastings Heading
Cabbage-collard seed, 75c Ib. 500
plants now ready for, transplanting,
$1. Exch. for Spanish peanut seed.
iy Johnnie F, Myers, Hartwell. Rt.
Genuine Rocky Ford cantaloup, 20c
per cup. Del. No-stamps. Mrs. M. J.
Patterson, Cordele. Rt. B. :
Yellow crook neck squash. Ist yr.
from Hastings. 10c large tbls. 5 for
-25c. Cash. Mrs. L. R. Martin, Gaines-
fe ville: Rt. 1.
Bu. gourd seed, 10c doz.
Stonecypner, Forest Glen, Rt. 1.
' Watson, 40c lb. Exch. for Otoo-
tans, velvets, Brabs, Irons, or baby
ochicks, ..J. lL. Burk, Tifton; Rt. 7.
__Cantaloup seed, Wards Ideal, and
Rocky Ford, and Thomas melon, all
-50c lb. Ga. collard, 25c lb. FOB. W.
J. Jackson, Ochlocknee.
Jones Wonder and Stone Mtn. mix-
ed, Eden Gem cantaloup, Banana
-muskmelon, Sound, 1930 crop. 25c- per
-teacupful. No stamps. Mrs. H. H.
Sullivan, Carrollton. Rt. 5.
~ 5 Ibs. Stone Mtn. 20c per cupful. $3
for lot. L. C. Harris, Dallas. Rt. 2.
_ Calif. multiplying beer seed, 10c per
start, prepa. George. Floyd, Rock-
_ Recleaned chufa seed, $1.25 per pk,
FOB. W. H. Bone, Jr., Douglas.
-_ 2 Ibs. Watson, 30c lb. Mammoth
Russian sunflower, 20c lb. Exch. for
peanuts, seed beans, June corn, or
yellow Flint. Mrs. V. C. Ray, Ken-
sington. Rt. 2.
Sweet gourd, 25 seed for 15c. Will
grow 3 or 4. ft. long. P. P. J. Z. Ed=
wards, Jefferson. Rt. 3. | ae
_ Old fashioned sage seed, 11 large
thls. $1. Mrs. J. P. Thomas, Gaines-
ville. Rt. 6. : :
25 lbs. Stone Mtn. 35c lb. postpaid.
-W. H. Hallman, Sycamore. Box 81.
Special kind Red broom corn seed,
20c lb. del; Hastings long brush. 10
Ibs. or more, 10c lb. Exch. Venor
Ray, Kensington. Rt. 2.
15 Ibs. white Rice p&s, 15c Ib: 3 lbs.
cornfield bean seed, weevil free, 28c
lb. Mrs. J. T. Tate, Whitesburg. Rt. 1.
Sorghum cane seed, $1.50 bu. R. M.
Turner, Royston. ; ?
_ Imp. Watson, 50c lb. Cheaper in
Ib. lots, or more, del. Exch. for pure
Donaldson Red eggs. Mrs. F. E. Hap-
poldt, Lewiston.
Stone Mtn. 50c lb. Walter Sargent,
Cordele. Rt. B.. - :
500 Ibs. Stone Mtn; 50c lb del. 30c
..in 10 Ib: lots, up. B. R. Andrews,
Haddock.
Ww. L.
MARKET
Mixed cantaloup and mushmelon,.
20c per cup; pumpkin, 15c cup; mus-
tard, 10c spoonful. No chks. Stamps
accepted. Mrs. Henry Eller, Ellijay.
RFD 3.
1930 crop stringless green pod bean
seed, 20c lb. plus postage. Money or-
der. Mrs. O. B. Brand, Byronviille.
10 Ibs. pure Stone Mtn. Shade dried.
Hand saved. 75c lb. Mrs. W. T. Jen-
kins, Sumner.
Hand saved
Watson seed, 35c lb. FOB.
rell, Quitman. Rt. 6. Coe
Pumpkin seed, from 60 lb. pump-
kins, 5c spoonful. Exch. for velvet
okra seed. Mrs. H. O. Medlin, Fair-
mount.
2 1-2 Ib. Stone Mtn. $1.40 for lot,
or 50c lb. A. J. Grant, Dallas.
Syrup cane seed, 3 lb. Exch. for
field peas and Porto Rico pot. plants.
B. F. Hall, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
Sound, clean Ga. Collard, speckled
bunch butter beans, 30c lb. Velvet.
okra, Golden Queen pop corn, May
Eng. peas, 20c pt. Postpaid. Miss
Josephine Roberts, Buford. Rt. 2.
Few bu. Honey Drip cane seed. Pure
and sound. 5c lb. $2 bu. FOB. Exch.
for pigs or shoats. T. O. McLendon,
Carrollton. Rt. 3.
Recleaned Honey Drip cane seed, 5c
lb. 10 lb. or more postpaid. Lester
Creel, Riverdale. Rt. 1. *
50 lbs. Dixie Belle. Guar. pure and
sound. 50c lb. del. Cash with order,
Radford Birdsong, Gordon.
300 lbs. Stone Mtn. 40c lb. whole-
sale; 50c retail. Exch. 3 lbs. for 2 gal.
Ribbon Cane syrup del. W. O. Bird-
song, Gordon.
350 lbs. Stone Mtn. 35c lb. del. Also
100 Ibs. Sorghum cane seed, 15c. Del.
B. Andrews, Haddock. RFD 2.
Thurmond Grey, 40c lb. Childers
Sheppard, Ellaviille. ;
Pumpkin, cushaw, squash and large
bucket-size gourd seed, 2 doz. 5c post-
paid. Myra Lemmonds, Social Circle,
RED 3.
Few bu. gourd seed, 10c doz. post-
paid (coin or stamps); Martin gourd
seed, 20 to 25 for 10c postpaid. R. H.
Martin, Hartwell.
Large amt. Stone Mtn. Grown es-
pecially for seed. 70c lb. 10 to 20 lb.
lots, 60c lb. Write for prices on larg-
er lots.
Texas seeded Ribbon Cane seed.
Pure. and clean. ic 1b, FOB. .R. .H;
Wood, Dacula. Rt. 1.
Thurmond Grey, 50c.1lb. postpaid,
45c not postpaid; over 10 lbs. 40c and
35c; 50 lbs. $15. Pat Montgomery,
Tiften. Rt. 2;
Calif. or Moss multiplying beer seed,
10c start, 25c cupful. A. A. Nash,
Riverdale. Rt. 1. fe ee
15 lbs. Stone Mtn. 30c Ib. FOB.
Exch. for same value. Jessie Howell,
Ry Dy, RG 2S
from select
J.
melons,
E. Har-
Texas Honey Drip cane seed, $1.50
og G. Z. Maxwell, Togcoa. Rt1; Box:
. Hastings citron sed, 40c lb. FOB.
L. D. Spriggs, Rockmart. Rt. 2.
Beggarweed seed, 10c. 1b. White
mustard seed, 5c oz. A. L. Heape,
Nashville. R. 2. Box 60. .
Dixie Belle or Lifsey, 30c lb. del.
No chks. J. O. Etheridge, Ivey.
Sev. mixed large winter squash. 3
doz. seed for 3 - 2c postage stamps,
postpaid. W. O. Gibson, Folkston.
Calif. multiplying beer seed, 10c
Sot prepaid. Geo. Floyd, Rockmart,
Martin gourd seed, 10c pkg. 3 for
25c plus postage. Mrs. T. B. Thomas,
Thomasboro.
Chicken bean seed, 30c per 1-2 pt.
18c per 1-4 pt. No stamps. Mrs. J.
M. Hyers, Alma. Rt. 2:
50 lbs. pure Stone Mtn. 25c Ib. J.
H. Farmer, Milledgeville. Rt. 2.
Mammoth Russian sunflower, 15c lb.
2 Ibs. 25c; Honey Drip cane seed, for
sale, Exch. either for peanuts. Add
postage. G. W. Randall, Lavonia.
Thurmond Grey and Stone Mtn,,
65c lb. Cash with order. Exch. for
Brab or Iron peas at $2.25 bu. Jas.
D. Hancock, Sylvester.
Long green pod okra, 20c cup; mar-
tin gourd, 15c per 2 doz. Broad Leaf
tobacco, 10c spoonful; cantaloup, 2
spoonfuls, 15c. Cash, Mrs. Thornton
McCurley, Hartwell. Rt. 5.
Mammoth sunflower, broom corn
and Honey Drip cane seed, ea. 50c
qt. or 3 qts. $1.. Mrs. L. M. Aderhold,
Lavonia.
Texas Blue Seal cane seed, $1.50 bu.
50 by. pk. FOB. Exch. for corn. G.
A. Skelton, Royston. Rt. 1.
Kleckley Sweet watermelon seed, 50c
lb. Syrup cane seed, 5c*lb. postpaid.
H. A. Wilson, Martin, Rt. 2.
30 lbs. Pride, of Ga. melon seed,
hand selected, 75c Jb. or 50c Ib. for
J. D. Alexander, McDonough. |
}
BULLE TIN
Long green pod okra seed, 25c cup;
Broad
martin gourd, 14c yr 2 doz.
5 Cash.
Leaf tobacco, 10c spoonful.
Mrs. M. C. McLane, Hartwell.
Seed Wanted .
Want 50 or 100 lbs. common or Ko-
rean Lespedeza or Japanese clover
seed. Advise what you have and best
price. C. M. Miller, Cornelia.
Want few lbs. large pumpkin and
cornfield bean seed. Send sample and
quote price. J. H. Beasley, Lavonia.
Want cornfield and garden bean
seed, Exch. value. Ea. del. Mrs.
Hoke Parks, Cumming. Rt. 4.
Want 40 bu. corn; 5 bu. cane seed;
5 bu. peas. Exch. pigs and other val-
ue, or pay cash. R. C. Brewer, Lula.
Rtie. =
Exch. yellow meat watermelon seed,
winter mustard seed, for butter bean
seed. Mrs. S. P. Sullivan, Marietta.
ARt. 2. _
Want sound Brabham pea, velvet
bean and chufa seed. State best price
and kind of bean seed. Jas. A. Chaun-
cey, Screven.
Want 15 lbs. collard seed and 5 bu.
Otootan beans. Bill Crow, Gaines-
ville.
Exch half pt. Ga. Belle watermelon
seed for 1 gal. white nest onions, or
the same amt. for 1 qt. shelled pea-
nuts. Write first. Mrs Mattie Sue
OKelley, Comer, Rt. 1.
Exch old fashioned currant, sprouts,
Gov't insp. at 12 1-2c ea. including
postage for value in peanuts or cane
seed, including postage. Mrs. W. L.
Stevenson, Sharpsburg.
Live Stock For Sale
CATTLE FOR SALE
Reg. Guernsey bull calves, from high
producing cows, $40 and up. Exch. for
field peas, corn, hay, etc. P. Neal, St.
Simons Island.
1 common cow Ist calf (heifer).
Cheap, or exch for chickens or beef
cow. Riley Justice, Waycross, RFD 2.
Reg. J. bull, Crickets Noble Fairy
Boy, grandson of Jasmines Fairy
Boy. $75 at barn. M. Glazier, Turin.
4 J. cows, fresh for sale. 4 1-2 mi. E.
Dalton, T. L. Warmack, Dalton, Rt. 2.
HOGS FOR SALE
S. P. C. 8 wks. old pigs, for Sale or
exch for peas or chufa seed. Mrs. L. M.
Dunn, Chauncey, Rt. 2.
3 mos. old O. I. C. pigs, treated ag-
ainst cholera. Ped. papers,. $8.50, or
$16 pr. A. T. Rigsby, Sale City.
Full stock B. B. African Black 6 10
wks. old, $6, $8; $12, $15 pr. 130 lb. bred
gilt, $18. L. B. Toler, Glenwood, Rt. 3,
Box 93.
Pure Black Guinea pigs, $10 ea. $18
pr.. A. P. Sanders, Tignall, Rt. 1.
HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE
7 yr. old horse mule, wt. 1100 lbs.
Sound and hearty, $175, or trade for
good 900 lb. plug and $100. G. M. Wil-
liams, Almon.
4 mules for sale, 4 1-2 mi. E. of Dal-
ton.. T. L. Warmack, Dalton, Rt. 2.
Live Stock Wanted
HOGS WANTED
Want 3 shoats or pigs. Make best
price for cash FOB. W. M. DeLay,
Douglasville, RFD 6.
Positions Wanted
26 yr. old man wishes job on farm.
Reasonable salary. Raised on farm
and dont mind work. W. R. Wil-
liams, Atlanta. 257 So. Pryor.
. Want 1 H. crop on halves. Plenty
of help. Also Mill work. Have to be
furnished. Or for wages. D. M. Park-
er, Conyers. Rt. 3. Box 94. z
Want job on farm in Murry County.
Stock or poultry. Good wages, and
comfortable home. Am considered
honest, reliable, etc. Jewrender Mur-
ry, Coolidge.
Want place as overseer, foreman or
for wages. Honest, sober and know
how to handle labor. Always work
for employers interest. State wages
including . board. J. M. Cavender,
Brooks.
40 yr. old widow wants job for sal-
ary and board. No ineumbrances.
Exp. in all kind of poultry, garden
work, milk cows, etc. Mrs. Senia Leo-
nard, White Plains.
Want job on farm. Thoroughly exp.
and raised on farm. 25 yrs. old. Mar-
ried, small, family... Also, Mill work:
lot. L. H. Roan; Lovejoy.
Howard McCuen, Stone Mtn. Rt..3.
Thursday, April 16, 1931.
Want place on farm: poultry, stock,
er caretaker of country home. On car
line near Atlanta. Wages, but board
selves. Glenn Campbell, Atlanta, 160
Gordon Terrace. phone, Ray 3037-J.
22 yr. old, single, high school edu-
cation. Raised on farm wants place
with good Dairyman. Wages, board
and laundry. Willing worker. At once.
Edward Kelley, Buchanan. P. O. Box
59. ;
HS
Want -job on farm. Lived on farm
all life. Wife and self. Small house.
= a old. M. G. Taylor, Ringgold,
49 yr. old, wife and 5 children.
Farm work. $15 mo. and board. Pay
weekly. Prefer So. Ga. truck or to-
bacco farm. L. K. Kersey, Lyons. Rt.
ZX
Single, 50 yrs. old. Life exp. in
breeding, raising calves, testing, fet-
ting and showing cattle. Ref. L. C,
Underhill, Columbus. Rt. 1. C-o Dave
Milford. | oe
Want place in farm home. Poultry,
dairy, etc. Salary and board for self
and 6 yr. old son. Mrs. Beatrice
Thomas, Reidsville. Box 192.
Want job as Green-house or yard
keeper. 7 yrs. exp. Can begin im-
mediately. .G. R. Yarbrough, Vinings.
Farm Help Wanted
Want a good farm hand. $16.50 per
mo. and good house to live in. Hustler. ~
Educated man need not apply. J. P.
Wilson, Machen. ;
Want boy to help farm. Industrious.
oO pad hapits. $12 mo. board and laun-
dry. R .A. Daniel, White, Rt. 2.
Want good, sober white man to farm _
$10 mo. and board. Cash at end of ea.
month. W. J. Morgan, Stillmore.
Want good helper for farm work.
Mrs. Florence Sturm, Statesboro, Rt.
oo :
le Want single boy, not under 18. Good
habits, etc. Assist in small dairy and ~
little farm work, drive Ford. Small |
salary, board and laundry. Mrs. B. G.
Lee, Macon, Rt. 2, Forsyth Rd.:
Want man with wife, without chil- _
dren, to live in home, and assist with
farm work. Drive truck, etc. and re-
pair work also. L. S. Rogers, Ringgold,
Rt. 1, Box 108.
Want family to help pick strawber-
ries and other farm work. State wa-
ges expected, exp. and full details con-
cerning self. C. G. Byington, Boling-
broke. -
Want exp. tanner to tan 2 large cow
hides. Write for full particulars L. M.
Kennedy; Collins. : ae
Want middle aged married man
without large family, who thoroughly
understands cattle. Steady work on
salary basis. W. B. Hutchinson, Al-
ae :
ant trucker to run 40 acres, 20 mi.
West. Atlanta. 3rd and 4ths. See: S.
S. Storer, Atlanta, 809 Terminal. ie
~ Want boy, 18 to 20 yrs. for farm wor.
$8 mo., board and washing. Opportun-
ity for learning farm business under
graduate of Agricultural College. Ed-
win F. Shippey, Thomasville.
Miscellaneous Wanted
4
Exch Whatleys prolific seed corn. Ist
Or good milling corn for pigs, Otootan
or Mathews Soy beans or peas. J. H. |
Rucker, Bowersville.
Want to can fruit on halves. Party
to furnish sugar and jars. Ref. Mrs.
R. Wilkerson, Dixie, Rt. 1, Care J. J.
Hodges. ee
Exch $1 and $2 value for sorghum, -
butter, or honey at market price. J. B.
Lindsey, Stockbridge, Rt. 2.
Exch. Mastodon and large everbear-
ing strawberry plants and fine syrup
cane seed for farm products and oth-
er kinds of plants. Claude Eubank,
Smytna Rt 2.
Want can all kind of fruit, vege-
tables and pickle on halves, Party fur-
nish cans and vinegar. Write. Mrs.
H. M. Blockover, Culloden. Se
Exch $40 value for cow, yearlings,
hogs, turkeys, chickens, or baby chicks
or eggs, and $3 val. for Soy beans. R. .
Brasiel, The Rock, Rt. 1. : se
Want 6 or 8 lbs. rattleweed root. Send
sample and lowest price. J. R. Maddix,
Watkinsville, RFD 1. :
Exch| value $1.50 for white feed sacks
free of holes. Mrs. J. G. Young, Talk-
ing Rock, Rt. 3. oe
Exch. $35 value for 15 bu. good corn,
fresh meal, 2 bu. white peas, 8M _POo-
tato plants. Write at once. J, B, Wood
Griffin. : sen
ie