GEORGIA
RKET BULLE
AGRICULTURE...
COMMISSIONER: 3
PUBLISHED BY THE BUREAU OF MARKETS A, D. JONES, DIRECTOR.
VOL. 14
STATE CAPITOL
_ Two weeks ago I wrote an article in the Bulletin calling your atten-
tion to the fact that efforts would be made in the Legislature to
abolish the Market Bulletin and also to separate it from the Depart-
ment of Agriculture.
' I asked the readers of the Bulletin to let the members of the Legis-
lature know if the paper had been of any service to them. Thousands
of letters have been written by readers of the Bulletin telling of the
benefits the paper has been to them.
The matter is not yet settled. Generally matters of this kind are
not poe until the last day of the Legislature, just before adjourn-
ment.
If you have not written your Senator and Representative, and
have received any service from the Department of Agriculture, they
would like to hear from you. I know that the Legislators and Sen-
ators both want to support any department that is really serving the
farmers of the state. So if you have not written and if you have
been served by the department, write to your Representatives and
Senators, care the Legislature, State Capitol.
-_I am publishing below a comparative statement of the operation
of the Department of Agriculture for the years 1926 and 1930. I
are entitled to this comparative statement:
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF THE OPERATIONS OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE FOR THE YEARS
1926 AND 1930, RESPECTIVELY
Bureau of Markets
1926
$ 32,445.12
1930
Salaries S$ 22;317.20
Traveling expenses (outside of fruit in- :
~ spection, which has been created since
1926)
Amount expended in making sales by
Bureau of Markets Pe
Total amount spent by the Bureau of
~ Markets
Sales reported by Bureau of Markets and
Market Bulletin
Per cent of sales cost of Bureau of
_ Markets =
8,989.53
54,711.85
85,683.35
1,936,715.00
1,442.73
105,487.73
5,210,991.39
1.10%
know that you people are interested in the cost of the department and:
62,160.00
_-ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1931.
The Work of the Department of Agriculture
Fertilizers
~g 1926
5,408
87,440.81
16,368.83
19,187.93
16.17
3.02
3.54.
1930
13,078
95,361.04
22,185.59
Number of samples ..
Total cost
Traveling expense, fertilizer inspectors....
Total cost of analyzing samples
Total cost per sample
Traveling expense per sample
Cost of analyzing per sample
7.28
1.69
1.41
Food, Feed and Drugs
Total inspections
Salaries
Traveling expense
Salaries per inspection
Traveling expense per inspection
Total expenses.
Total expense per inspection
15,844
$ 41,535.00
. 16,959.09
2.62
1.07
63,094.32
29,859
36,520.83
20,147.05
1.22 1-3
67 1-2
59,155.34
1.98
Veterinary Department
From hog cholera fund 9,980.67 $
Tick eradication fund 53,437.03 ;
From contagious diseases fund 5,416.59
8,356.32
46,678.94
4,961.96
Since 1926 the Legislature has passed a dairy inspection law and
the law for the eradication of bovine tuberculosis, which are now _
I
duties of this department, and in 1930 there was expended from the |
tuberculosis fund $10,848.68, and for dairy inspection work, $4.525.72.
The enactment of the tuberculosis eradication law and ithe dairy
inspection law. practically doubled the work of the Veterinary Depart- _
ment. Notwithstanding this fact, however, the total cost of operating |
this department was only $6,355.35 more in 1930 than in 1926. :
Beach inspection work was created by the General Assembly ir |
1927, and during 1930 there was expended the sum of $19,960.35 in
this work, and a balance of $4,137.03 was returned to the treasury a
the end of the year. ve 4 wy
The expense of collecting penalties on fertilizer was also placed on ~
the department by the General Assembly in 1927, which work has
been carried out and all penalties accruing under the fertilizer laws
have been collected and paid to the farmers entitled to receive them
or are now being contested in the courts. :
The acts of 1921, page 102, increased the tax on fertilizer from 10
(Continued on. Page Eight)
OF GEORGIA PRODUCTS
Hiee- Tetra, OA... cts cscs cue: $ .24
Bees, Standard, G02. oii cise eer 23 21 23
HPSS. Gra, CLA, COZ. <..c0c.-ccsnecarccacce 5 18 .16 SoSeg
| eos, Yard Run, doz. 2 ; a a = 23
Peepaes 4 : Ao 15 16
Rens We Se eee : 14 Lt 16
TOOStENS; 1D. he ee ae pe 10 LO
-, Friers, lb. : 22 25
Peis 10 . : 15
ere 457 : : 12
eres 10. oo : 2 25
Capons 1b. a 23 a 20
Field Peas, mixed, DU. ............:-:-00-00 1.50 1.50
Field Peas, not mixed, bu. ...........- 1.75 1.75
Country Butter, Best Table, Ib. ...... .30 ey .30 |
Far Corn (80 Ibs. to bu.), bu. ........ 10- . -10
_ Sweet Potofres. ner 100 Ibs. ......-...- 2.00 3.00
basis No. 1.
MARKET REPORT
ing Wholesale Prices Aug. 11, 1931. Always Subject to Variation.
Atlanta. Macon. Savannah, Augusta. Columbus. Valdosta.
$ 325 S20 $252
Hogs sold during week beginning August 3, 1901, at co-operative sales brought 7.40 per cwt.,
No. 1 grade Spanish Peanuts, $70 per ton, delivered, subject to correction.
INDEX
Poultry For Sale
Poultry Wanted <2 eas ae
Baby Chicks For Sale
Baby Chicks Wanted
Grain and Hay For Sale
Grain and Hav Wanted
Seed For
Seed Wanted
Farm Help Wanted
Miscellaneous For Sale
Miscellaneous. Wanted
Eggs For Sale
Eggs Wanted
Plants For Sale
Positions Wanted
Live Stock For Sale
Live Stock Wanted ..
Georgia Products For Sale
Georgia Products Wanted
$ .23 $ .25
21 23
16 18
aoa 20 |
12 16
14 16
-08
18,467.54
BULLETIN
Thursday, August 18, 1931
age Two MARKET
Poultry For Sale Poultry For Sale Poultry For Sale Poultry For Sale
BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS LEGHORNS
AUSTRALORPS
May hatched, Osborne str. Aus-
rp cockerels, $2.25 ea. del.; $4.25
jos Bt Crowe, Cartersville, 25
slas S
BANTAMS
pens bantams, 1 rooster and 3
ens, $3 per pen, buyer to pay exp.
ges; pure bred, black with straw
. Saville Perry, Dawson.
; Year-old Jap silkie bantam hen, $2.
ferman Mize, Americus.
ur nearly grown Sebright cocks
e Is, 50c ea. and other party pay
i pping chgs. Mrs. J. T. Lambert,
est. Park.
_ Fullblood Buff Cochins, yr. old
eter neers, $1; hens, $1.50 ea.; exc. for
ge breed chickens. Fred Gehrken,
Augusta.
L. Bantams, 50c ea. C. H. Over-
Columbus, 22 Eleventh St.
apanese Game Bantams, ready to
lay early fall, 50c ea. Dudley Spiers,
Ancolnton, RFD 2.
rio Japanese Fantails, imported,
hens and cock, Red and Black-
oot Cochins, $3: W. D. Proctor,
: Real, small one Brown Leghorn
antams, $5 per trio; Buff Cochins,
r.; eggs, $1.25 per 15. Mrs. W. E.
Jannah, So. Atlanta.
-R. CG. Golden Sebright cockerels, $1
el. Ga. Stacey Moore, Madras.
xed bantam hens, cocks, pullets.
ockerels and baby bantams. H. M.
dams. Douglasville, 70 East Strick-
d St.
- hres half grown genuine Buff
ochin cockerels, $1 ea.; trio grown
ock, $5; eggs, $1.50 per 15. O. H.
ight, Atlanta, 515 Peters Bldg.
Full olden Sebright cockerels,
\pril hatch, 75c ea. B. C. Pope, Tal-
apoosa, Rt. 3.
Nine mixed bantam roosters, half
own, 25c each; Golden Sebright
ooster. crowing, "5e: 6 bantam hens,
Ne each. Mrs. P. E. Wallace, Hape-
Cc:
ix young half grown bantam
ks, red, white and speckled, 25c
ach. Prompt shipment. James
tice, Douglasville.
- BARRED ROCKS
Thirty pure bred B. R. blood-tested
month-old pullets, also few roost-
, 60c ea. if taken at once. Not less
aan 5 in lot. R. L. Baird, Grovania.
_ Reg. stock, Parks B. Rocks, 20 April
pullets, $1 ea.: 2 cocks, 18 mos. old,
-ea.; money order; crates ret. Mrs.
an A. Watson, Graymont.
Pure Thompson Ringlet B. R. Mar.
ockerels, $1 ea.; 4 for $3.50 FOB.
Mrs. Reds: Mabry, Canon, Rt. 2.
One hundred pure Ringlet oho. tu:
ets and cockerels, May 13 and 27
teh. 40c ea. FOB in lots of 25, 50
00. Miss Nora Young, Baxley,
4.
Bie Rocks, last spring hatch,
ks and Mapleside Farm, direct
lis yr., $1 and $1.50 ea. J. J. Johns-
1. Waynesboro.
Eight to 10 pure B. R. 11-weeks-
ockerels, 75c ea., or exc. for B. R.
. L. pullets, Ib. for lb. Mrs. El-
Davis, Winston, Rt. 1.
April hatch White Rocks, best.
eeding, pullets and cockerels, $1.50
: fine March cockerel and 2 very
e 2-year cocks, $2 ea. Mrs. Z. L.
cott, Concorn./
ARRED AND OTHER ROCKS
Aristocrat B. R. 14 young laying
ns and roosters, $25 for lot. Mrs.
. Rubin, 3279 Stewart Ave., Hape-
Large white and barred rock pul-
lets, nearly grown, $1 ea. gta smaller
es, 15c ea. del. Mrs. A. S. Paulk,
els, April, $1.25 ea.; 2 or igs =
E. Steadam, Bainbridge.
Ten full Thompson B. R. 3-lb.
ers, $1 ea. Mrs. G. C. Clifton, | H
Box 57, Millen.
March and April hatch B. R. pul-
= = ea. Mrs. L. M. Aderhold,
S, at. 50. "ea.: 2 roosters, 15 mos.
; sa 0 ea., oe pt. deletes Mrs..
Ten B. Rock pullets, April hatch,
50c each. W. B. Stebbins, Savan-
nah; Rt. 3.
BRAHMAS
Brahma cockerels for breeding,
spring hatch, healthy, 75c ea. FOB.
M. E. Warren, Rt. 1, Hartwell.
Light Brahma cockerels from large
Northern breed stock, $1 each. Mrs.
C. W. Evans, Wrightsville, Rt. 1.
CORNISH
Fine dark Cornish cockerel, wt.
over 5 lIbs., $1.50; few hens, $2 each;
young pullets, $1 each. J. W. Grant,
Sataula.
Dark Cornish Indian cockerels,
Berry strain, April hatch, $1 each.
B. C. Pope, Tallapoosa, Rt. 2
Five large type Cornish March
hatch. puliets and 1 rooster. Av. 3
he $5. Mrs. Roy Garrett, Hahira,
Rt 2:
Pure bred dark Cornish, 6 hens and
rooster, $8 FOB. Mrs, Vo Hollings-
worth, Abbeville, Rt. 2, Box 83.
Cornish stock, 1930 hatch, $1.50
FOB. R. J. Holland, Empire.
Pure bred Dark Cornish 10-week-
old cockerels, $1 ea. Mrs. W. G.
Bruce, Boston.
GAMES
Four black game year-old hens and
cock, 1% yrs. old, extra good, $5. Miss
Kate Lancaster, Sylvester.
Grist Grady stags, $1 each; Red
Cubans, $1; Grady Red Cubans,
cross, trio, $2; Ky. Dom. 75c.. All
a pure. Henry Foster, Marietta,
Re I.
GIANTS
J. B. giants for table use, 25c lb.
FOB. Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruitland.
J. B. giant hens, $1 ea. prepaid;
have 15, also, March-April pullets,
75c ea. Mrs. J. E. Passe, Madison.
Royal Purplue J. B. Giants and
dark Reds, young and old, stock
chickens; reasonable. Mrs. Robt.
Simpson, Waverly Hall.
Marcy J. B. Giant cockerels for
sale of exc. for some of same age and
strain. Mrs. J. T. Lamberth, Arabi.
LEGHORNS
Thirty Tancred pullets, hatched
May 1, $15 for lot FOB. Roy D. Tan-
kersley, Appling.
Three brown L. hens and cock, 18
mos. old, clean legs, healthy, pure
stock, $3 for lot FOB. Mrs. C. F.
Williams, Dallas, Rt. 6.
Ten Ferris st. white L. pullets and
cockerel, March hatch, $7.50 FOB. R.
J. Holland, Empire.
Buff leghorns, Dawson str. fine
layers. 25 young hens and 2 roosters,
$50 for lot. Mrs. P. D. Rubin, Hape-
ville, 3279 Stewart Ave.
Ten leghorn pullets, 10 wks. old,
from 300-egg hens, 50c ea., or exc. for
equal value country-cured hams. Ar-
thur Balk, Augusta, 226 Green St.
Tancred str. white leghorn pullets,
10 wks. old, 80c ea. FOB. D. F.
Thomas, Odum.
White L. pullets, soon ready to lay.
Farm, Cascade Rd. B. H. Middle-
brooks, Sr., Atlanta, 953 Gordon St.
S. W.
Fifty W. L. fryers, wt. 2 Ibs. ea.,
25c lb. Mrs. J. M. Marshall, Tal-
botton.
Year-old ped. Tancred str. W. L.
cock, $1 FOB. Johnson Crowe, Car-
tersville, 25 Douglas St.
Three full Leghorn hens, $1 ea.;
money order. Mrs. E. P. King, Ro-
chelle, Rt. 1. :
Nice April hatch W. L. cockerel,
75e, or exc. for nice pullet, both del.
Mrs. D. Whiddon, Chula.
White Leghorns, pure Tancred. 150
hens yr. old, good layers, $1 each;
300 pullets, 8 wks. 7 mos. old. Forced
to sell very cheap. Mrs. H. R. Salter,
Atlanta, 3910 Peachtree Road.
Tancred W. L. cockerels, 8-12 wks.
old, selected for breeders from high
producers, 30c Ib. in lots of 4 or more.
. A. Neal, Carnesville, Rt. 3.
Fifty W. L. 34% mos. old pullets, 50
R. I. Reds, same age, 10 each; W. L.
and Red cockerels, 35 each, FOB.
Party to furnish crates. Geo.
Young, Tennille.
Pure bred S. C. Buff Leghorn, May
ist hatch cockerels, 75c each. Mrs.
G. J. McCarney, Eton, Rt. 1, Box 98.
(5s
c..
Fifty W .L. March 10 hatch pure
Tancred pullets. Few are now lay-
ing. $40 for lot, or 25 for $20. Mrs.
J. R. Lanier, Graymont, Rt. 1.
Roselawn big type Tom Barron
Eng. W. L. 14 wks. old W. L. cock-
erels, $1 each, or exc. for same breed
pullets. Mrs. H. P. Barker; Doyle.
Fifty Tancred W. L. pullets,
hatched March 5th, 90c; 100 same
str. hatch March 21st, 75c; 65 March
28th hatch, 65c each. W. B. Steb-
bins, Savannah, Rt. 3.
White L. Tancred, 12-wks. old pul-
lets, 60c each. .D. F. Thomas, Odum.
MINORCAS
Giant str. Black Minorca cockerel,
early April. hatch; select for breeder,
$1.50, shipped on approval. L. B. Mil-
lians, Newnan, 105 Temple Ave.
Pape str. black minorca year-old
hens, $1.25 ea. H. A. Wilson, Mar-
tin, Rt: 2.
Thirty S. C. black minorca cock-
erels, Pape str., 10 wks. old, 60c ea.
FOB my farm. E. Cooper, Folkston,
Ris 2 hex 73:
Pape Str. S. C. Black Minorca
hens $1.25 each, FOB: Malcolm Mc-
Millan, Bartow.
MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
Ten Ibs. of friers, fattened on peas,
$4, not prepaid. Mrs. B. S. Ward,
Toomsboro.
Frying size chickens, 25c lb.; hens,
15c Ib., in coops of 60 Ibs. or more,
coop to be ret.; send chk. J. W.
Lang, Omega.
About 70 lbs. friers, 25c Ib. if all
taken in same lot; money order. Mrs.
E. P. King, Rochelle, Rt. 1.
Coop of colored friers, 60c each;
10 in coop. Mrs. L. M. Aderhold,
Lavonia.
ORPINGTONS
Pure bred S.C. Buff Orp. 6-month-
old cockerels, $1 ea.: year-old cock,
.50. Miss Ranie Johnson, Shell-
man, Pub tf:
Pure Golden Buff Orp. March
hatch pullets, 75c ea. Mrs. J. W. Fan-
ning, Washington.
Buff Orp. pure bred, direct from
| Tyrone, Pa., 10 pullets, 8 mos. old;
$1.50 ea. J. te Johnston, Waynesboro.
One rooster, hatched from-ege di-
rect from Byers best pen of Golden
Buff Orp. champion exhibition mat-
ings, 2 yrs. 2 mos. old, $4, Mrs. 'T. D.
Fussell, Rhine. ;
Buff orp. friers, 30c lb. FOB: buff
orp. pullets and cockerels for stock,
$1 ea. Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruitland.
Six buff orp. roosters. hatched May
11, grade AA Byers Hee $1 ea. FOB.
J. H. Loyd, Milan, Rt. 3.
Golden Buff Orp. pullets and
cockerels for stock, $1 each, FOB;
hens for table use, large and fat, 25
Ib. FOB. Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruit-'
land.
RHODE ISLAND REDS
Twenty-five R. I. Red, Donaldson
hens, yr. old, $1 each; 2 roosters not
related to hens, $1.50 ea. FOB. Ce
D. Williams, Plains.
Tompkins star. cockerels about 2
Ibs., selected for breeders, 30c Ib. in
lots of 4 or more. FOB. H. A. Neal,
Carnesville, Rt. 3.
Three R. I. Red hens, $1.50 ea.
Mrs. E: P. King, Rochelle, Rt. 1.
R. I. Red pullets, trapnest, call and
see them. Farm, Cascade Rd. B. H.
Middlebrooks, Sr., Atlanta, 953 Gor-
don St., S. W.
R. I. Red cockerels, 2 lbs. up, from
heavy laying parent stock with trap-
nest records, 280-318 eggs, 75c-$1 ea.;
also Black Giants, same price. R. A.
Yeager, Zebulon.
Ten F. I. Red friers, av. about 2
Ibs., 30c Ib., not del. Mrs. P. E.
Wallace, Hapeville.
Ten R. I. Red pullets, 75c ea. or
$7 for lot. Wt. about 4 lbs. Buyer
to pay ib hls Mrs. J. G. McDon-
Fifty or 60 pure bred R. I. Red
hens and pullets, sacrifice at 60-75c
each. J. W. Sammons, Tarrytown,
Rt. 1. : g
ald, Colquitt.
SUSSEX
Speckled Sussex, 6 pure bred, 1930
hatch hens, $1.50 ea. J. J. Johnston,
Wayneshoro.
t
postage. J. W. Harper, Ranger.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE
Bourbon Red turkey tom $4; 1 hen
$3; also young ones. 2: T. Holland,
Lenox.
Fourteen 6-weeks-old: White Pekin
ducks, also 4 old ones. R. W. Parks,
Gainesville.
Pure bred Bronze turkeys, 18-mos.-
old hens and young No-Akin gobbler,
$8, or exc. for 10 hens or ready-to-
oe Walter Cowart, Summit,
Twenty Rouen ducks and drake,
{12 grown and half-grown, $1 ea.
FOB. Money order only. Mrs. J. T.
Lambert, Forest Park.
Fifteen White Pekin ducks, this
years hatch; sell or exc. for chickens
or pig. Can not ship. Live within 14%
mi. Mt. Zion. Mrs. Manuel Foster,
Carrollton, Rt. 7.
Indian Runner ducks, $1 ea. Burt
Bennett, Moultrie, Rt. 3.
. Twenty-five Indian Runner ducks
and drakes, 1930 hatch, ducks laying, _
and 2 White Pekins, male and fe-
male, 75c ea. FOB. Faye Daughtry,
Metter, Rt. 2. <
Pr. Bronze turkeys, $5 ea., and 2
gobblers, 3 mos. old, $1.50 ea.; exc.
for B. R. hens at 20c Ib. (Name and
address not given.)
Eighteen Mammoth White Pekin >
ducks and drakes, April hatch, 50
each, or exc. for geese or J. B. Giant
chickens. No order filled for less
ge 6, Mrs. M. D. Stalvey, Dupont,
Bronze turkeys, April hatch, $1 ee
each, $4 trio. Mrs. D. A. Pope, Talla-
poosa, Rt. 3.
Eight March hates turkeys, $1. 15
ea.; $12 for lot.
Graymont, eh
' Four White Pekin ducks, 8 mos.
old, 75c each. Mrs. H. R. Salter,
Atlanta, 3910 Peachtree Road. :
Eleven White Pekin ducks, spring
hatch, $1 ea.; $10 for lot. Gertrude
Lowery, Eastman, Feb. 2.
White Pekin and Indian Runner
ducks, $1 each for lot, or exc, for
Mrs. G. W. Akins,
B. R., Reds, or White Plymouth Rock _
chickens. Ww. H. Jones, East Point,
515 Pearl St. Phone Ca. 2367-J.
Wild Mallards for sale.
decoy purposes. Large,
birds. Write Lamar W.
Albany, P. O. Box 178.
Seven nice fat geese, 4 mos. old, $1 Ss
ea., or exe. for chickens of ~equal 3
Augusta.
Sixteen early spring hatch turkeys, _
large size to age; 6 young ones, 3
value. Fred Gehrken, Jr.,
mos. old; $38 for lot; money order.
Mrs. John A. Watson, Graymont.
2
TUM: SLERS
White and Blue Muff, Bigs Check-
er, clean legs; Birmingham Rollers,
Priests; Silveretts, African Owls,
White Maltese, Carneaux, White and
Ringneck doves, $2 pr. Herman Mize, = a
Americus.
WHITE ROCKS
Six White Rock hens and roosters.
Full blood Fischel str., 7 or 8 Ibs.
each, now laying, $1.50 ea. 7 for
$10. Mrs. N. E. Hattaway, Fast Point,
301 Wadley Ave.
WYANDOTTES
Four Wyandotte hens for sale or
exc. for 8 wks. old pig. Mrs. Ida
Sanders, Rockmart, Rt. 3. Ss
White Wyandotte 18-month-old
hens, Regal Dorcas str. R. A. Yeager, :
Zebulon.
Tarbox str. S. L. Wyandottes, 10
hens and March hatch cockerel, $10;
March cockerels, $1.25 ea.; exc. 3 for
some same str. and age, FOB. B. 'M.
Logan, Athens, Rt. 2. ==
Four S. L. Wyandotte April cock- _
erels, .75c ea, FOB. Harwell Gailey,
Alto, Rt. 2.
Fifty- ive closely culled Fischels
White yandotte hens, 7 cocks, yr.
old, $100 for lot FOB. Write for
D: F. Thomas,
smaller lot prices.
Odum, . 3 i
Four 8, &. Wyandotte cockerels,
Berry str., 4 mos. old, $1 a.,
Stock or
beautiful
Jefferson, ee
Thursday, August 13, 1931
Poultry For Sale
PIGEONS.
Nice mixed pigeons, white and light
colors, 5 for $1. Clarence Brown,
Helena.
prea. Pouters and dark red Car-
neaux, mated, banded and working,
.; exc. for 2 pr. mated and
0
$1.50 pr Br
banded white Kings.
-Hawkinsville.
Priests; muff tumblers, owls, sil-
yeretts, yellow, Carneaux, red Car-
neaux, white Kings, homers, Bir-
mingham rollers, all $2 pr.;
and ringneck doves, $2: pr.; Maltese,
mated, $3 pr. Herman Mize, Americus.
R. I. REDS
: Pure Donaldson reds, March hatch
puilets. and cockerels, $1 ea. H-
Wilson, Martin, Rt. 2.
R. I. red pullets, 75c ea.; cockerels, |
$1 ea., April hatch. Burt Bennett,
Moultrie, R. 3.
Ten Donaldson 1930 hatch. hens} _
and 1 unrelated rooster, no culls, $8..
Robt. Ashley, Bluffton.
- Fifteen thoroughbred dark red 1930:
hatch hens and 1 rooster, $5, or exc.
for thoroughbred Guernsey heifer or
anything can. use. Mrs. Emily Ahk,
Alma, Rt. 3.
S. C. reds, 50 Jan, and Feb. dark
pulleis, $1. 25 ea.;
ing, fine show hens, same price; 20
pullets, $25; cockerels, $2. Mrs. J. E.
Sikes, Cochran, Rt. 1.
Half grown R. I. red cockerel, $1.10
dei. Mrs. A. S. Paulk, Ocilla.
pitty. oC. Rak red hens, $1.50'ea.;
5 fine roosters, 14% and 2 yrs. old, $3
ea. All Mahoon str. Miss Belle Tim- @
erman, Bronwood.
Pure pred Homer pigeons, well
mated, banded and working: make
offer. C. H. Overby, Columbus, 22
Eleventh St.
Ringneck: eee $2 pr. L. oR, Wil-
liams, Ty Ty.
Five pr. White Kings, mated, $41 _
r lot. Harry Lindborg, Decatur, 318
elrose Ave.
- Japanese Ringneck doves, $1 pr.
. Carter, Brewton.
ung pigeons, 4 pr.. 35c. pr. Mostly
specklea, Sat. guar. _ James
) ouglasville.
Poultry Wanted
- BANTAMS
rant Sebright, Japanese and Game
is, also pure ducks
bler-and White King pigeons at rea-
( es PRICE H. M. Adams, Doug-
Cc. Golden Sebright
co kerel, bred. to the real marking of
feathers. Olin B. Moore, Madras.
BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS |
Exc. values, $1, $2 and $3 for Bar-
red Rock. pullets. Write if interested.
aC. T. Williams, Dallas, Rt. 6.
c. nice rabbit, grey, for a nice
red Rock hen not over yr. old. E.
E. Pitman, Gillsville, Rt. 1.
. LEGHORNS
hens.
Mrs. Otis Holloway, Canon,
Ri. 2.
- Want'to buy or exc. for Brown Leg-:
horn March hatch pullets.
Sa ss Coggin, Covington.
Other
- Want 15-20 White Leghorn 4. or 5}
ks, old pullets, cheap for cash;
ate prices; etc. W. Z. Bolmon, Dan-
jelsville, Rt. 4.
. Exc. pure bred Bronze April hatch
turkeys, mostly toms, for White Leg-.
Mrs. Ottis Holloway, [
mn hens.
Canon, Rt. 2.
Exc. 80-100 White King pigeons for
40 White L. pullets. A.C. Watts, Ma-
con, Rt. 5.
MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
Want 10 March hatch pullets, any
pure bred. No culls. Pay cash. Edd
see Alapaha, Ried
ORPINGTONS .
Want 1 pure bred Buff Orp. rooster
about 1 yr. or 1% yr. old. Mrs. J.
W. Fanning, Washington.
g TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
oe SUCKS, ETC., WANTED
Want 2- speckled. guinea. last. yr.
hatch hens at once: Must be cheap.
for cash. Clifford Cc Smith, -Mil-}
ford, Rt. 1,
J. Harvard, f
white |
10, $12; some lay-f{
Rice, |
and Tum-}
Pale Wanted
~ Want pure white gander and seese,
Drive.
Want Muscovey ducks, white: or
black. State lowest price. Dillard
Munford, Cartersville. -
. Will pay 15c Ib. for 10 Indian Run-
ner ducks and 2 drakes, del. S. S.
Storer, Douglasville, Rt. 6.
R. I. REDS
Exchange pure P. C. pig for nice
April hatch Red pullets. Must- be
pure S. C: R. I. Reds, true to name.
Mrs. J.-B. Harris, Cordele, R. B.
Want high grade R. I. Red pullets;
~ Trade 2 bantams for R. ES Reds. B.
L. Covam, Benevolence.
Baby Chicks For Sale
2 " Leghorns, anconas, Te: reds, rocks,
8c, blood-tested: imported barron
white leghorns, 10 ea.;
live del. guar.; 8-16 wks. pullets also.
Sam Brown, 316 Whitehall, Atlanta.
: Heavy assorted: haby chicks, $7.50
del. W. L. Helms, Buena Vista.
High-powered baby chicks, white
and brown leghorns, R. I. reds, barred
rocks; booking orders for Sept. del.
D:. F. Thomas, Odum.
+ AA quality, heavies, $12;-AA qual-
ity, lichts, $10; A quality, heavies,
$7.50; A: quality, lights, $7. Place or-
ders now. H. R. Gaskins, Americus.
High powered baby chicks from
theavy laying flocks. Reds, Rocks,
del. September del.
Odum.
| A quality. heavies, $10; lights, $8:
AA ce heavies, $12; lights, $10
per, 6-H R Gaskins, Americus.
Blood- tested Leghorns, Anconas,
Reds, Rocks, live.del. guar:.: imported
D. F. Thomas,
_| Barron W. L. chicks and pullets: cus-
tom hatching, every Monday; Buck-
eye Mammoth inc. 3c egg.
Brown, Atlanta, 316 Whitehall.
_ Baby Chicks Wanted
: Want 100 to 1 M baby chicks; any
-| breed to raise on halves to 12 wks.
old. Write first. S. F. Beard, Gra-
Jham, Box 164.
Want 100: baby chicks to raise on
50- 50 basis. J. L. Burns, Jesup, Rt. 2.
Want 100-200 chicks to raise on
halves to 8 wk:
Rocks or R. I..Reds. Party pay post-
age. Mrs. Geo. Kersey, Pavo.
~ Want 50 baby chicks, White. Leg-
horns preferred, bat will accept other
breeds.
for same.
Mrs, J. Fowler, Roy.
tember to raise on halves to 8 wks.
Forsyth, Rt. 4.
Want to raise chicks on halves.
Party to furnish chicks. and feed,
and get at any age desired. P. G.
| Webster, Macon, Bloomfield Road.
Exc. pure bred Direct Donaldson |.
cockerel for White Leghorn pure bred:
Want 200 baby chicks to raise on
halves to.2 lb. friers. Barred Rocks
or m. I. Reds. O. E. Stomey, East-
anollee, Rt. 1.
Exe, 25 Ibs. nice, new dried apples
c peaches for 50 pure bred baby
chicks, any breed, at once, ea. del.
T. M. Shelnuit, Franklin, Rt. 5.
Want. 2-500 any large breed chicks.
to raise on halves to 8 wks. Write
first. Mrs. R. V. King, Forest Park.
Grain and: Hay For Sale
Seed wheat, Blue Stem v var. $1 bu.
FOB. Exc. some for winter peas or
other seed. Ned Finley, Cass Station.
- Fifteen bu. No. Ga. seed rye grown
jon the. place, $1.25 bu. FOB. V.
| Bramhold, Mt. Airy, Rt. 1.
Fifty-100 * 1. of Ga. seed rye, 1931
crop, $1 bu: in. good bags, FOB. W.
T. Wright, Ellijay.
Genuine Blue Stem" wheat, $1.25
bu.; Bancroft seed oats, recleaned,
150 bu.: large lots; 65c bu. Car ea.
well baled oat and wheat straw, $8
ton, FOB. Jas. B. Woods, Brooks. -
Tall North Ga. seed rye, $1 bu.
FOB. _F. L. Asbury, Clarkesville.
Forty bu. new crop. choice tall
growing No. Ga. seed rye, $1.10 bu.,
FOB. C. R. Ray, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Ten bu. pure oats, recleaned, 50c
bu. FOB. H. G. Burroughs, Canon.
J. R. Bachman, Atlanta, 2646 Alston
exc. reg. Duroc Jersey, 4-month-old ;
|pig. P. C. Herod, Kathleen.
100 per cent |.
$10; White and Brown des $8 per C
Sam |
old. Prefer Barred
Exe. nice, ee apples.
- Want. 200 baby dhicks ist of Sep- |.
Any large breed. Mrs. W: G. Edge,
BULLETIN
Grain and Hay For Sale
- Appler seed oats, 75c bu. E. C.,
Mauldin, Lavonia.
Turf and winter grazing oats, 75c
bu. FOB; Appler same price. W. I.
Black, Lula, Ft; ot.
Shadburns improved Fulghum
seed oats, produced as high as 128%
bu. per acre this season; free from
wild onions and grass seed; $1 bu.
{J. L. Shadburn, Buford.
- Good seed rye, any amt. Write for
prices. S, G. Hughes, Hemp.
Burbanks Hull-less Barley (new
wonder grain), heaviest grain known,
72 lbs. per bu; ; supply very limited,
$2.50 pk. of 18 Ibs. Write for sample
and information. C. H. Hill, Tignall,
Two cars oat straw and chaff,
baled, $15. ton FOB: small car baled
fall oats, $25 ton; 300 bu. rust-proof
oats, recleaned, 60c bu. FOB. L. B.
Anderson, Shiloh.
Hundred and fifty bu. No. Ga. tall
growing rye, $1.10 bu. FOB Blue
Ridge; cash with order. T. Sparks,
Rugby.
No. Ga. tall growing rye, 1931 crop,
in 2% and 3-bu. bags, 95c bu. FOB.
J. S. Stewart, Clarkesville.
Hastings 100-bu. oats, 60c bu. in
+50 to 100-bu. lots if taken at once.
J. C. Ragan, Pelham. .
High yielding Blue Stem _ seed
peeats $1 bu. J. C. Broome, Hephzi-
ah
Blue Stem seed wheat, $1 bu. FOB.
Ned Finley, Cass Station.
Two hundred bu. Texas Rust Proof
oats A-1 cond., 75 bu.: 8 bu. wheat,
order with order. M. K. Smith, Ma-
con, Box 442.
New crop baled oats, $1.25 per
oe See Goolsby, Graham,
Grain and Hay Wanted
$1.50: 3 bu; rye, $1.75 pu. Money.
Want 50 bu. clean, sound Ga.
grown seed Fulghum oats. Send sam-
ple and price. P. W. Bonner, Talla-
poosa.
Want lowest cash price on 6 bu.
good seed wheat. T. M. Webb, Ellijay.
Want 15-20 bu: of 1931 seed rye
and 25.bu. Fulghum oats. R. E. Bow-
er, Dixie.
feeding purposes. Write before ship-
ping, stating lowest price FOB Amer-
205. G. R. Parsons, Americus, Box
Exc. high grade Jersey and Guern-
sey milch cows for grain, clover and
Austrian peas. C. M. Massey, Perkins.
_ Want 300 bu. hard wheat; quote
best price. Doyle C. Knight, Dublin.
Want samples and lowest cash price
for 25 bu. wheat, del. my barn. J. C.
Burns, Sylvania, Rt 3.
-Want about 40 bu. good seed. oats
at reasonable price; cash or exc. new
crop hay peas at $2.25 bu. R. C.
Loyd, Nicholls.
Want 60 bu. Fulghum or Hastings
100-bu. seed oats; exc. cows for same:
will pay 50c bu. for oats del. G. B.
Ham, Cobbtown.
: Exe. good value for 5 bu. good seed
oats or for other value. Write G. W.
Akins, Graymont.
Want 60 bu. Fulghum oat seed at
50c bu. del. G. B. Ham, Cobbtown.
'Exchange pure blooded Pee
healthy 4 mos. old pigs for A-No. 1
Ga. wheat and oat seed. Write or see
me at. once. Mrs. J. B. Harris, Cor-
dele, R. B.
Want 50 bu. Hastings 100-bu. seed
oats and 30 bu. seed wheat. Will
pay 55c bu. for oats; 80c bu. wheat
_|seed, del. Send sample. D. P. Mar-
tin, Cobbtown. :
Seed For Sale
Thousand Ibs. Burr clover seed with
sufficient soil for inoeulation, $2 per
100 Ibs. or 2c 1 lb. J. Dz Scoggins,
Bowman, Rt. 21, Box 76.
Rape seed, 2 Ibs., 40c; 5 Ibs.. 90c:
Purple Top, White Globe, Yellow
Globe, White Ege turnip, Ga. collard,
2 Ibs. up, 35c lb., less 40c del. W. H.
Waddelle, Pearson. - 2
Elberta, Ga. Belle peach seed, 314
doz., 25c del.;. mixed White Cling-
stone, same; 10 Ibs. heading collard,
$3.50, or 45c Ib. del.; mustard, 30
Ib. Mrs. A. S. Paulk, Ocilla.
Burr Clover seed in rough, 2c lb.;
60 per cent clean seed; FOB. Roy
Lewis, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
Want corn, wheat and oats for].
Seed For Sale
Thirty lbs. new mixed Seven To
Yellow Globe, Purple Top turnip see
25 lb. and postage. Mrs. J. W. bas
t s, Rome, Rt.
Old- ee oe y red shallatt =
scullions, 4c Ib. FOB. Harwell Gaile
Alto, Rt. 2.
Old-fashioned shallot buttons, 5
gal.; cheaper on larger orders; money
order only. Mrs. J.T: Lambert, Fo
est Park.
Nice, clean multiplying white on-
ions, for seed or eating, 50c gal. del
Ga.; $3.50 bu. FOB. Mrs. Ada Sur
merville, Dallas, Rt. 6.
Twenty-five lbs. Bermuda. onion
sets, well cured, small size, 10c Yb. for
1 %, not pre aid. John Crone, Philo-
math.
-ecleaned Burr clover seed, 6c
here. S. B. Kinard, Jackson.
Four lbs. Van Antwefps Jappo tur-
nip seed, $2 postpaid, or exc. for
Ibs. Tendergreen seed. R. V. Kin
Forest. Park.
-ermuda and Crystal Wax onio: n
sets, $1 gal ea. Cader Stephens, Flow-
ery Branch.
Thousand White Eng. peach
of finest var. Make offer FOB. c
Newsome, Matthews. ig
Large red multiplying onions, -50c
gal. and postage. Mrs. J. E.. Pas
Madison.
Burr clover seed, ae Ibe severa
hundred lbs, sell in one lot some
cheaper. Viola Smith, Martin. ~
Cup of winter mustard seed, 25
2 cups mixed turnip seed, 15
cup and postage. Mrs. Manuel
ter, Carrollton, Rt. 7.
Ibs., $1 del., cash with order. hh
Harrison, Dublin.
1-18. collard, 10c Ib.; fine,
>
gal.; exc. for other garden seed. M:
Laura Morris, Roopville. cipspo
Purple and Seven Top turnip
mixed 50-50, 20c Ib. del.; exc. for
Red pullets, high grade. P. C. Herod,
Kathleen.
Old-fashioned shallot. butto
about bu. for sale, 10c qt. Mrs
Euel Browning, Towns, Rik Box. 36
White Nest onions and onion se
50c gallon ea.; long red and tur
beets, 4 Ibs. 25c. Mrs. Sidda Sut
land, Ellijay; Rt. 3.
Mustard seed, 10c per half cupful
Mrs. W. H. Nelson, Powder Springs.
Three gals. old-time collard and
Seven Top turnip seed, gal. salad
Eng. peas; sell or exc. for day-old
chicks or 3 good shoats. J. C. Grave:
ly, Talking Rock.
Twelve lbs. Purple Top turnip. seed
slightly mixed. with Seven Top, 25
lb. and postage. Y. M. Patterson,
Homer, Rt. 2. E
Large red nest onions, 15 Ib.
gal.; postage paid on 50c orde
white nest onions, 60c gal. Mrs. W.
Robbs, Flowery Branch, Reticle =
Collard seed, $15 per 100, recleaned
or 1 lb. lots 30c postpaid; also red
nest onions, $1.60 bu. Malvin Col
Whigham.
Fresh, well rooted New Stone
mato plants, Chas. W. cabbage, True
Ga. Sgt g collard, 250, 50c; 600,
M del. R. G. Burell, B
Hot pepper plants, 35c C del., cash
with order. L. E. Harrington, Dubli 0
Chas. J. Wakefield cabbage, collar
and tomato, 500. 60c; $1 _M. Swee
pepper and eggplants, 200, 60c; 500,
$1 postpaid. Miss Rosa May, A
iston. 2
Thousands of tomato plants rea
40c C; $3.50 M; cabbage for fa
heading, 25 C; $2 M. Mrs. He
Franklin, Register. :
Stone tomato plants for fall setti
now ready; prices postpaid, 500,
$1.50 M; by exp. FOB, $1.25 M. J
Ww Derryhill, Lakeland.
Napier grass plants and roots,
ported from Africa; gives more green
forage than any other known grass
$4.95 M. S. T. Smith, Cuthbert.
Asparagus crowns 5c ea. and po.
age; also 10 May cherry bushes.
8 old-fashioned cherry, 20c ea.
Joe McWhorter, Bowdon, Rt. 1;
Guar, well rooted, tough Ston
mato plants. 300, 15: 500, $1;
M; Chas. W. cabbage, cabbage
lard, same price; roots moist. P
paid, C. R. Burell, Auburn, >
Georgia
Market Bulletin
Published Weekly by. the
BUREAU OF MARKETS
Arthur D. Jones, Director
Department of
Agriculture
Eugene Talmadge, Commissioner
THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1931.
Entered as second class matter
| February 15, 1922, at the Post Of-
fice at Atlanta, Georgia, under the
act of June 8, 1900. Accepted for
{| mailing at special rate of postage
| provided for in Section 1103, Act
of October 8, 1917.
Notice of farm produce and ap-
purtenances, admissible under pos-
tal regulations, inserted one time
on each request, and repeated only
when request is accompanied by
| new copy of notice.
Second-hand farm machinery,
flowers and seed, incubator and
ornamental nursery stock notices
are published in Monthly Supple-
men. which appears on the first
Thursday of each month.
Farm land for sale editions are
published at intervals during the
year. Advance notices of these edi-
ns appear from time to time
advising advertisers when to mail
us these types of notice.
Limited space will not permit in-
-sertion of notices containing more
than 30 words, including name and
address. We reserve the right to
cut down notices of more than 30
words, providing that this reduc-
ion does not destroy the meaning
of the notic When notices can
ot be cut. down they will be re-
turned to the writ:r for correction.
| Limited space will not permit in-
ertion of unimportant notices.
Under legislative act the Market
Bulletin does not assume any re-
sponsibility for any notice appear-
ng in the Bulletin or transaction
a sulting therefrom.
Seed For Sale
m the trees, 4-500 bu. excellent
Keiffer pears; $100 for crop; ready
er Aug. 15 and thereafter; located
mi. northeast Leesburg. R. K. Mc-
an, Aloany, Davis Exc. Bldg.
Good cooking and eating apples,
Ic bu.; new crop dried apples, 8c Ib.,
FOB. Marie Call, Ellijay, Rt. 8.
Nice new crop dried peaches, El-
rtas or White English, about 35 lbs.,
0c lb. Write first. Mrs. P. L. Powell,
Bogart, Rt. 1.
_ Fresh sun-dried old- fashioned press
aches, 6 Ibs., $1 del.; exc. for pure
6. bis bone April- May hatch
sults. No toms. Mrs. W. L. Helms,
Buena Vista.
Nice dried peaches, 10c lb. and
Mrs. J. E. Passe, Madison.
e: Finest Elberta peaches, large, sound,
1ighly colored, 25c bu. at my orchard,
; boi. Athens on Atlanta highway;
ucks loaded; baskets not supplied.
. R. Lyle, Athens.
seed, bbl. screened,
large white
%
- One bu. multiplying white nest on-
ons, 40c gal., $3 bu. FOB. J. S. New,
as.
- This years crop mustard and kale
ed, 25c per teacupful; exc. for tur-
ip or collard seed. Mrs. S. A. Miller,
Finleyson, Rt. 2.
Purple Top, Yellow Globe turnip
seed, 35c cupful; nest onions, 60c gal.
This a s crop; del.; no stamps.
H. H. Sullivan, Carrollton, Rt. 5.
SEED FOR SALE
Perennial nest onions, best yielder,
best flavor, best keeper and especially |.
fine for green onions, 50c gal. Add
roe bs Steinheimer, Wool-
MARKET
Sted For Sale
Clean Seven Top turnip seed, 30c
lb.; 20c per % Ilb., prepaid. Frank
Dunn, Tennga.
Winter onion buttons, 40c gal. pre-
paid. For early spring use, plant
from 20th Sept. to Oct. 15th. Mrs.
N. M. Green,- Blue Ridge, Rt.. 2,
Box 35.
1931 Beet, Mustard, Purple Top
Globe and Shogoin turnip seed. Not
mixed carrott and radish seed, each
25c heaping cupful; 15c large pkt.
Mrs. Emma Pittman, Canton, Rt. 3.
Hastings Big Seven Top turnip
seed, also White Globe, 30c lb; red
onion buttons, just gathered; also
white nest, each 40c gal. Mrs; E. C.
Harrison, Chipley; Rt. 2.
Purple Top turnip seed 30c lb. and
postage. No orders for less than lb.
H. G. Samples, Alamo.
Burr clover seed, clean or unclean.
Write for prices and samples. Gene
Harper, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
Collard seed $15 per. C; 30c lb.
postpaid; also red nest onions, $1.50
bu. Malvin Collins, Whigham.
Burr clover seed 2c lb. Exc. for
hogs or wheat, FOB. lL. A. Motes,
Elberton, Rt. 3.
._ New crop Ga. collard
cleaned, 15c Ib: FOB.: J.T. Ponder,
Whigham.
Burr clover seed, dbl. screened, 6c
lb. Samples on request.. H. G.
Wiley, Forsyth.
Buncomb collard seed, heading var.
50c lb. postpaid; Gold Nugget sugar
crowder peas, 10c lb. FOB.; Japa-
nese turnip seed, 40c lb. del. Zeno
Hutchinson, Quitman.
Collard seed 25c lb; 5 Ibs. $1; Chas.
W. cabbage $1 1b. Free of trash. Lee
Waldrip, Gainesville.
White Egg turnip seed, old fash-
ioned -Seven \Top combination, im-
proved ist yr. from Hastings large
ols. oe; 44 Ibe 206 6 Ibs 30c> 50c
lb; add penteee: Claud Davis, Elli-
jay, Rb:
Six ne cabbage collard seed, 1931
Grop, 35c lb. - $1.50 for lot; postpaid.
Cash with order. Mrs. -M. D. Stalvey,
Dupont, Rt. 1, Box 75.
Fifty lbs. new crop turnip seed,
mostly Seven Top and Purple Top,
30c lb.; 5 lbs. $1; 7 lbs. mustard seed
same, delivered. Miss L. M. Davis,
Silver Creek, Rt. 1:
Hastings Big Seven turnip seed
collection mixed with Shogoin, 35c
lb.; yellow crooked neck squash,
mammoth okra, 3 tbls. 12c del. Mrs.
C. A. Wilbanks, Commerce.
Extra quality Seven Top turnip
seed, 40c lb.; 2 lbs. 75c, postpaid; lot
of 15 lbs. $4.50. A. D. Todd, Gaddis-
town.
Peach seed, small size, pie seed
and plum, $1 bu, cash with order.
Pay part postage. E. V. McLaughlin,
Greenville, Rt. 3, Box 48.
Ga. collard seed, 15c lb. FOB; sacks
extra; 1931 crop. J. M. Poulk, Cairo.
Jappo turnip seed, 30c lb. delivered.
Mrs. S. P.. Reed, Varnell.
Nest onions, large white, 60c gal.;
Willetts Wonder Eng. pea seed, 8
Ibs. $2.75, or 35c lb; sound, new crop.
Mrs. J. BE. Latham, Carrollton, Rt: 5.
Burr clover seed, forked, threshed,
hand cleaned, 100 Ibs., $6. Mrs.
Luther Aderhold, Lavonia.
Kale, collard and _ turnip
about 75 Ibs. each, 30c Ib., del.,
220 Ab.-in: 25. 1b: lots FOB. Abhe?
Baker, Norman Park.
Cabbage seed, $1 Ib.;
$5e-1b;;
rots, lettuce, 60c lb.
Omega.
Yellow Globe and Seven Top tur-
nip, Red and Seven Top seed, % lb.
15c; Ib., 25c. M. L. Goddard, Sum-
merville, Rites: =:
Nice, home dried sage, 30c Ib.;
winter mustard seed, 10c tbls. Add
postage. Mrs. J. R. Mathis, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 12.
Mixed fall turnip sed, 35c per
Laci seed,
E. L. Powell,
teacupful, or exc. cupful for 100 cab-
bage or tomato plants, chickens, or
anything can use. Write first. Mrs.
C. M. Ray, Carrollton, Rt. 6.
Willietts Wonder Winter Eng. pea
a 30c Ib. Lillie Averette, Buena
ista.
$1 gal.; white nest onions, 60c gal.;
postage paid on 50c orders. Mrs. Ww.
V. Robbs, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1. .
Van Antwerps new delicious tend-
er green seed, 14 Ib., 55c; % Ib., 30;
90c Ib. Walter Jones, Martinez.
seed, re-
collard, 30c lb.: beets, car-.
Large red nest onions, 1l5c Ib., or
? Seed: For Sale
Twenty lbs. Hastings Shogoin tur-
nip seed, 1931 crop, 45c Ib. del. Ed-
ward Robinson, Nicholls, Rt. 3.
Cabbage-collard plants, 300, 50c;
$1.25 M; tomato plants, leading va-
rieties, 300, 50c; $1.25 M del. Mrs.
W. N. Lott, Braselton.
Leading var. cabbage and collard
plants, 20c C; 300, 50c; $1 M_ del.;
5 M up, 85c M col. No chks nor COD.
Mrs. E. B. Wetherford, Oakwood,
eT.
Wakefield cabbage, heading col-
lard and New Stone tomato plants,
25c C; 300, 50c; $1.20 M del.; $1 M
exp. col. Lee Crow, Oakwood, Rt. 1.
: Nice cabbage plants for fall head-
ing, Wakefield and Flat Dutch, $1 M,
now ready. Andrew Clark, Thom~
asville.
Baltimore, Stone tomato and Ga.
collard plants, 25 Cy 75e 500: $1.25
M del.; 5 M, $1 M, collect. Winfred
Waldrip. Flowery Branch.
Leading var. cabbage, collard and
tomato plants, 500, 55c; $1.10, M.
Virdice Jordan, Flowery Branch, Rt.1.
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Ga. pole and McCaslan pole beans,
es per hamver FOB. M. B. Scroggs,
O
Table peas, green, by truck load, 3c
Ib. at field, Aug. 8 and 10: for ship~
ment, 5c Ib. a bu. containers, FOB,
cash. Mrs. W. C. Hewitt, Screven.
tea:
Bunch and _ pole, beans,
drum FOB; Sugar Crowder peas,
roasting ear peas, $1.25 bu. FOB.
B. R. Woodliff, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Fancy green beans, $1.25 per ham-
per FOB; prompt shipment. J. C.
Irwin, Cornelia; RFD 1.
Tenn. stringless green-pod, M to 1,
or Refugee Eax beans, Thomas Lax-
ton and Alaska peas, 8 lbs. up, 12%4c,
mixed; less, 15c Ib. plus postage. W.
H. Waddelle, Pearson.
Seed Wanted
Want 1% Ib. shogoin and turnip
seed, 1 Ib. large white Crowder peas,
Y% cup velvet okra; exc. Red, Val. or
Navy, or butterbean or other peas.
Mrs. R. C. Loyd, Nichols.
Farm Heln Wanted
Want boy, 12-14 yrs., to stay with
me; give good home and send to
school; assist with light chores. P. S.
Payne, Cumming, Rt. 5.
Want party with stock to run 70
acres cotton, hogs and truck crops
and build up cream dairy on river.
See S. S. Storer, Five Notch Planta-
tion, 3 mi. south of Chapel Hill.
Douglas County.
Want help for a good stock farm
of 800 acres; must be a desirable
family; share basis. R. Ce -bova:s
Nichols.
Want party to work on farm, pre-
fer middle-aged man without bad.
habits, $6 per month, board and|
laundry. Write at once. Mrs. Laura
Wilcox. Nicholls, Rt. 2.
Want unincumbered woman, 50-60
yrs. old, for good home and assist
r|light farm work; must. be strong and
healthy: Mrs. Jno. E. Knight, At-
lanta, 929 Capitol Ave., S. W.
Want single man without bad
habits to do general farm work, must.
be hard, willing worker. W. B. Sut-
ton, Adairsville.
Want good, healthy white woman.
not over 35 yrs. old, to live as one of
family and assist with light farm
ey Mrs. C. C. Johnston, Lumpkin,
Want good, strong, healthy woman
or grown girl to live in home and
look after few chickens, garden, etc.;
good home and regular salary. Mrs.
rons Lester, Montezuma, 127 Minor
ve
Want man with 4 or 5 good work-
ers for 1932 crop; will hire 1 or 2
wage hands. R. C. Loyd, Nicholls.
Want unincumbered, middle-aged
woman to live in home and assist
with light work, looking after chick-
ens, milking cow, etc. Mrs. W. D.
Copeland, Manchester, 209 Third St.
Want good farmer for 1932 on 3rd
and 4ths. Good home for right par-
ty. Need not apply unless own stock.
Mrs. B. T. Osborne, Clermont, Rt. 1.
TOC. DU!
Thursday, August 1 13, 1931
Farm Help Wanted =
Want man to milk and do general
farm work; must be willing worker,
J. J. Roberts, Dawson, Box 29.
- Want colored boy about 12-15 yrs.
old to stay on farm with me and help
with work; must be good character,
not drink nor curse; good home. An-
drew Stewart, Talking Rock, Rt. 3.
Want small reliable colored family
for farm about 10 mi. south Atlanta:
must be able to feed themselves:
make suitable and good arrange-
ments; good home. Mrs. Edward
Scitzinger, Conley.
Want 1 wage hand; must be able
to milk cows; come ready to work
now; 50c day, board and ees eek
GB. Ham, Cobbtown.
Want single white man, pons moral
character, to live as one of family
with elderly couple and do gen. farm
work; good home. J. T., McClure,
Carrollton, Rt. 3.
Want middle-aged woman to live
in home and work for small salary;
light farm work. Mrs.
Lake Park.
Want good help for 2 or 3-horse
farm, 19 mi. Atlanta; must be willing
workers and able to run selves. W.
W. Hattaway, East Point, 301 Wad-
ley Ave.
Want settled colored woman with-
out family to look after chickens and
garden and other ite work. B. F.
Boling, Smyrna, Rt. Cravenwood
Station.
Want 1 wage hand at once, come
aT to work. G. B. Ham, Cobb-
own.
Want middle aged woman (no
children) to help with light work;
and live as one of family. Mrs. G. G.
Adair, Rutledge, Rt. 2.
Want boy 16-20 yrs. old, honest,
sober, exp. in farm work to help
gather crop, $8 mo.,
Jaundry. Write at once.
Grantville, Rt. 1, Box 75.
Miscellaneous For Sale.
Whole wheat flour, water groulid :
from select wheat, 3c Ib. Notiless
than 50 lbs. shipped. Jas. B. ee
Broors. i
Feavuners, new, 65c lb;. used, 50c lb.
All geese feathers. Mrs. J. G. Harper,
Wray, Rt. 1. .
Yellow root, 10c Ib. Add postage.
Mrs. Thedoshia Ross, Morganton.
Tobacco put up in good shape, old
and yellow, from farm 6 miles south
of Surrency. A. Campbell, Surrency.
ho oe
Sweet leaf, old and yellow tobacco,
del. in 5 lb. lots, twisted at 25c Ib. in
5 1D Ups Money order. Dan A.
Campbell, Baxley, Rt. 2.
Black walnut kernels, 80c Ib. del.
M. A. Cochran, Protection. :
New geese feathers, 80c lb. not pre-
pat Mrs K&D. Sanders, Eatonton,
Will make apple jelly on halves.
Party to furnish sugar and contain-
ers for their part. Mrs. Cc. G. Morris,
Bowdon, Rt. ee
My tobacco crop ready soon for .
market. Finest Ive ever grown, 5 lbs. _
$1; 25c for 1 Ib. Orders: carefully
handled. John Crone, Philomath.
One bu. large partly hulled. black
walnuts, $1.15 del. Mrs. A. S. Paulk,
Ocilla.
One hundred Ib. size strong white
chicken feed sacks, 10c each. Miss a
Xo
Belle Timmerman, Bronwood.
About 25 lbs. nice, clean goose
oe 50c Ib. or $8.50 for lot,
FOB. i): Williams, Plains.
One hundred lbs. dried sdssafras:
poke and yellow root, 10c lb, not
postpaid. . Miss Myrtle
Marietta, Rt. 3.
Will can peaches on halves; other
party furnish jars; also jelly and
preserves, other party sere jars
and sugar. Mrs. W. L. Scott, Mc-
Rae, Rt. 2. -
Enough nice, long broom straw for Ea
4 brooms, $1 postpaid. Miss Kath~
leen Ward, Toomsboro, Rt. 2, Box 9.
Twenty-eight Ibs. clean used geese =
feathers in good container, 35c lb.
and exp. chgs. Mrs. M. E. Mote,
Griffin.
~ Good No. Ga. smoking tobacco, 10
Ib.; add postage. H. B. Rich, Blairs-
ville, Ro.
New white feathers, 60c lb. del.
Sample on request. Mrs. Mary Col- |
lins, Cordele, 3 ee
BE. H. Bridges,. |
board and ~
Elizabeth, on
MARKET BULLETIN:
Page Five |
Miscellaneous For Sale
3.80 doz. FOB.
2.90 doz. FOB.
Apple and grape jelly, 6 pts, $2;
Canned peaches,
Mrs. Sam Smith,
Will make apple jelly on halves.
7 to furnish sugar and contain-
or her part. Mrs. C. G. Morris,
mon. rt. 1.
round oyster shell for large and
all chickens, $1 per 100 Ibs. FOB.
A. Smith, Savannah, 102 E. Bay
Ae
Cl
Country hams, 25c Ib.; sides and
dulders, 15c 1Ib.; white wool, 20c
No personal chks. Robt. S. An-
on, Hawkinsville.
Somfry roots, rattle root, yellow
yt and polk root, sassafras, pepper-
10c doz. Folts foot, 20c doz.
postage. Miss L. M. White,
onega, Rt. 1, Box 33.
teerlaneous Wanted
dill for making pickles. Mrs.
208 East
ant
Babcock, Cordele,
e.
some chewing tobacco, good
ong, cured in shade, twisted
pressed; send sample and price.
-Gornto, Wrightsville, Rt. 4.
t small truck farm in or near
, with pasture, for 1932; 2 in
. WwW. C. Allen, Sr., Cochran.
ined widow. 34 yrs. old, with
-old daughter,
ork considered; can give good
rs. Lula Douglas. Adrian. Rt. 1.
. T. Sanders.
g married man and wife want
ping gather crop:
its; anv reasonable wage ac-
Jack Smith, Juniner, Rt. 2,
S. Phillips.
ime exp. in both; 30 yrs. old,
e, married. 2 in family, both
<; ref. At once. E. L. Clack, At-
a, Gen. Del. ;
nt job on farm for wages, $15
oard and laundry, 23 yrs. old:
io anything on farm; honest
good worker. J. W. Crowe.
wells, Rt. 1. :
t 1-horse farm on halves for
also place to gather present
6 in family, all large enough
kk. D. M. Parker. Convers. Rt.
dairyman, lifetime on
, Atlanta, Rt. 8, Phone Hem-
8174-J.
ant fruit. poultry, chickens, ducks
thy chicks, Chinchilla rabbits,
rsey heifer, potatoes, peanuts,
iokes, garden
1 corn seed, etc.; exc. value.
Mrs, Daisv Cochran, Adairs-
for meat, hogs, chickens, cow or
ling can. use.
), RFD 2.
Hees For Sale
R. eggs, 60c doz.
Mrs. G. C: Clifton, Millen.
ure
er 15. Byers
Rt. 3.
bred Golden Buff Orp. eggs,
Fresh, fer-
J. H. Loyd,
pen, $1 per 16; $1.60, 30; 2nd pen,
er 15; $1.40, 30, del. Mrs. J. E
an, Bainbridge.
C. R. I. Red hatching eggs,
per 15; $3 for 50; $5 C. Mahood
in. Miss Belle Timmerman,
nwood.
Thite Australian
> per 18 del.
iant Black Minorca eggs, $2.25
trio, $7.50. O. H. Wright,
, 515 Peters Bldg.
Guinea eggs,
L. E. Williams,
money order; wt. of hens, 5-7 lbs.,
ters, 9-11 Ibs. each. Mrs. E. P.
g, Rochelle, Rt. 1.
- Eggs Wanted
nt 230 eggs to set on halves.
ons bred strain except Leg-
as. Set inc. Sept. Ist to 15th.
East 13th Ave.
wants work;
sober, no.
t work on dairy or other farm.
-| $8, collect.
99 yrs. old, wife, 1 child. C. C.
seed, popcorn.
. comb or ext. honey, best qual-
J: Martin,
Cartons to
thompson Imp. Ringlet B. R. eggs, |
ull Cornish Indian eges, $1 per|
see Plants For. Sale
Plants For Sale
Fully dev. Missionary strawberry
plants, any quantities, wet moss pack- |
ed, prompt service, 30c C; $2.50 M
FOB, Aug. 15 through Sept. del. Ref.
Citizens Bank here. W. F. Luckie,
Ray City.
Leading var. cabbage, tomato and
collard plants, 25c C; 300, 50c; $1.25
M del.; 5 M up, $1.10 M FOB. Mrs.
Cara Lee Crow, Gainesville,- Ris
Marglobe tomato, $1.40 M, 5M up;
$1.15 M exp. Flat Dutch, Wakefield
and collard plants, $1.25 M, moss
packed, correct count... B. R. Wood-
liff, Flowery Branch.
Lady Thompson strawberry plants,
20c C, or exc. for white feed sacks.
Mrs. J. J. Knowles, Patterson, Rt. 1.
Wakefield and Dutch cabbage,
heading collard. plants, now ready,
20e C; 50c 300; $1.25 M, postpaid.
Marcus Williams, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
. Wakefield and Flat Dutch cabbage,
Ga. and Heading collard plants, 20c
Cc i $1.25 M postpaid; 5 M
UD, $1, FOB. Amos Williams, Gaines-
ville. .
Cabbage and collard plants now
ready, 85c, 500; $1.50 M. Tomato
same price. Mrs. R. E. Hackle, Val-
dosta, 603 E. Savannah St.
All Season, Late Flat Dutch cab-
bage plants 20c C; 1 $125 M del.
Carefully moss packed. R. L. Black-
well, Cleveland.
Heading Ga. collard, Stone and
Baltimore and Wakefield cabbage,
300, 50c; $1.15 M del.; 5 M up, 80c
M. Exp. col. L. A. Crow, Oakwood.
Nice, thrifty Stone tomato plants,
ee Cc. Mrs. J. M. Marshall, Talbot-
on.
Large rooted Kudzu, $1 C; Celes-
trial and Brown Turkey figs, 7 large,
-$1; McDonalds earliest blackberry,
Lucretie and Premo dewbherry, $1 C;
$9 M. J. W. Toole, Macon, Rt. 2.
New Stone and Baltimore tomato
plants, 500, 60c; $1.10 M del.; 10 M
W. O. Waldrip, Flowery
Branch.
Wakefield and Flat Dutch cabbage
plants, 20c C; 50c, 300; $1.15. M; 5
M up, $1 M del. Ernest Williams,
Gainesville, rt. 2..
Fall plants, 200 collards, 200 toma-
paid for. $1.
Lewiston.
P: R. potato vines, 75c M
Mrs. Gertrude Branan,
FOB.
-|F. H. Windham, Kite.
Big Stem Jersey potato vines, $1
M, FOB. V. E. Riner, Kite.
Wakefield and Flat Dutch cab-
bage, new Stone and Greater B. to-
mato, Heading collard, 25 C; 50c,
300; $1.10 M del.; 90c M. Exp. col.
Obie Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Rhubarb plants, 50c doz.; rhubarb
seed, $1 teacupful; peppermint plts.,
35c doz.; yellow root, .bone dry, 20
Ibs. for $5.
Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Heading collard ,Wakefield cab-
bage, Greater Baltimore tomato
plants, 300, 50c; $1 M del. Guaran-
tee full count. Mrs. Calvin Garrett,
Oakwood, Rt. 1. A
Cabbage, tomato, collard and let-
tuce plants, 500, 75c; $1.25 M post-
paid.
Gainesville. | :
Cabbage, collard and Greater Bal-
tomato, $1.25 M; collards, 75c M,
Gader Stephens, Flowery Branch.
$1.50 M. E. L. Powell, Omega.
Late Flat Dutch cabbage and head-
ing collard plants, 15c C; 200, 25c.
M. GL. Goddard, Summerville.
Cabbage plants for fall heading
now ready. Wakefield. and Flat
Dutch, $1 M. Andrew Clark, Thom-
asville. iia as
Chas. W. and Early Jersey cab-
bage plants, $2 M del., or $1.50 M,
FOB. Sept. ist shipment. M. T.
2b agan Thomasville.
St.
Exe. k
Buff Orp. pullets. Mrs. C. R. Sand-
ers, Bluffton.
Chas. J. Wakefield cabbage, col-
lard and tomato plants, 500, 60c;
$1 M; Sweet pepper and Egg-plants,
200, 60c: $1, 500. Postpaid. Miss
Rosa May, Lewiston.
Lead. var. cabbage,
collard plants, $1.15 M del.
tomato and
Mrs .E. L. Babcock, Cordele, .
' Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 1. oe
O. : F.
toes, 50 pepper, 50 egg-plants, post-_|
Miss Cecil McCurley, |
Moss packed. Lee Waldrip,!
timore tomato plants. Cabbage and.
Wakefield, Dutch, Succession and}
Copenhagen Market cabbage plants,
Augustine grass cuttings, $1 bu.
for pure bred Barred Rock or|
Late Flat Dutch and Chas. W.
cabbage and Ga. collard plants, 15c
C; $1.25 M; new Stobe and G. B.
tomato, $1.75 M; 20c C. Major Crow,
Cumming, Rt. 4.
Well rooted, 7 in. cabbage-collard
and Chas. W. cabbage, Long Island
stock; 300, 65c;' 600, $f;. $1:50 M
postpaid. Expert packing. C. R.
Burell, Buford, Rt. 3.
Cabbage-collard, 25e C; 50c, 300;
75c 500; $1.10 M. New Stone, Balti-
more tomato, same price; Purple
Egg-plants, 60c 200; 40c C; $1 500,
del. Mrs. F. Happoldt, Lewiston.
Genuine Marglobe, New Stone to-
mato, roots mossed; evpert packing.
Large Wakefield cabbage, Long Is-
land stock, true cabbage-collard; 300,
60c; 600, $1; $1.50 M, postpaid. C.
F. Maddox, Buford.
Lady Finger strawberry plants,
$1.25 M. P. P. B. Frey, Dallas, Rt. 3.
New Stone tomato plants, 300 50c;
$1 M, del. (Well rooted. Rafe
Thompson, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Chas. W. cabbage-plants, fresh and
green, 200, 40c; 500, 75c; $1.25 M,
postpaid. Quick service. R. Chan-
'clor, Seville.
Wakefield cabbage, heading var.
collard, $1 M, del; 5 M up, 75c M.
Exp. col. Prompt shipment. Ovie
Crowe, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Heading and Ga. collard, Stone
and Baltimore tomato, Early Flat
Dutch cabbage, 20c C; 300, 50c;
$1.25 M, mailed; 10 M up 90c M.
a col. H. P. Crow, Gainesville,
Strawberry plants, 25c 100. J.
Homer McElroy, Forysth.
Genuine Marglobe, New Stone to-
mato: roots wrapped, expert pack-
ing; large Wakefield cabbage from
Long Island seed, true cabbage-col-
lard, 300, 60c: 600, $1: $1.50 M post-
paid. C. F. Maddox, Buford.
_ Marglobe tomatto plants, -lso true
Ga. collards, 25c C; 75c 500; $1.15 M
del. W. L. Wright. Alto, Rt. 2.
Chas. Wakefield cabbage plants,
fresh and green, 200, 40c; 500, 75c;
$1.25 M postpaid; quick service. R.
Chanclor, Seville. :
New Stone tomatto plants now
ready, $1.10 M del. Mrs. Dora Wal-
drip, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Well rooted, stocky Ga. collard and
Chas. W. cabbage plants, 300, 75c;
500, $1: $1.50 M; prompt shipment;
moist packed in ventilated boxes,
prepaid. E. A. Hayes, Buford, Rt. 2.
Baltimore and New Stone tomato
plants. $1.10 M:; cabbage, $1.25 M;
collards, $1.10 M:;: all del. Guy Crow.
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Baltimore and Stone tomato plants
now ready, $1 M del. G. E. Waldrip,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
New Stone tomato plants, 300, 40c;
500, 65c: $1 M del., cash with order.
|B. B. Tatum, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Late Flat Dutch and Chas. W. cab-
bage, Ga. collard plants, each 15c C;
$1.25 M; New Stone, Greater Balti-
more tomato, 20c C; $1.75 M. Mrs.
Rosie Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 4. |
Stone and Baltimore tomato plants.
Ga. heading and cabbage-collard, 300,
60c: 500, 85c; $1.25 M del. No chks.
L. M. Wingo, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
New Stone tomato plants, 500, 65c;
$1.25 M postpaid: prompt shipment.
J. B. Bennette, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Mammoth Everbearing strawberry |
plants, 300, $1 del. 1st and 2nd zone.
(Mrs. Sam Smith. Austell, Rt. 2.
Strong Ga. collard plants, 6-8 in..
$1 M del.; 90c M exp. col.; shipped
ee Ovie Crowe, Gainesville,
RG ay
Positions Wanted :
Young married man with 1 child
wants work on farm at once; do any
kind of farm work; can drive tractor;
have to be moved. R. Moore, Atlanta,
610 Hill St., S. E.
, Colored girl wants home on farm
caring for chickens, t. Salley Chap-
man, Atlanta, 96 Hillard St., S. E.
Want job of cleaning land or ditch-
ne: make offer. W. A. Bond, Alto,
Rt. 2. :
Want job in milk dairy or farm,
sf
prefer dairy; 19 yrs. old, honest, so-
ber and willing worker; at once.
Johnie Carrell, Ramhurst, Rt. I.
Want a real good, well located 2-
horse farm with branch bottoms,
within 25 miles of Atlanta. C. R. Bu-
yell, Auburn. |
Positions Wanted
30-year-old man with wife and
child wants job; can drive tractor
and keep up same; consider looking
after cows, hogs. poultry, etc.: per-
centage basis. M. lL. Alden, Fitzger-
ald; Rt. 2; Box 254. ;
19-year-old colored boy wants; job
on stock and poultry farm, good
house, good water, wages; considered
smart and willing worker; self and
mother. Jewrender Murry, Coolidge,
Gen. Del.
Large family want cotton picking
by the hundred, also work by day or
month until Xmas, 2-horse cron for
1932: 700-800 dailv. A. J. Powell, Bo-
gart, care P. L. Powell.
Want a good farm suitable for
trucking, dairving and hog raising,
near Atlanta: have 4 milch cows and |
3 brood sows: consider partnership.
C..- A. Vaughan, Jaeekson, Sylvan
Grove.
Exp. dairyman wants job. Answer-
ing, state salary with board. Refer-
ences. C. A. Shevnard, Marietta, Rt.
5, care R. E. Griffin.
Want job doing anything on farm
or dairy; exp., 5 willing workers; ~
have to be moved. but will renay
with work. State price. etc., in first
letter. Bill McGowin, Claxton.
Want ich on dairy or other work,
good ref.: lifetime exp. in dairving;
honest, sober. willing worker. J. W.
Dire, Loganville. Rt. 1.
Want job on farm. house to live in
and have to to be moved: 4 workers
in family, 4 can nick cotton: easy
to get along with. Mrs. Tillie Reneles.
Atlanta. 415 Foundry St.
Exp. gin man wants job running
gin: can keen up machinerv: also exn.
eng. and boiler man and fireman: go
anywhere. W. H. Roach, Columbus,
2508 Second Ave.
Want job in dairy milking, some
exp. dairy work: ref. furnished;
young, healthy man. Write wage in
first letter. Rav Weed. Richland, Rt:
5, Box 75.
Twenty-three-year-old young mar-
ried man wants. 2-horse farm for
1932; have a 20-year-old brother to
help with work: also want work for
bal. of this yr. D. C. Lane, Hortense.
Twenty-year-old white widow. 2
children, 9 mos. and 4 yrs. old, wants
good home on farm; willing to do
any kind of light work. Mrs. Ruth
Yount, Pitts, Rt. 2, care Wm. Fchols.
Want job on stock farm; exp. and
have had good success; consider
dairy: wife, 2 babies and mother-in-
law. State salary. or would work on
halves. R. G. Yates, Meigs. Rt. 2.
Want share crop good land. good
house with good cow and hog tract,
near church and school: able to
finance self. W. C. Garvin, Guyton,
Riiy2 ;
Thirty-five-vear-old widow wishes
place on poultry or other farm; well
exp. Myra Lowell, Atlanta, Gen. Del.
Want to run small dairy and truck
farm. near church, school, good mar-
ket with good man able to move and
finance to get started. R. J. Moon,
Poulon. Box 627. :
Want 3-5-horse farm for 1932,
50-50 basis: consider work until crop
time. Write or come see. J. R. Moon,
Poulon. Box 627.
Single man wants job on farm for
bal. t.is yr. and for 1932; gen. farm
work, feeding and looking after stock.
Cc. R. Holloway, Edison, RFD, care
Cc. J. Holloway.
Want job gathering crop in No.
Ga.: 10 in family. Mrs. Hanah Pless,
T".omson.
Young married couple wants job
on dairy farm, exp.; have taken care
of 25 milch cows: drive tractor or
car: reasonable wages; no bad hab-
its: ref. Thos. M. Bennett, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 7. ,
Forty-year-old man wants to raise
cattle: thoroughly exp.; also farm
work and handling labor: sev. yrs.
Ga. State College: good ref.; 3 work-
ing boys. T. E.-Bray, Walden.
Want job helning gather cron. 1 or
2-horse, for 1932, 50-50 basis: 33 yrs.
old; consider peach farm by month
for self and boy: ref. B. M. Coulter,
Columbus, Rt. 2. Box 408.
Young man of good character de-
sires job, farm or dairy. bal. this and
probably next yr.; can drive and keep
un Ford tractor. W. M. Dorminey,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 1. :
- everseer near Macon.
Positions Wanted
Piston: Wanted
Live Stock For Sale
Live Stock For Sale
Want farm in vicinity of Pavo,
Barwick or Barney for 1932, 50-50
basis; can furnish self; am willing
worker. H. L. White, Quitman; RFD 6.
25-year-old man wants job, dairy,
poultry or truck farm; honest, sober
and reliable. State what you offer
at. once. Harley Murdock, Jones-
boro, Rt. 2.
Want job on farm picking atten
and gathering crop, 7 in family, all
workers; move any. time; pick -bale
cotton every 2 days. L. P. Fain, Hi-
ram, Rt. 2.
Man with small family wants. job
year round on farm; life exp. in farm-
ing; house and wood to be furnished.
B. Conner, Atco.
Want job for 3 large boys and self.
R. L. Blackwell, Cleveland.
Honest white man would like to
gather crop for party if conditions
favorable, or would consider job with
my truck; 40 yrs. old. E. S, Harris,
Grovania, RFD 1.
Unincumbered widow, 35 yrs. old,
wishes light work on farm; well exp.
farm woman; can manage. Evelyn
Summers, Atlanta, Gen. Del.
Want work on farm for rest of this
year and for 1932; prefer poultry
farm; 20 yrs. old, raised on farm.
Make best offer. Cicero Freeman,
Dallas, Rt. 1.
Want 1-horse farm on shares; con-
sider dairy or poultry; 40 yrs. old,
exp. in dairying\ and trucking. J. A.
Fuas, Atlanta, 550 Venable St., N. W.
Want job; accept pay in live stock,
corn, most any farm produce; expert
carpenter, repair machinery, do all
shop work except shoeing. Good ref.
R. P. Chaney, Atlanta, Rt. 5, Box 407.
Middle-aged woman wants job at
once on farm; can do most any kind
of work; reasonable wages. Mrs. W.
M. Sellers, Garfield.
Want job running gin; 35 yrs. old,
Yun day and night, cheap; stay on
. ises all time. Write or come for.
. M. Foster, Flippen.
Boy 16 wants work on farm, strong
and healthy. Clifford Morgan, Litho-
nia, Rt. 4, at Belmont church, care |
S. E. Burney.
Went 2 horse farm for 1932 on
3rd and 4ths. Wife, 4 boys, 3 girls,
' willing workers. Have to be moved.
Farmed all life. Ref. E. O. Hall,
Suwanee, Rt. 2.
Want job on farm. Wife and 4
children; must have work. Exp. in
all kinds of farm and-gin work, etc.
Ref. W. I. Holcombe, Braselton.
Want. to dig and clean wells and
other farm work. J. L. Jerreries,
Austell, Rt. 2.
Fifty-four: yr. old man wants job
looking after stock farm, dairy and
poultry, general farming; also exp.
in cotton gins and grist mill work.
C.-L. Coursey, Ty, Ty, Rt. 1.
Want overseer job, or any kind of
farm work. Large family, .3 boys
large enough to. help. Farmed all
life time. Thoroughly ae and ref.
a J. W. Saxon, Blythe, Rt.
Life time farmer and fon. labor
manager desires position as farm
Married 36
yrs. old. Have family. Ref. W. B.
Pippin, Gray.
Want a full 2 horse crop on halves,
with a good man, near church and
schools, around Riverdale, or near
Atlanta. B. A. Harrison, Villa Rica,
eid
Want job-in milk dairy; about 8
yrs. exp.; good worker. Sam ae.
Atlanta, 216 Rinehardt St.,
Young man with pes ae
want work on farm at once. Rollen
Moore, Atlanta, 610 Hill St., S. E.
Twenty-six yr. old man with 2 yrs."
College training in dairying and ag-
riculture; Foremost Dairy, Savan-
nah, and. other reg. herds-connection.
Deeply interested dairying. C. V.
Martin, Atlanta, 686. Spring St.
Young man wants job in dairy
milking. Some exp. Write wage in
first letter. Ref. furnished. Ray
Weed, Richland, Rt. 5, Box 175.
Thirty-four yr. old married. man.
wants job for 1932 as farm manager..
general farm:
Ref. furnished as to hon= |
A. E. Nelson, Sugar Valley,
Have certificate
operator.
as
Want job on oes plant as
- wood foreman. Sev. yrs. exp. in this
business.
J. R. Farmer, Swainsboro;
: Rt. 2. :
.| Ga,
graph if interested.
Want 50 acres farm within radius
of 25-50 mils Atlanta. Will furnish
stock and self. Want pasture and
good house and -out- bidgs. J. E,
Bowen, Williamson, Rt. 2: :
White family wants job picking
cotton, fall of 1931, and 3 horse
crop 1932: 8 in family. Prefer South
W. G. Cochran, Wrightsville,
Rb.-3X.
Want job to manage large: farm
1932. General farming. Prefer get-
ting in touch with owner for personal
interview. Good ref. W. T. Ciand-
ler, Luthersvyille.
Want place on farm on. shares.
Sober and willing worker. At once.
Exp. J. C. Jordan, Atlanta, 544
Plume St.. N. W.
Young married man wants job on
dairy farm; good ref. J. H. Johnson,
Atlanta, 295 Mathews Ave., N.-E.
Widow, 6 boys, 10: to 23, yrs. old,
wants 2-4-horse farm, 50-50 basis,
near school or bus line, church and
Bee Mrs. W..F. Hyder, Griffin,
Bt 2: I ;
Twenty-one-year-old exp. truck
farmer wants job for bal. this and
next yr Honest, sober and indus-
trious. Board and laundry to be in-
cluded. Lloyd Brown, Pavo, Rt. 1.
Refined young widow with 1 child
desires job with small family on farm
to care for garden, poultry, etc.;
work for board and small salary. Mrs.
Mary A. Brady, Norman Park, Rt. 2.
Young married couple, raised on
farm, reliable, honest, 2tc., want
farm for 1932, 50-50 basis: can fur-
nish selves. G. FE. Fallin, Thomas-
ton, RFD 4.
Want job gathering crop and 1-
horse farm, 1932, 50-50 basis; con-
sider job by mo. for self and 15- -year-
old boy. B. M. Coulter, Columbus,
Rt. 2, Box 408.
Want job with reliable party for
bal. this yr. and good 1-horse farm.
for 1932; eS of help; go anywhere
if suited. W. E
Live Stock For Sale
CATTLE FOR SALE
Pure bred Jersey male, -has been
dehorned. Riley C. Couch, Turin.
Good 4-year-old Jersey cow, 2%
gals. milk, 1 lb. butter daily, $65:
5 mos. Jersey | bull calf, $10. Both
sired by Maggie's Sparkling Sultan, |
No. 247679. R. F. Sikes, Sylvester.
Reg. Jersey cow, Tittle Betty Sally,
1No. 869393, 2 yrs. old; fresh March
1, $100 FOB my home. C. P. Yancey,
Douglasville, Rib:
Grade Jersey cows and heifers, bred
and unbred; also grade Jersey, 20-
month-old pull, $20 for bull. R. W.
Blanton, Talbotton.
Six Jersey cows, young calves; sell
or exc. for feeder hogs. G. B. Ham,
Cobbtown.
Good Guernsey cow, fresh October;
sell or trade. J. B. Hand, Atlanta, Rt.
7, Box 404.
Pure bred Jersey heifer calf, 3 mos.
old, not reg., $10; pure bred Jersey
cow, 4 gal., fresh Aug. 15-20. Make
offer. Mrs. J. O. King, Lavonia, Rt: 3.
Three-month-old cow, calf, cheap
ae a T. T. Howington, Buford,
One car load of 2 and 3-year-old
feeder steers and cows for sale. Roy
Brewer, Hinesville.
Thirty-five fresh cows for sale, on
Highway 22. L. E. Callier, Junction | -
City.
Sixteen-month-old fine Jersey bull
not. reg. but bargain at $15. Mrs.
Lowe Smith, Maxeys.
Six-month-old Jersey pull, ent. to
reg., son of Volunteers Foremost
Jap: dam, Majestic Sarah of Tif-
ton; $30 without. ee Photo-
J. Carl Daugh-
try, Metter, Rt. 2. .
Seven young high-producing Jer-
sey cows, fresh in; see them at my
farm, =C2-G. Byington, Bolingbroke.
Jersey bulls of good, popular blood |
lines, 14 mos. $40: 9 mos. $30; 3 mos.
$20; '2 mos. $15. Exc. for cattle, hogs, |
wheat, oats, corn, etc. B. C. Haynes,
Clermont.
Twenty-five young Hereford bulls,
6-8 mos. old; 50 to 100 Hereford
heifers, 6-18 mos. old. J. C. Collier,
Barnesville.
Reg. Guernsey bull for sale or trade
for a reg. Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs. old
and well bred. J. T. Redfern, Tennille.
. Wood, Canon, Rt. 2. |
Jersey heifer calf, 4 mos. old.
Mother black Jersey, 4 gal, T: B.
tested; father red, not reg. $10 FOB.
cash with oraer. Mrs. L. O. Stapler,
Roopville, Rt. 2:
Grade Jersey heifer to freshen in
September, $25. FOB. J. C. Goolsby,
Graham, Rt. 1.
Cow and 2nd calf heifer. 6 wks.
old, full stock Jersey, 3 gal. up per
day. Gentle, easy to milk. $50. R.
J. Bishop, Fitzgerald, Rt 2:
Fine Jersey heifer, about yr. old,
$25 cash. Daner Greenway, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 5.
Real nice Jersey 3 yr. old bull for
sale or exc. $75 value for $40... Ac-
cept anything can use in cattle, hogs, |.
etc. L. E.-Phillips, Colquitt.
Several: young Jersey heifers, $30
to: $100. :
near Bostwick. Fred H. Bostwick,
Atlanta, 148 Marietta St.
Reg. bull calf, sire Sultans Raleigh,
whose dam made 543 Ibs. fat 305
days; calf line bred Xenia Sultan,
$35 or cotton seed meal. A. L. _Ma-
son, Acworth. -
Reg. Guernsey bull, 4. yrs.. old, wt.
1,200 lbs.;
for price. W. M. Holsenbeck, Winder.
Few choicely bred Angus pulls; our
herd bull is the renowned Baron
Burgess; twice winner in his elass at
International Stock Show, Chicago.
Few splendid individuals. E. B.
Weatherly, Cochran.
Fifty to 60:head beef cattle, young |
vie i and heifers: H. G. Wiley, For-
SY.
Reg. Jersey 5-year-old- bull, dam
produced 410 Ibs. of fat on official
test as Jr. 2-year-old, $100; 2 bulls,
6 mos. old. Z. J. Hall, Jr., Sanders-
ville.
Fifty head steers and heifers; some
Herefords. H. C. Waldrep, Forsyth.
ersey milch cow for sale, cheap.
Mrs. H. M. Gilmore, Moultrie, 1018
First Ave., S. W. 5
Month-old heifer calf; from 6- gal.
Guernsey cow and Jersey male, $20;
5\%4-gal. grade Jersey cow, fresh in,
$100; heifer calf, $15. Mrs. W. E.
Hannah, So. Atlanta.
Thoroughbred Guernsey bull calf,
not reg., 34 mos. old, for sale or exc.
for one of same kind; 10 nice heifers,
fresh Dec. to May. . Haynes, Bow-
don, Rt. 4.
Four bull yearlings, a steer, 2 COWS,
soon to freshen, 5c: lb. FOB.. Mal-
colm McMillan, Bartow. :
Registered Polled Hereford cattle,
both bulls (old: enough for service)
and heifers. E. T. Boswell, Jr.,
Siloam.
Pure bred Jersey male cow, wt.
about 700 lbs., $35. Riley C. Couch,
Turin,
Two mos. old Jersey bull calf, $8.
No papers. Luther Aderhold, Lavo-
nia. :
Two good milch cows; 1, the calf
8 -wks., and other, freshen about
September 25th, $40 each.. Mrs. J.
S. Hall, Tignall, Rt: 1.
Three yr. old Hereford cow, freshen
December, $30, or exc. for 35 hens.
H. A. Edinger Moultrie, Rt. 1.
Pure bred Jersey heifer, 7 mos. old.
Can not be reg. From 4 gal. cow,
$20, or exc. for- med. size shoats. J.
Justus, Hapeville.
Good Jersey cow, fresh in, 2nd
calf, heifer; few days. old. Bargain,
Je John B. Miller, Woodland, Rt.
, Box 59.
oe grade heifers, 5c lb. 3 -A.
Lee, Jr.,- Marshallville.
_ HOGS FOR SALE
Seven Guinea and Red Jersey cross
pigs, 8 wks. old, 25-35 lbs. ea., $4 ea. |
or $25 for lot FOB. De: Walden,
Gibson, Rt. 2.
Pure bred Big Bone P. C. gilt, 4
mos. old, thrifty and good cond., $9.
Riley C. Couch, Turin.
Five pigs, 6 wks. old, O. I. C. and
Big Guinea cross, $5 ea. at my barn.
or exc. for syrup, oats, corn or cotton
seed: W. L. Yates, Carrollton, Rt. 6.
Seven P. C. and Duroc J. cross pigs,
6 wks. old Aug. 1; healthy and eat-
ing;
son, Fayetteville, Rt.
Five pure bred B. = Cc. 4-month-
old pigs, $7 ea. or $30 for lot: 2 males
and 3 females; furnish certificate of |
reg. from prize winning stock. Lewis |
Smith, Jr., Stockton.
g
Can be seen at my farm |
gentle, in good cond. Write
PAZ a.
wt. 75-80 Ibs.,
in buyers name, $12.50 ea.:
Full blood P. C. male, wt. about 17:
Ibs.; life treatment against cholera,
Mrs. G. C. Clifton, Millen, Box 57.
Pure bred Big Bone Black PS
sow, reg., in good shape, when fat
wt. 450 lbs., $17 cash or exc. for he
or ready- to- lay pullets. Walter Cow:
art, Summit, Rt. 2.
Five-month-old reg. cholera im-
mune Duroc show boars and gilts, by
Early Dawn, $30 ea.: 250- -300-Ib.
reg. 8-month- old gilt bred, $35 FOB,
Henry : Lumsden; Talbotton, =
6... Ce month- old pigs, $8.50 e
Ped. papers or reg. in. buyer Ss name,
$9.50 ea. A. T. Rigsby, Sale Cit
~ Ten good, thrifty shoats, all w
on, wt.. 50-60 Ibs., for sale~ at:
home. R. M. Allen, Climax, RFD."
Pr. little Guinea: pigs, 6 wks.
$10,.or exe. for 10 grown na
Edgar Barnes, Summit, ate
Oak Hill Farms.
Dures J. boars, 6 mos. old., reg. in
buyers name, $15 ea. dS. Cc. Lumsde
Talbotton.
Four Duroc: and Pp. Cc. mixed gs,
12 wks. old, of a litter of 11, at $4
ea. or $15 for lot, at farm. Mrs We
W. Wilson, Warthen, Rt: 2..
Hampshire boars and gilts, ans
size, young boars, $12.50; gilts, $1
and up. .L. E. Hatcher, Jr. Coch
Seven head pigs, wt. 30 or 35
ea. del. at my barn; price reasona
wV'"illiams, Louisville, Rt.
Five pure bred fat fled
shoats, 2: mos. old; year-old pure br
bow. (gentle): sow, P. C. and Duro
3 yrs. Old: Make offer. Mrs.
Sikes, Sylvester.
3-month shoats, gilts and bears
rure bred Essex and a cross with
Guinea-Essex, same price. 2
Charping, Lenox, Rt. 1.
Five Duroc-Jersey 3-month-old
pigs, $5 ea. Dudley Spiers, Lincol
ton, RFD. 2.
Duroc J. boar 6- month-old
immune for life., reg,
exe , for
Appler seed oats. M. Ken 1e
Collins. es
- Six 6-week-old toroushhred Har
Pipe pigs, $5 ea.; Hampshir
1% yrs. old, wt. 200 Ibs., thoro
bred, not reg., $25. M. Haynes, -_
Ly
|don, Rt. 4
Hampenite sow, wt. 200 Ibs., go
brood sow, just weaned Std: oT
sell or trade for Jersey or Holste
heifer or common goats. F. Ga tt,
Sparks,
Thoroughbred . I, C. pigs, Sw
old, $7 -ea.; $12.50 per pair. Ped. fu
nished if desired. & Cc. Beat
Hartwell.
Eight black Essex 10 wks. old
Fine. $5 each. Money order with
order. M. K. Smith, Macon, Box 442.
Pedigreed Csub.. to reg.) Duroc .
sey boar pigs; 1 extra fine 4 mos.
85 Ib., immune for life. Reasonable
price or exc. same. breed.
Barrett, Avondale, P. O. Box 965
Pure bred S. P. C. pigs. ~*~
Boswell, Jr., Siloam,
Half little bone spotted guinea g:
bred for sale at my barn. John
Page, Monroe, Harris St.
Twenty-five head feeder 1}
black mammoth stock. Good shape
$5 each: J. O. Bridges, Lake Park
Pure bred big bone P. C. gilt: -
mos. old, thrifty and good mn
$10. Riley Cc. Couch, Turin.
HORSES AND MULES FOR SAL]
Five- -year-old stallion horse, 1
good blood, $250. J. C. Robinson, %
Donalsonville.
Small pony. size mule for sale at
bargain through Aug. for cash. B
Pope, Alma, Rt. 4.
Pony horse, wt. 650 tbs. good con:
and. good worker, $35 cash, Ri Le
Snow. McIntyre, Rt. 2. Box: 172.
Ten-year-old small, light wt., dark
brown mare mule, good worker 3
where; sell account unable to operate
farm; part cash and trade. t
McLaughlin, Sr., Macon, Rt. 2, Hea
Road.
$4 ea. if taken at once. Near |
Hopeful Church. J sings Walter Jack- |
Sev. good farm mules for pale at
the farm, mile west: of Zebulon; ca
be seen any day; party needing good
mules look them over. W. H. Mitche
Barnesville.
Two good young mules, a3 and
oa old ,$120. Must sell at once. M
. M. Travis, Fayetteville. =
ursday, August 13, 1931
e or 4 good mules for sale
WwW. B. Sutton, Adairsville,
{ ing mare, Ky. bred, wt. around
s; nearly black in color: 7 yrs.
reasonable. Mrs. FE. M. Lee,
n, Rt. 2, Cyrus Rd.
all over horse; work single or
saddiler or buggy horse. Fast,
ey and hardy. Part cash, bal.
jich cow. M. A. Lockhart,
e, Rt. 5, Box 54.
a 2 wt. 1200 Ibs., good
er cheap, or exc. for hens, milk
a H. A. Edinger, Moul-
e
AND GOATS FOR SALE)
and grades, open and bred,
heavy milking does, 4 fine
bout ready for service;. sell
> for good 1930 Leghorn hens.
simpson, Atlanta, 676 Tifton
Nubian does, % gal. each: 1
ids, $25 each. Located within
liege Park. C. J. Burton,
Park, Rt. 2, Turner Road.
oughbred Nubian billy, 14 mos.
om heavy milkers, $20; 15
Id thoroughbred Toggenbure,
heavy milkers. B. Ww.
LaGrange, Rt. 4.
undred head stock sheep; 38
ood size, gentle. Quote best
once. C. A. Phillips, Vida-
ue ccs
ee ae big,
sev. choice rams;
. 100 Ibs.; from reg. sire
ior ewes, $15 crated, FOB.
choice ewe lambs. K. D.
s, Eatonton.
qt. milk goat for sale. Miss
Todd, College Park, Gaines
goats $1.50 each, in crates
ore, FOB cars, or $1.25 not
. W. Lang, Omega.
young butt-headed does, bred
genburg buck, $3 each: butt-
ick, $5, at my farm. John
Monroe, Harris St.
RABBITS FOR SALE
red American White or Pink-
abbits, 4 does and buck, about
old, $7.50; ten 2 mos. old, $1
or chickens. 2s J. Brumba-
ure bred Chinchillas, *3 mos.
or $1 ea.; pure N. Z. White
- $3; sev. prs. Silver Cer-
Sent. 1, 50c ea. W. A. Flow-
or open, also younger White
all healthy and fully ped.
aS: H. A. Stahl, Val-
's ae Z. Whites from reg.
4-5 mos. old, $3.25 pr.; bucks,
~%-9 mos. old, $4. 50 pr.;
2.25 ea, H. E. Smith, Baxley.
ee Chincilla does, parents di-
om Stahls, 5 mos. old, $1.25
mos. old Chin. doe, direct
; $2; $5 for lot. Edward Rig-
3lackshear, tee
a. 7. buck, about 14 mos. old,
2xc. for N. Z White buck, 10- 12
d. Walter Lee, Rockmart.
oughbred S. P. C. 30-40 lbs.
ig, $10, or $12.50 reg. in buyers
Lavelle Davis, Waresboro.
e pure bred N. Z. Reds, $1 ea.;
and buck, old enough to breed.
ipper, Jr., Macon, RFD 3.
minerex (Whiterex) rabbits, un-.
= bucks $2, does $3; over 4
ks $2.50, does $3.50; Senior
bred, $5, FOB: must sell in Aug.
; ceDavid, Thomasville.
ear-old Stahls S. C. reg. doe,
7 June 27; daughter of above
c 7, $6. 50 and $3; reg. and
pers given. Mrs. E. L. Bab-
Cordele.
inchillas, Silver Marten, N. Z.
and N. Z. reds and Himalayan,
Juniors, each $1.75; pr. $3.50;
$5.25; unit, $10.50. AL Ww. Mel-
masville.
pure bred N. Z. red 9 mos. old
50 each. Exc. for chickens,
cks or ducks. J .W. Thomp-
Fitzgerald, P. O. Box 506.
se Chincilla rabbits cheap. Write |.
ices. Eugene Cown, Stone Mtn.
chilla, rabbits $1.50 each, 8
J, C. Lumsden, Talbotton.
MARKET WULLETIN
Live Stock For Sale
Chinchillas and N. Z. whites. Fine
Mrs. Annie Tanner, Wrens.
Two bred does, 2 Silver Grey
Giants, 1 black giant doe and black
buck, $5 for lot, 16 mos: old. Mrs.
W. G. Edge, Forsyth, Ret. 5.
Four Chinchillas about 4 mos. old;
from fine stock, $2.50: pair Chin-
chillas, very fine stock, just. bred,
$8. Mrs. J. H. Rogers, (Address not
given).
Fine reg. and ped. Chinchillas. and
N. Z. Reds, all ages. Sell or trade
some for chickens or anything of
value. W. S. Turnipseed, Atlanta,
1443 DeSoto Ave., S.-W.
Extra fine N. Z. Whites, $1.50 and
$3 pr: 3 whites, 10 wks. old, 50c ea.;
trio N. Z. Reds, $4; 3-2 mos. old, 50
each. Mrs. Henry Odum, Covington.
: Live Stock Wanted
CATTLE WANTED
Want 6-8 calves, 6-8 wks. old or
older; exe. 4-month-old thrifty
shoats 1 for 1, ea. pay exp. chgs on
what they get. O. S. Duggan, Chester.
Want few baby calves, cheap. or
exc. Guinea pigs, one for one. Edgar
Barnes, Summit, care Oak Hill Farm.
Want to hear from party having
good milch cow to let out for. feed:
have plenty of waste feed and good
range. Reply at once. J. L. Burns.
Jesup, Rt. 2.
Exc. good value for young milch
cow, giving not under 2% gal. daily.
B. W. Smith, Rhine, Rt. 3.
Exc. fine reg. Jersey bull, sired by
Lord Manoras Noble, out of Allene
Rose, 5 yrs. old, for good milch cow
or for hogs. W. L. Snyder, Madison.
HOGS WANTED
Want bred, little bone Guinea gilt.
Mrs. A. J. Connell, Nashville.
Want male and 2 females blue big
bone Guinea pigs; must be pure bred
and females unrelated to male. LL. C.
Crible, Blackshear, Rt. 2.
Want 75 head feeder hogs, from 35
to 100 lbs.; wont pay over 6c per Ib.
G. B. Ham, Cobbtown.
Exe. value for shoats. Write for
full information if interested. A. G.
Nelms, Dewyrose.
Exc. value for reg. S. P. C. sow pig.
Write if interested. A. J. Kent, Mid-
ville, Rt. 2.
for 1 pure:bred Duroc Jersey sow.
Mrs. J. D. Mullis, Alma, Rt. 2.
Want reg. P. C. pigs or Duroc, exc.
calves for same. C. M. Massey, Per-
_| Kins. -
Want 75 feeder hogs, wt. around
100 lbs.; pay cash and get the hogs
from your place. Mrs. B. E. Jordan,
Wrightsville, Rt. 2.
Exc. new sweet potatoes, also Jer-
sey bull or grade Jersey bull for equal
value in hogs. J. M. Clark, Baxley.
Want good, cheap brood sow that
will farrow in November, near Pavo;
must. be cheap for cash. R. L. John-
son. Pavo, Rt. 3, Box 54.
Want 75 head of feeder hogs, un-
der 50 Ibs., not over 6c. G. B, Ham,
Cobbtown.
Want 4 good hogs to fatten on
halves. R. L. Blackwell, Cleveland.
Want to buy 2 shoats or sows, wt.
150 or 200 lbs., not fat. J. H: John-
son, Lawrenceville, Fairview.
Want few hogs to fatten on shares
or buy if reasonable enough. J. W.
Flanagan, Hazlehurst.
Want some hogs to fatten on
halves, also sow to raise pigs from
on halves. J. A. Bennett, Atlanta,
Station A.
Want S. P. C. male pig, or young
hog. Good individual from prolific
stock. Prefer ready for service if
price is right. Thoroughbred and
reg. J. A. Gable, Raymond.
Want 75 head feeder hogs, not
over 50 Ibs. in wt., and not over 5c
lb. G. B. Ham, Cobbtown. ~
Want 1 or 2 shoats, wt. about 75
Ibs. to fatten on halves. O. E. Sta-
mey, Eastanollee, Rt. 1.
SHEEP AND GOATS WANTED
Want to exc. R. I. Reds and ducks
for Nubian buck goat, reg. or sub.
reg. Burt Bennett, Moultrie, Rt. 3.
Want highly improved stock male
sheep. Write age, size, what breed
and price. Stanton Howard, Cleve-
eo Rt. 3.
stock, reg. and ped. Write for prices.
- Exe. 10 W. L. pullets and rooster.
|; Purple Hull yariety.
Live Stock Wanted
Page Seven
Georgia Products For Sale
Want pure bred Angora buck, large
size. E. Weatherly, Cochran.
Want reg. Nubian buck to prevent
inbreeding. Give full description, age,
color, height, ear measure from tip.
to tip, copy ped; buy or trade. Ed-
win Simpson, Atlanta, 676 Tifton
St., N. -W.
Want Tog. and Nubian doe, buck
and sev. doe kids from good stock.
A. P. Boardman, Augusta, 332 Fif-
teenth St.
MISCELLANEOUS EIVE
WANTED
Want 6 females and 1 buck each
of the following Elk, Deer. Buffalo.
State best cash price loaded on Cars.
Ce ti Dulin, Cohutta.
HORSES AND MULES WANTED
Want i1-five gaited saddle horse
under seven yrs. old, perfectly ound,
wt. around 1 M lbs. Grady H. Rid-
ley, Franklin.
Want good mule, wt. around 1,000
Ibs., not over 12 yrs. old: exc. first
class apples trees. T. M. Webb, Elli-
STOCK
Javon. 3
RABBITS WANTED
Want pr. Chinchillas, grown, ped.:
exc. 2 does and buck, not ped. but
large and fine., N. Z. Reds. R. La-
mar Brantley, Wrightsville, Rt. 5.
fseorgia Products For Sale
BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE
1931 crop dry, sound Sugar Crow-
der peas, 4% bu. $3; $5 bu. L. E.
Phillips, Colquitt.
Alaska Eng. peas, 20c lb. del. Mrs.
5S. P. Reed,-Varnell.
Four lbs. Willetts Wonder Eng.
pea seed, 35c Ib.; $1.40 for lot, del.
No stamps. Mrs. H. H. Sullivan, Car-
rollton, Rt. 5.
Willetts Wonder garden peas, 25c
Ib. or 5 Ibs. $1, COD, or exc. for seed
oats. W. Clarke, Abbeville.
Bunch. frost proof Eng. pea seed,
25e lb. Mrs. J. Ge McDonald, Col-
quitt.
. Early -yellow Crowder bunch peas,
8c Ib.; $4 bu., FOB: A. L.: Law,
Ocilla.
Willetts Winter Eng. peas, 30c Ib.;
2 to 10 Ibs., 25c Ib.; $3.50 pk.; $6.50
bu. Webster Callaway, Farmington.
Willetts Wonder, the most prolific
of all the Winter Eng. peas, to be
planted Sept. to March, 4 lbs. $1,
prepaid. Write for large lot prices.
Jno. Underwood; Blakely.
_ Willetts Wonder Cold Proof gar-
den pea seed, 25c lb. Mrs. E. I. May,
Warthen.
Eighty bu. mixed peas, 75 per cent
sound, $1.65 bu., FOB. Sam Garver, |)
Columbus, 1012 Front Ave.
Little white table peas, $2 bu., not
prepaid. Mrs. B. S. Ward, Tooms-
boro, Rt. 2. Box 9.
Frost- proof, very prolific Bunch
Eng. Pea seed, 50c lb. N. A. Wynn,
Glenwood. 5
Willetts Wonder Eng. winter peas,
a bu. C. B. Bailey, Covington,
6;
Early hay peas, $2.50 bu. FOB.
J. W. Steedley,
Baxley.
Ten lbs. heavy bearing Dwarf frost-
proof Eng. peas, 20c lb. and postage.
Mrs. Manuel Foster, Carrollton, Rt. 7.
New crop sound peas, $2.25 bu.;
exc. for good seed oats. R. C. Loyd,
Nicholls.
Vickers peas, $2 bu. FOB; heavy
bearers, no vines. J. H. Brantley,
Nicholls, Rt..2.
Eng. peas, good var. for fall plant-
ing, 25c lb. Mrs. J. E. Passe, Madison.
Two hundred Ibs. little winter Eng.
peas, 25c lb. Mrs. H. V. Franklin.
Register.
Fifteen lbs. Willetts Wonder Eng.
peas, 35c lb.; guar. frost-proof; cash
with order, "FOB. C. L. Newsom.
Matthews. -
Thirty Ibs. new crop Bountiful Bush
snap bean seed, 20c lb., or $5 for lot
Re, my station. D. F. Ogden, Odum.
R
Six thoroughbred Duroc Jersey
to pigs, $25 for lot at 6 wks. old, Sept.
oO. G. Wright, Atlanta, 515 Peters
Bldg.
- Pure bred Duroc shoats, sub. to
reg., young boars, young sows, 3-4
mos. | old. J. C. cone aegis
One or more tons winter Austrian
pea seed, raised. in- Ga. and saved
without rain. Make offer. Sample
on request. Merrett Bennett,
bany.
Pure Bancroft oats, guar. free ob=
noxious seed, 65c bu. under 25 bu.
over, 60c bu., in good, new bags,
FOB. 55c at my barn, bags not
furnished. J. C. Ware, Royston.
Make best exchange price on Ab-
ruzzi rye, certified for Texas Rust
Proof oats. Webster Callaway, Farm ;
ington.
Pure. Bancroft seed oats, 75c ea
Riley C. Couch, Turin.
New No. Ga. tall growing seed rye,
ve 20 bu., FOB here; 2% bu. bags.
PER Harper, Sweet Gum.
Eight bu. Abruzzi rye and yetch
mixed, about half ea. Extra fine for
seed, $2 bu., FOB. R. B. Telford,
Maysville, Rt. 2.
Blue Stem seed wheat, high yielder,
$1 bu. J. C. Broome, Hepzibah.
Four hundred fifty bu. Abruzzi rye, .
clean and sound, $1.50 bu.. Marshall-
ville. H. A. Lee. Jr., Marshallville.
Pure Bancroft oats, 60c bu.: Bear-
less barley, $1.50 bu. Money order
or certified chk. A. C. Barnett,
Washington.
HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES
FOR SALE
New honey, 10c lb. Mrs. P. J. Byrd,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 4.
Fancy Gallberry in comb, $8 doz.
5-lb. pails; also good table ext. in
415-lb. bbls., 5c lb. J. T. Mullis, Alma.
About 40 old style gums of bees,
part have not been robbed, $1.50 ea.
at my place. Mrs.
Springfield. 4
HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES
FOR SALE :
Nice, bright, new 1931 chunk honey,
5-Ib. pail, 65c; 10-lb., $1.40, postpaid.
G.-G:-. Scott, Ludowici, Rt. 1.
Honey in 5-lb. pails, $1 del. Mrs.
F. R. Vincent, Fruitland.
Fifteen lbs. nice, yellow beeswax,
35c Ib. del. C. -G.
ville, Rt. 2.
Pure honey, ext. 10-lb. can, $1.25;
comb. 10-Ib. can, $1.50, del. by mail;
sat. guar. C. P. Smith, Enigma.
Sixteen hives Italian bees, all in
practically new pat. dovetail hives in
good cond., five 10-frame, bal. 8-
frame: make offer. E. T. Pritchett,
Juliette.
Ten lbs. good ext. honey, $1.25
postpaid; 10 lbs. fcy. comb, postpaid,
$1.75; 5 Ibs., 90c. Write for wholesale
prices. Jno. W. Berryhill, Lakeland.
New, bright honey, 10-lb. buckets,
$1.25; also new Gallberry, 10-Ib.
buckets, $1.50, all comb; postpaid,
cash with order. R. W. Browning,
Dublin, Rt. 3.
Fresh, new- Gallberry, chunk or ext.,
5 Ibs., 85c; 10 lbs., $1.50 del. D. F.
Thomas, Odum.
White honey in comb, packed in
lard cans, 50-60 lbs., 10 Ib. Send >
chk. J. W. Lang, Omega.
New honey 10c lb. Mrs. P.J. Byrd,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 4.
Clean pure beeswax, 15% Tbs.
at 25c lb. prepaid. Mrs. R. H. Greer,
Hampton, Rt. 2
Nice, new honey, Ext. and Chunk,
10 lb. buckets, $1 per bucket, FOB.
J. W. Stallings, Valdosta, Rt. 5, Box
92.
New crop good, bright honey, 10c
Ib. in 50 lb. cans, FOB. T. H. Flow-
ers, Jesup, Rt. 2.
Pure Ext. honey, 6-10 lb. pails, $6;
6-10 lb. Chunk, $7.25; 1-10 Ib. Ext.
postpaid, $1.40: sev. 52 gal. bbls. No.
2 grade, 75c gal. Jno. A. Crumney,
Doctortown.
Pure Ext. honey, 5 Ib: pails, $1 del.
Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruitland.
Fresh, new Gallberry, Ext. or
Chunk, 5 Ibs. 95c; 10 Ibs. $1.50: 60
Ibs. $8.40, del. D. F. Thomas, Odum.
CORN AND SEED CORN FOR SALE
One M bu. white milling corn, 6c
del. G. B. Ham, Cobbtown.
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
One thousand fivehuncced Tung
Oil Nut trees set out in field, 2 yre.
old; also 10 M this yrs. trees, ae
Write. for full particulars.
Colquitt.
3
Ale
Effie Hinely, |
Oliver, Barnes- |
ie
=a."
ripe
. tainers.
- peaches,
- 20 doz.:
-_ doz.: Pineapple pears, $1 bu. C. H.
_ Strangward, Sylvester.
Page Eight
MARKET
BULLETIN
Thursday, August 13, 1931
Ga. Products For Sale
Ga. Products For Sale
Seventy-five bu. Fulghum seed oats
from high acre yields, pure and clean,
70c bu., or exc. for good milch cow,
close by. S. J. Clary, Arabi.
Pure Bancroft seed oats, 75c bu.
Riley C. Couch, Turin.
Pure Bancroft oats, guar. free of
obnoxio 3 seeds, 65c bu.; over 25 bu.,
6Cc bu., good new bags, FOB; 55c at
my barn and you furnish bags. J. C.
Ware, Royston.
Abruzzi rye, $1.50 bu. FOB. W. J.
Grier, Clermont.
No. Ga. tall growing new seed rye,
$1.20 bu. J. R. Harper, Sweet Gum.
Abruzzi rye, free of wild onions,
$1.51 bu. FOB; cash with order. Mrs.
Lizzie Laudermilk, Mt. Airy, Rt. 1.
FRUIT FOR SALE
Twenty-five or 30 bu. pears for
canning and preserving, 75c bu. at
tree. J. J. Herrin, Winokur, Rt.
7 Box 16.
Five hundred bu. Pineapple pears
now ready for sale to truckers, very
roc oneble. M. J. Groover, Ludowici,
ee TD, .
_,.ce, sundried apples and peaches,
free from core and peeling, 12%c lb.
in 10 1b. lots. Add postage. Miss
L. M. White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box
So.
Fine tame grapes, ready in 10 days,
5c lb. FOB here. G. W. Blackburn,
Tiger.
Watermelons, 8 or 10 acres nice
Watson melons, now ready. Sell
field or by truck load. Reasonable.
. Hight miles south Douglas. M. L.
Aldridge, Kirkland.
Fruit juices, 50c qt. or $1.50 gal:
COD. Pearl Aderhold, Lavonia.
Unclassified apples, free from
worms and rot, $1 bu. del. Ga. by
parcel post. Cash with order. J. E.
Stembridge, Ella Gap.
Dried apples and _ peaches, this
veais fruit, 10c lb; add postage; no
exchange. Also Stone Mtn. melon
seed. this yrs. crop, 75c lb. B. ech
Dallas, Rt. 3.
Nice, sundried 1931 apples,
reacy,. 10c lb. Add postage.
Delian Reeves, Young Cane.
New crop apples and peaches,
peeled and sundried, 12%c lb. Exc.
for any kind of meat, lb. for Ib; not
bone. R. E. Lee, Carters.
Scunnerongs soon be ready, Tc per
* bu. Mrs. Mae Slaughter, Pow-
ersville.
Scy hundred bu. Pineapple pears
on market last of month. by truck
Joad or contract; see or write. W. R.
Barnard, Glennville, Rt. 3.
Fine lot of Pineapple pears, sell 1
bu. to car lot: ready for shinment in
Sent. If in market for same, write.
J. A. Owens, Moultrie.
Cencord and Ives grapes, 75c pk.,
$2 bu. at my home, near Madras;
Aus. 9. Olin B. Moore, Madras.
Nie2, new, peeled peaches, will exc.
now
Mrs.
15 lbs. for same amt. of new peeled
appie-. Mrs. C.G. Griffin, Cordele,
mrt. C.
Good, nice press peaches for can-
ning, preserving or pickles; free of
worms, 75c bu. del. within 50 miles,
in lots of 15.bu. uv. Isaac B. Wilson,
Garfield.
New, sun-dried apples, 15c lb. del.
in = Mrs. Cc. ; a ee: Dallas,
Rt.
ike white spabpertione grapes.
ready to ship Aug. 29, 10c lb. in bu.
containers, purchaser to furnish con-
Mrs. A. C. Hewitt, Screven,
Be. 2.
Fifty lbs. sundried peaches, fresh,
$6.50 for lot. Add postage wth order.
Eva Burell, Elberton, Rt. 6.
Fifty bu. Pineapple pears. Very
fine for canning and preserves, 75c
bu. R..E. Bower, Dixie.
Nice horse apples and large
streaked, all good fruit, $1- bu. del.
No chks. G. W. Nooney, Jr., Quill
Four M to 5 m bu. Starks, Deli-
cious and Red Winesap apples. Be-
gin picking about Sept. 1st. Bargain
for entire lot at orchard or storage
room. E .O. Johnson, Blue Ridge.
New crop nice sundred apples and
12c lb. FOB. Mrs. EK. N.
Wicker, Wrightsville.
Fruits to trucks only. Cantaloups,
Honey Dew melons, 50c
Large white scuppernong grapes,
Aug. 29 at the vine; prices per lb. ac-
cording to quantity purchased; cash
only. Mrs. A.C. Hewitt, Screven, Rt. 2.
Calif. beer seed, 10c start, del. M.
A. Cochran, Protection.
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
Smoked sides, meat, $17 per hun-
dred; shoulders, $16; hams, $25 per
hundred. Malvin Collins, Whigham.
Seven country cured hickory
smoked hams, 30c lb. Wt. 27-36-41-
25-25-15 and 11 lbs. Riley C. Couch,
Turin; = 2
Country cured, hickory smoked
hams, extra good. Wt. 27-36-41-
25-25-15-11 lbs. respectively, 30c Ib.
Riley Couth, Turin. .
Smoked sides, $17; hams, $25;
shoulders, $16 per C. Malvin Col-
lins, Whigham.
Smoked shoulders, 18c; hams, 25c;
50 Ibs. or more, 2c less. Smoked
with pecan wood. W. H. Waddelle,
Pearson.
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Several hampers of green Sugar
Crowder peas each week; $1.50 bu.
hamper del., for $3 per 100 Ibs. at
field. 2h. e. Phillips, Colquitt.
California. Wonder pepper and
Black Beauty egg-plants, 90c a ham-
per. T. T. Touchton, Valdosta, Rt.
2; BOX: 1%.
Ten bu. beans, Ky. Wonders, green
and white Tennessee green. pod,
Refugee. Right price. Lee Shepard,
Oak Hill.
Crowder peas, Lima beans, okra,
squash, all green and fresh; del. to
truck at tield.: A. He Cooper, Pavo,
| Rt. 3.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Cluster type, Tung Oil nuts, fall
del., 20c Ib, F. L. Cross, Colquitt.
Nice groom straw, enough for 12
aa, $1. Iowa Woodring, Alto,
Riek:
Bermuda grass roots, $2 per 100
lbs., del; 3c Ib. smaller lots. Globy
Minter, Leary. R. F. D.
Will make pear and apple pre-
serves on halves. Party furnish sugar
and containers for your half. Also
pears and apples, $1 bu. not del.
Mrs. C. M. Ray, Carrollton, Rt. 6.
POTATOES FOR SALE
P: RR: potatoes, $1 bu. at patch,
FOB, by truck loads. E. L. Drig-
gers, Lyons, Rt. 4. :
Small Red Bliss seed Irish pota-
toes, $1 bu. R. E. Bower, Dixie.
PECANS AND PEANUTS FOR SALE
Green, peanuts, $2 bu. FOB. C. E.
Brewer, Leary, R. F. D.
Green, imp. Spanish peanuts (just
the kind for boiling). $2 bu., or 5
bu. lots, $1.90 bu. Cash with order.
D. C. Mixon, Screven.
SYRUP FOR SALE
Reboiled cane syrup in bbls. and
cans, 45c gal. W. H. Davis, Oliver.
Pure Ga. cane syrup, 12 half-gal.
cans to cs.,.$4 per case; guar. best
grade. Malvin Collins, Whigham.
Pure Ga. Cane syrup, wt. and
quality guar., 6-10s, $3.25 Cs; 12-5s,
$3.55 Cc. FOB. M. T. Nunnally, Jr.,
Thomasville. ;
Pure Sugar Cane. syrup, 12-half
gal. Son to cs., $4 per cs. Sat. guar.
Malvin Collins, Whigham.
Geer- ia Preducts Wanted
FROIT WANTED
Exchange pair nice Chinchilla 4
mos. old rabbits of good stock for 1
bu. press peaches. Ex. pay express.
Mrs. J. H. Rogers, Manassas.
VEGETABLES WANTED
Want 1 peck of Red and Green
pimiento peppers at once, cheap.
Write Mrs. A. S. Paulk, Ocilla.
.. Exchange, hand cleaned, 1931
Speckled or White Lady peas for
large red multiplying onion sets,
shallot buttons, Bermuda sets or
plants. Mrs. B. F. Johnson, Daw-
son, Rt.
Want Sweet Bell Pevpers, both red
and green; write what you have and
price. Mrs. Annie Tanner, Wrens.
POTATOES WANTED
Want 1 bu. good seed potatoes for
fall planting; exc. pr. nice young N.
Z. pink-eyed rabbits; ea. del. H. A.
Stahl, Valdosta,
BETTER GINNING METHODS
Tests over a period of several years
at the Texas. Experiment Station
show that, in general, a saw speed of
760 revolution a minute, used togeth-
er with the loose breast-roll and the
standard air-line cleaner, provide the
most favorable conditions for ginning
cotton of various staple lengths with
the air-blast type of gin. This is
one of the points brought out in
Texas Bulletin No. 416, which dis-
cusses the important subject of gin-
ning methods in relation to grade and
staple of cotton.
The results of three years Gants
with a medium staple cotton show
improved the grade of the cotton and
the style of ginning. Increasing the
speed of the saws from 640 to 760 and
840 revolutions per minute, provided
the loose breast-roll was used, did
not seem to-have any significant ef-
fect on the grade of the cotton, the
length of lint, the gin cutting of lint,
or in the condition of the seed. .
The loose breast-roll in most cases
gave better results with all lengths of
staple than did the medium: or tight
breast-rolls. Increasing the density
of the breast-roll appeared to lower
HYBRID CORN CONTROVERSY
Lurid seed catalog stories on the
amazing yields secured with hybrid
corn have induced a goodly number
of farmers to pay $10 or $15 a bushel
for such seed, only to be disappoint-
ed by results in the field. Warnings
have accordingly been flashed from
a dozen or more experiment stations
advising farmers to wait awhile un-
tile the hybrid varieties have been
more thoroughly tested under local
conditions.
Perhaps the most common cause
of poor results has been the sale and
use of hybrids not adapted to local
conditions. Hybrid corn purchased
in the Corn Belt may be totally un-
suited to Colorado conditionsor to
those in the South or anywhere, else
than the general locality in which it
was developed. In the original lo-
cality, or where conditions are sim
ilar, hybrid varieties have been found
to produce 20. to 30 per cent higher
yields quite consistently. Elsewhere,
they may yield no more and often-
times less than the ordinary home-
grown field varieties.
A good statement on the possibili-
ties and limitations of hybrid corn
is the following taken from Bulletin
No. 149, Ohio Experiment Station,
by G. H. Strinefeld:
Hybrid corn may be produced by
crossing unlike plants. Hybrids be-
tween varieties offer little promise in
corn improvement. Hybrids between
selfed lines offer promise as to higher
yields and as to producing corn bet-
ter able to withstand specific ad-
verse influences such as the Euro-
pean corn borer and disease.
_ The present supply of hybrid seed
is small and should remain so until
existing hybrid combinations
that the standard air-line cleaner
lower the percentage of lint.
are...
use of the Bureau of Markets.
the Code of this state.
Agriculture:
Feed inspection
Dairy inspection
appropriations during 1930. On
' used lawfully that were not used.
43 cents per each subscriber.
$105,387.73.
August 11. 1931.
THE WORK OF THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
(Continued from Page One)
cents to 30 cents per ton, and provided that-a sum not exceeding the
_ sum of $100,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, which shall
arise from two-thirds of the 30 cents per ton fee, that is to say, 20
cents per ton, shall be paid to the Department of Agriculture for the
This is also found in Section 1793 of. .
In 1930 the following fees were collected ae the Dx
Fertilizer inspection and insecticide stamps
Boor inspection.2 a
Registration of fertilizer brands and fertilizer dealers..........
The Department of Agriculture did not exhause a single one of its
pended balance in the treasury of department funds of $28,463.91, to
which may be added $80,000 inspection fees which could have been
Total appropriations for the department for 1930, including inspec-
tion fees, which were available to. the department, according to the
law, was a little upward of $500,000. -
The total cost of the Market Bulletin in 1930 was $43,227.30, OF
The total appropriations for the Bureau of Markets, including the 2
Market Bulletin for 1930, were $105, 661.65.
r.ore definitely evaluated. The main
crop of Ohio and neighboring states
should be produced from open polli-
nated varieties for several seasons to
come. Experience and observation
rather than salesmanship and prop-
aganda should determine the rapidity
of hybrid corn introduction.Agro-
nomic Review.
RED MITES
Many times during the summer we
have poultry troubles that seem to be
unanswerable. No worms, no cocci-
diosisthe birds just dont do well
The hen flock is not laying well, th
pullets dont eat well. We think of
all the mysterious diseases we ev
heard about and start treating the
birds for everything. Many times it
is not the birds we should work o
A flock of poultry, living in a hen
house infested with mites, will not.
well. The poultry mite is a blood-
sucker. They work at night when
the birds are on the roost. They a:
the bed bug of the chicken. Fight
them continually all summer.
Painting the roost every two weeks
with used crank-case oil will elimi-
nate this source of*trouble. Dont
dilute th:. oil with kerosene. Put it
on thick. There are many commer-
cial preparations on the market that
will do a good iob and will not have
to be used as often.
GOVERNMENT WHITEWASH
~ FORMULA :
Shake in boiling water one-half
bushel of quicklime, keeping it just
fairly covered with water during the
process. Strain to reove the sedi-
ment, which will fall to the bottom,
and add to it one peck of salt di
solved in warm water, three pounds
of ground rice boiled in water to a
thin paste, % pound of pawdenad
Spanish whiting and a pound of glue
dissolved in warm water. Mix the
different ingredients thoroughly and
let the mixture stand for sever
days. When .ready to use, apply it
hot. If a less quantity is desired,
use the same proportions.
For buildings on the farm, fences,
etc., this will to a great extent answer
the purpose of paint and at a much
reduced. cost. The rice, flour and
glue make the whitewash. stick. Rain
and freezing have slight effect on
this whitewash and it may be put on
with a sprayer. When sprayed, hold
the nozzle 15 or 20 inches from the
sorayed surface.
the grade of the cotton and the style
of ginning. Tt increased the amount
of gin- -cutting, lengthened the time
required in ginning, tended to dam-
age the seed, and in some cases to
The new experimental gin at Stone~
ville, Miss., has been recently com-
pleted and is in operation. More
pu lications on this subject may be
expected in another year or two.
erannamic Parvionr,
ib OOo
59; 239. 83
so 20,096:46 |
3,964.30
13,371.00
$379,573.48 |
January. ist there was an unex-
Total expenditures were
EUGENE TALMADGE.