Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1931 September 10

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Ny

ET EUGENE TALMADGE

VEL DEPARTMENT 9f (ge



PUBLISHED BY THE BUREAU OF MARKETS A. D. JONES, DIRECTOR.

STATE CAPITOL

ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1931. ,

The Walls of Jericho Are Beginning to Tremble

Last Saturday, a week ago, the General Assembly of Louisiana
_ passed a law prohibiting the planting of cotton in Louisiana during
the year 1932 and this law was approved by the Governor of the

_ State, Hon. Huey P. Long.

There is a provision in this law that it will be effective only when
95 per cent-.of the cotton-growing states of the United States enact
similar legislation. i
_. Since the discussion of the no planting of cotton in 1932 all eyes
have been centered on the Lone Star State Texas. Why? Because
Texas makes on an average of four and a half million bales of cotton
each year. This is approximately one-third of the average annual
_ yield of cotton in the United States.

Saturday afternoon late, Governor, Sterling of Texas announced to
the world that he had called his Legislature to be in session on the
- 8th of this month to consider legislation, similar to the Long plan,
for Texas. oo
Immediately on this announcement, Governor Russell of Georgia,
Governor Blackwell of South Carolina and Governor Parnell of Arkan-
sas announced that they would assemble their Legislatures in extraor-
dinary sessions to also consider legislation similar to the act passed
by the Louisiana Legislature.

There is a great deal of talk in Texas about limiting planting to
--50 per cent of the acreage planted in 1931. There is some talk of
this kind in Georgia and the other states. Of course this talk
amounts to nothing. It is only an indirect. way to try to defeat the
cotton ban in 1932. There is no practical way to limit the acreage
of cotton to 50 per cent of the 1931 crop. It is unconstitutional. If it
were constitutional it could not be worked out and would not be
effective if it should be enacted into law.

Why? Because each farmer would pick out the very best acres that
he had to plant in cotton. He would fertilize them heavily and work
them better for having a smaller acreage to cultivate. With this
being done, every farmer knows that, with good seasons, as much

_.cotton could be made on the 50 per cent acreage reduction as was.

made the year before. :
: Sunday afternoon I received the following telegram:

Austin, Texas, September 6.
Hon. Eugene Talmadge, Atlanta, Ga.
Governor Sterling and I invite you to visit us and Texas Legis-
lature Wednesday, September 9. Governor Long will fly to Texas
Wednesday morning. Perhaps you can arrange to accompany him.

Regards. oe ee
J. E. MCDONALD, Commissioner of Agriculture.

_ITimmediately accepted this invitation because I want to see exactly
- how the Texas Legislators and farmers feel.in regard to cutting out
the planting of cotton entirely in their state in 1932. Texas is the
- pivotal state. First hand information from Texas is what the Gov-

_ ernor, the Representatives and farmers of Georgia want.

I will make the trip to Austin, Texas, Wednesday by airplane and
will return by plane Thursday. : wa
At this time I do not know exactly when our Legislature will be

, 120 bales.

cot icebas Governor Russell has not yet definitely announced the
ate. ;

Cotton co-operative associations have come out in opposition to the
Long plan. We are not surprised. You know they can make just
apes as much handling 5-cent cotton as they can handling 20-cent:
cotton. \
_ Here in Georgia the Georgia Cotton Growers Co-operative Asso=
ciation and Anderson-Clayton Company, the largest cotton brokers
in the world, have adjoining plants out on Glenn Street. I wonder
how. Anderson-Clayton Company feels about this cotton ban for 1932.

We have got to watch out for the interests that make just as much
of handling 5-cent cotton as they do out of handling high-priced
cotton.

I was surprised to see in the press that my good, Hon. W. H. Key,
Representative from Jasper County, had come out in opposition to
the Long plan very strongly. He states that if no cotton is planted
in Georgia in 1932 there will be no money made to support govern-
ment in Georgia. :

I would like to answer Mr. Keys statement this way: Is there a
dollar being made out of the cotton in Georgia this year to support
the government?

I would also like to call Mr. Keys attention to this fact: Jasper
County was one of the best cotton counties in the state before the
boll weevil. .Production dropped one year from 18,000: bales to 120
the next year. How did the growing of cotton help support the gov-
ernment the year she made only 120 bales?

Not only did the people of Jasper County go to the expense of buy-
ing and feeding mules, paying hands to break the land and prepare it
for cotton, she went to the further expense of buying thousands of
dollars worth of fertilizer to put under cotton. This good old county
of Jasper, the birthplace of my mother, came up that fall with only
The government of Jasper County has been going right
on and she has been paying her pro rata-part toward running the
State of Georgia. ;

If cotton were cut out in the State of Georgia, Jasper County would
not have to go to the expense of trying to make a crop. buying fer-
tilizer, etc., and then failing. The expense of making the cotton would
be saved. For the past several years the expense of a cotton crop in
Jasper County has been more than the farmers have realized out of it

Brother Key, talk to some of the farmers in your county and ad-
joining counties and see what they think of the Long plan. ;

Our distinguished friend and president of the Senate, Hon. Cecil
Neill, of Columbus, also comes out with a long statement that it wont
do for the farmers to quit a thing they are losing money at.

What would our good friend Cecil do if he had a manufacturing
plant that was losing money, or that had manufactured more articles
than he could readily sell? Would he close it down until he disposed
of the surplus? 2

Brother Cecil, this is exactly what we farmers in Georgia want to
do, and we want your able help. Talk to the farmers of Muscogee and
the adjoining counties and see if they dont want this law.

: (Continued on Page Eight)





MARKET REPORT.

: OF GEORGIA PRODUCTS
- Prevailing Wholesale Prices Sept. 8, 1931. Always Subject to Variation.

Atlanta. Macon. Savannah, Augusta. Columbus. Valdosta.

Eggs, Xtra, LOZ <ssssssseccecceseeceeceeee ch 729 $28. 9.26 $ .26
PISO, SLANGATGS COZ, .ccccccvencpcecsocsseee aT .26 24 24
Eggs, Georgia trade, OZ. .........0002 22 al 19 19

> Ges, Yard run, GOZ, -ecceccosccoseesdeccoesne 87 .26 24 24

~ Stags, Ib. 16 = a5 16 16
Hens; lb. eenccesccencccecenenqucesce dennevceecceceecese 16 15 18
SOOSPET Se Oe. oo. ccsccccecdsacoscundeevas weodecates 09 . 10 10

Friers, lb. no 293 23

Ducks, lb. 12 : 15
Geese, Ib. a .09 z

PE OACON S110, Saco -cscdecissvacecsscntancdccenedas 20

OTIS Dg ees cscpeac acencnsnce Zo
Micld Peas, Mixed; DW. ccccccccccseccne se0---
Field Peas, not mixed, DU. u........0000 +--+:

; Country Butter, best table, Ib. ...... 30

_ Ear Corn (80 Ibs. to bu.), DU. esses. 70

| Sweet Potatoes, per 100 Ibs. .......s0 1.75
No hogs sold during week beginning Sept. 1, 1931, at co-operative sales.

PeanutsOld stock exhausted, new crop not yet moving.





INDEX |

Poultry For Sale

Poultry Wanted

Live Stock For Sale

Live Stock Wanted

$ .30 Eggs Wanted
28 Eggs For Sale
a Baby C_ _2ks For Sale
Baby Chicks Wanted
Farm Help Wanted

- Positions Wanted
Seed For Sale
Seed *Yanted
Georgia Products For Sale
Georgia Products Wanted
Plants For Sale
Miscellaneous For Sale
Miscellaneous Wanted

. Grain and Hay For Sale
Grain and Hay Wanted















NUMBER 87

yard, or 50c to ship them.

hens, 90c each. J.

for

Page Two :

Poultry For Sale

ANCONAS
Sixteen pure bred Ancona hens,
%5c each, or exc. for Jersey heifer

_ galf. Mrs. Laura Montgomery, Mauk.

Six Ancona, Sheppard str. 2 yr. old
A. Culbreth, Cairo.

ANDALUSIANS
Two dark blue Andalusian cock-



erels and 2 pullets, 1 cock 1% yr.

old, other March and April hatch, $1
each. J. A. Culbreth, Cairo.

AUSTRALORPS
: Ten nice May hatch Osborne str.



S Australorp cockerels, $1.50 ea. for

quick sale. Johnson Crowe, Carters-

_ ville, 25 Douglas St.



BANTAMS ~!

Trio genuine Buff Cochin bantams,
$5: extra hens, $2 ea.;
per 15. O. H. Wright, Ailanta, 515
Peters Bldg.

Golden Sebrights, 6 mos. old, $2.50
pr. Grown ones, $3 pr., FOB. Olin B.
Moore, Madras.

Brown L. bantam rooster, hen and
pullet, 2 Red bantams, 35c each at
Fred
Hyder, Dunwoody, Rt. 1.

Pure Golden Sebrights, $2 pr. C.

- Bowers Guann, Clyo.

Trio R. C. Sebright bantams,
March hatch cockerel, not related,
$2.50. A. H. Banks, Slyvester.

Bantams from prize stock, Jap
Silkies, $4.25 trio, 6 mos. old. EXc;
_ pure Osborn str. Australoups,
Buff Cochins, baby peafowls, Silver
- Martens, or W. L. Mrs. Daisy Coch-
ran, Adairsville.

Pr. bright Folden Sebright ban-

-tams, nearly grown, $1.25, FOB. Mrs.
LL. B. Taylor, Rydal.



-BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS

Buff, Barred Rock cocks and cock-
_erels, $1. 25-$1.50 each, pure bred.
Few pullets, same price. Eggs, $1 per

_ 15. Mrs. C. R. Sorrels, Monroe, Rt. 1.

- Ten fine Fischel str. White Pl.

Sy Rock hens, $10, or large breed: cock-
- erels in exch.;
- old, 5 mo. cockerel, $4.25.

10 pullets, 7-12 wks.
R. S. Nash,
Smyrna.

Thompson Ringlet B. R. cockerels,

1st pen, $1.25 each, 2 or more; 2nd,

$1.25 each, 2 or more, $1. each. Mrs.

J. E. Steadam, Bainbridge, Rt. 2.
April hatch White Rocks, best
breeding. Pullets and cockerels, $1.25
each, extra fine cockerel, $1.50; 2
splendid 2 yr. old cocks, $3.50 for
both. Mrs. Z. L. Scott, Concord.
Sev. nice April hatch B. R. roosters,

- Park Holterman and Thompson str.
from blood-tested State accredited

AA., $1.25 each, FOB. Mrs. D. A.
Jackson, Bowdon, Rt. 1.
Four pure Thompson Ringlet

= March cockerels, $1.25 each, $4 for

- Jot, FOB. Mrs. N. R. Wilson, Canon,

ae

ay

Rt 2

Pure Thompson Ringlet B. R.
March cockerels, $1.25 each; $3.50
for the 3, FOB. Mrs. R. L. Mabry,
Canon, Rt. 2.

Parks str. pure bred B. R. cock-
erels. Per. No. 178-C-31. April hatch,
$2 each; March, $2.25 each; 1% yr.

- old rooster, $2.50. Mrs. John Roach,

Daisy.
Pure Parks B. Rocks, reg. Per. No.
40-C-31. Few choice cockerels and

yr. old cocks, $1.75 each. Hatching
eggs and baby chicks. Mrs. Orlo D.

Thayer, Daisy.
Two pure bred Partridge Rock
-cockerels, February hatch. Wt. about

5 Ibs., $1 each. Mrs. J. B. Womach,

_ Tifton, Rt. 6.

-pullets, $1.25 each, $14.50 doz.;
: Mrs.

Parks str. April hatch B. R. cock-
erels, 1 each. J. W. Pelham, Cairo.
Reg. stock Parks B. R. April hatch
20
$2.50 each; $4.50 pr.
Jno. Watson, Graymont.
Seven pure bred Fischel str. White

mos. cocks,

~ Rock hens and rooster. Took sweep-

stake prize at county fair, $1 each.
Exc. Mrs. W. O. Puckett, Cordele,
Rt B:

Barred Rocks, Parks str., reg. per.

_ 61-C-31, March hatch cockerels, $2

-ea., 2 for $3.50; cream grade, founda-
tion stock direct. Mrs. Mamie Roach

Plyler, Manassas.

--erels,

Twenty B. R. pullets and sev. cock-
certified blood-tested, March
hatch, $1 ea. Mrs. H. B. Ford, La-

~ yonia.

Thompson str. B. R. pullets, $1 ea.,;
FOB or 75c ea. for younger ones.
Mrs. W. L. Brown, Vienna. -

Fifty pure bred B. R. pullets,

: ee -April hatch, 75c ea., for Sept.
< el.:
Ro

nice pen. of yearling White
hens, cock, ee Fischel $8.

eggs, $1.50:



MARKET BULLETIN

Poultry For Sale
BRAHAMS

Light Brahma cockerels from large
Northern bred stock $1 each. Mrs.
C. W.. Evans, Whightsville, Rt. 1.

Brahma cockerel and 3 pullets for
breeding, large str., $2.60 FOB. M.
Warren, Harwtell, Rt. +

Eight Light Brahma hens and
cock, $20; pullets and cockerels, $1
and $1.50 each. Mrs. Jewel Godard,
Milledgeville, Rt. 1. Box 42.

CORNISH

Dark Cornish March pullets, $1 and
$1.25 ea.; April pullets, 75c and a
ea.; cockerels, $1 and $1.25 ea. C.
Ingram, -Lilly.

Dark Cornish cockerels, early spring
hatch, $1.25 ea. Miss Leona Simpson,
Culverton, Rt:. 1,-Box:38.

Spring hatch (1931) yure. bred
Dark Cornish Indian roosters, 4 to
5 lbs each, $1. each. E. H. Carey,
Danielsville.

Ten April hatch Cornish Indian
pullets, good stock, yellow legs; 1
young cockerel not related to pullets,
$10. J. T. Banks, Sylvester.

Five pure bred Dark Cornish, 4
pullets and cockerel, 3-4 Ibs., $5 for
lot, cash with order. Mrs. H. H. Wil-
liams, Rydal, Rt. 2.

GAMES

A lot of Pit game stags, $1 and up;
2 choice brood cocks, $10 each. Harry
McMillan, Blackshear.

Few select trios in Carolina Blues,
Pit games, $3 trio. Write if inter-
ested. J. W. Crow, Cartersville, 519
Erwin St.

Two white April stags, $2 each; 15
mos. old pure white cock, $2. 50;
Black and Red.27 mos. cock, $3;
Black pullets, 1 each. J. W. Tarpley,
Hogansville, Box 119.

GIANTS

Sev. nice yearling Black Jersey
Giant cocks, of best breeding, $2 ea.,
ee del. Miss Clara Trimble, Adairs-
ville

Three Jersey White Giant pullets
and cockerel for sale or exc. for S.
P; C: pr. O. iz C2 -pie, wt. 50: or 75
me a Ola Manley, Carnesville,
R

Trio of J. B. Giants, 4 mos. old,
$3. Mrs. Mary Collins, Cordele, Rt. 4.

Sev. J. B. Giant pullets, $1 each.
Pure Marcy strain. R. A. Yeargen,
Zebulon.

Jersey White Giant cockerels,
Truitt and Wright strain. Mrs. J. A.
Morgan, Valdosta,

LEGHORNS

Pure Sunflower str. Brown L. cock-
erels, beginning to crow, 75c ea. L. B.
Toler, Glenwood, Rt. 3, Box 9.

Two Kerlin cocks, S.C. W. L., extra
fine, $2.50 ea.; few hens, same kind,
$1-$1.25 ea. Exc. for corn, etc.-C. W.
Page, Norcross.

Fifty W. L. pullets, 6 mos. old, now
ready for laying, 75c each. Cash with
order. Coop ret. Mrs. D. M. Moore,
Eastanollee. -

Seven fine March 1st hatch W. L.
roosters. Egg-a-day parentage. Pure,
true to name, egg-a-day, $2 each.
Mrs. Beulah Moorhead, Bowersville.

One hundred Tancred WW:
pullets, 14 wks. old, 80c each, FOB.
D. F. Thomas, Odum.

Six W. L. hens. and rooster, sell
for cash or exc. for: anything can
use. Mrs. W. O. Puckett, Cordele,
Rt. B.

Six pure bred Everlay B. L. hens,
$1 each, $5.50 for lot, FOB. T. W.
Manning; Dudley, Rt. 1.

Fifty pure Tancred W. L. yearling
hens, heavy layers, from 312 egg
record stock. Most all laying now,
ae a lot. Mrs. F. Cowart, Summit,

Nice, well dev.. pure W. L., 6 mos.









old cockerel, 75c, or exc. for pure

Donaldson Red cockerel, same age.
Ea. pay postage. Write. Bessie M.
Joiner, Louisville, Rt. 2.

Sixty-five thoroughbred W. L. pul-
lets and hens, March hatch, now lay-
ing, also 75 Donaldson Red hens and
pullets, and 2 Red roosters. Cheap
for cash. Mrs, C. N. Wingfield, Col-
lege Park, 311 W. Jno. Wesley Ave.

Eighty Ferris and Tancred strains
W. &. hens, 50 per cent laying, 75c
each. Virgil M. Tatum, Atlanta, Rt.
5, DeFoore Ave.

Twelve S. C. Brown L. roosters, yr.
old, Everlay str., $3 each; April hatch
stock, 75 each. W. A. Summer, Nor-
ristown.

Sev. AAA quality S. C. W. L. cock-
erels, wt. about 2 lbs. ea., direct from
Booths as ay chicks, $1 ea. Exc.
for seed oats. E . H. Thomas, Hart-



Poultry For Sale
Sixty pure bred White L. hens,
March and April 1930 hatch, $50.
Cuyler Stafford, White Oak.

One hundred April hatch W. L.
pullets, 75c FOB each. Chas. P.

E.|'Tipon, Adel.

Imported Tom Barron direct W.-L.
cockerels of best AA foundation,
280-305 egg contest winnings mat-
ings. Sell or trade for young hens.
Edwin Simpson, Atlanta, 676 Tifton
St. Na W.

' Nice W. L. young rooster, "5 for
quick sale. Mrs. D. Whiddon, Chula.

MINORCAS

Fine 4 mos. old crowing Booth AA
strain Black Minorca roosters, 50c
each. Exp. COD. Mrs. Fannie
Hudson, Hartsfield, Rt.

Ten choice March Buff Minorca
pullets, soon ready to lay, $1 each.
Exe. for White or Brown L. early
hatch pullets, or good 1930 hens.
Edwin Simpson, Atlanta, 676 Tifton
St. NW.

Thoroughbred prize winning Black
Minorcas, 12 hens and cock, yr. old,
good layers, $25 for lot, or exc. for
friers or country cured meat. M. H.
Cribb, Augusta,-416 Fenwick St.

Giant White Minorca cock, 15 mos.
old, bred by J. L. Gordon, Marshall-
ville, Miss., $3, FOB. Miss E. H. Pra-
ther, Brookhaven, Rose Lane Cottage.

Pape str. Black Minorca. pullets
and cockerel, $1 each. H. A. Wilson,
Martin, Rt. 2.

Exceptionally fine trio Giant Black



| Minorcas, $7.50; extra hens, $2 ea.;

eggs, $2.25 per 15. O. H. Wright, At-
lanta, 515 Peters Bldg.

Nice Buff Minorca hens and May
hatch cockerels, 5 pure bred yearling
hens and cockerel, $5. Miss Clara V.
Trimble, Adairsville.

ORPINGTONS

White Orpington hen and rooster,
pure bred, prize winning stock. $2.50
for the pr.-Exc. for seed rye or oats.
Mrs. W. O. Puckett, Cordele, Rt. B.

Twenty nice Buff Orp. pullets and
2 cockerels. Ordered direct from
Booths list of April. Sell or exc. for a
sige fresh milk and butter cow. Mrs.

. W. McGowan, Graymont.



Dre pure Buff Orp. pullets and 2

cockerels, April hatch, 75c ea., $5.60
ee lot, Mrs. J. Y. Rhodes, Crawford-
ville.

Pure bred Buff Orp. Eng. strain,
March, April hatch pullets, 75c ea.,
FOB here. Exc. for lint cotton. Write.
Mrs. C. W. Griffin, Screven, Rt. 2.

Pure bred Golden Buff Orp. pul-
lets, March hatch, 75c ea. Mrs. J. W.
Fanning, Washington.

Twenty Buff Orp. pullets and 22
roosters, April hatch, $20. Mrs. J. H.
K. Jones, Tifton, Rt. 6.

R. I. REDS

' Two R. I. Red cocks, from Owens
and Tompkins blue ribbon stock, $3
ea. or exc. for corn, onions, et. C. W.
Page, Norcross.

Fine Donaldson S. C. R. I. Reds, 5
pullets and cockerel, 85c each; $2
An oh Mrs. J. F. Trawick, Tennille
Rt. 1.

Pure bred R. I.. Red and mixed
breed friers, 23c 1b.; hens, 20c lb.
Harold Smith, Baxley.

Nine pullets and cockerel, pure
bred R. I. Reds, March hatch, $1 ea.
for the 10. Mrs. H. B. Ford, Lavonia.

Two-;2ar-old R. I. Red hens, pure
bred, 80c ea. if taken in Sept. Miss
Clara Trimble, Adairsville.

PHEASANTS

Eng. Ringnecks, 5 hens and male,
this years hatch, $16.50, Sept. del.
Mrs. Annie Tanner, Wrens.

Pure Golden Pheasants, $8 per pr.
Mrs. Jewel Godard, Milledgeville, Rt.
1, Box 42.

WYANDOTTES

Six pure bred S. L. Wyandotte
hens, yr. old, and 3 April pullets, $1
ea., FOB; also Feb. hatch cockerel,
$1. Johnson Crowe, Cartersville, 25
Douglas St.

R. C. W. Wyandotte and Barred
Rock cockerels, 35c lb., FOB. Mrs.
J. B.. Cox, Sr., Milledgeville.

Pure bred White Wyandotte vul-
lets, stock from John S. Martin, 75c
ea. J. T. Owens, Covington.

Ten select W. Wyandotte pullets,
Regal Dorcas str., no culls, $1 ea.
Mrs. W. L. Guillebeau, Lincolnton.

Six hens and rooster, pure bred
Tarbox str. S. L. Wyandottes, $6 for
lot, exp. col. Mrs. H. So
Carrollton, Rt. 5.







e



Box 53.

testa September 10, 1981

Poultry For Sale

SUSSEX
Two Speckled Sussex roosters,
$1.10 each, or exc. for pullets. Alsaq
young friers, mixed breed, 35c Ib,
Mrs. J, P. Smith, Sr., Homerville Fits
1. Box 37:

MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS _
About 50 chicks from 4 wks. to 2
mos. old. Mixed Wyandotte and B.
R., and Anconas, $12 for the bunch,
Ww. Cc. Cherry, Waycross, RFD,
Fat hens, large breed, for table use,
25c lb., FOB; number young pullets
and cockerels at fair price, FOB,
Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruitland. a
Fifty large broilers, 40c each. No,
chks. Mrs.. J. S. Berryhill, COCheDs

Nice fat friers, 25c Ib; 10 W. 1
MG 35 te Reds, 1% to 2 Ibs,
Johnie Cochran. (No address given.)

Twenty-five friers, mixed breeds,
25c Ib.; 50 hens, mixed Buff, L. Reds,
Buff Orpingtons, 18c Ib. Mrs. eo Pe
Sr., Homerville, Rt. 1, Box 37,

TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE

' Five young. Big Bone geese, $1 25.
ea. Ella Wilson, Fairmount, Rt. 1.

Five April hatch turkeys, 6 July
hatcn and 2 last years hens, $18.50
for lot. Exc. part for a good blooded
shoat, about 75 Ibs. Mrs. J.. Hal
Rucker, Elberton, Rt. 8.

Nine head Red Bourbon young
turkeys, 5 mos. old, good size to age,
$13 tor lot: $3; 35 pr. or exc. for
Ancona chicks. Mrss2 D-DD; Deen,
Baxley, Rt. 4.

Giant Bronze turkeys at bargain
prices. 5 hens, tom, 35 April hatch,
Write for information at once. Mr
W. C. Brinson, Wrightsville.

Fourteen early Spring hatch tur-
keys, large to age, $2 ach;. $27 for



Rt. 5.



jot; also 6 4-mos. old, $1. 50 each

$35 for entire lot. Mrs. Jno.
Watson, Graymont.

Seven White Pekin and Indian
Runner ducks and gander, $6, or ex
for eaual values in pullets. W.
Jones, East Point. 515 Pearl St.

Pure M. B. turkeys, 7 Ib. toms,.
Ib. hens, selected breeding stock.
Trio, $5; 3 4-lb. turkeys, $1 each; 2
mos. old, 50c each. C. D. Collins,
Cordele, Rt. 4, L

Two yr. old Bourdon Red toms,
about 30 lbs when fat. $5, or exc. for
nice young hens or pullets (chi
ens). L. R. Sheridan, Jefferson, R

Two Bronze turkey hens, yr.
and 3 April hatch; $7 cash for. lot.
Money order. Mrs. L. D. Kimbrel,
Baxley, Rt. 3. e

Ten head ducks, 3-1930 hatch,
1931, $9 for lot, FOB. Money | ord :
Mrs. J. S. Harper, Hortense, Rt. 2,
Box 20.. :

Black Mammoth Bronze turkeys,
April hatch: 2 yr. old hen for sale.
Make best prices. Mrs. C. B. Mattox,
Glennville, Rt. 2, care J. O. Harrell.

Wild Mallard stock, large, beauti-
ful. birds, $2 per duck. Lamar Wz
Jefferson, Albany, P.O. Box 178.

Five Indian Runner ducks, drake
and 4 now laying ducks, and 1 puc
dle duck, $5. Exc. for 5 White Pe-
kins. Dillard Martin, Cartersville.

White Muscovys, large, heavy
young stock. All healthy good layers.
Mrs. Jewel Godard, Milledgeville.
Rt. 1, Box 42.

Gander and 2 geese, pure White
Emdens. Large and fat, 12c lb. ea.,
full feathered. Not over half grown,
$2.50 ea. Mrs. Less Southern, Carte-
cay.

Pair true Spencer Turkeys, 4 mos.
old, $2.50 pr.. Mrs. W. R. Thompson,
Lawrenceville, Rt. 1.

Seven Mammoth White Pekins,
ducks and drakes, spring hatch. Now
grown, full. feathered and ready to
pick, $1 ea., cash with order. Mrs.
A. Jd. Collins, Demorest.

Six Toulouse geese, $12, or exe. for
corn or wheat, oats or any kind of
feed stuff for chickens. Mrs. Cc. A.
Black, The Rock, Rt. 1.

Eleven pure M. B. fivkeys: May
hatch, 4 hens and 7 toms, $2 4.,
s Mrs. Haily Moss, Dewy Ros
Rts 2:

Two geese and eedee 2 yrs old
75e ea., $2 for the trio here. Jack
ODell, Sulphur Springs.

Seven pure Black Muscovy drakes,
April hatch, wt. 6-7 Ibs., $2 ea.. FOB.
B. E. Anderson, Warm Springs.

Pure bred Big Bone Bronze tur-
keys, trio, 2 hens, 18 mos. old, young.

no-akin tom, $9, or exc. for hens or
pullets. Arthur Cowart, Summit, Rt.

Seven head White Pekin duc
$4.50, FOB. J. J. Sap 3





1 ursday, Septem

Poultry For Sale

pr. fine Bronze, about 18 mos. old,|

ell or exc. for pr. pure dred 8-12-
week-old pigs; also interested in pure
pred 8-12-week pullets. Wm. C.
Weeks, Harlem.

Three Indian Runner drakes, 75c
ea., or exc. for 3. Indian Runner
aa ks. Everett Roberson, West

een.
r. xearly grown pure bred dark
wo color Indian Runner ducks,
$1.50, FOB. Mrs. L. B. Taylor, Rydal.

; PIGEONS
welve head pigeons, Blue- and
te. Good size. 20c each. Exc. for
dried apples, free from worms,
Fach pay chgs. on what received.
rs. W. S. A. Beckworth, Baxley. |



High bred White Kings for saleat |.

ice. Utility and Show birds.
Ike Winship, Macon, Rt. 4.
ee hundred ninety White Kings,
a.; few young birds, full feath-
to 2 yr. stock. G. H. Wade, Coch-
. Rt. 1, at Cary. :
Plymouth Rock str. White Kings,
and banded, $2.50 pr. Priests,
Tumblers, Silveretts, African
wis, Yellow Carneaux and others,
pr. Exc. White Kings for fancy
ons. Herman Mize, Americus. _
hree pr. White Kings, $6, or trade
hens or produce. A. E. Skinner,
inta, 1307 Iverson St.
elve pr. Carneaux, $2 pr., mated
working. Owen D. Edge, Colum-

a i /
ated prs. Red Carneaux and ex-
White Kings, also youngsters for
le or exc. for R. I. Reds or B. R.
ts. Mrs. Geo. W. Simmons, Sa-
nah, LaRoche Ave. _ =e
een pr. thoroughbred White
-hard workers, for sale or exc.
ckens or for hams. Mrs. J.
ers, Macon, 771 First St.
rty-five or 40 pr. White Kings,
and working, $1 pr., or exc.
ng hens, any kind, if not too
pullets or friers. Mrs. Walter
, Ft. Valley. a
pure bred Feb. hatch Red
$1.50 ea., or exc. for shoats or

Mrs. R. S. Attaway, Matthews.

ie Donaldson Reds, March hatch.
ets and cockerels, $1 ea. H. A.
son, Martin, Rt. 2. .

onaldson str. Red cockerels from

e winning stock, April and May)

= 20 and $1 ea. L. G. Hicks,
U e. ~ z a :
en thoroughbred Red hens and

yr. to 11% yr. old., $10, FOB. |

R. T. Abernathy, Forsyth, Rt. 3.
ix fine R. I. Red cockerels, 3 mos.
direct from Hubbard Farms,
ew Hampshire, $1.50 ea., FOB. F. B.
cer, Hapeville, 3351 Stewart Ave.
ine pure bred Reds, Donaldson
Tt pultets, 2 cockrels, 3 mos. old,
or $5 for lot, FOB. Cash or

4

relve
wt. 2 Ibs each, 25c Ib. Mrs. T. G.
ling, Athens, Rt. 2. :
ty S. C. R. I. Red friers, av. wt.
, 25c Ib. Mrs. M. B. Scroggs,

t nice young R. I. Red hens
ooster, $10 for lot. Mrs. Milton
ner, Sylvester, Rt. 3.
en R. I. Red pullets, wt. 3% Ibs.,
-a., $7. for lot, Mrs.J. G. Mc-
ald, Colquitt. :
e bred dark Red Jan. pullets,
$1.50 ea.; cockerels, $3 ea.;
ice 10 pullet order; 30 Dunlap
Reds, 3 mos. old, 40c ea. Mrs. J.
kes, Cochran, Rt. 1. ~ Z
rty White King youngsters, 2 to
nos. old, 25c ea. FOB; 3 pr. French
ondaines, mated, working, $2.50 pr.
Wm. F. Watkins, Millen, Box

ut 15 pr. common pigeons, 25c
Claude Jones, Tifton, Rt. 6.

_ Poultry Wanted

BARRED ROCKS
ant 25 pure bred B. Rock pul-
"eb.-March hatch. Exc. 25 pure
ed heavy-laying yearling hens.
F. Cowart, Summit, Rt. 2.
ant B. Rock or R. I. Reds in exc.
-urple Hull peas or cabbage
ts, or will pay cash for chicks.
Ss. J. M. Deen, Coffee. :
Want 15 Jan. or Feb. hatch B. R.
ets, must be choice stock and
sonable price. N. C. Faulkner,



Exc. 25 Big Bone Bronze turkeys,
3 lbs. ea., for 25 B. R. or R. I.
March or April pullets. Mrs.

er 10, 1981

Poultry Wanted

Exchange pr. reg. Chinchillas for
8 pure bred B. R. April hatch pullets,
free from all disease. Mrs. Annie
Tanner, Wrens. :

GAMES- f
Exe. Dark Cornish pullets and
cockerel for White Cornish. C. A.
Ingram, Lilly.

Want 35, more or less, Blue Avin-
dale, commonly called Blue Game,
chickens, must be cheap for cash on
del., arch or April hatch. Mrs. W.
A. Smith, Rome, Rt. 2, Box 17.

LEGHORNS :

Want 50 W. L. April or first of May
hatch pullets, no culls. Write E. L.
Herndon, Franklin, RFD 1.
Exe. pullets, 3 mos. old, 6 Black
Game or 6 White Cornish, for 6
Brown Leghorns. Mrs. G. P. Um-
phrey, Douglasville, Rt. 5.

Want 350 W. L. April hatch pul-
lets. Will exc. value for same. H. H.
Cain, Tallapoosa.

Went 150 March or first of April
hatch W. L. pullets, Tancred or Bar-
ron str., no culls, state kest price.
Virgil M. Tatum, Atlanta, Rt. 5, De-
Foore Ave. ~ soe

Want 20 hens, yr. old, and 25 April |

hatch W. L. pullets; state str. and

}best cash price. Jno S. McCreight,

b



Herndon, Baxley, Rt. 4,

Dorchester.

Want 50 or more Leghorns or any
other pure bred pullets at 20c lb. in
exc. for-a good 8 yr. old mule. J. A.
Knowles, Jackson, Rt. 4.

_ BR. I. REDS
Exe. mated prs. Red Carneaux and
extra White Kings, also youngsters,
for R. I. Reds or B. R. pullets, or
sell pigeons. Mrs. Geo. W. Sirmons,
Savannah, LaRoche Ave. |
Want 6 nice R. I. Red or Golden

Buff Orp. pullets and 1 rooster. Make |

best price; 10 or 12 at right price.
Bessie Joiner, Louisville, Rt. 2.
Want 25 R.
pullets, Donaldson str.; will pay 60c
ea. Mrs. W. A. Fletcher, Tifton, Rt. 3.

- MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS |.
Want, 25 pullets, 3 to 6 mos. old:
exc. value for same. Chris King,
Forest Park.





PHEASANTS, PEAFOWLS WANTED

Exc. trio Ringnecks f:: Golden
pheasants; also exc. pheasants for
peafowls. David Jennings, Jr., Amer-
icus, P. O. Box 84. _

TURKEYS, GUINEAS, DUCKS, .
GEESE, ETC., WANTED
40 pure Berry str. Faun and
White Indian Runner ducks and



ir
tne

drakes for Mammoth White Pekin},

Cucks, ea. pay transportation. H. E.
Malaier, Chattahoochee.

PIGEONS
Exc. few White and Silver Kings,
l-rge, mated birds, for Racing Hom-
ers, pr. for pr. F. S. Taylor, Vidalia.

Live Steck For Sale

~ CATTLE FOR SALE
-. Twenty-eight head thrifty, smooth
young cattle. J. L. Sibley, Milledge-
ville.
Fourteen-month-old Jersey heifer,
bred to Jersey bull, $35, or exc. for





nice clean seed oats, free from pest..

Mrs. J. I. Abbott, Alma.

Reg. Guernsey heifer, 2 yrs. old,
with papers, bought from Howard
Coffins Sapelo plantation as a calf,

$100, or trade for oats, corn or hay.}

Prentis Neal, St. Simons. Island.

Nice grade Guernsey male calf, 3
mos. old, 15-16 pure, from 4-gal. cow,
$10 cash, FOB barn. J. F. Tyson, Ten-
nille. Sore

Ten good dairy cows, $35 ea. or $250
for the 10; 2 reg. Jerseys, $75 and
$50: reg. J. calf, $25. H. E. Ozburn,
Rutledge.

Five young Jersey cows, 3 to fresh-
e.. in Sept.; 2 reg. J. heifers from
A. & M. College, freshen this fall;-1
young reg. bull, cheap. M. Y. Arnold,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.

. i

I. Red 5-month-old

<

LLETIN:
Live Stock For Sale

Three-gal. Jersey cow, ent. to reg.,
freshen in few days, $50 at my barn.
Charlie Conner, Covington, Rt. 3.

Nineteen mos. old pure blooded
Jersey bull, muley-headed, good con-
dition, gentle. Write at. once- for
price. W. C. Sampler, Roswell.:

Cow fresh Feb., 3rd calf and heifer.

Cash or part cash, bal. poultry, at
barn. Mrs. J. H. Swinford, Adairs-
ville,- Rt, :2.
, Seven young -cows and heifers.
Grade Jerseys, bred from and to
registered sires. Also 8 P. C. pigs,
7 wks, old. Reasonable prices. P. R.
Sims, Rayle.

Three fresh Jersey cows, $100 for
the 3. All second calves. J. B. Miller,
Woodland.

Thoroughbred Holstein 4 mos. old
bull; grade Jersey and Holstein heif-
ers. Write for information. E. B.
Cade, Washington.

Five yr. old reg. Guernsey cow.
Freshen next month, 3 gal. Bred to
reg. bull, $175, FOB, or exc. for oats
del. to me. Prentiss Neal, St. Simon
Island.

Guernsey and Holstein cross bull
calf, 14 wks. old, $10; or exc. for 2
shoats, R. H. Hambrick, Lavonia.
Guernsey heifer, 15 wks. old, fil
stock but not reg., $25, FOB, crated.
W. T. Adams, Lavonia, Box 381.

One % Elack Angus 2-year-old
bull, 35, FOB. W. S. McMichael,
Buena Vista.

Five-year-old Sweet Raleigh and
Tycoon str. Jersey bull, quiet, easy
to handle, $100, FOB. J. B. Bussey,
T2lbottson, Rt. 1, Box 22.

Pure bred, not reg. Jersey heifer,
cream-color, 11 mos. old, $25, or erc.
for 25 pullets, March-April hatch,
no Leghorns. Mrs. H. B. Ford, La-
vonia. :

Fifty head beef cattle, 20 head
steers, 30 head heifers and cows. A. J.
Dixon, Toombsboro, Rt. 3.
Guernsey-Jersey. cows for sale at
my farm, 4 miles east of Cobbtown,
in Tattnall County. L. M. Kennedy,
-Collins. ;

Pure reg. Jersey heifers, yr. old,
and 2 smaller calves, 1 mo. old, cheap
sd fo J. T. Owens, Covington,

Good Jersey cow due to freshen in
30 days, $50. Can be seen at B. L.
Kerseys farm, Brunswick. Owner,
Alfred Harris, St. Simons Island,
Y Guernsey Dairy Farm.

Fine, small Jersey cow, 2% yrs.
old,,. first calf, good milker and
gentle, $60; Jersey heifer, freshen in
fall, $100 for both. M. Cox, Way-
cross, Rt. 5. 2

One Guinea cow
$50 at my barn.
White Oak.

Short Horn Jersey milch cow, 3
yrs. old, $75. D. F. Jackson, Nicholls.

Brown Swiss cattle: Bull, 2 cows,
reg. accredited herd. Prices reason-
able. Tom Bellhouse, Alto, %Green
Hills Orchard.

Pure bred Jersey male cow, wt.
about 800 Ibs., $35. R. C. Couch,
Turin.

Fine 8 mo. old Jersey heifer for
sale or exc. for shoat or pullets. J.
Justus, Hapeville. ~ =

Four yr. old Jersey bull, ent. to
reg.:, wt. 900 lbs. Condition perfect,
7 = my barn. E. J. Walton, Amity,
Rb :

Three mos. old heifer calf, cream
rae FOB. Viola Robinson, Waco,
RE. 2. /

Milch cow, % Jersey, 3rd calf mo.
old. Good qualities. About 3. gal.
milk, 144 Ib. butter. Sacrifice $45
cash; my house. C. T. Jackson,
Matthews, Rt. 1, Box 79.

One male heast, fat, 34 Jersey, 15
mos. old; $15 at lot. E. B. Warren,
Toombsboro, Rt. 2.

' Jersey and Holstein cross 15 mos.
old bull. Mother 5 gal. milk, 2 lbs.
butter, $16 at barn. G. C. Colbert,
Point Peter.

Two 4 mos. old calves, 1 Jersey

and heifer calf,
John S. Bruce,



and other Jersey and Guernsey cross.
Mrs. Jos. N. Shirley, Lavonia.



Page Three.

oR

Live Stock For Sale

Good, gentle milch cow, Grade

Jersey, calf 2 mos. old, 2% gal. day.
Extra good: for butter.
Charlie Prather, Ranger.

Six mos. old large thrifty, fawn

color Jersey bull. Sub. to reg. Fine
breeding. $25 FOB. Reg. papers ex-
tra; also Grade Jersey cows and.
heifers.
RG 2s

Now time to get foundation stock

in the Souths coming beef breed.

Polled Herefords, sev. young heifers _

and mature bull offer now. Perry
Lunsford, Covington.

Reg. Jersey bull, 27 mos. old, No.
324704. Sell for cash, or exc. for any= _

thing can use of equal values. A. B.
Moorhead, Bowersville.
Choice Springers, second and third

J. Carl Doughtry, Metter,

$35 at barn,

calving. Reg. bull 3 yrs. old for sale.

J. J. Harris, Pelham.

Jersey bull calf of extraordinary

breeding, Sired by Lotharios Sybill
Majesty No. 309957; dam, Lotharios

Foxy Madge No. 856035. $15, exc. for
10 bu Abruzzi rye, del. M. L. Duggan. .
Clayton.

~

Ten head Jersey and Guernsey Es

heifers, sub. to reg. Soon willfreshen.

$75 per head. W. J. Morgan, Still-
more, Rt. 1. ae

Fine Jersey milch cow with young
(third) calf; about 2% gal. per day.
$50 cash, FOB at farm near Black~
shear. J. O. Ward, Blackshear.

Reg. Jersey heifer, bred reg. J.
male. Oxford and Sultan lines.-Hugh
Milner, Barnesville.

Five mos. old Guernsey bull calf,
ent. to reg.; 3 heifer calves, half
breed. All reasonable. Donalds
Rancho, Americus. : s

Sev. head young grade Guernse
heifers and steers, from reg. Sta
Fair winning sire. Priced right. Exc.
for seed rye. Del. from farm at
Thomson, Ga.,
Palmer, S. C. .

HOGS FOR SALE
B. B. Guinea hogs, African str., all.
black in color, wt. 30 to 75 Ibs., $6 to
$12 ea. L. B. Toler, Glenwood, Rt. 3, |
Box 98. .

Nice S. P. C. pigs, reg. stock, for |

sale. C. R. Morgan, Americus.

S. P. C. pigs, 40-50 lbs., 8 wks. old,

$10 ea. FOB. here, reg. in. buyers
name. T. R. Duggan, Warthen.

Three or 4 fine O. I. C. full blood

brood sows with 30 or 40 fine pigs,

M. 8B. Tucker, -

eve

\

6 wks. old. Sell either or both cheap. |

R. C. Roberts, Jefferson. pm
Reg. Duroc-male for sale. Retiring
from hog _ business.

Sacrifice for

<
)
<

$17.50; also pure bred Duroc sows, _

sub. to reg., 8c Ib.
Barnesville.

Ten pigs, 8 wks. old, $30. Cannot
ship. L. F. Moreland, Leesburg.

Extra fine reg. S. P. C. male and ~

gilt, 4% mos. old. Sire and dam, Fair

winners. Papers in buyers name. On

my farm, Thomson, Ga. M. B. Tuck=

Pure bred big bone Black P. C.
2-year-old sow, reg., wt. around 200

er, Palmer, S. C., _

J. OG. Collier, 2

lbs. now, 500 Ibs. when fat, rood cond.

and large litters, $16, FOB. Walter |

Cowart, Summit, Rt. 2.
P. C. pigs, 8 wks. old, shoats, 60 to
100 Ibs., $12 to $16 pr.; 175-lb. gilt,
big type, black. Sell or exe. R. Ei
Fowler, Smyrna, Rt. 2,
stop.

Log Cabin

Duroc-Jersey pigs, 3 mos. old, wt. .
35 or 40 lbs., reg. in buyers name,

$8.50 ea. or 2 for $16. L. M. Ken-
nedy, Collins.

Seven-month-old Duroc J. boar,
very fine individual, wt. about 150
Ibs., last one of a litter of 19 pigs,
reg. in buyers name, $20. J.C. Lums-

den, Talbotton. i

Pure bred Big Bone, P. C. gilt, 5

mos. old, thrifty and good cond., $12.

Riley Couch, Turin.
Six little bone P. C. pigs, wt. about

45 Ibs., 9. wks. old, $9 pr. J. A. Jones,

Glenn, Rt. 2.

Young P. C._boar,, just in his
prime, $50. Easily worth twice the
amount. C. F. Owens, Albany.



Home Canned Products.



2

ik Home Canned Producta Week This Fall

Mrs. Lawrence Mitchell will attempt to interest the city housewives, grocerymen and my
markets of the state in co-operating in a great advertising and sales campaign of Georgia

In the meantime we suggest that the farmers wives give special attention to the quan- Ee -
tity and quality of their canned products this year; also suggest that.as soon as possible
they get in direct.touch with the city consumers.



| tions appear from time to time






Page Four



Georgia
Market Bulletin

Published Weekly by the
BUREAU OF MARKETS
Arthur D. Jones, Director

Department of
Agriculture

Commissioner







Eugene Talmadge,
THURSDAY, SEPT. 10, 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-
ment 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--

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-
tion does not destroy the meaning
of the netice. When notices can
not be cut down they will be re-
turned to the writer for correction.



Limited space will not permit in-
_sertion of unimportant notices.
Under legislative act the Market
Bulletin does not assume any re-
sponsibility for any notice appear-
ing in the Bulletin or transaction
resulting therefrom.







THE SENATE INVESTIGATION
AND THE ANSWER

Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 2, 1931.

Hon. Eugene Talmadge,
Commissioner of Agriculture,
State of Georgia,

Atlanta, Georgia.

Dear Sir:

Under and by virtue of a resolu-
tion adopted by the Senate at the
recent session of our General Assem-
bly demand is hereby made for the
immediate coverage into the State
Treasury of the sum of $14,136.68,
together with the further sum of
$1,600, paid to Mr. John A. Peterson
_ as a clerk in the Department of Ag-
-riculture at the rate of $50 per month
since December 1, 1928.

The resolution to which reference
is made above contains the following
provision, to-wit: :

Therefore, be it resolved by the
Senate, that his Excellency, the Gov-
ernor, be and he is hereby requested

to have instituted in the name of the

state, legal proceedings to recover
from the said Eugene Talmadge and
his bondsmen the said monies .. .
Please advise compliance with the

foregoing demand.

Very respectfully yours,

: T..R. GRESS,
Assistant Attorney General.

Atlanta, Ga:, Sept. 2, 1931. |
Hon. T. R. Gress,
_ Assistant Attorney General,
State Capitol,
Atlarita, Georgia.
My Dear Mr. Gress:

Your communication of the 2nd,
- requesting me to cover into the State
Treasury the sum of $14,136.68 and
the further sum of $1,600 paid to
_John A. Peterson as clerk in the De-
partment of Agriculture at the rate
of $50 per month since December 1,
1928, received.

I note that this request is pred-
icated on a resolution from the Sen-
ate. You quote from the Senate the
following: Therefore be it resolved
by the Senate, that his Excellency,
the Governor, be and he is hereby
- requested to have instituted in the



MARKET BULLETIN. .

name of the state, legal proceedings
to recover from the said Eugene Tal-
madge and his bondsmen the said
monies. :

In answer to the above request I
wish to state the following: The sum
of $14,136.68 that you requested to
be covered into the treasury was ex-
pended for the following purposes:
$3,614.85 was expended as the usual
monthly salaries and expenses of the
employes of the Bureau of Markets.
The other sum of $10,521.83 was ex-
pended for covering the loss that the
Bureau of Markets sustained in ship-
ping 82 carloads of hogs out of the
State of Georgia.

In January and February of 1930
the local packers in Georgia were
bidding 3 cents under the Chicago
quotations on hogs. We felt that
they were taking advantage of the
farmers by making these low bids.
We further knew that the farmers of
Georgia would put their hogs on the
markets during the months of Feb-
ruary and March, or as soon as the
fields were eaten out.

Knowing that this emergency ex-
isted, Mr. A. D. Jones, the director
of the Bureau of Markets; Mr. Max
L. McRae, field representative for
the Bureau of Markets, and myself
held several consultations. on the
matter. We very carefully consulted
the law creating the Bureau of Mar-
kets. After looking over the law, we
came to the opinion that we had the
legal right to expend part of the ap-
propriation made to the Bureau of
Markets to alleviate the situation.
We came to the further opinion that
the manner in which it: was expended
rested solely on the discretion of the
director of the Bureau of Markets,
by the approval of the Commissioner
of Agriculture.

After we construed the law as
stated above, Mr. Jones was requested
to consult the Attorney Generals of-
fice to see if we had construed the
law properly. Mr. A. D. Jones re-
ported to me that the Attorney Gen-
erals office agreed in our interpreta-
tion of the law.

The loss of $10,521.83 forced the
packers of Georgia to raise their
bids 134 cents per pound. This ac-
tion benefited the hog producers of
Georgia several hundred thousand
dollars. The local packers have not

since that time allowed their bids to}

go as low as 2 cents under Chicago
quotations.
The director of the Bureau of Mar-

kets and myself felt that we did the |:

only practical thing to stabilize the
price of hogs in Georgia and prevent
the packers from combining and
getting the hogs below market prices.

After our action in these matters,
the Attorney Generals office was

again consulted when the Governor

failed to honor the requisition, and
on the 28th day of March, 1930, we
received from the Attorney Generals
office a copy of the letter to his Ex-
cellency, Governor L. G. Hardman.
This letter to Governor L. G. Hard-
man cited the law governing expendi-
tures in the Bureau of Markets and
stated to the Governor that in the
opinion of the Attorney General the
expenses were legal, and the requisi-
tion should be signed.

In regard to the request for the
return of $1,600 paid to John A.
Peterson, a clerk in the Department

of Agriculture, at the rate of $50

per month since December 1, 1928,
I wish to make this statement: This
request is asking me to return a por-
tion of the salary of an employe of
the Department of Agriculture, who
happens to be my step-son. If any
authority has the right to request
that I returiu this portion sf John A.
Petersons salary, then they have the
right to request that I return por-
tions of every employes salary in the
Department of Agriculture.

Of course, I maintain that no au-
thority except the Commissioner of
Agriculture has any discretion as to
the salaries of the clerks in the De-
partment of Agriculture.

I call your special attention to the
act creating the Bureau of Markets,
Section 3, paragraph -(h), which
reads as follows: Whenever it shall
appear that any agricultural products
are liable to spoil or waste or de-
preciate in value for lack of ready
market, take such steps as may be
deemed advisable to benefit the pro-
ducers and consumers thereof and
to prevent waste.

I call your further attention to
Section 8 of the act creating the
Bureau of Markets, which by indi-

rection- grants the authority to the

\
AE





employes of the Bureau of Markets to
buy and exchange farm products for
the benefit of the farmers of the
state.

I call your further attention to the
last senten 2 of Section 3, paragraph
(g), of the act creating the Bureau
of Markets, which specifies that the
only limitation placed on the activi-
ties of the Bureau of Markets force
in marketing the Georgia crops is
not to cast any liability against the
state, the Department of Agricul-
ture or the Bureau of Markets be-
yond the appropriation provided for
the Bureau of Markets.

I wish to call your attention to the
fact that in the year 1930 the Bureau
of Markets did not exceed its appro-
priation. I wish to call your atten-
tion further to the fact that with
the requisition of $14,136.68 paid,
there is still a balance of the appro-
rriation for 1930 left to the credit
of the Bureau of Markets. __

I wish to further call your atten-
tion to the Constitution of the State,
which states that the _ legislative,
executive and judicial branches of
the government shall forever remain
separate, distinct and inviolate.

If it is bad policy for any depart-
mot of the State Government to
have authority. to buy and sell farm
products, then the law should be
changed and the officials who follow
the law should not: be held liable or
criticized. ees

I wish to: further call your. atten-
tion to Section 4, paragraph 6, of
the Code of Georgia, which states
that. a. substantial compliance with
the law as to officials is deemed
sufficient. If the act creating the
Bureau of Markets gave me the au-
thority to expend part of its appro-
priation stabilizing the hog market
of Georgia, the actions of the Bureau
of Markets and the Department of
Agriculture have been a substantial
compliance with the law.

With best regards, I am,

Yours sincerely,

EUGENE TALMADGE,
Commissioner of Agriculture.

Live Stock For Sale

Twenty shoats, P. C. and big bone
Guinea, wt. 45 to 60 lbs., $3.50 ea. for
lot, FOB, or will wt. for 7c lb. J. L.
Champion, Sandersville.

Eight nice pigs, 3 mos. old the 13



\

September, $3 each or $22 for lot at

my barn. Mrs. A. Rowe, Greenville,
Rb. 1.

4 mos. old, never been stunted, $5
ea. Dudley Spiers, Lincolnton, Rt. 2.

Sixty P. C. boar pigs, $5 ea., for
quick sale. Money order. W. B. Cadle,
Mt. Vernon.

Nine nice porkers, wt. about 1500
Ibs., 634c lb. at my barn; also 2 good
brood sows and 6 head of cattle
cheap. M. J. Patterson, Cordele,
Rt. B.

Five thoroughbred Duroc pigs,
thrifty, stay-fat kind,.8 wks. old, $4
ea. O. W. Smallwood, Mitchell.

P. C. and QGuiena, cross _ sow,
farrow last Sept.; 5 P. C. shoats, 3
mos. old, from reg. stock, 2 gilds, 3
males, $5. ea. Mrs. C. O. Sikes. Syl-
vester.

Three-month-old Duroc Jersey pigs,
immune for life. Reg. in buyers
name. Reasonable price. L. M.
Kennedy, Collins.

Three Essex males and 8 gilts, due
to reg. Gilts farrow on or about No-
vember 4. Males ready for service,
$25 pr., $60 for lot. S. W. Griffin,
Cecil, Box. 17.

Seven wks. old Hampshire pigs of
good stock for sale. W. H. Jones,
East Point, 515 Pearl St.

Duroc male hog, wt. about 170 lbs.,
10c lb. FOB. J. E. Hawes, Thomson.

Reg. Duroc J. gilts and males, 5%
mos. old, 75 and 100 lbs. Cherry red
and from excellent stock. J. Carl
Daughtry, Metter, Rt. 2.

Pure bred O. I. C. 8 wks. old pigs,
ped. free, wt. 40 to 50 Ibs. each, $7.50
cue $12.50 pr. E. C. Heaton, Hart-
well,

Chester White, O. I. C. pigs, $8 ea.:
prs. for breeding, $15. Del., treated
and ped. furnished. J. J. Harris,
Pelham.

Sev. P. C. pigs, about 2 mos. eld,
$5 each, or exc. for Jersey heifer
calves, or W. L. hens. Mrs. Will
Trimble, Adairsville.

_Six Duroc and Hampshire mixed,
pigs, 34% mos. old, $4 each; $22 for
lot. Leo Akins, Graymont, Rt. 1,
Box 57.

Feeder shoats, 40 to 80 lbs. Any
quantity, 74%c Ib. L. M. Felton,
Marshaliville.

Five pure bred Duroc Jersey pigs,



Thursday, September 10, 1931 *

Live Steck For Sale

Little B. B. Guinea pigs, $15 pr
I. G. Thompson, Summit. SCs

Reg. big bone Black Essex. Sat,
guar. W. J. Bargeron, Sardis.

S. P. C. 14 mos. old male, ready
for service, $20; 3 gilts, 4 mos. old,
$6 each. Good blood lines. Exc. for
field seeds, oats, wheat. Mrs. J. B.
Harris, Cordele, Rt. B.

HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE
Extra good bay horse mule, 9 yrs.
old, $125; horse, 1100 ibs., $65. Exc.
for hogs, wt. around 150 Ibs. at 7c
Ib., that have been treated. L. O.
Moon, Comer. ee
Good plug mule, sound and fat
for sale or exc. for hogs, heifer, Red
or B. R. pullets. W. E. Hall, Norris-
town, Rt. 1. #
ood 8 yr. old mare, wt. about 800
Ibs., work anywhere. Excellent for
saddle and buggy, $50. J. M. Cole,



-Reno. :

Good mare mule, 8 yrs. old, wt M
Ibs., work to anything. Sell or exc.

for good working mare and colt not
over 8 yrs. old, C. M. Christian, Rich-

land, Rt. 3.

Two good work mules, sound and
healthy, wt. around 1,000 Ibs. ea., 12
yrs. old, quick and gentle, $50 ea. at
my barn; exc. for cows. Mrs. H. B.
Ford, Lavonia. ra 2

Extra good small 8-year-old: mule

for sale or exc. for pullets or 20c lb..

(Name not given), Jackson.

Fine Percheron mare,
blemish, work to anything, fat, 12 yrs.
old. Sell or exc. for 1 M Ibs. good
thrifty hogs. Thos. Jeffrson, Nash-
ville, Rt. 3. ; 8 ee

Mare mule, about 850 lIbs., $45, or
exc. for hogs. N. E. McGinty, Nor-_

wood. ees : : , ie
Three high bred Shetland pony >

eolts, year-old, 2 mares and 1 Stal-

lion, $30 ea., FOB. Sell 1 or all. W.S.
McMichael, Buena Vista. oe.

Choice young mare about 8 yrs.
old, wt. about 1 M. lbs., work any-
where. Healthy. $150, cost $260 a
year ago. R. E. Canady, Stillmore.

One horse, 1100 lbs., gentle, work

anywhere; $60; horse, 900 lbs. sound
and gentle, work anywhere, $25.

XC.
for fresh milch cow. W. M. Coleman, _
Cobbtown, Rt. 1.

SHEEP AND GOATS FOR SALE
Thirty-five or. 40 head of gentle
sheep, lambs, bucks, $2.50 per head
for quick sale. W. J. Weeks, Norman
Park Rtn l= :
Southdowns. Choice young ram
and 2.ewes (worth $15 each), for $36
crated FOB, or $33 at farm. Sired
by reg. ram, out of best grade ewes...
K. D. Sanders, Eatonton, Rt. 2.
Two Nubian-Toggenburg does, ex-
ceptionally good milkers. Both bred
to reg. Nubian buck; pr. buck kids |
from 4%. qt. doe, reg. sire. Edwin |
Simpson, Atlanta, 676 Tifton St.NW. |
Extra fine pure bred Shropshire
buck lambs ready for service; also
1 2-yr. old buck. W. -P. .Baum=)
gardener, Gardners. ae

RABBITS FOR SALE.
White Flemish Giants, 8 mos., 11
Ibs., $5.50 pr.; 4 mos., 7 Ibs., $3.50 pr.

Gold cert. Chinchillas, 4 mos., 6%





'Ibs., $3.50 pr. H.-A. Stahl, Valdosta.

Ped. Chinchilla and N. Z. Whites.
Sell or exc. for R. I. Red broiiers
and friers, Brown Turkey Fig and
other var. fruit trees. J. B. LaFitte,
Decatur, Rt. 1. nee

Eleven N. Z. White does, 7 mos. |

old, $1.25 each; 12 does, 3 mos. old,

_ each. Mrs. O. B. Lambert, Grant-
ville.

Chinchillas, ped. and second direct
from Stahls; sell or exc. for rabbit
feed: Bill Gibson, Griffin, 319 E.
College St. oe

Two fine N. Z. White does, reg.,
$4.50 ea. Exc. for 8 bu. corn, del.

Also have fine stock Chinchillas and _
| Whites, $1.25 ea., ped. Mrs. Annie

Tanner, Wrens. oS
N. Z. Whites, also Chinchillas, good
stock, no culls, sell cheap or exc. for

common laying hens, Leghorns or

Barred Rocks preferred. W. Harri- |
son, Fitzgerald. | ee

Stahls N. Z. Whites from reg.
stock, healthy, ped., 5 to 6 mos. old,
oS $1.60, does $1.80, $2.50 pr.;
9 to 11 mos. old, bucks, $2.50. does
$3, $5 pr. Harold Smith, Baxley.
Ped. Junior Chinchillas and N. Z.
whites,
each; mature stock, $2 each.
Gilmore, Fairburn.

Eighteen mos. old N. Z. white does,
proven breeders, $1 each; reg. Chin-
chilla doe, $2; Flemish Giant does,
$2 each. Herman Mize, Americus.

Jee

without

75c each; Silver Fox, $1

Thursday, September 10, 1931

Live Stock For Sale

Chinchilla doe and 7 young, 2 mos:
a. $4 for lot. Exc. for Jap Silkies,
or Buff Cochin bantams, or White
Pekin or Muscovy ducks. Dillard
Munford, Cartersville.

Twelve or 15 nice, young meat
rabbits, wt. 3% to 5% Ibs, at market
price. Byrd Jones, Morris Station.
Best quality Stahls Gold Cert.
-Chinchillas, per pr., does bred, $3.50;
few younger ones, also. H. R.
Gaskins, Americus.

Erminerex (Whiterex) rabbits,
junior and senior stock; bargains. H.
-H. McDavid, Thomasville.

Thirteen fine N. Z. Whites, 9 wks.
old. Raised from fine stock, 75c ea.,
$1.50 pr. Walter Lee, Rockmart.

Ped. Chinchillas, Wh Whites,
Reds, Himalayans and Silver Marten

bbits. Seniors, $3.75 each; juniors,

e each. A. W. Melton, "Thomas-

Chinchillas and N. Z. rabbits, sell

xr exc. pr. Chinchilla or trio N. Z.

or 15 Ancona, White or Brown L.,

- Minorca March pullets. Rebecca
Hunt, Tallapoosa.

Live Stock Wanted

CATTLE WANTED



Want .an_ Aberdeen-Angus_ bull |

calf or yearling. Give age, descrip-
tion and best price, FOB. Jno. S.
McCreight, Dorchester.

Want small Jersey heifer cheap.
xc. equal value for same. Mrs. G. S.
Posey, East Point, 509 Taylor Ave.

_ Exchange Buff Orp., April Heese
or a

corn in part payment. Write. Mrs, J.
W. McGowan, Graymont.

- Want at once 1 .young milch cow,
$35 cash. Carl F. Hutcheson, Atlanta,
223 Trust Co. Ga. Bldg. *Phone. Wal-
e nit 5353.

_. Exchange car load good new corn

for any kind of feeder yearlings, or

hogs or good stock. J. C. DeVane,
del.

Exchange baby chicks for full
blood Jersey or Guernsey heifer with
ist-2nd calf. Gentle, easy to milk, 3
or 4 gal., lb. butter per day. Mrs. L.
S. Andrews, Ochlochnee.

a HOGS WANTED

Exchange Keifer pears, 75c bu. for
shoats or anything can use. Mrs. R.
s. Attaway, Matthews.

Exchange 2 fat calves, 2 and 4
mos. old for pigs. Prefer Big Bone

i ee Ezzell, Temple,

Want 20-30 ee of hogs to fatten
-on halves. Plenty of potatoes, pea-
nuts, beans and corn run. G. E. Stan-*
ley, Lyons, Rt: 1.

- Want 10-12 hogs already treated,
wt. about 150 Ibs. gross for 7c lb.
Exc. good mule and horse. L. O.
Moon, Comer.

Exchange pigs for a P. Cc. male, or
what good stock have you?- Must be
reasonable. W. H. Jones, East Point,
515 Pearl St.

-7ant to exe. good value for cows
or hogs. Write for full information.
E. Dickens, Soperton. -

Exc. trio Fancy Giant Black Mi-
norcas for male thoroughbred Duroc

ersey ready for service. O. H.
Wright, Atlanta, 515 Peters Bldg.

HORSES AND MULES WANTED
Want pony,, must be cheap for
-eash. State what you have, etc.
Lamar Blalock, Nicholls.

Want 8 or 10 shoats to. fatten on.
halves. Ed Carswell, Tifton, Rt. 2.

- Want to rent 2 or 3 head of good
mules for a while, to be used. in sow-
ing fall grain, etc.; ; feed and pay
cash for their rent. D. P. Martin,
Cobbtown:

Want Shetland pony,. spotted in
color, 4 to 6 yrs. old, wt. 5 to 600 lbs.,
with good eyes, gentle and no bad
habits. Cheap for cash. Prefer mare.

Mrs. R. T. Zorn, Lyons, Rt. 3.

; SHEEP AND GOATS
Exc. 2 gals. syrup for 1 goat, prefer
red butt-headed, 2 billies, 1 medium
age and a young one. W. E. Dur-
ae Ashburn, Rt. 2.

Eggs Wanted

< Want 3 doz. guinea eggs, O. K. for
hatching, any breed, will pay 50c
cash; send COD, at once. Mrs. John
Burns, Jesup, Rt. 2.

Want best prices on trea. heavy
breed setting eggs, incubator lots,











from 2 doz. up, from mature stock.
Mrs a E. Sikes, Cochran, Rt. 1.

fe For Sale

Donaldson str. S. C. R. I. Red eggs,
65c per 15. Crates ret.. Mrs. J. F.
Trawick, Tennille, Rt. 1. :

B. R. eggs, Thompson prize win-
ners, all blood-tested for BWD, $1
per 15. Mrs. Milton Sumner, Syl-
vester, Rt. 3.

Donald. on eggs from closely culled
flock of rich, dark Reds, $1.10 per
153. $2): per:.30::. $5..C. Mrs." H.- G.
Brown, Stone Mountain, Riv:

Eggs from. prize winning Black
Minorcas, $2 per 15. M. H. Cribb,
Augusta, 416 Fenwick St.

Eggs from Thompson Imp. a
lets, 75c per-15 del.; cash. Mrs. C.
Wilbanks, Commerce, Rt. 5.

Thompson Ringlet B. R. eggs. ist

~| pen, $1 per 15; $1.70 for 30; 2nd pen,

85c for 15; $1.40 for 30, del. Cartons
ret. Mrs. J. E. Steadam, Bainbridge.

Pure bred Golden Buff Orp. eggs.
Byers str. 65c per 15. Fresh, fertile,
prepaic insured. No chks. J. H:
Lloyd, Milan, Rt. 3.

Barred Rock eggs, Thompson str.
prize winners, bloodtested; $1 per 15.
Mrs. Milton Sumner, Sylvester, Rt. 3.

J. B. Giant eggs, 75c per 15. Exc.
for large breed baby chicks -by 8
September. Mrs. J. E. Passe, Madi-

son.

Baby Chicks For Sale
~Bloodtested chicks, Barred, White
Rocks, Reds, Wyandottes, $8.50 C;



Heavy Asst, $7.75. Prepaid live del.

Lots less than 100, add 1c per chick;
custom hatching, 3c. R. H. Fechtel,
Waycross.

Donaldson Red chicks from dark

red quality stock, $12 C del. Order.
*|in advance. Mrs. H. G. Brown, Stone
| Mountain, Rt. 1. : a

Blood-tested Leghorns, Anconas,
Reds, Rocks, live del. guar.; also im-
ported Barron W. L. chicks and pul-
lets; custom hatching; Mammoth
Buckeyes, 3c an egg. S. Brown, At-
lanta, 316 Whitehall.

High powered baby chicks, Rocks,

Reds, $10; White and Brown Leg-
horns, $8 C del. .100 per cent live
del. guar. D. F. Thomas, Odum.
High grade, blood-tested chicks,
Barred and White Rocks, Reds, $10
C; heavy mixed, $9. Postpaid. Live
del. W. S. Allen, Albany, Box 471.
Thirty 2 wks. old chicks, 10 each;
mother hen, $1. Pure bred Thompson

str. Barred Rocks, FOB. Mrs. Clinton |-

Bryan, Charing, Rt. 1.

A quality chicks: heavy breeds,
$9.25: rights, $8.25; AA quality,
heavies, $12:25: lights, $10.25. Order
at once as chicks are scarce. H. R.
Gaskins, Americus. -

Blood-tested Leghorns, Anconas,
Reds and Rocks. Live del. guar. Also
imported Barron White L. chicks and
pullets: custom hatching Mondays in

ammoth Buckeye, 3c egg. S. Brown,

Atlanta, 316 Whitehall.

Baby Chicks Wanted

Want 200 baby chicks to raise on
halves to 8 wks. old, B. Leghorns pre-
ferred, party to furnish postage. Mrs.
G. P. Jennings, Andersonville.

Want 1 or 200 W. L. to raise on



| halves to 8 wks. by last of Sept., ea.

pay postage. Mrs. Edward Shiver,
Cairo.

Want 150 baby chicks, heavy breed,
mixed, or any heavy breed. State cash
price, kind, etc., in first letter. Frank
Harris, Baxley.

Want 200 thoroughbred baby
chicks to raise on halves to 8-10 wks.
old, any large breed. Mrs. Mary
Jankins, Pelham, Rt. 2.

Want 1 to 500 baby chicks, any
breed, to raise on halves. to 10 wks.
old. Mrs. J. E. Stewart, Acworth.

Want 200 baby chicks to raise to 8

wks. old on 50-50 basis, any breed |-

except Games and bantams. Mrs. V.
C. Ray, Kensington.

Exc, 1 grown N. Z. rabbit doe for
25 baby chicks, day old. Rebecca
Hunt, Tallapoosa.

Want 100 R. I. Reds to raise on
halves to 8 wks., I furnish feed, party
to pay dat "Mrs. H. L. Holloway,
Canon, Rt.

Want 100 fe 500 Cornish or R. I.
Reds to raise to 12 wks. old on
halves. W. E. Dickens, Soperton.

Want 500 baby chicks to raise on
halves to 8-10 wks. old, any good
kind. Write first. Harley Sikes, Col-
lins, Rt. 1.

Want 100 baby chicks to raise on
halves to 8 wks. old, any large breed,
B. R., Giants, Reds or Cornish. Mrs.
B. L. Sirmans, Valdosta, Rt. 5. -

Want some baby chicks to raise to
12 wks. old on halves. Mrs. Bedia
Smith, Cochran, Rt. 3.

i

to 8 wks.,

country boy,

vantages to right party.

all large enough to work.'Ref. D. M



_, Macon, Rt. 3.

Baby Chicks Wanted

Want 50 or 75 R. I. Reds or B.
Rocks to raise on halves to 8 wks.
old, by Sept. 15, pay postage. Mrs.
W.E. Hal, Norristown, Rt. 1.

Want 50 R. I. Reds to raise on
halves to 8 wks., to be del..to me not
later than Sept. 12. Mrs. M. W.
Whitfield, Commerce, Rt. 3. ~

Want 300 heavy breed chicks to
raise to 8 wks. on halves. Mrs. J. E.
Sikes, Cochran, Rt. 1.

Trade 25 lbs. nice sun-dried peach-
es for 50 baby chicks, any large breed,
Barred Rocks preferred. Mrs. W. E.
Mills, Garfield.

Want 350 chicks to raise on halves
Golden Buff Orp., Reds
Or Bi RR, preferred, at once: Mrs.
Henry Fos.ert, Baxley.

Farm Help Wanted

Want woman, 39 to 60 yrs. old, to



live in farm home and raise poultry,

hogs, etc., on halves. I furnish every-
thing. A..P. Brown, Palmetto, Rt. 2.
_ Want some good working family
with good force to gather crop and
do other regular farm work. 2 miles
NW Jefferson. R. C. Roberts, Jef-
ferson.

Want strong, healthy, single white
man, exp. in farming, 30-45 yrs. old
not afraid of hard work. Give board,
laundry and reasonable wage. C. C.
McDaniel, Winder, Rt. 4.

Want at onc woman of good
character to look after garden, chick-
ens, flowers, etc., and live as one of
family, with small salary. W. T.
Thornton, Washington, Rt. 3. .

Want middle-aged settled woman
to help me with.my poultry. Write
for full particulars. Mrs. F, R. Vin-
cent, Fruitland.

Want healthy, industrious orphan
15 to 18 yrs., good
habits, to live with aged couple on
farm; heln with gen. work. Ad-

"Esa,
Blanton, Lake Park.

Want a good colored:man to do
gen. farm work. One that knows how
to. farm in anything. J. H. Milant,
Lawrenceville, Rt. 3.

Want widow to help. with cow,
garden, milk and butter, etc. Reason-
able wages to right party. Must not
be more than 2 in family. Mrs. W. M.
Watkins, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.

Want middle aged, unincumbered
white woman. Widow preferred, for
light farm work. Good, permanent
home and salary to right party. S. A,
Lozey, Carnesville, Rt. 3.

Want to hear from a good. reliable
man for 2 or 5-horse*crop for 1932.
Half of crop and will furnish $7.50 to
the plow in cash per mo. Answer at
once. Dan Ridley, Meigs.

Positions Wanted

Young iady desires place with eld-
erly couple looking after poultry and
other light work, ref. exc. Miss Mil-
dred Willoughby, Washington, Rt. 3.

Boy, 16 yrs. old, wants place on
farm doing any kind of work, $15
mo. and board, etc.; no bad habits.
Fred Hyder, Dunwoody, RFD 1,
Spalding Drive.

- Want 1-horse truck farm for 1932
on 50-50 basis, 10 years exp., within
12 mi. Macon or Columbus. Cee 185
Spencer, Columbus, Rt. 1, Box 402.

Young man with small family
want work in dairy or farm for 1932.
About 8 yrs. exp. in dairying and
truck driving. P. E. Elliott, McDon-
ough, Rt. 4.

Want position on farm as overseer
and 2 or 3 plows on halves, or from
3 to 5 plows on halves. Plenty of
help. Want good house for 9 in fam-
ily. Ref. J. H. Ward, Moultrie, Rt. 4.
Want position on farm. Exp. man.
_ E. Shubert, Atlanta, care Gen.

del.

Want small 1-horse crop on halves.
Preferably within 15 miles. H. Kite,
College Park, Rt. 1.

Want l1-horse farm on halves.
Force sufficient to run same, or. work
in dairy or truck farm. 6 in family,



Parker, Conyers, Rt. 3, Box 94.
Young, single man of good char-

acter desires job with good party on

farm. Lifetime exp. in stock farm-
ing. J. W. Harrell, Midville.

Want good house to live in and
day work for rest of yr., and 2-horse
crop, 50-50 for 1932. Can furnish self.
oo ref. C. E. Joiner, Louisville,

Twenty-eight year old man, wife,
1 child wants place on farm. Well
exp. Prefer 50-50 basis. E. L. Reeves,

as

wy



- Page Five

Positions Wanted

Want small crop for 1932 on 50-50
basis. Am widow, middle aged with ~
15 yr. old boy. -Like extra work :to ~
help live on. Begin Jan. 1. Ref. Mrs. .
Annie L. Houston, Dalton. Rt. 6.

Married man desires. position as
farm manager for 1932. Have certifi-
cate as general farm overator. Ref. |
Sober and honest.-A. E. Nelson, Su-
gar Valley, Rt. 1.

Twenty-five year old white man
wants job with dairy for this winter -
and truck crop for 1932. Prefer with-
in 5 or 7 miles Atlanta. Begin Nov. .
oP. As Head; Winder; Rt.-4

Want job overseeing farm. 45-yrs.
old. Exp. in gen. farming, good man-
ager of labor and gen. expenses of
farm cost. Would accept peach farm.
Ref. Jno. C. Brown, Fitzgerald, Rt 3.
- Highteen year old boy wants to get ~
with good family that will send-him
to school for 6 mos. of yr. for 6 mos.
work. Ref. Experienced. Elko Shep-
pard, Bartow, Rt. 3. ;

Woman with child 8 yrs. old wants
home with couple to assist with light
farm work, for home and small wage.
Mrs. G. M. Bletch, Rome, 4th ward, |
Ave. B. H. No. 813.

Twenty-five year old man wants

position on farm, Ref. Can handle
truck, tractor, riding cultivator, labor
or any kind farm work. M. L. Cosby,
Washington, Rt. 2. ey
Want job working with honey bees.
Exp. Married, wife and 3 children.
U. G. Allen, Lumber City, Rt
Two boys want farm and grist mill
together. 1 is 20 yrs. old. Raised at
mill, other farm boy, 18 yrs. Honest,
reliable, ref. L. P. Ross, Culloden, -

smith, keep up car, etc. Wife to do
milking, poultry, etc. Begin now. C.
B. Shepard, Rockmart, Rt. 2. oes

Twenty-siv year old man. wife. 2
children want place on dairy. 8 vrs.
exp. Excellent milker, Anywhere. Im-
mediately. Salary secondary. B. J.
Reeves, Loraine, Rt. 1.

Fifty year old, life term farmer,
wife and 3 children want farm over-
seer job. Exp. labor manager; drive
any kind car; common grade "school
education. Ref. Begin November 1
J. V. Kerce, Lindale, Rt. 1.

Want good 2- horse enor. Prefer |
| place Smyrna. Shares. R. . West-
brooks, Dallas, Rt. 2.

Want job on milk dairy or farm,

near Macon. Exp. J. T. Ward, eo

con, 14 Schell Ave.

Thirty- two year old, lifetime exp.
farmer, can handle labor and ma-_
chinery, wants job, or crop on shares.
Prefer stock. Begin now. S. B. Smith,
Jeffersonville. ae

Want 1-horse crop on 50-50 basis. |
Good house, near church, school, or
want job this winter taken care of
estate. Make gardens, etc., 1932. .
Reasonable wages. John Ww. pie
Clarkesville, Rt. 2.

Lifetime farmer and exp. labor
manager desires position as over-
seer. Married, with family, 36 yrs.
old. Begin at once. W. B. Pippin,
Gray.

Want to help gather crap, 1 or 2-
horse farm 1932. 33 yrs. old, wife, 3
children. Best ref. Would accept job
until Xmas for self and 15 yr. old
boy. B. M. Coulter, Columbus, Box
408, Rt. 2.

Reliable young man wants to run
farm. Any good offer considered.
Jay Eller, Hiawassee. :

Want 2-horse farm, good } Agee
good land, with good man. Ref. 50- ae
basis for 5 or 10 yrs. 6 in family. N
small children. M. C. Coker, Daniels:
ville, Rt. 2. :

Middle aged man and_ wife want
work at once. North Ga. farm pre-
ferred. ae or stock, Consider
anywhere. W. A. Worley, Atlanta, Rt.
2% Box? 262:

Single man wants job on farina
Feeding and looking after stock. or
general farm. work. C. R. Holloway,
Edison, care C. J. Holloway.

Want 2-horse farm on 50-50. basis
1932, and work for balance this yr.

191 yrs. old. No bad habits. Good

worker. Understand f. rming. Brother
19 yrs old. W. V. Lane. Hortense.

Want job on poultry farm by exp.
poultry man. Would consider grain 0
truck, hogs, ete. Family of 3. C. Ez.
Billings, Taylors Creek.

Twenty year old white girl wae
job on farm tending po ry, garden
and other light work. Miss Pauline
Cunn, Sharon, Rt. 2, Box 32. ~

Want job on farm as overseer. 20.
yrs. experience. Sober, Good vet. ae
W. aeeeen es Hartwell. :

*













RTT aces iS
Pa ge Six : M ee R K EB T B U i i E T I N Thursday, September 10, 1981
, Positions Wanted Seed For Sale Seed For Sale Georgia Prodacts. For Sale










































































Want farm on halves, and extra
ork while not in crop. Prefer near
shool and church. Can give ref. C.
. Hardy, Austell, Rt. 1.

Colored woman, 42 yrs .old wants
job on farm. Widow, no children.
ee Lewis, Ft. Valley, Rt. 1, Box

- .Want to run water mill on shares
with party for salary. Sev. yrs. exp.
Best of ref. L. C. Bigbee, Shellman.
Want job overseeing large farm.
Can furnish self. Good house. Mar-
ried, middle age; no children. Small
salary with privilege of. raising
chickens and own garden. Paul
Briant, Atlanta, PO. Box 1456.

- Want 2-horse crop, 50-50 basis, can
run self; plant corn, rye, peanuts
and other food crops; no guano. Bert
Carson, Social Circle.

_ Want to get with good party on
farm who can furnish work for man,
wife and 3 boys, oldest 17; good
workers; for bal. this and next yr.
Have to be moved. At once. L. J.
Alford, Raceville.

Man, 38 yrs. old, wants crop to
gather, exp. in all kinds farming,
HKDandle any kind farm machinery;
have 5 to pick cotton and take up
peanuts, 1 grown boy. Come after
us with truck. W. T. Tyson, Fro-
lona, Rt. 1.

-- Want truck and hog crop on shares
this fall and 1932. Have family; have
to be moved and given work, at once;
prefer So. Ga. Thos. J. Tucker, Ft.

hands, light
ork, by Nov. 15. Good house and
location. Thos. Jefferson, Nashville,

Rt. 3.
Bond For Sale

ar Large white nest onions, best keep-
er, yielder, $1 peck and _ postage;
Burr clover seed, dbl. screened, dirt
enough to inoculate, Sc. W.) $12 for



vonia.
Burr clover seed, 2c Ib. or exc. for
ogs or nese FOB. L. A. Motes,

Elberton, Rts,

Alaska early Eng. pea seed, pure
931 crop, 20c lb.; 5-Ib. lots or more,
-20c :lb. postpaid. E. L. Upchurch,
Locust Grove...

Three hundred Ibs. Ga. collard
seed; make best offer for any amt.
from 1 to 300 lbs. FOB. Y. O.
thews, Axson.

- Two hundred to 300 Ibs. seedling
peach seed, new crop, clean and
well dried. Make best offer FOB my
station, ready Sept. 25. R. E. Kimsey,
Farmington, Rt: 3:

' Old-time white Eng. peach seed,
_red and yellow Indian peach seed, 10c
oz., 3 doz 25c; mixed lot old-time
seed, 100, 25c; 700, $1. Mrs. Lula
Hawkins, Alpharetta, Rt. 4.
Winter mustard seed, 10c pk.; big
sweet pepper, $2 bu.; hot pepper, 30c
gal. Mrs. R. Q. Miller, Acworth, Rt. 2.
Few qts. scallion buttons, 20c at.
Rt org J. H. Phillips, Buchanan,
Thousand lbs. Burr clover seed, c
Ib. FOB., enough dirt to inoculate.
J. iH. Wall, Statham.

Burr clover seed in rough, 2c Ib.,
per cent. clean seed, FOB. Roy
wis, Hartwell, Rt. 1.

Old time shallot buttons, 15. at.,
pal. del. C. iG. Oliver, Barnes-\
REC 2

Large red nest onions for fall
nest to be planted in October)
planting, 15c lb., 75c gal; white nest
onions, 60c gal. Mrs. W. B. Robbs,
lowery Branch. .

Seven Top turnip seed, 1931 crop.
ound, clean. Teacupful by mail
postpaid, 18c in stamps; half cup,
Oc; 1.qt., 60c; $2 gal. Mrs. M. E.
dford; Crandall, Rt. 1.
Limited amt. fine cantaloup and
watermelon seed, at usual rates per
b. About peck Elberta peach seed,
nd plum stone. Make offer. Mrs.
nie Wafford, Dalton, 111 Laner St.
Red nest onion buttons, 50c gal.
Miss Martha Kemp, Doraville, Rt. 1.

Perennial nest onions, best yielder,
sest flavor, best keeper and especial-
ly fine for green onions, 50c gal.. Add
stage. Stamps accepted. R. P.
inheimer, Woolsey.

Two thousand lbs. 1931 Crimson
lover seed for sale or exc. for seed
wheat. R. B. Kinman, Calhoun, Rt.
t, Box 62.

Onion sets, ship in Sept., Yellow
own, 60c gal., 90c pk., $3. 50 bu;
Ci rystal Wax Bermuda, 75 gal., $1. 25
k., $4.50 bu., exp. Cader Stephens,
lowery Branch.





ot of 200 Ibs. Pearl Aderhold, La-.



White multiplying onions, for
planting, 50c gal. del. Mrs. R. L.
Mabry, Canon, Rt. 2.

One hundred lbs or more old time
white and yellow clear seed peach
seed, $2 per 100 lbs. G. A. Brewer,
Cave Springs, Rt. 2.

Red multiplying onion buttons for
fall planting, 50c gal. del. or 80c
peck, Mrs. B. L. Brown, Ball Ground,
Ri I.

Seven Top turnip seed, 30c Ib.;
pimento sweet pepper seed, 80c lb.
Postpaid. L. A. Crow, Oakwood.

Extra early English pea. (bear in
6 wks. from planting) 25c lb. and
postage; oe onion seed, 10c
pkg., del. Mrs. R. H. Wright, Middle-
ton, Rt: Fk.

Old fashioned shallot buttons,
1931 crop, 50c peck. Add postage.
Harold Pass, Point Peter.

Crimson clover seed, in chaff, 5%4c
Ib. in 100-Ib. lots up, FOB. L. E. Pitt-
man, Sugar Valley.

Clean Seven Top turnip aeee 30c
Ib., 20c -per 3% Ib., prepaid. Frank
Dunn, Tennga.

Two hundred M. stalks P. O. J. 213
sugar cane for seed, 40c per 100 at
farm, Oct. del. Norman Maxwell,
Whigham.

Crimson clover seed, 6c lb. FOB. A.
H. Hendrick, Bowman, Ri. 2.

Clements American Wonder melon
seed, (1 oz., $10 lb. Melons grow to
wt. 160 lbs. and over. E. T. Clements,
Tennille.

Old fashioned large red scallion

buttons, 15 at., 2 ats. 25c, or 50c gal.
Fall planting scallion bulbs, 10c doz.,
S\doz:. 25c=. Mts. :C. Rh; Sorrells, Mon-
Boe; Rt. i

Rape seed, 2 Ibs., 30c; 5 Ibs., 70:
Purple Top, White Globe, Yellow
Globe, Rutabaga, collard seed, 40c
Ib., 2 Ibs., up, 35c Ib.,. plus postage.
W. H. Waddelle, Pearson.

Collard seed, 15c Ib. in 100 Ib. lots;
18c in less, or 30c per Ib. postpaid.
Malvin Collins, Whigham.

Large red multiplying onions. Kind

to plant in fall, 50c gal. Mrs. J. E.

Passe, Madison, Rt. 4.

Hastings Japanese Shogoin louse
resistant turnip. seed, for fall plant-
ing, 60c Ib. Postage paid, in 3-Ibs. or
over, 50c. H. S. Mullins, Milner. :

Old fashioned red shallot buttons,

50c gal. Cash with order. Mrs. J. T.

Lambert, Forest Park.

Collard seed, 35c lb; turnip, Purple
spp. soc. 1s Straw color Bermuda
onion, $2 Ib.: all lead. var. cabbage,
$1 1b. postpaid. W. W. Williams,
Quitman.

1931 crop True Ga. collard seed,
recleaned, 15c lb. FOB. J. T. Ponder,
Whigham.

Fifty lbs. peach seeds of good
quality, including yellow and white
clear seed, plum and lemon peach
seed; for best offer in cash. Mrs. B.
G. Hightower, Fayetteville.

Sunflower seeds, 35c half gal. 70c
gal. Cash with order. Everlene Mc-
Laughlin, Greenville, Rt. 3, Box 48.

Recleaned Burr clover seed, 6c Ib.,
here. S. B. Kinard, Jackson.

Willetts Winter Eng. pea seed, 30c
lb., 10 lbs. $2.25, del. H. V. Franklin,
Register.

Heading collard seed, for sale. Exc.
ibs tots ib Hastings Big Seven
turnip seed collection. Wiley Lynn,
Collins. :

White : nest onions, '50c gal; $3.50
bu.; Willetts Eng. pea seed, 30c: lb.
Exe. for good Purple Straw seed
wheat, each paying chgs. Mrs. H. H.
Sullivan, Carrollton, Rt. 5.

Willetts Eng. pea seed, 8 lbs. 35c
lb:, $2.50 for lot; gal. of large white
nest onions, 60c. All del., no stamps.
Mrs. J. E. Latham, Carrollton, Rt. 5.

Three bu. peach seed, nice and
clean, this yrs. seed, $1 bu. Add post-
age. Mrs. W. L. Crowe, Dallas, Rt. 3.

Johnsons Winter beans. Plant in
October, 35c qt. del.; purple bloom
salad Eng. peas, 30c pt. del. Mrs. M.
P. Patterson, Cordele, Rt. B.

Wakefield and Flat Dutch cabbage
seed, $1 lb. B. R. Woodliff, Flowery
Branch.

Good, old fashioned clear seed
peach seed, 40c gal.,
Add postage. Mrs. W.
Alpharetta, Rt. 2.

Silver skin nest onions, 25c Ib. post-
paid. Mrs. W. L. Daniel, Dawson, Rt.
1, Box 101.

Palmetto asparagus seed, selected
from largest stalks, 35c lb.; germina-
pe guar. R. H. Richard, Marshall-
ville.

Pure Crimson clover seed in the
chaff, 5c lb. John Fenok, Summer-
wie Rt. Je

x: Burgess,

5 gals $1.75.



White nest onions, $1 pk. or 60c
gal. Mrs. Ella Robinson, Greenville.

Prolific- frostproof Eng. pea seed,
60 Ibs., in good cond., hand-cleaned,
2nd yr. from Hastings, 30c lb. or 25
Sy lot. Grady C. Taylor, Alpharetta,
Rt. 3.

Perennial nest onions, best yield-
ing, best keeper, best flavor, especial-
ly. fine for green onions, 55c gal.,
postpaid. Stamps accepted. R. P.
Steinheimer, Woolsey, Rt. 1.

Purple Top turnip seed, nice and
clean, 35 lb.; cheaper in large lots.
F. N. Bragg, Hawkinsville.

Collard seed, 15c Ib. in 100-Ib. lots,
18c smaller lots, or postpaid in 1-lb.
lots, 30c. Malvin Collins, Whigham.

Five hundred Ibs. white. Silver
Skin multiplying onion sets, now
ready, 7c lb: O. L. Davis, Albany.

. Choice Crimson and Burr clover
seed in pod, samples and information
on request. S. L. Thornton, Dewy-
rose, Rt. 2.

_Extra yellow,-large peach seed, 1c
ea. Cash or money order. Mrs. Em-
ley Long, Cleveland, Rt. 4; Box 13.

Old time red multiplying onions,
50c gal. Willetts Eng. peas and

Johnsons Wonder Canadian beans,

frost-proof, 25c Ib. J. O. King, Luella.

Hastings Big Seven turnip seed
collection, slightly mixed with Sho-
goin, 30c Ib. del., 4 lbs., $1. Make
best offer on 125 lbs. C. A. Wil-
banks, Commerce, Rt.

Forty lbs. new on turnip seed,
mostly Purple Top and Seven Top,
30c Ib.,-5 lbs., $1 del. Less than Ib.
add postage. Miss L. M. Davis, Silver
Creek, Rt. 1.

Large, white nest onions, 60c gal.,
$1 pk.; May-Queen tomato seed, '50
pkg. of 200 seeds. Mrs. Ea Robin-
son, Greenville.

Collard seed, 25c Lb. 5<lbs. 7$1
Chas. W., Early Flat Dutch cabbage,
$1 Ib. Free of trash. Del. good cond.
15c extra if chk. is Sent. Lee. "Waldrip,
Gainesville.

Seed Wanted

Exe. shallot buttons or Hanover
seed, for rutabaga or turnip seed.
ae D. M. Keen, Lyons, Rt. 4, Box

Want 25c worth of Calif, beer seed
as quick as possible. Miss F. E.
ee Moultrie, 722 E. Central

ve /

Want 5 lbs. white or yellow Ber-



muda onion seed and 1 lb. Copen-

hagen market cabbage seed. E. F.
Dye, Hahira.

Ga. Products For Sale.
BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE



Old time running garden peas, |

saved this yr., 20c lb. Add postage.
a W. Fordham, Toombsboro,
Eng. peas for fall planting, 25c Ib.
Mrs. C. R. Sorrells, Monroe, Rt. 1.
Tenn. Green Pod and Giant
Stringless, Black and Valentine bean,
Thos. Laxton and Alaska peas, 15c
Ib. plus postage. Stamps or money
order. W. H. Waddelle, Pearson...
Willetts Wonder Winter Eng. pea
seed, 30c lb. Lillie Averette, Buena
Vista.
1931 crop Lady Finger peas, 2 lbs.

25c; 5 Ibs., 50c; % bu., $2.75; not
prepaid. Mrs. M. J. Mixon, Mcin-
tyre, Rt. 1.

New Era peas, $1.50 bu. FOB
Gainesville. L. A. Crow, Oakwood.

Few bu. black-eyed Calif, peas, 5c
lb., or exc. for Fulghum seed oats.
Bu. peas for 5 bu. oats, or for
Cornish chickens.
Cave Spring.
~ Thirty-four Ibs, Thomaston Winter
Eng. pea seed, 25c Ib. Lot for $7. All

FOB. Claudia Stallings, aidosta, Rt.

3, BOX 92.

Twenty-four lbs. frost proof Eng,
pea seed, 35c ib. Old time free
stone seedling peach seed, 25c for 3
doz. del; 15c cup. -No chks. Miss
Martha Thompson, Sylvester, 104
Westberry St.

Willett Wonder Eng. pea, 4 lbs.,
$1, prepaid. Write for prices on
larger. lots. Jno. Underwood, Blakely.

Roasting ear peas, winter Calif.
black-eye, $1.50 bu. del. Add postage
if less than $1 order. Mrs.
Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.

One hundred bu. good clean 1931

Purple Hull peas, in good sacks, $1.65

per bu. FOB, cash with order; no
chks. John z: Bennett, Screven, Rt.
2, BOkret.

New crop Lady peas, sound and
free of trash, sacked in good strong

bags, reasonable price; make offer.|
J. B. Bannister, Ball Ground, Rt. 1. _



We. Wilbanks,

Lie



Fifteen bu. Rice peas, 7c lb. John
Brock, Jasper, Rt. 2.

Eng. peas, 25c per cupful. Exc. for
other garcen seed. Mrs. W. O. Puck=
ett, Cordele, Rt. B.

Black peas, 1931 crop, sound, clean,
not weevil eaten, heavy producers,
$1 bu. FOB. Charlie Prather, Ranger,

One or 2 bu. Winter Austrian peas,
hand-cleaned and sound, 15c Ib..
FOB here. Mrs. Ida L.. Prickett,
Maysville, RFD 3. 3

Frostproof Eng. peas, 30ce Ib. Exc,
for good white feed sacks, 100-Ib. size,
at 6c ea. Mrs. A. C. Gladden, Talla-
poosa, Rt. 3.

This years crop Speckled field
peas, $1.50; white Crowders, $2, FOB.
Exc. for Sheppard str. pullets at 75c
ea. Miss Inez Bigbie, Shellman.

One hundred fifty Ibs. pure, select
winter garden peas, 25c lb. E. FP,
Dye, Hahira.

Six hundred lbs. new crop eet
winter peas, recleaned, 5%c Jhb.
Strictly No. 1. Also 150 Ibs. new crop
hairy vetch, recleaned, 9c lb. K. Dz
Sanders, Eatonton, Rt. 2.

Red Rippers and Whipporwills, 5c

Ib., $1.75 bu. Black-eyed and brown-

eyed, 6c lb.; $2 bu. Lady peas, 10c lb.
Ernest Wetherford, Oakwood, Rt. 1.

BUTTER FOR SALE
Two lbs. fresh butter ea. week, 20c
Ib., add postage. Mrs. Bertha Crowe,
Dallas, Rt. 3. :

FRUIT FOR SALE :
Nice sundried apples, 1931 crop,



%

12%c lb. postpaid. Exc. some for 100 _

lbs. or 50 Ibs. cap. feed sacks, free
ae holes. Mrs. V. C. Ray, Kensing-
on
_Keiffer pears, 50c bu.; scupper- |
Denes: $2 bu. A. M. Wilson, Jones=
oro a



CONTROL OF INSECTS ~~ [
ATTACKING SEED GRAIN |

| Serious insect injury to stored
grain is experienced by the farm-
ers of Georgia every year. This |
injury can be avoided if proper
control measures are employed.
As soon as harvest is over, the

bins. The grain should then be
fumigated with Carbon Bisulphide,

any drug store. If the bin is prac-
| tically air-tight, use 5 to 8 pounds
| of Carbon Bisulphide for each

constructed bins, use 20 to 25
pounds to each 1,000 cubic feet.
In using Carbon Bisulphide on |
shuck corn in storage houses, the
corn should be leveled and holes

out the ears at intervals of four
feet each way. Divide the Carbon
.Bisulphide to be applied among
these holes. Begin farthest from
and. work toward the door. Pour
the Carbon Bisulphide directly
into the holes and fill them imme-
diately with corn to confine the
fumes. In fumigatiag peas and
beans, the best method-is to pour
the Carbon Bisulphide in shallow
pans placed on top of the grain.
Small quantities.of seed can best
be fumigated by placing the seed
in water-tight barrels, filline to
within 4 or 5 inches of the top, |.
then pour the Carbon Bisulphide |
into a shallow dish and se* the
dish on top of the seed in the bar-
rel. Place the top on the barrel
and cover with wet newspapers
and old blankets and allow to
stand at least 24 hours. After the
fumigation has been on for 24
hours or more, in the case of.sziall
quantities of beans, peas, etc., the
seed should be removed from the
fumigation bin and stored in in-
sect-proof containers, such as cof-'
fee cans or barrels. The reason f-r

injury from mice.

Precaution: Carbon Bisulphide
when mixed with air forms < gas
that will ip-nite at a temperature
above 296 degrees F. and, there- }
fore, must not be approached with
a lighted lantern, lamp, pipe, ci-
gar, or fire in any form. Unless
the gas is inhaled for a consid-
erable length of time, no harr il
effects should result from its use.

For further information con-
cerning insects and diseases. at-
tacking farm crops, write the
Georgia State Board of Entomol-
ogy, State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga..

W.H. CLARK, Entomologist,











grain should be stored in air-tight =

a Hquid that can be obtained at Aa

1,000 cubic feet; for more loosely |

made about a foot deep by pulling: =





this is to ~sevent reinfestation and |




eo

Georgia Products For Sale

Dried fruit, 12%2c lb.; peaches, 15c
Yb. Exc. for good white feed sacks,
100-lb. size, at 6c ea. Mrs. A. C. Glad-
den, Tallapoosa, Rt. 3.

Light scuppernongs, $2 -bu., 30c
-gal.; black scuppernongs, 30c gal., $2
bu., or $2.40 of each, del. Miss Leona
Simpson, Culverton, Rt. 1, Box 38.

Nice cooking and eating apples, 60c

jay, Rt. 4.

ws New var. blight-resistant pear, re-
cently developed, bears fruit in nor-
mal season from early summer until
late autumn; for prices, -vrite T. G.
Chapman, Bronwood.

Three or 400 bu. red Winesap and
Black Twig apples in orchard, $1 bu.;
also 50 bu. clean seed rye, at home,
$5c bu., FOB Blue Ridge. John E.

- Cook, Hemp. 2

_ Five Ibs. peaches, Clingstone, .50c,

add postage, cash with order. Mrs.

Bertha Crowe, Dallas, Rt. 3.5 __

- Sundried peaches, 123c lb. or 9
_. Jbs. $1; 2 doz. peach seed, mixed, 35c.

Mrs. Lula Bell, Alpharetta, Rt. 2.

Bright sun-dried old-fashioned

_ peaches for sale or exc. some. for

dried apples., lb. for Ib., within 10 mi.

Canon. Mrs. H. L. Holla ay, Canon,
Rt. 2.

White scuppernong grapes, 75c pk.,
$1.90 bu., at my home near Madras.
Olin B. Moore, Madras.

- Dried apples and peaches, selected
Sees and peeled, old-fashioned Clingstone,
So very sweet, sun-dried; also jelly, pre-
Mrs. John 8S. Branan,





serves, etc.

McDonough.
_. Sun-dried peaches, 12%6c Ib., free

from worms, cash with order; 65c

for 5 Ibs. Everlene McLaughlin,

Greenville, Rt. 3, Box 48.

' Best Starks Delicious apples, $1.50
bu., FOB, money order; delicious ap-
ples by truck load, $1 bu. at orchard.
R. H. Crawford, Tiger.

' "Red Delicious, King David, Rome
Beauties, Grimes Golden, Kinards,
etc., entire orchard or by truck load.
Mrs. M. L. Duggan, Clayton.

Fifty Ibs. dried peaches, this years

-erop 12%c lb.; 9 lbs., $1. Mrs. Chas.

Soschee, Cleveland, Rt. 1.

Pineapple pears, now ready, 50c bu.

at my farm, 4 miles east of Cobb-

town. Exc. for oats, rye, etc. L. M.
-Kennedy, Collins.

Car load Stone Mtn. watermelons,
_ ready Sept. 15, or will load trucks at

patch, cheap. O. L. Craft, Lavonia.

~ Pears, $1 bu. at the trees. Warren
Parks, Hogansville, Rt. 1, Box 80.

: Nice, fresh, sun-dried peaches, free

eS from worms, i%c lb. Mrs._R. D.

Carter, Whitesburg, Rt. 1.

' Sun-dried peaches, 10c lb. and
_, postage. Mrs. Flora Sams, Cumming.
Nice apples at my orchard, 2 miles

north of Cleveland, for truckers. W.
G. Owneby, Marietta.

Nice, sundried peaches, 1931 crop.,
oo 15c Ib., 8 lbs. $1, postpaid. Cash. No
oot Sons Miss Inez Moore, Bowdon,

Nice, dried peaches, 1931 crop, 10c
Ib. Viola M. Robinson, Waco, Rt. 2.

Nice red and yellow apples, $1.25
bu. box del. Henry Weaver, Marion.

Sundried peaches, few lbs. only,
for sale or exc. for dried apples. Ea.
to pay postage. Mrs. H. W. Bryson,

= _ Rome, Rt. 3.

== Dried apples, 10c Ib. del. Robt. E.
Lee, Carters.

Dried peaches, 15c Ib.; also peach
seed, 1c ea.; sage, 40c lb. G. B. Mc-
Lane, Hartwell, Rt. 5.

Starks Delicious and Kinards
.Choice apples. Grade 50 per cent ex-
tra fancy, 75c bu. at orchard; seund,
unclassified apples $1 bu. by PP. J. E.
Stembridge, Ella Gap.

Ss Keiffer pears, 40-50 bu. at orch-

eo ard adjoining Stallings plantation,

ao ' 5-6 miles Haddock. Will exc. some

for baby chicks and seed oats. R. B.

Walker, Milledgeville, Rt. 5, Box 74.
Nice, white scuppernongs, 50c

. peck; 10c postage. Harold Pass, Point

Be Peter.

= Fine Detroit Red and Starks ap-

ples, $1 box, FOB. D. T. Heerey,

Ellijay, Rt. 1.

Nice, peeled sundried. peaches,
12%c Ib. or exc. for good side meat.,
Ib. for Ib., each pay postage, or exc.
for anything use. Mrs.R. L. Blood-
worth, McIntyre, RFD 1.

1931 crop peaches, thoroughly
See dried, free from worms, 12%c Ib.; 5
i Ibs. 50c. Mrs. W. R. Thompson,

Lawrenceville, Rt. 1. : :

Entire crop apples, about 2500 bu.
at orchard, 1 mi. east Demorest
depot. Bargain. House to camp in
while gathering. Make offer. A. J.
Collins, Demorest.

















Thursday, September 10, 1931

bu., FOB. Sat. guar. A. D. Call, Elli-|-



Georgia Products For Sale

Sundried peaches, 10c lb. Add
postage for less than $1 orders. M.
F. Etris, Dahlonega, RFD 1.

About 200 bu. Keiffer pears and
between 2 and 3 M. bu. improved P.
R. potatoes for sale at market price.
W. C. Shelnutt, Allentown.

Dried apples in 50 Ib. lots. Make
offer. Mrs. Pauline Jordan, Flowery
inch: Rt 1s

_Sundried apples, free from core
and peeling, 10c lb. No chks. A. M.
Etris, Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 50.

1931. dried peaches, 10c lb.; 100
Tbs. $10, and postage. Also choice old
fashioned peach seed, $3 per 100 lbs.
Mrs. Mae Turner, Cleveland, Rt. 4.

Shockley, Yate, Winesap and
Kinards choice apples, $1 box, del.
T: C. Mooney, Quill.

St.idried peach and apple fruit, 7c
= tees C. C. Jarrard, Cleveland,

Nice sundried peaches, 1931 crop,
20: Ih... del... Mrs, O. L. Craft, La-
vonia.

Keiffer pears, $1 bu.; exc. for pigs.
Martin Wilson, Jonesboro.

Dried apples, peaches, free of
worms, 10c lb. Muscadines now ripe,
35c gal., 50c peck. Miss Beulah Frey,
Dallas, Rt. 3.

Pineapple pears, $1 bu. at my
place, 7 miles north of Waycross. J.
H. Mixon, Waycross, Rt. 1, Box 37.

Apples by truck load at bottom
prices. Golden delicious, King Davids,

Grimes Golden. Paved road to At-

lanta, Macon, . Valdosta. M. L.
Duggan, Atlanta, room 201, State
Capitol. :

Pineapple pears now ready, 50c bu.
at my farm; 60c if shipped, not pre-
paid. Exe. for Abruzzi seed rye and
other things. L. M. Kennedy, Collins.

Nice, clean fresh dried peaches, 12c
Ip. del. Mrs. Grace Murphy, Jasper,
Rt. 2, Box 61.

Seventy-five or 100 bu. Keiffer
pears, 50c bu. at the trees; better

| price by the truck load. Now ready.

Mrs. C. H. Horne, Chester, Rt. 2.

FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Twenty-five: black walnut trees,
12-18 inches and more, $2.50 for lot,
FOB. Blanche Woodruff, Greenville.
One hundred young horseapple
trees for sale or exc. anything can

use. B. F. Smith, Dalton, Rt. 1.

FRESH AND CURED MEATS

Country-cured oak-smoked_ sides,
18c; shoulders, 16c; hams, 25c Ib.,
all ; .ar. sound and free from insects.
Malvin Collins, Whigham.

Six country cured hickory smoked
hams, wt. 27-41-25-25-15 and 11
Ibs. each, 25c 1b. Riley Couch, Turin.
Hams, 25c; shoulders and sides, 20c
Ib., 50 Ibs. or more, 2c less. Smoked
with pecan wood. W. H. Waddelle,
Pearson.

Country cured meat, sides, 18c;
shoulders, 17c. hams, 25 lb. Malvin
Collins, Whigham. :

Country-cured hams, 20c Ib.; sides
and shoulders, 13c lb., eash with or-
der. Robt. S. Anderson, Hawkinsville.

HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES
FOR SALE

New honey, 10c lb. Mrs. P. J. Byrd,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 4. -

Fall crop ext. honey, 6c Ib. in
600-lb. bbls.: prices higher in smaller
lots. J. R. Conger, Oliver, Rt. 3.

*Gallberry honey, chunk or ext., 10
Ibs.. $1.50: 5 iis, 85e, del. DL F-
Thomas, Oduni.

Nice, bright, new chunk honey,
5-lb. cans, 65c; 10-lb., $1.30, postpaid
in Ist, 2nd and 3rd zones. L. G. H.
Scott, Ludowici, Rt. 1.

Five hundred lbs. new crop. honey,
chunk, 10c lb., or exc. for 500 baby
chicks or for shoats. C. O. Potts,
Macon, Rt. 3. 3

New crop good, bright, honey, in
50 lb. cans, 10c 1b. T. H. Flowers,
Jesup, Rt. 2. :

Nice fresh honey, 50 Ib. pails, Cs.
of 4 $3.40; Cs. 6, $4.50; Cs. 2, $1.80;
small quantity chunk, if desired.
FOB. W. G. Chambless, Dawson.

New, bright honey, 10 lb. bucket,
comb, $1.10; new Gallberry, 10 Ibs.,
combs, $1.25 postpaid. Out of state,
20c more per bucket. R. W. Brown-
ing, Dublin, Rt. 3. :

Pure ext. honey, 5 Ib. pails, $1 del.
Mrs. F. R. Vincent, Fruitland.

Bright, white Gallberry, Cs of 12
5 Ib. pails, $7.50; ext. 415 Ib. bbls. 5c
Ib.; 60 lb. pail, $3.75. Prompt del.
J. T. ullis, Alma.

Good, honey, chunk and ext., 10c
Ib. in 10 lb. buckets, FOB. Jd. W.
Stallings, Valdosta, Rt. 5, Box 92.











MAREE T BULLE TIN

Georgia Products For Sale

Chunk honey (comb) in 175 If. tin,
$9; No. 10 can, $1.50: lb. sections, 24
to Cs. $4. All del. Exc. for anything
can use. L. H. Edenfield, Stillmore,
Rt. A Box 31.

Nice ext. honey in 10 Ib. pails, 6 to
Cs., $6. Exc. for other value. What

have you? John A. Crumney. Doctor-
town.



PECANS AND PEANUTS FOR SALE
Freshly dug Spanish peanuts, fine

for boiling, 5c lb: Billie Woods,
Brooks.

POTATOES FOR SALE

Porto Rico sweet potatoes, 65c at
the patch. H G. Kirkland, Cobbtown.

Very fine Porto Rico potatoes
ready now, in patch cheap. Chris
King, Forest Park.

Sweet potatoes, any quantity, at
the market price. E.- C. Hunter,
Tifton, Rt. 7.

SYRUP FOR SALE
Pure Ga. Cane syrup, 1214-gal. cans
to cs., $4 cs., all guar. best grade.
Malvin Collins, Whigham.
Pure Ga. Cane syrup, 12 No. 5
cans to cs., $3.90 per cs. Malvin Col-
lins, Whigham.

VEGETABLES FOR SALE

Red and green hot pepper, 20c qt.,
60c gal. prepaid. Exc. for vetch, rye,
winter peas or onions. C. W. Page,
Norcross.

Nice tender green beans for sale.
Ella Wilson, Fairmont, Rt. 1. ~

Hot green pepper, 2 doz., 25c pre-
paid. Mrs. T. B. Thomas, Thomas-
boro.

Ruby King sweet pepper, 35c doz.;
sage leaves, 25c qt.; peppermint
leaves, 20c qt., 75c gal. Miss Jessie
L. Eaton, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Fresh Lima butter-beans will be
ready for sale, 20 to 25 of September:
L. T. Woodall, Jr., Crest.

Cabbage, 1c lb. in patch. T. C.
7 looney, Quill. :

Red and green hot pepper, 10c at.;
25c gal. postpaid; also cupful curled
mustard seed, mixed, 25c. Exc. for
sacks or turnip seed. Mrs. S. A.
Miller, Finleyson, RFD 2.

Hot green pepper, 35c gal; Pimen-
to green pepper, 20c doz.; old
fashioned peach seed, 30c qt. Miss
Jessie Cash, Flowery Branch, Rt. 3.

Green hot pepper, 15c qt. Also
green tomatoes for pickles, 25c pk.
Mrs. R. S. Attaway, Matthews.

Georgia Products Wanted

BEANS AND PEAS WANTED

Exec. Kudzu crowns at ic ea. for
austrian peas, Kudzu to be del. in
fall. W. L. Fielms, Buena Vista.

HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES
WANTED

Want any amt. of bees in pat.
hives to work on shares. Worked
with bees all my life and have good
range. Party del. bees. Write S. A.
Strickland, Manor, Rt. 1.-

Exe. doz. %-gal. cans white Eng.
peaches for 50 Ib. can honey. Mrs.
J. T. Lewis, (address not given).

Exe. 4 gals. white nest onions for
2 gals. nice strained honey, ea. pay
chgs. O. H. Bond, Bowman, Rt. 2.

FRUIT WANTED

Want 2 bu. good, sound mild flavor
apples for eating. Exc. No. 10 can
honey: Both del. L. H. Edenfield,
Stillmore, Rt. 1, Box 31. :

Exe. 25 Ibs. nice, unpeeled, this
yrs. -peaches for 25 lbs. good dried
apples, free from worms. L. P. Ross,
Culloden, Rt. 1.

Want apples and pears by truck
load. State lowest price and variety.
Must be cheap. H. W. Berge, Hazle-
hurst.

POTATOES WANTED
Exc. apples for sweet potatoes and
onions. C. W. Page, Norcross.

VEGETABLES WANTED

Want 1 gal. good tender string
beans every week for sick person;
send beans and write me the price.
cae Rose Donvers, Buena Vista,
Rt. 5.

Someone give price on pimento
peppers ready for canning, by peck.
Miss A. Dixon, Alma.

PECANS AND PEANUTS WANTED
Exe. % bu. this years peach seed
for 1 pk. peanuts, ea. to pay chgs.
O. H. Bond, Bowman, Rt. 2.
Want 100 Ibs. papershells, 100 lbs.
seedling pecans. Send sample and
state best price. C. L. Swint, Milner.





















Page Seven

Plants For Sale

Chas. W. Flat Dutch cabbage, Ga,
collard plants, 15c C; $1.25 M; New
Stone, Greater B..tomato plants, 20c
C; $1.75 M. Miss Rosie Crowe, Cum=
ming, Rt. 4.

Rhubarb plants, 40c doz. G.. D. Me-
Lane, Hartwell, Rt. 5.

Michigan strawberry plants, $2 M;
also Missionary strawberry plants,
$1.75 M. G.L. Belflower, Tifton.

Chas. Wakefield cabbage and col-
lard plants, 75c M. Cash with order.
Sat. guar. D. M. Barber, Baxley.

Chas. W. cabbage and collard
pants, $1 M. J. L. Leggett, Baxley.

Cabbage, collard and _ tomato
plants, 75c, 500; $1.25 M. del; & M.
lots, 75c M. FOB. Winfred Waldrip.
Flowery Branch.

Everbearing strawberry plants,
30c C. Mrs. M. L. Peterson, Vidalia.

Lady T. strawberry plants, 40c C;
Mastodon everbearing, same price;
red and_ black raspberry, $1 doz. Mrs.
Mae Turner, Cleveland, Rt. 4.

Wakefield, Dutch cabbage, Head-
ing collard, Stone tomato plants,
$1.10 M. del. 5 M. up, 90c M: Exp.
col; Klondike strawberry, 30c C;
oe M. del. H. P. Crow, Gainesville,

St. Augustine grass cuttings, well
rooted, $1 per bu. FOB. Exc. Write
what you have. Miss A. Dixon, Alma,
Box 55.

Chas. W. cabbage, fresh and green
plants, 200, 40c; 500, 75c; $1.25 M.
postpaid. R. Chanclor, Seville.

Chas. Wakefield, Flat Dutch cab-
bage, Ga. collard and good var. to-
mato plants, 500, 65c; $1.15 M.:; 5 M.
up, 90c M. by mail; 85c exp. in large
a J. C. Chambers, Gainesville,

Wakefield cabbage, Heading and
Ga. collards, $1 M. del.; 5 M. up, 75c
M. Exp. col. Guyton Teal, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 1.

Cabbage, collard, tomato and
lettuce plants, 75c, 500; $1.25 M.
postpaid. Moss packed. Bas!:et free,
15c extra if chk. is sent. Lee Waldrip,
Gainesville.

Wakefield cabbage, Heading col-
lards, $1 M. del. 75c exp. col. Jeff
Mooney, Gainesville, Rt. 8.

Cabbage, collard and _ tomato
plants, 500, 60c; $1.10 M. del. H. W.
Dowdy, Gainesville, Rt. 2. ;

Wakefield cabbage, Heading col-
lard, $1 M. del.; 75c M. Exp. col.
Ovie Crowe, xainesville, Rt. 2. -

Fall cabbage, collard and tomato
plants, 500, 60c; $1 M. postpaid. Mrs.
c ertrude Branan, Lewiston.

Fresh crop cabbage, collard and
tomato plants, 500 85c; $1.50 M.
Mrs. R. E. Hackle, Valdosta, 603 E.
Savannah Ave.

Tomato plants, $1 M; Late Flat
Dutch cabbage plants, $1.20 M. del.
G. E. Waldrip, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.

McDonalds blackberry, Premo and
Lucretia dewberry, $1 C; $9 M;
Celestrial Brown Turkey figs, 8
medium, $1; Large Kuduz, $1 C. del.
J. W. Toole, Macon, Rt. 2.

Large, fresh Early J. and Chas. W.
cabbage 1 nts, 500 60c; 90c M.; del.
postpaid; 4 M. up, 75c M. Exp. col.
Robert McCook, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4.

Cabbage-collard plants, 65c, 500;
Stone and Baltimore tomato plants,
same price. Postpaid. Purple egg-
plants, 40ec C. Mrs. F. Happoldt,
Lewiston. /

Fully dev. Missionary strawberry |

plants, packed in wet -moss, prompt
service, 35c C, $3 M FOB here, del.
beginning Sept. 1. Ref. Citizens Bank
here. W. F. Luckie. Ray City.

Chas. W., Early Flat Dutch cab-
bage heading collard plants, 20 C.,
75c 500, $1.15 M postpaid; 5 M up,
an M collect. Amos Williams, ains-
ville.

Cabbage, tomato and collard plants,
20c C; 300, 40c; 90c M del. FOB.
Obie Crowe, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Wild forest Ginseng for transplant-
ing, all ages and sizes, as dug, 3c
per root; also seed, %ec per seed; 25c
for sample of 5 av. roots. Lee Ad-
dington, Morganton.

Will grow asparagus crowns, $2.75
per M. R. H. Richard, Marshaliville.

E. J. Wakefield cabbage plants, $1
M, 65c 500, del. J. P. Mullis, Bax-
ley, Rt 4.

Thousands Wakefield cabbage and
tomato plants, ready; 200, 50c; 500,
$1: $1.75 M. H. V. Franklin, Reg-
ister.

Lady Thompson and Everbearing

strawberry plants, 500 for $1. del. A.
D. Call, Ellijay, Rt. 4.

Hastings heading cabbage-collard
plants, 500, 60c; $1.10 M, postpaid.
Mrs. V. C. Ray, Kensington, Rt. 2.

A om

A ah Bake,
be Weel Hie














Page Fight
Plants For Sale

Will give 1 ton Bermuda roots to
anyone that comes after them. J. B.
LaFitte, Decatur, Rt. 1.

Cabbage, collard and tomato plants,

500, 550; \$1.10 M, del.- B. ~ Crow,

_ Gainesville.

Well-rooted Chas. W. cabbage, Ga.
e. coueard. plants, 300, 65c;. 500;-.90c;
$1.25 M, postpaid. E. A. Hayes, Bu-

Dutch and W. cabbage, heading
collard, Stone tomato plants, 300, 50c;
- $1.10 M, mailed. L. A. Crow, Oak-
be wood.
~ Garden gooseberry, 2 yrs. old, 6 for
$1; Cuthbert red raspberry, i2 for
50c, $3.50 C, scuppernong grape vines,
rooted, 6, 75c. Jessie L. Eaton, Dah-
jJonega.
Blightproof Marglobe tomato, Ga.

isa ford, Rt. 2.

collard, Flat Dutch and Wakefield

- cabbage plants, $1.25 M, mailed; 5 M
up, 90c M. B. R. Woodliff, Flowery
Seeranch, kt... 1:

Napier grass roots and plants, can

~ be cut 4 times yearly from now until
middle Nov.; most prolific grass
known; special price, $4.50 M. Fine
for stock. S. T. Smith, Cuthbert.

- Wakefield cabbage, Heading col-

lard, $1 M del.; 75c M in 5 or more
_M lots. Exo. collect. Ed Mooney,
- Gainesville, Rt. 8.

Chas. J. Wakefield, Flat Dutch
cabbage, tomato: and collard plants,

500, 60c; $1 M; Sweet pepper and}

Eeg-plants, 200, 60c $1, 500, postpaid.
Miss Rosa May: Lewiston.
' Wakefield and Dutch cabbage, true
heading collard, 20c C; $1.10 M, del.;
Save up, 75c.-M, collect. LOC extra if
chk. is sent. Mrs. E. B. Wetherford,
Oakwood, Rt. 1.
Wakefield and Dutch cabbage, true
_ heading collard, 15c C; $1 M, del.;. 5
_ M up, 80c M. No chks. Clyde Smith,
- Oakwood, Rt. 1.
Progressive everbearing strawberry
_ plants, 40c C; $3.75 M. Cash or mon-
ey order. Mrs. Emley Long, Cleve-
_ land, Rt. 4, Box 13.
Copenhagen, E. J., Flat Dutch cab-

ace Ga. heading collard plants.
' Grown on new ground. Each, 200,
40c: 500, 85c; $1.30 M del. Grady

Kelley, Sulphur Springs, Rt. 1.
Tough, summer grown cabbage
plants, Chas. Wakefields, 500, 60c;
$1M del. E. Y. Stokes, Macon, Rt. 3.
Earliest var. imp. Klondike straw-
berry plants, 30c C; $1.25, 500; $2.25
~M del. Mrs. J. S. Crowe, Cumming,
Bubs 4:
Kudzu crowns for winter del. Con-
_ tract now. Guar. to live. Y. M. Ander-
son, Williamson.
Fresh grown cabbage plants, now
ready. Extra early J. and Chas. W.,
- 500, 60c; 90c M del.; 5 M $3.75 Exp.
eCoL, Sat. guar. F. F. Stokes? Fitz-
; gerald.
J. Wakefield cabbage, collard,
Stone tomato plants, 20c C; 300, 45c;
'$1.10 Mdel.: 5 M $5 col. Lee Crow,
Oakwood, Ric.
_ Wakefield cabbage, Ga. collard
plants,. 7bc M. Sat. guar. D. M.-
Barber, Baxley.
C. W. cabbage plants, $1 M, 300
~ 50c, del.; c_lard and tomato plants,
. ot oe del. Calvin Garrett, Oakwood,
abe Ll.
Chas., E. J: Wakefield cabbage
- plants, 20c C, 50c 300, 90c M, del.;
5 M up, 65c M, FOB, cash with or-
der. O. F. Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
_ Wakefield and tarly Flat Dutch
cabbage and collard plants. now
ready, 20c C, 300 50c, $1.10 M, post-
paic; 80c M, collect. Marcus Wil-
_liams, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Chas. W., Flat Dutch cabbage
~ plants, 500 75, $1.25 M; tomato and
collards, same price, del. Carl Stray-
Sor; Flowery Branch, Rt: i.

_. Huckleberry bushes for sale or exc..

Dollie Blackwell, Cleveland.
_. Missionary strawberry plants, $1.50
_M; rhubarb plants, 40c doz.; yellow
- root, kone dry, 35c Ib.; red pepper,
_ 50c lb.; sage plants. 10 ea. Miss Cecil
- McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Wakefield and Jersey cabbage
plants, 20c C, 80c M. Ray Whitmire,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
: Tomato and collard plants, 20c C,
; ae del. C. F. Waldrip, Gainesville,
Le ECG: Den
_. Collard, cabbage and tomato plants,
500, 60c, $1.10 M. H. W. Dowdy,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Large Lady Thompson progressive
ever-bearing strawberry plants, 35c
C; Condons Mastodon ever-bearing,
60c C. Roy A. Grindle, Dahlonega,

me. 3.
es Cabbage plants, Wakefield and

- Flat Dutch, $1 M. Andrew Clark,
Thomasville.




Plants For Sale

Flat Dutch and Wakefield cabbage,
heading collard, 20c C, $1.15 M post-
paid; 5 M up, 90c M exp: col. Amos
Williams, Gainesville.

Huckleberry plants, 5 doz., $1. Miss
Lyndia Stancil, Alpharetta, Rt. 2.

Fully dev. Missionary strawberry
plants, packed in wet moss, prompt
service, 30c C; $2.50 M, FOB here.
Del. beginning Sept. 1st. Ref. Citi-
ne Bank here. W. F. Luckie, Ray

ivy

Missionary strawberry plants, any
desired quantities, 30 C, eet 50 M FOB,
Ge e through Sept. W. F. Luckie, Ray
City.

Hastings heading cabbage-collard
plants, 60c, 500; $1 M del. Have
about 2 M. Mrs. V. C. Ray, Ken-
sington, Rt. 2. ee
' Cabbage plants, large. Wakefield,
now ready, 20c ; $1.25 M, post-
paid; 5 M lots, $1 _M. Exp. Marcus
Williams, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Chas. W. cabbage, Ga. collard,
New Stone and Baltimore tomato,
300, 75c; 500, $1; $1.50 M, postpaid.
KE. A. Hayes, Buford, Rt. 2.

Two hundred tomato plants, 65c
del. John Blackwell, Cleveland.

Everbearing strawberry plants, 45c
C. Leo Blackwell, Cleveland.

Brimmer and Marglobe tomato
plants, 20 C, $1.25 M; heading col-
lard, same price, all del. Mrs. W. N;
Lott, Braselton.

Marglobe tomato, Wakefield and
Flat Dutch cabbage, Ga. Blue Stem
collard, $1.25 M; 5M up, 90c M. B. R.
Woodliff, Flowery Branch.

Stone tomato, heading. collard,
Chas. W. cabbage, 300, 60c; 600, $1;
$1.25 M postpaid. C. R. Burell, Au-
burn.

Lady T. strawberry plants, $2 M;
Klondike, . $1.75. M. Ethel Crow,
Gainesville, Re 2:

Miscellaneous For Sale

Flue cured tobacco, 10 and 15c Ib.,
FOB. Mrs. Ralph M. Bennett, Sur-
rency.

Good chewing tobacco, 10c Ib. No
order for less than $1. Mrs. G. C.
Horton, Baxley, Rt. 2.

Twenty-five good cotton seed meal
sacks, 5c ea., $1 for lot. Cannot ship.
Mrs. T. G. Fleming, Athens, Rt. 2.

New geese feathers, Ist quality, 5
or 6 lbs., 80c lb. plus postage. Mrs.
K. D.,Sanders, Eatonton, Rt. 2.

Those interested in getting pre-
serves and jellies put up on halves,
write to Mrs. J. F. Davis, Whites-
burg, Rt. 1:

Tobacco in 5 lb. pasteboard box
cartons, $1 del. Money. order with
order. A: Campbell, Surrency, Ried:

Tobacco for chewing, pipe or cigar-
ette, 15c lb. Money order. Ruth
Spivey, Surrency, Rt. 2.

Sweet leaf tobacco, 5 lb. boxes, $1
del., ist to 3rd zones. Exc. for pea-
nuts or apples. Phillip Davis, Sur-
rency.

New crop bright leaf tobacco, 5
and 10 lb. boxes, 5 lb., $1 del. C. L.
Fetter, Surrency. oe

Flue cured tobacco, now ready for
chewing.or pipe, or cigarette, 15c Ib.,
FOB. Dan F. Young, Baxley, Rt. 2.

Nice, dried sage, 45c Ib. No chks.
Mrs. Lizzie Erris, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Pear and apple preserves, apple
jelly, 25c pt.; $2.50 doz.; 30e at.; 45c



per % gal.; $4.50 doz. Mrs. E. A.
Ray, Carrollton, Rt. 6.
Apple jelly, $1.75 doz. molds;

peach pickle, 45c qt; Red Indian
peach preserves, 50c qt. Mrs. Z. M.
Story, Thomson.

About 300 lbs. clear white wool,

Oak.

Good chewing tobacco, 10c; smok-
ing, 8c lb. No order less than $1.
Exc. anything can use. Wendell
Smith, Baxley.

Whole wheat flour from selected
wheat, water ground, 3c lb. No less
than 50 lbs. shipped. Cash with
order. Jas. B. Woods, Brooks.

Good, flue cured tobacco, smoking,
10 Ibs. $1 del. No orders less than $1.
Chewing, same price. Sat. guar.
Harold Smith, Baxley.

Sweet Yellow Leaf tobacco, twisted,
ready for chewing or smoking, 25c
Ib. del. or in the leaf, 12%c lb. del.
Dan A. Campbell, Baxley, it. 2.

Feat: -rs, 30 or 40 lbs. nice clean
used feathers, cheap. Mrs. C. G.
White, C nley, Rt. 1.

This years Bananza smoking and
chewing tobacco, 12c lb., or exc. for
anything can use. Sent in 10-lb. or
more lots. Geo. A. Thompson, Swains-
boro, Rt. 2.



MARKET BULLETIN

\%c Ib. Chewing,

watermelon rind preserves, 60c aqt;.

25c lb. FOB. John S. Bruce, White



Miscellaneous For Sale

Chicken feed sacks, white, 100-Ib.
cap., 10c ea.; no less 5 sold. Exc. for
turnip, collard and sunflower (fresh)
seed. C. Maxwell, Whigham.

Broom corn, enough for 3 large
brooms, $1, del. Pearl Aderhold, La-
vonia.

Asparagus tips in No. 2 cans, qual-
ity guar. Write for prices. R. H.
Richards, Marshallville.

Dill sprays for dill pickles, 10 for
25c, prepaid. Mrs. T. B.. Thomas,

| Thomasboro.

White wool, 20c lb., cash with or-
ger Robt.. S. Anderson, Hawkins-
ville. ;

Grub, red root, 30c lb.; white phan-
tom yellow root, sassafras, 15c Ib.;
peppermint, 30c lb., add postage. Li.
B.. Walker, Mineral Bluff.

Nice, new, white feathers, 55c Ib.,
del. or 50c Ib. plus postage, sample on
la aie Mrs. Mary Collins, Cordele,
Rt. 4.

About 35 lbs. excellent goose feath-
ers, in good container, $12.50, FOB.
Mrs. E. B. Cotton, Palmetto, Box 47.

Four-H Club products: beans, to-
matoes, peaches and soup mixture.

-| Beans in No. 3 cans, $2 doz.; others,

No. 2, 10c and 15c ea.
toms, Marietta, Rt.. 3.

New shade dried sage, 40c lb.; red
multiplying shallots, 30c gal.; large
white multiplying onions, 40c gal.
Add few cents postage. Mrs. Ralph
Williams, Cumming, Rt. 6.

Spice wood, 4 lbs., $1; sassafras,
20c Ib., 6 Ibs. $1; poke root, 15e21b:;
3 Ibs. '40: yellow clear seed peach
seed, 30c gal. Miss Lyndia Stancil,
Alpharetta, Rt. 2.

Fresh water ground Graham flour,
$2.50 per 100 lbs. Smaller lots, 3c Ib.,
FOB. M. F. Lewis, Adairsville.

Nice, new shade dried sage, 40c Ib.,
prepaid. Mrs. L. B. Taylor, Rydal.

TOBACCO
. Good, flue cured smoking tobacco,
10c lb. Orders for
$2 up del. Harold Smith, Baxley.

SACKS
One hundred sacks, $5, FOB. Mrs.
D. Whiddon, Chula...

Miscellaneous Ws

-Exc. 10 Ibs. fine dried peaches for
15 white feed sacks; also 5 lbs. fine
dried apples for 10 white sacks. Mrs.
Comer Meeks, Alto, Rt. 2.

Want to hear from parties having
Concord and Carmen grape cuttings
for sale. J. C. Osteen, Waresboro.
~ Want 100 white feed sacks, free of
holes. Exc. for same. L. M. Ader-
hold, Lavonia.

Want 100-lb. cap. white feed sacks.
Exe. nice green hot pepper or sun-
dried apples ox peaches, 1931 crop.
oe first. Mrs. V. C. Ray, Kensing-

on.

Exchange good value

_danelle Bot-







for home

raised ham or meat, Ribbon Cane

syrup, fresh honey, or any farm
product that I can use. Write. Mrs.
L. A. Teasley.-Comer.

Exchange fertilizer for seed wheat,
oats, corn, cotton seed, live stock and
other farm products can use. O. E.
Norton, Fairburn,

Want chicken feed, all one grain
or mixed. Must be sound. Exc. S. C.
Black Minorcas, 1929-30 hatch hens.
Some exhibition grade. = Ss. Mc-
Lean, Sharpsburg...



Thursday, September 10, 1981

Miscellaneous Wanted

Want to buy some small watere
melons, beans, peas, and apples, etc,
Wire or write at once. Lloyd Hogins,
Atlanta, 558 Hollins St.

- Exchange white feed sacks for ap=
ples for canning, large cling peaches,

crabapples, quinces, pineapple pears,
fresh, white chunk honey, sugar.
cured meat. Mrs. L. S. Andrews, Och-
lochnee.

Exchange value for large and small
white chicken feed sacks. Write. Mrs,
R. H. Whitehead, Jefferson, Rt. 2.

Exchange 10 Ibs. dried apples for
10 Ibs. good chewing tobacco: 10 Ibs.
fruit for 18 white feed 100 Ib. sap.
sacks. R. L. Blackwell, Cleveland, :
- Want 2 bu. pears and 15 Ibs. to-

bacco in exc. for nest onions and

Wannamaker pltg. seed. Write. R. Poy
Steinheimer, Brooks.

Want sheep and poultry manure,
or mixed. State lowest price, large
and small lots del. Mrs. Ezra Wilson,
BiReNS,

- Grain and Hay For Sale.

One hundred bu. Texas Rustproof



seed oats, free from other seed,- Se :

pu. W. T. Pelt, Jackson, Rt. 3.

Pure Bancroft seed oats, free from
foreign grain or grass seed, 65c bu.
Riley Couch, Turin.

Three hundred bu. pure Fulghum |
seed oats, gar. free from rust, smut, |
and obnoxious seed, 75c bu. FOB.
Thos. Denham, Eatonton. :

Seed wheat. Test 60 Ins. per bu., -
$1.20 bu.; 50 bu. or more, $1 bu.
FOB. M. B. Lee, Ft. Valley.

No. 1 Tall Growing No. Ga. seed

rye, $1 bu., del. Emett Nichols, Min-
eral Bluff.

Grain and Hay Wanted

Want to buy seed rye and oats. W.
J. Morgan, Stillmore, Rt. 1, Box 46.

Exc. milch cow for seed oats. I. G,
Thompson, Summit.

*Vant seed rye and oats. Exc. pure
bred chickens for same. Mrs. W. O.
Puckett, Cordele, Rt. B.

Exc. 3 bu. brown sugar Crowder
peas for 5 bu. oats and 2 bu. wheat
of good variety. H.-C. Fambrough,



| Dallas, Rt. 1.

Exc. apples for wheat, bu. for bu.
Each pay chgs. T. C. Mooney, Quill.
Want 100 bu. good seed wheat.
Exc. Abruzzi rye or Hastings 100-bu.
oats. C. L. Rhyne, Plains.
Want 100 bu. good, sound seed

oats; exc. 50 Ibs. comb chunk honey _

for each 25 bu. Mail sample of oats
if interested. L. H. Edenfield, Still-
more, Rti 1. Box 31.7 =- :

Want seed oats and rye, cheap, or
reasonable. Pay cash or exc. W..
Waddelle, Pearson. te

Want 150 bu. good seed oats. Sam= ~
ple and best price del. Must be cheap -
for cash. Prentiss Neal, St. Simons |
Island.

Exc. pure bred Guernsey bull

|calves from high producing stock for

corn, oats or hay. A. L. Crowe,
Smyrna, Rt. 1.

Want oats, rye, barley and wheat
Seed. State lowest cash price. Also
will exc. Game chickens or hogs for
same. Harry MacMillan, Blackshear.

Want 15 bu. wheat for chickens,

cheap. Mrs. A. G. Smith, Sharon.

Want Beardless barley and Abruzzi
rye. Mail samples and prices. S. S.
Copeland, Jackson.



and cultivate cotton.
= Ill tell you what we'll do.

live and board at the same place.

other states.

FOR 1932.
September 7, 1931.



The Walls of Fk Are beshinine to Tremble
(Continued from Page One)

A great many questions have been asked as to what the Gaiters and
negroes who work on the farms will do in 1932-if they do not plant

We have a 12-month job in Georgia for our farmers to learn to

_. There are millions of dollars worth of hay, corn, oats, mixed feed,
flour, meal, grits, all kinds of meat, meat products, dairy products,
poultry and eggs shipped into the State of Georgia. We can get busy
next year and grow these same products here in Georgia.

There are all kinds of canned goods that come into our state from

This is not so much a reflection on the farmers of Georgia as it is |
on the business men. The business men have not built the manufac-
turing plants te convert the raw pro ucts into the finished product.

Cut out cotton for 1932 and our b
preparing these manufacturing plants.

Here is the answer to every argument against the Long plan:
farmers must quit growing cotton until it is profitable.
must quit growing cotton until the actual or feigned surplus of
9,000,000 bales is wiped off the map.

No other plan answers this statement except CUT out COTTON

iness men will also have a job

The ;
The farmers

EUGENE TALMADGE.







hc