Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1931 September 17

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'- planting of cotton in 1932.
_. present, and opposed to the Long plan. Practically all of the officials



GEORGIA



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DEPARTMENT 9 {
EUGENE TALMADGE |

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

STATE CAPITOL

ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1931.

PSSST PIL SEES REARS ECS RR TA aA ES

TEXAS

Last Tuesday morning I caught an airplane at Birmingham, Ala.,
for Austin, Texas. This is the second time I ever went up in a plane.
The first time was a short ride over Atlanta in the fall of 1926. That
short ride was very refreshing, and I thought I would enjoy any kind
of a trip in an airplane.

The plane that I caught at Birmingham was a tri-motor. There
were eight passengers and two pilots. We were shut up in a little

passenger room that looked like a miniature train coach. Our first

stop was Jackson, Miss.

Here we nad dinner.
Monroe, La.

\ The next stop was
Then from Monroe to Shreveport. *

From Shreveport
we took a long hop to Dallas, Texas. On the way from Shreveport

to Dallas we went up 10,000 feet. We rode high over the clouds.

They looked like mountains under us. Figure up that 10,000 feet
and you will see that we were two miles above the earth. It was

pretty cold up there. The surprising thing about an airplane trip is

to see how beautifully the earth is marked off. It looks like-a quilt
of all different colors and shapes. The earth also looks smooth.

When we would land, the change in the atmosphere would make us

very hot, and my ears hurt a great deal from the difference in air

pressure.
At Dallas, I caught a single motor plane for Austin. There were

four passengers on this trip and one pilot. The pilot was a young ~

man, not over 21 or 22 years old. I knew from the hum of the
motor that we were going some, and I looked at the speedometer
and it was registering 170 miles per hour. We landed in Austin be-
tween sundown and dark. Commissioner of Agriculture McDonald
had his secretary to come out to the airport in a car for me.
When I reached the Driscoll Hotel it was full of Representatives,
Senators, farmers and lobbyists. I never saw as much interest in
anything in my life as they have in Texas over cotton legislation.
Last Wednesday the farmers began to pour into Austin for the mass
meeting Wednesday night. They had an open meeting of the Legis-
. ae and.a large number of the farmers addressed the Legislature
oO exas. .
At the mass meeting last Wednesday night in Texas, Governor
Sterling was present and opposed to the Long plan of prohibiting the
Congressman Cross, of Texas, was also

present at the meeting last. Wednesday night were opposed to the
Long plan. Mr. Allen, of Louisiana, Governor Longs little boy and
I were the only three persons on the stand who advocated the Long
plan. I had to break the ice with the opening speech favoring the
Long plan. Much to my surprise, the audience of 15,000 Texas farm-
ers made the welkin ring with whoops of Georgia when I did advo-
cate the Long plan of planting no cotton in 1932. When my time was
up, the farmers called me back for another short talk. Then Gov-
ernor Long spoke to the farmers of Texas over the radio for. one
hour and 15 minutes. He did not mince words. He jumped on Gov-
ernor Sterling of Texas good and strong. Governor Sterling was
sitting on the stand, and the audience cheered Long. Long stated
that Governor Sterling had called the Legislature of Texas together
and insisted on raising the price of oil, which was done. He also
stated that Governor Sterling was not trying to help the farmers of

\

Texas in.this extra session, but by his actions was hindering them.

Commissioner of Agriculture McDonald also was taken to task for
advocating a reduction of acreage. Governor Long argued that any
law reducing the acreage was a camouflage and could not be en-
forcedthat it was unconstitutional. I believe that he is right.
I found that the lobbyists for cotton seed oil mills, railroads and
cotton brokers of the country were sitting with the boys who were

advocating the acreage reduction laws. These lobbyistsreally do not

want any legislation and they know that this is the easiest way to
kill the legislation. Every speaker who opposed the Long plan at
the mass meeting in Texas was hooted down by the Texas farmers.
The Texas farmers want a law passed prohibiting the planting of
cotton for 1932.

Last Thursday, September 10, I addressed the General Assembly

of Texas for one hour. I made about the same talk to them that I

have made over Georgia. I found a strong sentiment in the General
Assembly of Texas for the Long plan. The Representatives and
Senators who advocate the Long plan in Texas are making a gallant
fight. They are fighting the combined efforts of the lobbyists of

_ the whole world.

I caught a train at Austin, Texas, last Thursday, and when we
were about five miles out of Austin the engine jumped the track and
killed the engineer and fireman. The mail clerk was hurt pretty bad.
This was the first train wreck of my life, and I escaped without. a
scratch. They got.up another train and brought us to New Orleans.
When we were going on the ferry in New Orleans Friday morning the
engine jumped the trackwreck No. 2. Fortunately, the wreck at
New Orleans did not hurt anyone. I spent the day in New Orleans
Friday and had a long talk with Mr. James M. Thomson, publisher
of the New Orleans Item and Morning Tribune, and a party of rep-
resentative citizens of New Orleans.

At 5 oclock in the afternoon I caught the train out of New Or-

leans for Atlanta. We reached Atlanta Saturday morning. I went in
to see Governor Russell Saturday morning at 9 a.m. I told him what

I saw in Texas and that I thought that the Texas Legislature needed
the moral support of the Legislature of Georgia. I still think that if
the Legislature of Georgia was in session at the same time the Legis-
lature of Texas is in session it would be much easier for the Legisla-
ture of Texas to pass a law prohibiting the planting of cotton for the
year 1932. One good purpose that this would serve would: be to
scatter the lobbyists. They cannot be in Austin, Texas, Atlanta and
Columbia, S. C., at the same time. The Legislature of South Caro-
lina met on Monday, September 14. They sent a resolution from the

Senate of South Carolina to Texas indorsing the Long plan and call-

ing on Texas to pass the total prohibition of cotton for 1932.

On Sunday some farmers were here to see me and insisted that we

have a general mass meeting of the state tomorrow, Wednesday, Sep-
tember 16, at 1 oclock, Central Standard Time. Of course, when
you read this the mass meeting will be over. I agreed to their plans,
of course, and think that it is very essential for the farmers to meet
and discuss so serious a problem as not planting any cotton for the
year 1932.

(Continued on Page Hight)





MARKET REPORT

_ OF GEORGIA PRODUCTS
Prevailing Wholesale Prices Sept. 15, 1931. Always Subject to Variation.

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

ees, xtra, COZ: Sieg crete, Ea: G29: 21g OR $ .28
eoeare Shandard, COZ. 22.52... ce-cccasdenceavesac .26 , 26 .26
Eges, Georgia trade, GOZ. -.............-c.- i 21 ae

Be OOS VATCATUN, (COZ, he. ictcsocclawtinc scene : (26 2 26

' Stags, Ib. 5 14 oS

eae ih a : 14 46

- Roosters, Ib. os ; _-10
Friers, Ib. ae : .23
Ducks, Ib. : 15
Geese, Ib.
Turkeys, lb.
Capons, Ib.
Field Peas, mixed, bu.

Field Peas, not mixed, bu.

Country Butter, best table, Ib. =

- Ear Corn (80 lbs. to bu.), DU. 2... ; 10
Sweet Potatoes, per 100 Ibs. : 1.60







Hogs sold during week beginning Sept. 7, 1931, at co-operative sales brought 5.20 per ewt.,

basis No. 1.
PeanutsOld stock exhausted, new crop not yet moving.

Z





- INDEX

Poultry For Sale
Poultry Wanted
Second-Hand Machiny Wanted....
Second-Hand Machiny For Sale..
$ a $ a Live Stock For Sale
"99 = Live Stock Wanted
pal 28 Plants For Sale
5 Eggs For Sale

ol5
08 Eggs Wanted

Farm Help Wanted
Positions Wanted

Georgia Products Wanted
Seed For Sale

Seed Wanted j
Miscellaneosu For Sale
Miscellaneous Wanted
Grain and Hay For Sale
Grain and Hay Wanted















NUMBER 38

4



: Page Two

Poultry For Sale

: ANCONAS

Pure Sheppard str. Ancona cock-
@rels. 5 point combs, 7 mos. old, $1.75
@a.; 5 mos., $1.25 ea.; 2 yr. roosters,
$1.50 ea.; 18 mos. hens, 65c ea. Mrs.
Jeptha Pullin, McDonough.

SNS BANTAMS

Trio genuine Buff Cochin bantams,
$5; eggs, $1.50. O. H. Wright, At-
lanta, 515 Peters Bldg.

Four White bantam pullets and
rooster, 4 mos. old, 25c each, or $1
lot. H. L. Camp, Douglasville,

t. 4.

Four White bantam roosters, now
crowing; 50c ea.; also few pullets, 50c
- sal Will exc. Frank Erwin, Adairs-
Ville.

Six pure bred Buff Cochin pullets
and cockerel, 9 mos. old, also 3 hens
and rooster, same str. Mrs. S. M.
Gorman, Atlanta, 844 Rose Circle,
Ra. 3198-J.
~ Two bantam hens and rooster, $1
for the lot. C. A. Franklin, Covington.

BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS

Nice, pure Thompson Ringlet B. R.
March cockerels, wt. 5 and 6 Ilbs.,
$1.25 ea., or 3 for $3.50, FOB. Mrs.

_R: L. Mabry, Canon, Rt. 2.

Thompsons Egg-a-day str. S. C.
B. R., 3 mos. old cockerels, 50c ea.,
FOB. Exc. 3 for 1 cock, same strain
of 1930 hatch. Mrs, Shelton Crutch-
field, Toomsboro.

Yearling cocks direct from Parks
Cream A. Mating, $1.50 ea., also some
pen Pet. birds, $2.50 ea. Eustace J.
McKinney, Jr., Blackshear. 2
> Fnree- nice March hatch B.. R.
cockerels. Stock direct from Parks.
Reg. per. 125-C-31, $1.25 ea., or $3
for lot. Mrs. Walter Dobson, Cal-
houn, Rt. 2.

Buff P. Rocks.
bred, bloodtested, blue ribbon stock.
3% mos. old, about 3 lbs., $3.75 for

_ trio. Cockerels, extra, $1 ea., FOB.
Mrs. Susie K. Poindexter, Baxley.
Reg. stock Parks B. R. with regs.
- permit. 12 April pullets, $14; $1.25
ea.; 18 mos. old cocks, $2.50 ea.;
. $4.50 pr.; 3 laying hens, $1.50 ea.
Mrs. John Watson, Graymont.





Partridge Rocks, pure bred, cock-|

erel, $1; 5 puillets, $1.25 ea. Pullets
will lay in Oct. Mrs. I. C. Battle, At-
lanta, 932 Crew St., Ma. 8508.
-. April hatch B. R. pullets, pure bred
strs., 75c ea.; 8 pure bred White
_ Rocks and 1930 hatch cock, $8. Miss
Clara Trimble, Adairsville.
Holterman Aristocrat B. R., 6 Mar.
hatch pullets, about ready to lay, $1
ea.; cockerel, $2.50, or lot, $7.50, FOB.
John B. Nix, Alto, Rt. 1.
_ Parks str. pure bred B. R. cock-
erels, permit 178-C-31, April hatch,
extra fine, $2 ea.; March, $2.25 ea.:
1%-year-old rooster, $2.50. Mrs.
John Roach, Daisy. :
Six pullets and cockerel, thorough-

bred White Rocks, 1% to 2 Ibs. ea.,|

$4 for lot. James Brown, Helena.

: Parks B. R. April hatch cockerels,
$1 ea., $1.50 pr.; 2 extra fine 1930

cocks, $1.75 ea., $3 for pr., reg. per

_ 26-D-1-31, FOB. Mrs. H. L. Odom, large White Tancred str., 6 mos old,

_ Daisy.

- Spring hatch White Rock cocker-
els, $1, FOB this place. Mrs. A. H.

_ Price, Locust Grove.

_ Four April hatch thoroughbred,

_ blood-tested B. R. roosters, $1 ea.
Mrs. J. W. Hatcher, Kite, Rt. 1.

Three Feb. hatch B. R. cockerels,

$1.50 ea., Parks str., reg. per. 27-C-31.
Mrs. R. W. Barwick, Doerun. |

Twelve Parks B. R. pullets, 3 mos.

_ old, 75c ea.; 6 cockerels, same str.
and age, 75c ea. Mrs. H. I. Moore,
White Plains.

__ Two Buff Rock, Nuggett str. roost-
ers, spring (1930) hatch, $1.50 ea.,
or $2.75 for both. Exc. 1 for 1 same

breed, at once. Mrs. T. C. Beverly,

Ochlochnee.

BRAHMAS
Seven April hatch pure bred light
Brahma cockerels, Giant str., $1.25
ea., $2 for 2, FOB. G. A. Skelton,
- Royston, Rt. 1. .

eer CAMPINES

_ Six White.Campine hens and roost-
er, 18 mos. old, $6. Mrs. F. S. Kirk-
sey, Albany, Rt. A, Box 29.





Sev. trios, Pure | ready to lay, 75c ea., FOB. F. C.

| Brand, Hazlehurst.

ES

MARKET BULLETIN |

Poultry For Sale

Dark Cornish 3 Newbert str. cock- |
cockerels, Golden Buff Orp., fat and

erels, March hatch, $2 ea.; 3 Weber

|cockerels, March hatch, $1.50 ea. R. J.

Cannon, Americus, Rt. D.

GAMES

Ewing Walker Mugwumps, pit
games, early 1931 hatch, stags or
pullets, $1 ea. C. J. Cleveland, Hart-
well.

Two pure bred pit game cocks.
Guar. 1 Bob Sanders Roundhead; 1
White Pyle, both winners, $4 ea.
Carl Griffin, Gainesville, 85 Oak St.

Games, about 3 lbs. ea, some half
Red Quill and half Ginn Grey, and
others, all full pit games, guar. sat.
J. A. Crumley,,Demorest.

Irish Grey stags, $1.50 ea.; 1 Blue
stag, $1.75; 1 Brown Red cock, $2;
4 Warhorse cocks, $8.50 for the lot;
1 Allen Roundhead, $2. J. D. Wil-
cher, Gibson.





GIANTS

Jersey Black Giant pullets, $1 ea.
for Sept. only; 7 and 8 Ib. hens, same
breed, $1.25 ea., FOB. R. A. Yearger,
Zebulon.

Eighteen J. B. Giant hens, wt. up
to 10 Ibs. ea., and 2 roosters, $2 ea.
or lot for $37; large, excellent stock.
A. C. Floyd, Clayton, RFD 2.

LAKENVELDERS

Two full str. Lakenvelder cockerels,
March and April hatch, $2 ea. Henry
L. Bryan, Cedar Springs.

LEGHORNS |





Fifty head Brown L. hens and 2}

roosters, 75c ea. Sell part or all. Exc.

for Guinea pigs or shoats at reason-

able price. C. F. Rowell, Winokur.
Seventy-five Tancred Leghorns,

Payne, Rome, Rt. 5, Box 102.

Fifteen fat, large W. L. hens, 1 to
2 yrs. old, 95c ea.; 2 lb. June pullets,
30c each.-Not prepaid. Money order
or cash. Mrs. W. S. A. Beckworth,
Baxley.

Fifteen or 20 W. L
pullets, Tancred str., AA grade, 75c
ea., FOB. H. H. Todd, Hogansville.

Twenty-five W. L. hens and 2
cockerels, Ferris best egg strain, $1
ea., or exc. for wheat or sound corn.
Bu. for each chicken. F.B. Bohlen,
Madison...

Tancred W. L. pullets, 4 mos. old,
well dev., 80c ea. D. F. Thomas,
Odum. =

-One hundred and eighty-five Fer-

ris str. W. L. hens, 17 mos. old, good

layers and healthy, 80c ea. J. M.

Four Eng. str. W. L.
March and Anril hatch, $1.25 ea. Mrs.
Piety Forbes, Brooklet.

Everlay S. C. B. L. year-old roost-
ers, $1 ea. W. A. Sumner, Norris-
town, Rt. 1.

About 50 S. C. W. L. 2-year-old
hens, selected as best out of about
200, excellent for breeders, $1 ea.

A. C. Floyd, Clayton, Rt. 2.

Four pullets and cockerel of the

$4. J. W. Brown, Helena, Rt. 2.

Three hundred and fifty well-
developed March and April hatch W.
L. Tancred and Ferris str. cross, one-
third now laying, $1 ea., FOB, or lot
$325, crates ret. G. C. Rodgers, Way-
cross, Rt. 4. Z

One hundred W. L. pullets, May 9
hatch, $1 ea., or $90 for lot, no culls.
Edgar Woodall, Cornelia, Rt. 1.

MINOKCAS

Seven Pape str. pure bred early
hatch S. C. Black Minorca cockerels,
$1 ea. Mrs. J. M. Hall, Calhoun, Rt. 5.

Trio Giant Black Minorcas, $7.50;
eges, $2.25. O. H. Wright, Atlanta,
515 Peters Bldg.

Some nice, pure bred Buff Minor-
ca hens, 1930 hatch, 90c ea., Sept.
del. Clara Trimble, Adairsville.

Seventeen pure bred Black Minor-
cas, 15 pullets and 2 cockerels, April,
1931 hatch, $17, cash with order.
ee H. D. Swofford, Douglasville,

Nine Buff Minorca hens, 1930
hatch, $1 ea. C. A. Franklin, Cov-
ington.





CORNISH ;
Dark Cornish spring

Pure bred
hatch roosters, Berry strain, $1 ea.;
Setting of eggs, $1; baby chicks, 15c

te Mrs, C. A. Patterson, Ty Ty,
_Pured bred Dark Cornish youn
Toosters, $1.50 ea.; 25 White Cornish,
os. old, 50c ea.; Spring hatch
te Cornish cockerels, $1.50 ea.



Nichols, Rebecca, Rt. 2.

MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
Mixed large breeds, friers and

broilers, 23c Ib. Mrs. W. B.. Collier, |

Ft, Valley, Rt. 3.

ORPINGTONS
Buff Orp. friers, 2% and 1% Ibs.,



}also some pullets, 25c Ib., del. your

station; some pure bred roosters, $1
ea.; lots of 5, 75c ea. Mrs. M. S.

+

'ea.; others, $2.50 and $1.50 ea.; 4%

March hatch cockerels, $1 ea., not

-ers, Same str., $1 ea. Mrs. J. J. Hollo-

L. May hatch

1 Ville, Rt. i. Box 52.

cockerels, |

_JY., Moreland, Box 55.

Dry Branch.

full feathered squabs to 2 yrs. old,
'50c ea. G. H. Wade, Cochran, Rt. 1.



Cash with order. Gomailyou Sirman,
Valdosta, Box 522.0 =

Poultry For Sale

Twelve March hatch pullets and

healthy, 30c lb., FOB. Mrs. J. A.
Lee, Ludowici. :

Twelve pullets and 2 cockerels,
Golden Buff Orp., $1 ea., if taken at

once; also 50 large fat hens for table |

use, 25c lb., FOB. Mrs. F. E. Vincent,
Fruitland.



R. I. REDS

Twenty-five R. I. Red hens, yr.
old, $1 ea.; 2 roosters, yr. old, $1.50
ea. All Donaldson str. FOB. C.
Williams, Plains.

Pure bred Donaldson (direct) S. C.
R. I. Red (dark) cocks, $3.50 and $5

mos. cockerels, $1.50; pullets, $1 ea.
Mrs. R. J. Fleming, Lincolnton.
Fifteen pure Donaldson last of

del. Mrs. C. H.-Capel, Molena.

Four hens, yr. old, 20 mos. old
cockerel. Donaldson str. Reds, $5,
FOB. A. L. Freeman, Sycamore.

Two-year-old R. I. Red hens, best
str., 85c ea. Miss Clara Trimble,
Adairsville. :

Twenty-five Dunlap str. R. I. Red
pullets, ready to lay, $1 ea.; 6 roost-

way, Carrollton.
Eighteen-month-old dark
rooster, from special mated stock,
$1.50. Mrs. Jesse Brown, Helena,
RFD.
Hight R. I. Red -Donaldson str.
hens and young rooster, $10; Mrs.
Milton Sumner, Sylvester, Rt. 3.

Pure bred April-May hatch Red |

cockerels from prize-winning stock,
Donaldson str., $1.50 and $1 ea., FOB.
L. G. Hicks, Clarkesville.

Pure bred dark Red January lay-|

ing pullets, $1.50 ea.; young hens,
$1.40; 2 cockerels, $3 ea.; 2-cocks, $5
ea.; 30 pullets, 25 hens, $90. Mrs.
J. EB, Sikes, Cochran, Rt. i.

Nine S. C. R.-I. Red pullets, April
1 hatch, $5.50, FOB shipping point.
Mrs. W. T.-Couch, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
. Eleven Red hens, $1 ea., rooster

free with entire lot; also some mixed |

hens for sale. C. G. Bishop, Means-

Two R. I. Red hens, 4 pullets,
rooster, $7 for all. Palmer Browne,
Savannah. .

R. I. Red and mixed breed friers,
up to 3% Ibs., 22c lb. Harold Smith,
Baxley.

Three Mahood str. red 1930 hatch
roosters, good stock, sell or exc. for 3
roosters equal value, any good str.,
reds. L. T. Long, Bremen.

WYANDOTTES

Sixteen pure bred White Wyan-
dotte 4% mos. old pullets from prize
stock, $1.25 ea.; 10 mixed hens. $1 ea.
All FOB. Mrs. Mattie McPherson,
Rabun Gap. :

Thoroughbred Tarbox str. Feb: and
March hatch Wyandotte pullets and
cockerels, 75c ea. Miss Lyda Gibbs,
Uvalda.



- Six hens, 1 rooster, pure Tarbox |
str. S. L. Wyandottes, 1930 hatch, $7,
'exp. collect, non-ret. coops. Mrs. H.|

H. Sullivan, Carrollton, Rt. 5.

Pure bred S. L. Wyandotte March
hatch roosters, $1 ea.; 7 pullets and
5 roosters, R. C. May hatch, 75c ea.
Mrs. W. E. Kirk, Rockmart, Rt. 3,
Box 146.

\ PIGEONS
Few select White Kings for quick
sale to make room. L. H. Eidson,
Fitzgerald.
Ten prs. Splashed Red Carneaux,
mated, banded and working, $1 per
pr.; closing out stock. E. C. Cureton,



Five pr. thoroughbred White Kings,
mated, banded and working, all

healthy, $7, FOB, for lot. Exc. for 10]

hens, any large breed. D. Z. Lindsey,

Ten pr. common pigeons, 30c pr. or
lot for $2.50. Henry McDaniel, Ome-
fa, bs fF. : :

Five hundred White Kings, from

At Cary.

Finest bred White Kings, both util- |

ity and show birds, all extra large
and productive, at sacrifice price.
Mrs. Ike Winship, Macon, Rt. 4.
Show and utility White Swiss Mon-
daines, $5 pr., del.; from best str.:
sell on acct. overcrowded. H. R. Nor-
ris, Valdosta, 217 No. Troupe St.

Silver Kings, 7 pr., $2 pr., $10.50]
for lot; 15 pr. White Kings, $2 pr.,

$22.50 for lot, all mated and working.

Thursday,

D.|

Red|

September 17, 1931

Poultry For Sale _

Ten prs. White Kings, mated,
banded and working, $12 for lot,
FOB. J. J. Harvard, Hawkinsville. .

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

Ten White Pekins, 8 ducks and 2
drakes, thoroughbreds, 5 mos. old.
Large var., $10 for lot. Atlan Ward,
Ellijay, Rt. 1, Box 66. ;

Three drakes and duck, pure White
Mammoth Pekins, full grown, $1 ea.,
or $1.25 separately. Mrs. R. J. Flem-
ing, Lincolnton.

Black and White spotted Muscovy
ducks, 5 mos. old. Drakes, $2; ducks,
$1 ea. Exc. for pure White Muscovy
ducks, Lockard Beel, Atlanta, 264
Alexander St. ; : ee

Wild Mallards, beautiful birds for



_| stock or decoys, $2 ea. Lamar W. Jef-

ferson, Albany, P. O. Box 178.
Eleven Pekin ducks, almost grown.
Sell or exc. for chickens of equal
value. Mrs. G. W. Vaughn, William-
son, os
Eighteen spring hatch turkeys, nice
size to age, $3 for lot, money order,
Mrs. John Watson, Graymont.
Fifteen White Pekin ducks, $10, or
exc. for 15 hens, any kind, but Brown
Leghorns preferred. No chks. Mrs,
HE. W. Corbett, Lakeland, Box 61.
Turkeys, 1%-Ib., 50c; 4-lb., $1:
6-Ib., $1.50. Pure M. B. from unre-
ae stock. C. D. Collins, Cordele,
Large Bronze tom and 1 young
'tom, for sale or exc. to prevent in
breeding. Mrs. Jeptha Pullin, Mc
Donough. ;
Three spotted Indian Runner
|ducks, 2 ducks and drake, 50c ea.,
or exc. for anything can use. Frank
Erwin, Adairsville. ae
Toulouse geese, $5 pr., $7.50 trio.
Exc. 2 pr. or trio for pr. Little Bone
Blue Guinea (old-time stock) pigs,
/or male, old enough for service. L.
Williams, Ty Ty. :
|. Four ducks and drake, 50c ea., or
/exc. for 5 Game or Brown L. pullets,
ea. pay postage. Mrs. W. H. Hurst,
HEllaville, Rt. 4, Box 97. ee
Five White Mammoth Pekins, 4.
ducks and drake, ducks now layi
$6. Mrs. Piety Forbes, Brooklet.
Few pr. of Blue Slate turkeys, $1
pr. J. F. Harper, Monroe, Rt. 3

pr.,
ville, Thomaston St. ees
Four large pure bred White Peki
ducks and drake, $1 ea. Exc. f
Cornish hens; cash with order
Pee Mrs. E. I. Dampier, Valdosta
Blue Toulouse geese, $5 pr.: als
/White Orp. pullets and rooster, 75c
ea.- Mrs. Lois Tanner, Dewyrose.
Seven Mammoth White Pekin
spring hatch ducks and drakes, full
feathered, ready to pick, $1 ea. Mrs
A. J. Collins, Demorest. eee
Twenty-one White Indian duc!
from half grown to feathering out
| size, $7.50 for lot, no chks. Jay Frone:
ibarger, Canton, Rt. 3. =. 2g

Poultry Wanted
ANCONAS: =
Want Ancona pullets, 9-12 mos.
old, or Buff Leghorns. Trade equal
value in Chinchillas or White N. Z.
rabbits and other value. Write. R. H.
| Akin, Griffin, Rt. B. ae
Want 1 pure Sheppard str. co
1-2 yrs. old, must be cheap for cas
or will exc. pure bred year-old B. R.
cock. L. C. Bigbee, Shellman. a

BANTAMS Pe
Want Golden Sebright bantams,
state age, etc. Want for farm in Ga.
S. L. Calfee, Columbus, Ohio, |
Lenwood Ave... ees

BARRED ROCKS :

Want very early hatch thorough-
bred B.. R. pullets, to be used as
breeders on my farm in Georgia. S. L
Calfee, Columbus, Ohio, 659 Le
wood Ave.

Exc. 10 May hatch Brown L. puls
lets for 10 B. R. same age pullets
prefer Thompson str. Mrs. J. P. La
-nier, Summit, Rt. 2. :

MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
Want to get in touch with party
who has 3 or 4 eapons or tools for
caponizing. F. M. Fowler, Surrency.
Exe. 3 grade Jersey calves, 2 and 3
mos. old, for laying pullets, or young
hens of good breed. O. D. Lee, Jr.,
Macon, RFD 2, Ayers Road. =

ORPINGTONS
Want a fancy Buff Orp. cock













true to color; give description anc
price in first lette J. M. Bo
artwe.



sday, September 17,
Poultry Wanted

: R, I. REDS
Exe. 3 Black Minorca Giant str.
April-May hatch cockerels for 3 dark
| pure bred cockerels, April-May
atch, or sell mine, $1 ea. Mrs. W. I.
arrell, Gresston.

JURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,

= DUCKS, ETC,

Want 25-50 young Blue Speckled
guineas by Sept. 15. Exc. Keiffer
ears at 75c bu., FOB. Write first.
rs. O. K. Yeomans, Gardi, Rt. 1,



x 34.
Want Mallard ducks. Advise, giv-
ull information. Mrs. D. C. Col-
jer, Barnesville, Thomaston St.

Second-Hand Machinery
= - Wanted

SPECIAL NOTICE
A Correction

Want to buy or exc. for 3 Roller
rup Mill, copper bottom evaperator

fixtures, blacksmith tools (part

large pea and bean thrash.
od cond. Describe fully. L. O.
thrie, Loganville.

Second-Hand Machinery
For Sale
SPECIAL NOTICE
~Broomcorn seeder (hand or power),
ess (steel), mower, needs some
3; 2 utility works, ball-bearing;
ule cotton-duster, all good cond.
hn Pappa, Atlanta, 430 Blvd., N. E.,
2, Wal. 2421.

Live Stock For Sale

CATTLE FOR SALE
sarge yearling, wt. 850 Ilbs., 34
arnsey. Good cond. $35 at my
-C. R. Walker, Grayson, Rt. 1.
e good reg. Jersey bulls, about
old for sale. S. L. Thornton,
meOSe, Ithe 2. = '
our-year-old dark Jersey cow,
August 21 with 3rd calf, giving
al. on pasture feeding. Good cond.,
d gentle, $50. Mrs. Pearl Parker,
ing Rock, Rt. 1.
ree-fourths Jersey male cow, wt.
90 Ibs. to the quarter. $30 or
or some oats, wheat or Irish
atoes. C, R. Walker, Grayson.
ne nice, fat beef, $15. Mrs. Piety
es, Brooklet.
ree-fourths Jersey. heifer, fresh-
November. Sell or exc. for a
uggy horse, free from. blem-
J. L. Wilcher, Gibson.
0 good milch cows, 1 gives 2
ther 3 gal. Will fresh last of
tober; $20 and $25 at barn. W. J.
mer, Garfield, Rt. 2, Box 62.
me Holstein and Jersey, cross,
3 mos. old, $8 FOB, Athens.
F. Moore, Danielsville.
fwenty head Jersey and Guernsey
Ss, Sub. to reg. Freshen in about
n0s., $50 per head. W. J. Morgan,
imore. ; :
ty head of yearlings, mostly
Jersey heifers. Wt. 300 to 600
ome to freshen in December
anuary, others March and April.
Glass, LaGrange, Rt. 6.
ire dairy, 12 cows at $40 ea.
Brown, Morrow. |
full blood Jersey bulls, 1%
| yrs. old, $25 and $30. Exc. for
heifers. J. R. Simonton, Dacula,

, T-year-old cow, $40 FOB.
attie McPherson, Rabun Gap.
Jersey cattle for sale or trade, |
Jersey cow and 2 6 mos. old
lyes. W. P. Chappell, Newnan.

ung Jersey bulls of good breed-

39; pure bred polled Hereford
and heifers, 6 to 8 mos..- old.
Collier, Barnesville.
-owW, due to freshen Nov. 1; heifer,
e about the same time; Jersey bull
1 steer, sell or exc. some for seed
M. H. Floyd, Cochran.
eg. Guernsey 6-month-old bull
', Splendid blood lines, $100, FOB.

. Daniel, Tennille.
Thoroughbred Jersey bull, about

yrs. old, $25. Mrs. A. H. Reid, Sr.,
tonton.

Vv. cows giving milk, pure Jerseys |

ice fat beef, also good farm
ues for sale. Mrs. E. L. Wright;
esville.

g. Jersey cow, freshen Oct. 1,

) 1 grade Jersey cow, giving 3
S., calf 3 wks. old. E. P. Mason, |









W.

Reg.

blood yellow Jersey bull, 26
ld, wt. about 700 Ibs., not
nor spiteful, $30 at barn. H.
tell, Powder Springs, Rt. 1.

1931

Me

_ Live Stock For Sale

Four young reg. Jersey cows, to
freshen in Noy., bred to a Great
Sybil bull. Come see them. A. M.
Pace (address not given).

Four-year-old reg. Ayrshire pull,
priced right. B. A. Weldon, Fitz-
gerald, Rt. 2.

Reg. 4-year-old Ayrshire bull, no
bad habits, wt. near 1,200 lbs., cheap.
D. F. Null, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.

Reg. Jersey heifer, 114 yrs. old,
bred, and 6-month-old reg. J. male,
Oxford and Sultan lines, sell or trade
for beef cows or any farm
Hugh Milner, Barnesville.

Two one-half year old Guernsey
male, reg. in fine cond. $100, or exc.
for pure bred Guernsey heifers, reg.
or ent. to reg. S. A. Fuller, Eatonton,
Rt. 2, Box 156.

Reg. Jersey bull, Pretty Gamborge
Laddie No. 294267, 36 mos. old.
Cheap, or exc. for reg. J. heifer or
milk cow. W. M. Reynolds, Siloam.

_ Ten fine grade heifers, all showing
fine. Come to see them, 2 miles north
of Palmetto on Newnan road. R. D.
Tatum,. Palmetto, Fair View Farm.

Two high grade young 4 gal. Jer-
sey cows, $50 ea. Fresh in Sept. 10.
Chas. L. Mevill, Pulaski.

Pure bred Guernsey bull calves for
sale. Dr. N. C. Alston, Richland.

Three young pure bred Double-
standard Hereford bulls, ready for
service. Grandsire, Prince Charm-
ing (Polled). Wt. 2300 lbs., 4 yrs. old.
Ref. furnished, $200 for the 3. R. R.
Renfroe, Quitman.

Two-year-old nice Black Jersey
male, $25; cream colored cow with
third calf, $35 for cow and calf at
~ = I. H. Thomas, Stonewall,

One cow to freshen in few days, 1
cow giving milk, 6 and 7 yrs. old, for
sale. Write or come see. Heitie An-
derson, Hiawassee.

Good red Jersey milch cow, 6 yrs.
old, with good feed will give 4 gals.
milk and 2 lbs. butter, reasonable
price. Antha Lowe, Lawrenceville.

Good Jersey male cow, wt. about
800 Ibs., $30. Riley C. Couch, Turin.

Five-year-old Jersey cow, fresh in,
4 gals. per day, $40. T. S. Wallie,
Carrollton Rt. 1, Box 13.

Grade Jerseys, 7 young cows and
heifers, bred from and to reg. bulls,
to freshen Jan. and Feb., 6-month-
old calves, good cond.. reasonable. P.
R. Sims, Rayle. :

Reg. Jersey 4-year-old bull, Maj-
estys Gamboge You'll Do Ed,
290568, $100; grade Jerseys, large dry
cow, 3 ea. fresh cows and heifers
bred, 6 calves, $200. J. Hope Tigner,
Chipley.

Large work ox; wt. 1,400 lbs., cheap,
or exc. for seed oats, wheat or good
mule; fat steer, wt. 600 Ibs.; heifer,
ae Ibs., 4c lb. R. S. Parham, Green-
ville.

Fine heifer, 3% mos. old, by pure

products.

| stock; Guernsey male and fine cream

Jersey (extra good butter cow), $15
cash, money order. Mrs. G. 'T. True-
love, Stockbridge, Rt. 1.

Sub. to reg. bull yearlings, 7 mos.
old, fawn color, Volunteers breed-
ing, from excellent cow, $30, FOB.
J. Carl Daughtry, Metter, Rt. 2.

Reg. Jersey heifer, bred, 1 reg. J.
male, Oxford and Sulton lines.
Hugh Milner, Barnesville.

Guernsey-Jersey milch cow, now
milking, for sale at my farm, 4 miles
east of Cobbtown. Come and see.
L. M. Kennedy, Collins.

HOGS FOR SALE
Two Duroc J. sow pigs, 6 wks. old,
50 Ib. ea. Good type. Cherry red, $10
ea.; $18 for pr.; 2 males, same kind,
age and wt., $15 pr., or $8.50 ea.,



town.

Ten or 12
meat purposes. Guinea and P. C.
crossed. TI. T. Proctor, Eastman,
Ri :

row, 2 sows, 5-3 mos. old pigs, $15
cash, FOB. Trade for good corn or
rseed oats. H. EB. Hankey, Helena,
Maplewood Guernsey Farms.

Pure Black Guinea hog pigs, 8 wks.
old. Treated. $10 ea., $18 pr. A. P.
Sanders, Tignall, Rt. 1, Box 87. |

Reg. S. P. C. pigs from Champion
and show winning hogs. Cheap.
Write for prices. F. H. Bunn, Mid-

| ville.

Thirty-five Duroc Jersey pigs, 6 to

110 wks. old, $150 for the lot at my

barn. &. H. Edenfield, Stillmore, Rt.
1, Box 31.
One sow and 8 shoats, half P. C.,|



Rt. 2, Box 62. a

$15 at barn. W. J. Joiner, Garfield,

MARKET BULLETIN

FOB my farm. G. B. Ham, Cobb-.
nice thrifty shoats for

Fight pigs, Black Essex type, 1 bar- |



Louisville, Rt. 5, Box 54,

GES

Live Stock For Sale
Sow and 3 pigs, $15. W. J. Morgan,
Stillmore,

Big, fine pure bred Berkshire boar,
$25 at barn; Duroc boar, same price.
ae D. Tatum, Palmetto, Fair. View

arm. .

Two mos. old O. I. C. pigs. Ped.
papers free. Dbl. treated for cholera,
$7.50 ea. A. T. Rigsby, Sale City.

Little bone Guinea hogs, 3 mos.
old, $20 pr. Yr. old males, $25 ea.:
bred gilts, $50. Exc. for grown ewe
goats, baby heifer calves. R. E.
Barnes, Summit.

_One large O. I. C. gilt, 60 to 75 Ibs.,
life treated, at reduced price of $7.50,
FOB. W. B. Cadle, Mt. Vernon.

Pure: bred Duroc male hog. Wt.
about 160 Ibs:, at 10c 1b., FOB. J. E.
Hawes, Thomson.

Three pigs, 8 mos. old, 2 females
and male, P. C. and Duroe crossed,
$10, or exc. for 12 bu. sound corn or
12.bu. sound wheat. F. B. Bohlen,
Madison.

Fifty to 75 Feeder pigs, 50 to 100
lbs., at 7c lb. All dbl. treated. Robt.
S. Anderson, Hawkinsville.

Four P. C. pigs, $9 per pr. or $5 per
head. Come see them. Wm. Harkins,
Baxter. ~

Reg Duroc J. male and gilts, 5 mos.
old, 100 lbs., cherry red, from excel-
lent stock, $13, FOB. J. Carl Daugh-
try, Metter.

Little Bone Black African Guinea
hogs, ready bred gilts, males and
pigs, 6 to 8 wks. old; lower price than
ever before. T. J. Wills, Griffin, Rt.4.

Fullblood Big Bone P. C. male, wt.
150. Ibs.; $15 at barn. Mrs. G:C.
Clifton, Millen, Box 57.

Duroc Jersey red sow, wt. about

| 100 Ibs., 8 mos. old, $20, or exc. for

200 chickens, $1 ea., Red or Golden
Buffs. Mrs. J. O. Stewart, Gardi.

Six Duroc and Hampshire mixed
shoats, 4 mos. old, in growing cond.,
$4 ea., $22 for lot, money order. Leo
Akins, Graymont.

Reg. Big Bone Black Essex, sat.
guar. W. J. Bargeron, Sardis, Box 146.

Fifty head shoats and pigs, up to
100 Ibs., for sale Sept. 20. W. A.
Sumner, Norristown, Rt. 1. ~

P. C. sow and 7 shoats for sale.
Write. Mrs. Eliza Carter, Hazlehurst,
Rt.-3, Box 146. =

Pure bred Black P. C. sow, sell or
exc. for good seed oats, free from
weed
hairy vetch. J. C. Goolsby,
ham, Rt. 1.
- Pigs, 8 wks. old, % P. C., reasonable
prices. P. R. Sims, Rayle.

Chester White O. I. C. pigs, $8 e2.;
prs. for breeding, $15, treated and
ped. furnished. J. J. Harris, Pelham.

Fine male hog, Duroc and S. P. C.
cross, 2% yrs. old, 200 to 250 Ibs.,
good cond. and gentle; also1S. P. Cc.
sow; sell or exc. J. Sawyer, \Law-
renceville, Rt. 3.

Gra-

One hundred feeder shoats, 100 to

125 lbs., also young brood sows, wt.
150 to 250 Ibs., well-bred- Durocs.
J. C. Collier, Barnesville.

One hundred feeder shoats, 40-80

lbs., P. C. and Hampshire breeds, in-
oculated, clean and thrifty, 7%c Ib.,
FOB. O. K. David, Marshaliville.
Seven-month-old Duroc
boar, ready for service, very fine in-
dividual, wt. about 150 lIbs., cherry-
red, out of 19-pig litter, reg., $20,
FOB. J. C. Lumsden, Talbotton.
Duroc Jersey 3 to 4-month-old
pigs, wt. 35 to 40 Ibs., immune for
life against cholera, reg. in buyers

| name, $8.50 ea., $16 for 2. L. M. Ken-

nedy, Collins.

HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE
Two nice saddle horses and mare
and colt for sale cheap, or exc. Write
for prices. R. S. Parham, Greenville.
Thoroughbred Kentucky saddle
mare, 7 yrs. old. Nice driver, work
anywhere. Wt. 1100 ibs. G. B, Laf-
fitte, Sylvania.
Eight-year-old mule cheap for
cash. Write or come see. Hettie An-
derson, Hiawassee.
Bay Shetland pony, wt. 550 Ibs.,
12 yrs. old. Good qualities. Has sad-



|} dle gaits. Suitable for large boy or

small man, $35. L. A. Lovett, Wrights-
ville. ~

Nice saddle pony for sale or exc.

for good milch cow, fresh in or for
goats or sheep. Tom Hancock, Moul-
trie, Rt. 4. :

Two young mules, 6-7 yrs. old.

Good cond. $200, or exc. for 300 bred |
Tancred str. W. L. pullets, now lay-|

ing. Buford Carr, Vienna.

A grade, all around horse, plow}

any way, saddler, buggy horse. Trim
and hardy. No plug. M. R. Lockhart,

seed, Fulghum preferred, or

Jersey



_ C, J, Cleveland,

Page Three S
- Live Stock For Sale

Saddle horse, bay, gentle, 6% yrs.
old, also plug mule. Sell or trade for
Jersey cow or heifers. W. A. Kerr,
Climax, Rt. 2, Box 116. :

Good 12-year-old mule, wt. about
1,100 ibs.,.$40; pr. Tennessee mules,
8 yrs. old, $110 ea.; 9-year-old mule,
$95. W. H. Bolton, Griffin, Box 436.

Twelve-year-old sorrel horse, 90
Ibs., sound, fat, work anywhere, $7
cash; used principally as saddler for
2 yrs., good gaits, fine appearance.
Richard Lewis, Cornelia. | re

Good family horse for sale or exc.
tA T. L. Swanson, Fitzgerald,



RABBITS FOR SALE
Seven Chinchillas, 7 mos. old, 3
does and 4 bucks, $6. J. C. Lumsden,
Talbotton.

Five about half grown Chinchillas,
$2 for lot; must sell as am leaving
town. Mrs. H. O. Padgett, Atlanta,
160 Howard St., S. E. Be

N. Z. Whites, 4 mos. old, $1 ea.
bucks or does, cash with order.
Gomailyou Sirman, Valdosta, Box
522. i
Twelve-month-old Chin., doe and
1 young, $1.25, FOB, for both, or exc.
for grown N. Z. buck, wt. over 4 Ibs.,
ea. pay exp. chgs. Warren Oglesby,
Rincon, Rt. 1, Box 53. a

N. Z. Whites and Chinchillas, good _
stock, cheap; exc. for laying hens,
Leghorns or Barred Rocks preferred;
consider exc. for White Pekin ducks. |
W. Harrison, Fitzgerald.

Stahls N. Z. Whites, from reg.
stock, 5-month-old buck $1.75, doe
$2.25, $3.75 pr., ped., ent. to reg.;
13-month-old 10%-lb. doe, $3.50.
Harold Smith, Baxley.

Ped. N. Z. Whites and Reds, 58 in
all. $1.50 ea. Leaving city. Sell entire
lot. P. L. Thomas, Decatur, Station
FE, 214 Third Ave.

Bred Chin. doe and unrelated buck,
Ped. and healthy, $3.50 ea., or $6.50.
for pr. Cash with order. Guy Goare,

Richland. Se

Sev. pr. N. Z. White, pink-eyed,
best bred rabbits for sale or exc. for
something of equal value. Robt. C.
Collier, Barnesville, Thomaston St.

Two half-grown rabbits. Believed
to be Chinchillas. $1.35 prepaid, for _
both. A. A. Nash, Hapeville.

One extra fine N. Z., ped. sub. to |
reg. buck, 16 mos. old, $2.50. Exc. for
anything can use. Write. Mrs. Shel- _
ton Crutchfield, Toomsboro.

Ten fine Chinchillas, not reg., 1.
buck, 2 does, 7 youngsters, 4\ mos,
old. Also 12 compartment self-clean-
ing, weather-proof hutch, optional.
Mrs. Chester Haynie, Decatur, 931.
3rd Ave. De-3354-R. 1

Pair pure bred N. Z. Whites, full

grown with ped. certificates. Beau-

ties. Perfect health. Doe ready bred.
Special price, $5. Rabbit book free,
W. M. Keady, Norcross.

Sixty rabbits, Silver Martens, N.
Z. Reds, Flemish Giants and Grays.
Wt. 3 to 5 lbs., for sale. J. W. Hewell,
Bogart.

Pure bred Chinchillas, 8 mos. old,
buck, $1; 22 mos. old, eligible for reg., |
$2; reg. pr., $5; 3 mos., 50c ea.; 5
mo. does, $1. C. J. Cleveland, Eart-_

| well.

Erminerex (Whiterex>. rabbits. Am
closing out my stock and offering
some real bargains. H. H. McDavid,
Thomasville. a
- Two pure blooded N. Z. Red does,
8 mos. old, $1.50 ea., or exc. for a
buck of same breed. State age. Mrs.
Fred L. White, Buckhead, Rt. 1. (2
_ Reg. stock, also selected and tested,
ped. Chinchillas, reasonable prices.
Write. S. E. Dorsey, Blackshear,
Box 191. - eS
Chinchillas,- Silver Martens, N. Z.
Whites and Reds and Himalayans, |
ped. juniors, ea. $1.75, pr. $3.50, trios
$5.25, unit $10.50. A. W. Melton,
Thomasville. a
Checkered Giant rabbits, prize-
winning stock. If interested, let me
know. John R. Smith, Atlanta, 95.

Ormond St., S. E. shes

Entire lot Chinchillas, Stahls str.,
sell or exc. for ducks or chickens
except White Leghorns. M. E. Rivers,

| Atlanta, 1364 Hardee St., N. E.

Chinchillas and N. Z. Whites, from
prize-winning stock, young stock, $2
pr., FOB. Mrs. O. C. Beam, Blue
Ridge. : Pre <i

Chinchillas, reg., pr. $5; 22-month
old doe, $1.75; 8-month-old buck, $1;
does, $1.50 ea.; 3% mos., $1.25

Hartwell. ae



Page Four



Georgia
Market Bulletin

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

Department of
Agriculture

Commissioner







Eugene Talmadge,
THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 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-
tions appear from time to time
advising advertisers when to mail
us these types of notice.



Limited space will not permit in-
sertion of notices containing more
than 30 words, including name and
address. We reserve the right to
cut down notices of more than 30
words, providing that this reduc-
tion does not destroy the meaning
of the notice. When notices can
not be cut down they will be re-
turned to the writer for correction.



Limited spaee 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.



NOTICE

I have a good many complaints
from people who use the Bulletin in
regard to answers they receive to the
notices printed therein. Be sure to
read any notice you expect to answer
_ carefully. If you cannot fill every
qualification asked for, do not answer
that notice. When you do, you are
wasting your letter and your stamp
when you might be answering some
other notice and finding a-place for
which you are eminently fitted.
If a notice states that a man is
wanted who can furnish his own
_ stock, plows, etc., and you have none
at all, then why write that letter?
Please take note of this and be sure
you can meet requirements before
answering inquiries in the Bulletin.
: EUGENE TALMADGE.

Live Steck For Sale

SHEEP AND GOATS FOR SALE
Nubian buck, milk goat type, $15.
FOB. P. P. Pirkle, Lawrenceville.
ese Five milk goat does for sale or exc.
for chickens. E. R. Cleghorn, Villa
Rica. \
_ Twenty head nice common goats,
mostly nannies, sell or exc. J. F.
Williams, Andersonville.
Reg. Nubian and mixed breeds,
bred and milking, from $5 to $25.
Will trade. Going out of business.
J. L. Adams, East Point, 104 Larose
Street.
Yen nannies and 1 billy goat, young
stock, $1.50 ea., 8 miles east of Glenn-
ville on the Lanes Bridge Rd. C. J.
Storey, Glennville.
. Two stock ewes, fine Southdown
ram, $15, crated. Palmer Brown, Sa-
-yvannah.
- SSouthdowns, choice young ram with
2 ewes, $15 ea., crated, FOB, or $36
for the 3, $33 at the farm; by reg.
sire and out of best grade ewes. K. D.
Sanders, Eatonton.

Live Stock Wanted

. CATTLE WANTED
Want a good fresh in milch cow,
: near Athens. Write your best cash
: were. BE. B. eee Athens.







MARKET BULLETIN

Farm Help Wanted

Want 1 Jersey or Guernsey heifer
ealf around 3 wks. old, from not less
than a 4 gal. milker and lb. butter
per day cow. L. H. Edenfield, Still-
more, Rt. 1, Box 31.

Want 2 or 3 Jersey milch cows, 4
gal. each. Give best cash eS del.,
and age of cows, etc. W. L. Hogsed,
Chamblee, Rt. z

Want a good Jersey milch cow.
R. C. Brewer, Lula, Rt. 2.

Exc. corn for good milch cow with

calf, or that will freshen soon. W. B.

Sherrod, Summertown.

Want to get in touch with party
who would furnish Guernsey, Jersey
or Holstein calves to raise on halves
through the winter. S. G. Lindsey,
Lenox.

Exc. ped. Chinchilla rabbits and
other value for any kind of pure
blood live stock, calf, pig, sheep, milk
goat, fowls, etc. B. E. Bragg, Bolling,
Ala. (resident of Atlanta, Ga.).

Want to buy few more milch cows
on milk basis, $10 per gal. per day;
anything under 2 gals. not wanted.
Joseph Freeman, Blakely.

Want 1 Jersey or Guernsey heifers,
cheap for cash, or will exc. rye and
wheat. C. V. Bruce, Jasper, Rt. 2.

Exc. good No. 1 peavine hay for a
good milch cow. Write. Clinton
Teems, Baxley, Rt. 1.

Want calves to fatten on shares
in my field until Jan. 1, 1931.- Horace
Lewis, Odum.

Exe. value for cond Jersey or
Guernsey cow to freshen last of this
month or first of next and not over
3 yrs. old. Mrs. A. E. Haulk, Syca-
more, Rt. 4.

HOGS WANTED

Exc. value for Duroc Jersey or O.
I. C. sow or gilt, ready to farrow, or
for heifer calf of good breeding.
Write. Mrs. Maggie V. Haulk, Ash-
burn, Rt. 4. :

Exchange thoroughbred Hampshire
boar, 4% mos. old for a thorough-
bred P. C. or S. P. C. boar. This boar



has good markings and is no cull. |.

W. H. Jones, East Point, 515 Pearl
Street.

Exc. 21 White Indian Runner
ducks, thoroughbred, 15 ducks and 6
drakes, for 2 shoats, wt. 75 Ibs. ea.,
or sell ducks for $15. Mrs. J. M.
Lusk; Canton, Rt.-3.

Want reg. Duroc boar, 8 to 12 mos.
old. Exc. Berkshire sow, bred to reg.
Duroc boar, or pay cash. Also want
some Duroc brood sows. R. C. Brewer,
Lula, Rt. 2.

HORSES AND MULES WANTED

Exc. real good blooded Ga. stal-
lion horse, 5 yrs. old for a good mule.
J. T. Robinson, Donalsonville.

SHEEP AND GOATS WANTED

Want few pure bred Toggenburg or
Nubian milk goats to raise on shares.
Consider taking a few common stock.
H. D. Yawn, Rhine, Rt. 1.

RABBITS WANTED
Want Flemish doe, about 9 mos.
old. cheap. Grier Reynolds, Baxley,
a
Want pr. Chinchilla rabbits. T. M.
wee Atlanta, 276 Alaska Ave.,
Ni:







Piants For Sale :

Lady T. and Progressive straw-
berry plants, 35c C; Condons Masto-
don Everbearing, 60c C. . Exe for
chewing tobacco, or W. Rock hatch-
ing eggs. Mrs. Sarah Grindle, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.

Napier grass plants and roots. Give
more green forage than any other
srass. September best month ~ for
Narada $4.50 M. S. T. Smith, Cuth-

ert.

E. J. and Wakefield cabbage plants,

$1 M; 500, 65c. All del. J. P. Mullis,
Baxley, Rt. 4,

Large size Lady T. strawberry
Seon. 25c C; $2 M., postpaid. Mrs.

L. W. Seago, Pinehurst.

J. Wakefield cabbage plants, col-

lard and tomato, 25c C; 300, 45c;

$1.10 M del.; 5 M, $5, exp. col. Lee
Crow, Oakwood, Rt. 1.

Kudzu plants. Booking orders for
later del. Write for prices and sam-
ple. Gene Harper, Hartwell, RFD. '

Collard plants, 500, 60c; $1 M del.
Guy Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Large, well rooted Ga. collard and
Chas. W. cabbage plants, 300, 65c;
500, 90c; $1.25 M, postpaid. E. A.
Hayes, Buford, Rt. 2.

Heading collard, Wakefield cab-
bage, 50c, 300; $1.10 M mailed; Klon-
dike and Lady T. strawberry, 30c C;
$1.75 M nee HP. eae Gaines-
ville, Rt. 2

; 2



Plants For Sale

Chas. W. cabbage plants, 15 C;
$1 M. Lamar NeSmith, Ashburn, Rt.
i, Box. 109.

Cabbage, collard and tomato plants,
500, 55c; $1.10 M del. Cash with
order. Verdice Jordan, Flowery
Branch.

Cabbage, collard and tomato plants,
500, 55c; $1 M del. H. W. Dowdy,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.

French shallot onion plants (has
no seed nor buttons), 30c per 50
plants, 50c per C. Money order. Mrs.
Shelton Crutchfield, Toomsboro.

Cabbage and collard plants now
ready, postpaid, 500, $1; ae 50 per M;
Exp. $1 M; 10 M $7.50. L. H. Allison,
Tifton.

Fine Lucretia dewberry plants, $1
C del.; large white nest onions, 60c
gal., $1 pk.; Burr clover seed, $1 bu.
Mrs. B.. Lb. Robinson, Greenville.

Chas. W., Flat Dutch cabbage, Ga.
collard, 15 C: $1.25 M; New Stone,
Greater B. tomato, 200-C; Klondike
strawberry, 25c ron Major Crowe,
Cumming, Rt. 4.

McDonalds earliest
Premo and Lucretia dewberry, $1 C;
$9 M; large rooted Kudzu, $1. C;
Celestrial, Brown Turkey figs, 8 me-
dium, $1 del. J. W. Toole, Macon,
Ri2

Fall and Winter heading cabbage
and collard plants, 500, 60c; $1 M,
postpaid; tomato plants, same price.
Mrs. Gertrude Branan, Lewiston.

Chas. W. cabbage plants, fresh and
green, now ready. 500, 60c; 95c M,
postpaid. R: Chanclor, Seville.

Mastodon everbearing strawberry

plants, 30c C; $2.50 M. Add postage

on orders less than $1. M. F. Etris,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Heading collard plants, 20c C; 90c
M; 5 M up, 75c M. Mrs. E. B. Wether-
ford, Oakwood, Rt. 1.

New Stone and Baltimore tomato
plants, 25c C; 65c, 500; $1.10 M del.;
5 M, 75c M, FOB. Winfred Waldrip,
Flowery Branch.

Flat Dutch cabbage plants, $1.10
M del. G. E. Waldrip, Flowery
Branch, Rt..t. :

Early Flat Dutch, Chas. W. cab-
bage plants, 20c C; 300, 50c; $1 M
del.; 80c M Exp. col. Ernest Williams,

Gainesville.

Wakefield cabbage and Dutch
plants, $1M_del.; 75c M. collect.
Charlie Hill, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Chas., Jersey Wakefield cabbage,

Heading var. and Ga. collard, 90c M
del.;'5 M up, 75c M, exp. collect.
Guyton Teal, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
- Cabbage plants, Extra early J.
and Chas. W., 500, 60c; 90c M; 5 M,
$4 del. P. P. postpaid. HP: Stokes,
Fitzgerald.

Millions cabbage sents large, full
grown, Early J., Chas. W., 500; 60c;
90c M del., P. P. postpaid. "Robt. Mc-
Cook, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4.

Wakefield cabbage, Heading col-
lard, 90c M del.; 5 M up, 75c M, Exp.
collect. Ovio Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Cabbage and Ga. collard, 500, 90c;
$1.50 M del.; $1 M, Exp. collect; Yel-
low Bermuda, White Portugal, Sweet
Spanish onion plants, $1 gal.; $2.50,

/54 hamper, prepaid. G. W. Coleman,

Tifton.

Nice Ga. collard plants, 50c, 500;
Re. m FOB. O. A. Collins, Whigham,

Spearmint plants, 50c C. Mrs. Z.
M. Story, Thomson.

Chas. W. cabbage plants, 15c Cc;

$1 M. Now ready. G. L. NeSmith,

Ashburn.

Cabbage and collard are now
ready. 500, 85c; $1.50 M; tomato
plants, same price. Mrs. R. E. Hackle,
Valdosta, 603 E. Savannah Ave.

Chas. W. cabbage, Heading col-
lard, 90c M del.; 5 M up, 75c M. Exp.
oe Jeff Mooney, Gainesville,

Chas. W. cabbage, heading collard,
90c M del.; 5 M up, 75c M exp. col-
lect. Ed Mooney, Gainesville, Rt. 8.

Early plants of Missionary and
Aroma strawberries, $1 per C. James
Cureton, Austell.

Chas. J. Wakefield, Flat Dutch |.

cabbage, collards and tomato plants,
500, 60c; $1 M; Sweet pepper and
Egg plants, 250, 60c; 500, $1, post-
paid. Miss Rosa May, Lewiston.

' Brimmer and Marglobe tomato
plants, cabbage-collard plants, 20c C,
50c 300, $1.15 M. as, W. N. Lott,
Braselton.

Ei oJ; Copenhagen, Flat Dutch,
Sweethead collard, New Stone toma-
to plants, 500, 70c, "$1. 20 M., postpaid;
5 M, $4, exp. col. Grady Kelley, Sul-
phur Springs, Rt. 1.

E. J. Wakefield cabbage plants, 90c
M, del. O. F. Crow, Gainesville.

It

plackberry, |



Thursday, Sentewiber 17, 1981

Plants For Sale_

Fully developed Missionary straw-
berry 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., Flat Dutch, E. J. cab-
bage, heading collard plants, 20c C,
50c 300, $1.15 M. postpaid; 5 M up.
75c M, exp. col. Amos Williams,
Gainesville. -

Genuine 8-in. Marglobe, New Stone
tomato plants, large Wakefields,
Copenhagen cabbage, heading col-
lard, 300, 60c; 600, $1; $1.35 M, post-
paid. CoB: Maddox, Buford.

Wilt-resistant Marglobe tomato,
True Ga. collard, large Flat Dutch ~
and Wakefield cabbage plants, ready,
$1.25 M; 5 M un, 90c M. B. R. Wood-
liff, Flowery Branch,

Cabbage plants, rresh grown, Early
J., Chas. and E. Flat Dutch, 500, 60c:
$1 M, del; %70c M, FOB. Collard
plants, .same price. E. Y. Stokes,
Macon. :

Millions cabbage plants, extra E. J.,
Chas. W., 500, 60c; 90c M; 5 M, $4.25,
del. by P. P. postpaid. Now ready.
F. F. Stokes, Fitzgerald.

Wakefield cabbage, Stone tomato,
heading collard plants, 300, 40c; 90
M, del.; 5 M, $3.50, FOB. Obie Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 1s

Chas. W., Flat - Dutch cabbage,
heading collard, 20c C; 350, 50c; $1. 05
M, del.; guar. full count. Ernest Wil-|
liams, Gainesville.

Cabbage, collard and tomato plants, _
ae 55c; $1 M, del. B. Crow, Gaines-
ville. -

Chas. W. cabbage plants, 75c M,
sat. guar. D. M. Barber, Baxley. |

Hastings heading collard plants, |
500, 60c; $1.10 M, postpaid. Mrs. Ws Cc.
Ray, Kensington, Rt 2.

Ga. cabbage and Sweethead col-
lards, Wakefield, Dutch and Drum- .
head cabbage, Globe, Marglobe and
Baltimore tomato plants, del., 500, $1;
$1.50 M. Mrs. H. L. Howell, Valdosta,
$07 No. Patterson St.

Heading collards and Dutch cab-*
bage plants, 300, 50c; $1.10 M, mailed;
Everbearing and Lady TT strawberry
plants, 30c C; $1.75 M, mailed. L. Ase
Crow, Oakwood.

Wakefield. cabbage plants, $1.10 M;
300, 50c, del. Tomato and collards,
same price. Mrs. Calvin Garrett, Oak-
wood, Rt. 1. 4

One hundred M cabbage, Balti-
more tomato, heading collards, 300.
50c; $1 M, del. Rentie Garrett, Oak-
wood, Rte:

Cabbage, lettuce and collard: plants, a
500, 75c; $1.25 M, postpaid, moss

packed, basket free: 15c extra if chk.

is sent. Lee Waldrip, Gainesville.

St. Regis and Cuthbert (red) rasp=-
berry plants, 50c doz.; 50, $1.25; $2 C;
500, $7; $10.50 M, postpaid. Exc. for.
farm products. E. J. Hart, College
Park.

Klondike strawberry plants, 7100 $1;
Lady T, 700, $1, not del. Mrs. Z. T.
Williams (address not given).

Cabbage plants, Wakefields aad
Flat Dutch, $1 M, ready for ship-_
ment. Andrew Clark, Thomasville. |

Wakefield, Flat Dutch cabbage, to-=
mato and collard plants, 200, 50c,
$1.25 M; 5 M up, 95c M, exp. col.
Carl Strayhorn, Flowery Branch.

Flat Dutch cabbage plants, $1.10
M, del. G. E. Waldrip, Ov
Branch, Ree:

Wakefield cabbage plants, 20c Cc
$1.10 M, mailed; Lady Thompson.
strawberry, 30c C. $1.75 M, mailed.
H. P. Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Frostproof cabbage plants, ES
Chas. W. and Flat Dutch, $1.25 M,.
del. Special price on large orders.
B. F. Mallard, Rincon.

Millions cabbage plants ready,
Extra Early J. and Chas. W., 500,
60c, 90c M, del. P. P. postpaid; 5 M,
$3.75, exp. col. F. F. Stokes, Fitz-
gerald.

Sage plants, 15c ea.; also green hot.
pepper, 10c qt. Bessie Boone, Com-
merce.



FARM FOR SALE EDITION
OCTOBER 15TH

> Now is the time to mail in farm
for sale and wanted notices for
publication in the October 15th
issue of the Market Bulletin. Z

These types of notices must be
expressed in not more than fifty
words, inclusive of name and ad- |
dress.
Farms wanted or for rent on |
shares may be listed weekly under
the help and _ positions wanted
columns.









day, September Vi
Plants For Sale

: Wakefield and Flat Dutch cabbage, |:

ading collard plants, now ready,
es C, 50c 300, $1.10 M, postpaid;
'$4, collect. Marcus Williams,
E incville, Rt. 2:
Kudzu plants, $5 M; booking or-
ders for winter del.- Gene Harper,
Hartwell, Rt. 1.



Eggs For Sale
Pure B. R. eggs for hatching, 40c
doz., or exc. for wheat. R. S. Parham,
Greenville.

Pure bred Golden Bufr Orp. eggs,
5c per 15. Fresh, fertile and insured
prepaid. No chks. J. H. Loyd, Milan,

3,

.R. and S. C. R. I. Red eggs, 15
er. 15 prepaid. C. W. Waughtel,
romeland.

- Eggs from heavy laying str. Reds,
31.25 per 15. R. A. Yeager, Zebulon.
hompson Imp. Ringlet B.-R. eggs,
t pen, $1 per 15, $1.75 per 30; 2nd,
85c per 15, $1.45 for 30, del. Cartons
ret. Mrs. Te E. Steadam, Brinbridge,
] 2.

R. eggs, Thompson | str. Blood-
sted for BWD., $1 per 15. Mrs. Mil-
n Sumner, Sylvester, Ries:

Eggs for hatching from my heavy.

winter layers of R. I. Reds, $1.25 per
R. A. Yeager, Zebulon.
me to 3 cases of white eggs per
Like to get in touch with reliable
y. J. E. Martin, Flowery Branch.

Eggs Wanted

Want heavy breed eggs to set or
hatch some on halves. Can use
240-480 eggs. Must be fresh, cheap
for cash. Mrs. J. E. Sikes, Cochran,



2

Want 400 B. R. eggs during Sept.,
ate str. and lowest price; also want
eges to hatch ae Sept. and Oct.
on 50-50 basis. H. P. Gunnels, West



g EGhby Chicks For Kale

High powered baby chicks: Rocks,
ds, $10; Everlay Brown, Tancred
Thite Leghorns, $8 C del. 100 per
oS live del. guar. D. F. Thomas,

Forouchbred Barred, Buff and

ite Rocks. Reds, Wyandottes,
50 C; Heavy assrt., $7.75, prepaid
del. Less than 100, add le per
chick; Custom hatching, 3CGe Re EH
tel, Waycross.
lood- tested Leghorns, Anconas,
ds and Rocks, live del. guar.; also
imported Barron W. L. chicks and
pullets; custom hatching, Mondays,
mammoth Buckeyes, 2c an egg.
Brown, Atlanta, 316 Whitehall.

Baby Chicks Wanted

Want 100 mixed breed Reds and
arred Rocks at once. Will pay $5
ash, or any large breed mixed. Mrs.

aC, Harrison, Madras, Rt. 1.

rant 100 baby chicks to raise on
nalves to 8 wks. Party pay shipping

. both ways. B. R. preferred. Any
arge breed. By. 15-20. Mrs. John F.
avis, Pineora.



Cowart, Milan, Rt. 1.
ant 300 chicks to raise on 50-50
asis to 12 wks. old, Barred Rocks or
Reds preferred; I furnish feed, party
pay exp. Mrs. K. EH. Fender, Norman
Park, Rt: 1.
Want 350 chicks to raise on halves
1p 0 8 wks. old, Buff Orp., Reds or
. R. preferred, at once. Mrs. Henry
Fossett, Baxley.
ant 200 chicks to raise on halves
0 wks. old, large breeds preferred,
party. to del. them. Mrs. I. J. Crews,
oboken, Rt. 1, Box 49.
Want thoroughbred chicks to raise
halves, 200 Anconas or R. I. Reds,
C 8 wks. old, party to pay postage.
ESeet. J: Hester, Orange, Rt. 1. _
Want 400 chicks to raise on halves
to 8 wks. old., B. R. or heavy breed
ssorted, party pay exp. chgs. Mrs.
jira Music, Carrollton, Rt. 2.
Want 200 chicks to raise on 50-50
asis to 8 wks. old, any breed except
Games and bantams. Write first.
Mrs. V. C. Ray, Kensington, Rt. 2.
Exe. value for baby chicks and
atching eggs of standare breed.
Write for full information. F. M.
llis, Griffin, Box 491:
Exe. Now: Whites and Red rabbits
or 75 Brown L. baby chicks, both
ay exp. chgs. Write Dwight Strick-
ind, Douglas.
Want 300 R. I. Red or B. R. baby
to raise on halves to 8 wks.
Willis, Sylvester, Rt. 3.

ee

gn Chicks Wanted

Want 300-400 Reds to raise on
halves to 8-10 wks old, party pay
exp. chgs., I furnish feed, at earliest
convenience. Mrs. D. G. Smith, Deep
Step, Rt. 1.

Want 100 or 200 baby chicks, Buff
Orp. preferred, or any large breed, to
raise on halves to 10 wks. Mrs. A. E.
Haulk, Sycamore, Rt. 4.

Ga. Products For Sale
BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE

Frost-proof Eng. pea seed, 20c lb.
and postage. Mrs. G. M. Foster, Car-
rollton, Rt. 7.

Old fashioned cornfield bean seed,
25c teacupful; red and white speckled
Crowder peas, 40c qt. Mrs. W. V.
Robbs, Flowery Branch.

One bu. Lady Finger peas for sale
at best offer, del. Mrs. B.S. Ward,
Toomsboro, Rt. a

Willetts Wonder Eng. pea seed, 30
lb. Lillie Averette, Buena Vista.

Little white Rice peas, not dam-
aged, 8c lb., $3 bu., FOB: Cash with
order. No chks. Sample on request.
Add postage P. P. Shipments. J. C.
Ponder, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

One hundred fifty lbs. pure Winter
Garden peas, 25c lb. E. F. Dye,
Hahira.

Eng. pea seed, 15c cupful, postpaid,
or exc. for some sweet pepper. Mrs.
L. T. Floyd, Canon, Rt. 2.

Four bu. white, black- eyed peas, $2
bu.; also 3 bu. Little Lady peas, $3 bu.
Mrs. Lizzie Halcomb, Roopville, Rt. 2.

Cream Crowders, sev. bu., 7c lb.;
pure Brown Whips, also Blue Whips,
all sound. Make best offer. Mrs. W.
D. Johnston, Grayson.

Willetts Wonder coldproof Eng.
pea seed for sale, also soon gathering
early pecans.. Mrs. E. T. May, War-
then.

Willetts Wonder frostproof peas,
nos bu.; 20c lb., or exc. for oats or
wheat. R. S. Parham, Greenville.

New Eras and white _brown-eyed
peas, $1.50 bu., FOB R. R. L. A.
Crow, Oakwood. .~

Frostproof, extra prolific bush Eng.
-peas, 50c Ib. N. A. Wynn, Glenwood.

White, black-eyed peas, $3 bu., or
exc. for oats; Brown Ala. peas, $2
bu., all sound and O. K. Mrs. E. M.
Travis, Fayetteville.

Two or 300 lbs. Lady peas, 10c Ib.,
FOB. J. E. Martin, Flowery Branch.

Willetts Wonder Eng. peas, 30c lb.;
10 lbs., $2.25, del. H. V. Franklin,
Register.

Tenn. Green pod, Giant Stringless,
Black Valentine, Refugee beans, Lax-
tons Eng. peas, 2 to 4 Ilbs., 15 Ib.:
4 Ibs. up, 12144c lb. plus postage. W.
H. Waddelle, Pearson.

One hundred bu. peanut and ped-
dling Crowders, sound, clean, in per
fect cond., $6 per C, or exc. Robt. T
Alln, Riverdale.

Frostproof Eng. peas, very prolific,
25c lb. Mrs. E. D. Lawhorn, Sumner.

Ten Ibs. bunch, frostproof Eng.
peas, new crop, 25c lb., prepaid, cash
with order. Mrs. S. N. Newsome,
Keysville, Rt. 2.

Sugar Crowders, 20c soup peas,
20c, cash with order, no chks. Ever-
lene McLaughlin, Greenville, Pleas

Box 48.

Willetts Winter Eng. peas, 25c Ib.,
over 2 lb. orders; less, 30c lb. Web-
ster Callaway, Farmington,

Willetts Wonder Frostproof Eng.
peas. 75 lbs. guar. sound, 35c Ib. del.
-within 100 miles. Cash with order.
No stamps. C. L. Newsome, Matthews.

Best known American Wonder Eng.
peas, 25c Ib.,. 5 Ibs., $1 del. Also
white nest onions, $1 pk. Maude
Hamby, Greenville.

Willetts Wonder Coldproof Eng.
pea seed, 30c lb., 5c off on every ad-
ditional lb. lot: Postpaid. No chks.
Mrs. Shelton Crutchfied, Toomsboro.

Seed peas. White Sugar Crowders,
$1.15 Ib. Guy Goare, Richland.

Peddling and Peanut Crowder
peas, clean, bright and sound, $5 per
C, or. exc. Robt. T. Allen, Riverdale.



BUTTER FOR SALE

Two or 8 lbs. fresh, firm butter,
free from coloring, 30c b., del. in Ist
and 2nd zones. Send 5c for sample.

| Miss Eva Cogburn, Alpharetta, Rt. 2.



FRESH AND CURED MEATS

Hickory-smoked, oe coun-
try, guar. sound, wt. 11%, 11% and
15 lbs. ea., 25 Ib.: 15 extra ea. ham |
if postage. P. W. Harrison, Halcyon-
dale.

Hams, 25c; shoulders, sides, 20c
(3c less on 50. Ibs. or more orders),
mostly small, smoked with pecan
Hoe. W. Es Waddelle, Pearson.



MARKET BULLETIN

Georgia Products For Sale

Six country-cured, hickory-smoked
hams, 27, 41, 25, 25, 15 and 11 Ibs:,
25 Ib. Riley Gc. Couch, Turin.

Country-cured, smoked sides, 16c;
shoulders, 16c; hams, 25c. Malvin
Collins, Whigham.

FRUIT FOR SALE

Fancy delicious apples, $2.25 bu.
baskets; nice, large size unclassified,
$1.25 bu. basket, FOB. C. M. Miller,
Cornelia.

Nice, dried apples and peaches, 15
Ib., postpaid: also black-eye peas,
60c gal. and winter mustard seed, 5
co Marie Cardwell, Greenville,

Dried apples and peaches, 1931
crop, 15c lb., postpaid; large and
small white Crowder peas, 60c. gal.;
white nest onions, 60c gal., postpaid.
Irene McLaughlin, Greenville, RG: 3:

Entire lot of apples, about 2500 bu.
at orchard, 1 mile east of Demorest
depot. Bargain. House to live in while
gathering. A. J. Collins, Demorest.

Apples: Delicious, Grimes Golden,
King David, Rome Beauties, Wine-
saps. Bottom prices by truck loads at
orchard. M. L, Duggan, Clayton.

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

Sundried, 1931 crop apples, 10c Ib.
Mrs. Delia Reeves, Young Cane.

Nice apples, $1 bu. del. by P. P.
Exc. for chickens, hogs, or anything
can use. Nice dried apples, 7%c lb.
del. N. R. Mooney, Quill.

Extra nice Red and Yellow apples,
$1.25 per bu. box del. Henry F.
| Weaver, Marion.

Dried peaches, 15c Ib. del.: dried
apples, 15c lb. del. Mrs. J. E. Felt-
man, Whitesburg, Rt. 3.

New crop dried peaches, 12%c Ib.
Exc. for home cured side meat or
pa. Mrs. J. S. Taylor, Elberton,
Rt. 9. ;
~ Nice, sundried, old fashioned
peaches, 10c lb., postpaid. Mrs. Logan
Beach, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Nice, sun-dried apples, 7c lb. in
see lots, FOB. W. T. Wright, El-
Jay.

Sun-dried apple and peach fruit,
50-lb. even wt. bag, 7c lb., FOB, cash
Wiener: C. C. Jarrard, Cleveland,
Rite ake

Two hundred and fifty Ibs. nice
dried peaches, with peeling on, 5c



Gilstrop, Murrayville, Rt. 1, Box 104.

Scuppernongs for sale or exc. for
ham. Mrs. J. F. McArthey, Mosena.

Nice, sun-dried old-fashioned
peaches, 10c lb., add postage on small
orders of less than 10 ibs.; also white
nest onions, 40c gal. Mrs. W. C.
Wiley, Lula, | Ria

Apples on 50 trees.for sale at or-
chard, Black Twig, Dixie, Johnsons
Extra Winter, Arkansas Bik.: special

don Rist;

Dried apples and peaches, 15c Ib..
or 20c lb. del.; also jellies, preserves,
pickle and canned fruit. Mrs. John
S. Branan, McDonough. /

Bright sun-dried apples, 10c Ib.,
or 11 Ibs. $1; sun-dried peaches, 12c
Ib. or 10 Ibs. $1, add postage. Mrs.
Lula Hawkins, Alpharetta, Rt. 4.

Good apples for sale at $1 bu., post-
paid. J. C. Walker, Graytonia.

Large, cultivated crabapples, $1
bu. L. A. Ponder, Juliette, Rt. 1.

Large, cultivated crabapples,
bu. Homer Ponder, Forsyth, Rt. 1.

-Crabapples, $1. 50 bu., FOB, or $2
bu., del.; also cabbage- collard seed,
15 oz. T.E. Draper, Whigham, Rt. 3.

Nice sun-dried apples, 8c lb. Mrs.
W. H. Anderson, Murrayville, Rt. 1.

Dried: fruit, 15c lb. Exc. for pt. salad
dressing jars with good lids at 35c
doz. Mrs. Jeffie Ham, Forsyth, Rt. 6.

Fifty lb. even wt. bags, sundried
fruit, apples and peaches, nice
quality, ic lb.,:FOB. Money order.
C..C. Jarrard, Cleveland, Rt. 1.

New sundried apples, 15c lb. del.
Lot of 30 lbs., $4, FOB. Mrs. C. T.

| Williams, Dallas, Rt. 6.

Fresh, old fashioned dried peaches,
6 Ibs., $1 del. Exc. for meat, or any-
thing can use. W. L. Helms, Buena
Vista.

Bright, new crop sundried apples,
6c lb., FOB. F. R. Rogers, Young
Cane.

Three or 4 crates of figs weekly at
25c per gal. and exp. chgs. Shipped
in peach crates. Mrs. C. H. Capel,
Molena.

Very fine Pineapple pears for sale
or exc. for fine, good grade apples,



bu. for bu. Write at once if inter-
ested. J. A. Owens, Moultrie.

lb., FOB; 7c, prenaid. -Mrs. J. M.}

prices to truckers. C. G: Morris, Bow- |

$1



Page Five

Georgia Products For Sale

Large cultivated Crabapples fo:
jelly and preserves, $1 bu. L. A.
Ponder, Juliette.

Fine Detroit Red and Starks ap-
ples, $1 per box; FOB. D. T. Heery,
Ellijay, Rt. 1.

Pears for sale, 80c bu. Jas. L. Sut-_
ton, Metasville.
Sprayed apples of leading varie- ~
ties. Price is right. At orchard 6 miles
east of Blue Ridge. J. C. Edwards,
Morganton.
Sun-dried apples, 10c lb., FOB.
Mrs. H. F. Brown, Blairsville, Rt. 2.
Sun-dried peaches, 10c lb.; old- |
time peach seed, .$1 gal. Fleeta

Adams, Marietta, Rt. 3.

Bright, sun-dried apples, del. by P.
P. in Ist and 2nd zone. Miss Dessi.
Muro, Rugby.

Pears for sale, 75c. bul Exes for
thoroughbred young chickens. A. L.
Ellis, Denton.

Sun- dried fruit, peaches, free and
clingstone, 20 lbs. of ea., 20 lbs. ap-
ples, 10c lb., not prepaid. Miss Beu-
lah Frey, Dallas, Evb. Ss

Sun-dried apples, 15c lb. Mrs. G.
C. Clifton, Millen, Box .57.

Three gals. sun-dried peaches, $1
for lot, add postage. Mrs. Floyd Rou-
sey. Elberton, etc: 5.

Dried peaches, this years crop, 10c
lb., add postage, no chks. Mrs. H. C.
Reid, Hogansville, Rt. 2

Nice sun- -dried apples, 12%c Ib.,
del. in 10 or 15-Ib. lots; also unpeeled
peaches, same price. Miss N. Z.
White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 34. _

Bright sun-dried apples, 10a: -1b,3;
unpeeled peaches, sun-dried, 10c lb.,
postpaid. Robena Wallis, Buford.

Nice sun-dried apples, 10c lb. and
BL Mrs. Oscar Kincard, Ellijay,
Hit

Light scuppernongs, 30 Pals gaa
bu. Dark scuppernongs, same price.
Miss Leona Simpson, Culverton, Rt.
1, Box 38.

PEANUTS AND PECANS FOR sane

Selected peanuts for boiling (this.
years. crop), 5c lb., 20 lbs and Over,
Billie Woods, Brooks.

HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES.
FOR SALE

Forty odd stands of bees. Havent
been robbed. Sell or exc. for hogs or
cows. J. M. Dees, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.

Fancy ext. in bbls., 10c lb.; No. 1
light amber color in bbls., 644. 1b.
FCB; postpaid, 10 lb. pail Ext., $1. 2554
10 lb. FCY Comb, $1.75. John Berry
hill, Lakeland.

Nice, bright Gallberry, packed and
labeled in 5 Ib. pails, 12 per cs. Comb,
$7; 5 gal. cans, $3.50; bbl. DORE Be
Ib. J. T. Mullis, Alma.

Chunk comb honey, 75 lb. tin, $8;
in Ib. sections, 24. to case, $4; No.
10 can, $1.50. All del. L. H. denfield,
Stillmore, Rt: 1.3 Box :31-;

New honey, 10Gb. > Miss P. Je

Byrd, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4.

Pure Ext. honey: 6-10 Ib. pails, $6;
6-10 1b. Chunk honey, $7.25. John
A. Crumney, Doctortown.

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

Fresh; new honey, chunk or ext.,
5 lbs., 85c; 10 Ibs., $1.50 del. D. FL np
Thomas, Odum.

Small or large lots section comb
honey; chunk or ext. Best qualit:
State quantity and write for lowest
prices. H. F. York, Jesup.

New crop of good bright honey, 10c
Ib. in 50-lb. cans. T. H. Flower
Jesup.. :

PECAN TREES FOR SALE ~
Govt. insp. budded pecan trees,
leading varieties. All size:. Sell o
exc. Write for bargain prices. F. C
Geiger, Flintside. oe

POTATOES FOR SALE

Six to 9 M lbs. Porto Ricans, 1c
per lb. at farm. Rufus Merriman,
Lyons, Rt. 1.

Two hundred fifty or 300 bu. No.





BAG





>

E. Braswell, Cairo, 211 E. Grady S
About 2 M bu. potatoes for sale a
Soperton, composed of Big Stem Jer-
seys and Porto Ricos. M. H. Newsome,
Soperton. a i

SYRUP FOR SALE

Beat-the-Bee Syrup, No. 1, 90c gal
postpaid to 3rd. zone. G. Ww. Dills
Tunnel Hill.

New sorghum syrup, 85c gal. de
Annie Murphy, Cohutta.
- Pure Ga. cane syrup, 12
cans to case, $3.90 per es. Ma
Ae Whigham.

oe





ge
Page Six

eorgia Products For Sale
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Hot Green and Red pepper, 25c
gal. Exc. for dried apples or peaches.
. E. D. Lawhorn, Sumner.
Green-yellow Crowder peas in hull.
ake best offer. About 4 acres. G.
Wilson, Rebecca.

MARKET BULLETIN

Positions Wanted

Want place on farm for self and
13-year-old girl, both willing work-
ers, reasonable wage; want to be with
good people, close to school and
church. Fred Pollock, Cordele.

Disabled ex-service man, 50 per
cent rating, 8 in family, girls, wants

id.|to do poultry raising with reliable

_ Exc. for sound eating Irish potatoes.
Mrs. J. T. Rawlins, Milan, Rt. 2,
Box 49.
For sale, hot pepper and eggplant
for eating, in small lots; state best
grice del. by P. P. Mrs. B. S. Ward,
-Toomsboro, Rt. 2, Box 9.

Farm Help Wanted

Want a good practical farmer with
family for extra good trucking and
farming land on Coastal Highway.
_ House, team, water furnished. Write.
-R. L. Smith, Brunswick, Rt. 1, New
Hope Plantation.

Want middle aged woman to help
: with poultry and garden. Pay and a
good home for right party. H. R.
eerison, LaGrange, Rt. 6.
_. Want colored girl to help with light

arm work. Will feed and clothe for
oe help. Mrs. Margie Tate, Athens,



: Want young, single, white man to
live as one of family and help gather
crop and trade for 1932. Must have
_ good ref. Write at once. G. C. Canup,

Lilburn, Rt. 1.

Want able bodied woman to live on
remises and do field work, etc. Good
hhome, plenty to eat. Not more than
2 children, and no husband. Mrs.
George Thompson, Doerun, Rt. 2,

Want young woman or widow to
help with work on farm. Dan Small-
wood, Adairsville, Rt. 3.

Want man and wife, unincumbered
to live in house with couple and help
with farm work. A. W. Wood, Com-

merce, Rt. 6.

- Want woman or girl to assist with
light farmwork and poultry. Rev. G.

LL. Hicks, Villa Rica.

Want wage hand, settled and will-

Ing worker. All fall job and possibly
next yr. Must have fair knowledge
of farming. Come. 50c, board and
laundry. G. B. Ham, Cobbtown.

Want white man or woman to
come and help work on farm, pick
otton, feed chickens, and help house

e. present crop. Ref. exc. Home,
board and clothing furnished. Lee
yorner, Hinesville.

Want good farmer who can fur-
nish mules, plows and move himself

d take care of his grocery bill, I
to furnish farm guano on 50-50 basis.

_ Mrs. Mabel Cowart, Claxton.

- Want widow or middle-aged wom-
an to look after poultry, garden, etc.,
family; good place for right

party. W. M. Foster, Meansville, Rt. 1.

Want .aanager for 1, 000-acre plan-
tation at Columbus, must be able to

ke 2 to 4-mule crop on 3rd and

. See S. S, Storer, Atlanta, 809

seein to stay in home with man
and wife and look after poultry, etc.,
board and clothes furnished. D. J.
Bryan, Omega.
_ Want middle-aged woman or grown
girl to assist with poultry and 1 cow,
good home to right party. Mrs. M. A.
Paris, Dallas, Rt. 1.
S Want exp. truck grower with some
capital to run irrigation, etc., to im-
prove crop, share basis. Write for
particulars. W. J. C. Hodges, Atlanta,
996 Washita Ave., N. E.
_ Want good 1 or 2-horse farmer
who can furnish self. Farm near city
limits. Shares. Must have family,
furnish ref. A. B. Wood, Griffin.
Want middle-aged, unincumbered
_ white widow for general help around
farm, poultry, etc.; must be strong,
willing worker; live as one of family;
Mrs. Gu J. -darrard,

Want unincumbered young wom-
an or girl to live on farm and help
th poultry and other work. Write
or come at once. Dan Smallwood,

Want expert, practical, exp. farm
an to take management of poultry
farm of possibly 3 M hens, prefer
graduate of poultry husbandry. Wil-
mer L. Moore, Atlanta, P. O. Box



Pe ione Wanted

1-horse crop on 50- 50 basis,



party, some truck also; finance self.
Write. R. G. Byrd, Enigma.

Want for 1932 large truck farm
on 50-50 basis, near Macon. Jim
Maddox, Dacula, Rt. 2.

Want 1-horse farm on 50-50 basis,
part corn and feedstuff and truck,
not over 12 miles from Macon or Co-
lumbus, or some good market. J. J.
Spencer, Columbus, Rt. 1, Box 402.

Want a large crop for 1932 on
shares, must be good land, near
school; have large force, lifetime exp.
Fee Sutton, Pelham, Rt. 5.

Poultry farm near Atlanta, share
basis. Describe fully. W. Ss. Free-
man, Jonesboro, Rt. 2.

Family of 6 want work by day this
fall and large 2-horse crop for 1932,
50-50 basis; can furnish self and pay
half of moving. WwW. M. Peneley:
Douglasville.

Single man wants Son on form
feeding and looking after stock or
gen. farm work. C. R. Holloway, Edi-
son, care C. J. Holloway.

Want job on dairy; sev. years exp.,
can give ref., young man only. Geo.
Braswell, Leesburg, Rt. 2, Box 144.

Widow, 35, and son, 16 yrs. old,
need work: poultry, dairy or any
other kind farm work; both exp. and
industrious; start at once. Mrs. Viola
Byers, Atlanta, Gen. Del.

Young man, 22 yrs. old, wants
1-horse crop on 50-50 basis? sober,
honest, willing worker; must be with
good man able to furnish me. Law-
ton Conner, Seville, RFD 1, care W.
Q. Conner.

Family of 3 want crop on 50-50
basis for 1932, 10 to 15 acres. J. B
Lavender, Eastman.

Unincumbered widow wants posi-
tion on poultry or dairy farm or
other work, reliable, exp., 35 yrs. old.
Hazel Binney, Atlanta, Gen. Del.

Young man, 20 yrs. old, wants
place on poultry farm, 2 years exp.
on. small scale, graduate National
Poultry Institute. Cicero Freeman,
Dallas, Rt

Young man wants job on farm for

rest of this and for 1932. No bad

habits. B. L. Brown, Pavo, Rt. 1.
Widow with 3 boys, , 7, 1s yrs:
wants steady job on farm, $1 day
each for oldest boy and self; House
and wood. At present working. Mrs..
Victoria Schwab, Jeffersonville, Rt. 4.
Two nice refined ladies would like
a place with house, garden and crop
for 1931-32. Can milk and tend to
poultry, etc. Miss Lilie Bell, Blakely.
Want 3-horse crop on 50-50 basis
in good, desirable farming section.
Life exp. in farming. G. W. Dyar,
Hartwell, Rt. 5.
Want job on farm or 50-50 basis.
4 hands to work. Willing workers.
Honest and reliable. Near school and
church. J. H. Cash, Suwanee, Rt. 1.
Want a farm near a good town,
for hogs, poultry, small trucking,

also want job for rest of this year

cotton picking, gathering crop, etc.
W. E. Herring, Elberton, Rt. 4.

Want to get with party who needs
a good man to look after things on
farm. Just myself. For bal. this and-
next yr. A. F. Bedingfield, Swains-
boro, Rt. 4, Box 40.

Widow wants place for herself and
either 1 or 2 boys on truck or chicken
farm. Near Atlanta or College Park

preferred. a Nellie Cochran, Fair-
burn, Rt. 1

Would like to hear from some good
man interested in stock, cows, hogs
and goats to raise on halves, as I am
wel exp. in i raising. J. M. Dees,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 2

Poultryman desires peaietion for
1932 as supervisor. Unincumbered.
A-1 ref. Bryan Williams, Statesboro.

Want a farm on 50-50 basis for
1932. Have to be moved, but will pay

back later. CoH: Kilgore, Grayson, |

RE: 2
Want to get with party who has

lost enough time and money growing

cotton. Exp. salary or 50-50 basis.

-F, L. Henderson, Eastman, Rt. 7.

Young widow with 2 girls wants
home on farm with family, or live
on place. Party to plow for me to
hoe. Can: move now. Honest and in-

dustrious. Mrs. Annie Heard, Cum-|

mine: Ret;
Twenty-year-old young man, a
farmer who understands all kinds of

; | farming wants connection right away.

B. B. Benton, Ft. Valley, Rt. 4.



Positions Wanted

Lifetime farmer and exp. labor
manager wants position as overseer.
Married. 36-years-old. Strictly sober.
Begin at once. W. B. Pippin, Gray.

Married man wants place with man
who. will furnish stock and land and
poultry and go into the business on
halves. Rex McInvale, Reynolds, Rt. 3.

Single man, 26-years-old wants
job as overseer. of large farm or
would consider truck and live stock
farming on shares. M. N. Hardin,
Calhoun.

Want job as syrup maker. Exp, A-1
ref. Kigh Knight, Woodbury.

Want 3-horse farm on shares for
1932, plenty of force to work; plant
anything except cotton. Trade with
good man for 1-5 yrs. See or write.
Geo. Brooks, Atlanta, 28 Gould St.

Want job on farm near Atlanta,
looking after poultry and hogs. Mar-
ried and have 4 in family. Move any
time. Best of ref. J. A. Baskin, De-
catur, 4 Simpkins St..

Want 3 to'5 acres. with good house
near good town for trucking on
shares. G. S. Moye, Mt. Vernon.

Man with wife wants home on
farm at once. Or as caretaker of
farm home near Atlanta. Understand
farming. Good workers. S. F. Walden,
Atlanta, 567 Shelton St.

' Ready to move now. Man, wife and
4 yr. old child. Gathering crop, or
dairy work, or share crop 1932. Have
to be moved. Emory Roebuck, Flow-
ery Branch, Rt. 2.

Want place to run-a placksmith
shop, grist mill combined. Exp. and
good ref. J. C. Reid, Bremen.

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

Young lady wants place with
couple, caring for poultry and other
light farm work. Miss Mildred Hill-
oughby, Washington, Rt. 3. _

Middle aged man and wife wants
work on stock or poultry farm. No.
Ga. preferred. Honest, reliable. Ref.
exc. Wm. A. Worley, Atlanta, care
Gen. Del.

Want to run a plant farm on
halves. Tomato, potato, onion and
other plants. Party to furnish seed
and fertilizer. I to do work. E. L.
Stone, Nicholls.

No. Ga. man and wife want a crop

for 1932, or will live in home with |

good people on farm and help with
work. No bad habits: Answer quick.
Bill Overby, Rebecca.

Man, wife and child want place on
farm. Exp. in farm work, drive any
make car or truck. Sober, honest.
Have to be moved. Make offer. V. F.
Tolison, East Point, 411 E. Washing-
ton St.

Want a good, honest, clean boy,
13-15 yrs. old, from a good family,
know how to drive car. Help with
farm work. Good home. John L. Ben-
nett, Screven, Rt. 2, Box 31.

Want unincumbered white girl or
woman to live in home and dssist
with cows, chickens, etc. Good home
and pay to right party. Mrs. R.-D.
Welch, Iron City, Box 121.

Want a good man for 2-horse farm
on 3rd and 4ths. 4 room house, good
pasture, good land, close to church
and school. Mrs. B. T. Osborne, Cler-
mont, Rt. 1.

Want girl or woman, not under 15
nor over 30 yrs. old to help with light
farm work. Small wages. Mrs. A. J.
Fite; Hull; Rts.

Want a good, middle aged woman

to live as one of family and help me}

with poultry and other light work
around a poultry farm. Mrs. eeu:
Vincent, Fruitland:

Married man, wife and 2 boys, 14
and 16 yrs., want 2-horse farm near
Atlanta on, 50-50 basis; good house
and pasture, near school. Rev: C. A.
Vaugham, Jackson, Sylvan Grove.

Unincumbered widow, 27 yrs. old,
wants work with good Christian peo-
ple, tend to chickens, cows, etc.; can
also drive car.- Write. Mrs. Bessie
Strozier, Fairburn, care Mrs. H. E.
Redding.

go anywhere, farmer, poultryman;
made 96 per cent raising baby chicks

this last spring. J. L. Bennett, Stone

Mountain. _
Young man with wife and 1 child
wants job on farm, life exp.: can also
drive car or truck; also want place for
1932, consider anything. Thurman S.
Smith, Dahlonega, Rt. 4, Box 8.
_ Married man, 27 yrs. old, 4 in fam-
ily, wants 1-horse farm near Lyons,
Vidalia or Metter; consider share
basis, stock to be furnished; willing,
hard worker. J. Ezra Hendricks,
Cobbtown, Rt. 2.

Unincumbered man wants place, |



Thursday, September 17, 1981

Positions Wanted

White man with small family wants
work on farm, crop share or salary
basis. Roley Nay, Atlanta, Rt. 1.

Want to care-take country home,
lodge or large farm; fine gardner,
etc.; exp., best ref., consider any of-
fer. Claude M. Murphy, Barwick.

Want. big 2-horse farm on halves
for 5 yrs.; have to be moved and
some help the first yr.; 2 plows and
4 hoe hands. W. G. Freeman, Cleve-
land, Rt. 3.

Middle-aged man and wife want
job tending truck and poultry farm;
well exp. in farming. H. E. Eady,
Macon, Rt. 2, Log Cabin Drive.-

Man, wife, grown son, 2 small chil-
dren, want work gathering crop and
place for next yr.; best ref.; must be
furnished; share basis. Ww. M. -Stans-
ford, Atlanta, 153-Pryor St.

Georgia Products Wanted.

BEANS AND PEAS WANTED |
Exe. pecans or mush peas at mar-
ket price for Willetts Wonder Eng,



peas. D. Jones, Jacksonville, RFD 3, |

Box 34.
Exc. Kudzu crowns at ic ea. for
Austrian peas, Kudzu to be del. in

fall. W. L. Helms, Buena Vista.

FRUIT WANTED

Exc. 20 Ibs. sun-dried apples,
peeled and cored, for 20 lbs. peeled
dried peaches. Mrs. E. M. Thomas, _
Morganton. : ee

Want 10 or 15 lbs. good dried acid
apples at not over 12%c lb. Exc.
Lady Finger peas, shallot onion
plants or Willetts Wonder peas. Mrs.
Shelton Crutchfield, Toomsboro.



Want quinces for preserving. Quote |

prices. Dr. C. C. Harrold, Macon. -

VEGETABLES WANTED 2
Want sound 1931 onions, doe eat-



ing. Will exc. 1931 dried peaches,

free of worms, gal. for gal.
before sending.
brook, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.

Seed For Sale

Choice Crimson and Burr clover |
seed in pod. Prices, sie and in-
formation on request. S. L. Thornton,
Dewy Rose, Rt. 2. =

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

Crimson clover seed in pod, 5c Ib.,
FOB. Exc. for seed wheat, rye or
oats. J. K. Holcombe, Buchanan. i

Fine seed peas or Crowdrs or
Calif. brown-eyes, 50c gal., postpaid
to 3rd zone. Money order. G. Ww W. Dills,
Tunnel Hill. f

Cayenne pepper, 20c at. Dishrag
gourd seed (the contents .of one
gourd, 10c). Calif. beer seed, 25c
start. Mrs. Ruth Fowler, Surrency. s

Large red nest onions (quarter 8
times, 10 and 12 in hill), 75c gal.;
white nest onions, 60c gal, Mrs. We
V. Robbs, Flowery Branch. 4 OF

Old fashioned red shallot buttons,
50c gal. Cash with order. Mrs. J. T.
Lambert, Forest Park. :

Something over 1 bu. dry seedling
peach seed. Make best offer; mixed
turnips, Seven. Top, White Globe,
Purple Top, few rape, 35c Ib. del.
Mrs. A. H. Price, Locust Grove.

Mixed peach seed, some Bells, El-
bertas mostly, old fashioned. Make
best offer on % or bu. lot. Alton
Feltman, Whitesburg, Rt. 3.

Collard seed, 40c lb. Also straw-

Write



| berry plants, 50c C. Mrs. H. D. Mel-

vin, Waycross, Rt. 4, Box 136. =

Red nest onions, 15 qt., and post- as
age. Exc. 1 qt. for 150 collard plants.
Ea. pay postage. Mrs. W. J. Lump-
kin, Coleman, Rt. 1.

Willetts Wonder frostproof Eng.
pea seed, 30c lb.; Hastings Shogoin
new Japanese turnip seed, 45c Ib.,
postpaid. Miss Laura Garner, War-
then. :
Early Alaska Eng. pea seed, sound ~
and clean, 1931 crop, 25c lb., 2 Ibs.
45c, or 5 lbs., $1, postpaid. Mrs. C. R. :
Smith, Buford, RE 3

Van Antwerp s new oats ;
green, (ready for market within 25
days from planting), 10c pkg., 15c
oz. Extra early Eng. peas, Bunch,
35c Ib. Miss Eva Cogburn, Alpha-
retta, Rt. 2.

Winter mustard, 25c cupful; mixed
turnip, 15c lb.; 2 doz. yellow clear |
seed peach, 1 doz. white, 25c, or 10c
doz. Add postage. Mrs. G. M. Foster,
Carrollton, Rt. 7.

Extra, early Jersey. cabbage seed,
%5c Ib., postpaid. E. L. Allgood,
Draketown, Rt--kk =

Old fashioned 50 per cent Heading
collard seed, extra fine, also swycard
seed, 10c oz., postpaid. Mrs. Shelton =

Crutchfield, Toomsboro.



Mrs. F. M. West-=-











Seed For Sale

White Eng. peach seed, 35c per 100
seed del. Cash with order. No stamps.
C. L. Newsome, Matthews.

Old fashioned seedling peach seed,
50c per gal., or exc. W. L. Helms,
Buena Vista.

Nice, clean nest onions for eating
or planting. About 4 bu., $3.50 bu.,
FOB, or 50c gal. del. $12 for lot,
FOB. Mrs. Ada Summerville Dallas,
Rt. 6.

Old fashioned peach seed, 2c lb.;

plood red turnip, beet seed, 10c cup-

ful; winter turnip seed, 5c thls. Add
postage. Fletcher Anderson, Murray-

ville, Rt. 1.

Extra fine Winter shallot buttons,
50c gal.; selected Old Time peach
seed, 50 for 50c. Yonge Walker, Mt.
Airy, Rt. 1.

Two hundred lbs. new crop Crim-
son clover in the hull, 8e ib. Gath-
~ ered with seed stripper. K. D. Sand-

-ers, Eatonton, Rt. 2...

Ga. collard and mustard seed,
1931 crop, 15c Ib.; Dickeys Eng, -peas,
25c Ib., FOB. J. T. Ponder, Whig-
ham.

Old Time seedling peach seeds, 30c
gal., or 4 gal. $1. Mrs. A. O. Ward,
Hoschton, Rt. 1.

5 Red nest onions for fall planting,
large kind, 50c gal., postpaid. Cash
with order. Mrs. I. M. Greenway,
Dial.

All leading var. cabbage seed, $1
Ib.; Purple Top, White Globe turnip
seed, 35c lb.; collards, 35c lb., post-

paid. W. W. Williams, Quitman.

Johnsons Winter bean seed. Plant
In October. 35c qt. del.; Salad Eng.
peas, purple bloom, 30c qt. del. Mrs.
M. J. Patterson, Cordele, R. B.

One hundred fifty los. Dwarf Eng.
pea seed. Cold resistant, very profilic,

20c lb., or 6 Ibs. $1. Add postage. M.

~D. Perry, Iron City.

Shallot buttons for Fall planting,
35c gal., postpaid. A. A. Fugua, Jack-
son, Rt. 3.

Cold proof dark green smooth leaf
mustard seed, suitable winter truck
growers, 50c Ib. Mrs. Carl Luttgen,
Edison, Rt. 2.

_ Scullion onion butions, 40c gal. del.

Cash with order. Mrs. J. M. Bobo,

Hartwell. :

Chas. W., Flat Dutch cabbage, $1
Ib.; Copenhagen Market, $1.25 Ihb.;
Yellow Bermuda, Prizetaker and
Yellow Danvers onion, $1.75 Ib., post-

paid. New crop seed. R. L. McRee,
Meigs.

Cuban Queen watermelon seed, $2
Ib. From choice stock. B. F. Easter-
lin, Andersonville.

Crystal Wax, Yellow Bermuda onion
sets, 75c gal., $4.50 bu., exp.; Red,
Yellow and Brown sets, 50c gal., $3.60
bu.; multiplyers, 50c gal. Cader Ste-
phens, Flowery Branch.

- This years collard seed, 35c Ib.;
white bloom salad garden peas, 50c
Ib., del., no chks. Mrs. H. W. Corbett,
Lakeland.

Winter turnip seed, lice resistant,
50c Ib., del.; scallion buttons, 50c gal.,
del. Mrs. J. T. Pattilo, LaGrange,
Rt. 6, Box 79.

Shogoin turnip seed. 40c Ib. Write
for prices on large quantities. L. H.
Oden, Blackshear.

-_ Willetts winter seed, 30c Ib., 10
Tbs., $2.50, del. H. V. Franklin, Reg-
ister.

Burr clover seed, 3c Ib. Miss Viola
Smith, Martin.

Chas. W., Flat Dutch cabbage seed,

$1 Ib.; collard seed, 25c Ib.; 5 Ibs., $1;
15c extra if chk. is sent. Lee Waldrip,
Gainesville.

Ga. collard seed, heading var., 10c
o0z.; 14 Ib., 20c; 60c Ib.; 5 lbs., $2.75.
Mrs. J. W. Willis, Sylvester, Rt. 3..

Willetts Wonder Eng. pea seed, 25c
teacupful; Purple Top, Yellow Globe
mixed turnip, 30c teacupful; nest
onions, 60c gal., del., no stamps. Mrs.
H. H. Sullivan, Carrollton, Rt. 5.

White nest onions, 50c gal., $3.50
bu.; Willetts Eng. pea seed, 30c Ib.
Exc, for Purple Straw seed wheat, ea.
pay chgs. Mrs. W. H. Rowe, Car-

_ rollton, Rt. 5.

_ One gal. white nest onions, 60c,
del.; 8 Ibs. Willetts Wonder Eng.
pea seed, $2.50 for lot or 30c Ib., del.,
no stamps. Mrs, J. E. Latham, Car-=

-rollton, Rt. 5.

White multiplying onion sets, 50c
gal., del.; collard seed, 35c Ib., del.

E. Williams, Ty Ty.

One hundred and twenty-five Ibs.
Hastings Big Seven turnip seed
collection, slightly mixed with Sho-

Oin, 30e Ib., del.; 4 Ibs., $1. Make

Offer for lot. Mrs. GC. A. Wilbanks,
Commerce, Rt. 5.

.. Burr clover seed, hand-cleaned, 8c

qb. or 50-lb. bag, $3. Pearl Ader-

hold, Lavonia. v

Thursday, September 17, 1931

MARKET
Seed For Sale

Three hundred and fifty Ibs. good
clean old-time seedling peach seed,
3c Ib., $10 for lot, FOB. Wt. and
quality guar. Mrs. R. Allgood, Oxford.

Early Flat Dutch and Chas. W.
cabbage seed, $1 lb.; fall planting
white nest onions, 50c gal., del. B. R.
Woodliff, Flowery Branch.

Old-fashioned scallion buttons for
fall planting, 50c gal.: also scallion
onion buttons, 50c gal.; white nest
onions, same price, postpaid. John B.
Nix, Alto, Rt. 1.

Burr clover seed, clean and un-
clean. Write for prices and sample.
Gene Harper, Hartwell, RFD.

1931 Japanese Shogoin, louse-
resistant turnip seed, 60c lb., post-
paid; over 3 lbs., 50c lb. H. S. Mul-
lins, Milner, Rt. 1.

Collard seed, 15c Ib. in 100-Ib. lots;
18c smaller lots, or 30c per Ib., post-
paid. Malvin Collins, Whigham.

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

Leading var. cabbage seed, $1 lb.;
Purple Top, White Globe turnip
seed, 35 lb.; collards, 35c lb., post-
paid. W. W. Williams, Quitman.

This years crop Ga. collard seed,
15c lb.; Dickeys Eng. peas, 25c Ib.:
mustard seed, 15c ib., FOB. J. T.
Ponder, Whigham.

White multiplying onions, 40c gal.
Mrs. V. S. Ladd, Gainesville, Rt. 7.

Purple Top turnip seed, 1931 crop,
30c lb., add postage. H. G. Samples,
Alamo.

Perennial nest onions, best yielder,
best keeper, best flavor, especially
fine for green onions, 55c gal., post-
paid. Stamps accepted. R..P. Stein-
heimer, Woolsey, Rt. 1.

Nice, clean Purple Top turnin seed,
30c Ib.; less in large lots. F. N. Bragg,
Hawkinsville.

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

len M stalks cane for seed, 4 ft.
long, 2%c stalk. T. J. Mallory, Grif-
fin Rb.-C;

Gal. nice red multiplying onions,
gal. old-fashioned growing shallots,
for planting, 60c gal.; both for $1,
ee Mrs. N. R.-Wilson, Canon,

White multiplying onions, 30c gal.
Mrs. P. M. Boatright, Rayle.

Purple Top, White and Yellow
Globe, White Egg, early White Dutch
rutabaga, 2-lbs. up, 35c Ib.; less, 40c,
plus postage; rape, 10 Ibs. up, 10c lb.
W. H. Waddelle, Pearson.

White nest onions, sound, 7c Ib.
for lot; small lots, 10c Ib.; less than
5 Ibs., add postage. John W. Moseley,
Soperton, Rt. 2.

Collard seed, Ga. collard, cabbage-
collard and the white var. mixed, 25c
lb; Mrs. E. D. Lawhorn, Sumner.

Two hundred lbs. new crop Crim-
son clover seed in hull, 8c Ib., gather-
ed with a stripper. K. D. Sanders,
Eatonton, Rt. 2.

Mustard, curly leaf, 15 per cupful.
Mrs. W. I. Pollard, Bremen, Rt. 1,
Box 37. ;

Burr clover seed, uncleaned, 2c Ib.;
clean, 6c lb.,; all pure and sound,
cash or COD. Write for sample.
Gene Harper, Hartwell, Rt: 1.



COTTON SEED FOR SALE
Piedmont ped. cotton seed, ist yr.
from orig., 50c bu. J. T. McCullough,
Dexter, Rt. 2.



CORN AND SEED CORN FOR SALE

Fresh 1931 Hastings big-headed
chicken corn, thrashed and winded
out, free from weevils and worms, 30c
at., postpaid, any amt. Perry Willi-
ford, Uvalda, Rt. 2.

White milling corn, 75c bu., FOB.
Geo. Green, Jasper, Rt. 3.

Pure Whatleys prolific corn seed,
paid $4.25 bu. this yr. from_ the
breeder, 3 ears to stalk, sell $3 bu.
Mrs. E. L. Wright, Yatesville.

Five hundred bu. corn, 70c bu.,
FOB. T.L. Swanson, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.

Seed Wanted

Want 1 Ib. Copenhagen market
cabbage seed, also 5 Ibs. white or
yellow Bermuda onion seed. E, F.
Dye, Hahira.

Want 3 to 5 Ibs. white Bermuda





onion seed. Write best price. S. A.
duhen, of, Adel

BULLETIN

Miscellaneous For Sale

Crabapples, your price; sage, 50c
Ib.; Comfrey and ginseng root, 25c
Ib. Mrs. H. A. Musgrove, Chatta-
hoochee, Fla. Resident of Georgia.

Best chewing tobacco, 15c Ilb.;
smoking, 12\%c lb. F. M. Fowler, Sur-
rency.

Yellow Leaf, flue cured mellow
home-made chewing and smoking
tobacco, 10c lb. del. Cash with order.
Dan A. Campbell, Baxley, Rt. 2.

Twenty-five nice, white feed sacks,

10c ea. Cash only. Mrs. Piety Forbes
Brooklet. 2

New crop dried sage, 40c lb., post-
paid. Exc. for feed sacks. Mrs. J. S.
Taylor, Elberton, Rt. 9.

flour, made from selected wheat,
ground on old time water mill, 3c lb.
No less than 50 Ibs. shipped. James
Wood, Brooks.

Peach, fig and watermelon rind
preserves, 50 and 60c qt.; 30c pt.;
peach pickle and plum sauce, 40c at.;
few molds plum jelly. Mrs. Z. M.
Story, Thomson. ;

Twenty-four lbs. fresh whole wheat
flour, from select and recleaned
wheat. Prepaid in 1st and 2nd zones,
90c; $1.15 in 3rd zone, (150 to 300
miles). P. W. Ethridge, Milner.

Nice, clean dried sage, 60c Ib. del.
This yrs. crop. Money order only.
J. E. Yawn, Rhine, Rt. 1, Box

Will make jelly and marmalade on
halves. Party furnish sugar and con-
tainers; also,can apples in your at.
jars at 13c each. Mrs. O. J. Ham,
Forsyth.

New crop broom corn, enough for
3 large brooms, everything complete,
$1, money order only. Mrs. Arad
Smith, Lavonia.

New crop broom corn, enough for
3 large brooms, $1, del. Pearl Ader-
hold, Lavonia.

Twenty-five burlap sacks, in good
cond., cotton seed meal and other
sacks, all 25 for $1, del., postpaid,
ae order. Mrs. Nora Nix,.Alto,

Toe-sacks, 2 and 3c ea., FOB. L. G.
Hicks, Clarkesville.

Ten lbs. new geese feathers, 1931
crop, $1 lb. Mrs. H. I. Moore, White
Plains.

Poke and sassafras roots, dried,
also D. B. root, 10c ea., not postpaid.
Elizabeth Adams, Marietta, Rt. 3.

Yellow root, sassafras, butterfly
and rattle root, all 15c lb.; wild cher-
ry tree bark, 20c Ib.; pie plants, 3 for
25c. Miss N. A. White, Dahlonega,
Rt. 1, Box 34.

Nice, new white feathers, 55c Ib.,
del., or 50c plus postage. Sample on
re Mrs. Mary Collins, Cordele,

Nice, flue-cured smoking tobacco,
12%c lb. cash, or exc. for canned corn
or tomatoes or anything can use. No
orders less than $1. Mrs. B. A. Pal-
mer, Milford.

New waterground meal in 1 and
2-bu. bags, $1 bu., FOB. H. V. Frank-
lin, Register.

New crop tobacco, sell or exc. for
geese or duck feathers, peas or pea-
nuts. Geo. A. Thompson, Swains-
boro, Rt. 2.

New waterground meal in 1 and
2-bu. bags, $1 bu., FOB. H. V. Frank-
lin, Register.

Whole wheat flour from selected,
clean wheat, ground on old style wa-
ter mill, 3c lb.; new crop water-
ground cornmeal, 3c lb. No less 50
lbs. shipped. James Wood, Brooks.

Chewing tobacco, 10c lb.; smoking;
6c lb., add postage. J. W. Steedley,
Baxley.

Good sweet leaf chewing and smok-
ing tobacco, 12%c lb., del., no trash;
twisted, ready for chewing or smok-
ing, 30c, del., cash with order. Dan
A. Campbell, Baxley, Rt. 2.

Good flue-cured chewing tobacco,
10c lb.; smoking, 6c lb., add postage.
Harold. Smith, Baxley.

Five or 6 Ibs. new geese feathers,
80c lb.; also sheeps wool, without
burs, 35c lb., add postage. Mrs. K. D.
Sanders, Eatonton.

Good old mellow chewing tobacco,
15c lb.; smoking, 10c lb. No order
for less than $1, add postage. Mrs.
Minnie Young, Baxley, Rt. 2.

Good chewing tobacco, 20c Ib.;
smoking, 15c Ib, no order for less
than $1, add postage. Phillip Davis,
Baxley, RFD 2. :

Clean chicken feed sacks, $1 doz.
Mrs. Wm. Hiatt, Smyrna, Rt. 2.

Yellow root, 15c lb.; May cherry
trees, 10c ea.; also dry peaches and
apples, 10c lb.. Exc. for chickens or



A
Best grade whole wheat (Graham)

Page Seven

Miscellaneous For Sale

Good smoking tobacco, 12%c lIb.,in
5-lb. lots, FOB, or exc. for dried
peaches, peeled, 1931 crop, Ib. for Ib.,
ea. pay postage. Mrs. Mollie Gamble,
Surrency, Rt. 2.

Chewing tobacco, 12c lb.; smoking,
10c Ib., no orders for less than $1,
add postage. Mrs. G. C. Barton, Bax-
ley, Rt. 2.



FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
White Eng. peach trees, yr. old, 90

doz., -del.; 2 yrs. old, $1 doz. add
ee Mrs. V. S. Ladd, Gaines-
ville.



Miscellaneous Wanted

Exc. new dried fruit for white feed
sacks or for good chewing tobacco.
Write first. Geo. M. Foster, Carroll-
LOT Re ty

Exc. value for sacks. Write for full
information. Mrs. Delia Reeves,
Young Cane.

Want hogs, oxen, chickens, eggs
and other farm produce. Exc. value

$350. F. Hicks, Savannah, P. O. Box '

100.

Want 50-100 Ib. feed sacks, white

only. Will pay $2 cash and postage.
Send sample. Must be good. Mrs,
Cora G. Harrison, Madras, Rt. 1.

Exc. 100 Ib. feed sacks or jute bags
for honey or dried fruit. Mrs. G. B.
Strickland, Duluth.

Want 100 lb. white feed sacks. Exe.
4 lbs. choice dried fruit for 10 large
ae Mrs. Jeffie Ham, Forsyth,
Rt. 6.

Exe. Cokers Fulghum seed oats,
clean, pure, for field peas, velvet
beans, Tall Growing rye, or feeder
shoats, nearby. Mrs. J. C. Bryan,
Reynolds.

Want 2 bu. pears and 15 lbs. to-
bacco in exe. for nest onions and
Wanamaker pltg. seed. Write. R. P.
Steinheimer, Brooks,

Want sage and red pepper for
sausage making. Advise price and

quantity can furnish. J. A. Childs,
Butler.
Want white feed sacks, free of

holes. Exc. nice dried peaches or ap-
ples at 20c lb. Mrs. Pearl Aderhold,
Lavonia.

Exc. value for chickens, corn meal
or white peas, ribbon cane syrup or
meat. Write. A. B. Wood, Griffin.

Fruit trees, peach, apple, cherry
and plum trees, 10c ea. Mrs. L. H.
Coe, Eastanolle.

Exc, 2 qts. Eng. pea seed for white
feed sacks or % gal. honey; 1 gal.
bunch butter beans, exc. for 12 white
feed sacks, 100-lb. size, clean, no
holes. Frances Boatright, Rayle.

Exc. milch cows, hogs, beef cattle
or anything can use from my farm
at Blythe Island for cotton at mar-
ket price. B. O. Fussell, Brunswick.



Grain and Hay For Sale

Blue Stem Rust Proof seed oats,
any amount, 75c bu. W. H.. Holt,
Fayetteville, Rt. 3.

Twenty tons good peavine hay, and
200 bu. sweet potatoes. Mitchell
su Agricultural Committee, Pel-

am.

Good, clean Abruzzi rye, $1 bu.,
FOB. W. J. Grier, Clermont.

Blue Turf oats, 75c bu. Money order
us cash. A. C. Bowen, Cleveland,
ibe 5.

Large grain Beardless Blue Stem
seed wheat, $1 bu.; Fulghum seed
Oats; 15c -bu., FOB. J... F. Ployd,
Adairsville, Rt. 3.

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

Abruzzi rye, $1 bu., FOB, Cler-
mont. C. W. Grier, Lula, Rt. 1.

Three hundred bu. Texas Rust
proof seed oats, 60c bu., FOB. Money
order. J. M. Smith, Statesboro, Rt. 1.

Three hundred bu. genuine Ban-
croft seed oats, 60c bu., in new 5 bu.
bags, FOB. Geo. Jennings, Dawson.

One hundred bu. good Blue Stem
seed wheat, $1 bu. Milton J. Bush,
Barnesville.

Blue Stem seed wheat, pure and
clean, $1.25 bu.; Fulghum and Hast-

J. H, Patrick, Jackson.

Hastings 100-Bu., Cokers cold-
proof and Fulghum oats, 65c; Mar-~
retts 40 to 1 wheat, $1.50. All 1 yr.
from originators. Pure, clean, saved
without any rain. R. W. Stembridge,
Milledgeville.

Blue Stem seed wheat, $1 bu. J. R.
Maddox, Athens, Rt. 2. :

Pure Appler seed oats, 60c bu.;
pure Purple Straw seed wheat, $1
bu.; Abruzzi rye, $1.50, FOB. Raised



white feed sacks. Mrs. J. B. Jones,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1.



on my own farm. C. L. Mouchet,
Bowersville.



ings 100-Bu. seed oats, 70c bu., FOB. -













3 and. Bancroft oats,

without rain. Cash with order.

Page Eight
Grain and Hay For Sale

Cokers Ped. and Cert. Fulghum
5c bu.; Blue
Stem wheat, $1.25; Abruzzi rye, $1.50.
S. L. Thornton, Dewy Rose, Rt. 2.

Cokers coldproof seed oats, 5c
bu. at my place. Pure and saved

Langston, Ashland.

Twenty bu. improved Abruzzi rye
seed, $1.50 bu., FOB. C. A. McClain,
Lavonia.

seven hundred bu. recleaned Ful-
enum, 50c_ bu;

poot0; 75 bu; Blue Straw wheat, $1.10

:

: ghum, 75c bu.:

- ner,

- FOB;

X

: Fulghum oats,

bu.; M bu. mixed oats, 5 bu. bags,
38c bu. Bags ret. Amos Floyd, Canon.
Pure Abruzzi rye from Cokers seed,
$i bu., in 2% bu. bags. S. M. Carter,
Carters. ~
Bancroft seed oats, $1 bu.: Ful-
seed rye, $2 bu. W.
Quitman.
$1.50 bu., FOB;

W. Williams,
Fifty bu. Abruzzi,

- YTexas Rustproof seed oats (no foul

seeds), 50c bu.; Blue Atem seed
wheat, $1.15 bu. P. W. Ethridge, Mil-

Fifteen bu. No. Ga. seed rye, $1.25
u., FOB. Grown on the place V.

Bramhold, Mt. Airy, Rt. 1.
Hastings 100-Bu. oats, 75c; extra

- fine Fulghum, 75c; Appler Rustproof,

60c. R. D. Tatum, Palmetto.
_Car of bright Oat straw, $7 ton,
1500 bu. Hastings 100-Bu.
oats. Sound, bright and clean. no
- smut, 75c bu. G. W. Coleman, Tifton.
Bancroft and 100-Bu. seed oats.
Grown especially for seed, 50c bu.,
any quantity. James Wood, Brooks.
Two hundred bu. Cokers Imp.
thrashed without
rain, free of onions or smut, 60c bu.,

_ FOB. J. E. Hawes, Thomson.
Pure Bancroft oats, guar. free of

onions and other obnoxious seed, 55c
bu.; over 50 bu., -50c bu., in good
bags, FOB; 50c at barn, bags un-

furnished. J. C. Ware, Royston.

Texas Rustproof oats 55c bu. del.
at Bostwick Webster Callaway,
Farmington.

1931 crop Abruzzi, 90c bu., 3 bu.

bags FOB here. Money order. C. C.

_Jarrard, Cleveland, Rt. 1.
- Cokers Fulghum seed oats, free of
trash, etc., good wt. grain, 3 bu. bags,
50c bu., FOB. Exc. for feeder shoats,
near by. Mrs. J. C. Bryan, Reynolds.
_ Fufty bu. fine rye, will take 75c bu.,
FOB. C. R: Ray, Ellijay.
Abruzzi rye, recleaned, 2nd _ yr.
~-Cokers seed, excellent quality, $1.35
bu., in 24%4-bu. bags. J. D. Massee,
-Marshallville, RFD.

Fulcaster wheat, recleaned, 2-bu.
bags, $1 bu; Abruzzi rye, $1.30 in
2-bu. bags; Fulghum seed oats, pure,
60c. J. L. White, Adairsville, Rt. 1.

Four hundred bu. Cokers latest
strain No. 5 Fulghum oats, bright,
sound, cisean and: unmixed, 65c bu.
Sampie on request. J. H. Palmer,
Tennille.

Pure Abruzzi rye, recleaned, free of

~ grass and weed seed, $1.50 bu., cash
- with order, FOB. W. B. Collier, Ets

Valley, RFD.
Good, clean No. Ga. Tall roe
seed rye, $1.15 bu., del. Ga. points,

- Jots of 5:bu or more. R. L. Pehiotsn.

Mineral Bluff.

This years crop Abruzzi rye, in
3-bu. bags, 90c bu., FOB, money or-
der. C. C. Jarrard, Cleveland, Rt. 1.
- Sastings 100-Bu. oats, bright and
clean, 50c bu. in 5-bu. lots here; 10

bu. or more, 45c bu. here. W. H.
Bolton, Griffin, Box 436.

-. Abruzzi rye, pure, recleaned, in
strong 242-bu. bags, $1.35 bu.; Cokers
str. Fulghum oats, 60c bu., all FOB
here. L. M. Felton, Marshallville.

Recleaned No. Ga. grown Abruzzi
rye, $1 bu., FOB. M. F. Lewis, Adairs-
ville.

Three hundred bu. Woods ped.
oats at 60c bu.; 25 bu. his best seed

wheat, $1.25 bu., first. yr. sowing,
clean and absolutely sound. A.
Drake, Philomath.

Shadburns imp. Fulghum = seed
oats, produced as high as 128 bu. per
A. last season, lots of 10 bu. up, 75c
-bu., FOB. J. L. Shadburn, Buford.

Good Blue Stem seed wheat, $1.25

- bu., frt. prepaid in Ga., money order,

cashiers or certified chk. accepted.

_ Arthur Owen, Barnesville.

Abruzzi rye, Ga., grown, $1.25 bu.,

' FOB. N. A. Wynn, Glenwood.

- Turft oats, treated for smut, spores,
80c bu. S. D. Duncan, Cornelia, Rt. 1.
One hundred bu. Fulghum oats, 50c
bu. Geo. W. Greer, Fort Valley.
Two hundred bu. rye for sale. C. V.
Bruce, Jasper, Rt. 2.
Tall Growing Ga. seed rye, 1931
-erop, new and clean, 75c bu- in 5

and 10-bu. lots, FOB. W. T. Wright,
- Ellijay.

A. J-' hurst, Rt. 3, Box 146.

10 tons oat straw, |

MARKET BULLETIN

Grain and Hay For Sale
Pure ped. Fulghum seed oats, free
of any pest, no smut, any quantity,
65c bu., FOB. A. F. Sawyer, Vidalia.
Fifty bu. fine rye; will take 75c bu.,
FOB. C. R. Ray, Ellijay.
Ten bu. Fulghum oat seed, will send
sample. Mrs. Eliza Carter, Hazle-

Coker Fulghum cat seed, av. 60 bu.
A., no fertilizer on in 4 yrs., 75c bu.;
12 tons cut-in-the-pink oat straw,
cut, baled, stored without rain, $8
ton. R. R. Renfroe, Quitman.

Bancroft, Fulghum and _ Appler
seed oats, guar. free from rust, smut
and obnoxious seed, 50c. bu., FOB.
Sam Lovinggood, Bowersville.

Pure Bancroft seed oats, specially
saved for seed, from big yields, rust-
proof, 50c bu., any quantity. Jas. B.
Woods, Brooks.

Absolutely pure Blue Stem seed
wheat, $1.25 bu., 24%2-bu. bags; pure
Fulghum seed oats, in 5-bu. bags, 50c
bu., FOB. W. M. Wright, Ft. Valley.

Pure So. Ga. Abruzzi rye, grown
on my own farm in Houston County,
$1.35 bu., 5 or more bu. lots, FOB Ft.
Valley or Macon. Cash with order.
W. D. Tharpe, Ft. Valley.

Pure Blue Stem seed wheat, re-
cleaned and treated for weevil, no
grass or other seeds, $1 bu., FOB.
W. J. Potts, Bonaire.

Good, cleaned seed oats, Fulghum
and Bancroft, 5-bu. bags, 60c bu.,
FOB. No orders for less than 5 bu.
Eli S: Lewis, Dawson. ~

Seed oats, Fulghum and Bancroft,
60c bu., FOB. No orders for less than
5 bu. J.P. M. Dowell, Dawson.

Genuine, recleaned -Abruzzi_ seed
rye, grown from Cokers ped. seed,
certified by Ga. Crop Assn, $1.50
bu., FOB; Cokers Fulghum oats,
pure, recleaned, 60c bu., FOB. O. K.
David, Marshallville.

Two hundred bu. No. Ga. Tall
Growing seed rye, 75c bu., cash with
order. J. R. Harpe, Sweet Gum.

Nortons cold-proof oats, stand lots
of hard cold.and are good producers,
first-class seed, 75c bu. Ben R. Tan-
ner, Sandersville.

Grain and Hay For Sale

Two M bu. Abruzzi and 5 M bu.
No. Ga. rye, each $1 bu., FOB, in
even wt. bags for immediate ship-
ment. D. B. Anderson, Blue Ridge.

_Carload oat and wheat straw, $8
ton ,FOB; 30 bu. pure Blue Stem
seed wheat, $1 bu., FOB. Exc. for
hams, good cond. at reasonable price.
Do h.: Patrick, -Griffin, :-R..C.

Per 100-lb. lots, FOB, 75 bu. mixed
Abruzzi vetch, Austrian peas, $3.25;
200 bu. Blue Stem Wheat vetch, Aus-
trian peas, $2.75; Abruzzi vetch, $3;
French rye vetch, $3.50. R. L. Black-
well, County Agt., Calhoun.

Absolutely pure Blue Stem seed
wheat, $1.25 bu., 2%-bu. bags, and
pure Fulghum seed oats, 5-bu. bags,
50c.bu., FOB. W. M. Wright, Fort
Valley.

Pure So. Ga. Abruzzi seed rye,
grown on my farm in Houston Coun-
ty, $1.35 bu. in 5-bu. and more lots,
FOB Fort Valley or Macon, cash with
order. W. D. Tharpe, Fort Valley.

Extra heavy Fulghum oats, cured
in excellent weather, 60 to 80 bu. per
acre., free of foreign weed seed, 60c
bu. J. G. Dean, Dawson.

Fifty bu. Blue Stem .seed wheat,
recleaned and treated, 2%4-bu. bags,
$1, FOB. W. J. Potts, Bonaire.

Norton coldproof oats, stand lots of
cold weather and produce well; some
good seed 75c /bu. Write. Ben R.
Tanner, Sandersville.

Good, bright hay, 10 or more tons
for sale. J. C. Etheridge, Forsyth.

Recleaned No. Ga. grown Abruzzi
rye, $1 bu.; -Cokers ped. Abruzzi,
$1.25 bu., FOB. M. F. Lewis, Adairs-
ville.

Blue Stem or Purple Straw seed



T.| wheat, $1 bu., FOB, cash with order.

S. S. Copeland, Jackson.

Cokers ped. state certified Abruzzi
rye and Blue Stem wheat, $1.50;
Bancroft, Fulghum and Norton oats,
75c. S. L. Thornton, Dewyrose, Rt. 2.

Hundred and twenty-five bu. good
Ga. rye, $1.25 bu.; seed oats, 50c bu.
S. D. Harrison, Kathleen.

One hundred bu. Abruzzi, 100 bu.
ee wheat, each, $1 bu. Recleaned,

4 OM. bags. FOB. H. L. Pritchford,
iene Rte G6:

Bancroft seed oats, 50c bu., 25 bu.
up; Blue Stem wheat, $1.25 bu.; 10
bu. up, $1.10; Cars baled oat straw,
$8; wheat straw, $7 ton. FOB. Jas.
Woods, Brooks.

farm in Houston: county. $1.35 bu. in



5 or more bu. lots. FOB Ft. Valley or
Macon, cash with order. W. D.

Pure So. Ga. Abruzzi, grown on my |}

Tharpe, Ft. Valley.

Fight bu. rye, clear of. any kind of
seed, $1.25 bu. Good heavy enas
Johnnie Cochran, Madison, Rt.

Sev. hundred bu. good seed meat
and Abruzzi,
Frenderson, County Agt., Chatsworth.

Five to 7 M. bu. Fulghum oats,
cheap, or exc. for good seed wheat.
Oscar McKenzie, Montezuma.

Approximately 500 bu. guar.
Abruzzi, $1.50 bu. del. anywhere
within the State. Cash or-M. O. N.
A. Pratt, Ellijay.

Bancroft seed oats, pure, $1 bu.;
tall growing rye, $2 bu. Ww. W..
Williams, Quitman.

Abruzzi seed rye, 3 bu. bags, 90c
dis ene C. C. Jarrard, Cleveland,
Tit. 1.

Good, sound wheat for chicken
feed, $1.50 per hundred Ibs. FOB.
H. M. Cheek, Bowersville.

One hundred bu. Appler seed oats,
free from Johnson grass, 60c bu. FOB.
G. B. Poore, Canon, Rt. 2.

Abruzzi rye and winter peas mixed,
$1.25 bu. C. L. Rhyne, Plains.
Bancroft seed oats, 50c bu., any
quantity; Blue Stem seed wheat, $1
bu.; Oat straw, well baled, $8 ton:
wheat straw, $7. Billie Woods,
Brooks.

Pure Bancroft oats., guar. free ob-
noxious. seed, 55c bu. Over 50 Ibs.,
50c bu.; in new bags, FOB, or 50c
at barn; any amt., you furnish bags.
J. C. Ware, Royston.

Twenty or 25 bu. nice, clean Purple
Straw wheat, $1 bu. FOB. J. E. Hix,
Lavonia.

Choice Blue Stem wheat, $1 bu.

Forty bu. pure Purple Straw seed
wheat, free from onions, etc., $1 bu.
FOB. No checks. John Joe Pruitt,
Commerce, Rt. 7. s
Best grade Texas Rust Proof oats
for seed. Sell or exc. for pure Duroc
pigs or young gilt. H. M. Carter,
Logansville.
One thousand seven hundred bu.
genuine Fulghum seed oats, free of
grass seed, 55c bu. FOB; 500 bu.
Texas Red Star, 55c bu.; 50 bu.
Abruzzi rye, $1.25 bu. J. L. Kelley,
Tennille.
Six bu. Abruzzi seed rye, $1.50 bu.
FOB, or exc. for 2 good pigs, or Rust
Proof seed oats at 60c bu. ea., pay
chgs. C. G. Oliver, Barnesville, Rt. 2:

Genuine French rye, insp., $1.50
os ea R. F. Whittemore, Calhoun,
Russe.
Thirty bu.-Cokers genuine, sound,
free of onions, Abruzzi, FOB, $1.60
bu., 5 bu. lots; $1.75 smaller; 10 bu.
$1.50.; sample, 6c (stamps). W. L.
Ledford, Crandall, Rt. 1.
Hastings 100-bu. oats, 75c bu.
FOB. Free from wild onions, thresh-
os and dry. G. B. McLane, Hartwell,
RG. Ds

Good cured peavine hay, not baled,
packed in barn, good and bright, $25
per ton. John L. Bennett, Screven,
Rte 2. Box a:

Grain and Hay Wanted

Exc. 1931 sorghum cane syrup in
good 10-lb..cans for seed oats. J. J.
Davidson, Pineview.

Want 60 bu. Fulghum seed oats.
Quote best price, frt. prepaid to Met-
ter. G. B. Ham, Cobbtown.

Want enough hairy vetch to sow
1% acres, also 244 bu. Purple Stem
wheat and 6 bu. good seed rye, cheap
oe caeh J. A. Crumley, Demorest,

. . #

Exc. potatoes or chickens for 2 bu.
seed oats, 1 bu. seed wheat, at once.
J. O. Stewart, Gardi.

Exc. Burr clover seed, hand-
cleaned, 6c lb., for seed wheat at $1
bu. Sidney Aderhold, Lavonia.

Want 100 bu. good sound, clean
seed oats, Fulghum preferred. Exc.
75 lbs. tin honey for 25 bu: L. H.
Edenfield, Stillmore, Rt. 1, Box 31.



$1 bu; ROB. J. E..

FOB, Farrar. A. M. Aiken, Newborn.



Thursday, September 17, 1931 _

Want seed rye and oats. Quote
best price del. W. J. Morgan, Stil].
more, Rt. 1, Box 46.

Want wheat for seed and milling,
Jas. L. Winburn, Wrens. s

Exc. value for 10 bu. Abruzzi rye,

Lee Jones, Collins, Rt. 2.

Exc, 114 bu. pure Red Ripper peas
for 1% bu. good seed wheat. Write
first. E. G. Loggins, Jefferson, Rt. 1,

Want 30 bu. seed wheat, 50 bu. .
good seed Fulghum or Hastings oats.
Will give 55c bu. for oats and 85c
bu. for wheat, del. Metter. D. Pp,
Martin, Cobbtown.

CONTROL OF THE PEACH TREE
BORER WITH PARADICHLORO-
BENZENE .

Paradichlorobenzene is the best
chemical control of the peach tree
borer in peach trees four years old
and older.
benzene should be used as the un-.
sublimed and adulterated forms are
apt to cause injury and to be ineffec=
tive. When proverly applied, the sub-
limed paradichlorobenzene will kill



95 per cent or more of the borers

with no injury to trees four years old.
and older.

Date of Application: The paradi-
chlorobenzene crystals should be ap-
plied in North Georgia from Septem-

per 25 to October 5, and in Central

and Southern Georgia from October
10 to October 20.

Agestto Treat: Trees four and five
years old should receive a %4-ounce
dose per tree; trees six years old and >
older should receive a l-ounce dose
per tree; trees under four years old
should. not be treated but should be



Only pure paradichloro-

wormed by hand during the month

of November.

How to Apply: Before applying
the paradichlorcbenzene the soil for
about a*foot around the trunk should
be cleared of trash and grass and >

then smoothed with the back of the

shovel. No mounding is necessary
before applying except where the
borers are working above the soil

level; then the soil level should be

raised so that the crystals are above >
the topmost borer galleries. The
paradichlorobenzene should be ap-
plied in a circle around the trunk,
Ehout one inch from the bark. About
six shovelfuls of dirt are then placed |
in a cone shape around the tree over
the band and packed down complete-

ly. The first shovelful of dirt should

be shaken over the band cafefully to
avoid getting the crystals against the
trunk.

Length of Exposure: The mounds ~
should be removed after four weeks
from the four and _ five-year-old
peach trees and after six weeks from
the six-year and older trees. Fresh
soil should be returned to the tree to.
its original level before cold weather,
to avoid winter injury.

Effect of Paradichlorodebenzene on
Oriental Fruit Moth Larvae

Some of the. Oriental fruit ae :
larvae hibernate on the trunk and
around the base of the trees so that
many of them that are covered by
the mounds are killed by the gen-
erating gas from the paradichloro-
benzene. crystals.

C. H. ALDEN AND W. H. CLARKE,

Georgia State Board of Entomology,

Atlanta, Ga.
EGGS FOR SALE 3 :

Pure bred R. I. eggs, 60c doz., pre=-
paid, cartons ret. Mrs. G. C. Clifton,
Millen, Box 57.

B. R. eggs, Thompson str., plood-
tested for BWD, $1 per 15. Mrs. Mil- ~
ton Sumner, Sylvester, Re. 3:

Spencer Wonder bird
eggs, $1.25 per 15; $2.25 for 30, car-
tons ret. Miss Rebecca Campbell, At=_
lanta, 860 Boulevard, S. E.

Eges from Thompson Imp. Ring=
lets, 75c for 15, del., cash. Mrs. C. A.
Wilbanks, Commerce, Rt. 5.



States is 15,685,000 bales.

~on the farmers long enough.

as the farmers of Georgia.





- September 15, 1931.

TEXAS

(Continued from Page One)

They say that we have 9,000,000 bales of cotton surplus. 5
believe it. The government estimate for this years crop in the United
I do not believe that we will make this
much cotton. But how can we call their bluff?
I know of is to pass legislation that will affect the supply of cotton.
The only legislation that will affect the supply of cotton next year
is to pass quarantine laws prohibiting the planting of cotton for 1932.-

This law of not planting cotton for the year 1932 is worth it to the |
people of Georgia to get rid of boll weevils, Georgia Cotton Growers
Co-Operative Association and other. pests.

Don't forget this: The farmers of Texas are in just as bad shape
They realize that not to plant cotton in
1932 is a great sacrifice, but are willing to do the practical thing to
save this years cotton and cotton seed.

I dont

The only way that

They have been preying

EUGENE TALMADGE.

VeRee





(Turken)