Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1937 August 2

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RALLS, SUPERVISOR, MARKETING DIVI













Estimated Production and Condition of

Crops Furnished by the United States
Department of Agriculture)



.PPLES: The Georgia crop this year is reported
be 57 percent of normal on July 1 compared with
ily 38 percent of normal on the same date in 1936.
he 1937 crop production is placed, at 1,174,000
shels while 966.000 bushels were harvested in
1936. .
CABBAGE: Prices have continued at a low level
n the Atlanta market although receipts have been
y moderate.

- CANTALOUPES:! The Atlanta market has im-
proved slightly during the past week as rceipts
declined. Sales in large lots have been r.ade at
mostly 50-75c per bushel in bulk.
CORN: The estimated yield of corn for the en-
State this year is expected to be 45,309,000
uusheis from 4,119,000 acres. The 1936 yield was
estimated at 33,624,000 bushels from 4,203,000
pres.
GRAPES: The 1937 indicated production of all
prapes for Georgia is placed at 1,860 tons compared
with a yield of 1,850 tons last season. The crop
} reported to be 73 percent of normal on July 1,
7 and was 66 percent of normal on July 1, 1936
PEACHES: Shipments are now being made from
ome North Georgia points. Total carlot move-





















ars while 7381 cars had been moved on the same
date last season. The f. o. b. carlot market has
weakened considerably during the past few days


























MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 1937

NUMBER 13



*Suly 2k

mt through July 26 this season amount to 2323






-earlot shipments.

with present sales on a cash track basis of mostly
$1.85-2.00 per vushel of Elbertas, US No. 1, two
inch minimum. (July 27). Sales a week ago were
almost $1.00 per bushel higher.

PEARS: The receipts on the Atlanta market are

increasing and prices have already reached a low ~

level. The crop is now expected to yield a total
production of only 212,000 bushels as against 396,-
000 bushels reported to have been 1arvested in 1936.

PEANUTS: The crop this year will be harvested
from 668,000 acres, while 642,000 acres were planted
in 1936. The crop was 75 percent of normal. on
July 1, 1937 and 77 percent on July 1, 1936

WATERMELONS: Carlot shipments of water-
melons from Georgia shipping points this season
exclusive of truck movement already total 9721
cars. or almost 2,000 cars ahead of last. seasons
carlot movement of 7815 carloads on this same date.
Large and small Cuban Queens are now
selling at shipping points at mostly $40-50 per car
for good quality stock. (July 27). The quality of
most melons is very good and sizes are running
much larger than during last season.

REPORTS FROM STATE MARKETS
THE MACON MARKET |

We are still in the midst of the watermelon sea-



son with practically all of the cantaloupes gone with

the exception of some few lots North of Macon but
the prices on both have been extremely low. How-
ever, cantaloupes are selling well now at a slight
advance over last week. We have been able to

move practically all the melons that reached our |

market by truck and at some better prices than
With the exception of only a
few loads, the quality has been as fine as we have
er seen in any one season and for this reason we

q











have been able to get truckers here to move them
to other states. ie

Due to extremely favorable seasons for the last

few weeks in South and Middle Georgia, there has
been a surplus of corn, lima beans and field peas,
causing prices to decline considerably. Sweet po-
tatoes have now commenced to move on our mar-

ket and at a very satisfactory price but we fear

that producers will soon flood the market with un-
graded potatoes and force the price to the bottom.
It would be much better for the producers if they

leave the poorer grades on the farm to be fed to .
livestock. a
J. N. RAINES

: THE DOUGLAS MARKET

, With the exception of-a few scattering patches,
watermelons have all sunburned beyond use. Can-



taloupes are gone, and tomatoes will be gone in an-

other week or so. Picking continues in several late
patches with prices running around seventy-five
cents a bushel. The late crop of butterbeans are
just coming in this week with many first pickings
next week. The quality is good and the vines are
holding their color well. Prices have been low,
ranging around sixty and seventy-five cents. These
beans were planted to come in late for Florida de+
mand and we are looking forward to better prices
in the next week or ten days. ie
Sweet potatoes are moving in large quantities
at around two cents per pound. Four truck loads
of sweet potatoes moved through the market today.
Pineapple pears are selling now at twenty-five to

thirty-five cents per bushel. The quality is as good

as I have ever seen. We are trying to move these
pears as fast as they are listed with us but we need
more truckers to take care of them.

As tomatoes have gotten scarce and our heaviest
season is over on highly perishable produce we are
asking farmers to cooperate with us by bringing
these products to the markettomatoes, beans,
peas, okra, etc.on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wed-
nesdays of each week. This is in order that we

(Continued on Page Two)

AS



Shipping Point Information and Progress of Crops

.

would bring only the best grades to the market and


MARKE PBULLETIN







Page Two

GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN

Established by J. J. Brown, Commissioner of Agriculture,
March 1, 1917.



y

Published Semi-Monthly
By
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Publishing Office Covington, Ga.
Executive Office: :
State Capital, Atlanta, Georgia.

COLUMBUS ROBERTS,
Commissioner of Agriculture
HAMILTON RALLS
Supervisor, Marketing Division

J. W. SIKES
Assistant Supervisor, Marketing Division
MRS. ROBIN WOOD
Assistant Supervisor, Marketing Division

F. J. MERRIAM, Editor
~ ELIZABETH HYNDS, Assistant Editor

Entered as second class matter February 15, 1922, at the Post

Office at Atlanta, Georgia, under the act of June 8, 1930. Ae-

cepted for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in
Section 1103, Act of October 8, 1917.

_ Application made for transfer of second-class mailing rate
to Postmaster at Covington, Georgia.

Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable under
























=

















ae 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 im issue of
the 15th.

Farm land for sale editions are published at intervals. during

the year. Advance notices of these editions appear from time

to time advising advertisers when to mail us these types of
notices.

















Limited space will not permit insertions 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 reduction does not destroy the meaning of the notices.
When notices cannot be cut down they will be returned to the
writer for correction.










Limited space will not permit insertion of unimportant no-
tices. Under legislative act the Market Bulletin does not as-
sume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the Bulletin

or transaction resulting therefrom.












(Continued from Page One)
will have a sufficient amount to load trucks on these days.
These days have always been our best sale days for perish-
able products. This will also enable me to be free during
_| the latter part of the week so that I may help truckers in
securing potatoes, pears,.etc., which they usually load dur-
ing the last three days of the week.
H. W. LONG, Manager.

THE THOMASVILLE MARKET |
The produce season is about over and for this reasom the
movement at the Themasville State Market is very slow.
Butterbeans, peas, corn and okra are still coming in
akg quantities and watermelons are moving in trucklo
only.
There are a good many pears this season but the m
ment is not so good. The supply is much greater than

















- postage regulations inserted one time on each request and re- |





MARKET BULLETIN

TOBACCO MARKETING SITUATION

On July 20th a large gathering of tobacco growers met
at the Court House in Camilla, Georgia to discuss tobacco
marketing. I was invited to that meeting and on my return
to Atlanta I immediately prepared the following letter to the
major tobacco buying companies:

Gentlemen:

On last Tuesday a large gathering of tobacco grow-
ers held a meeting at Camilla, Ga., and passed the fol-
lowing resolution. The writer was present at this
meeting and is in accord with the views expressed in
this resolution:

Whereas, due to prevalence of blue mold in South
Georgia last spring, many farmers could not plant any
tobacco and many others could not plant their allotted
acreage in tobaceo and practically all tobacco is late,
and

Whereas, the opening of the tobacco market in
Georgia has been advanced even in face of these condi-
tions and period of remaining open has gradually been
reduced, to the disadvantage of Georgia tobacco grow-
ers, and, whereas, much of the tobacco in this section
will inevitably be late, and thus growers of late to-
bacco will be exposed to low prices, in pursuance of
previous practices,

Resolve, that we request Honorable Columbus. Rob-
exts, Commissioner of Agriculture, to request the buy-
ing companies to maintain even prices upon their
erades during the latter part of the tobacco-selling
season this year, so as not to entail too severe loss on
late growers of tcbacco, and fourth,

Resolve, that we request our Commissioner of Ag-
riculture to use his influence and beSt efforts to pro-
cure a later opening date for the Georgia tobacco
market and a longer period for sales.

At the request of the Georgia farmers, I am send-
ing Mr. Walter Perkins, Assistant Commissioner of
Agriculture, and Mr. J. W. Sikes, Assistant Supervis-
or, Bureau of Markets, te your city to discuss the
matter with you. Any courtesy shown these gentle-
men will be appreciated by the writer and I.sincerely
trust that you will be able to prolong the Georgia mar-
ket a sufficient length of time to take care of the late
tobacco and that you will maintain the price level dur-

i ing the entire season.
Sincerely yours,
COLUMBUS ROBERTS,
Commissioner of Agriculture.

These letters were delivered to them at their home offices
in Durham, N. C., and Richmond, Virginia by Mr. Walter
Perkins, Assistant Commissioner of Agriculture, and Mr.
J. W. Sikes, Assistant Supervisor of Markets. f

Mr. Perkins and Mr. Sikes returned today and state that
the companies interviewed assured them that they would
maintaim buyers at strategic points in Georgia a sufficient
length of time to buy the entire erop.

FARM AND HOME WEEK PROGRAM
State College of Agriculture, Athens, Ga., Aug. 10 to 13

SOIL CONSERVATION DAY
9:30 A. M.Tuesday, August 10, 1937-Hardman Hall
July G. Liddell, State Coordinator, Soil Conservation
Service, Presiding

AddressDr. T. S. Buie, Regional Conservator Soil Conser-

vation Service, Region No. 2, Spartanburg, S. C.
Georgia Soil Conservation Districts Law-Thomas

State Extension, Soil Conservationist.
Introduction Members of State Soil Conservation
Report of all agencies in State on contribution to

out provisions of State Law on Soil Conservg
Noon-Day AddressJ. Phil Campbell, Head,
lation in Extension Soil Conservati





_ 4-H club members,







4H
CLUB
NEWS

G. V. Cunningham, the 4-H
club leader for the state of



-Georgia, calls attention to the

fact that this is probably the
busiest season of the year for
as far ag
outside activities are concerned.

The state-wide club camp is
rew in full swing at Camp Wil-
king, on the University of Geor=- _
gia eampus in Athens. The >

eamp for club girls has been |

concluded ani now @ie boys
are getting their outing.

Southeast Georgia club boys
were in camp July 19-23, south-
west Georgia boys camped in
Athens July 26-30, northeast
Georgia boys are scheduled for
August 2-6 and northwest
Georgia club boys will come to
camp August 16-20. The week >
of August 9 has been reserved
for the annual State 4-H Lead-

ership conference.

In addition to the state club
eamp at Athens, numerous
county and district 4-H club
camps are being held through-
out the summer in all sections
of the state, Mr. Cunningham
said. In many cases, abandon-
ed CCC camps are being used
by club members and these
seem to provide excellent fac-
ilities for these outings.

Numerous Contests

Mr. Cunningham also men-
tioned the fact that this is the
contest season. First, contests
in various phases of club work
are held in the counties, and
then county winners compete.
in district contests. Finalists
in the district meets then com-
pete for state titles. The health
eontest will be held in Athens
during the leadership confer-
ence, and the clothing and
bread-making finals are sched-
uled for-Macon in October.

The contests for boys and
girls are being held simultan-
eously this year for the first
time. The northeast Georgia
contest was held at Monroe Ju-
ly 22-24, the sou





















DODGE COUNTY MAKES REAL PROGRES

hat W. D. McCranie, One-Man Commis-
sioner Is Doing To Assist Farmers.
Improve Their Livestock and
Market Their Produce

By F. J. MERRIAM

Monday morning Walter Perkins, Assistant

issioner of Agriculture, under Mr. Roberts, | we still have about four hundred gallons.

lots of syrup to keep a chain gang happy. We have

e@ into the office full of enthusiasm about the
yonderful things that were happening down in
dge County and a man by the name of McCranie,
> was largely responsible. There were, it seems,
okehouses full of bacon and lard, cribs full of
orn, store rooms full of flour, purebred cattle and
logs and bumper crops, for all of which W. D. Mc-
franie, the one-man county commissioner, was
hiefly responsible. Well, said Mr. Ralls, this
vil bear looking into. You must go down, Mr.
jam, and ascertain the facts. I will write Mc-
Sranie a letter. And, Merriam, find out what they
re doing about marketing the farmers produce.
ind so it was arranged and I went down to Hast-
man, Georgia. I found Mr. McCranie in his office
t the Court House. He is a man of nedium size,
r heavy-set, with a quiet voice and ready smile
man who evidently knows what he wants to do
and has the courage to go ahead and do it.
Thave heard about Dodge County, Mr. McCranie,
nd I have come down to check up on you. I am
ike the man from Missouri, I have to be shown.
Well, just let me get through with a couple of
m here and we will go. -

While he was talking to the men his secretary,

rs. Cobb, showed me some photographs. Now,
lis, said Mrs. Cobb, is the picture of our prize
og that we butchered last fall.
pounds, gross weight and net 946 pounds. The
ams weighed 130 pounds each. You can get some
dea of its size by comparing it with the convict
tanding beside it. Oh, you will see we have the
ods all right.
ny years and know what he was up against and
at he had to overcome.
Now; if you are ready we will just get in my
and I will take you around and show you, said
. McCranie, coming back into the room. Ah, I

see Mrs. Cobb has been showing you the photo of

ur big hog. We were right proud of that hog.
only wish you could have seen him.

| LIVE STOCK MARKET
Well, now, that is our saw mill Gown there: Jt

has proved one of the best paying investments we

have. With it we were able to produce the nec-
essary lumber for our new livestock sales barn,
which is practically completed.
that first. It is 120 feet long and 76 feet wide,
with cattle pens on one side and hog pens on the
other. Then af be end we will have the scales
for weighing and seats for the buyers. when we
have auction sales. Over on the side here are the
oper pens and chutes for unloading from: trucks.
Then at the other end near the railroad tracks we
will have more open pens with the necessary chutes
for loading on railroad cars. In other words, we

have here the complete necessary equipment for

the marketing of cattle and hogs to the best ad-

vantage and cattle and hogs are fast becoming one +
|. home demonstration agent.

of our chief money crops in Dodge County.

There will be no charge to the farmers of the
county for the use of the barn. The only charge

will be their proportionate share of the cost of ad-
vertising and the salesman or auctioneer.
furnished the lumber and the WPA furnished part
of the roofing and cement and their men did most
of the work; and we have something: here worth
real money to the county.

ee PRODUCE MARKET
Wow that open piece of land out there next to
our livestock barn and market is where we propose

to have our produce market. It also will be located

where we car have railroad trackage which we con-

sider most necessary to the successful operation

of any market. Then you see we can ship water-
melons and other produce in carlots without dif-
ficulty. Our Junior Chamber of Commerce is tak-
ing an active part in this enterprise and we ex~
pect to put it right through.

MEAT AND LARD

Now I guess I had better show you our smoke-
thouse next. You see om that side we still have
sixty fifty-pound cans of lard. We had twenty-

one cans when we started killing last. year. And
meat! You see this house is pretty well filled with .

hams, shoulders and middlings and we have eight
tons of meat in cold storage.

Tt takes three middlings a day to feed our garg
to say nothing of flour, meal, syrup and vegetables.

on the waste around here and furnish egps. We
give the gang bacon and eggs for breakfast with
hot biscuits, syrup and coffee and sometimes grits.
Then we try to give them at least two vegetables
for dinner and supper with boiled meat and corn
bread. And the old hens: we kill them off for the
men. A dozen hens and a peck of rice make a
pretty good stew for dinner.

We not only feed over sixty-eight convicts but
ere are one hundred and twenty paupers to whom
we furnish supplies. That old woman who stopped
me back yonder needed food. I had to see she: got
it, and this morning another. woma.. with four
children needed help; husband out, of work ..and

nothing in the house to eat,.we will have to: ;see,

that she does not suffer until her husband gets

ut I want to show you here how we cure our
. We pack the meat down in this pit. A layer

da layer of ice and let it stand twenty-

Sate
Ni



ing stored for us at the mill.

on them already.

It weighed 1,038:

I have been in this department |

. Jeast twelve thousand bushels.
.you out in the field this afternoon and show you

our oats.

I want you to see

asked.

Yes; we

Then we have a big flock of four hundred Leghorn:
hens. You can see them over there. They flourish

~two -hundred: and twenty-five
' hogs.



_ four hours. Then we put it in those deep boxes, a
| layer of meat and a layer of salt and it stays there
| until the salt penetrates, when it is hung up and
di pai hinge We can handle forty to fifty head at a

' time;
_ kill and cure and we give this service at cost to

It costs about 50c per hundred pounds to

farmers in the county.

SYRUP AND FLOUR

Now over in this house is our syrup, of which
It takes

seven acres in sugarcane growing now, which
should produce enough to supply our needs. And

| here is our wheat. flour of which we still have, as
. you see, seven barrels left of the 1936 crop. Our
_ crop this year was light because of smut.
ly made nine hundred bushels

We on-
on twenty-seven
acres. We have made as high as forty bushels per
acre and our average for the past four years is
thirty-seven bushels. Most of our 1937 crop is be-

been making all the flour we need. But come back
here. I want to show you my fig and pineapple pear
cuttings. You see there are a good many rows
about knee high: and some of the. figs have fruit
I plan to give one of each to
any 4-H club boy or girl or farmer even who wants

them to. set out in some rich spot near the house.
Get them to: thinking you know. .

SWEET POTATOES

And here is our sweet potato curing house built

oh the most approved plan amd with a capacity

of five thousand bushels. Last year we made two

hundred and fifty bushels per acre and you see we
still have a: few bushels of last years crop on hand

and in a short time the new crop will be ready

to begin harvesting, of which we have thirty acres.

_ We also cure potatoes for the farmers in the county,

charging them twenty per cent or one bushel out
of every five. We are gettng our crates ready now
for the next crop.

a CORN AND OATS

Corn, yes we have corn. Come down here and
let me show you. It takes lots of corn to run this
outfit; two hrndred to three hundred bushels a
month at least, sixty of which go into meal. But

|, you- see the pile there, plenty to last us until the

new crop comes in, of which we shovld make at
I shall have to take

that corn crop Iam going to build a new tight
barn to hold that corn, one where the corn can be
treated to keep out the weevils and rats.

An@ over here is the storehouse where we keep
About fourteen hundred bushels in that
bin: Our oats didnt do so well this year because
of smut.
where last year we made seventy.

Didnt you treat your seed to prevent smut? I
Oh, yes, he replied, we used Formailde-
hyde, but I think the excessive wet weather had

. something. to do with it.
Yes, that is our pressure canning outfit. We put

it in here temporarily. We can for the farmers
of the county free, except the cost of the instructor.
We will put up a new building right away to take
care of the canning which is most important. We
have two outfits besides the small one used by the

NTow over here is our trench silo. It is ninety

feet long, eight feet wide at the bottom, thirteen
_ feet wide across the top and seven feet deep. It
holds about ninety tons and you see it is two-thirds

full right now with silage put in last summer of

- eorn and velvet beans.

I expressed my surprise that no more of the silage
had been used. Well you see, said Mr. McCranie,

gs, long as our citron melons last the cows prefer _
- the melons to the silage.
' in our corn, as I will show you.

We plant citror melons

MORE MULES AND HOGS
But first come around to the mule barn and see

|-our jacks, of which we have two. The jacks were
at the back side of the lot, but when called uttered

a long and loud bray and came trotting over to be
rubbed and petted. We will eventually raise all
our own mules in this county, said Mr. McCranie.

| We give free service to farmers. in the county who

have mares to breed.
_ you. can see two mares with young mule colts, They

Out in that pasture there

are three-year-old mares with their first colts and
they helped to make a crop too, We ave five

, brood mares, fourteen mules, two horses, two stal-

lions, two jacks and the two three-year-old fillies

_ with the mule colts. Then we have sixty-three head _

of white face Herefords, ten Aberdeen-Angus cows
with six calves. Also nine Hereford bulls, six Aber-

' deen-Angus and two Shorthorns most of which are
' Joaned out to farmers over the county who have
livestock they are trying to improve.

And in this hog pasture back of the barn we

- have several Poland-China sows with their pigs.

Yes; we have nothing but the Spotted purebred
registered Poland-China hogs on the farm and we

- will swap pigs with any farmer in the county. Pig

for pig, no matter what breed he has. In that
way we get the purebred hogs introduced over the
county. We have ninety-five pigs and altogether
head of purebred
Also fifteen registered boars, Joaned out to
farmers over the county. However, I see you are
getting hungry and there is still much to show you

over the county. after lunch.

EVEN MAKE COFFINS

. We passed the saw: mill on our way out after.

Inch and Mr. McCranie remarked: You know,
that saw mill surely has been a help. We not only
sawed the lumber of that big new barn you saw,

but we built a new stockade, also houses for the
county agents office and one for the home demon-

=

However, we have -

We only made thirty bushels per acre



stration agent with room enough for her classes :

- and demonstrations in canning, preserving, cooking,

etc. Also a house for the welfare workers and WPA
headquarters and we even go so far as to.make cof
finsordinary coffinsplain but good, padded and
lined. We do that on rainy days and give them to
the poor when needed who have no money. And
see that pile of slabs? We use them for fire wood
at the court house and jail. This county spends no
money. for coal. Pages
As we passed a nice white house on a corner of
the street he remarked: That is where my bos.
lives. Your boss, said I. I didnt know you had
a boss. I thought you did just as you pleased
Oh, no, he replied. You see my wife lives there.
Well, perhaps, that accounts for your success, was
my rejoinder. Perhaps it does, at that, said he.

GROWING TIMBER os

Now before you see the crops I want to take

you out to show you some growing timber. The
growing of pine timber for turpentine, cross ties
and lumber, is you might say, my pet project. If
gone about in the right way it is destined to make
this whole south Georgia country rich. I have four
boys and I intend that every one of them shall have >
some of this cheap land and grow timber. Last
winter we gave away little slash pine seedlings to
the 4-H club boys and girls in the county, enough
to set forty acres and that is just a starter. Every
boy im the county should have a few acres of pine

coming on and the slash pine grows so fast. No

you see those trees over there. They are at least
thirty feet tall and some of them large enough ~
right now to begin working for turpentine. And y

in 1925 that land was in cultivatior with cotton
growing on it. In this old field you can see the
young pines coming on in rows where we set them

I like to set the young trees six feet apart in rows
thirty feet wide. They are then more easily pro-_
tected against fire and we can plant some grazing
crop like oats between them and sow Lespedeza and
carpet grass especially in the low spots. We will
drive over to that patch of young timber yonder.
I want to show you where we have plowed up the
wiregrass running quite shallow with a one-horse,

_ turner. Weare now cross-breaking and getting t

ready to sow in oats this fall and then in carpet
grass and Lespedeza, get something in there that
is good for livestock and not wire grass which burns
and ruins your timber. 5
We had been driving for some time and finally
came to a piece of good timber. I just wanted
to show you this piece of timber because the fire
has been kept off by plowing fire rows in check
through it. Just come down here. See the little
pines coming up through the grass? If fire got
in here it would kill them all out and ruin hundreds
and hundreds of dollars of potential wealth. I cn-
sider fire our worst enemy down here. I would

almost rather a man would set fire to my barn than

to my woods, for I can insure my barn. Naturally.

in a county like Dodge, where there is no fence law
and the stock run out, there is always a temptation
for some people to burn the woods in the spring.
However, our folks are learning to plant oats for
spring grazing and the velvet beans and citron mel

ons will carry the stock through December and un-
til the oats are ready. But to get back to our trees.
You know the Gavernment estimates that one thous-
and acres of timber protected from fire will brin

in an income of $275.00 a month? Young trees set
twelve by twelve feet or six by thirty in twenty
years would be worth $140.00 an acre. When yo

take into consideration the fact that these pines
flourish on the poorest soil, too poor to grow a pay-

ing crop of corn or cotton, just think what a won-

derful asset the South has. I just cant get over it,
especially for our boys. ue

_ FOUR CROPS IN ONE aa

Well, we must get on out to one of the farms
for we have three. It didnt take us long and when >
we arrived and drove down into the field, I saw
corn already made with two big ears to the stalk
and velvet beans running over them. The corn was
in five foot rows and in the middles was a row of
runner peanuts and pretty well all over the ground

x

- was those Citron melon vines with melons setting

from two inches to eighteen inches long. Four
crops in one, all right. I want you to come down
here later in the fall and see those Citron melons
shining over that two hundred and fifty acre field
of corn. eee
"Rich land. Yes, it is rich because the vegetable
matter is being kept up. We do not ever pull th
foddernothing but the corn and that field shoul
produce at least twenty-five bushels per acre. _
Next week we will turn one hundred eight-weeks
old purebred pigs into this field. The mixed breeds
will be put into that field of Spanish peanuts we
passed on our way out. Yes, we have grazing for.
our hogs and cattle the year round. They gather.
the crops. That is where the profit lies. Later. af-_
ter the corn in gathered, cattle will be turned in-
here. We find that where they have Citron melons
to eat along with, the velvet beans, they do much >
better and never have any bad effect from the
beans as they sometimes do when they eat them.
by themselves a eS

A ONE-HORSE FARMER
As we drove away, I asked him. I said: Mr. Mc-
Cranie, what were you doing before you became
commissioner? He replied: I was farming. You
see, he continued, father died when I was verv

- young, so I had to turn in and helo mother. Didnt

have much. time for school, just a common school
education, you might say, not ever high school, Ve
had 2 one-horse farm and that was where I started.
Then I bought another farm and more mules until
when I went with the County thirteen years aro Tt
was running a severtteen myle farm. When the
depression hit us and we couldnt sell what we made

(Continued on Page Four) Cre

i:






and our poor scrub iivestotke ak worth driving
to market, I decided we had to produce something
- to eat to feed those prisoners and paupers.
up to Atlanta and 1 looked over the stock yards
and I found that while our scrub stock brought
little or nothing, that purebred stock, Herefords,
-Shorthorns and Angus, sold for a good price.
I bought some \bulls and came back determined =
_breed up our cattle in Dodge county.
FARMING FOR THE COUNTY be
We started farming for the county in 1929 and
farming
Having made plenty of feed
in 1935 I bought fifty steers which I fed out and
"sold at a profit sufficient to pay our 1936 fertilizer.
This year I bought heifers instead of steers,
pil nvrehred Herefords, my idea being to raise bulls
ae replace those loaned out to farmers in the coun-
-- . ean then bring in the older bulls and sell
en for enough to pay a good profit on their

we have doubled our
year since that date.

pills:

original cost, for I purchased
_ young. ae

By this time we had arrived at another farm
owned by the county and were driving through a
cowpeas and sorghum
The peas stood thick -

It was impossible to

one hundred acre field of
sown after oats and wheat.
-and from knee to waist high.

= estimate how. much hay they would produce.
_ then we came to another bie field of corn with vel- .
ever beans, a and Citron melons | growing in

petween.

I went

So

operations every

them when _ quite

winter.

And



had recently acquired.
- Cranie told me about the county.
hold of things, said he, the county was in debt.
There was a $100. 000.00 bond issue, about half of
which had been redeemed and on.which the county
paid a total of $112, 580.00 in interest.
finished paying off those bonds and interest last
So now the county is out of debt with .
the exception of what is still unpaid on this farm.
It is one-third paid for and I aim to make the farm
Besides. this farm the county
owns one two hundred and seventy-four acre farm
and a one hundred and sixty eight acre farm all
acquired in the last seven years.

pay the balance.

Tee Not 80. good as the first field, but. good.
- Qf course, the season has been in our favor, said
Mr. McCranie.
we will make enough corn to last us three years and
I shall arrange to keep it, so if we have a drouth.
another year we will be OK. Now lets go back on
the other side of these peas. I have a field of comm
there planted after Austrian peas, that is corn
Sure enough, as he said, it was corn and would
produce forty to fifty bushels per acre.
rank that the velvet beans which had been planted
between the corn as usual
would not amount to much. The corn had ae
the ground. -
And then we went over to look at a seven hun-
dred and fifty seven acre farm which the county
As we drove along, Mr. Mc-
When I took

We have had plenty of

were very

some tax property we had to take in put I dont

This, besides

1 count. that.
portunity to
rain and

to real advantage.
Corn so

slim and
ford heifers.

McCranie.
investment.

Well, we
down.
toward the car.
tages for growing

money crops:



shall try to plant it in pines.
land and have cultivated six hundred ae
_ year for the ro three _seate 3

Tedeent a and caer: a. is

We have ren

land in which power aan could. be

It was rented this year

man who had been on it several years and v
growing mostly cotton and corn.

On our way back we stopped to look at he | :

There were about fifty in all an

eral of them had little calves trotting aroun
hind them and most of them with a calf.

_ I am going to pick out a few of the fines
fatten them for exhibition at our Fair,
Yes, I am sure they will prov
/The heifers had been out on pi
all day and had just been penned and give
old hay. Mr. McCranie was sitting on, top
board fence looking at them and he hated
He is a man who loves cattle.
give them a little grain, he said, as we s
You know,
good blood in our cattle and. our natura

SL
he continued

feed and pasture and

winters, livestock are bound to be one of ou
There is no limit to what we ca
poe in this a if we our minds



Second: Hand
_ Machinery Wanted.

a |Secona Hand Wi caleba

FOR SALE



< Want metal <overshot! Sigh cbs
mill wheel 10 or 12 feet. Must.

be in good condition. State price.
a ieen Furr, Villa Rica.

Want wind mill, tower, etc., in
= when condition. - A. Ju Carrs Jt,
. Milledgeville. :
g Want to buy 1 double box all
steel press for cotton gin; also
have for sale one good Interna-
tional mule hay baler $75.00: S.
HE. Vandiver, Lavonia. ssid
_ Want one small caterpillar
tractor in good condition and
cheap. Describe fully and give
price. Floy Pruitt, Buford.
a Want t slightly used No. 6 Mc-
-Cormick-Deering mowing ma-
ehine in A-1 condition. Make
price in first letter. M. C. Mc:
Kvnev.-Chestnut Gap. .

2X" see io buy one Ensilage cut: |

ter cu.aplete cheap for cash. Jas.
_ W. Smith, Rt 1, Forsyth.

Want peanut picker or thresh-
er. State make, age and name
best cash price. W. B. daterard,
Barnesville.

- Want one mechanical tramper
for cotton gin. T. M. Heaton,
RFD No. 3, Hartwell.

Want one = row Niagara dust-
BE machine.

-@ Mann Conyers.

Want 35 or 40 inch suction fan
and connections, etc., for cotton
Sin, in good cond. and bargain.
Vv. BL Durden, Graymont.
- Want one used wagon scales.
Must be in good condition and
Velen for cash. Cc. H. Martin,
Rt Ee Wrightsville.

Want a 18-36 or 28-50 Hart

Parr - tractor. Prefer model not
later than 1928." M. Deoly,
5 Farmington.
Want one No.. 47 DeLaval
Cream separator.. Must be in
good condition. T. R. et eas
: BONE DC: oe

i
Want to buy: old qashionca wa-

ter grist mill comnlete with metal}

water turbine. Will buy separate;
Wr. 7H. Robbins, A102, a Sis;
Savannah. ;

Want to buy a second and
hand-turned pea thrasher. P.
Pulliam, Rt 1, Toccoa. :
_ Want 1 large 3 roller late
fnodel | cane mill (Golden No. 3
preferred). Must be cheap for

Se eash.
. has been in. use.
gin, Hartwell.

- Want to buy metal silo in good
_ condition. State price and loca-
tion. A. W. Neely, Waynesboro.

Want a 2 or 3170 saw Gin out-
fit complete less power unit.
State what you have and price.
Hi. W. Clark, Marble Hill,

Want 2nd hand dairy boiler in
g00d condition. Give description
-and cash price in first letter. J.
T. Hairston, LaGrange.

Want good, used 15-30 Farmall
eS ee _ A. C. Adams, Hartwell.
Rt fe 1

Want an 13- 20 in. Meadows
grist mill, also Webster magneto,
complete for an 8 h. p. ker Her-
eulese eng. All must be good
cond., and cheap for cash. Wil-

Ham L. Garren, McCaysville.

Want a jacket boiler, 1. 1-2 or
. h. p. for cash, or exc. .g00d
oxuD mill and pan in the trade.

W. Price Cedartown. Rt. 2,

W. M. Year-

Want a good second-hand Hay

Bailing power press. in A-1 cond.

. State make, size of bales, how
- long used and lowest cash price.
P Ww. __ Jones, Canton.

Vana Machinery for Sale
Have two 70 -saw Continental
ins, 12 imch saws. 1 dbl box

Ss, automatic tramper, good

belts, 45 horse power Case dis-
late Pee e All in good con-
Will sell cheap. Whole

outfit. for sale. &. ox anne?

well i



.for six tons: of peanut: hay.

-| sheller.

Must: be in good!
-eondition and priced cheap. WwW.

; wher farm. equipment,
for sale at bargain. Write}

State how long your mill].

VA. J. Moree, 4-2: miles:

condition. - Will sell. or Soe

W. Thompson, Cataula.

$20.00. Good condition. R. H.
Stanton, 281 Norwood Ave. NE.

Four 70 saw
BrushPlain Breast gins. Alsa
feeders, condensor, lint flues, 35
inch ball bearing fan. Gins and
brushes on ball bearings. All for
$1000.00. J. L. Crowder, Barnes-
ville. =

I. H. C. mower, rake, and. disc
harrow,,farm bell and many oth-

Continental

264,

25 bo p. Fairbanks-Morse Dies-
el Y type engine. Leon Gay,
Fort Gaines. :

1 Cole: grist mill complete, 1

feed mill complete, 1 power corn
All in operation
Sell or exc. for cows or mes
H. I. Shingler, Ashburn.

~ Mowing machine, first class
cond., $30.00 at my place.

Adcock, Adairsville. Rt. 2.

Large 2 roller syrup mill,
good shape, almost new, $16.00 or
exe. for equal value. E. D.. or
phy, Winder. Rt. 4. :

~260 saw Continental Gins

complete with lineshaft and pul-
leys, etc. All A-1 shape, for sale;
also Want Farmall F-20 tractor,
Cameron mechanical tramper,
Write. ee AS: pene Hartwell,
Rte,

A 30 hyp. motor generator and
used
Gordon Kettles, Varnell.

.One horse International hay

lh press used. very little, $125.00. Je

R. Kidd, Rt 1, Fairburn.

One 25 HP (2300 volt and one
15 HP550 volt electric motors
each with starters for milling
purposes. In first class condi-
tion at a bargain. C..'S. Dally,
Social Circle.

platform 8 by 14 capacity 8000
Ibs. Priced right. E. M. en re
Holly Springs.

12 horse gasoline corn 1 mill out-
fit complete for sale, T. N.
Hurst, Luthersville.

Meadows Grist Mill 16 inch
rock in perfect condition. Rocks
have not been run since sharpen-
ed $25.00 cash or will trade for
anything can use on farm. T.
Treanor, Milledgeville. Se

One No. 3 Golden cane mill for
sale cheap. J. B. Nixon, New-
nan. nl Tea

Also one mule two row cotton
dusting machine in good condi:
tion $35.00 cash here. D. J, -Wool-
bright, Dawson, |

complete $250.00; practically new
one horse wagon $45.00. James
T. Swint, Stilson.

4 gins & feeders, press & tram,
100 HP engine, 125 HP boiler, 1
peach spray outfit, 1 Fordson
tractor and side plow. Ww. G.
ae Rt. 4, Eatonton.

' One ox cart wheels, body shafts,

|bow and yoke in good condition

complete $10.00. LL. : Richbourg,
Rt 3, Mitchell.

One cannery. complete for gale.
W. B.Colclough} Penfield.

Would trade for live
stock. Come see. Do not write.
from
Augusta on Atlanta Highway.
One Chattanooga th. p. 3 roller
eane mill, largest size made in
A-1 condition.



-condition.
Hand, 2 RE

At a hargain- bs Cc.

ee

Benthal ee ocker sete
}gine- at a bargain.

Sell for |:

ery farm items for sale or trade. |
| Dan Browning Helena. P. O. Box

-} mill.

chicken feed mill complete, J-Bee)

now..

C. M.}j

in|

slightly |

/ son.

One set Howe Platform scales, |

16 ft. Benthal peanut picker

'that can and will work.

: Canning outfit for sale. Perfect:
condition.

wanted in. first letter.
Stafford, Thomaston,

salary wanted.



: Second Hand Machinery

-. FOR SALE



Te Mule power hay press, Royal.
Marys Oil en-.

Jr. 1-40 H. P. St.
Will trade

for anything I ean use. -R. B.

: Phillips; Rt Bi Damascus.
One 3-4 h*'p engine and 20}
wood saw, cost $60.00. ~

_One good No. 2-3 roller New
Golden syrup mill and pan _ for
sale. $20.00 FOB my place. H.
Le Coleman, RED No. 2, Smyrna.

"Fordson tractor, rubber tired
late model, with Ferguson
wheeless plow $230.00. Little
used. Has magneto and gover-
nor; Case Wheatland multiple
discs plow $25.00; Fordson wheel-
ess plow $30.00. Not used much.
Wm. J. Brennan, 1511-19th St.,

Columbus. eee eek

in first Glad
Will take
Ww. M.

Electric | churn
shape. Cost $35.00. |
ceasonable price. Mrs.
Hill, Canon.

~-8 -roller -Chattanooga syrup
--Good: 9: foot copper bot-
tom pan. $50.00. J. R. Leard,

Hartwell,

112 horse Russell traction
boiler and engine for sale or ex-
change. What have you? H.
P: McArthur, Dalton.

Cane mill looks good as new,

ust been rethreaded' and new
Boxer roller 16 by 18, new cap
key with bolt good frame, all
complete $40.00 at my farm. M.

a Eason, Alma,

1 Avery seed or grain planter,
also cotton planter combined or
can be attached, $20.00 FOB, or
exchange for something can use.
V. M. Hutchinson, Adel.

Cane. mill, 16 x 20. in, rollers,
|just been turned and re-threaded,

new boxer, good shape $40.00 at
my farm. Exc. for cows or hogs.
M. J. Eason, Alamo.

Good, second-hand John Deer
mowing machine, $25.00 cash at
my home, Cr J. Seng: Modi
Rt. 2s:

10 ft. copper syrup pan and 3
roller Chattanooga Cane Mill, 1
large size Star pea thrash, 1

Deering Ideal mowing machine

and hay rake. Good running
cond, Sell all or exc.*H. D. Ed-
mondson, Temple. Rt. 1.

1 Meadows grist mill, 20 in.
rock, for sale or trade for shoats.
Harry Jerrell, Collins.

FARM HELP WANTED

Want lV or 2 men, good cotton
pickers, to pick cotton. Pay
reasonable price and board. J.
T. Holland, Sparks. Rt. 1.

Want unencumbered white wo-
man for light farm work, no
field work. Room, board, laun-





dry and small salary. B. W. Bin-

ford, Tignall.

Want middleaged wiltte woman
in good health to do light farm
work, no field work. Comfortable
home and reasonable salary. Hi.
W. Carlilse, Perry. Rt. 2.

Want family of 7 or more work-
ers on produce farm. Good
house, good: water, on mail route
and school bus route, near
churches. Hal crop for 1938 for
right man. No drinkers. H. J.
MecCorvey, Pavo.

Want lderly man to ok af-
ter things on farm for me, one
Must
have good ref. Mrs. L. McFar-
lin, Blakely. Rt. 2.

Want refined, unencumbered,
middle
ucation, to live as one of family
and help with light farm work,
no field work. State salary

Want - settled, - unencumbered,
white woman to live as one -of

}small family, do -light farm work,
One juice pan A-I{

milk 1 cow, no. fteld work. State
~W. J. Brooks,

Lithonia. RED: Carrier, eal Ae :

aged woman with some ed-'

Mrs. Sam}

FARM HELP WANTED

Want good family to gather a
crop this ~fall. J. H. Price,
Barnesville.

Want woman, 25- 45 yrse of age
who wants good home on farm
to do light farm work, pick. .cot-
ton, etc. Miss Avis Key, Bow-
Mons Renda

Want hetie le,



exp. man, 25-
orchard work. Must be able to
drive car and truck. $12.00 mo.
board and jek Cc. G. iver,
Barnesville. Rt.

Want. unencumbered, healthy,
middleaged white woman for light
farm work, no field work. Good
home and $2.00 week. Permanent
place for right party. Write at
once. Mrs. H. F. Wilson, Greens:
boro. Rt. 2:

a 2 horse crop, | 3 mi. East of El-
lenwood, 8 mi. East Atlanta, See
Luther Hayes, Ellenwood, for R.
Cc. Loyd, Ocilla. Rt. 1.

Want honest, sober, blacksmith
for 1938, on paved highway No.
9. Good house, pa ee
shop and tools. . A. Strickland,
Alpharetta. Rt. =

Want family, white or eolared,
to help gather crop. 4 room
house, good water. Write or come
see at once.
ville.

Want orphan boy, intelligent
and quick, to live with middle
aged. couple on farm as one of
family, and help with light farm
chores. Live 1 mi. good 9 mos.
School and 2 churches. J. M.
Jones, Grayson.

Want family of 4 or 5 field
hands to pick cotton, pull fod-
der and gather this Fall erop and
ig suit will hire for next year.
4 room house, wood, pasture, gar-
den patches, all free.. 5 mi. S. W.
Villa Rica. W. W. McPherson.
Villa. Rica.

Want white, middleaged + woman
of good character and refinement,
who -can drive car, to live in
home and help with light farm
work, no field work, for home and
small salary. Elbert Branch,
Sale City. Z

Want sober man to help around
place and small grist mill for
board and clothes. H. T. Jones,
Buchanan. RFD 2.

Want man and wife. to help
gather crop. Reasonable wages
and home; would consider share
crop with right man. Dan Barn-
hill, Soperton. Rt. 2.

dred or give straight wages. G.
A, Thompson, Swainsboro. :

Want country raised woman,
white or colored for light farm
work, no field work, for home and

small salary. W. E. Mote, Car-
rollton. Rt. 2.

Want woman, unencumbered,
willing worker, well OXp., 20. t0
40 yrs. of age to live in home
and do light farm work, no field
work.~ Buy clothes and pay small
Salary ea. week. Mrs. Lela Whi-
tin, Austell. Rt. 1,

Want middleaged white woman
to do light farm work, no field
work, $8.00 month. Mrs, Lois
E. Lade, Atlanta. 1338 Hardee
St. N. E. :

Want honest, smart, healthy
middleaged white woman to live
in farm home and help with light
farm work. Small salary. Mrs.
ae D. Fussell, Rhine.

: Want family of good white
people to help gather. crop. Good,

and wood furnished. Like 1 stout
boy in crowd as a straight time
wage hand. P. H.. Monfort, Sr.,
}Beuna Vista.

25 acres cotton and 25 acres pea-
nuts. 4 room house. Write,
stating details about self, at once.



Hush Parten, Ashburn. Rt. 3,|:
Box Bite: oh Gee en

45 yrs. old, for general farm and

Want family with 2 Re for |

L. D, Todd, Glenn-|

| ed:

Want 1 or 2 single boys to help|
gather crop, pick cotton by hun-}

Rt 4,
new 4 reom house, good water!

cation:
Want family to gather erop,



FARM HELP WAN |

Want a girl 16 or 18
age, industrious, willing
light farm work, no- fic
one who can milk and tend
try, and help dry and can -
Orphan preferred. Mrs.
Hayes, Wiley. ee

- Want honest, feliable
couple to cultivate 28 acr
on 50-50 basis for 1938.

eant drinkers need not ap
Mrs. J. O. Morris, Rt. 2, Aus

Want unencumbered white
man for light farm work, no
work... Mrs. be. =
Rt 3, Valdosta.

Want a woman to milk
tend chickens and do other
farm work. Can live as on



the family or will pay wage

or write J. W. Lucas, Men

Want large family pick co
(house to live in) J. G. Pu
Odum.

Want white woman to doi
farm work. if interest

/Mrs. I. A. Hamilton, Jaki

Want white share cropper
can furnish self for 2 or 3
farm for 1938. Might use
this fall if unemployed,
Dougherty, R 1, Americus. :

Want colored boy 10 or 12 ye
of age to live as one of fa mil
to do light chores. Good
for the right boy..

RFD 5, bx 163, Covington.

woman for light farm work
milking or field work. Good h
and salary. Reference exch
P. EH. Rhodes, Baldwin.

Want a good reliable man
milk and other dairy work. $1

per month and board. a H.

Barnesville.

Want honest, middle-aged .
man for light farm work,

| field work. Home and sm

ary. Mrs. T. J. Sherman, Lum
kin.

Want a large. North Geor
family, white or colored, to at
er crop and will give share cr
next year if satisfactory.
Locke, Rt 3, Dublin. 4

Want white woman for i
farm work. Cc. F. Allen, Aust

Want honest, nice, healthy,
encumbered white woman 18-
years old to do light farm wo!
no field work. Good home, si
family, fair salary. Mrs.
Wills, Rt: 1, Dawson. :

Want at once colored. coup
man to do farm work, must
how to milk, woman to w
too. Will furnish house an
salary. J. H. Harper, Scre en.

Want a good man for go
two horse farm for standin
at Rex, Ga. 85 acres in lo 0
pasture with running water. M
C. R. Palmer, 238 Dodd Ave.
lanta, Phone Main 9079.

- Want a man with two hel
to gather crop. | Must all be
workers, honest and temp
Would like for one to help
and drive a truck. Will pay

-onable salary and furnish

house with water and wood clo
by CC. W. Price; Rt 25 ms
town. 2
Want an, unencumbered - whit
woman for light farm work, .
a month. Answer at once. Ar

Epp Williams, Madison.

Want white woman fo:
farm work $1.50 per week
start. Must. be healthy an
est. No field work. - G. L. Ee
~Morrow.

Want boy 18 years or ov
work. on farny remainder of
mer. Will .give right boy Op]
tunity to finish high school e x
Will pay. all expenses
school for a reasonable amoun

) Work on farm, a

Rivers =








healthy, ;
ildren, to make home with
couple, look after chickens
p with other light farm
Good home and small
-G. L. Stripling, Macon.

: z 3
t intelligent young woman
ht farm work, no field
Must be unencumbered and
good ref. Joe Davis, Ellijay.

at large family to live on
e and gather large cotton
Pay good wages and give
for another year to right
House and wood furnished

G. H. Davis, Rome. Rt. 2.

nt good, white hand to help
erop, cotton picking, 50c
00, and board. Day labor
day and board. Steady work
ished. Roy H. Sumner, Ty-
Re 2.
uy Sond none on farm. Pay
day, board and laundry.

. want good farmer for large

orse crop for 1938 on 50-50
T, K. Moore, Canton. Rt. 3.

t good, reliable:2 or 3 horse

; Furnish own
, tools and finance self and
od re Good land: W. L.
Talk ng eGh Rt. 2. :

hel Swinney, McRae.

an farmer, exp. in. ibnece
gen. long crop on 50-50 basis,
force to handle 2. horse crop
938. Good 4 room house

ool, oe Ry. and on high-
Plenty of milk if you can

Peds Stone, Savannah. 209

Anderson St.
ant good man with force

ugh to tend and clear up 4 to
res of good branch bottoms.

sae and out-bldgs. and plenty

Also. sell

, good pasture.
Hie

"wagon, tools and cow.
heriff, Palmetto.
it healthy, middieaged, un-
bered woman for light farm
rk, no field work. Good home

rls, or small family of cotton
<ers House wood, water fre;
nty steady work same _ place
m adjoining farms;
J Prevailing prices
yme see. W. EH.

Rt 3.

bad habits, to live as one}

mily on farm and help with
ay some spending money.
L ( Barnie Sauls, Ma-
ate 1:

int 100 or more cotton pick-

to begin at once 75e per

Ibs. Will advance some _ to

ae Dan Richards, Pa-

ood home and small wages to
red woman who has no de-
dents, to do light farm work
help with cows. Mrs. J. W.
ander, Rt. 2, Covington.

t family of good workers
fo ce to gather crop all cot-

u can pick. Good house.

en prospect for crop an-
year, good ee Ue ey H.
ficRae, Glenwood.

t a dairy man for retail
route. Reasonable salary.
e man preferred or small

Must be hones, sober,
and. furnish reference.
in own handwriting. T.
dlove, Monroe.

a large hustling family
r crop. Can use several
AD mules and horses. No. 1
sey ows and Herefords ee
Would trade. I.
pson, Brooklet.

ant farm boy or young man
ther crop. Begin Aug. 15th.
and board. Work all next
good plow hand. No smok-
x cursers wanted.
brooke, Rt 1, Zebulon.

t a settled woman between

40 years to do light farm
Running water on back
and have electric lights.
reasonable salary and treat
Be. - McDonald, Rts

ge family to pick cot-

do other farm work.

; pace and water furnish-
ee Warren, Pineview.



SITIONS WANTED



ts 2 horse farm for 1938.
lal id, house, barn, pasture,
i001 bus route. Exper-
Will take place on 50-
asis, furnish own stock and
R. L. Bloodworth, Rt 2s
McIntyre.

< ob on: farm as labor
. 20 years. experience.

ive good references. Also
carpenter and. painting

Ds L. Sopelants os oe
Oe ii

settled woman,

good |

} thing

Ww. Le

etta.

H. F. Morris,
} Courtland St. N. EB.

: ing gather crop,



i 24 yr. ola oie, man. wants joo |

on farm. Exp. and good worker.
Come after or write at once. Joe
Stallings, . Fekea alas 108 Washing-
ton Ter.

29 yr. old widow, 2 yr. old boy,
wants light farm work, no field
work, no milking, for home with
good people and $4.00 week. Mrs.
ee Hartley, Shannon, 430. 3rd

Want 2 or 4 horse farm for
general or truck farming. Would
consider raising poultry, hogs or
cattle raising on shares. Self
and 4 grown boys and 2 grown
girls to work. Good ref. Joe A.
Bryant, Gainesville. Rt. 2. .

Want to gather crop. Family
of 4, all healthy and able to
work. Like share crop for next
yr. Good house. Have to. be
moved. Leonard King, Warne
N.C. Rt Noe
gia but Post Office in N. C.)

Want home and salary with
good people in return for light
farm work. Sober, upright and
honest. Have to be moved (can
furnish own room). Send stamp-
ed, self-addressed envelope for
reply, or see: A. N.- -Hambrick,
Americus. Rt. te

Wanted by middleaged, married
man with several yrs. exp. as
Florist position as caretaker or
overseer of large country estate.
G. W. Thompson. Cartersville.

Good, christian, unencumbered
woman wants light farm work, no
field work, for home and salary.
Exe. good ref... Eda J. Rogers,
Atlanta. -o. Gen. Del = pax

Want job tending stoek, poul-
try ineubating chicks, eversee-

fing farming, Bee culture, painter

and can carpenter some, and exp.
operating corn and flour mill.
State offer. LL. C. Bigbee, Bluff-
ton.

Want a water grist mill and
1-horse crop for standing rent
or run for part of toll and other
basis. Columbus Archer, Logan-
ville. - es :

Want job on dairy or poultry
farm near Atlanta or Marietta.
Best of ref. and want ref. in ex-
change. Annie Lanchorn, Junc-
tion City.

28 yr. old man (3 in family)
wants job on farm as overseer.
Life time exp. on farm and with
live .stock. E. FF. Hutcheson,
Kite. Rt. 1. : Z

27 yr. old man, wife and 4
children (3 large enough to work),
wants job on farm; can drive any
make car or truck and do any-
else that comes handy.
Honest, so-.

Oscar P.
815 Harold

Have to be moved.
ber, hard worker.
Biackwell, Atlanta.
Ave. . E.

Married man with 4 to work.
wants place gathering crop and a
1 horse crop on shares for next
yr. Close to school and church.
Can do all kinds of carpenter and
repair work. B. R. Hemphill,
Newnan. Rt. 1.

Want. place on stock, dairy or
truck farm by exp. gin man; han-
dle- all kinds of gins and do. all
repairs. Honest, reliable, sober,
can handle labor: James M.

Beall, Monticello. Rt. 2, Box 79.

Young man without bad habits,
desires job near city, as handy

boy around the farm, or as care- |.

taker. 20 yrs. old, high school
with 1 yr. college education. Com-
municate with: Mrs. J. E. Martin,
Flowery Branch. Rt. 1.
Widow wants job doing
farm work. no field work,
home and small salary.
James Pyron, Atlanta.
South Erv Or st. S. W.

Want teres 1 horse crop on
halves within 5 or 6 miles Dal-
ton or Rocky Face. Joe Coch-
ran, Dalton. aie 1, co Robert
Owen. :

Mother, son, and sister want
jobs on farm with good people.
Good references.
and can work. -
Jennie Bryant,
Hood st. :

Want work on farm. 5 in fam.
ily or field work. For hal. this
year and crop for next yr. if suit-
ed. Write O. W. Keeter, Mari
ARs, 2.

Want Mill to run. 22 yrs. exp..
in both Wheat and Corn, Can
begin at once. No drinker. Can
give ref. Noah A. Fowler, Law-
renceville.

Want job as Corn and Wheat
miller. Can furnish ref. T. F.
McDonald, Macon. 123 Ft. Hill
st. 2

light
for
Mrs.
319

Mrs.

Need house.
424

Atlanta.

a8

Settled, single man wants work

on farm at once, picking cotton,
pulling fodder or any kind of
farm work. Reasonable wages.
Atlanta. 319

Single, hard working, middle-
aged man wants work at once
on farm picking cotton or help-|
or as caretak-.

Exp. in farming and peaey

Cain

er.
Reasonable wages. good ref.
M. Woodall, Atlanta. 83
St., N. B., Apt. No. 4,
Negro man _with family wants

job on farm. Have had tots of
eee a

Prefer place in Ful-

ton County.
I Jennings ae Ee :

(Live in Geor-|,
| boy who does not mind work

go anywhere.

-on farm or dairy (preferably with

Cochran, Atlanta.

Raised on farm,
| perienced in raising chickens. 9th

two year old child wants home
with Christian family doing light

| Will work for small salary. Wana

L. R. Rucker, 154
a cross. os



"Want Zood | 4 horse crop: tor
1938 on 50-50 basis. .Good- land,
good house, good stock with good
man. Furnish self. R. H. Gad- |
dis, Greensboro. Rt. 3.

Man, exp. in mill werk wants
job. Write. J. K. Wells, Atlan-
ta. 1182 Moreland.

Want cotton picking ad: once.
Fall work and house, crop. for4
1938. Man and wife. Howard
eo Atlanta. 117 Clarke St.,

Want job in blacksmith shop
or any other kind of work. Four
in family, all big enough to
work. State best offer in first
letter. Let me hear soon; Clint
Overby, RED No. 1, Talmo.

Single man wants job on farm
for balance of 1937. C. R. tits
loway, Edison.

Nice young, well mannered, re:
liable, industrious, dependable

wants position with nice Chris-
tian people, No bad habits. De-
sire place where can attend high
school. Will give good refer-
ences. John Oliver Harper, Rt
1, c-o E. Ingram, Acworth.
Want at once job on dairy
farm for reasonable wages. Will
Alfred) E. Smith,
Rt 2, Hiram.
- Young man wants job doing
light farm work for reasonable
Salary and board. Joe Edelman,
Jr.; 1736 Melrose | Dr., Atlanta.

Want work with man who has|
improved farm machinery. Can
keep same in repair. Have farm-
ed all my life. Dont drink or
curse. Can give references from
best of citizens. W. H. Duke, Rt
2, Ehomaston,

Want position as farm over-
seer for this fall and for 1938.
Lifetime experience in handling
both stock and labor and suc-
cessful in farming. Age 48.
Three in farnily. B. D. Seagraves,
Brookwood <Ave.,; Commerce. :

Want a 2 or 3 horse crop on
halves. 12 in family. Must have
help during crop time. Prefer
South Georgia. Have farmed all
my life. Can furnish references.
T..R. Brown, Rt 3, Cedartown.

Want to lease or work on
share basis up-to-date Poultry
farm with or without hatchery.
Experienced in all lines of poul-
try work. Willis oe Talla-
poosa.

Young man wants job on farm -
preferably truck farm, -Exp.
driver of truck (any make). Go
anywhere. Stephen Doss, East
Point. 522East Washington Ave.

Young man, age 22, wants work

truck farmer, as am. exp. truck
driver). No bad habits. Johnnie
Luck, Atlanta. 657 Tumbley St.,
Se Wa ees

22 yr. old man wants job with
truck farm or dairy. Exp, driver
of truck. No bad habits. Robert
637 Echo St.

Exp. man wants job as Corn
or Flour Miller. 20 yrs. exp, Ref-
erences. John Hinton, Atlanta.
General Del. ee ae.

19 yr. old boy wants light work
on farm. Room, board and reagy
onable salary. Joe Edelman, Jr.,
Atlanta. 1736 Mill Road Dr.

Young white woman wishes job
doing light farm work. No field
work. Write or come see. Mrs.
Ww. Grossman, Atlanta, TAL Prior
St, S. W.

en

Want 2 or 3 horse farm for
1938 on 50-50 basis. Have plenty
of force. Sober, non-tobacco user.
Want place near church and
school. Can furnish good ref-
erences, LL. H. Oliver Rt 1, La-
vonia.

18 year old boy wants job on
poukry farm with house and
wood furnished and a dollar a
day. Have mother and 14 year
old brother. No bad habits, Can
furnish best of - references. Ex-

aoe like ,to

grade education.
Raymond Grif-

move at once.
fis, PB 260, Tifton.

Refined white widow with a

farm work for board and small
salary. Mrs. May Ronine, RED
No. 1, eo P.. C. Reynolds, Val-|
dosta.

Want position as farm over-|

seer for this fall and 1938. Life
time experience in handling both
stock and labor. Successful in
farming. Age 483 in family.
B. D. Segraves, Brookwood Ave.,
Commerce. } 5

Want two or three novos: farm

in Floyd or adjoining counties:
close to consolidated high school,
church. Can furnish self. John
A. Kell. R 1, Bx 210, Rome.
- Widow 39, with education and
refinement,; no . encumbrance,
wishes. job doing light work in
the country in home of..nice peo-
ple.. Reasonable salary, room and
board: Mrs. Marie -Gilbert, De-}
eatur.

Would like a, place. in a home
as one of the family for. light
farm work, no field work... Have
2 children 2. years and 6 months.

Cooper, 612 Chariot: pt;% ee



<4

-| References.

|2, Swainsboro,

jor anything can do.

dint a job on large farm run-|
ning. trucks and doing other farm | -
work. M. J. See 320 Ross
St., Macon.

Want job as overseer of farm}
for 1938, life time experience.
Can handle labor, white or black.
F. L. Crook, Mays-
ville.

iIam experienced dairy hand, 7
years experience, would like to
have job with regular dairy.
Board $8.00 month. Can milk
by hand or machine. Can drive
car, truck or tractor, Will go
any place with the right party.
W. EF. Cochran, RED No. 2, e-o T.
B. Sprayberry, College Park.

Young man and wife wants job"

on farm for wages. Can do any
kind of farm work, poultry. or
dairy work. J. . Miller, c-o
American Cafe, Alma.

A family of ten wants work
gathering crop for best prices,
free house, wood, good water near
by and fall garden and free fruit
for the family. We have six
to pick cotton. Please write from
central Georgia. Mrs. Lillie |
| Williams, Rt 1, Ashland.

Want light farm work with
some good family on farm. Gar-
dening, look after poultry, milk-
ing, and ig necessary, ho in
field, for board and reasonable
salary, Mrs. O. B. Worley, c-o
Loyd W. Worley, Demorest.

Married man with small family.

wants job on farm or dairy. Ex:|.

perienced. Sam Ramey, Rt 2,

e-o J. J. Richardson, Decatur.

Want a good. one horse crop
on halves, good house and water.
Have to be moved. Must be good
land, Guy Trotter, Rt t, Demor-
ae

- Family of five ates job help-

ing gather erop, also want 2
horse erop 1938 on 50-50 basis.
All good workers. Prefer South
Georgia. H. C. Overby, Rt 1,
Talmo. eS

Want steady job on farm at
once with Christian people. Har-
ry Johnston, 1430 Lakewood Ave.
SE, Atlanta, Phone Main 1128.

Middle aged single man wants
light farm work or a handy man
around farm home. Make best
offer. J. B. Steger, Meansville,
c-o T, EB. Nelson.

Woman. 26 years of age wit
6 year old boy wants a job doing
light farm. work for home and
small salary. Would like to. be
near school. Ruby Morris, Rt

Want a job with someone who

needs hand to look after stock, |

hogs and cattle. Can do dairy

work also. Please state what

you have and what you will give

a. good and willing worker. Do

not drink. A. T.. Davis, Rt 2h
aycross.

Want 4 horse farm for 1938.

Standing rent. Must be good
land, good houses, Prefer in
Dooly, Crisp or Turner County.
Ray G. Stewart, Egan.
Want a. job on farm cutting
wood, cleaning up ditches, hanks
Wages 75c
per day, board and washing. Pay-
able weekly. Am single white
man. Sam McCalla, Rt ot, cArae
gon, -0 Walter Yarber. :

Girl, 26 years of age wants job
on farm doing light farm work.
No field work. $6.00 a month.
Must be moved. Miss Vera Wea-
ton, RFD No. 3, Hartwell.

POULTRY WANTED

j ANCONAS |
Want thoroughbred Ancona
rooster, Must be well marked and
not over 2 yrs. old. W. J. Bea-
cham, Decatur. 106 Glenn Circle.

BABY CHICKS
Want 200 chicks to raise on
halves to 8 wks. old, any large
breed. Experienced. Furnish
feed; other party pay trans. chgs.
both ways. Mrs. M. M. Tomlin-
son, Homerville. RFD Box 25.

BANTAMS

Want Golden Sebright bantam
young cockerel or cock not over
2 yrs. old, also consider few pul-
lets or young hens. Must be Rose
Comb and reasonable in price.
No cross breeds nor culls wanted.
Mrs. O. M. Hunt, Decatur. RFD 1.

LEGHORNS

Want 200 or 300 W. L. laying
hens or pullets. Write. Mrs. D.
L. Smith, Good Hope. Rt. 1. *

Want 50 S. C. W. L. pullets, 8
or 10 wks. old. State str., prices,
rete.
ham, Rt: 1. Box 127.

Want 50 March or April hatch
puilets at reasonable price. Write
Mrs. B. L. Helmuth, Manassas.
Rt. 2. E





MINORCAS

Want 25 or more February-
March hatch. pullets. of Pape
Mammoth 8S. C. Black Minoreas
at reasonable. price. No culls. Edw,
| Standhardt, Clarkston.
TURKEYS, GUINBAS, GEESE,

DUCKS, ETC: WANTED

Want 2 White Muscovey ducks
and 1 drake, not over 1 yr. old,
also some BEyerbearing strawberry
plants, at reasonable prices. Miss

land white rabbits, 8 wks. old, 50

Mrs, Clyde K. Belcher, Whig- |



ay ae McCollum, Grantville, Rt.

fogs MINORCAS Lae

4 Golden Buff Minorca. hens, 15.
mos. old, now laying, $6.00, or eX.
for 7 Buff Rock hens. pede

; Lloyd Taylor, Unadilla.

Giant Black Minorca precdies
cockerels, Few outstanding speci+
mens. March hatch $2.00 ea. O..
H. Wright, Atlanta. Peters Bldg.
Wa 7858 or He 0648-W. NG

Pure bred Buff Minorca dons :

erels, at 10 wks. old, 75c ea.
exc. for anything can use. Get
order in now. Melba Boyd, Car
rollton. 15 Sims Sti

St =O DIPHS* =
150 Oliph pullets and 50 Oliph |
cockerels, $1.50 ea. Cash. (Oliphs
have the appearance of Barred
Rocks, are a vigorous, active
breed, good layers of white eggs
and grow off quickly). G D.
Webster, Austell: Rt. 2. | 2
os ORPINGTONS .
KAA Buff Orp. hens; $1. 00 ea.
unrelated roosters, $1.75 ea; 9
hens and rooster $10.00; eggs for
hatching, $1.00 per 15 postpaid.
Mrs. E. H. Roland, Morgan. Ea
Pure Golden Buff Orp. chicks, s
4 wks. old July 24th, 25 ea. FOB;
moth.r hen, pure stock, $1.00,
Mrs. a oe Miller, Acworth. Rt. 2
PHEASANTS
120 halt grown, 30 grown Ring.
neck pheasants, at reasonable
price. A. Marondo, Atlanta, Me-
manorer Road, Rt. 3.
PIGEONS -
Carneaux. Monaainee,
Pouters, Tumblers and Jumbo
Homers. All fast breeders from
healthy, high bred stock. Max
Middleton, Blakely. | :
REDS (New Hiiepehive)
New Hampshire and Parmenter |

. Kings,

Red eockerels, 12 to 14 wks. old, -

direct from. breeders. $3.00 to

$5.00: ea.
Thomasville, Rt. 4,

New Hampshire Reds, 4 hens
and male, 1936 hatch, direct from
breeder, $6.00; 5 Rusks Buff Min.
orca hens, $4.00 New Hampshire

April pullets, 75c ea. FOB. Mrs.
\J. B Passe, Madisepe:

39,
REDS (Rhode Island) -

10- pure bred R. I. Red Korth
roosters, 75 ea; also 1 Narragan-
sett turkey tom, 14% yrs. old,
$6.00. ey Gordon, Jesup. Box
Shy

2 cochivele. 1 Red and 1 Pe
and 12 mixed hens, $8.00 at my
place. Will not break lot. Mrs.
H. J. McEachern, Fayetteville.

ts

Harry G. Covington, wy

Rt. 2, Box

20 Donaldson str. R. I. Red hens ce

and 2 roosters, $20.00 at my home.
Miss Lizzie Sumner, Sylvester, 907
No. Isabella St.

64 hens, 6 roosters, R. I, Reds, _
Yr. old, bloodtested, Cert. leg
banded, culled, laid 90 percent
this yr.
I, Parr, Cordele. Rt. C.

15 pure Donaldson | RT. Red
hens, now laying, $1.00 ea. Mrs.

W. D. Vaughan, seers P. me

Box 183.

TURKEYS,
DUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE
4 head of good young turkey

hens and 1 turkey hen with 6 SS
|young for. $13.00, FOB.

Cash |
with order. .No chks. John L.
Bennett, Screven, Rt. 2, Box 31.

White African guinea Tooster ao
$1.25 ea. Mrs. A. Ww. Arnold, |
Newnan, Rt. 3. :

15 White- Pekin ducks, $15. 00.
No ehks,
Cumming. Rt. 5.

10 White Indian Runner April _
1937 hatch, large, healthy, 75
ea. No chks. Mrs. W. Je
Dowell, Blakely. Rt. 2.

Mrs. O, M. Mashburn, =

$1.00 ea. FOB, Mrs. Sy ;

GUINEAS, GEESE, Siar

Mee.

Ducks, guineas, pure bred ban-

tams, 20c ea; also New Zealand

ea.: young white turkeys, 60c ea.

48 ducks, Wild Mallard and &

White Pekin mixture: duck, drake

and 16 half grown, $10.00 for lot.
J. N. Jones, Decatur 2226 No. De-
catur Rd. De 5189 W. s
WYANDOTTES

Pure bred R. C. S. L. Wyan-
dotte April cockerels, 75 ea. ae
for $1.25. FOB; Eggs, 60c per 15.
ae Barl Wilson, Clarkesville.
Rt. 1

R.. Ci White Wyandotte pullets

and cockerels, March hatch. (Par-__ 5

ent stock hen wt. 8-9 Ibs., cocks
10-11. Ibs.) Cockerels, $1.50 ea;
0 pullets and cockerel, $10.00. Can
furnish unrelated stock. Mrs. J.
L. Wallace, -Bowersville. Box
153:
20 select: White Wyandotte pul- _
lets, April hatch, AAA quality,
ploodtested, 85c ea. Sell in lots of.
5 with unrelated cockerel for
$5.00. Mrs, W. L. Gillebeau. Line
colnton. Rt. 2.
GIANTS

April 29th hatch White_ Giants,
10 pullets, 10 cockerels, 0c ea.
not prepaid. T. A. Clack, Pitts.

- Phe Spencer Wonder Bird (Tur-
kens), 2 hens, 1936 hatch, 3
hatched this spring (av. large
friers, sex unknown), $5.00 FOB
for lot. Mrs. Jno. R. Tae

Williamson.

22 beautiful White Pekin anoee:
just grown (22 ducks and 10
drakes), $1.00 ea, Mrs. Arch Me-

Crea, pansten: Rt. 25

Pape



: Page Six

MARKET BULLETIN

as 7



POULTRY FOR SALE

at head of Barred Rock oa.
av, 2 Ibs.. ea. fat, nice, $5.00. Cash
with order. Mrs. R. M. Smith.
Demonest.

9 Wiarch hatch, well developed
Barred Rock -pullets, $10.00. Miss:
Bdna Walton, Eatonton.

100 fine, bloodtested, vaccinaited
Park's Barred Rock hens, $1:00,
ea. or tess if all taken at one
time.Laying and banded. Prefer
selling at @oor; fine hatching eggs,
75c per 15. Cartons ret. Mrs. G.
Cc. Clifton, Millen.

CORNISH

Cornish, Webber str. pullets, 2)
Wb. size, Toc ea. J. T. Holland ,
> Spartiks. dt. 1.

10 Cornish whens, a 2 yr. old
cock, 2 April cockerels, $1.00 ea.
Chas. Seiferman, Sylvester. Rt. 4.

Large type Dark Cornish from!
prize strain, bloodtested, no-akin:
rooster,, April thatch. 20 chicks,
Te ea; May chicks (20) 50c ea.
FOB in Hebt crate. Mrs. Vera)
Duggar, Sylvester.

GAMES -

Gray ormenters from R. R.
Range, also som D. Smith Blues.
Young and old. Limited number.
Wrorite for prices. M. EE. Taylor ,
Canton.

Pure bred pit games, $1:00 ea.
All. mature birds. Aitso White.
Guineas, $1:00 ea., pheasants and.
Quail for sale, also. J. T. Berry,
iNorcross.

Puts Ginn-Reds and. Blues,|

$3.00. Guar.
Vaughn, Roy-,

pound size, trios,
dead Ta. ST.
ston. Rit. 1. /

Pure bred games, Yr. old Brawn:
Red cock, Yr. old Black-Red cock,,
$2.00. 8 Brown-Red pullets and

rooster (5c ea, BlackRed pullet:
and rooster, ea. $1.75; also 2
Brown-Red ihens with 168-12 wks.
old chicks. D. G. Akins, Carroll-
ton. Rt. 4.

10 Game thens, 1936 thatch (half,
Minorca and half Brown Leghorn):
50c ea, Cash. A. Krause, Atilanta,)
63 Walnut Ave., N. E., Peachtree
Hills.

- GIANTS

25 pure Jersey Black Giant pul-|

lets, 34% mos. old, wt. 3 to 4 Ibs.
ea, $150 ea. YT. C. Gordon, Jones-:

boro.
_ 6 Burchs AAA, April hatch W..:

Giant cockerels, $1.00 ea. or exc.
for White Giant pullets or eggs:

ofc: setting. Virginia Wiggins

- Waynesville. Box 14. ,

LEGHORNS Soe

15 or 20 Eng. 8. C. W. L. hens,
AAA grade, healthy and good.
layers, $1.25 ea. or $1.00 ea. for
ig J. , White, Armuchee. Rt

25 AAA quality Booths str.,

White Leghorn hens, 1 rooster,
$1.25 ea. Mrs. Bryce, Atlanta.
1736 Howell Mill Road.

200 Eng. str. W. L. 3 mos. old
pullets, 65c ea. FOB. U.S. Odell,
Oakwood.

A few best bred AAA Big Eng.
W. L. 2 mos. old cockerels, 250-;
300 quality, from 26 to 30oz. eges;)
roosters over 6 Ibs., hens 5 Ibs.
oven. 40c ea. No. chks. Mrs. F. E.
Grubbs, Demorest.

10W. L. pullets, 2 Ww. . roost-
ers, 1 Brown L. pullet and rooster, |
10 wks. old, $8/00, or 60c ea. All!
pure bred. H. G. Jones, Ohoopec.

7 AAA W. l. April thatch pul-
lets, good cond., nice size, 342 ese
records 90c ea. or $67. 00 for lot.

oP. , money order; also 10 dark |

S. . Red March pullets, $1.50 ea.
15 young Red hens $1.25 ea.
(cockerel free with 10), Del. Don-|
aldsons direct. J. E. Sikes, Coch-
Tran. Rit. 2.

22 Improved Eme. str., Sleod-
tested W. Leghorns, Yr. old last
April, $150 ea. 1 unrelated roost-| ay
er, same, $1/00 ea. FOB. Exc. for!
bloodtested Barred Rocks, Yr. old.
Be Booths or Park str. Mrs.

A. C. Malphus, Tusculum.

200 W. LL. pullets, hatched April
12 1987, nice and healthy, $1.00:
ea. if sold im 1 fot, buyer to fur-|
nish Coops. F. M. Faulkner, oe
nelia. Star: Rt.

Fine AAA young W. L. last of|
March thatch roesters, 1 or each
2 for $1.75; 8 for $2.50; 7 for $5.00.
Must sell at once. Mrs. M. A..
Collier, Darien. ;

6 pullets and cockerel, pure
bred, heavy laying str., Brown
Leghorns, laying now, $10.00 FOB.

J. R. Lyon, Atlanta. 964 Mani-
gault St., S. EB. erie

6 Buff Leghorn April cockerels,
Golden beauties. 75c ea. or $4.00.
for lot. Exc. hens or pullets for,
same breed unrelated. Mrs. W..
D. Flynn, Austell. Rt. 2.

450 W.. Iu. pullets, March hatch,

all healthy, $1500 ea. at my yard.
Party to furnish coops if shipped.
200 hens, Yr. old, 70c ea. at yard.
No culls. G. B. Ham, Cobbtown. |
5 Reselaamn W. Li. cockerels, nolo
culls, February hatch. $1.00 ea.
Wine. NL OW. Folsom, Norman
Park. i }

40 Buft Leghorn hens, now lay-|
ime S5c ea. or $32'50 for lot. J.
P. Brown, Meansville. Sy
200 W. L. April hatch, Barron

| to buy a shoat.

| 81.50, FOB, Mrs.
((Camen. Rt. 2.

fl choice hens and extra nice.
April, 1936 hatch, from,
direct AAA Rusks Barred Rocks,:
{$12.00 FOB; also 9 pullets and 1;

| POULTRY FOR SALE |
BANTAMS:

and cockerels, 40c ea. Also want

Douglasville.
BANTAMS

from wprize winners (Southeastern
Fair, 1936) $1.50 ea. R. B. Scar-
boro, Atlanta.
S. W., Ra. 3348.

Some small type mixed ban-
tams, real good workers, also
gome very fine White Pekin
ducks. Reasonable. Charlie Has-
jam. Jr., Marshallvil

Trio Black Rose Comb ban-
tams. $5.00; 1 pr. Barred Rock,
$3.50; 1 pr. White Leghorn, $2.00;
and many varieties half grown,
50c ea. All pure bred. Mrs. Lou-
ise Hlartley, Clarkston. Ray's
Rd., or P. O. Box 483.

prize winning stock (Southeastern
Fair), $5.50 or $2.00 each. G. B.'

) Howell, Pavo.

Midget Black Rose Combs and.
also

Buff Cochins, $8.00 pair;
large breeds, S. 8. Hambergs and
. L. Wyandottes. D. T. Jennings,
Americus. P. O. Box 84.

BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS.

and cockerel 4 or 5 mos. old,

eross. 1610 Madison St.

erels, from 288 egg. hens, 60c :ea.

pure bred Partridge Rock
friers (roosters), for breeding,
from prize stock, $1.00 ea.
do to ship about August 15th;

$1.00 ea. and 3 roosters,
breed, 85c ea. FOB. Mattie B.
McPherson, Rabun Gap.

4 White Rock AAA Grade 4
mos, old cockerels 75e ea. R.
Jackson, Yatesville.

B. R. March 1936 hatch cock,
R. da. Mabry,

rooster,

cockerel, March and April 1937
hatch, $10.00 FOB. Mrs.
Wood, Cedartown. Rt. 1.

Incubator Brooders
Etc. For Sale

No. 9 Buckeye Incubator, 2300
ege cap. cheap for cash. J. M.
Mitehell, Atlanta.
Way.

140 cap. Buckeye Inc. ey





inal price. Mrs. J.

|) Manor.

iso No. 10 DeLaval cream separa-
tor, $10.00 or the 2 for $14.00.
Mrs. J. W. Beck, Camilla.

1937 Sears-Roebuck 100 cap.
Simplex Inc., only set twice, good
as new.
Mrs. Myrtle Bankston, Waycross.
i Rt. 8.

tie Connell, Kingsland.
Blue Flame oil brooder, 800 cap.
perfect cond., $5.00, or exc. for
large breed pullets. R. L. Wright,
Yatesville.
220 cap. Buckeye Inc.,
dbs. goose feathers in good cond.
Bach send collect. Mrs.
| Harper, Wray, Rt. 2.
Buckeye Mammoth Inc.,

M. Powell, Macon. Rt. 1.

cap., A-1 cond. $12:50

Clarkston.

EGGS FOR SALE

Pure Cornish Indian game eggs,
4 $1.00 per 15.
P. March 1936 hatch roosters, 2
for $2.75. P. . Money order.
Annie B. King, Hahira. Rt. 1,
Box 124.

White Muscovey duck and
guinea eggs, 75e per setting del.
Effie Barton Trenton. 2

Pure bred Dark Cornish game





Veges (hens wt. 5-7 Ibs., stock un-
related), $1.00 per 15 postpaid.

_ Fred Johnson, Dawson. Rt.



CROP FOR SALE

Growing crop of 70 .acres
corn, av. yield 20 to 49 bu. per
acre; 45 acres in. cotton, av. 1



|*M Ibs. A. also 4 good farm mules,

farm implements for 4 h: farm;

2 good milch cows, 1 -heifer, 20

See. T. B. Visvage, Ma-
Bloonafield. ee

"BUTTER FOR SALE

ieee country techie, 40c Ib. !
del, postpaid. Furnish 5 bs. per |
week. Mrs. ee L. Ward, Bow-







DU: Cans Task, Black-)
RFD 1. d

Bantam hens, roosters, pullets'

H. M. Adams,

Golden Sebright cockerels, bred:

1736 Lawton St.,

5 pure bred B. Pl. Rock pullets.
$3.50 for Tot. B. L. Tiynn, Way-!
Rileys B. BR. 8 wks. old cock-

FOB. Mrs. I. A. Cartwright, |

| jay. Rt. 7B. | Gainesville,

Will

also. 10 pure bred White pullets,.
same

E. G.

925 Waverly

good |
ccond., $11:50, half price of orig-
L. House,.

2 Ine., eee cap., 150 and 250, al-

Sell or exc. for chickens. |

|} Promptly by mail,
1 Super-Hatcher 250 egg Inc. we
practically new, $8/00. Mrs. Ger-|

a... HA.!

4 Super Hatcher Inc., 260 egg)
shipped
\from Atlanta. W. B. Whiddon.|

Carton returned P..

of



PLANTS FOR SALE

New Stone and Gr. Baltimore

tomato 15 per :C. 20025c, 500"

50c or 85ce per M, in 5 and 10 M
Jots 75e.
in ventilated boxes. All. orders
shipped prompt and postpaid. J.
B. Bennett, Rt.
Branch.

Cabbage and collard plants 500
65ce, $1.00 per M postpaid, 5 M
$3.75 exp. collet. No checks,

no COD. Amos Williams, 23 Gar-

den Ave., Gainesville.

Marglobe.. New Stone tomato,
Chas. W. Cabbage and heading

| collard 50050c, 90c per M del.

10 M$6.50 collect. W. 0. Wal-
drip; Flowery Branch.
Dutch and Wakefield cabbage

50050c or T5c per M del; Stone
and Baltimore tomatoes, heading

| collard 50050c or 80c per M del.

2 pare Ged Golien Seogntl So ee.

bantam roosters, half grown, from

Prompt shipment.
A. C. Garrett, Rt 7, Gainesville.

Wakefield and Dutch cabbage.
Stone and Baltimore tomatoes 500
50c, 85c per M.
lots $7:50.. Laura Mae
Rt 7, Gainesville. .:

Open field grown cabbage, to-

'mato and collard plants, all lead.

varieties, full count, sat. guar.
now ready, prompt shipment, any

amount, 20c C. 300, Bae; $1.00 M.:

adel; 75c M. Exp. col. Ernest Wil-
Hams, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Miltions Stone, Baltimore and
Marglobe tomato, cabbage and
collard plants, 85c M. del. No
chks. nor COD. E. B. Wetherford,

Gs 2.

Dutch,
New Stone,
collard

Wakefield,
Roundhead cabbage,
Baltimore tomato and
plants, 400, 45c; 85c M del.;
$3.00; larger lots cheaper; Mar-
globe tomato, $1.00 M. del. 90c M
Exp. Col. Lee Crow, Gainesville,
Ree. ;

Marglobe and Stone
500, 50c; 90c M. del; 5 and 10 M.

|lots, 65 M. Exp. col; Chas Wake-
1 pure bred Thompson Ringlet

field cabbage and Heading Col-

Jard plans, 500, 50c; 90c M. del.

E. C. Waldrip, Flowery Branch,
Bete sh,

Chas. W. cabbage and eollard
plants, mow ready, 500, -75c; $1.25

M. postpaid; $1.00 M. Exp. Collect.

No chks. nor COD. Marcus Wil-
liams, Gainesville. Rt. 1.

New Stone, Baltimore and
Marglobe tomato, Ga. collard,

| Dutch, Wakefield and Copenha-
Jigen cabbage, 20c C. 85c M.
Jor 60c M. Exp. collect.
| Crowe, Gainesville. Rt. 1.

del.
V. A.

Marglobe tomato, cabbage and
collard plants, $1.25 M; 25c C; 300.
50c; 500, T5e. Clay Evans, Gaines-
ville. Rt. q,

Marglobe and New Stone toma-
to plants, 15 C; %5c M. 5 M.
$3.00. Now ready. Al del. Clyde
Mathis, Flowery Branch. Rt. 1.

Marglobe and New Stone toma-
to plants, 20c C; 85c M. 5 M. $3.25,
Prompt shipment. Guar. count.

| Royce Waldrip, Flowery Branch.

Rt. 2:

ee

Dutch, Wakefield, repeathiein

cabbage, Stone, Marglobe, Gr.
Baltimore tomato, old fashioned
collard plants. All now ready.
prepaid, 25c
C. 300, 50c; $1.25 M; Express cel-
lect, $1.00 M; 5 M. $4.50. No COD.

| Major Crow, Gainesville. Rt. 1.

Copenhagen, E. Jerseys, Chas.
W. cabbage,

gar Woodall, Cornelia.

Late Dutch, Copenhagen,
sey Wakefield cabbage,
globe tomato, Ga. collards,

Jer-
Mar-

shipment. Sat. hh. 1B.

Wright, Alte. Rt.

guar.
2.

Chas. W., Flat Dutch cabbage, |

Stone, Marglobe tomato, true Ga.
collard, 200, 30c; 90c M.
$4.00, del. O. F. Crow, Lula.

Stone and Baltimore tomato,
jcollard and Wakefield, Dutch

cabbage plants, 300, 40c; 85 M.
mailed; 10 M. 50c M. Exp.
lect; Vigorvine tomato plants, 20c
doz. L. A. Crow, Gainesville.
ARE.

New Stone tomato plants, T5c
M. Now ready. Add postage. D.
= Garner, Flowery Branch. Rt.

Late Flat Dutch cabbage and

Greater Baltimore tomato plants,
15e CG. Henry Hiller, Ellijay. Rt. 3.

Gr. Baltimore tomato plants
now ready, $1.25 M. Exp. collect;
$1.75 M. Exp. paid. Moist pack-
ed. J. D. Vance, Cumming. Rt. 1.

' Field grown collard plants, 20c
C. Horsemint, 25c Ib. Del. Mrs.

|A. H. Price, Locust Grove.

Celery plants, moss packed, 50c

C. Miss Bessie Martin, Gaines-
vile. Ht. 6.

Tomato and cabbage plants
$1.00 M; Collard plants, $1.50 M.
Add. postage, J. RR. Strayhorn,
Flowery Branch. Rt. 1.

Tomato and.Cabbage plants,

| $1.00 M; collard plants, $1.50 M.
| Add postage.

a Ee
Flowery Branch. Rt. 1.

Marglobe and New Stone to-
mato and cabbage plants,
M; collard, $1:50 M. Add postage.

Maud Strayhorn, CSET Branch.

ae :

Packed with moist roots.

1, Mlowery:
|} Ga. collard, 90c M.

All del. 10 M,
Garrett, }

I penhagen cabbage,

1M.

Danish

5 M)

tomato,

| 35c, $1.00 per M del.

|%5c per M collect.

Ga. collards, Mar-:
globe tomato, 15c C. $1.25 M.|
| Write for larger lot prices. Hd-'
good:
cond., $10.00 cash, or trade for 20
20c |
| C; 500, 60c; $1.00 M. del. Prompt
1008 |
cap. perfect cond., $50.00 cash, or]
exc, for cows, hogs or sheep. C.|

5 M.

Col-}

Strayhorn,

$1.00)



PLANT: S FOR SALE |

Marglobe tomato, Jersey
Chas. W.
plants, 25c C. $1.25 M. Prompt
del, J..N. Wright Alto. Rt. 1.

Stone, Baltimofe and Marglobe
temato, Dutch, Wakefield, Copen-
hagen cabbage and Heading and
5 M. up, b0c
M. Fine plants shipped prompt-
ly. Everett Warren, Gainesville.
BoE. Ts.

Well rooted Marglobe tomato
plants, 25c C. 500, G5c; $1.15 M;
Stone and Baltimere tomato, 85c
M. All del. Prompt shipment.
Winfred Waldrip, Flowery Branch

Marglobe and New Stone to-
mato, cabbage and collard plants
75c M. del. Now ready.. Prompt
shipment. Ethel Crowe, Gaines-
ville. Rt. 22.

Stone and Baltimore tomato,:

Wakefield and Dutch cabbage,

Heading collard plants, 300, 40c;
500, 50c; 85c M. All Gel. 10 M lots,
$7.25, Exp. col. Amos Garrett,

Gainesville. Rt. 7.

New Stone tomato plants now
ready, 75c M. Postage added. .Al-;
vin Buice, Flowery Branch. Rt.

Flat Dutch, Wakefield and Co-
Ga. collard,
New Stone, Baltimore and Mar-:
globe tomato plants, 400, 50c; 7d.
M. mailed; 10 M. $5.00 Exp. col-
Ject. H. P. Crowe, Gainesville.
Ris:

Wakefield, Dutch
Stone and Margilobe tomato also
collard plants, $1.00 M. del. 5c
FOB. John C. Crow, Gaines-
ville. Rt. 1.

Marglobe tomato plants ready.
50050e. 75c per M, 10M$6.00
express; Bermuda nest brown-
yellow Danners 80c a gal. Write,
for quantity prices. W. R. Steph-
ens, Rt 6, Gainesville.

Ga. heading collard 25c per C,
50075e, $1.25 per M; exchange
for white feed sacks or anything

cabbage,

can use; Few more Master Mar-

globe and certified Break o Day
tomato plants 25c per C, $1.50.
per M. Mrs. John B. Nix, Rt 2,
Alto, Balmy Breeze Farm.

Marglobe New Stone tomato,
plants 65c per M del. Moss pack-
ed and prompt shipment. J. P.
Mullis, Baxley.

Savoy-E. J. & Chas. Wakefiela-
E. Flat Dutch cabbage, Ga. head:
and cabbage collards, Marglobe,,
Stone and Baltimore tomato, al-
so other leading varieties 150
25c, 30050c; 600T75c $1.00 per
M, $1.20 postpaid; Pimento pep-
per 25 for 15c with other orders.
Millions field grown mountain

plants ready. D. G. Smith, Cloud-

land,

Certified Marglobe tomato 300
80c col-
lect; All season and Dutch cab-
bage Stone & Baltimore tomato
30030c, 50045c, 70c per M del;
5 M33.00; 10 M$5.00 collect;
collards 40035c, 65c per M del;
45e per M exp collect: Guar.
Prompt shipment. No checks.

| Bonnie Smith, Rt ,.2, Gainesville..

Million Dutch & all season cab-
bage, stone & Baltimore tomato,
collards 30035c, 50050c, 80c

per M del; 5 M$3.25, 10 M}|

$5.50, 15 M or more 45c per M
express collect; certified Marglobe
tomato 30040c; $1.15 per M del.
Orders mixed
as wanted. No checks. C. W.
Smith, Rt 2, Gainesville.

Stone and Baltimore tomato
50050c, 90c per M; Wakefield
and Dutch cabbage 30040c, 500
50e, 9Qc per. M. All good plants.
Prompt shipment. All del. Amos
Garrett, Rt 7, Gainesville.

Ga. heading collard 15c per C,

$1.10 per M; early impr. genuine
Klondyke strawberry 20c per C
er exchange for baby chicks.

Rosie Crowe, Rt 1, Cumming.

Krout King cabbage (produce|

40 tons per acre, heads average
14 pounds). 100 plants del. 25c;

Vigorvine (12 ft. tomatoes) seed:

150 del. for 25c.

Roy.
Sikes

seed,

Will C. Smith,

famous white
everbearing

per M; also large type Dark
Cornish games from prize strain
bloodtested April cockerels, pul-
Jets 75c each, 25 May hatch 50c
each $11.00 for the lot (25). FOB.
Cc. 0. Sykes, Sylvester.

Marglobe tomato $1.00 per M,
New Stone tomato, cabbage and
collard 90e per M del. Now
ready. Prompt shipment. C. D.
Crow, Rt 2, Gainesville.

Chas. and Dutch and Copen-
hagen market cabbage, Stone and
Marglobe tomato, heading col
lards 60050c; 65c per M. Prompt
shipment. Ovie Crow, Rt 7%,
Gainesville.

Marglobe, Stone & Baltimore
tomato, Wakefield, Dutch and
Copenhagen market cabbage,,.
heading variety.
$1.00 per M prepaid. 5 M
$3.50. 10 M$6.00 express col-
lect. Prompt shipment. JEstie
Crowe, Rt 7, Gainesville. ;

_ Marglobe, New Stone and Gr.

| Baltimore tomato 15e per C, 25c

per 200, 50c for 500, 85c per M
in 5 M lotsi10 M lots 75c per
M. All orders shipped promptly
and postpaid. Buice Bennett, Rt
i, Flowery Branch.

wee ;
cabbage,. Ga. collard.

| 20ce, 50060c.

PLANTS FOR

Marelobe romnevte,
Dutch, Jersey Wakefield,
hagen, cabbagg Ga. co.
| $1.00 per i
Prompt. shipment. Sati
guaranteed. W. L. Wis
Alto. .

Cabbage and collard wits
ready, 400, 60c; $1.25 M. del.
M. FOB. No m
Frances Williams,
ab; Sk:

Mareglobe, New Stone,
more tamato plants, T5c |
95c M, mailed. 68 in.
with good roots.

Flowery Branch. Rt. 1.

CORN & SEED CO!
FOR SALE





-or Erons, $2.00 bu.

collard |
strawberry |
plants 20c per C, prepaid $1.20)
rell,

Georgia collard:



125 bu. corn in shuck, $1

FOB my barn. (Will hold for

Cashiers or Certified check
K. W. Sproull, Stilesboro.

500 bu. good white corn.
best price on part or all
place, shelled or in ear.
Hendrix, Baxter,

No. 1 white miitling corn, |
bu. at crib, 5 mi. south J
will sell in shucks by shel
weights. Write your wants.
L. Green, Jasper.

few weevils if any), $1.40 Ba
LL. Hopper, Dillard.

150 bu. good, sound corn
shuck, free from weevil, $:
at my barn. No personal
L. H. Cousins, Greenville.



SEED FOR SALE

Imp. red multiplying
for fall planting,

300 Ibs. more or less |
butter-beans, hand select
quantity lots, 15c lb; also
green okra seed, 25 Ib. G
| Radford, Dublin. Rt. 4, Box

1937 Crimson. clover 3
bur, nice, clean, no trash or
5c Ib. FOB. E. C. Heaton,
well.

Recleaned Southern bur cl
seed, 5c Ib. here. Contains
essary soil to inoculate.
Kinard, Jackson.

Southern collard seed
per 100 Tbs., or 30c Tb.
also mixed field peas, New
Malvin
lins, Whigham. ;

Extra fine; old fashioned
multiplying onions (best
known), 50c gal. postpat
stamps. Mrs. C. R. Smith,
ford. Bt...

1 bu. Red multiplying sk
for fall planting, $2.00 es
gal; 60c peck. All del.
money order.. Mrs. W.
ner, Gainesville. Rt. 5.

Red multiplying winter
buttons, 40c gal. prepaid.
WwW. M. Green, Blue Ridge
2, Box 35.

Unhulled Crimson: clover:
5 1-2c th. $5.00 per CWT.
for sample. (84 yrs. expe
also 29 pure bred Duroc
sired by brother of latest W
Champion.. $4.50 ea. here
ea. more if shipped. S. L.
ton, Dewyrose. Rt. 1. ;

Red multiplying onions
planting, 25c gal. FOB.
Couch, Gainesville, Rt. 6.

Calif. multiplying beer seed,
tbls. 3 for 25c. Add 8c po
Mrs. R. A. Nolen, Rockr
Rt. 2. e
About 75 Ibs. Crotalaria
8e ib. FOB. J. W.
Abba. ae

Scallion onions, post
sale or exc. for white
ions and Bermuda on
postpaid, measure for 1
Mrs. J. B. Stevens, Gra:
Rt. 2.

Bur clever seed, wun-
with natural inoculation,
at market price. Mrs. J.
Cataula. RED.

Calif. multiplying beer
start, plus postage, al
large yellow dent pop
Ib. Mrs. Sallie Floyd, 1
Rt. 2. ;

Red multiplying onion
lbs. $1.00 del. i
Grayson.

New. collard
grown, 10 lb. in 100 Ib. ot
jb. smaller lots. Money
BH. Elkins, Cairo. Rt. 1, Bo

Cabbage-collard seed
Be oz. Mrs. J. B. Ward,

}Rt. 2.

2 M lbs. Crimson clover
recleaned, and in good ce
Ib. FOB; also 200 bu. g00
oats, 75c bu. All FOB.
Gurley, Hartwell.

Large Red nest onions for
Fall planting (quarter 4 tit
quarter makes 8 and 10
65c gal. Mrs. W... Ve.
ery Branch. tee
- Old time Red onion butt
8 in bunch), ready
aera bcs








| sweet and juicy, smoking and
chewing, 10 Ibs. $1. 00; 6 Ibs, of.
either, 50c. Postpaid. M. B.
| Swain, Rockingham. Rt. 1.

j

| Smoking tobacco,- 12 Ibs.,. 75@

; iP. Py ao Lightsey, Screven.

ys and Cokers ped. 2d),
mht and clean, no vt.
st. Put up any way
hem. G. W. ee | ,

Coker s Cert. Abruzzi
rown on my own. farm, |

1 phy, Sandersville.

Rye: for sale.. Sample},
sent on request. W. BD:
ung Cane.

ood fodder $1.25. per).
D. J. Woolbright, Daw-/'

{




{
,

bu. nice. Pineapple pears}!
sprayed trees); also 500 bu.
in P. Ri, sweet. potatoes
hot beds inspected plants),
to ship: now. At wholesale)!
ah Ready ta loads.)
_ AL Metcalf, Waycross.

eros. of Pineapple pears
to move. in few days. Com-:|:
_ R. Dr Stephens, Coun-

, Fitzgerald.

00 bu: nice scupyer-|
3, $2.00 bu. del. Aug-|'
A. Lewis, Bax-



huckleber-

inl sprays, 10c doz. Also
. blackberries at home, but
send COD. Addie Eaton,

baa, mot. 1 Box-.38:
bu. Bllis and June. apples,
truckers. Make bids:
near Aaron. Tourist)

. G. Rose, Loving.
uu. ripe Pineapple pears.
o take run of orchard)
ear, W.. D. Harper,

. 1004 Plant Ave.

bu. fine Starkes delicious |,
eady for truckers: last. 2),
ugust and first 2 wks.
-- Write if interested.
easley, M. D., Hartwell.)
; om. bunch, $1.00 bus)
es, picked, $1.15; scup-
ongs $1.25; tomato plants,, 61
25e; collard, 300, 35e;, 90);
ices at Vineyard. Grapes'|
L. E. Harrison, Dub-.



{

ates Pineapple pears),
Mrs. ah H. Morris,

ss late watermelons for
Jate in August. Geo. A.
Swainsboro, Rt. 2.
Pincanpple pears, ready),
now. Prentice D. Ray,
City. 5 i
pu. No. 1 Detroit) Red ap-|
ed right for whole Alot.
Lloyd, Blue Ridge.
uu. nice yellow apples, 50c
onchard,. 7 mii, Clarkesville; |!
Mrs. lb. N. Taylor
sville. R 3:
Iudi and Concord,
ist week..in) August,, $1.00),
Parties. furnish own contain-
rohn T. Peyton, Mt. Airy. |





- dried apples, nice and
Ib. FOB. Exe. 10) Ibs:
es. Mrs. Jinn Gable,
Rt... 2.

dried apples, 1937 crop.
in 10 lb. lots; old fash-
allots, 35c gal. Del. in Ga.

M. White, Dahlonega. Rt.

crop nice, bright, sundried
S, 800 lbs. unpeled, 15 Ibi;
80c lb. Free from worms;
e, 3dc 1b.; beeswax, 25
onion buttons now ready:
ing, 35e gal. Add post- |!
Ss. Aaron Hill, Maysville: |

Sundried apples free from
Gore and peel, 10c Ib. del.

| Biijay. Rt: 2%

NS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
; Pcwnceyed Crowders

y, $1.50 bu; 5 bu. mixed,
Robert. TT. Hill, Damn: |





tts Wonder Eng. pea. seed,
Postpaid. No less. than 2)!
ae customer. M. O. only.
izzie Bullard, McRae. Rt.
2 beans) for August}
very best, 30c per Ib.
owders, 20e pint, Gel







{

in}.

: -ed honey;
pails:.

size.
needed),

'B.

stone.

Rt. 2,

_

Honey Howe and Bee
Supplies. For Sale

New. Ext.. Gallberry honey in
10 Ib. pails, $1.00- per 10 Ib. pail,
not prepaid. Jim: Pye, Odum.

New crop, choice White chunk
honey, 65. Ib.. pails,, $3.75; 185
Ib. pails, $10.80; 4-10 Thi, , $4.90;
-1210 Ib., $18. 80. You. pay freight.
10 Ib: sarmple, $1.95
Guar. pure. Prompt shipment. H.
L. Hallman, Nahiunta..

100 gal. good grade Ext., strain:
10e. lh in 5 or 10: 1b.



amount,. J. Bi. Jesup. P.
QO. Box 213.

37 ib. eanms, geod Chunk
honey, no Black. camb, $5.50 per
can, FOB. Cash with order. W.

-| J.. doiner,, Garfield.. Rt.. 2, Box 87.
moilel.|
and delicious flawor, $1:50' per 1@')

New,, faney comb honey,

lbs. postpaid te 4th zene. Write

for special prices on large quan-|

tities of either: comb or extract-
ed. J. O: Hallman, Blackshear. :

New, Ext. Tupelo honey, $1. 50
per-10) Ib;. pail, 75c per 5 lbs. B.
E. Sheppard, Savannah. 1222) B:}
Henry St.

New, strained honey in 1-2 gal.
pails, 60c ea. del. or 301-2) gal
Geo. D. Bar-:

pails, $25.00: FOB,
field, Iouisville.
New pure Gallberry honey in

/L@ lb. pails, $1.00 pail not pre-

paid. . Jim Pye Odum.

New white honey,.10. Ib. bucket,
$1.50; new bright honey, 10. Ih.
bucket, $1.25 postpaid. Cash (M.
O. preferred) with order. R. W.
Browning, Dublin. Rt. 3.

FRESH & CURED MEAT
FOR SALE

Brooks county cured hams, 3fe
lb: or $29.50 per 100: lbs.
.M. O. only.. C. R.. Hutchinson





Quitman. Rt. 1, Box 184.



Miscellaneous. Wanted



no flaws
R.

ity Calabash gourds,
nor insect marks: State price.
A. Caldwell,, Faceville.

PECANS: Want. 100: Ibs. seed:
ling pecans; 1986 crop. G. T.
Clark, LaGrange:.

CAVIES: Want some Guinea
| (cavies) pigs. State what you
have, wt.. and: price, ete. L. A.
Rochez, Atlanta..

eon.

SEBD:.

Want 45 Ibs. pure Vetch seed.
State Kind, quality and@ price
first. Grady Honea, Ir., Ayers-
ville. ,
GRAIN & HAY

Want 150 bu: Hastings 100 Bur

oats, also 150 but. Fulghum oatis;.|:
50 bu.. Abruzzi Rye, 30 bu. Beand-
D. Truitt, Coun: |;

less: barley. S:
ty Agt. 901 Court House, Atian-
ta. ;



| Miscellaneous For Sale



FRUIT TREES: Big assort-
ment of peach, apple pear, cher-

ry, plum, figs, grape vines; pe- |.

walnut, all. sizes and well.
Write
Cureton,

cans,
suited for gen. purposes.
for prices: James
Austell. ,
WALNUTS:

Black Walnut

Meats, nice and clean, bright ol-
_or,, 55 Ib, del.
Rolston.

M. M. Cochran,

DILL: Nice, dried Dill. Mrs.
J. 'T. Thomason, Montieelle, Rt. Y.
GOURDS
Gourds: priced according to
(State for what purpose
Also Spearmint planis,
25c doz. plus postage. Plants
packed in damp moss. Mrs. T.

Thomas, Thomasboro.
COTTON

Nice cotton (never used), 13c

lb. plus postage. Hxe. for 100 Ib.

caps, white feed: sacks, free of

heles. Mrs. C.. W.. Fricks,, White-

HERBS:
Calamus), bear-foet,. birdeck, yel-

lew dock, yellow root, butterfly
root, Queen of the Meadow rat-
tle .reot,

Mayapple, wild cherry
bark, witch-hazle;, and others, 30c
lb .or exe.. for sacks:
doz Mrs: R. C: Stover; Royston.
PRATHERS

18 lbs. new goose
feathers, 60 1b. del. if party taltes
alli Money order. Mrs. J. F.
Hattaway, Alame:

DBER. TONGUE

3 Ibs: deer tongue, dry $2.00;
3 Ibs. sassafras: reot bark $1.00:
.P. O.. Money order. Chas. McGa-

ihee;, Townsend pt. 2, Box WE.

' Geod, home-mate tobacco, 1936 at
and 1987 crop, Red and Yellow,|

postpaid..

Write for price. on whole,

Cashis( :
i Wint little bone Black Guinea |;
for breeding purposes. State!

419 Pence de
| SHEEP AND GOATS WANTED.

| fully and state: best price:

Plants, 10}

(2936-37),



, WANTED

CATTLE WANTED |



fresh in, 1st er 2nd calf, in good

cow, cheap for cash. Mrs. G.
H. Roberts, Grantville, Box 103.

Want Hereford bull calf. Need
not be registered, but must be
pure bred. Clyatt

Townsend, Be

- Want thoroughbred Black An-
gus bull calf, also a big bene

mare and 3 colts fer sale. T:.

"| A. Bowen, Blakely.

Want Jersey heifer about 3 or
4 mos. old, from 4-5 gal. cow.
State age price, etc. for sale. 6

1987 reosters, $5.50 or $1.00 ea.
Leo Akins, Graymont. Rt. de.

fresh. with Ist or 2nd ealf, cheap
ifor cash. Mrs. Odessa Roberts,
(Grantville. Box. 103..

Want 30 to 40 Jersey cows.
Must be Bang and T. B. tested.
State what you have, price want-
ed and av. production. Prefer

Leesburg.

HORSES AND MULES
WANTED:

Want. small mule or pony, work
anywhere, also a spring or light!
1 horse wagon and plo~7 tools: for
1 horse farm. Must be bargain
for cash. Write particulars. D.
.P. Edwards, Waycross; Rt. 4:

Want Shetland pony, gentle ax]
good cond. State what you have
and price at once... Howard Reg:| ~
ers;. Cobbhtown.

: Trade a $300.00 value to swap
for good mule. Write or come
see.

4

Quincy Howell, Emma.

or would\ trade some goo,

or. going to be fresh cows. J.

|.) Burson, Franklin, Rt. 2.

Want mule, not over 9 or 10
yrs. old, with smooth mouth, and
without blemishes, sound
| free of disease. State what you
have and best price'for eash.. S.
M. Nisbet, Rising. Fawn.

HOGS WANTED

pil
Wl., ge; and price, Also have
garlic pulb 9s for sale, 25c to 50c
per doz... Ho As: ust, Bogart,

{Rt 1.
GOURDS: Want few good qual- |

Want S: P. : sow or gilt
the short, stocky type;
same type boar, to
September.
pigs of same type:
near enough: to go: after.
Kennedy, Collins. |

Want 10 hogs, wt around 150
Ibs., ea. or more, thin hogs from
So. Ga. State best price.
Tarpley, Marietta, Rt. 1.

L.. M.

Want buy 1 pure bred Angora |
Ram goat, about 1 yr. old: A.
J. Rich, Bainbridge. 7

Want. some sheep. Describe
Wm.
H. Barfield, Louisville.

CATTLE FOR SALE

21-2 yr. old bull
Guernsey crossed; weight about
1000 Ibs. Will work. $75.00 at
my barn; 15 Sheppard strain An-
cona pullets 11 months old $12.50





Good layers. Cash with order.
H. Neal Lord, Rt 3, Toomsbore:

Jersey milk cow, gentle, easy.
to: milk, ealf 2 1-2: months old.
Not roguish,
R. Greer, RFD, Hampton.

One thoroughbred brown Swiss
Bull 2 1-2 years old $50;
Cobb, Rt 8, Gainesville,

3 registered Jersey cows, fresh
in. $100.00 per cow, calf includ-

Chappell, Rt i, Newton.

One small squirrel color grey
cow with month old calf, one dark
Jersey cow with 6 months old
calf. Bargain at my barn; 5 fine}.
6 weeks: 6ld: Duroe pigs bacon
type $6.00 each or lot for $26.00.
Mrs. S. P. Jones, Rt 2, Lula,

Two Jersey bulls dropped
March 15, 198% price $100:00,
bright lemon or golden color; 1
dropped April 17, 1937$150.00.
la. C.. Shipp, Reckmart.

One registered Guernsey bull
four years old, gentle and good
natured. Selling om account of
inbreeding. Ree: paper furnish-
ed. Price $50.00 FOB.or $45.00
my barn. N. D. Amos,
City.

' Reg: Guernsey Aragmont Mir-
iam 371335, due te freshen by
Reg. Guernsey with 4th ealf Aug:
26th. Gave 4 gals: last calf.
Goed. type and. nicely marked.
Price $125.00 at barn. 703. Hast:

1 Jersey and 1 Guernsey heifer
calves,
over 5 gall milk. 15.00:
Exe. 1 for fryers or. peund: size:
pullets., John Waillace,, 194% Gib-



som St. = Atlanta,

j well broke, single or dbl.,
c fabout 800 Ibs. ea. $100:00 or exe: | -
Want buy. eung Jersey cow, |

cond., gentle and:a good butter |

Middieton, |

Guinea: male pig; have 3 broed

Eiverlay dark Brown Leg. April)

Want good.Jersey mileh cow,)

all from. one party. M. Stocks,|
(Stocks Dairy Farm). |

Also want hear from party |
having Crimson clover seed.. John.|,

Want swap 2 mules for a No.
1. good mare, or a good size mule,,
fresh

and:

of
bred to
farrow in)
Or consider nice gilt}:
Prefer them):

Lintom |

Jersey. &|

for the lot. of 14, or $1.00: each.

$35.00: FOB. Paul.

Hdd

ed, $290.00 for the lot. W. P.|

Everett,

John Wesley Ave. College Park. |

both from cows: giving)
each.



2 yoke of oxen, with horns,
wt.

for young pony. male mule. (11
mi. So. Ellijay).. J. C. Ponder, El-
lijay. Rt. 3.

Jersey cow, 5 yr. old in
vember, freshen first of Aug-
ust, 2nd. calf, $60.00. In Dr. Tit-
shaws:' pasture om. Peachtree
Road. Mrs, Velvia Greene,
Gainesville. Rt. 2. : :

Fine;
Yr. old. bull: fot sale. or trade.
G. Acree, Atlanta, Rt. 7.

20 reg., horne type Hereford.
bulls, 6 to 18 mos. old, $75.00: to
$500.00 ea. Domino, Mischief,
and Bocaldo breeding. Percy
A. Priee;, Albany.

2 high bred Reg. Jersey bull!

BH.

and $15.00: ea. respectively, with-
out papers. State College and
Pebble: Hill Stock. -
er, Stone Mitn., Rt. 1.

About 12 or 15 good
cows,

days.

A. K. Chamblee,
Guernsey Bull

Sparta.
ealf Dam:-Se

has: best og Guernsey blood in
him. Sell or swap him for Guern-
sey male. G. Di Rice; Rt
Madison.

Two male Jersey calves avopped|
May 12: and 22nd,, out. ef extra
good cows, by good. sire.. Will sell}
or exchange. Will register. Write!
for terms. E. G. Summers, Rt

. Senoia..

"Five reg. Jersey heifers 2 to

5 months old $25.00 each for the].

the 15 months old. Mrs. S. E.
Jones, Rt 2, Fairburn. /

Jersey: cow; 2nd calf 5 mos. old,.
$35.00. J. Jolley, Atlanta. Rt. 5.

Good 5 gal. milch cow, very
rick in butter fat, freshen about
Sept. 1st. Chas. LL. Nevill Pur
laski.

Guernsey Jersey (cross), cew,
fresh, 2nd calf, now giving 3. gal.
milk, Price moderate. Miss Hivia
Bullard, Deeatur. Columbia. Drive:

HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE *

x





A perfect mule in make up and

years olds. Come and see him.
.O: S$; Williams, McRae.
Good mare mule, fast worker;

sound and gentle, 10 years: old

gentile
AL GE

weight. 1250) Ibs. Aliso)
horse,, work anywhere.

mile north Palmetto.

One good old horse mule weight
1000 Ibs $75.00. LL. B: Thurmond,
Commerce Road, Athens.

Shetland pony, brown and
white;. weight 400 lbs;. very gen:
tle; a. perfect pony for children.
Price $40.00.. Mrs. George WNel-
son, Blakely.

900) lbs, good! condition, priee very
reasonable. W.. Ta. TOME Greens-
boro. :

Niee bay mare fia; weight

W. H. Bolton, Griffin.

Good work mule, old, but
sound (just finishing a 20) A.
crop), $35.00, er trade for cow,
or heifer that will give milk soon.
Fabom Brown, Tyrone,

Mule; No:
yrs. old. wt. 1100 lbs., $225.00 at
my barn, O. S. Williams, Mc-
Rae: Rt. 1.

Bay mare, wt. about 900 ibs.
Healthy, good cond. for sale for
cash. Ralph Hilton,, Davishboro.
Bt 2k

RABBITS FOR SALE

2 New Zealand: White Does,
4 bucks, 18 mos. old, 5 mos. old,
and 23 mos. old. All for $6.00
sat my place. F. E. Reynolds,
Stone Mtn.

38 fine breeding does, Yr: old,
$1.50 ea; 2) yr. oid, prize winning
buek, $2.00; 23 mos: old bucks,.
75e: ea; yr. old} poorly: marked
buck,, $1.00; doe and. 2 bueks, 2.
mos. old. 50c ea. Trade for chick-
ens. Beyer McKinley, Atlanta.
1170 Gilbert St. S: E:

4 rabbits, 3: mos. old, mixed) 50c
ea.,, also buek and 2 does; N. Z.
Whites, grown, 75c@ ea. Alli





J. D: Bryan Lula. Box 96.

5 N Z. White does, 1 Giant
Flemish doe, ail bred; 2. Ne -Z.
White and; Giant White buck.
T young, Mrs
East Point. 307 Thompson St.

24 Angora rabbits, 4 grown, 12
4 mos. and 86wks: eld. All rege:
stock. $20:00)for lot. J. BE: Stew-
lart, Fairmount., Rt. 2-

GOATS FOR SALE

24: goats; some mixed! with: Nu:
Sian, for sale, at my. farm. Exe.
for caws. or hogs. W. W. Bond,
Tras, Eastman. : :









"CATTLE FOR SALE |

No-:

thoroughbred Guernsey|

calves, 9 and 3 mos: old; $20.00}

A. A. Fowl-| lect from.

milch ;
some with young calves;
and all coming in within 30 or 40!

Thoroughbred and: grade]

Jerseys, Well .bredi andi well fed.)
| 5 femaie, $10.00. each,, ent. to: reg.

.| Best blood line, James R. Cowan,

phias Bloss 344650 Sir lLassies},
| King Africander 215852. This. calf}.

2,4)

L boars and gilts for sale:
5 months old and $30:00 each: for

auality, weight about 1100 Ibs, 81

Robertson, Roosevelt highway1,

One: black jack, inde tens about),

1000. Ibs, 12 years old, work any-+
where, no blemishes, price $100. 00.)

1 in every way, 8/

August 28th, $18.00;
(mer,

im:

good cond. Crate 1l0 extra. FOB: |:

Francis: Akins,.}.

Tu.



SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE

Pull Nubian subs. to reg.,. buck, |
2 does, 1 freshen in September,
other December: $25.00 for the
lot. James: Farmer;, Ashburn.

| Fine milk goats: for sale or
trade for chickens; also have Bar-
ron str, W. L. eoecks, 3 mos. old
and some Barredi Recks; 10 mos.



old for sa or exch. A. R.. Shed- ee.

dan, College Park; Rt. -2:

ea. at my barn: |. M. Stewart,

Levett..

| Beautifull pure-blooded. Tog-
genburg 5 mos; eld! doe kid, per>
fect color and: markings; from: a
6 qt.. dam. $15.00 FOB; Nice Nu-
bian 6 wks. old doe Kid; $5.00. i
FOB. John Hynds, Atlanta. 93
Warren St. Ni Ei De 0489 W. | Sa

8 thoroughbred Nubian milit
goats; Heavy milkers: & te see
Cheap. H. A. Bvans,.
tlanta.. 369) Augusta. Ave... S.. EB.

HOGS. FOR SALE

7 pure bred: Durce pigs, 2: male,,





Monticesta, Rt 2.

Fine Noetatarad: Sterm. King
breeding Hampshire Boar farrowe
ed Sept. 1935. Wonderful breed-
er, Good enough: to shew. Sell
to prevent shuerteeeia tad J, BE: Hall,
Soperton,
| Big Bone: Black Guinea SOWs.
Weight 200 Ibs: and: 9 pigs. $30.00,
one month old. Mrs. Gertrude
Howell, Rt 1, Mitchell.

Few pure bred Hampshire
Herd
1936; International!
Also some
Bi. Bi. Wear:

bear; son of
Grand Champion,
Grade Angus: cattle,
therby,. Cochran,, :
. Weaned S. P. G@:. pigs out. of a
Zoam sow and Gunfire boar,
8 to 12 wks: old, males, $12.50.
ea. ree. im buyers: name: also
Knob-Comb game: ehickens;, April
hatch. pullets, and. roosters, $1.00 .
ea. D,. T.. Lee, Dawson..

P. C. Sow, 2 1-2 yrs. old, fare
row last of August, $25.00 at my
place. : M, Ado, Reale.
Rt. oie ;

Black. Poland: China. pigs from
the best of registered stock. Can
furnish pedigrees: and have pigs
registered if desired. Price $12.50
ea registered or $11.50 not regis-
tered. W.. W.. Quinn, Rt 3;, Wash-
ington,

Bigs. bone: Biack Poland China:
pigs: Registered and double
treated for cholera. Write for
pictures and prices. Unless: best.
breeding stock is: wanted dont
write: . J. May, Washington.

Five unusually fine pigs: Six.
weeks old Aug. 25th, for sale. BF.
ods Crane, Canon. i

Blue hogs, male amd female,
50 to 150 ibs each. Life treated.
Write for prices; 32 grade feeder -
shoats average 40 lbs: ea.12 1-26
per lb at my bam. Iiife treated:
L, H.. Bdenfield,, Rt 1,, Bx: 34,, Still-
more,

2 Big: bone Black P.. C.-bred:
Sows: $12.00. ea; also: 4 mixed. sows;.
Yt big. male P. CC: $15.00; 15 P: CG
shoats, 50 to 80 lbs, $7.50: ea; 14
pigs, 12 weeks: old! $3:50) ea. Mrs.
W. A. Key,. Rt 5, Macon.

Nice: pigs \$5.00) each, 6 weeks
old July 2st. Miss Janie Moe
Cullough, Rt 4, Summerville: . ;

One: male Duroe: and. BHssex
-erossed pig, nine weeks old,
weighs 35 Ibs, price $5.00. Mra, .
Kate Phillips; Rt 1, Palmetto.

Extra large Duroe Jersey sow,
4 years: of age and 6 pigs. five
weeks: old,. extra, good. to) manage
and in good condition: $50.00 cash
at my home; 1 good milk cow 8
years: of. age: $35.00 cash at my;
home. Ollie Grantham, Rt 3,
Vienna.

Very fine 8 week old Black P.
c. pigs: AW males: $5.00 each
FOB. J. HE. Womack, Greens-
boro, rea E

Purebred reg:. Durocs, young
bears: ready for service: Also
weaned pigs by a son of Perfect
Balancer, Grand Champion of
Iowa in 1936. Thrifty and growe
ing, .Write for prices: Aubrey
Stallings; Rt 3, Carrollton.

Big Bone Blue Guinea gilts and
boars, $5.00: to $10:00 ea. accord:
ilies to sizes I bred gilt, farrow
WwW. A. Sum-
Adrian,

10 little bone Guinea pigs; 6
wks, old August 26th: Hubert
Daniell, Winston,

Young. P..C: Boar for gale.
don Kettles, Varnell.

I5: black P. Ce pigs, 6-8 wks. -
old $2.50 to $3.50 each, or $37.50
for lot at pen. Come: or write.
J. G. BMulsey,, Mayfield.

30: Duree pigs; pure bred and:
carrying bloodlines of latest
Champions. 10 wks. old, $5.00 ea.
here, $6:00 ea. skipped. S: LL.
Thornton, Deweyrose: Rt. 1.

Ss: P: sow, not reg. a little
thin, 18 mos. old, first litter of
10, when 13 mos. old: $50.00, or
exc, for fresh in, 45 gall cow. a
Altman, Aidma._

3 8. P. GC. sow pigs, not. oe
8 wks, old, $25:00.. B.. By.
ders, Alma..

Gore

4



50 head ewes: andi 2! bucks;, $4.00 ae









published by Direction of.
COLUMBUS ROBERTS .
ee of Agriculture
PR J. M. SUTTON
State a
SS
PRESERVATIVES IN MEAT.

There has been @ tendency among. meat packers
and | butchers to .use chemical preservatives on
ole and greund meat.in order to make an inferior
tale product appear fresh.
ibits the use of any pregervative
meats.

.e Chemical Division, of the State Department
of Agriculture, has complted a number of analy-
ses for preservatives in Fresh meats. The sam-

les for these analyses were taken from several
ctions of the State by the Veterinary and Food
Inspection Divisions. A large. proportion of the
samples show that they have been treated with
the so-called gulphite preservatives.
Since certain packers have petitioned that they
e permitted to use small amounts of these sul-
phites, the Department has made a thorouch study
of the use and effects of this preservative. Opinions
ave been resuested and received from noted Phy->
ns, Patho'ogists, and representatives of the:
tadical Sorictties of Georgia. These experts re-
ommend that sulphites should not be permitted
n or on edible fresh meats. The following quota-
tions are t-xen from some of thy letters received:
_ Doctor Roy R. Kracke, Professor of Pathology.
nory University, in his letter quotes the following :.
Sollman, T. H. A Manual of Pharmacology.
_ The principal importance of the sulphite
arises from its use in preserving foods. Their
harm is mainly indirect in that they improve
- the odor and appearance of spozted meat $0
that it is sold as fresh. Pou ae

Outline of basic arguments from literature: ee

17 As At harmful as a chemical? Not unless - used
in excessive | amounts.

. iF. PURVIS, Director
; Food Inspection

in = or On.

2 Does it lead to injurious conditions in the food

to which it is added?.

ers posed meat salable as first class meat.
not kill bacteria but hides their effects.
3. Is it expedient? Not at all. Sulphite is a
weak preservative. Under present conditions
of refrigeration not at all necessary unless

Yes, makes decom-

. fraudulent sales of inferior meat are eontem= <

_ plated. pee
Tanner, Fred -W. Be S., M. 8. Ph .D. Prof. of
acteriology, University of Bae fa

Wiley stated that the administration of
sulfurous acid in food is objectionable and

produced disturbances of metabolic functions et

and injury <0 health and digestion:
- These compounds are now prohibited as
z food preservatives. These compounds may
not be added to meat products according to ~
U.S. Bureau of Animal Industry Order 211,
Regulation 18, Section 6, Paragraph 1.
r. T. F. Abercrombie, Directwwr of the State De-
tment of Public Health, includes ne FORE IPE
| his. letter:
: Suiphites unen applied to organic matter
such as fresh meat very quickly oxidize. to
: sulphates. In so doing they act on the hemo-
_ globin in the meat, changing it to a bright _
red color. The chief objection to the use of
sulphites or any other chemical agent for
_ the purpose of restoring the color is that
_ it may screen the true condition of the meat.
In other words, it deceives the consumer,
giving the impression that the meat is fresh.
As a preservative it is doubtful if it has any
value.
2 Dri HC. Sauls, President of the Fulton County
_ Medical Society, includes in his letter:

-. In regards to your letter of June 24 con-

cerning the use of sulphites in preserving
of meat, will state that I am not im position.
- to discuss the matter except that, if the use

. of this causes any harmful result in the meat,

I am bitterly opposed to its use, and think
a A should be discontinued.

The State Veterinarian has stated that the law.
will be enforced prohibiting the use of sulphites,

other preservatives, and dyes on fresh meats but-
chered, ground, transported, sold or offered for sale
in Cooreia, The Citv of Atlanta has prosecuted

and fined several meat packers and butchers found
putt of using sulphits in meats sold within the

-citv limits.
Several of the Atlanta mars:ezs have asked per-
mssion to use certain chemicals known as Meat
Tonderizers. Enzymes in these preparations
hanoe the character of the meats and misleads
the purchaser as to the condition of the product.
"ny meats which have undergone treatment
vith chemicals, preservatives, colors, or tenderizers
cannot be sold or offered for sale as fresh meat.
J. PRESTON YARBROUGH. State Chemist.
FRNEST A. NEALY, Food Chemist.

The following are some of the meats recently
a Tred, for sulphites and other preservatives which
are emphasized in ore above article.

A-241 -
Sample of Boned Beef

Manufacturer: Upchurch Packing Co., Atlanta, Ga.

Where found: Wilson & Co., 475 Whitehall St Aes

=< Slanta, Ga.
ey meiunion: Contains trace of sulphites.

hibited preservative.

Sample of Mix Sausage, ?
Manufacturer:

The Georgia law .

| A-260 .

_ Manufacturer:

_ Where found:

; Conclusion:

_ Where found:
: Conclusion:

Does

_ Manufacturer:

Adult- |
erated in that product contains a pro-.

Rex Market, 107 Broad St., Atlan-



of | aioe.

promised preservative.

A-256
Sample of Hamburger

Manufacturer: L. D.. Cross Market, 90 Broad a
y Atlanta, Ga.
Where found:
Conclusion:

Same : :
Sample contains relative large amount
_ of sulphites.
branded in that product contains a
prohibited preservative. :

S AOGOe
Sample of Mix Sausage
Manufacturer:
St., Atlanta, Ga.
Where found: Same_
Conclusion:

. product contains a prohibited Bagi
ative. Sic

Sample of Hamburger

Smith & Watts Market
Where found: Same it
Conclusion: Samplc contains trace of sulphites.

ie

A- 262 ;
Sample of Mixed Sausage

New) York Meat
Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Sample contains. sulphites.
ated and misbranded in that product
contains a prohibited preservative.

product contains a prohibited eae
BUN ES a, e

Market, 16 W.

A-265
Sample of Hamburger
Brookfield Market, 18 N. Broad Sti
Atlanta, Ga.

Sample contains Suintiien :
ated and qmisbranded in that product
contains a probated preservative.

A-268 \
Sample of Beef Chips for Sees,
Atlanta Sausage Co., Howell Mill

Road, Atlanta, Ga.
- Where found: Same as above.

Conclusion: Sample contains sulphites. Adulterated
-and misbranded in that product con-

tains a prohibited preservative.

hs 269

- Sample of Hamburger.
- Manufacturer: Atlanta Sausage Co., "Howell Mill
Road, Atlanta, Ga.
Where found: Same as above.
Lone; Sample contains sulphites.
ed and misbranded in that product con-
tains a prohibited preservative.

A2d .
Sample of Sausage Meat.
Manufacturer: Morrell Packing Co., Ottumwa, Iowa.

Where found: Atlanta Sausage Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Conclusion: Negative for sulphites.

A-275

Sample ae Haniiunet.

Manufacturer: Peacock Market, Peneliigpe St., At-
lanta, Ga. =i

Where found: Same as above.

Conclusion: Sample contains relative large amount
Eee Adulterated. and mis-_
as _branded in that product contains a pro-

of sulphites.

of hibited preservative.

A-276

Sample of Hamburger,

Manufacturer: H. A
nah, Ga.

Where found: Same as above.

. Dotson, City Market, Savan-

_ Conclusiom: Sample contains sulphites. Adulterated =p

ce and misbranded in that product. con-
ea tains a prohibited preservative,

ATT.

Sample of Hamburger.
Manufacturer: Jack Ratner, City Market, Savannah,
Ga,
Where found: Same as above.
Conclusion: Sample contains sulphites.
ed and misbranded in that product con-
tains a prohibited preservative.

A-278-

Sample of Hamburger.

Manufacturer: Meddin Bros., Se Market, Savan-
nah, Ga.

Where found: Same as above.

Conclusion: Negative for Sulphites.

A-279 r

Sample of Sausage.

Manufacturer: Meddin Bros.,
nah, Ga.

Where found: Same as above.

Conclusion: Negative for sh Sasseiae

A-280 .

Sample of Hamburger.

Manufacturer: Son Doyle, City Market, Savannah,

: Ga.

Where found: Baine as above.

Conclusion: Sample contains sulphites,
- . and misbranded in that product con-

tains a prohibited preservative.
_A- 281 :

Sample of Hassvunse:

Manufacturer: Woods & Robbins, Ane., 516 W. Har-

ris St... Deve en, Ga.

Adulterated and Thee -
branded in that product. COO Bf

Adulterated and mis-

Smith & Watts Market 105 Broad

Sample contains a trace of sulphites.
Adulterated and misbranded in that

_ Adulterated and misbranded in that

A-236 ay
Adulter-

Mannfacturer:

~ A-288

Adulterat: -

A-294 |
- Sample of Hamburger.
Manufacturer: Brown-Green ee 144 Price st
vannah, Ga.
Where found: Same as bove. =
Conclusion: Sample contains relative large amo

Adulterat-

City Market, Savan-

A-296

- Sample of Hamburger.

aaniecdas



: Conclusion: Sample contains sulphites, Adu

oe ed and misbranded in that produ
tains a Beonibites rea
A282

Si

- Sample of Pork Saneiee

Manufacturer: Kantzipen Market, 418
. St., Savannah, Ga. ~
"Where found: A- Stewart, 502 ee
2 vannah, Ga.
_ Conclusion: Negative for sulphites.

A- 283
Sample of Hamburger.

Ga. >
Where found: Bane as above.
Conclusion: Negative. for sulphites.

A-284

- Sample of Hamburger.

~ Manufacturer: Rodgers Market, 2302, Bull Ss
' Vannah, Ga.

Where found: Same as sive.

Conclusion: Negative for sulphites: :

~ A-285

Sample of Hamburger.

Manufacturer: A. Rosenzweig, 2402. Bull
-vannah, Ga.

Where found: Super Market, 2402 Bull Ss Sa
"nah, Ga.

- Manufacturer: A & P Co. 1509 Bull St. Sa

: Conclusion: Sample contains sulphites.

Rare

ed and misbranded in that product
tains a prohibited preservative

Sample of Hamburger,

Manufacturer: Smiths Market, 2438 Bull St.
vannah, Ga.

Where found: Same as above.

a Conclusion: Sample contains re

and misbranded in that produc
tains a prohibited preservative

-Adulter- A A- 287

Sample of Hamburger.
Kantzipen Market, ls W.

St., Savannah, Ga.
Where found: Same as above.
Conclusion: Sample containts sulphites. Adulte:
SR ed and misbranded in that produc
tains a prohibited preservative.

Sample of Sausage Meat.

Manufacturer: Kantzipen Market, 418 w. Lil

- t.. Savannah, Ga.

- Where found: Same as above.

Conelsion: Negative for sulphites. pe

A-289

Sample of Sausage, Bologna, Be ae ae
Manufacturer: Wood-Robbins, Ine., , 516 WL
. t., Savannah, Ga. Fe Se
Where found: Same as above.

tS Conclusion: Negative for eee

-A-290

| Sample of Veal and Steak.
| Manufacturer: J. C. Shore, City Market, Sava

Ga.
Conclusion: Negative for sulphites.

A-291

Sample of Veal. - Te Oe
Manufacturer: Jack Ratner, City Market, s van
Ga. Z

Where found: Same as above.

Conclusion: Negative for sulphites.

A-292

- Sample of Hamburger.

Manufacturer: Son Doyle, City Market, s va
Ga.
Where found: Same as above.
Conclusion: Sample contains sulphites. Adu te
ed and misbranded in that product
oe _ tains a prohibited preservative
A-293 ae

Sample of Mixed Sausage.

Manufacturer: Moppers Market, 402 E. Brou

Sayannah, Ga.
Where found: Mrs. Dora Mopper, Same addr
Conclusion: Sample contains relative large
of sulphites. Adulterated and
branded in that product contains
hibited preservative.

of sulphites. Adulterated and
branded in that product contains:
hibited preservative.

A-295 oe . oe

Sample of Hamburger. =

Manufacturer: L. R. Richardson, 328 w.
St., Savannah, Ga.

Where found: Same as above.

Conclusion: Sample contains sulphites. _

and misbranded in that procuc'

tains a See preservative

Manufacturer: A & P Store, 321 Ww. Liber y
Savannah, Ga.
Where found: Same as above.

Conclusion: Negative for sulphites.

A-300

Sample of Paaapuasen 7

Manufacturer: A & P Market, 345. Peters
lanta, Ga. i
Where eee Same as above. =