HAMILTON RALLS, SUPERVISOR, MARKETING DIVISION
ISSIONER i is rae
STATE CAPITOL, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1937
lowing Address W Was Made by Cone
er of Agriculture Columbus Roberts
inner Given by Mr. Chas. J. Haden,
ta, in His Honor to Representa-
Agricultural Workers of Georgia
on January 14th, 1937.
oughout the length aad breadth of the
tates, Georgia is known as the Em-
of the South. She is the largest
of the Mississippi river. She pos-
nin her domain every product need-
sustaining, clothing, housing, trans-
and elevating a vast and progressive
yurse, she whose people are hospit-
ocial to the marrow of their bones,
-e and tradition, has no desire to
herself alone. But the fact remains
extent, to which a state could sus-
in case of necessity, relying exclus-
its own resources, materials and prod-
the last analysis the most accurate
vf its strength and power.
nine climatic zones into which the
s is divided, she has three. Out
ties of soil in which the United
bounds, she is endowed with, by far,
st scope and range of any state in
| remains today, as it has always
rgias leading and most valuable,
duct of the farm. But we find on
e figures for 1936 that our grow-
tock industry is pushing King Cotton
irst place. She leads the Union in
of watermelons, in production of
atoes, in production of peanuts, in
of papershell pecans and is sur-
nly one other state in the produc-
'g Ee ddnction of poultry and eggs
ately one-third of her cotton pro-
her vegetable and tobacco indus- |
-e making splendid progress. And who
this commonwealth does not know of
ualed goodness of her peaches?
gia is the sustenance center of the
leracy said General Sherman during the
His ruthless destruction of her
n facilities forced General Lees sur-
Appomattox, proving his statement
lies the fairest and richest domain
earth. It is the home of a brave and
people. There, is centered all that
. 98.25
8.50
SS oa ecg oe OY
ae C50
oe
eseCtoeseecee
up: ..
Cwt.
Cwt. '
Gmticsn:
180-240 per
2 150-180 per
8 180-150 per
110-130 per Cwt.
- 60-110 per Cwti3..
2.00 under. smooth hogs of whatever
they make.
ing cooperative hog sales were held
Me ae and- Sandersville and 51,275
eccee scons Seve
eeoeee
eeoeeeeeeeoces
can Heke a prosper humankind. A perfect
climate above a fertile soil yields to the hus-
bandman every product of the temperate zone.
There, by night the cottor whitens beneath
the Stars and: by day the wheat locks the sun-
shine in its bearded sheaf. In the same field
the clover steals the fragrance of the wind
and the tobacco. catches the quick aroma of
the rains. There, are. mountains stored with
exhaustless treasures; forests, vast and pri-
meval, and rivers, that, tumbling or loitering,
run wanton to the sea.
Our farmers are Georgias very. heart. Our
farm products her life blood, which is pumped,
to a material extent, into the veins of every
industry and business and profession and oc-
cupation.
Therefore, if she is to live and grow and
feed our people and they are to be strong and
prosperous and free, this life blood, farm prod-
ucts, must be kept pure and clean and healthy
and it must flow evenly and smoothly and
without interruption. -
Ask me the question, Is there any one
thing that will enable this heart to regularly |
pump this vigorous life blood evenly and
smoothly through Georgia s veins? I answer,
Yesa stable and fair price for the e products
of the farm.. ~
he my judgment, this is the way and the
only way living conditions on all her farms
can be made, not only tolerable, but desirable;
happiness, contentment and. independence
made sure and ownership of the land restored
to the people who live on it.
The attainment of this goal is the chal-
lenge for all of us who are engaged in admin-
istering to agricultures needs and who are
being paid for this service with public funds.
It is alsoa challenge for each and every one of
our citizens, our national, state, county and
city governments. It is our particular duty
and also our responsibility to outline the ob-
jectives, direct the thinking and plan the ac-
tivities of all those who are willing to help.
MARKET REPORT OF
GEORGIA PRODUCTS
Prevailing Wholesale Prices (F.0.B. Points Men-
tioned) Subject to Change. February 12, 1987.
Atlanta
-21-.22
om
.20-.21
oe
*New Ege Classifications:
Eggs, Large, Doz.
Eggs, Medium, Doz.
Eggs, Current Receipts (yd.run), Doz....
Eggs, Small, Doz.
Eggs, Unclassified, Doz.
Hens, Heavy Breed, Lb.
Hens, Leghorns, Lb. .
Roosters, Lb.
Stags, Lb.
Friers, Lb.
Ducks 7s0bs eas
Geese, Lb. ...
MUrkeGySs Ds 5 dais wisels we bis kis 4 S's 0 ees ee
Capons, Lb. 0 ee sere 05s}
Country Butter, Best Table, Lb. ..c..see
Field Peas, Mixed, Bu. ob aictemseieee
Field. Peas, Not Mixed, Bu. .. i vesicsexses
Ear Corn (80 Lbs. to Bu.) cee eee eee sia ooe
Wheat, Bu. eo eco 0 eee ee 0's 0 Se:
Peavine Hay, No. 1, Ton ....0.csceicwee.. 18.00
Peanut Hay, No. 1, Tom .......ceeeees- 13.00-14.00
o12-.14
-10-.11
.08-.10
12
.15-.18
10
.08-.10
A5-.18
ecceseeecodncs cee ee
eooee see ceoee cease &
e ele eco cee cc's o's eo 6
e@eoecoseoceovesseges coe,
TE TES 0 6b leg oe 0b 0b pae a8 lee Set
sh 0 obese 60860 06 cus be s'esie eee
Seecoeoceocensevec age cs 'e ce}
eC RSTCSCOHSEHE THT CE HOS EEO VIGO
25
1.50
2.00
1.25
Spanish PeanutsNo. 1$87.50-$90.00 per ton, del
Mills.
Cotton Seed (Prime)$48.00 per ton f.o.b. Atlanta.
Cotton Seed Meal7%, $33.00 ton f.0.b. Mills; 8%,
~ $35.00 ton f.0.b, Mills.
-*Under the Cooks Lay ES must be classitied
es. of $8. 25. er e yt. :
|
Boos
ac
NUMBER 2
de
For-we must have. right thinking and ae aS
acting if we solye our agricultural problems. se
Tt is easy to see that a tremendous respon-
sibility rests upon us. As Georgias new com- :
missioner of agriculture, I recognize and ac-
cept, with you, this responsibility. So at the
beginning of the new year as we take up the
work of the Department of Agriculture, we -
say to you and to Georgia, that our main ob-
jective is a stable and fair price for the me
ucts of the farm. Cg
T know you are thinking of the many sep-
arate objectives that you are interested in as _
Some of these no doubt are:
individuals.
education in farm management; the National
Soil Conservation program which is planned
to help farmers produce only sufficient cash _
crops to meet the demands, to prevent the
production of price burdening surpluses and |
to conserve the fertility of the soil; soil ero-
sion, which problem must be met and solved,
especially in our great Piedmont red land sec-
tion; the marketing problem, to solve which |
we must begin our planning at planting time;
the problems of research, finance, land use,
farm tenancy, farmer rehabilitation, reguia-
tion, resettlement, rural electrification ange
certainly no less | important are farm home
improvement, church and school dealer at,
and maintenance.
Hach of. these are. worthy objectives but
in the final analysis they are, taken singly, a
means of attaining a stable and fair income, |
or a result of the attainment of a stable and
fair income. | =
If our reasoning then is correct and we _
have established the right goal to plan and
work for, it follows that those engaged in any
right program for the good of the Georgia =
farmer can, if they will, conscientiously co- ~
operate with us and we in turn can work with
them, because our objectives are the same.
On this basis, then, I offer you my co-
operation and ask for yours, with the deep
conviction- that only in this way may T hope
to merit the confidence bestowed in me by
all the people. <
ATLANTA WHOLE MILK MARKET
Georgia Milk Producers Confederation paid their ne
members during January $2.60 per CWT for 4% (usual
4c per point up or down on test) for Grade A milk.
The January price is given due to the fact that the
price cannot be determined until the net proceeds are
in for the month.
ATLANTA SPOT COTTON
February 11, 1937.Atlanta Cotton closed, steady
today at 13.55 for middling.
The average -price today on middling 7-8 in. staple
on ten southern spot markets was 12.91 cents per
pound. The average price on this grade for the eon
to date is 13.00 cents a pound.
Staple Premiums: The average price on six aot
ern markets for 15-16 in. staple was a premium of 65
points; on 1 in. ene a premium of 122 points.
PRICES ON FRESH GEORGIA VEGETABLES
PREVAILING ON STATE FARMERS
MARKET, ATLANTA, TODAY
(FEBRUARY 11, 1937)
Cabbage (Green) per Cwt. Ib. ..
Cabbage (White) per Cwt. Ib. ..........
Collards, per doz. bunches
Mustard Greens, per hamper ....
Potatoes, (Irish) per bu. nie eee
No. 1 New Bliss Triumph |
Potatoes (Sweet-Hill) per cwt. $1, 85- = 09
Potatoes (Sweet+Kiln) per Owt vere $
Radishes, per bunches ce ;
85- 50
See oeee
ae
correction.
_. this line.
GEORGIA
Published Semi-Monthly
By...
- DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Executive Office:
State Capitol, Atlanta, Georgia.
COLUMBUS ROBERTS
Commissioner of Agriculture
HAMILTON RALLS
Supervisor, Marketing Division
F. J. MERRIAM, Editor
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1937
_ ntered as second class matter February 15,.1922, at the Post
Ofiice at Atlanta, Georgia, under the act of June 8, 1930. Accepted
_ for mailing at special rate of postage erodes for in Section 1103
Act of October 8, 1917. e
Notices of farm produce ae appurtenances admissable under
postage regulations inserted one time on each request and repeated
only when request is accompanied by new copy of notice,
Second hand farm machinery, flowers and seed, incubator and
_ ornamental nursery stock notices-are published in 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
x
Limited space will not permit insertion of unimportant notices.
Under legislative act the Market Bulletin does not assume any
responsibility for any notice appearing in the Bulletin or trans-
action resulting therefrom. |
: OS
DO YOU LOVE YOUR WORK?
You know our success depends so much on our atti-
_ tude, the way we regard our work, no matter what it is.
_If we love our farm, our home, our crops, our livestock
and our poultry, then we will give them the best we have
_ inus and they will improve and grow and thrive accord-
- ingly. Furthermore, when we feel this way and also
love our neighbor as ourself, as Jesus tells us in the
_ Bible, then we are happy and life assumes a richness
and fullness that nothing else can give.
_ We cant help feeling sorry for the man who works
only that he may live; for what does he get out of life
_ beyond the gratification of his appetite? A sordid and
selfish existence without love and little hope for the
_ future puts him down almost on a level with the animals.
_ On the other hand, when we can feel that we are co-
operating with God in the production of our crops and
that every blade of corn or stalk of cotton is an expres-
gion of his love made manifest, then existence takes
on new interest and our work becomes a pleasure in-
stead of a drudgery..
- You know it is an established fact that if you love
your cows they will give more milk; if you love your
_shens they will lay more eggs?
You also know that when a man loves his work and
~ becomes so interested as to forget himself, he dont
even have time to get sick. And this you know is
Gods law, for God is love. But perhaps you just natur-
ally dislike farming, that your faculties seem to have
_ fitted you better for something else. In other words,
you would love some other line of work more. Then
you should try to get into that other line of work into
- which you can put your whole heart. However, in this
world it seems that a man must do what, he knows how
to do. There seems to be no other vocation open to him,
except as a day laborer under someone elses direction,
and it is not easy to love to cut cord wood or hoe cotton
by the day. Here the thing to do is to try to give full
value, to try to serve, to do with our might what our
hands find to do and express love through service.
However, it is quite possible for one to learn to love
what one has todo. To accomplish this, if we are farm-
ing, we must put our mind to work as well as our hands.
We must inquire into the reason for things and learn
why certain fertilizers produce certain results. Do a
_little*experimenting and a little studying on our own,
hook. This will add interest and interest can grow into
love. Perhaps the Bulletin may help you some along
! We hope so. But above all, dont forget to
ask God to help you, for He is always ready.F.J.M.
A FEW SUGGESTIONS
We wonder how many of you folks save your ashes
to fertilize your Irish potato patch and other vege-
tables? Probably you do not know that good dry hard-
wood ashes are worth $10.00 per ton as a fertilizer.
Do, you keep your horse and cow stalls well bedded
With oak leaves or pine straw? The oak leaves are best
_ because they contain more plant food and decay faster.
Several of the croppers in our settlement moved the
first of the year as usual. It was too much trouble to
e accumulated manure in their horse stalls, 50
cheap and we b ;
MARKET BULLETIN)
| dimes worth of greens.
move his manure. We gave him a nice spot for a gar-
den and he spread the manure on that spot. He will
have a good garden.
- All last summer many of our cropper neighbors and
some that were on government rehabilitation farms
were constantly coming over to purchase a nickelor
Something to boil, was what
they wanted. Are you going to be in that fix this com-
ing summer, or are you going to have a garden? Now,
if you really want a garden, we will try to help you
through the Bulletin. If you eat more vegetables you
will be healthier. You will feel more like work and do
better work. Then, too, a good garden can be made
to produce half the living of your family, besides some-
thing to sell or swap for coffee, a or tobacco when
you go to town.F.J.M. Z
To Start a Garden
If there is no fenced in garden spot near the house,
pick out the best place you can find, that is far enough
from the house so the chickens wont trouble it. A sec-
ond bottom, well protected from the west winds, would
be a good place. If you have a large family you will
need half an acre. Now break this as soon as the ground
is dry to work and if you have that manure we have
been talking about, haul it out and spread broadcast
and work it on the surface. Then supplement this with
guano when you plant.
You will find that manure applied on the surface will
give better results than if covered deeply in a furrow.
The reason for this is that manure from the horse and
cow stall is not very- well rotted and the plant food it
contains is not available until it rots and it needs air
to rot. If therefore you cover it deeply in the ground,
especially when the ground is cold in the early spring,
it will just lay there until you plow it up later.
When planting small seed at this season, such as tur-
nips, carrots, lettuce, etc., it is well to plant on a bed
or low ridge. We like to throw our land into ridges
after manure and fertilizer is applied. Then as soon
as dry enough after a rain, knock off the top of these
ridges with a board or single stock and follow this with
seed drill. If you have no seed drill, you will have to
open these ridges with a very small scooter and sow
by hand. The reason we prefer to sow on the bed in
early spring is it prevents the water settling over the
seed during a heavy rain, for this forms a crust and
prevents these small seed from coming up.
All small seed at this season should be eovered very
shallow.
THE ROSE IS QUEEN
It has always seemed to us that the rose is the Queen of flowers.
Most of them bloom so continuously and are so beautiful and
fragrant. In fact, they are our favorite flower, and so we are
putting out a new rose bed this spring and trying to fix it right.
You see roses are strong feeders, They need rich land and plenty
of fertilizer; They seem to flourish best on red clay loam soil,
but any good, rich, well drained soil will answer.
We are having our bed spaded up 12 inches deep and then cov-
ered broadcast heavily with stable manure. We find that well
rotter stable manure is.about the best fertilizer for roses and
we put on enough to cover the ground heavily and work it in
with a pronged hoe on the surface, Then set our bushes about
two feet apart each way. We made this rose bed four feet wide
so we can work it from either side and also cut the flowers
without disturbing the plants or tramping the soil.
Now we had to put this bed in the back yard because there were
trees in the front yard and the ground was too hard and dry.
You see roses just wont grow in the shade. Also trees take up
all the moisture. We would have much preferred having ours
in the front yard where they would show off to greater SAyEMeet
but we had to sacrifice our pride in this to our roses.
We know this will give us finer flowers to.cut later. aeworere
our bed is near the kitchen window where the good lady of the
house can enjoy them while cooking dinner. Also it will be easy
to pour slop water on them in dry weather and believe me, this
will help. In fact, we really should have a barrel into which,
we could dump poultry droppings and other manure, mix this
with water and pour this liquid manure around our bushes. And
now that we have told you about this, it is evidently up to us
to get a barrel.
{
THRIFTY VARIETIES :
We have selected a few of the most thrifty varieties and those
which have been found best adapted to the South. Among these, are
Radiance comes firstRed and Pinkand Mrs. Charles Bell, a
soft salmon pink. Then comes Etoile de Hollande, a beautiful
deep red, not as vigorous as the Radiance, but will-outbloom them.
Also Sunny Southvivid pinkmakes long pointed buds, long
stems, free blooming. 2
- When it comes to yellow roses, Sister Therese easily heads the
list.. This is a comparatively new rose and bids fair to be most
popular, eee is another good yellow or orange and very
fragrant,
We also included. Talisman, which they call a two-tone, or red
and bronze, very attractive.
Among the white roses the old Mama Cochet is perhaps one
of the most reliable, so we had to include it. Also Caledonia,
a we understand is very good and which has a lemon yellow
inge
Then for old times sake, we included a Marschal Neil, which is
a yellow climber and LaFrance, the old original hybrid tea rose,
which always seemed to us one of the sweetest roses in the world.
Then we set four hybrid perpetuals, such as the majestic Paul
Neyron, which is, as you know, the largest of all roses, +_
Well, we got our bushes and set. them out and watered them.
We set them just a little deeper than they were in the nursery
and we were careful to turn off all broken roots and branches.
In fact, we trimmed all the branches back to about six inches,
then we were careful to spread the roots out naturally and press
the soil in around them with our hands and press it down firmly
so they would be comfortable and go right to growing: which is
oe | exactly what they will do.
going to be mighty fine to have cae. beautiful
mer and brighten up the house, Dont you
POSITIONS. WANT
Single man wants
farm. C. R. Hollowa
Family of 7 (no ma
place on farm. Exp. a
of farm and dairy wor
house, Mrs. G. P. Evan
mart, 433 Piedmont A
Want jop on farm.
dring nor use tobacco.
to church and live up
Do carpenter work an
own tools. Robert J.
Hinesville, Rt. 1.
Want a full 2-horse
halves. Near school and
Owner furnish good stoc
plenty fertilizer, house
repair), free acreage fc
use, and wood. Life tim
3 plow and 5 hoe hands.
ourselves. J. L. Day,
698 Edgewood Ave. |
Middleaged woman, 20
son, want jobs on fa
in all kinds farm wo
characters. Mrs. L. J
Farmington, R. F. D.
Want work on farm.
old, reared on farm
Torbert, Atlanta, 374 Cr
Want work on farm.
work, $10.00 mo.
Theodore A. Tinsley,
Crew St., S. W.
Good Miller and M
85 yrs. old, experienced,
job. Water power mi
ferred. Cheap wages, sh
standing rent. <A. B.
Atlanta. 62 DeKalb A
Want large 2-horse
halves. Have to be m
pay with work.
Younes man with wit
job on farm, $1.00 per
1-horse crop on halves
be moved. Both work
month, board
Curtis B. Davis, Bufo
23 yr. old white b
worker, with good hab
home with honest, reliabl.
helping with farm work, f{
sonable salary. T.
Rocky Face. a
Respectable young
yrs., high school educatio
job doing light farm w
field work, for $3.00 week
and board. Alyce Da
Green.
25 yr. old young woma!
2 small children, wants
with good, Christian peop
ing any kind light farm w
home and small salary
desired? Near Atlanta p
Ollie Belle Grindle, De
1, c/o Homer Waldrop,
FARM HELP W/
Want good man for
poultry farm, pecan gr
ing cap. 2 M_ hea
houses, 1,500 cap.,
brooder, 2 M cap., light
concrete floors, W. Il
Alma, Rt. 3. ae
Want woman of good
ter, for light farm worl]
field work. Small salar
home. L. Walton, Sr., |
ville. j
Want good men fo
good land for 1-4 of
O. Fussell, Atlanta,
Ja.-7739-M. aa
Want good,
hand for gen. farming
to live, board, good wa
once. David Wood, Bi
Want neat, reliable,
girl for light farm Ww
mo. and live on premise
Strickland, Atlanta. 40
etta Street. i
Would consider hiri
plow hand for all roun
fair wages and boar
full description of si
what you want. A. ae
Byron, Rt. 1.
Want young girl
farm work, $15.00 mont!
Grossman, Atlanta, 55K
vard, S. E.
Want good, all ;
hand, married, settled
J. Fort, Griffin, Rt. C.
Want healthy, in
white woman or girl
farm work. Home and
able salary. State age
expected. Ref. exc
Patty, Ringgold, Rt. 1..
16-18 yrs. to help ma
for board, laundry and
able salary. Write vy
will work for and pa
B. M. Hicks, Cleveland,
white,
No field work
for full particulars. M
Mitts, Fitzgerald.
Street.
Want good man on
other basis, valso a g
hand, for farm
have good ref,
expected. W.
ing Rock, Rt.
(Continued
_ FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
col. hardy phlox, _ iris,
ms, 2 doz. 25c; tiger lilies,
dy hibiscus, oak leaf hydran-
4, 25c; mix. dahlias, gladi-
50c doz. Add postage. No
ieks. Sarah Grindle, Dahlon-
ks. Sarah Grindle, Dahlonega.
ee,
American Beauty roses, red
onicas, butterfly bush, 6,
00; yellow, red dogwood, Cher-
kee roses, rhododendrons, spi-
a, $1.00 doz.;.10 rooted roses,
00; lemon lilies, 30c doz.; oth-
rs. Addie Wilson, Morganton.
Rhododendrons, min. laurels,
zaleas, dogwood, pink, red, yel-
yw, redbud, coralberry bush, red
japonicas, spruce and white pine,
Di Cherokee roses, 3 ft. rooted,
jost paid, $1.00 doz. Mrs. Boon
ison, Morganton.
Nice lot Irish.evergreen Juni-
pers, cecars, 3-6 ft., also 2 box-
yoods. Cheap. R. M. Hamby,
Cumming, Rt. 3.
Cedar, spruce, white pine, old
ashioned lilies, snowballs, aza-
as, Balm of Gilead. Any 4 for
=5e, or exc. for white feed sacks.
\dd postage.
Murrayville.
alif. violets, parsley, snowdrops,
Wiris, $1.00C; Japonicas, coral-
erry, butterfly spirea, azaleas,
\merican Beauty and Peach rose,
rooted, 6, $1.00. Mrs. J. H. Pen-
land, Ellijay.
Trimardeau Giant pansy plants;
cent each and 7c postage. Mrs.
VY, H. Crawford, Doerun.
st yr. from Hastings, 10c per
Mrs. Lena McBrayer, Bu-
ford, Rt. 2.
Hastings Exhibition and giant
imardeau pansy plants, 20-30c
er doz. Shrubbery and rose cut,
ooted sage, cheap. Lady peas,
ts. E. C. Heaton,
3.
White and yellow jonquils, 75c
-rhododendrons, azaleas, lau-
, white pines,
Hartwell,
15e doz.;
abapple, $1.00 doz.
enry, Mineral Bluff.
Yellow ramblers
il) 25c ea.; cuttings, 15 doz.;
olets, 50c C; blue, white and
arf purple iris, orange day
lilies, $1.00 C; old-fashioned
mixed gladiolus, 25 doz. Mrs.
H. Hughey, Fairmount, Rt. 1.
bl. bright red, white, extra
ge pink and single bright red
tulip,. poplar,
Mrs. E: J.
egonias, rooted, 3, 25c, del. Ida
right, Alto.
Water flower, 6 seed, 15c;
fesurrection plants, 20c ea., ox-
4 bulbs, 25c; 25. pkgs. as-
ed vegetable seed, 35c, post-
aig. Directions for planting in-
luded. Mrs. Hdith Whatley,
jiege Park, Rt. 2.
2 rooted roses, $1.00 C; King
lumbert cannas, 12, 50c; $5.00
imalaya berry plants, $5.00
dd postage. Miss Mary C.
mce, Durand.
ahlias, 40 named var, Kath-
m Norris, Mamomth Cham-
n, Dorothy Stone, Kentucky,
rmion, Clansman, Margaret
ison, Jersey Beauty and oth-
. $3.00 doz. March-April. del.
2 Hugene Mozeley, Clayton,
'Peonies, dif. shades pink, red
and scarlet, very fine, 30c ea.
$3.20 doz.; perennial phlox, vi-
plet blue and lilac pink,. $1.25
Rhododendrons, mtn. laurel,
waleas, white pine, red dogwood,
alberry, redbud, crabapple, tu-
pS, poplar. Well rooted, $1.00
0z.; Ted japonicas, 25 ea. 6,
1.00.
af,
Purple, lilac, 3-4 yrs. old, 15
0, $1.00; large, dbl., yellow
las, 75e _doz.; American
ity roses, 15c ea. 3, 35e.
. J. A. Wilson, Martin, Rt. 2.
OSs roses, pink, 3, 25e; box-
foods, 10-15 in, rooted, 50 ea.;
Hobe arbovitae, 12-18 in. 6,
00; 18-24 in. 4, $1.00; Irish
ipers, 18-20 in., 75 ea.; par-
iolets, 30c doz. Mrs. W. M.
ren, Morganton.
dobe arboryitaes, 15-20 in.
$1.00; moss rose, 3, 25e; al-
as, 3, 25c; parma violets, 30c
Mrs. E. B. Smith, Morgan-
atkspur, phlox, Sweet -Wil-
petunia, 10c doz. plants;
running rose, 15c ea. 3, 35;
e leaf Evergreen, 15 ea;
wood, 15c; 3 peonies, $1.00;
ple, white iris, 80c C. Exc.
value. Mrs, G. lL. Tallant,
ning.
Crepe Myrtle bushes, $1.00,
id mail. Money order. Chas.
yanee, Townsend, Rt 42,
Vistaria vines of seven yrs.
bh, 50 ea., if called for.
J. S. Harris, Dearing.
oted cuttings, Weeping or-
d, dark red, dbl. geraniums,
dar chrysanthemums (can
v. into large type), 10 and
0z.; 1 large ger. 35e. Exe.
white jasmine, gardenia or
Mrs, J. T. Grindle, |
arcissi, jonquils, day lilies, pur- | N. W.
Dixie sunshine marigold seed, |;
936 crop, clean, sound, 8c Ib.
$1.60 doz.;
mon lilies, purple iris, snow- |
(Marechal
Tanium cuttings, red and white.|
ioz. Mrs. S. W. Sloan, Auburn..
Eunice Henry, Mineral
| FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
van, Atlanta,
Ave, N. E.
Blue, grape hyacinth, 50c C
bulbs; 500, $2.90; Snowdrops,
$1.00 C; dbl. white Feverfew,
$3.00 C; Forsythia, 10c, Ray
Johnson, Hartwell.
Dbl. white, Feverfew, 25c doz.
plants; blue, grape hyacinths,
50 C bulbs; Emperor and Sir
Watkins daffodils, $1.00 G bulbs.
Vena Brown, Hartwell.
Mix gladiola, $1.00 C; named
dahlias, $1.00 doz.; tuberoses,
35c doz. $2.00 C. Postpaid.
Idris Ownbey, Trenton.
Mix. col. gladiola, 20 doz.
bulbs (blooming size), del. Exc.
for loose cotton at 10c lb. Mrs.
W. D. Ralston, Ella Gap.
Buff cannas, 1-2 bu. $1.00;
$1.75 bu.; 2 bu. $3.00; small
palms, 3 at $1.00 ea.: old time
plum, 25 ea. $2.40 doz. S. M.
Seaborn, Brunswick.
Jonquil and narcissi blubs, 10c
doz.; purple iris, 1c ea.; blue
dydrangea, 15c bunch. Alene
Younge; Cleveland.
Shrubbery of all kinds, Box-
woods, etc., cheap. Mrs. Lucy
Switzer, Atlanta, 297 8th St.,
949 Greenwood
Large, scarlet red dahlias, 3
tubers, 25c: old time running,
Speckled butter-beans, 25 qt.
, Add postage to all. M. Order.
Julia M. Stevens, St. Marys.
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
Babys Breath, Jan. Jasmine,
Sweet yellow Jasmine (vine) 6
for 50c; Larkspur, Ragged Robin,
Caliopsis, 10c a doz.; Thrift, 50c
per-100. 50c worth del. Mrs.
Alma Scott, Concord.
Gaillardia, Fhlox grass pinks,
20c per 100; verbena 10c per
doz. All frostproof, Narcissus 20c
per doz. Add postage. Mrs.
Lester Phillips, Rt. 1, Royston.
Red, pink and white mammoth
verbena, good large plants, 5c ea.
or 6 for 25c; Small white daisy
Plants 5c ea. or 3 for 10c; white
pompom chrysanthemums 5c ea.
Will prepay postage on 50c or-
ders. Mrs. Jeff Marchman,
White Plains.
Pink Thrift rooted 40c per 100
or 300 for $1.00. Add postage.
Mrs. J. H. Duke, Wrens.
Rooted Jan. blooming yellow
Jasmine 20c ea. postpaid, or 7
for $1.00 or $10.00 per 100. Mrs.
J. P. Rush, Rt. 1, Adairsville.
Larkspur 10c a doz.; perennial
Sweet peas 20c a doz.; Shasta
Daisy 25c a doz.; large rose ver-
bena 5c a bunch; purple fox
glove 20c a doz.: rose bushes
25 ea. or 5 for $1.00. Mrs. V:
T. Chamblee, Rt. 2, Cumming.
Palmetto Palms 3 and 4 ft.
high for $1.00 each.
express.. Ready for shipment.
Let me hear soon before it is too
late to transplant. Fanny Terry,
Shellman.
You pay
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
a
Jasmine, 5 for $1.00; old-fash-
ioned white English dogwood, 2
to 3 ft5 for $1.00; gardenia,
well rooted, 15c each. Mrs. T.
J. R- binson, Greenville.
15-or 18 dbl. red Japonica
trees 5 yrs. old, 5 and 6 ft. high
and full bloom. Cheap for cash.
Come see me. A bargain. J. C.
Hargroves, Marlow, Effingham
County.
Red PomPon Zinnia seed 20c
a cupful; large size yellow mari-
golds 20c a cupful; small winter
marigolds 20c a cupful; mixed
petunia seed 10c a teaspoon full;
blanket flowers 10c a tablespoon
full; snapdragon seed 10c tea-
spoon full postpaid. Mrs. J. S.
Adams, Rt. 2, Loganville.
Wild ferns $2.50 per 100; wild
Dutch Iris, bird-foot lilies, blue
grape hyacinth bulbs, white
daisies $1.50 per 100; Spider
$3.00 per 100; Old English
dwarf boxwood plants $1.50 ea.
Mrs. Clara Belle Carey, Rt. 1,
Royston.
Three good sized lilac sprouts,
purple bioom, large. lor 25e and
75 per doz. Add postage. Miss
Lessie Minish, Rt. 4, Commerce.
May cherry sprouts 10 each,
2 yrs. old; evergreen hedge
plants 5 to 10 in. high, le each
or $8.50 per 1.000. Now time to
plant. Lonnie Rundles, Rt. 7,
Gainesville,
Mr. Hamilton Ralls,
State Capitol,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Mr. Ralls:
exceed $400.
Supervisor Marketing Division
Latest Information Regarding Seed Loans
Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Office
Farm Credit A daieustation
As requested by Mr. J. E. Askew, I am sending you the following re-
lease, which you may put in this weeks issue of the Market Bulletin:
The Act of Congress giving an appropriation for. making emergency
crop and feed loans for 1937 by the Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Sec-
tion of the Farm Credit Administration was approved February 9. Blank
forms of applications for such loans, together with all other necessary
papers to be made out by an applicant, will be available at each county=seat
in the State of Georgia sometime during the week beginning February 15.
The loan will be locally administered in the State of Georgia by field super-
visors representing the Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Section, each of
whom has a given number of counties assigned to him as his responsibility.
These loans will be made only to farmers who cannot obtain credit
from any other source, as provided by regulations issued by the Governor
of the Farm Credit Administration. 'The money loaned will be limited
to the farmers immediate and actual cash needs for growing his 1937
crops or for the purchase of feed for livestock and in no instance may
Farmers are not eligible for these loans if they can borrow from an
individual, production credit association, bank, or other concern.
gency crop and feed loans will not be made by the Farm Credit Adminis-
tration to standard rehabilitation clients of the Resettlement Administra-
tion whose current needs are provided for by Resettlement.
As in the past, the security for these loans will consist of a first lien.
on the crop financed if the loan is for the production of crops, and if for
the purchase of feed for livestock, then a first lien on the livestock to be
fed. Landlords, or others having an interest in the crops or the livestock
to be fed, will be required to waive their claims in favor of the lien to the
Governor of the Farm Credit Administration until the loan is repaid.
Checks in payment of the approved loans will be issued by the Regional
Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Office at Columbia, South Carolina.
Very truly yours,
, Dept. of Agriculture, .
L. B. PONDER,
Columbia, S. C.,
February 10, 1937.
Emer-
State Supervisor.
2 yr. old bushes,
Snapdragons, ali col. some
variegated, 10c teaspoonful. seed;
sultanas, 4-5 col, 36 seed, 10c;
rooted, running roses (red)
sprouts, purple lilac, rooted, 15c
ea. 2 for 25c. Mrs. I. N. Min-
ish, Commerce, Rt. 4.
Rhododendrons, Mtn. laurel,
Cherokee rose, red, yellow and
white dogwoods, azaleas, Red-
buds 75c a doz.; Boxwoods, ar-
bor-vitae, Beauty rose, 6 for
$1.00; pink perennial phlox,
snowdrop $1.00 per 100. Sadie
Wilson, Morganton.
Evergreen trees, Junipers, Ar-
bor-vitaes, Boxwood, all sizes.
Write T. A. Magness, Mineral
Bluff, Rt. 1, Bx. 21,
Most beautiful arbor-vitaes, 6
feet high, 15c each at my gar-
den: Armur Privet Bushes, 7 ft.
and up, 20c each at my home.
Mary Robinson, Greenville.
Beautiful Magnolia Glauca
trees, 2 to 3 ft. high, $2.50 per
doz. $16.75 per 100 del. in Geor-
gia. Virginia Robinson, Green-
ville, ae
Cannas, Apricot, King, Hum-
bert, President, Yellow King
Humbert and Wyoming 50e a
doz. or $3.00 per 100 del. State
inspected and true to name, S.
RG Sullt-
la Calfee, Brunswick,
Ret
ted, & for $1.00; yell-w winter
Tea olive, evergreen, magnolia,
sweet bay, crabapple, sweet
shrub, granny greybeard, yellow
jasmine, evergreen oak, sweet
myrtle, holly; honey suckle, long
straw pines 1 foot 10c each, or
3 for 25c; Easter lilies 10c a
doz. No stamps. Mrs. Free-
man Watson, Rt. 2, Toomsboro.
Magnolia, sweet bay; tea olive,
evergreen, crabapple, yellow jas-
mine, sweet shrub, evergreen oak,
granny grey Deard, sweet myrtle,
holly, honeysuckle, dogwood; long
stem pines, 1 ft, 10c ea, or 3
for 25. Exchange for white feed
sacks. No stamps or checks.
Mrs. M. C. Connell, Rt. 2, Tooms-
boro.
Quantities of one, two and
three year old evergreen cherry
laurel plants and coral vine to
exchange for hyacinth and tiger
lily bulbs; or will sell. Also pink
and red crepe myrtle. Mrs. H.
EK. Park, Sylvester.
2,000 ornamental dogwood
trees from 4 to 6 ft. tall. Well
rooted. Will sell for 10c each
in 100 lots or 15c each in smaller
quantities. N. J. Morgan, Still-
more.
Uniform boxwood well rooted,
6 to 8 inches, $1.00 a doz.; Cydo-
nia Japonica, 2 to 3 ft. well root-.
Large pyramid arbor-vitae,
large globe arbor-vitae, large
Rosemary, large Juniper boxwood
50c to $6.00;. small boxwood 10
for $1.00; blooming shrubs 25c
each. Mrs. W. T. Panter, Mor-
ganton.
Strong, vigorous three-year-
old Cape Jasmine 35 each post-
paid. Mrs. Warner Edwards,
Spring Vale.
Various spring bulbs; 8 color
weigelia; 5 varieties Spiraea;
3 bush honeysuckle; forsythia;
English dogwood; Red quince;
pink almand; moss locust; ar-
bor-vitaes; golden hedge rose;
evergreen;. sweet pea; wisteria.
a C. H. Ward, Rt. 1, Adairs-
ville.
White peonies 3 for 25c or 10c
ea.; white and red monthly
roses 5c ea.;. Marechal Neil 5c
ea., well rooted; white and gold
winter pinks 5c a bunch post-
paid. Lillie Allred, Rt. 2, Box
69, Tallapoosa.
Rooted boxwoods, bushy 18-
in., $2.00 each; yellow canna;
white August lillies, 35e a
bunch; long trumpet white Pe-
ruvian daffodils mixed, $1.00
per C; Bridal wreath 25 large
bunch; cigar plant 35c large
bunch; purple lilacs 40 each;
elephant ear hulbs. 15c; few
Reigel, Experiment.
-FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
bulbs Black Lily of India, 25c
ea.; pink oxalis, 3 bchs. 25
postpaid. Alice Harrison, Bre-
men.
Blue Roman hyacinths 25c per
doz.; yellow cluster tiny nar-
cissus 25c a doz. All fragrant;
also a few choice Buff Orpington
cockerels, purebred, $1.50 each or
2 for $2.50. Mrs. J. M. Bobo, Rt.
1, Hartwell.
Well rooted evergreen hedge 2c
a plant; also sundried peach
fruit 12 1-2c a lb., postpaid.
Mrs. Bessie Ward, Rt. 1, Ho-\
mer,
All colors sweet pea seed 10c
a small glassful. Add postage.
Miss Maudie Ward, Rt. 4, Bo
206, Ashburn. :
Pansy plants 15c per doz., or
$1.00 per 100. Add. postage.
Mrs. Lois Tanner, Dewyrose.
Purple lilacs well rooted,
$1.00 per dozen postpaid. Ruth
Tyner, Danielsville.
Jonquils and narcissus mixed
bulbs, 30c per 100 or $2.75 per
1,000.. Blue Iris same _ price.
Mrs. Dessie J. Pruitt, Rt. 1,
Box 67, Dahlonega.
Redbuds, red and white dog-
woods, rhododendrons, laurel,
hemlock, different colors of
azaleas, crab apple, pussy wil-
low, red maple tulips, poplars,
Jap hedge bushes, hardy ferns,
8 for 25c. Mrs. Susie Wilson,
' Mineral Bluff.
Redbuds, red dogwoods, aza-
leas, pussy willow, . hemlock,
rhododendrons, red maple, 3 for
25e; arbor-vitae, boxwoods 25c
each, sweet scented violets, per-
ennial phlox 25 a doz. Mrs.
F. &. Abercrombie, Mineral
Bluff,
Junipers ranging from 2 ft.
to 12 ft. or over in height for
cash at my home. Mrs. Mary
Morris, Rt. 2, Alto (2 miles from
State T B Sanatorium.
Golden yellow gladiola bulbs
65ce per C. You .pay postage.
Mrs. F. L. Pearson, Reedsville.
Tiger lilies, $1.00 per GC; dbl.
yellow cannas 60c per C; long
trumpet white daffodils $1.00
per C mixed; white Bridal
wreath 25c a bunch; white Aug.
lilies 35c large bunch; cigar
plant 35 ea.; Amaryllis lilies,
red, 15 ea., 12 for $1.00; purple
lilacs 40c each; red crepe myr-
tles 20c ea. 3 ft. postpaid. Mau-
tile Harrison, Bremen.
Several hundred arbor-vitae
plants 30 in. tall, rooted, 25c
ea.; hardy white lilies 15c ea.;
purple lilac 15c ea. Add postage.
Miss Jessie Cash, Rt. 3, Flowery
Branch.
Globe arbor-vitaes, 3 ft. high,
7 ft. circumference, 4 for $1.00
| Page Three _
e
if party will come get them. None _
shipped.
1, Kennesaw.
White Oleander 15c; Peach-
tree rose, 1 yr.; 10c,; 2 -yrs., 15;
blooming size, 25c; red crepe
myrtle, 15c; 10 cuttings of red
and - white crepe myrtle 10c;
mixed bulbs narcissus and but-
ter and eggs, 10 for 15c. Mrs.
M. D. Walters, Plains.
Old time English Dogwood,
well rooted,
6 for $2.00; 12 for $3.50 F.O.B.
J. F. Haddan, Doerun.
Amour River Privet Hedge
well rooted, $2.00 per 100;
Banna plants, $1.00 ea.; Giant
lily,- $1.00; dogwood, white, 5
for $1.00; small palms, 3 for
$1.00; buff canna lilies, $1.50.
All well rooted and packed. B.
O. Fussell, Brunswick.
Verbenas, 5c each, add post-
age, colors, lavendar, pink, red
with white center, white, purple
and red, 5cadd postage; shasta
daisies, 5c ea. Mrs. A. C. Mal-
phins, Tusculum.
Extra fine red spider lily
bulbs, 35c a doz., $2.50 per 100;
paper white double narcissi, 35
a doz., $2.50 per 100; King Al-
fred daffodils, 75c per 100 or
$6.50 per 1,000; yellow jon-
quils, 65 per 100, $6.00 per
1,000; Hemerocallis lilies, 50c
per 100, %.00 per 1,000. Mrs.
Cliff C. Dye, Rt. 1, Middleton.
Dahlia bulbs, Michael Gold,
Millionaire Rose, Williams,
Warner Mauve, . Vanderveer
pink, Amon Autumn, Jersey
Beauty, 7 for 80e or 15 each;
3 yr. old Cape Jasmine in pots,
75e each. Bessie Martin, Rt. 5,
Gainesville. :
German I[Iris, blue, mauve and
yellow, 25c per doz.; Red Cy-
dona Japonica, Snowball and
purple lilac, 25c ea.; white har-
dy narcissi, 75c per C. Mrs. Ri-
ley Ross, Ringgold.
Narcissus and Jonquils, 50
per C; purple iris 65c per C;
bridal wreath and brides bou-
quet 5c ea. or 6 for 25c; pink
almond 5c ea.; Japonicas 10
ea.; hollyhocks 5c ea.; monthly
blooming roses 5 ea. or 6 for
25c; day lilies 50e per C. Add
postage. Lizzie Barnes, Oak-
man. a :
Phlox Subulata or Thrift.
Grand for rockeries and bor-
ders. Varieties Rosa and La-
cina. Strong plants, $2.00
per C prepaid. Orders for less
than 160 not accepted. . George
Mrs. Cliff Booth, Rt. .
_ flowering, pink,
gladiolas 20c doz.:
_Wiolets, 25c per C.
FLOWERS
~~ FOR SALE
20 M extra fine cannas, City
Portland pink and Eureka white
$3.00 per C or $15.00 per M;
King Humbert same. price,
President Red and Armenian
yellow $2.00 per C or $10.00 per
M: 1,000 some of each variety,
$12.00: crepe myrtle, $1.00 a
doz. Mrs. J. R. Camp, Cordele,
Mixed colors Iris, daffodils,
Shasta daisies, purple foxglove,
pink hardy phlox, $1.00 a doz.;
Snowballs, purple, white, al-
-- theas golden bell, forsythia, 2
for 25c., well rooted. Exchange
for white 100 lb. sacks. Add
postage. Mrs. Nancy Hender-
son, Rt. 3, Box 49, Ellijay.
Dbl. Easter rose, yellow, red
Cydonia Japonicas, Butterfly
bush 20c ea.; Altheas, winter
jasmine, forsythia 15 ea.;
maryllis, Madonna, Tiger, Rid
Spider lilies. 20 ea; yellow
emeon lilies, 25c a doz.; varie-
gated iris, 6 for 15c. Miss Eva
Cogburn, Aipharetta.
| 100 seedling peach trees, 6 to
7 variegated, all. good, $3.00 at
orchard; sizes from 18 inches to
65 ft. tall. Will not ship; 3 Ibs.
magnolia seed $1.50 del. Mrs.
Alice Garner, Palmetto..
a= Dakiws:. 12. eolors,'2 large
_ yellow, red,
white, lavendar, etc., including
, Mrs. Warner (mauve pink)
15 good bulbs $1.00 . postpaid.
Growing instructions furnished.
-~Todds Farm, Sarah.
All color azalea 50c a doz.;
white pine spruce 10c ea.; 12
for $1.00; Spider lilies 20c ea.;
sweet shrubs 20 a doz.; red
and yellow Japonicas i15c ea.
-or 2 for 25c. Add postage... Mrs.
Ermon Teague, Rt. 2, Ellijay.
-. Large type. chrysanthemums
Jabeled 30c a doz.; 4 doz. $1.00;
unlabeled 6 doz. $1.00; .Pom-
poms mixed $1.00 per C. Post-
paid. Mrs. H. G. Woods, Don-
aldsonville, Rt. 3..
Heavenly Blue (Early Flow-
ing Sky Blue) Morning Glory,
grows rapidly, dark green glossy
leaves 50c for. half ounce; pkt.
10c or 3 pkts. for 25c Mrs, A. S.
Hutchinson, Hapeville.
~ Dahlia Tubers, Royal Pur-
chase, Murphys Masterpiece,
Lord of Autumn, Americas
Sweetheart, Golden - Hoard,
Buckeye Bride, Salem Stream-
line, Jane Cowl, Jersey Beauty
and others. Send for list. Low-
est prices. Grady Price, Can-
Stone 7
King Alfred. daffodils 50c per
GCG; Blue Baster lilies 10c a doz.;
_ pink, red and white iris 10c ea.;
gold band lilies 50c per C. Will
exchange for anything can use,
_. James White, Rt. 1, Box 52,
- Buchanan. ope
50 pieces well rooted ever-
green hedge plants, $1.00; Sun-
, dried bright peach fruit, 1937
crop, 12c a lb. postpaid. Mrs.
_ Bessie Ward, Rt. 1, Homer.
King Alfred daffodils 75c per
C; $6.00. per M; gold band
lilies 50 per C; German Iris,
blue, yellow and white, 15 per
-doz.; white and lavendar pink
mums, 15 per doz.; Wonder
lilies 50c per doz; Shasta daisy
15c per doz. Miss Fay Wray,
Rt. 1, Buchanan. : :
- annas, red, white, - pink,
peach, 50c doz.; purple, white
dris 25 doz.; dbl. white althea,
dbl. pink almond 20c sweet
_ shrub, dbl, carnations blooming
25e ea. Add postage. KE. L.
Smith, Wadley. :
Blue and lavendar iris 15 a
doz.; althea, pink almend, red
_ Japonica 10c ea., 8 for 25: pink
weigelia 20c ea.; purple Jilac
i0 ea.; early blooming Forsy-
\thia.- 15 ea.; azaleas. 8c per
fon Add. posigges 2 cs. oR.
Owen, Rt. 2, HWiijay.
_ Pink, red perennial phlox;
purple, lavendar Iris 15 doz.:
white spider, Tiger lily bulbs
20; white and spruce pines,
laurels 75 doz.; pink weigelias,
almond; altheas 15c.. Add post-
@. lL. Eller, Rt. 2, Elli-
Iris, 4 colors: daffodils, jon-
_quils 25c doz., 2 for 40c; golden
bell, pink almond, weeping
Mary, aitheas, dogwood, bird
in bush, spirea, bridal bouquet,
25 a doz.; small junipers i5
ea, J. W. Silver, Talking Rock.
* Large size, blue and purple
iris lily bulbs 80c per C or
$1.56 for,200. Eva White, Rt. 2,
_ Box 229, Temple.
Mixed col. size
Hydrangea,
i5 buneb, 2 for 25; weeping
willows, 10c ea. 3 for 25c;
mixed col. iris, dry mnarcissus.
bulbs, 60c per ; tame blue
All rooted
Mrs, Le. Ta. Stephens,
blooming
and del.
Bia Gap.
Weeping willows, D. Per-
kins rose, wisteria vine 10 ea.,
8 for 25c; tame bine violets 25
per C; mixed col. iris, narcis-
sus bulbs 60 per GC; privet yard.
hedge $1.00 per C. - All rooted
and del. Miss Willa Mae Rals-
~
| postage.
(5 a doz.;
-thia,
OWER
|. FOR SALE
Sweet William 25c a doz.;
standing cypress 10c a doz.; red
carnations cuttings, 45 a.
Mrs. E. B. Warren, Rt. 2,
Toomsboro. ee
Tris, 6 colors, 25c doz.; wei-
gelia and spirea cuttings 20c
per doz.; abelia cuttings 30
doz. or large shrubs $1.00 ea.
(express size). Will exchange
cuttings for white feed sacks
free from holes. Mrs. Bettie
Roberts, Rt. 2, Tallapoosa.
Gold band lilies 50c per C;
King Alfred daffodils 75 per
C, $6.00 per M; snow white and
old lav. mums, 25c per 4doz.;
lemon lilies 25c doz.; orchid
flowering cannas 30c per doz.;
butterfly bush 15c ea. Miss
Opal Gray, Rt. 1, Buchanan.
Yellow and speckled _ lilies,
hardy phlox, mums, down hill
vine, grown ivy, New. Years
vine, violets 2 doz. for 25c; oak
leaf hydrangea, 3 for 25c. Add
Mrs. Lena Blackwell,
Rt. 1, Dahlonega.
Old English (dwarf) box-
wood plants well rooted $2.00
per ; Eng. Ivy cherry laurels,
cherokee rose, crepe myrtle,
dbl. yellow Kerria, $1.00 per doz.
prepaid. Blanche Woodruff,
Greenville. :
Snapdragons, pansies, stock,
sweet Williams, Eng. daisies,
Dianthus, larkspur, phlox, large
plants, $1.00 per C or 25c a
doz. Mrs. Willie Wise, Wadley.
. Sev. colors Iris $1.00 per C;
dbl. tuberose $1.00 per C or
$5.00 per M;. white calla. lilies
8 for $1.00; yellow callas 6 for
$1.00; blue August lilies $1.00
per doz. Mrs. S. M. Gunter, Rt.
1, Lawrenceville.
King Alfred daffodils 50c per
C; German Iris 50c per C; fairy
lilies, red and orange dbl. cannas
25 a doz.. Mrs. Beatrice White,
Rt. 1, Buchanan. cs
Blooming size bulbs white
nacissus, yellow jonquils, yellow
butter and egg $1.00 per C;
perennial sweet williams 50c a
doz., 3 for $1.00; running cedar,
large wild ferns
$2.00 per C. Money order. Mrs.
T. H. McCurley, Hartwell.
Yellow, white jonquils, dbl.
butter and eggs $1.00 per C;
blue spider lilies $1.00 per doz.;
perennial larkspur 50c doz.;..dbl.
yellow Regal lilies $1.00 per doz.
Nora McCurley, Rt. 2, Hartwell.
Long trumpet daffodils $1.50
per C;. whife, yellow jonquils,
butter and eges $1.00 per C;
blue spider Hlies $1.00 per doz.:
yellow larkspur 50 doz.; wild
ferns $2.00 per C; peppermint
50e doz. Miss Cecil McCurley,
Rt. 2, Hartwell. :
Tris, Lemon lilies 40 doz. or
$2.25 per C; daffodils, digitalis,
verbena, phlox 25.a doz.; mixed
colors azaleas, altheas, forsyn-
pink, red cabbage head
roses 25c ea. or 5 for $1.00. Ge-
neva Richards, Rt. 3, Ellijay.
Purple Iris, Golden Glow,
Fox Glove 25 a doz.; yellow
iris 35 doz.; golden bells and
lily bushes rooted 10c ea. Add
postage, Estelle Duvall, Rt. 3,
Ellijay.
. White narcissus bulbs, jon-
quils, lemon lilies $1.09 per C;
blue grape hyacinths 50c per C
or 500 for $2.00; few tiny snow-
drop bulbs $1.00 per C. All del.
Mrs. Lee Akins, Hartwell.
200 crepe myrtle sprouts
$5.00; 500 Vinca Minor $2.00;
English Ivy $4.50;. dwarf box-
wood and other evergreen; wild
bush honey suckle sweet shrub
25 for $1.50. Mrs. W. E. Pear-
son, Greenville, ;
Mtn. Laurel, Azaleas, rhodo-
dendrons, white and spruce
pine, hemlock, cedar, holly, 2
to 4 ft. high, all well rooted,
3 for 25c; Haster lily bulbs 3
for 25c; Myrtle vine, garlic,
peppermint, catnip, tanzy, 3
bunches for 25c; Marly Alaska
English pea seed, 25c pt. Add
postage to all orders under 50c.
Rachel Ferguson, R. F. D. 1,
Murrayville. Seas
Nandina, 2-3 in. 60-for $1.00;
25 Ligustrum $1.50; native per-
ennials, shrubs and evergreens.
Write for name and _ prices.
Lois Woodruff, Rt. 5, Greenville.
One arbor-vitae cedar 10 ft.
high, 7 it. diameter, $8.00 F.O.
B. here at my yard, 2 miles
south Browns Bridge. Mrs. J.
B. Liles, Rt. 2, Gainesville,
Rooted dwarf boxwood $2.00
per C del.; 2 to 8 ft. deep pink
crepe myrtle, well rooted $1.00
per 6 or $12.50 per C del. Mrs.
R. F. Terrell, Rt. 3, Greenville.
150 lovely .arbor-vitaes 5 ft.
and up 5c each at my home;
Magnolia Glauca trees 2 to 2
1-2 ft. high $2.50 del: in Ga.;
large boxwood bushes 2- ft.,
heavy, well shaped, $2.60 each
del. Mande Hamby, Greenville.
Nandinas 28-30-in. high, 75e
a.; gardenias 32-34 in. hish,
Tac ea.; hardy Japanese aza-
leas 12-18 in, high, $1.00 ea.:
pone eed :
L. Robinson, Greenville.
en
| white narcissi
plants $1.00 per doz. |
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
sweet shrubs, $1.00 per doz.;
ft, high rooted; pink, phlox,
oe iris 30c doz. Add
postage. Mrs. Nora Ellis, Min-
eral Bluff. z
Billard pink white, white,
red dwarf spireas, snowgar-
land, dbl. red white almonds,
coralberry, euonymous, crepe
myrtles, magnolias, holly, but-
terfly bush, tame sweet shrub,
2 yr. old, 15c ea. Mrs. W. A;
Lewis, Toomsboro.
Lily bulbs, white aster,
orange amaryllis 10 ea, or
$1.00 doz.; white fairy, dwarf
daffodil 15 doz. or $1.00 per C;
white iris, maple, white tube-
rose, pink gladioli 25c doz. No
stamps. Add postage. Mrs. W.
L. Whigham, Rt. 1, Whigham. |
Perennial phlox 44 doz. 50c;
Golden Glow 6 for 25c; white
violets, fall pinks, white prim-
roses, sage not rooted, 25c a
doz.; peppermint 2 doz. 25;
horehound, 3 bunches 25c. Add
postage on small orders. Miss
Mary Grindle, Rt. 1, Box 58,
Dahlonega.
Bridal Wreath 10c ea., well
rooted, also Flowering almond
10c ea.; both 3 for 25c. Add
postage.
R. F. 1, Buchanan.
Giant pansies ready to bloom
85c doz. 4 doz, $1.00; Giant
verbenas well rooted, bloom-
ing size, Beauty of Oxford, pink,
red, white and lavendar 25c doz.
or 5 doz. $1.00. All prepaid.
Mrs. Grace Dobbs, 9 Hudson
St., Gainesville. -
- Azaleas, mixed
red Japonicas 25c ea.; -yellow
and white narcissus $1.00 -per
C; pink hardy phlox, blue
morning lilies, 25c doz.; bleed-
ing hearts 25c ea. All rooted.
Garvin Davis, Elia Gap.
Azaleas, all colors, 50 doz.;
pink weigelias, Golden Bell,
pink almond 20c ea.; purple
and blue iris, yellow jenquils,
$1.00 per C:
pink hardy phiox, blue morn-
ing lilies 25c doz. All rocted.
Add postage. Mrs. R. M. Ray,
Ellijay, Rt. 3. ae
Blue Iris 60c per C;. violets
$1.00 per C; narcissus 75c per
C; peonies 30c ea.; yellow iris
40c a doz.; Abelia cuttings 15c
doz. Mrs. Htta Stembridge,
Ella Gap. :
Large blooming size bulbs
Crimson Amaryllis 40c doz.;
dbl. butter and egg daffcdils,
narcissus, white iris 25 doz.
No stamps. Add postage. Mrs.
M. T. Tanner, Sandersville.
Ten 2 yr. old dbl. red slighkt-
ly variegated Camellias 50c ea.
1 yr. old 25c; ten Gardenias
(Cape Jasemines) 25c ea.;
mixed chrysanthemums, vio-
lets, geranium cuttings i5c dez.; |
3 kinds verbenas, artemisia,
cannas, red carnations, 5c. ea.
Add postage on small orders.
No exch. Mrs. R. C. Loyd,
Ocnige =< = ae
Mixed colors azaleas, rhodo-
dendrons, red Japonicas, spruce
pines $1.00 doz.; blue Spider
lilies, mixed phlox, mixed
chrysanthemums, foxglove, or-
ange lilies, purple iris $1.00 per
Cc. All del. Miss Ruby Webb,
Rt. 3, Ellijay.
12 monthly rose bushes, well
rooted 25 ea, or $3.00 for lot;.
few thousand Haster lilies $2.00
per doz. or $5.00 per
OClock seed 25 half pint. All
plants and seed postpaid P. M.
O. with order preferred. W. B.
Boss, Rt. 1, Swainsboro.
Rhododendrons, mtn. laurel,
ivy, blk, white spruce pines 3
ft. P. P. $1.25 doz.; mixed col-
ors azaleas, white, red dog-
woods, sweet shrubs, pink flow-
ering almonds, butterfiy bush,
pink, white altheas, lilies, all 2
ft. rooted; packed in damp cot-
ton, $1.00 per doz. P. P. Hilsie
Heaton, Blue Ridge.
Monthly Roses, red radiance,
red velvet, Lady Ashton, Betty
25 ea.; Shrubbery, Ligustrum,
cherry laurel, 50 and 75c ea.;
abelia 25 and 50c ea.; Euony-
mous 50 ea. Plus postage. No
stamps. Juanita Whigham,
Whigham.
Pink crepe myrtles 20c ea.:
narcissus 50c per C; Star of
Beth. 15 doz.; Baby . Button
Mums, white, yellow 25c: doz.; |
August lilies 15e ea.; Feverfew
25 doz.; Hemerocallis 75c. per
C; sweet peas 25e doz. Add
postage. Miss Bula - Conner,
Rt. 2, Bremen. :
Flowering quince rooted, 25
ea.; bridal wreath 10c ea., 3: for
25c; purple lilac 15c ea.: King
Alfred daffodils 75 C; baby
button mums, white, yellow 25
doz.; Hemerocallis 75 per C:
Flag iris 20c doz. Add postage.
Mrs. Gussie Conner, Bremen,
_Chrysanthemums, Amelia or
pink cushion blooms from sum-
mer until frost, 3 plants 25c.
Mrs. Paul R. Camp, Rt. 8,
Marietta. Z :
_ Dahlia Tubers, 12 different
varieties, true to name, $1.25
doz. postpai Treasure Island,
Bea agamore, Alas-
Mrs. P. EB. Ballenger, |
colors, Tbe
doz.; pink weigelias $1.00 doz.;
C; 4)
| FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
Warner, Jersey Beauty, Pride
of Cal., Mrs. Chas. Harrold, etc.
Mrs. H. C. Bell, Duluth.
Red Dogwood, Mtn. laurel,
azaleas, black and white pines,
sweet shrubs, rhododendrons,
pussy willows, $ ft. high, $1.00
per doz.;_ trailing arbutus,
evergreen galax, 85c doz. Add
postage. W. G. Abercrombie,
Mineral Bluff.
Blue and white iris each 50c
per C; everblooming well root-
ed Paulownia, pink and white
cochet, red Hugene Marlitt rose
bushes 20c ea. 6 for $1.00; root-
ed pink weigelia 15c ea. Add
postage. Mrs. Jesse Jackson,
Rt. 2, Austell.
Dahlia Tubers, many fine va-
rieties true to name, 1 ea. of 12
varieties $1.25 postpaid. Mrs.
Warner, Mrs. Chas. Harrold,
Betty Aslon, Marjorie Castle-
ton, Mina Burgle, Queen of
Garden Beautiful, etc. Mrs. H.
H. Gilstrap, Suwanee.
Pink thrift .200 plants 75e;
scarlet verbena, other colors,
dbl. mixed larkspur, gaillardia,
feverfew 25 a doz.; orange
flare cosmos, Mexican sun-
flower, peony type poppy seed
8c a pkg. del. second zone. Mrs.
de Pattie, Rt. 6, Box 49,
LaGrange,
Good quality seed, larkspur,
poppy, zinnia, cypress vine,
Chinese forgetmenot, Prince
feather, Bachelors Button,
burning bush, woodflower, cal-
thrysanthemums 25c a _ doz.
postpaid. Marion McConnell,
Cornelia.
150 dwarf
planted plants 8 to 10 in. above
ground, $20.00. Write for prices
on smaller quantity. Mrs. EB. A.
Smith, Rt. 3, Greenville. _
- Black and white pines, rho-
dodendrons, Mtn. laurel, red
dogwood, azaleas, sweet shrubs,
crabapple sprouts, 3 ft. high,
$1.00 per doz.; trailing arbutus,
evergreen galax 35c doz. Add
postage. R. L. Curtis, Mineral
Bluff.
White Iris 75c per 100; climb-
ing sweet peas 10c ea. $1.00
doz.; pink verbena 25c doz.
Mrs. John Saye, Newborn.
Well rooted sage plants, 10c
ea,; Shasta daisies, pink yar-
row 10c a clump; ragged robin,
larkspur, johnny jum-ups 10c
per doz.; pink and red verbena
lardias 10c a doz. Add postage.
Mrs. E. L. Rogers, Griffin.
White, blue, iris, Shasta
daisies, pink verbena 10c. doz.;
Leopard begonia 15c; red and
pink conch begenias rooted 5c;
pink, white, and giant red ox-
alis 5c; geranium cuttings 5c;
ferns i5c. Add postage. Mrs.
Ralph Williams, Cumming.
Privet hedge, large nursery
6 to 8 in. plants 50 per C; 12
to 24 in. plants 75 per C; 5 to
6. feet, $1.00 -per 100. A. P.
Gladden, Rt. 2, Box 60, Talla-
poosa.
Althea, Scotch broom, Milk
and wine lily bulbs, pink ver-
bena, pink crepe myrtle, 25c
ea.; Abelia, trumpet vine,
Japan quince, wisteria, jonquil
bulbs $1.00 per C; daffodils 75c
}per C; phlox (_60c per. doz.;
poinciana, large, 60c. Add
| postage. Mrs. E. J. Forrester,
Sparta,
250 Armor Privet hedge
plants, 2 and 3 ft., 2c ea.; 100
gardenias 1 and 2 ft. 15 ea.;
yellow bells, snowdrop, purple
lilac, pink and white Dorothy
Perkins rose bushes, all well
rooted 15c ea. Postpaid. Jose-
phine Raby, Mitchell,
Sweet scented dbl. white
pinks, plumosus, mixed colors
50e per. C; 200 for 90c: Sibe-
rian lilies, mixed iris, 80c per
C; Thornless rose 10 ea. Mrs.
Christine McLeod, Rt. 2, Box
166, College Park.
Rhododendrons, Mtn. Laurel,
azaleas, white and pink dog-
woods, holly bushes, tulip pop-
lars, all well rootel, 10 ea.,
$1.00 doz.; red Japonicas and
forsythias 15c ea.; dahlias 25
a doz. bulbs. Mrs. Lucy Wil-
son, Sweet Gum.
40 boxwood bushes 4 yr. old,
30 ea.; 75-1 yr. old 10c ea.:
1 bushel Monmouth soy beans
$2.50. L. A. Grizzle, Rt. 1,
Talking Rock, ~
Mtn. Laurel, red dogwood,
azaleas, sweet shrubs, rhodo-
dendrons, black and white pines
8 ft. high, $1.00 per doz.: ever-
green galax, trailing arbutus
85 a doz. Add postage. F. F.
Roper, Mineral Bluff. :
Crabapple sprouts, black and
white pines, azaleas, sweet
shrubs, Min. laurel; red dog-
wood, rhododendrons, 3 _ ft.
high, $1.00 per doz.: trailing
arbutus, evergreen galax, 30c
per doz. Add. postage, P. D.
Waters, Mineral Bluff.
_ Shasta daisies 20c a doz.;
ple iris 25 doz.; pompon
lias 50c doz.;. exchange
url=
ah-
for
- Whitfield, Rt |
liopsis 5c pkt.; verbenas and
boxwood__ trans- [
teria,
10c for 3 rooted plants; gail-.
white feed sacks 100 Ib. size.
FLOWERS AND SE
FOR SALE
Daffodils, Star of Beth
Orange day lilies, leo
purple and lavendar
per ; snowballs,
white altheas, pink
for 25c. Well rooted.
postage, Sell or excha
white feed sacks. M
Henderson, Rt. 3, El
German Iris. (fine
Snow Storm, white 250
per 100. -
stamps. Harold Pass
Peter. ae
Several thousand privet
plants 2 and 3 yrs. ol
rooted with nice spr
cents each in lots of 50 0
Mrs. H. B. Ford, Rt. 1, Lay
Hollyhock seed mi
large package 10c pos
lian Hardin, Rt. 1,.
White. :
Dahlia tubers, | large
such .as Jane Cowl, Mo:
Champion, Queen of th
den Beautiful, others,
digging, $1.00 per doz
Mrs. W. A. Pettigrew,
ville. ae
Evergreens, rho
white pine, spruce pine,
lock, ivy, laurel, 20 inch
80c prepaid; 100, $4.00
Hunnicutt, Tallulah Fa!
Water lilies,
red, Gladstone
blooming size 3 for
low poppy 2 for 1
feather 10c. Add
live.
6, Gainesville.
Old fashioned sweet
pinks, coreopsis 250 f
mixed tulips 3 doz. 5
iris 65c per 100;
winter jasmine,
50c. del. Mrs. Dick Po
2, College Park.
Crepe myrtle, lila
bell, bridalwreath,
cape jasmine and nice
woods, 25c ea.;
white narcissi,
Tea-olive,
greybeard, 4
shrub, black haw, yello
mine, crepe myrtle, holly.
others, 1 ft., 10c: 3 ft
stamps nor chks. Mrs.
man. Watson, Toomsboro,
Purple and lavende
bulbs with tops, large
C; jonquils, 60c C; whit
blooming narcissi, Lad
Lake, 60c C; yellow Eas
rooted, 25c ea, Others.
E. White, Temple, Rt. 2,
231. eS :
Cherokee
drons, Mtn.
roses,
laurels,
pers, 6, $1.00.
crombie, Mineral Bluff,
Red dogwood, red buds
arborvitaes, 25, 50c ea.
green galax, trailing
10c doz.; tiger lilies, 15
blue iris, 20c doz. Add po
Mrs. Hattie DeHart
Bluff. eae
\
30 citrus trifoliatas
for small hedge), 25c ea.
nandinas, spirea Thu
Billardi, Salvia, Turk
lemon. lilies,. eleagnus,
baby doll rose, 20c. Ad
age. Mrs. J. M. MeMilla
metto. 3
Pink, red phlox, bl
purple iris, pink foxglo
doz.; yellow japonicas,
spruce and white l
doz.; all col. azaleas,
Add postage. Linda Eva
lijay, Rt. 2. :
Weigelia, white, ~
ea.; red japonicas, althe
pa:3/3 for 25c5 3
pink almond, 10c ea., bl
lavender iris, 15 do
Exc. for feed sacks 0
ton. Add _ postage.
Charles, Ellijay, Rt. 2
Scotch brooms, cape
(early blooming); |
willows, 35c ea.: gold
15c ea. prepaid. Mrs.
English, Bowdon, Rt. 3.
Box flowers (cutting
snowballs, goldenbell
locks, 10 ea.; privet
rooted, $3.00 C. Del. Es:
anything can use. Mil
Willis, Talking Rock, R
Red japonicas, altheas,
velvet roses, 10c ea., 3 for
all col, azaleas, 30c doz.
almond, 10c; purple
blue, lavender iris, 15 d
postage. Bettie Owen,
Evergreen boxwoods,
white pines, laurels, 6,
pink weigelias, pink
dbl. yellow japonicas, 2 fo!
purple, lavender, iris, pir
ennial phlox, 15 do
Shepard, Ellijay, Rt. 2.
White and spruce
rels, 10c; all col. a
doz.; rhododendrons,
:
urple, red crepe myr-
ts. purple wisteria, isc |
HE. Wright, Lizella,
Ss, 25ec: pink spirea,
alwreath, goldenbells,
, forsythia, 6, 40;
"iris, 503 affodils,
pis, mix. yerbe-
Mrs. Henry Eller,
3
unipers, 50c ea., 4-5 ft.,
Exp. Col.;
iris, orange
blue violets, 50 for
ple lilac, 3 for 25.
Wiche, Ellijay, Rt. 3,
and spruce pines, hon-
$1.25 doz. Add post-
rs. Myrtle Thornton, El-
d salmon sultanas,
white conch begonias,
af begonias, Surprise
Ss, pink weigelias, 5c
je Allred, Tallapoosa,
wers and yard shrub-
h as snowballs, lay-
denbells, bridalwreath,
onds, 10c ea. 6 or
tpaid; hedge cut. 50c
Charlie Willis, Talking
pink, 5c a.;
; orange Amar-
sell -eactus, rooted, 10c
Thomas Diggs, Doug-
ae. roots, 20e doz.;
red. lily sprouts, 3-5 ft.
catnip, hoarhound, 10
dd postage. Miss Lillie
Cleveland, Rt. 1.
dbl. yellow marigold
shel gourd seed, dbl.
igle Jarkspur, 10c large)
nna roots, yellow, red,
leaf, - _35c- doz. Exch.
you? Mrs. Fred
m, Valdosta, Rt. 5. \
pe mums, golden yel-
0 white, bronze, lav-
eream, red, honey dew,
tinted, Ball, pink,
- jewel pink, 20
. Mrs. Minnie Bell,
t253
prize winning chrysan-
- Ball yellow, Jean
white, Man o War,
ender, bronze, shaggy
ioney Dew, Black
ed, 20 plants, $1.00.
L. Silver, Cuthbert,
Japonicas, all col-
olive, banana _ shrub,.
um, green variegated,
. Pyracanthas, Pho-
Habra, 2, $1.10; spireas,
oleanders, 4, $1.10.
Griffin, Cordele.
mine, Scotch Broom,
priced
it.
, Thompson, Law-
Rt As
lilies, 50e C; King
fodils, 75 C; white
low chrysanthemums,
mixed verbena, 20c
ple flag lilies, 15c doz.
rie ErrOunS, Buchanan,
aly roses, well rooted,
ed and white spotted
hollyhocks,
ws = Keener,
doz.;
. Mrs.
ay
hrysanthemums, ar--
lants, 25c doz.: Dixie
marigold seed, Calif.
mnia seed to exch. for
ials and dahlias. Make
s. H. W. Law, Chula.
Graybeard, 2 1-2 to 3 ft.,
me, 4, $1:00; purple
Lace, 25
Zz. 40c; red, yellow,
age cannas, 40c doz.
Add postage under
Oscar Phillips,
20. ae fine named
ll true to name: Wal-
unshine, Margaret Wil-
rs, $2.00 doz. del.;
1, Mrs. Warner, etc.,
Send stamp for in-
rs. R, Q. Miller, ee
Burel, azaleas, rhodo-
white, spruce pine,
cedar, holly, snowballs,
2-5 ft., 4 for 25c.
aze under 50c orders.
rguson, a
ioned yellow cluster,
ted jonquils, 1c ea.:;
00; paper white nar-
doz. All blooming
Add postage less
B.A.
Leary, Rt. 2, Box 15.
ixed larkspur, fine,
nts almost ready .to
C, postpaid; flag and
fes, 25c doz. Exe. for
mums, doz. for doz.
ASAD, Roopville,
es climbing roses,
h es, laurels, box-.
_ yellow _ Japonicas,
colors, at
'Dahlias, all-
sonable price; also Kentucky
bean seed, 15 pke., del. Mrs.
a E. Stewart, McDonough, Rt.
White, Fairy lilies, 25e doz.;
blue, yellow, white iris, 15c doz.;
King Alfred daffodils, 75c CG:
goldband lilies, 50c: C; lemon
hedge seed, 5c doz. Mrs. Lee
Gray, Buchanan, Reed:
Red japonicas, blooming Size,
white spider lilies, 10c ea.;
blue violets, 10c doz.; dusty
miller, 10 doz.; white, April
blooming narcissi, 20c doz.
Others. Add postage. Exc. for
feed. sacks. Mattie Clayton,
Hllijay. se:
Tiger lily bulbs,
Add postage.
graves, Commerce,
wood Ave.
Red dogwoods, 5, 25c; Myrtle
vine, 10c doz.; blue iris,
doz.; tiger lilies, 20c doz.;
trailing arbutus and evergreen
galax, 10c doz.; others. Add
postage- Exe: for feed sacks.
Mrs. Lona Vaughn, ~- Mineral
Bluff, care DeHarts Box.
Mix. col. petunias and lark-
spur, 20ec C plants; pink ver-
bena, 10c doz.; sev. col. gera-
nium cuttings, 5c; Maple leaf
begonia rooted, other begonias,
10c ea. All F.0. B. Mollie Gable,
Tallapoosa, Rt. 2.
Cynoglossum, Rosy Morn pe-
tunias, phlox, artenvisia, 25c
doz.; Digitalis, Campanula,
Sweet Williams, all field grown,
Terrestrial orchids (won. Blue
Ribbon) 10c ea. Mrs, WwW. KF.
Crute, Macon, Rt. 2.
Azaleas, pink, red and yellow,
rhododendrons, mtn. laurels,
redwood, holly, white pines, wild
cherry, rooted, 3 ft., $1.00 doz.
Add postage. Emmpgene Pick-
elsimer, Hurst. ;
Sweet Williams, 25c doz.;
Eng. daisies, 25c doz.; coral-
berry, 10c ea. Exc. for cherry
trees, Thunbergi, pink hydran-
gea, red oleanders, tuberoses,
and: others. Write. Mrs. Lewis
P. Gunn, Thomson,
Well rooted box woods, arbor-
vitaes, 90c doz. del. 6 to 18
in. tall; forsythia, snowballs, li-
lac, white August lilies, 3 for
25c;. 2 to 31-2 ft. boxwoods,
$3.00 to $5.00. Mrs. . Willie
Panter, Morganton, Rt. 1.
Lot of Short Leaf Pine plants
for sale. W. P. Rhodes, Keys-
ville, Rt. 1.
Phlox, petunia, hardy plants,
25e' doz.; Shasta daisies, purple
and pink verbena, perennials, 1
doz. well rooted, 50c. Postpaid.
Mrs. A. J. Cotney, Reynolds,
Ris geo
Collection, 15 blooming age
perennials, all different; Sweet
Williams, Ageratum, dbl. holly-
hock, verbena, etc., 30c, 2 of ea.
50c, 5 of ea. $1.00 postpaid.
W. R. Thomas, Haralson.
Everlasting sweet pea plants,
6 for 15c; seed, 10c large pkg.
Fuschia, begonias, oxalis, weep-
ing lantana, rainbow moss, ge-
raniums, 10c ea. Large, dbl.
cannas, 20c doz. G. W. Cogburn,
Alpharetta, Rt. 1. :
12 doz. or more bulbs, German
iris, assorted colors; 6 pome-
granate, rooted. Mrs. TT. C.
Langston, Maysville.
Blue iris, 40c doz.; holly-
hocks, 50 doz.; red japonicas,
50e each; pink "roses, 25 each.
Mrs. Dora Garrett, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Bird-foot, wild violets, 50c
doz.; wild spider pin and blue
lilies, 10c ea. $9.00.C; blood
root, 50c doz. Mrs. A. A. Cary,
Royston, Rt. 1.
100 boxwood, 30 gardenias, 10
ea. in lots of 5 or more, 2 x
size. Add postage. Mrs. W.
Cosper, Bowdon, Star Rt.
Annuals, larkspur, cornflower,
perennials, Shasta daisies, va-
riegated violets, 5c doz.; 35 C;
others cheap. All blooming age;
2 yr. monthly roses, all colors,
10c. $1.00 orders postpaid. Mrs.
W. Gable, Haralson.
White, pink, orange, laven-
der, wine geraniums, red, white,
pink and maple leaf begonia, 5
cutting, 6 for 25c. Add postage.
Mrs. Emmett Chandler, Talla-
poosa, Rt. 2, Box 74.
Azaleas, crabapples, straw-
berry bushes, white pines, mtn,
laurels, rhododendrons, 15 ea.;
trailing arbutus, plueberry
2 Aor Zoe.
11 Brook-
| bushes, 25c doz. Cherokee roses,
$1.00 doz. Rooted. Mrs. a Ww.
Wilson, Morganton.
8 doz. white Roman hyacinths,
2e ea.; dbl. and single day lilies,
le ea.: * ageratum blue flowers
in Fall), 5c doz. Mrs. Hardy
Bllington, Dublin, 1001 Jeffer-
son St
Azaleas, 10c ea.; mistletoe, 10
bunch; holly push, 25-ea.s min.
laurels, 50c ea.; mountain ivy,
15c bunch. Mrs. Mollie Eller,
Ella Gap.
Queen of the Meadow, white
pine, maple, mtn. laurels, mtn.
4 honeysu
rea- |
Mrs. B. D. Se-
30c |
others.
Mooney Suwanee.
sweet gum | i
Japanese honeysuckle,
25c; hibiscus, hollyhocks, Eng.
dogwood -azaleas, sweet shrub,
38 for 25c; 2 yr. old boxwoods,
25c ea. Fall pinks, hardy phlox,
25 doz. Add postage. Tamar
Teem, Talking Rock,
Nice, 2 yr., rooted old time
boxwood, sev. black walnuts, dif.
size bushes, few old time figs,
var. of small peach trees. Mrs.
C: W. Griffies, Bowdon.
Holly bush and red and yellow
japonicas, 10c ea.; weigelias,
snowballs, azaleas, 15c ea.; iris,
all colors; violets, all colors, 75c
C. Miss Doris Vick, Ella Gap.
White pines, 18 in. $1.00 ea.;
orange lilies, 25c doz.; azaleas,
15c ea.; crabapple sprouts and
white dogwood, 10c ea. Add
postage. Miss Berry Jane Hller,
Ella Gap.
~ Boston Ivy, rooted, 20 for
$1.00; 6 cuttings different gera-
niums 25c; 1 cutting each four
different altheas 20c; Artemisia
rooted plants 6 for 25c, 50 for
$1.00; 1 each of 12 prize win-
ning chrysanthmums $1.00. All
postpaid. . Mrs. W. L. Guillebeau,
Rt. 2, Lincolnton.
Old time Butterfly bushes, 10
and 25c ea.; hedge roses, 25c
doz. cuttings; 15ec ea. rooted;
purple iris, Day lilies, $1.00 C.
Miss Mollie English, Demorest,
Re:
Red-Hot-poker, 25c; Iris, pur-
ple, $1.00 C. Orange Day lilies,
$1:00=-C: Shasta daisies, 50c;
Dusty Miller, and others . Mrs.
His dk McConnell, Demorest, Rt. 1.
Madam Warner Dahlia. roots
for sale or exc. for other large
varieties. W. S. Sanders, Dan-
ielsville, Rt :
Nice size long leaf pines (for
transplanting) $1.00 ea. W. Woo-
ten, Camilla. fe
Hydrangea, 9 ft. high, 45 ft.
cir., $25.00; .2 arbor vitaes, 9 1-2
ft. high, 20 ft. cir. and 8 ft. high,
9 ft., 2 in. cir., $15.00 ea. 1 Box-
wood, 3 ft; 28" in; S-ft..2 in. cir,
$10.00. All at my home prices.
Abbie Batts, Lewner.
8 dif. col. chrysanthemums,
butter-cups, blue bells, Sweet
Williams, - Tox-glove, ea. 10c
bunch. World Wonder, large
pink blooms, 10 ea.; others.
Postage not included: Lila Voyles,
Lewner.
Snowballs, $1.75 doz.;
bells, $1.50 doz.:
$1. 00 per 6; Easter lilies, 50e
doz.; pink: almond, 50 doz. Exc.
for "E. de Wakefield cabbage.
Add postage. Mrs. A. H. Pat-
terson, Talking Rock,
Red japonicas, 2, 25c; all cot
azaleas, 35e doz.; altheas, 10
ea.; old fashioned lilies, 30c
doz.; trailing arbutus, 5c; rho-
dodendrons, T0c doz.; pink al-
monds, i5 ea, Add postage.
_ F. Charles, Ellijay, Rt. 1, Box
Yellow japonicas, 15 ea.;
25c; snowballs, \15 ea.; * aza~
leas, 35C G0z-: rhododendrons,
laurel, spruce and white pines,
70e doz.; daffodils, 25c doz.;
altheas, 10c ea. Add postage.
Lora Parks, Ellijay, R.F.D. 1.
Laurel, white, spruce pines,
70 doz.; azaleas, 35c doz.; pur-
ple, lavender iris, 15c doz.; pink
almonds, 15e ea.; 2, 25c; wild
ferns, 25 ea.; weigelias, white,
15 ea. Add postage. Ruby.
Charles, Ellijay, R.P.D. 1. 9
FLOWERS AND SEED
WANTED
polices
purple lilac,
2,
Want sey. col. Camelia Japon-
icas, especially peony tyyes,
azaleas (not wild), Cedrus Deo-
dara, Rex begonias, tri-color and
Ivy geraniums.
rooted jasmines,
Mrs.
Rt...3, Box 34.
Want deep red (not pink)
crepe myrtle. State price and
what you have. . Miss Corrie
Mims, Baxley. :
Want white perennial phiox.
Will exc. mauve color phiox
and other flowers; also exc.
colored putter- -beans _ for Eng-
lish peas and garden pean seed.
Mrs. D. T. Dew, Curryville.
Exe. red crepe myrtle, 4 ft.,
for any kind of evergreens or
abelia, same height: also exc.
Rockyford cantaloupe seed for
large size. pie plants. Mrs.
Hugh Linger Ween Cartersville,
Riz 3.
Want dahlia divisions of
named varieties, true to name
and cheap. Write Mrs... Sher-
man Duckett, Jasper.
Want 1 flowering peach, 1
orange with red dots, canna
(bulb), red. (mot pink), 1 yel-
low dogwood bush, abl. lark-
spur, snapdragon, yellow cos-.
mos and pansy seed. Miss BF. B.
wisteria,. and
J. L. Bush, Tifton,
6. for |
eellent for breeders,
Exc. petunias,
strawbe ry
RB. 5 cabbage, 500, 75e; $1.30
M. Nice field grown plants. |
G. L. Tallant, Cumming.
Missionary strawberry, 500,
$1.25; $2.00 M; rhubarb, 50c
doz.; catnip, spearmint, pep-
permint, hoarhound, 35 doz. 4
doz. plants, $1.00; yellow meat
watermelon seed, 25e cupful.
Mrs. Thornton MeCurley, Hart-
well.
Missionary pao 500,
$1.25; $2.00 M; rhubarb, 50c
doz plants; garlic, 10c head,
$1.00 doz.; yellow meat water-
melon seed, 10c doz. Exch. for
white feed sacks. Miss Cecil
McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Chas., Dutch cabbage, Ber-
muda white and yellow onion,
300, 50c; $1:00 M prepaid; 5 and
10 M, 60c M collect. Sat. guar.
Ovie Crow, Valdosta.
Condon and Mastodon ever-
bearing and Red Gold straw-
berry, 80c C; $2.50 M; June
cherry, goose plums; old time
sweet and Hng. horseapple,
white walnut sprouts, 10c ea.;
blue Damson plums, July sweet
pears, 15c ea. Add_ postage.
Rev. W. N. Turner, Dahlonega,
RES 1
Chas. Wakefield cabbage, 20c
C: 500, 60c; 90 M del.; Klon-
dike strawberries, $1. 50. M;
plants, del. Winfred Waldrip,
Flowery Branch.
Horseradish plants, 20c doz.;
roots, 25c 1b.; Hastings Big
Head lettuce plants, ready for
setting, 20 doz.; 35c, 2 doz.;
garlic sets, 20c doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. I. A. Woodring, ete
Rt? 1.
Lettuce plants, large Wendie
var. now ready, 20c; 200, 35c;
horseradish, . 25c Ib.: ditney
leaves (an old Indian herb),
25c pkg. Mrs. W. A. Johnson,
Alto, Rt 1.
Chas. Wakefield, E. J. cab- |
bage, $1.00 M; 5 M, $3.00; white
Bermuda onion plants, 75 M.
D, T. Herrington, Baxley, Rt. 3.
Kudza Crowns, $6.50 M, F.
Q.B. Cash with order. B. Wat-
son, Hamilton.
Million, fresh, stocky plants,
ready. Dutch, Wakefield, Co-
penhagen cabbage, $1.00 M pre-
paid; 50c M collect; yellow,
white Bermuda onion, $1.00 M
prepaid; 75 M col.; booking
orders asst. tomato, $1.50 M.
0. M. Crowe, Valdosta.
Lady T. strawberry plants,
500,. $1.00: $1.75 M;, Klondike,
500, 75: $1. 50 M del. Prompt
shipment, Ethel Crow, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 2.
_Kudza vines to anyone who
will come after and dig them;
also haye boxwood bushes for
sale. Lizzie Gholston, Cham-
blee, Rt. 2, Box 270.
Millions cabbage plants: Bx-
tra E. J., Chas W., Copenhagen,
500, 40c; 75e M postpaid: 3 M.
up, 50 M C.0.D. Sat; guar. F.4
F. Stokes, Fitzgerald.
Premier strawberry, 30c C;
$2.50 M; collard plants, 50c M:
also 125 W. Leghorn hens, ex-
good str.
90c ea. Edgar Woodall, Cor-
nelia.
Frost-proof E. J., Chas. W..
cabbage plants, 500, 500: 75e M
del.; 5 M $3.25; 10 M $6.00 Exp.
col.; Klondike strawberry, 500,
90c: $1.75 M del. Prompt ship-
ment. E. C. Waldrip, Flowery
Branch, Rt. 1.
Lead. var. a6 Wonee and col-
lard plants, 20c CC; .90c M
mailed; 10 M $5.00 Exp. col.
A. Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Wakefield and KE. F. Dutch
cabbage, 20c C; 400, 40c; 85ce
M del: 5 M $3.00: 10 M "$5.00
Exp. col. Sat: suar. Aee
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Klondike strawberry, 25c ;
500, 80c; $1.50 M; Biverbearing
and Lady PS s0G. C: 500, $1.00;
$2.00 M.. Young plants, prompt
shipment. Mrs. Ara Waldrip,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Frost-proof W. and Dutch
cabbage, now ready, 20c C; 300,
40ce; 75c M by mail prepaid; 50
M by express collect. Cash,
M. O. preferred. Major Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Lead, var. cabbage plants, 75
M del.; 50c M .: collect. J. W.
Lang, Omega.
Cabbage plants, 300, 40; 600,
60c;- $1.00 M-del.. E. B, Weth-
er ford, Gainesville, Rt. 2
ae
EH. J., Chas. W. cabbage, 75e
M del.; 10 M, $6.00 collect; Mar-
globe. tomato seed, $1.10 Ih.
New Stone, 65c Ib. del. W. O.
Waldrip, Flowery Branch.
Lead var. cabbase, white,
yellow Bermuda onion, $2.00
M postpaid: 75c M at beds (25
mi. Macon). Large quantities,
cheaper. Geo. R. Hunt, Kath-
teen.
Tobacco plants, Gold Dollar
and Virginia Bright Leaf,
March del.;: want. some seed:
velvet beans. Dell -Guilferd,
Biackshaer.. care Oden Farms.
Klondike and fady
38
UT.
| da onion, 60c M C.O. a
mailed.
. Jersey, Chas., Cones
cabbage, white, yellow Bermu-
or 500
50c; 80c M postpaid. I. L . Stokes,
Fitzgerald, Rt tT.
Collard, cabbage and. New
Stone tomato plants, $1.00 M.
Edna Barfield, Cordele, Rt. 2,
Box 52.
Wakefield, Copenhagen ae
bage, white and yellow Ber-
muda onion, 80c M. Good plants
and prompt shipment, Harnest #
Lewis, Baxley.
Lead var. cabbage and caltard
plants, 20c C; 75 M mailed: 10
M $5.00 Exp. col. 'H. &. Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 7.
Dutch, Wakefield cabbage and g
collard plants, 300, 35c; 75C
M mailed; 5 M $4.50 Exp. Col.;
Klondike strawberry, $1.50 M
ia. A= Crow, i -
ville, Rt. 2.
Frost-proof cabbage
300, 40c; 500, 55c;
5 M 65e M collect.
ville, Rt. 2. :
EE. J., C. W. abbage, 500, 50c:
7be M. Full count, prompt del,
postpaid, T. L.. BV ANSON, Fitz
gerald, Rt. 2.
Frost-proof,. healthy cabbose.
300, 40c; 600, 65c; 95c M del.;_
5 M $3.50 collect; heading col-
lard, 45c M del.; Stone tomato
seed, 75c lb. Exch. for pecans
or peanuts. Bonnie pari
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Cabbage plants, extra early J.,
Chas. W., Copenhagen, 500, Adc;
"5c. M.. Postpaid... Sats guar.
S. C. Rowe, Ocilla, Rt. 2. | E
Imp. Missionary. strawberry
plants, 35c C; $1.00, 300; $1.50,
500; $2.50, M: Bermuda onion,
60c,, 500; $1.00, M. Postpaid.
Robert S. Harris, Cuthbert, Rt. 2.
Rhubarb plants, 50c doz.: Mis-_
sonety strawberry, 5005: $1-25e 3
| $2.00, ; peppermint, spe2 rmint, |
| 50e ao garlic, 10c head, $1.00
doz. Exe. for white feed sacks.
Miss Mattie McCurley, Hartwell,
Rte 2s ;
Early J. cabbage, Pri ize- Taker:
and Yellow Bermuda onion, $1.00.
M del. Good size plants, full |
count. Loyd Steedley, Baxley,
Mastodon Everbearing and
Lady T. strawberry plants, 35c
C; $38.50 M; Red Gold, $5.00 M;.
Sage plants, rooted, 6, 60c. Mrs.
J. D. Cleveland, Cleveland, Ga.,
Rt. 4. a
Earliest var. Klondike straw-.
berry, 10 C; plus postage; gar-
lic bulbs, 10c bunch, not post-
paid; Clay peas, not mixed,
$2:00 but F.0.B, Mrs. Mae
Crowe, Buford; Rt. 1. = ?
Cert. plants: Chas., J. W., Co-
penhagen, Flat Duteh, Succes=_
sion cabbage; white, yellow Ber-_
muda, Prize-Taker onion. Any
mixture, ees $1.00; S5c. M;
500; 50 del.; 5 M, tee 00510 Ma.
$5.50 Express. W.-H: Morris,
Baxley.
Blakemore
$2.00; $4.50 M.
Grifitn, Adel, Rt. :
Flat Dutch, Wakefield Ga
bage, 800, 40e del., or 8 M, $1.00
F.0.B. Now ready to sbip. He
plants,
85ec M del. ;
straw berry,
. O.B.
| BE. Rhodes, Baldwin.
White Bermuda onions, $1. 00
M del.. H. R. Williams, Baxley.
Red raspberry plants, $2.00 C
BOB. Cash oD. Ho Murray,
Athens, Rt. 1. , : ee
EH. J., -Wakeficid, Chas
Fiat Dutch frost- proof cabba
plants, ready now, 500, 50c: &5
M. postpaid; Bermuda onion, -
same price. R, Chanclor, Pitts.
New pat... Acme Thornies
Youngberry, and new Boysen-
berry, 6, $1.00; 12, $1.75. Pre-
paid. Other outstanding new
varieties; Muscadine and Bunch _
grapes, raspberries, strawber- x
ries, fruit, roses. State insp. a Ee:
A. Neal, Ashiand. eS
Mastoden Strawberry, 40 C;
500, $1.50; $2.50 M; Sage plants,
20, 50e; 100, $1.00; witch-hazel
pushes, 30e ea. R. B. Etris,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 49. =
Premier strawberry, 25e
85c, 500; Young dewberry, one
doz., $i. 50 Cc; calamus. plants,
20c. doz. Homer Smith, Alto,
RED.
Mastodon strawberry, Soc C;
500, $1.50; $2.75 M; Lady ~.
806-20: =-500, $1.00: $1.15 Me
Prompt shipment. Miss Verdine
Whitmire, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Millions Chas. W.. cabbhag
plants, open field grown, $1.50
M del; cheaper at the bed an
in larger quantities. L. By
Owens, Duluth, Rt. 1. eee:
Mastodon strawberry, 35 C,
500, $1.50; $2.75 M; Lady T., 30_
Cr 500, $1.00; $1.75 M. Prompt.
shipment, Mrs. Lonie Prat
Gainesville, Rt. 1. :
Million Ga. cabbage - collard
plants, large and healthy, 7
5 M or more, 60c M. ej
Cash with order. R.
er, Rincon, Rt. 1.
Kudzu crowns for. BB
Lee, Cone: ;
.
Chas. W., Early J., Copen-
hagen cabbage, White and yel-
low Bermuda and Prize-taker
onion, 55c M; 5 M, $2.50. Mixed
any way desired. B. J. Morris,
Baxley.
<All var., cabbage and onion
plants, 60c M; 5 M, $2.50. Mixed
if desired. Strong plants guar.
J. D. Stone, Hazlehurst.
Marglobe, Early Prolific,
Scarlet Globe tomato; Calif.
wonder, Ruby King,
Beater pepper plants. $1.00 M
del. 25c C. Hiram. Lightsey,
_ Screven.
~ Lead, var. cabbage, collard,
onion plants, 75 M. 10 M and
over, 60c M. All F.O.B.
Howell, Lakeland.
= Booking orders for P.R. po-
\ paid in Ga.
_ Ex. for dried fruit.
$1.00 M. del., 25.
Genuine
--tato plants, April-May del: $1.00
M. C.O.D.; Tomato, ready 1st
<of March, 20c C; $2.00 M. C.O.D.
A. F. Maddox, Fitzgerald.
Crystal Wax Bermuda onion,
field grown plants, 15c; BE. J.,
Chas. W. cabbage, frost and cold-
roof, 15c C. 200 or more post-
No stamps. J. T.
Stevens, Hawkinsville, Rt. 3.
Klondike strawberry, 25c C;
500, $1.10; $2.00 M; extra large
meat strawberry, 30c C.
500; old fashioned blue and pur-
\
ple skin goose plum, 20c ea. Miss
Grace Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Chas., E. J., Wakefield cab-
bage plants, 75c M. postpaid;
60c M. Exp. col.
prompt shipment.
-ner, Omega, Rt. 1.
- Chas. W. cabbage plants now
ready, 50c, 500; $1.00 M. post-
paid; large, early bearing straw-
berry, $1.00 C. Add. postage.
Mrs. Ora
Thornton, Cumming, Rt. 5.
- Cert. yellow or pink skin P. R. |
potato plants, seed from vine cut-
_ tings, ready April 1, $1.25 M. del.
Leland Lightsey, Screven.
_ Cabbage plants, Copenhagen,
Early Flat Dutch, Chas. W., 90c
M. plus postage. W. R. Padgett,
Folkston, Rt. 1. e
Pink skin P. R. plants, Insp.
and treated, ready April-May,
$1.25 M. del.; Marglobe toma-
to, ready April ist, $1.00 M. del.
W. D. Lightsey, Screven.
- Crystal Wax Bermuda. onion,
85c M; 5 M. up, 75e; also flue
_ cured smoking and chewing to-
bacco, 10 Ibs., $1.00 del. J. H.
Griffis, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 152.
_Margilobe, Scarlet Globe, Red
Rock tomato, ready April 1st,
C..L. Light-
sey, Screven. =
-Kudzn plants, rooted, $5.00 M.
Crowns, $10.00 M. Wallace
Crump, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
__ Klondike strawberry, 25 per
CC; 500, $1.10; $2.00 M.; extra
large fine meat strawberry, 30c
C; $1.25 per 500. Mrs. L. L.
Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
_ BEANS & PEAS FOR SALE
O-too-tans, re-
cleaned and graded, $4.50 bu.;
_Whatleys seed corn, selected,
nubbed, shelled, $2:00 bu. R. M.
Turner, Royston.
20 bu. sound Iron peas, slight-
ly mixed, $2.00 bu. F.O.B. Mrs.
E. PP. Powell; College Park,
Rt. 2. :
Sev. hundred pounds pure
Sugar Crowder peas (made 700
_ bu. on 15 acres), 10c Ib. F.O.B.
_G. E. Duffey, Palmetto, Rt. 1.
20 bu. genuine O-too-tan
_ beans, 1936 crop, $4.50 bu. J. B.
_ Leverett, Luthersyille.
Fine white rice - peas,
of hulls, 2 bu. at 8c lb. Mrs.
Marie Holland, Dalton, Rt. 2,
Box. 196.
65 bu. or more No.1 Brabs, 15 ||
bu. No.2 Brabs, 15 bu. No.2
mixed, slightly damaged, 15 bu. |.
No. 1 mixed.. Make best offer.
ies Williams, Oglethorpe, Rt.
_ 150 bu. Irons, $2.50 bu.: 75 bu.
Brabs, $2.75 bu. In even wt.
: W. L. Renfroe, Byron.
-. Red Hull Speckled peas, sound,
free of weevils, $1.00 peck, post-
paid; $3.00 bu. F.0.B. John W.
Moseley, Soperton, Rt. 2.
- 40 or 50 bu. 1936 crop O-teo-
tans, $5.00 bu. F. O. B. Alonzo
L. Harley, Tennille.
2 bu. white, brown-eyed
peas, $2.00 bu. F. 0. B., or exe. |
for 5 bu. good, clean Fulghum
seed oats, or heavy fruited cot-
ton seed; 1 bu. Sugar Crowders,
$2.50 bu. F. O. B. All clean
and sound. A. J. Pope. Talla-
- poosa.
_ Unknown peas, $2.00 bu.
ugar Crowders, hand shelled,
lean, 8c 1b.; Indian Chief yel-
low corn for seed, 75e pk.
shelled; unknown syrup cane
seed, $1.75 bu. F.0.B.; fodder
at my barn, $1.75. Jim Gable,
Tallapoosa, Rt. 2. -
Large, white, old fashioned
alf-Runners, tender, sound, 20c
large cupful. Add postage. No
chks. or stamps. Mrs.
J i a
World:
B. F.
-$1.25, |
Good count, |
J. H. Sum- |.
free |
7
Bunch velvets for seed, $3.00
bu.; running 90 or 100-day, $2.00
bu. N>-T. Beasley, Nunez.
Brabhams, Clays, Whipporwill
and mixed peas for sale. W. C.
Coffin, Richland. .
7 bu. white crowder peas, $3.00
bu. Clays, $1.65 bu. All bright
and sound. C. R. Cook, Buena
Vista.
25 bu. pure Bunch Velvets,
$2.25 bu. but not prepaid; 3 bush-
els white crowder peas, $3.00
bu. R. P. McCorkle, Buena Vista,
Rt. 3.
100 Ibs. sugar crowders, 6c
Ib;. 500 lbs. Red Rippers; 4 1b,
All in 100 lb. sacks. Sample on
request. FOB. V. Bramhold,
Mt. Airy.
Few Speckled crowders, Calif.
der cornfield beans, 2 lbs. 30c not
prepaid; yard long peas, pumpkin
seed, 15c cupful. Add postage.
Mrs. Willis Grindle, Dahlonega,
Rt. 2;
3 bu. Speckled crowders, $3.00
bu.. or 10c Ib. in 3 Ib. lots or
more. 5 bu. yellow mammoth
Soy beans,. sound, clean, $3.50
bu. G. T. Brown, Ball Ground,
Rt,
?
40 bu. Brabham peas, $2.50 bu.
95 per cent sound; 50 bu. D&PL
cotton seed, $1.00 bu.; and 200
Ibs. at 6c lb. J. L. Nelson, Ogle-
thorpe, Rt. 2. ;
SEED FOR SALE
Citron seed, 15c Ib.: early
okra seed, 10c 1b.; running yel-
low squash, 10c cupful; pure
Stone Mtn. melon, 75 lb. Purple
hull table peas, 25c gt. Rosie
Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
125. Ibs. guar. red to the rind
or money back, Watson melon
seed, 50c Ib. del. Cut price on
Padgett, Stilson.
12 lbs. imp. Jones watermelon,
$1.20 1b.; Dixie Belle, $1.00 Ib.
Del. in Ga. Wayman KE. Smith,
Locust Grove. ;
White Stone Mtn., seed. Orig-
inated and guar. pure, will not
sunburn. 7%5c lb. under 10 Ibs.
Over 10 Ibs. 50 Ib. J. M. Liv-
ingstone, Dexter. ~
40 Ibs long green okra seed,
slightly mixed, for sale. A. F.
Bemby, Unadilla, R.F.D, 1.
Cuban Queen melon, $1.00 Ib.
Exc. 5 lbs. for 8 wks. old male
pig, any breed, or full stock
eggs, any breed. Starling Yawn,
Vienna, Rt. 2, Box 113.
1500 Ibs. hand saved Cuban
Queen seed, 75c lb.; also sev.
hundred Hales Best cantaloupe,
50c lb. All F.0.B. No less 5 lbs.
shipped, P. EH. Ivey, Pinehurst.
Melon seed: Stone Mtn., 45c
Ib.; Cuban Queen, 90c Ib. Hand
selected, screened, and of choic-
est imp quality. Have about 500
Ibs. Cashiers chk. or money or-
der. E, J. Lavender, Sylvester,
R.F.D.
New stock New Stone, Red
Rock and Baltimore tomato
seed, 60c Ib. del.; cabbage seed,
$1.00 lb.; onion, $1.75 lb.; Exe.
Baltimore tomato seed for flow-
er bulbs and nursery stock. M.
A. Ramsey, Quitman.
Genuine Ga. Red Sugar cane
for seed, $12.00 M stalks, sacked
and shipped by freight. Less
price del. to trucks in Blakely.
John Underwood, Blakely.
Kleckly Sweet melon seed, 60c
lp.; 1-2 tb., 40c; 1-4 Ib., 25c;
Hales Best cantaloupe, same
price. C. DeForest - Decker,
Brunswick.
6 lbs. pure Cox watermelon
seed, 75c Ib, W. S. Murphey,
Chipley, Rt. 2.
5 Ibs. pure Cox watermelon
seed, 75c lb. R.L. Baker, Chip-
Tey, Rt. 2. :
50 lbs. Stone Mtn. melon, 50c
Ib.; 50 lbs. Cuban Queen, 75c 1b.
Add postage. 1936 crop. James
L. Bloodworth, McIntyre, Rt. 1,
Box 74. u
50 or more lbs. Seven Top tur-
nip seed, from 1936 crop, in 5
or 10 lb. lots, 20c lb. C.O.D.
ae Jake M. Wilson, Madison,
Rt. 2.
100 Ibs. Dixie Belle melon
less 10 Ibs. Add postage: 22 Ibs.
Cuban Queen, 50c Ib. or $10.00
for lot. A. L. Brady, Rupert.
Stone Mtn. watermelon seed,
selected, up to 50 Ibs. 40c ib.;
100 Ibs., 35 Ib.; over 100 Ibs.,
30c lb.; Watson melon. seed,
30c lb. Party pay postage, W.
A. Moore, Haddock, Rt. 1.
Stone Mtn. melon, guar. pure
and treated, 10-50 Ibs. 35c Ib.:
50-100 Ibs. 30 lb.; 500 lbs. 25
lb.; 30 nu. Iron. peas, $2.50 bu.
H. L. Wilcher, Butts, -
10 tbls.; cream sugar crowder
peas, 3 lbs. 25c. Add postage.
ge R. A. Nolen, Rockmart,
P.O.J. seed Cane, 50c C; old
fashioned sugar cane, 75 per
100. At bed prices; pure P. R.
5 one Nancy Hall potato plants,
black-eyed, 6c 1b.; mix. col. ten- |
10 lbs, or over. No chks. M. C..
seed, hand selected, 35c lb. for |.
Calif. multiplying beer seed, |
PRO 1
1.50 M. C. R, Redmond, Pel-. Pn ty
Early Market Queen water-
melon seed, ripens 60 days from
planting, 36 seed, 10c; 1-2 pint,
$1.00 del.; April, 1936, hatch
B. R. rooster, $1.00 F.0.B. Lu-
ther Norris, Harrison.
White garden bean __ seed,
striped half-runners, brown
cornfield bean seed, 20c cupful,
or 35c pint, prepaid. Irene Ov-
erby, Oakwood.
Williams imp. watermelon
seed, hand picked, $2.00 lb. post-
paid. 1 lb. seed plants an acre.
Write for full information re-
garding culture, qualities of
melon, etc, Elder Morgan Wil-
liams, Greenville, Rt. 4.
Halls imp.-Cane seed, 4c Ib.
Sample of syrup (made from
this cane) on request. Swap
for peas. Sam L.- Hall, Middle-
ton.
Ginseng seed, 1936 crop, $1.25
per M; also white lily plants, 50
ea. Oscar Meister, Baldwin.
Veltina okra, 15c oz.; $1.25 Ib.
Approved by State Agri. Col-
leges. J. J. Simpson, Atlanta,
19 Brookwood Dr.
Pumpkin seed, sev. var. mixed,
5, 10, 20c pkgs.; genuine corn-
field beans, 15c cup. Jake
Shields, Dalton, Rt. 4.
10 lbs. Stone Mtn. melon seed,
50c lb.; 25 lbs. Hales Best can-
taloupe, 40c lb. Add postage on
small orders. Dalton Law, Chula.
100 Ibs. A-1 Cuban Queen
melon seed, 80c lb.; 5 lb. up, 75
Ib. del. W. G. Hatcher, Jr.,
Cordele. ;
Cuban Queen melon seed, 75c
Ib. del. Not less pound shipped.
J. D. Means, Elko.
25 lbs. speckled bunch butter-
bean seed, 15c lb., not prepaid.
Mrs. J. H. Dailey, Millen, Rt. 4,
Box 58. :
Mostly white pole beans, 20c
pint; Mexican Banana pumpkin,
30 seed, 10c; white cornfield
beans, 20c pint. Not postpaid.
Mrs. Robert Clayton, Ro.y,,
2 M ibs. pure Watson melon
seed, 20 lb. in 20 or more Ib.
lots; less amount, 25c Ib. R. E.
Jernigan, Smithville.
CORN & SEED CORN
FOR SALE
Pure Indian Chief seed corn,
1st yr. Nubbed and tipped, $2.00.
bu. Also, pure D&PL cotton
seed, ist yr. -$1.25, bu. J. D.
Brennan, Columbus, Rt. 4. _
Yellow pop corn for sale. G. L.
Weldon, Senoia, Rt. 1.
Imp. Hickory King and Tenn.
Red corn, seed corn,
FOB. Thos, Webb, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Fine _ Marlboro Prolific seed
corn, 60c pk. FOB. Selected-and
nubbed. Edd T. Pierce, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 6.
Broadwells pure 2-eared Pro-
lific seed corn. Carefully select-
ed, nubbed and shelled, 75c peck,
$3.00 bu. FOB. 25 years breed-
ing this var. John B. Broad-
well, Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
Hastings Prolific, field insp.
and cert. by Ga. Crop. Imp. Assn.
Ger. test, 99 per cent. Selected
seed ears, nubbed, shelled. $2.25
bu. FOB. M. G. Lewis, Cornelia.
300 bu. good ear corn, also
sey. tons bright peavine hay.
Make best offer my barn. W. A.
Fitzgerald, Omaha.
Imp. Whatleys Prolific, hand
nubbed. and shelled, $2.50 bu.;
genuine, recleaned Petty Toole
wilt-resistant cotton seed, $1.25
bu. 100 Ib. bags. C. P. Barrett,
Ft: Valley.
Tenn. Red Cob seed corn.
Carefully selected. $2.50 bu.;
$1.35 per 1-2 bu. J. L. Porter,
Decatur, Rt. 1.
Pucketts imp. seed corn, from
selected stalks, hand nubbed and
shelled. $2.50 bu. FOB. J. J.
Craig, Ranger, Rt. 1.
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Turnips in truck load lots at
my farm, reasonable price. R.
F. Burch, Jr., Eastman.
About 2 tons green cabbage,
delivery about 20 February, 1
mi. Denmark Station, West. S.
M. Dominy, Statesboro, Rt. 1.
400 bu. yellow skin P. R: po~
tatoes. Passed field inspec-
tion. 2c Ib. J. M. Christian,
Stockbridge.
Red Skin P. R., seed potatoes
from vine cuttings, field select-
ed. $1.00 bu. at my farm. D.
F. Ogden, Odum, Rt. 1.
COTTON SEED FOR SALE
Lot of nice, recleaned Ruck-
ers No. 11, ist yr. seed, $1.00
bu. F. K. Duncan, Douglas-
ville. ;
Imp. Big Boll Dixie Rose
(best cotton grown), $2.50 bu.
F. O. B. John C, Johnston, Ho-
gansville.
Ruckers and Stoneville No. 2
cotton seed, ist yr. $1.00 bu.
T. P. Holcombe, Adairsville,
-resistant,
r pure,
| $1.15 del. John
$1.50 bu.
Monday, Februa
OTTON SEED FOR SALE
100 Ib. bags. Only about 700
bu. H. A. Petty, Dawson.
100 bu. Dixie Rose Boll cot-
tonseed, $1.75 bu. F.O.B. Arthur
Smith, Monticello.
Pure No. 11 Ruckers, ist yr.
45 per cent lint, $5.00 per
CWT. I. P. Forrester, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 4.
4 tons imp. Petty Toole, big
bolls, especially selected and
protected for planting, $1.25
bu.: over 10 bu. $1.00 bu. Cash.
J. Walter Crummey, Jesup, Rt. 2.
Pure Farm Relief and Stone-
ville No. 2, recleaned, $1.00 bu.
F.0.B. T. T. Hattaway, Davis-
boro.
Pure Wannamaker and Half
and Half cotton seed, sound,
$1.10 bu. F. H. Bunn,
Midville.
500 bu. Petty Toole and Imp.
Cook, wilt-resistant, recleaned,
guar. sound. $1.00. bu. T. O.
Whitchard, Blakely.
Wilt-resistant Toole big boll,
$1.00 bu.; Campbells Amber
seed corn, 50c gal., $2.00 bu.
F.0.B. Alexander Campbell,
Surrency.
A-1 Stoneville No. 2 cotton
seed, 95 per cent ger. 2nd yr.
high yield, $3.00 per CWT. Sam-
pl on request; Vandivers Heavy
Fruiter, 2nd yr. Same price.
P. W. Harrison, Halcyondale.
Pure D&PL, 1st yr. $1.25 bu.;
pure Whatleys seed corn, Ist
yr. Nubbed and tipped, $2.00
bu. W. J. Brennan, Columbus,
1511 Nineteenth St.
Dixie Rose, 1 and 2 yrs. from
Orig. pure and sound, $2.25 and
$2.50 bu. E. H. Adams, Cairo,
Box 82.
Wannamakers bright, sound,
pure, 2nd yr. $1.00 bu. FOB.;
Roland, Jr., East-
man, Rt. 1.
PECAN & OTHER FRUIT
TREES, ETC., FOR SALE
100 or more seedling peach.
trees, 1-3 yrs. old, good var.,
plum and clear-seed, 15 ea. at
my home, and help dig and
ek John N. Maxwell, Bowman,
bo be
Brown figs, brown scupper-
nongs, muscadines, old-time
plum-peaches, blue and large
goose plums, 10c ea. $1.00 doz.
6 or more del. Asa A. Moon,
Bowdon.
Brown scuppernong, old fash-
ioned plum-peaches, musca-
dines, Japanese apricots, large
goose plums, brown figs, well
rooted, 10c ea. $1.00 doz. 6 or
ne del. W. A. Moon, Waco,
500 well rooted peach trees,
3-5 ft., plum and clear-seed, 10c
ea. F.O.B. J. D. Robinson,
Waco, Rt. 2. 2
Old fashioned. Eng. _ peach,
white and yellow, Brown Tur-
key fig, white scuppernong,
muscadine, blue, red goose plum,
10c ea. $1.00 doz. Holly bush-
es, 30c ea. $3.00 doz. Post-
= A. T. Patterson, Waco,
May cherry sprouts, 10c ea.
$1.00 doz.; few June pear, 20c
ea.; large blue or black grape
cut., 50c C; few horseapple, -20c
ea. Exc. for white sacks, or on-
ion, cabbage plants. Evelyn
Co Tallapoosa. Rt. 2, Box
Japanese apricot, Damson
plum, 4-5 ft. 85c doz.; Pine-
apple pear, 3-4 ft., 75c doz. In-
spected; Klondike strawberry,
$1.00 M; Silver Leaf maple, 4-5
ft, 80c doz All del. W. B.
Skinner, Gainesville, Rt. 5.
Sour, Barly Richmond cherry,
Royal apricots, rooted; 8 of each,
$1.00 P.P.; black walnuts, 6,
$1.00; hazelnuts, 6, 50c; mtn.
blueberries, 4 doz. $1.00. Add
postage under $1.00. J. Edsel
Heaton, Blue Ridge.
Damson plum, 10 ea,
doz.; white lilac, 10 ea. $1.00
doz. ; Mastodon strawberry
Plants, 35 C; $2.50 M. Mrs. A.
J. Stansel, Cleveland.
2-4 ft. high, old fashioned
white and yellow, sweet peach,
scuppernong vines, brown Tur-
key figs, Damson blue plums.
10c ea. $1.00 doz. Rubye Pat-
terson, Wacon, Rt. 2.
Goy. insp. leading var., apple
and peach trees, 1 and 2 yrs.
old, 10 to 20c ea.;. pear and
cherry, 25c; 2 yr. Concord Ni-
agara grape, 10c ea. $7.50 C; 1
yr. vines, 7c ea. $5.00 C. Del.
Lee Head, Cornelia.
_Hobsons delicious blight-re-
sistant Chinese Chestnuts, 1 yr.,
$1.00 ea. plus postage: Ilex
Intricata, India, 16 yrs. old
(know no other in this country),
$1,250.00. James Hobson, Jasper,
Bartlett pear, 2 ft. 75 ea., 6
for $4.00; Nectarines, 2-3 ft.,
$1.10 ea; green gage plum
trees, 75 ea.; all var. peach
trees, 50c ea. $5.00 doz.: others.
$1.00
|W. M. Skinner, Ludowici,
Brown Calif. figs, brown scup-
| pernongs, muscadines, Jap. apri-
cots, large, red goose plums,
blue plums, oid time seedling
:
peach, rooted, 10 ea, $1.00 doz.
PECAN & OTHER F
TREES, ETC., FOR
6 or more del. Mrs,
Moon, Bowdon, Rt. 2. E
2 yr. grape vines, large
Alaska. and Concord, $1.
Brown Turkey fig, 6 ft., 5
small, 25c; also apple and
Cc. M. Dwight, Atlanta,
Capitol Ave. S. W. |
HORSES AND MUI
-. FOR SALE, |
Sound, 9 yr. old mul
anywhere, any time,
habits. L. C. Kenned
Mtn, Rt. 2 (Lawren
Highway).
Sev. mules and some ho
sale or exch. W. R. Ev
gusta. 821 Heard Ave.
2 nice brood mares
makes nice saddle horse
ea. Can be seen at my p
21-2 mi. Bartow. Emmit |
Bartow.
Good plug mare mule
sonable price. Tom Carte
noia, Rt. 1. e
Black horse mule, 900
yrs. old, sound, in good wo
order, $60.00. 4 mi. Co
Crossing. J. R. Vincent, R
dale. BS
Mare mule, 13-14 yrs,
wt. about 800 Ibs., i: :
$55.00.
milch cows, heifers, hogs,
chickens, or corn, at once,
L. Hand, Eatonton, Rt. 2.
Brier Patch Farms.
12 yr. old, 900 Ib., work
where, black horse mule,
cash. 5 mi. So. Rockmart.
Braswell, Rockmart, Rt. 3.
Horse mule, about 15
950. Ib. wt., $65.00. Exe.
good cow or corn. R. P.
Palmetto. fz A
. Black mare, 1150 Ib., 1
old, works anywhere, $1
also 3 P. C. shoats; $8.00 ea.
KE. Smith, Locust Grove.
' Bay mare mule, 8 yr
wt. 1100 Ibs. Berry J: Wh
oe Rt ly at
Mill. ae
CATTLE FOR SAL
2 highly bred, reg. Gue
bulls, 5 yrs. old, $100.00; 5
old, $30.00. Ped. If inte
W. A. Taliaferro, Blue Ridge.
High grade Jersey cow
heifers, fresh in and spr
at reasonable prices.
Burch, Jr., Eastman.
Reg. Hereford horn-type yeat
ling bulls, outstanding blo
lines. Percy A. Price, Alba
1 young, fresh, 4 gal.
cow, $40.00. Chas. L.
Pulaski.
Fine. Jersey cow, freshen
April, right good shape
$30.00. Mrs.
Palmetto.
old, 7-8 pure, about 400
$20.00, at barn. Alex Barf
Louisville. :
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
Extra nice, large, pure b
ed Toggenburg, excellent m
ings and heavy milk st
Expected freshen around
ruary 20-25. Very fine an
Reasonably priced, si
with quality. John Hynds,
lanta, 93 Warren St., N. E
0498-W. i
Milk doe, half Saanan,
Make best offer. Mrs. W.
Sellers, Doerun. ee ce
Entire herd of milk
Nubians and Toggenburgs
kids and bucks. C. .
Sparks. ; a =
Pr. Nubian-Toggenburg g
for sale or trade for pigs.
Pierson, Atlanta, 14 Roswell
Phone Ch, 2134,
Fine Toggenburg doe, h
milker, with long
Cheap for quick sale.
rata Maricia, Atlanta, 16
nut Ave., Peachtree Hills.
POULTRY FOR SAL
GAMES
Game stags from best
ready to go, $1.50; cocks
ea. Haskell Little, Gaines
8 Dorsey street.
' Fine Warhorse game
$2.00; eggs; $2.00 per 15.
Wilbanks, Atlanta. 889
wood avenue,
Game roosters, 32 yrs.
41 yr. old, $2.00 ea. at
barn. W. A. Martin, Gaines
Rt 4. a
Walked cocks, 1935 hatch,
on free range, trimmed
ready, Roundheads, Wild
Blues, Grist Gradies, $3.00
Eggs later. P. B. Stewart,
ton, Rt. 4. :
6 game hens, Warhorse, A
Roundhead crossed, 8 mo:
beginning to lay, ) fc
Money order.
3
Sweet Gum.
day, February 15, 1937.
POULTRY FOR SALE
MARKET BULLETIN
EGGS FOR SALE
. D. stag, $2.50; pullet, $2.00.
xc, for pr. of Blue Cubans. J.
: Gayton, Acworth,
ull Claiborn Roundhead, 1
f Blue and half Grey, 5 Ibs.
- March 1936 hatch. Jack
by, Blairsville, Rt. 3, Box
GIANTS
J. White Giant chicks
grow wt. 13 lbs.) 6 wks. old,
cea. Pure bred, ploodtested, q
of disease; Big Boston
ding lettuce * plants, 75e M.
tpaid. Aaron Sampson, Jr.,
an.
nice Giant cockerels, 1 1-2
nd 10 mos. old, $1.50 ea. Cash.
ttie Tilley, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
ebys AAA grade White
ey Giant cockerels, $1.50
Peges, $1.25 per 15, del;
amps for information. P. B.
own, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
_ LAKENVELDERS
2 pure stock lLakenvelder
ekerels, about 10 mos. old,
Harmon Carter, Au-
LEGHORNS
oths AAA Ped. 8. C. W.
L.
earling hens, $1.25 ea.; nice,
fat, milk-fed_ friars, av. "2 ibs.,
ed heavies, 200. IDs A
B.
wder Springs.
2 Ss. Cc. W. L., Bocths AAA
rect, no culls, April hatch,
$2 00, F. O. 8. Cash. Mrs.
. Matthews, Marietta, Rt. 3:
out 40 B. L. April hatch
pullets. Sell or exc. for corn,
beans, anything can use, Roy
Mrs. -T. W. Hagood,
00 Tancred S. C. W. L. 1936
pullets, now laying, $1.00 ea.
. Shannon, Lenox, :
ed. W. L. breeding cockerels,
from Official contest record
ams, large type, vigorous birds
ed reasonably, M. W. Kan-
, Elberton.
pure bred 7 mos. old W. L.
erels, $1.80, -or $1.00 ea.
0. B. Louisa Crump, Ellijay,
fo OX ol;
44 B. L. AA grade, 21 mos.
old, and 4 unrelated 10 mos.
kerels, $1.00 ea. seer WwW.
11, Winston.
2 pure AAA Tancred bi type
ghorn, 9 mos. old roosters, di-
ct, $3.00 prepaid, or $1.25 ea.
t del. Mrs. D. A. Thomas,
fol, Rt. 1.
big type Eng. [W..
d hens, healthy, laying, no
Js, $75.00. Mrs, BE: R. Odom,
mt dt.
$9 choice, bloodtested, AAA
eg type, Hollywood W. L. pul-
beginning to lay,
my farm; $95.00 F.0O.B. No
Marcus D.
Ls yr.
WwW. L. April pullets, now
ying, $1.00 ea. Mrs. Evie Pad-
tt, Stilson, Rt. 1.
About 100 April 1936 hatch
. L. hens, practically all lay-
g. Noroom. Must sell. EB. L.
ester, Fort Valley.
125 March AAA grade, blood
tested W. Leghorns, no culls, all
laying, $120.00. C. W. Sapp,
~ . L. March hatch
Pullets, laying, $1.00 ea. Few
cocks, same price. Mrs. -Mary
Sapp, Ohoopee.
April 1936 hatch B. L. hens,
Hyerlay strain, now laying, se-
fected stock, 9 hens and rooster,
$10.00 F.0.B. J. B. Davis,
Curryville.
80 pure bred W. Leghorns, 20
mos. old., 75c ea. _ Bill COO,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
40 Hollywood W. L. April
1936 pullets, $1.00 ea.; Ancona,
Licht Brahma and W. L. eges,
15. -per 15 postpaid; want 10 to
15 bu. ea. Sikes and Tooles
wilt-resistant cotton seed. H. C.
Burnsed, Hilabell, Rt. 1,
50 hens, 2 roosters,
hatch, English str. W.
horns, - $50.00 F.0.B.
Barnes, Summit. ~
1936
Leg-
R. E.
BANTAMS
Golden Seapbrights, 1st, 2nd,
rd prize at Southeastern Fair,
1936, $1.50 ea.; day old chicks,
20 ea. eggs, $1.50 doz., F.O.B.
B. Searboro, Atlanta, 736
Lawton St. S. W., Ra. 3348.
Pen black cochins, 4 females,
1 cockerel, August hatch, very
small, $5. 00; 2B. R. Red Game
ckerels, $2. 00 and $3.50 re-
spectively. Shipped on approv-
. ZB. Lott, Augusta, Box 910.
Genuine Buff Cochin ban-
tams, stock and eggs; also set
ing eggs Giant Black Minorcas,
=. 50 setting. O. H. Wright, At-
lanta, Peters Bidg.
Sev. pr. Golden Seabrights
jm prize stock, $1.50 pair;
eggs, $1.00 per 18. Add post-
age. Miss Carlie Kemp, Mari-
etta, Maple Ave.
Trio black with silver neck
d saddle bantams, $3.00. Exc.
or 1 Clay- pene turkey 9 mos.
old hen; also, 2 does, 1 black,
gray, "15 ea. Pay postage.
Moss, Jasper, Rt. 2.
| Ib.;
BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS
4 pure bred Thompson Ring-
let B. R. cockerels, now in ger-
vice; healthy, $5.50, or $1.50 ea.
if 0.8. Mrs. R. L. Mabry, Canon,
6 nice B. R. pullets, now lay-
ing, $1.00 ea.: 2 roosters, same
kind, $2.50 for both. Cash. Mrs.
ce S. Bradshaw, Wrightsville,
10 Parks B. Pl. Rock April
cockerels, $12.50, F.O.B. Money
order. J. W. Kell, Ellijay.
CORNISH
2-hens, 18 mos. old, 2 pullets,
cockerel, June hatch. All thor-
oughbred and treated, $4.25 for
lot, F.0.B.; also'5 good pigs.
James Br own, Helena,
10 pure bred Cornish pullets
and rooster, $1.00; 2 roosters,
same breed and age, $1.50 ea.
aes Ernest Stephens, Lyons,
MINORCAS
6 R. O. P. Black Minorca
young Show Trpe_ roosters,
$1.75 ea., 2 or more; $1.50 ea.;
eges, hybrid crosses, B. Mi-
norcas-Leghorns,
$1.25 per 15, $6. 00 per GC Del.
JSS Harvard, Hawkinsville.
15 Buff Minorcas, AAA grade,
6 mos cockerels, $1. 00 ea.: 8
pure bred Buff Orp. and 2 cocks,
18 mos old, $1.00 ea. ee
Alice Lawson, Gainesville, Rt.
FRESH & CURED MEAT
FOR SALE
Old fashioned country cured
Brocks county hams, 10-25 Ibs.,
s5 lb. Ribbon Ga. cane syrup,
6 gal. to case, 60c gal. M.O.
only. L. E. Hutchinson, Quit-
man, Rt. 1.
Brooks county cured hams,
$30.00 per 100 Ibs. or 32c per
lb.; Red cane syrup, 6 gal, to
case, $3.50. Cash or money or-
der. C. R, Hutchinson, Quitman,
Rt. 1, Box 184.
HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
Bee Swarm Catcher (device
to catch immerging swarm and
transmit to new hive). Hasily
operated. Write for further in-
formation. I. L. Manley, Deca-
tur, 222 Lockwood Terrace.
Pure Tupelo extracted honey
in No.. 10 Ib. pails, $1.50 del.;
also baby lime butter-bean seed,
15c Ib. 5 lbs or more del. Mrs.
T. H. Flowers, Jesup.
3 Band Italian Queens and
package bees; 3 lb. package with
untested Queen, April-May del.
$3.15; 2 lb. pkg. with ~untested
Queen, April-May deh. $2.45.
FOB. John A. Crummey, Jesup,
Box 351.
BUTTER FOR SALE
6 lbs. fresh Jersey butter ea.
week, 30c lb. postpaid. Shipped
subject to approval in half brick
molds. Mrs.P. T. Eason, Bow-
don; Rt 2:
7 and 8 Ibs. Jersey butter per
week, 30c lb. postpaid 8rd zone.
Shipped subject to approval. Mrs.
B. D. Eason, Bowdon, Rt._2.
3 1-2 lbs. nice brick molded
Jersey butter, $1.00 del. in 1
shipment .to 8rd zone; peeled,
sundried apples, and unpeeled
peaches, 20c Ib. Del. 5 Ib. lot,
38rd zone. Mrs. L. A. Sanders,
Ashland, -
12 to 15 Ibs. nice, fresh butter
ea. week, 30c Ib. Del. Mrs.
Charles L. Willis, Talking Rock,
Rt. 2.
TOBACCO FOR SALE
Good, whole leaf tobacco,
chewing 12 lbs., $1.00; smok-
ing, 21 1dbs., 7be. Pip. Leroy
Lightsey, Screven, Rt. 2.
Good, Red Leaf, flue cured
chewing tobacco, 12 lbs. $1.00;
smoking, 12 lbs., 75c. P.P. Otis
Odell Lightsey, Screven, Rt. 2.
Good, home-made __ tobacco,
chewing, pipe or cigarette, 10c
100 lb. lots, 8c Ib, Lilla
Campbell, Surrency.
EGGS FOR SALE
Pure bred Dark Cornish eggs,
$1.00 per 15; mix. eggs, 1-2 to
3-4 Cornish, 50c per15. Un-
related stock. Crates ret. No
chks. Miss Florence Horne,
Grovetown.
Carefuly selected. Parks B.
R. eggs, 85c per 15, $1.45 for
30. Del. crate ret. Money or-
der. Breeding this str. 9 yrs.
Mrs. J. S. Raulerson, Rocking-
ham, Rt. 1, Box 27.
New Hampshire Red eggs, 75
per 15; also pecans, large and
seedling, 15c and ,10c per Ilb.;
dried apples, free worms and
peel, 15c lb. Mrs. J. A. Brows,
Bowdon, Rt. 3.
Pure Donaldson str.
ezgs.
$1.50 per setting, del. in Ga, Mrs.
Ray Peterson, Vidalia,
bloodtested,
Selected Cornish eges, $1.00
per 15, del. Mrs. Ruth Johnson,
Dawson, Rt. 2.
Selected eggs from thorough-
bred Donaldson st. R. I. Reds,
$1.00 per 15. Mrs. W. D.
Vaughan, Jackson, P. O. Box 183.
Eggs from R. C. Wyandottes.
Pure bred, bloodtested stock. 5c
ea. Del. Can furnish 100 each
week. Money order. sata BE. LL.
Todd, Valdosta.
Donaldson Red eggs, 75c per
15, plus postage: white scup-
pernong well rooted vines, 20c
ea. my farm. Mrs. A. C. Mc-
Corvey, Buena Vista.
Parks B. R. eggs, $3.00 per
100; 2 roosters, $1.00 ea. Mrs.
J. rs Erwin, Adairsville, Rt. 2.
Pure bred S. L. Wyandotte
eggs from Rose Comb hens, 60c
per 15. P. P. Mrs. Barl Wil-
son, Clarkesville, Rt. 1.
Pure bred Dark Cornish eggs,
$1.00 per 15, postpaid. Exc. 1
setting for Bermuda onion and E.
oe cabbage plants. Mrs. W. L.
Stoneycypher, Abbeville, Rt. 2.
Booking orders, B. R. eggs,
del in Spring, 75c per 15; $1.25
for 30. Mrs. Geo. Moxley, Mid-
ville, Rt. 2.)
Donaldsons . C. R. TP. Red
eggs. Officially culled and BWD
tested, $1.00 per 15; few choice
3 lb. cockerels, $1.00 ea. Mrs.
M. L. Peterson, Vidalia.
Direct Hansons L eggs,
| $7. 50 per 100; chicks, $12.50 per
hundred. F. R. Kennedy, ae
Mountain, Rt. 2. :
Bloodtested Buff Orp.
75e per 15, postpaid, or exch.
Mrs. Ida Buchanan, Chula.
Eggs from crossed heavy
breed, 383c doz. W. EL. Chapple,
Tunnel Hill
Pure bred Butt Orp. eg8s. from
Booths Lady Egg-a-Day str.
75c per 15, postpaid and in-
sured. J. H. Lord, Milan, Rt. 3.
S$. L. Wyandotte eggs, select-
ed, from winter layers, 75c per
15, del. Exec. for anything can
use. Clem Pritchett, Cisco, Rt.
1, Box 71.
Hatching eggs, Ringlet B. R.,
Partridge Rock, Pit games, Ex-
chequer Leghorn, bantams in B.
R., Maley, R. C. Blacks, B. B.
Red games. Absolutely pure bred
and show type, $1.50 per 15.
J. L. Berry, Norcross, Box 125.
Weekly, few settings pure Buff
Orp. eggs, $1.10 per 15; 8 or
more sets, $1.00 per setting. All
prepaid. Crates ret.; few bu.
O-too-tan beans, $5.00 bu. Exc.
1 bu. for 5 bu. corn. Mrs. Lillie
H. Jordan, Norwood, Rt. 2.
Booking orders for eggs from
Worlds Largest Giant Bronze
turkeys, $6.25 doz. prepaid: few
last spring toms, 25-30 Ibs.,
$10.00 ea. L. J. Ellis, Cumming.
Limited amount, AAA _ Big
English Barron W. Leghorn
eggs, $1.00 per 16, del. in Ga.
M. O. only. Mrs. Nellie <Grubbs,
Demorest.
Eggs from ped. trapnested,
200-300 ege record Eng. W. L.
Inc. lots of 250, 6c ea.; 15 eggs
for $1.50; custom hatching, 8c
per egg; baby chicks, same
strain, 17c ea.; other breeds,
10c ea. Mrs. Etta Harrison, Kath-
leen.,
Light Brahma eggs, $1.00 per
15. Crate ret. Mrs. Mamie Stone,
Adairsville, Rt. 2.
POULTRY WANTED
ANCONAS
Want 1 or 2 yr. old S. CG, An-
cona cockerels, no culls. Jas.
Carter, Valdosta, Rt. 1.
Want some Sheppard str. AAA
grade Ancona hens, not over a yr:
old. Have ancona eggs for sale,
85c per 15, postpaid. Mrs. L. D.
Elliott, Lavonia, Rt. 1. .
BANTAMS
Exe. pr. Ringneck pheasants
for trio Silver Sebrights or Jap-
anese Silkie bantams, CG T.
Gaines, Buford.
* CORNISH
Want 12 Cornish hens and 1
cockerel, free from disease and
reasonable price. Mrs. J. M.
Moxley, Soperton, Rt. 1.
= LEGHORNS
Want 4 direct Booths AAA
White Leghorn roosters, April
1936 hatch, for breeders. J. C. M.
Bohlen, Madison, Rt. 3.
Want 100 B. L. baby chicks to
raise on halves. Other party
pay postage; I furnish feed.
Minnie Horns, Eastman, Rt. 5.
QUAIL
Want 25 prs. quail for deliv-
ery March 1, Pay $2.00 pr. and
will secure permit for shipment.
D. W. Boone, Newnan.
Owning to lack of space, a few
ads had to be carried over to}
our March Ist issueKd.
OFFICE OF STATE ENTOMOLOGIST
Atlanta, Georgia
INSTRUCTIONS ON DIPPING SEED SWEET
Why Dip?To prevent the spread in the seed bed of
POTATOES
the Black Rot Disease and other infectious potato rots.
Growers who dip properly report that potatoes raised
from dipped seed keep much better and longef than
potatoes from seed not dipped.
Georgia regulations
for the production of potato plants for sale require that
the seed be dipped before being bedded.
What to UseBichloride of mercury, also called cor-
rosive sublimate, 1-1,000, or 1 ounce to each 8 gallons
of water.
What It DoesIt kills the spores or germs of the rot
diseases that are on the skin of the potato, keeping
them from growing into the potato and rotting it when
placed in the warm, moist bed. It does not cure a rot- ~
ten spot already in a potato.
Before Dipping1...Secure from a druceiat 4 ounces
of Bichloride of mercury if you have about 25 bushels of
seed to treat, or 8 ounces for each 75 bushels you have.
The technical grade is satisfactory.
2. Select a wooden container for the dip, mercury
will corrode metal and lose its strength. A barrel does
nicely for small lots, a wooden tank or vat may be found
used, but waste much of the dip.
3. Prepare beds to receive potatoes.
*
;more convenient for larger quantities. Also get several
hampers or crates to handle potatoes in. Sacks can be
4, Cull seed carefully, throwing out all potatoes that
have any rotten spots on them.
5. Grease hands with lard or oil to prevent chapping.
DippingDissolve the chemical in 2 wooden, enamel
for
rive well.
" egzs, or earthern vessel by pouring on it 1 quart of hot water
each ounce used, and stirri
:an then be poured in the cold water in the barrel or vat,
This solution
using 1 gallon of the hot solution (containing 4 ounces
for 5 to 8 minutes.
{of the chemical) to 30 gallons of cold water.
6. Set hamper of seed in the dip and allow to remain -
Remove, drain, and bed. It may
be more convenient to have one hamper soaking, one
draining and one being bedded at a time.
After Dipping 25 BushelsAdd 2 quarts of hot so- -
lution (containing 2 ounces of mercury) to the dip
it loses its strength. Add enough cold water to bring
the level up to the original 30 gallon mark. After the
next 25 bushels do this again.
been dipped, do not use the dip any more but make up a
fresh batch. The old dip will be too weak and muddy
to be any good.
During and After DippingDo not leave dip or pour
it out where stock can drink it or where it will seep
into a well.
It is a poison. Do not use the barrel or
wooden bucket for drinking water afterwards, a crock
or enamel vessel can be cleaned with hot water.
Properly dipped potatoes will keep in beds in which
barnyard manure is not used, until next summer or fall.
They can be dug up and fed to stock.
year.
flattering.
TOM O.NETLL. Entomologist.
THE OUTLOOK FOR TOBACCO
Dear Mr. Roberts: ;
I have just received and 4m now reading your issue
of the Georgia Market Bulletin of Monday, February L
I wish to congratulate you upon this issue and trust
that it will be followed by others just as good, which is
saying a good deal.
I do not know what you read in the press regarding
the outlook, acreage, etc., of tobacco for this particular
Our information, however, is that tobacco is up
to a very good stand and the prospects are really very
If the farmer will do his duty, and not
overplant, he will make money this year.
With warm personal regards, I am,
Blackshear, Ga. |
Yours very truly,
A. P. BRANTLEY.
GEORGIAS FAT STOCK ON PARADE
From The Progressive Farmer-Southern Ruralist
Every Georgia farmer who can possibly do so will
find it profitable to attend one or more of the five state-
wide fat stock shows and sales in March and April or
one of the dozen or more local shows and co-operative
sales of beef cattle that have been planned.
Proud of its record of starting the fat stock show
and sale movement in the Southeast, Savannah will
lead off the state shows with its sixth annual affair,
March 25-26.
If there are still any doubting Thomases as to the
quality or quantity of beef that Georgia can produce,
let them visit one of these shows.
M. P. Jarnagin, animal husbandman at the University
of Georgia, the value of livestock and livestock products
in the state had climbed to a level with cotton a year
ago (not counting seed nor benefit payments).
According to Dr.
If King
Cotton isnt willing to share his throne with the cow,
the hog, the hen, and the steer, Georgia is likely to de
throne him or force him to abdicate.
GEORGIA FAT STOCK SHOWS
Savannah, March 25-26.
Augusta, March 30-31.
Albany, April 6-7.
Macon, April 12-13.
Atlanta, April 20-21.
Moultrie, Apri] 27-28.
Other shows and sales or co-operative sales to be red .
during March and April are now being planned at Coe
jlumbus, Valdosta, Sylvania, Blakely, Americus, Tifton,
Blackshear,
Baxley, Mt. Verron and.
r localities.
Page Seven
After 75 bushels have |
8
Want single white man,
to live as one of
habits,
bad
family, and tend a crop. $12.00
o. for 8 mos. er all the year.
ust be good, willing worker.
ee Joyner, Hine
sville.
Want strong, healthy, indus-
trious, reliable m
an with small
family for truck.farm, one that
can keep in repair gas. eng., and
is handy with tools.
Waddelle, Pearson.
. Want white girl, not over 25,
to live as one of
light farm work.
vith middle-aged
family and do
Good home
couple. Mrs.
Mattie Spivey, Vidalia. |
Want young man or boy at
nee for gen. farm work. $11.00
month, board and laundry.
Camp, Sycamore, Rt. 1, Boxy
~ AS
356.
F.
Want middle- aged man, ius
or colored, unencumbered, to do
light farm work for board, small
salary;
near Atlanta.
Answer
by letter. Mrs. Louise Hartley,
Atlanta, 413 6th S
as 4 or 2 horse
man. House, ba
tas, Neds
farm to good
rn, water in
pasture, 3 mi. Tunnell Hill. See
at once for particulars.
A derson, Tunnel
ESs8;
1 Hill, Rt. 2,
Want country raised woman,
20-35 yrs.
to live as one of
family and help with light farm
work. Mrs. H. A
boro.
- Want couple to
eouple and
A. Watts, Tooms-
live with sacd
farm .on_ shares.
Could use colored man.
Come
see or give particulars first let-
sor. %: L. Rauton, Vidalia.
Want young man who knows
how to farm, to
help on small
farm, $9.00 mo., board and laun-
- dry. Must be good worker, heal-
hy and sound, J. A. Goldman, :
mity. ,
Want nice, go
od, - unencum-
Good place for right man,
good 2 horse farm, near Senior
high school.
good worker. M.
Gainesville, Rt. 6.
eS Want 10 to 12
hands, white or
m work. Also 3
ppers, 50-50 basis.
Must be sober and
G. Reynolds,
2 farm > wage
colored,
2-horse share
Farm lo-
cated Piedmont, schools, church-
es, daily mails. Southern Re aR
station. If cant
move self, do
not reply. Ref. required. + Cc.
Collier, Barnesville.
Want good man
or boy to live
in home with old couple and
work on farm.
anting and needi
home. Write at
Prefer one
ing permanent
once. E. G.
Balenger, Waco;' Rt. 2.
Want a reasonably old man
f tend lots of
nd patches, fer h
nthly salary.
garden work
ome and small
Write first.
H. G. Yeomans, Collins. _
Want good man, 30-50 yrs.
old, to plow and
help- on small
arm. Honest, sober and willing
orker.
and board,
$10. 00 to $12.00 month
John L. Bennett,
Screven, Rt 2, Box Si;
Want exp. man
(one that ean
milk) for farm work. $12.00 mo.
board and
hand. No. bad
tian preferred.
Ambrose.
- Want. nice,
woman, 25- 30, to
Ss one of family
farm work, for
laundry for good
habits, Chris-
J. W. Buchan,
Christian young
live in home
and help light
small salary.
Re Harrell, Barnesville, Rt. 2.
Wart settled, sober man and
wife to live in house with wid-.
ower (no children) and help
with farm and light farm work.
Good home.
_ $tillmore.
Write J. A. Spear,
Want an exp. farm hand for
s
or, colored. |
@tive Cars. 215. m
near Riverdale.
College Park, Rt.
1 horse farm, 50-50 basis. White
Prefer one can
i. So. Atlanta,
Will Wesley,
SDs
Want white man, 20-30 yrs.
for gen. farm work.
good plow hand,
able.
Write first.
Hazlehurst, Rt. 3,
Must be
honest, reli-
$12.00 mo, and _ board.
Ben F. Wilcox,
Box 150.
Want large or smal family of
ood workers, for
Taylor, Rochelle,
Want good, re
wages. A. B.
Rt. 1, Box 90.
liable, honest,
sober man, white or colored,
with. sufficient help to work a
good 2 horse farm on shares.
Pienty day work.
den, wood, pasture free.
House, gar-
Near
paved highway, church, school.
Send ref.
once,
tr 2
and particulars at
C. G. Oliver, Barnesville,
= Want white boy to do gen.
farm -work.
family and $12.00
nd Jes He kin
nt reliable
Live as one of
month, board
No bad habits.
man or boy,
year round to work on small
Mountain farm fo
and small salary.
aes Home.
r part of crop
Prefer one
WwW. H. Jones,
no
to keep right up with his work.
"} to plant it. ,
for
seed.
toothed cultivator. .
= Colon: We have ee growing Stoneville No. 2 Yor
the past two years. We like it because it is early and | t
the staple is longan inch and betterso it brings us.
a premium, from one-half to a cent above the market
for ordinary cotton. Then Stoneville comes in ahead
of the boll weevil if we plant early, which insures our
making a crop every year,
And now they have come out with an improved
Stoneville, which they call. Stoneville No. 2-B. Mr.
Bledsoe, the Agriculturist at the Georgia Experiment
Station, in a letter to our ginner, Mr. E. J. Swint, in
J onesboro, spoke very highly of it. He said it had done
well at the station the past year; that the bolls were/
larger, that it fruited more heavily, and that the staple
was even better than Stoneville No. 2. Mr. Swint had
gotten hold of some of the seed of Stoneville No. 2-B
and agreed to let us and a few other farmers in Clayton
County have it at what it cost him, provided we would
plant our whole crop in it so as not to get it mixed. He
also agreed to pay us $5.00 a ton above the market for
the seed next fall. Well, this sounded pretty good to us,
so we sold him our old Stoneville No. 2, planting stock
and bought the No. 2-B. We, or rather our croppers,
will have about thirty acres in all of this cotton and we
will let you know how we come out.
Our new cropper, Ben Carter, was so much interested
that he told us if we would furnish his seed he would
return to us two bushels for one next fall and this we
agreed to do. Ben, you know, has his own livestock and
is supposed to furnish himself, he paying us one-fourth
of the cotton and one-third of the corn. Ben has a
nice big pile of stove wood cut ahead for next summer
and last week, February 4 and 5, he dragged down his
stalks and ran up his terraces.. He is evidently going
One Variety Gin
You know we are right fortunate in vine a public-
spirited man in this community like C. J. Swint for our
ginner. He brought this Stoneville No. 2 cotton to
| Clayton County in 1934 and last year he succeeded in
getting 85 per cent of the farmers in his gin territory
He estimates that there were about 2,500
bales of cotton grown in Clayton County last year and
that the Stoneville cotton brought to the farmers of
this county at least $10.000.00 more than ordinary
cotton would have done. He calls his gin One Variety
Gin for Stoneville No. 2.
Now there are other good long staple varieties be-
sides Stoneville and the thing to do, as we see it, is to
try to have all the farmers in one community plant one
variety, then the mills and large cotton factors will
know where they can purchase a certain defivite grade
and staple and this will enable the ginner and the grower
to secure a higher price.
Competition
You see we cant compete with Texas and the Delta
section of Louisiana and Mississippi growing just cot-
ton, for they can make it for 5 cents a pound and here
in Georgia it costs us-at least 8 cents. So we must take
advantage of every point we can. -
The writer has grown cotton for five. cnts a pound,
but it was only on a special pet acre which produced
over a bale and it was fertilized plenty. We shall have
something to say about fertilizer for cotton in the March
First Bulletin. : _F. J. MERRIAM. -
IN OUR TRUCK GARDEN
We have often been asked the question: : Why doesnt
my lettuce head? We will tell you. It is because let-
tuce will not head in hot weather and.as a rule you plant
your lettuce so late in the spring that the weather be-
comes hot before it starts to head and then it goes to
It is hard to grow lettuce in competition with
Arizona and California, where they have irrigation and
climatic conditions are ideal for lettuce; but we have
grown nice hard heads of the Iceberg variety where
we planted seed in open ground the middle or last of
February.
The main trouble is that land usually stays wet so
late in the spring that it is difficult to prepare a seed
bed. The way we do is to break the land in the fall
and throw it into beds about six feet wide. Then the
land wont pack and the surface will dry out quickly
after a rain. We have a small patch on which we hope
to make good heads. We covered the beds with well
rotted stable manure and worked it in with a spring
Then we applied a 7-5-5 fertilizer
broadcast over these beds at the rate of a ton per acre,
worked that in with cultivator, dragged it level with a
plank drag and then sowed our seed with seed drill
eighteen inches apart, three rows to the bed, sowing the
seed practically on the surface. Later we shall thin to
one plant in a place ten inches apart and top dress with
nitrate of soda. To grow good lettuce it must be forced
and there is little use in planting it at all if you are not
prepared to fertilize it liberally.
Two Crops In One
At this time we sow a patch of radishes and apieank
broadcast. We mix the seed about one-third radish to
| two-thirds spinach. We sow this seed carefully so it
will not come up too thick but will at the same time
give us an even stand. The radish will come off ahead
of the spinach and will interfere with it very little. It
is needless to say that such a practice requires very
jrich land and lots of fertilizer. We fertilized our patch
Practically t. as di rib d
Monday, February ie :
tn the latitude of Atlanta we try to plant our
about the 5th of March. We have a piece of ric
shall fertilize these beds Bec broadeast on t ut
face and prepare a good seed bed with cultiva
drag. Then plant two rows to the bed so we .
them: with a horse. - :
Turnip Greens
It seems to us that Atlanta eats more fupaie: g
take it the year round, than any other vegetable
that reason, we try to have a continuous supp
have one patch,-a fourth of an acre, where the
were sown broadcast in January on land that ha
thrown into ridges in the fall. As a matter of
we wouldnt have this patch if the land had not
ridged, because as you know, it rained almost cor
ously last month.
Most country folks, as you know, hate to wor
Saturday afternoon, but in the trucking business
cant stand back on that account. Well, it hadnt r
for a couple of days and one Saturday afternoon abc
the middle of the month the tops of those ridges |
came dry enoligh to work, so we could run a Little
harrow over them. We got one of the Mayo boy
run the harrow and we sowed the seed broadcast.
was Seven Top seed that we had saved ourselves
summer, so we put down plenty of seed. We sg
behind. the harrow, leaving the seed on the su
Well, that night there came a gentle rain and the ne
day still more and practically every day for th
week. It is needless to say that we have a fine sta:
of turnips. When they get well started we shall
dress them heavily with fertilizer and nitrate of sod
We sowed another patch February 6 and that was
urday, too, by the way, only all the men got off at noon,
The ridges had been harrowed over though bet
ner, so we could do the. sowing by ourselves.
When a man works hard all the week and up t
ner on Saturday, it does seem as though he migh
Saturday afternoon to xo to town and enjoy his :
and purchase his provisions. So we try to let th
whenever we can. Even our Commissioner, Col
Roberts, and Hamilton Ralls, our director, to say n
ing of yours truly, like to get off and a ee the
. force go too. |
An Open Letter
Ke ectiae the One Variety Community.
Dear Mr. Merriam:
I am very glad to know that you will plant Stare
No. 2-B on your farm this year. It*is a splendid
riety, good yielder, early, and has a very uniform st
which runs 1 inch to 1 1-16 inches. I believe you
be well pleased with it. Stoneville cotton has done
throughout North Georgia for the past five yea
has been very popular with the farmers.
With reference to our one-variety communit i
development, you will be interested to know that
had 134 one-variety communities last year in 63 ce
ties. 15,194 farmers were members of one-var
communities. They grew a little more than 100,
bales on 200,000 acres. . This cotton brought an
age premium of one cent per pound above that for sl
cotton.
Farmers eainatad that the varieties used in 0
variety communities gave them an average 0
pounds of lint per acre more than was obtained
the old mixed variety plan: of production. |
the extra profit from premium and extra yield ave
$7.50 per acre, or a total of $1,500,000 in extra pr
The varieties used in the northern half of the Sta
4
one-variety community development were St
No. 2, D. & P. L., and Farm Relief.
All of these cottons have the ability to make la
yields, they are early, and have a staple which runs :
1 inch to 11-16 inches. There are more communities
ing Stoneville No: 2 than any other variety, Tt
southern half of the State, where wilt is preva
have been using Cokers Clevewilt very successfully
is a good yielding cotton and has a staple 1 inch to
inches. This year a considerable quantity of W.
Wannamakers Wonder-Wilt Dixie Triumph will be
to start one-variety communities in southeast Geor:
This variety also has a staple 1 inch to 11-16 in
A number of Georgia mills are now using cotto
duced in one-variety communities, and they Sa.
cotton meets their requirements as well as any w s
cotton which they have used. This, of course,
encouraging to us. Many Georgia mills are now U
cotton produced in one-variety communities exclusi
where they formerly used only western cotton. _
In 1930 only 16.4 per cent of Georgias crop was 1
inch staple and longer. Fifty-six per cent of the
crop was 15-16 inch and longer. This will give
very definite idea of how far we have come during
last five years.
I stopped to see you while in Atlanta last week,
you had just left the office. I shall be glad to co-op
with you in the publication of the Market Bul
any way that I can.
With best wishes, I am
Very truly yours, _
ee Oe Se WESTBROOK,
Cotton and Tobacco S