Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1937 April 1

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"HAMILTON RALLS, SUPERVISOR, MARKETING DIVISION.

STATE CAPITOL, ATLANTA, GEORGIA APRIL 1, 1937,

cing Forward to the agen Season

a @ petore us a report from the Bureau of

ult al Economics of the Agricultural Depart-+

Washington. This report is very complete. It

a world outlook on production in this coun-

nd abroad, together with the probable outlook for
on and prices during the present year. _

3 connection we felt it would be of interest

ly of value to you to know something of

orecas' regarding a few of the principal crops.

you are most interested. We shall therefore

you: a brief summary of their findings on

st encouraging feature in this report is that
is: expected to show a general increase in
ion ot - staple crops, the consumer de-

Eg which they haye heretofore been |

ithout. | This increase. in Eareteetns

| of tobacco. .



age nde of middling 7/8 in. Mtanle 6 on ten
arkets was 14.91 per pound, the average :
yas 13.92 per pound.
arch 30th. .The average pre-=-
outhern markets was 44 points
3 and bs vente on for one inch.

jae

fe ht

fang on State Farmers Market,

Atlanta, Today (March 30, 1937)
ee

ey per Cwt. Lb. (Fair & White). . .85-$1.15

per Cwt. Lb. (Best) . cave Lied= 1.40-

per doz. bunches .......:..... .40- .60

d Greens, per hamper ... (85-50

Irish per bu. (Crates)........-

ew Bliss Triumph tees ctcee 2s00= 2510

ee: -Hill) per Cwt. ........ 2.00- 2.25

oes (Sweet Kiln) per Cwt. Saeeiy 42 Boe 250

8, per doz. bunches .......000.~%-700- .35

pee eB Bs

per doz. bunches ....... 25-. .50

oocooe

we ecoovone

e@eoeeo



lad, per hamper 57 32, 345 ee 40



(0us season and 9 per cent Jess than the ten- -year aver-
age, the carry- over of foreign cotton is. materially

-above the average and the prospective production the

largest in history. They estimate the total foreign
production this season will reach 17, 500,000. bales.
Such a crop will exceed the 1936-37 United States
production by 5,900,000 bales. They. estimate an in-

| crease in foreign carry-over this year, and that the

supply. of such cotton will. be somewhat larger than

the: previous season, unless _ the 1937-1938 crop is.

smaller than expected.

They: estimate a still further reduction in the carry-
over. of American cotton, Also an increase in the

acreage and consequent: crop of American cotton this
year.

Furthermore, that if this years crop exceeds
or is greater than the reduction in the carry- -over

from August ist, 1936, to August Ist, 1937, a reduc-.

tion in price may be expected unless offset by an in-
creased demand = for American cotton, all of bases
Seems reasonable, a ne
TOBACCO

Nar Much change is expected in the market posttion
Domestic consumption is increasing but
this is being. offset by lower exports.
the requirements will be little, if any, greater than in
1936 and that no. increase in. the acreage thin year
seems justifiable, - :

WATERMELONS i=
Prices in 1936 were higher than in 1935: which would

indicate that the acreage this year. will be increased;

| that if growers respond to prices as they have. in the
past, it is Seely, that the United aye watermelon



HOG MARKET

March 295.1937. Prevailing avorage: prices Tat.

Atlanta packing plants: =

Heavies, 240 pounds and up, per CHL. steccees.

Basis No. 1 180-240 per Ghia ret eect 20

2 150-180 per Cwl.........5..0000 9.95

3 130- 150. per CWE eee eeeeeeeeees - 9.70

4 110-190 per Cwt.. 322. eds 2s, 1 8.20

5 60-100 per Cwt.. . 7.00 down

No, 7 medium thin and soft hogs bought at pre-
vailing prices,

4 : PA

Sy OULTRIE
Moultrie, Ga., March 29.Hog market 10 higher:

Heaviest 240 ee BNO ND oie is Glico Send
No. i, 180 to. 240.. nhytresseedaestasge sah SMO
No. 2, 150 to 180. steeeeeresectreceeteeeneess 8.60
No. 3, 130 to 150.
No. 4, 110 to 190. oo. oes coerce nese ced ehe sine 6.10
NO. 5s 60" to-1102 3: | 5.10

Fat sows 2.00 under Paavo hogs of whatever
weight basis they make, stags 6.60.





They estimate |

these money crops.

Canner _ * vine a es ie 3.75



NUMBER. 3

acreage will be the largest since 1923, with prices cor=

respondingly lower. eee
= PEANUTS - ;

The peanut acreage in 1936 was the largest on. rece

ord but on account of the drouth yields, were re

and prices were relatively good. This they esti ate
will result in some Ere increase in arene thi
years: :

nuts. will depend somewhat on the size of-this. x
cotton rey and. the volume of hog mene =

gmall lard supplies when the 1937. peanut crop is being.
mImarketed.
Improved consumer incemes have resulted eo ine

> creased demand for peanuts and peanut product:

nee has been some decrease foes recent month

a ralanable demand and price may be expecte <
_ From the foregoing it would seem advisable to
sue a middle course and not over- ~plant | on any i
Furthermore, to be sure to, plan
sufficient food crops to give you that. indepe
feeling; no matter how the market goes. ie
: (Continued On Page Three)



ATLANTA. .

oe ae ie piers Se ee

Fat beef types a $8 00@ 9.00
Medium, Mlesh types e650... cc sve 650@! 7.50 |
Fat, native types Pee ate 7.00@ 8.00 |

Medium types eRe Chali 6.00@ 6.50
-Common types deg sesepadsecas caren one: DO00@ 6.00

4 4 : ah

; Cows me
Fat Gots oe ei ei eas | B50@ 6.00

Medium | COWS | sy a at ee, 5.50
Canners, cutters, mostly 1% ae ae 4.50

Ble Se 4
_Fat egies sesssieses 500@ 6.00
Medium types : 5.

c Calves
Fat types . va as tnt ne Ng di 7.50@ ;
~ Medium. > fy pes. 5 ees cece Go ks cen ee 0 UO) 7.00.
Common - etc ees 5.00@ 5.50
Throwout types .....-.-ceeseeee







- MARKE T REPORT OF GEORGIA

PRODUCTS

April 1, 1937.

Frovallitg Wholesale Prices (F.0.B. Points Mentioned) Subject to Change.



Barnes-
Atlanta ville

-21-$ .22 Hae IO
20
20



S 14,
Ad- 14 01214
09- .10 209
A2= 14 12.
22> 425 45)
102 12 =<
Be win 6b 6 os 'bk a6 6 ken wis eke LO
~ A5-> .20
es A8= .20
Butter, best table (ib... 25- 30>
mixed (bu.) ce. L.50- 2.00
not mixed ee coves 200-

See eee
es

Palere S GT Abb 6 ha 0is ee ee lee
SAS ae re eee ee ee
COCETECCOHEFELCOCECELOE SOD OH

CSCS OHEDCOCHOOCOLOO MOO 6S

ry. SER OCC Ee 0 OOOO 01d.0-0 8 0. 2 0-0

green, per 100 lbs.).... _
bie, oe 100 age :

$18. 00-$20.00



Com=
merce





Dawson

17%

Ss ae

Ad
10

ef
[1 LELSae

bo
ot

SS

EVAL A



Glen



taray
ette ~

18
mig S
12%
210
08

LO

20

09
07

15
20
20

1.50.

1.75

1.00

275 | -

1.95

* 00- 20. 00



Metter
ld

18

ean
a
oes



Sanders-
ville





States- RS

poro

21
21
21

16
14
10
10
24
15
14
21
J8
35
1.50

2.25-3.00

1.10
2.00
8.00

3.00 |
25.00
. = 28.00

Valdosta



20
aed
15
14
12%
a 22 ;




" Published Semi-Monthly
By
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Executive Office:

State Capitol, Atlanta, Georgia. -
COLUMBUS ROBERTS
Commissioner of Agriculture
HAMILTON RALLS
Supervisor, Marketing Division

fw. Wa SIRES a
Assistant Supervisor, Marketing Division
MRS. ROBIN WOOD

Assistant Supervisor, Womens Division

F. J. MERRIAM, Editor |





THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1937

Be ~ Entered as second class matter February 15, 1922, at the Post
Office at Atlanta, Georgia, under the act of June 8, 1930. Accepted.
for mailing at ee rate of postage provided for m Section oe
Act of October 8, 1917. :

_ Notices of farm produce ana 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
nial 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 ae writer for



: imited space will not permit insertion of mataperet notices.
Sark legislative act the Market Bulletin does not assume any
ibility for any notice appearing in the Bulletin or trans-

at resulting therefrom, |

- SHIPPING POINT INFORMATION AND
PROGRESS OF CROPS |

This column will be continued through ihe season to keep
buyers informed regaiding the movements of produce in Georgia.
_ (Acreage figures furnished by U. S. Crop Reporting Board.)
~ ASPARAGUS: Georgia acreage this year 2,700; 3,100 planted
4936... The yield forecast for 1937 is 54,000 crates, with 62, 000 |
in 1036, The crop in Montezuma is in fair condition. Harvesting
began in January, but has been delayed by cold weather. Present
poevenent limited < few express shipments. eo
SNAP BEANS: No report as to acreage. Government report:
out April 13. Beans are expected to be ready for the market in
oS by May 1. ve
CABBAGE: This years acreage placed at 3,800, with 2,800
in 1936 and 1,600 in 1935. Crop is now moving in a small way with

ral movement. expected early in April. OG '

ENGLISH PEAS: Movement from South Georgia is -
light at present. Expected to move freely in. April.
ae LETTUCE: - Fine quality iecberg lettuce moving in very lim-
ited volume from Brunswick in carload and truck lots. o8 ses
"PEACHES: The low temperatures and frosts in Pobeaary
an March caused extreme damz se fo the commercial peach crop,
extent of the damage varyiu eZ widely. between the different.
sections, different orchards in the same section and different. parts
of the same orchards.
: spotted condition. Some growcrs have prospects of a full crop
nd at the other extreme there are some growers who have prac-
ically none, while others in between the two extremes have pros-
pects a two- thirds, one-half, one-third of a crop, or less. In our
judgment the crop as a whole will be about 50 per cent of Jast
years shipment.
POTATOES: Geaveis acreage of Trish potatoes is expected to be
: increased from 1,000 acres in 1936 to 1,600 acres this year, an
_ increase of 60 per cent, The crop was planted in February.
2 PEANUTS: The Georgia acreage for 1937 will be released
soon. The Federal report of acreage of March 1, peanuts for all
purposes for harvest this year 2,098, 000 acres in the United States
eompared. with 2,056,000 acres a year ago and 1,946,000 acres in

1935. These figures are 15 per cent higher than statistics of |.

acreage harvested for nuts. ef
STRAWBERRIES: Very te now available. Crop has been
- damaged by cold weather. Acreage at 600, with 820 acres in 1936.
; SWEET POTATOES: No acreage figures available as yet.
TOMATOES: Crop notes later.
WATERMELONS AND CANTALOUPES: Nothing on Can-
taloupes. Watermelon plantings in South Georgia . are. nearing
completion. A 5 per cent increase in acreage is expected, or 63, 000
acres compared with 60,000 acres in 1936.
The Pkeeg. Division of the Department of Agriculture will
f have daily information on the above crops and will act as a con-
tact agency between the producer-shipper and the trade. Any
mattiriog concerning sales, purchases or consignments. will be
promptly handled by this office or by the following managers of
e Farmers Markets in the different producing areas; |
we L. E. Payne, Manager, State Farmers Market, Atlanta, Ga.
- John N. Raines, Manager, State Farmers Market, Macon, Ga.
. a M. Joines, Manager, State Farmers Market, Thomasville, Ga.
Harrell Ww. Long, Manager, State Baers "Mar ket, Douglas, Ga. |

We have what is usually called a very |

LE F t :
THURSDAY, "APRIL 8
Weekly Egg Sale Every Thursday Thereafter

This sale will be held at two oclock, April 8, at the Warehouse

| of the State Farmers Market fronting on Washington Street Via-

duct in Atlanta, and will be under the supervision of the Market-
ing Division of the Department of Agriculture and in direct charge
of oe Georgia Farm Products Marketing Association.

All eggs for this sale must be forwarded so as to reach the

Market by the afternoon of April 7. Express and Parcel Post
shipments, also those by truck and in person should be addressed
or delivered to Mr. L. E. Payne, Manager, State Farmers Market,

Atlanta, Georgia, and all express receipts should be mailed to}

him,

A charge of one-half cent per dozen will be made to cover
marketing expenses, grading and candling.
under the supervision of the Chief Egg Inspector of the State
Department of Agriculture. =

REMEMBER: Address all shipments of eggs to -.- - L. E.
Payne, Manager, State Farmers Market, Atlanta, Georgia.



LABEL YOUR PRODUCTS |

The_Georgia law requires all products, such as canned fruits,
vegetables, meats, syrup and other ptomucts in containers offered
for sale.in this state to be labeled.

This label must show the name of the packer, miller, or manu-
facturer and the name eos the weight of the product contained
therein.

You put up something fine.
whom you wish to sell, do not.

Put an attractive label on it. By eoiaiving with the law, you
help to sell your products and make a future market for what
yyou have to sell.

Mee Tk: Purvis, Chief Food Inspector, states that many of
his food inspectors over the state are having to hold up canned
and bottled products, mostly syrup on grocers shelves, because of |
no label whatever. If you cant buy an attractive printed label,
write one ae and paste it on: your cans, then they will be
0. K.

You know about it, but others to

ae

Ganon FERTILIZERS FOR GEORGIA -

eo



The above is the title of Bulletin No. ies just issued by the Geor- }

gia Experiment Station, Experiment, Georgia.

It is revolutionary in its recommendation in that it cuts the

amount or percentage of Phosphoric Acid nearly in half and prac-
tically doubles the amount of Nitrogen and Potash above what has

been customary in a commercial fertilizer for cotton.

They recommended a_6-6-6, or a 6 per cent Nitrogen, 6 per cent

Phosphoric Acid, and 6 per cent Potash with a total application |

of from 500 to 600 lbs. per acre. = |

Where it is not possible to purchase a 6-6-6, they raps menand
400 Ibs. per acre of an 8-4-4 or-4-8-4 as they have it. They put Ni-
trogen first, Phosphoric Acid second, and Potash third to corres-
pond with other States. Then, they advise a top dressing of a
mixture of 100 Ibs. Nitrate of Soda and 32 Ibs. Muriate of Potash
per acre, put on immediately after chopping.

Their findings are the result of eight years experiments, 1928-
1935, in Lamar, Burk, Peach, Randolph, and Polk Counties to}
demonstrate what analysis and what quantity of fertilizer would
produce the most cotton for the money spent for fertilizer,

FARMER COOPERATIVES

_ In Macon, Georgia, on March 8th, the Georgia Farth Products
Marketing Association was formed by a group of men from differ-
ent sections of the State. Bi

The purpose of the Association is to operate on the State
Farmers Market as a selling agency.



burn, Georgia, temporary Vice President, and A. os Barwick, of
Thomasville, Georgia, Seretary.

This organization, whose home office will be af the State
Farmers Market, Macon, Georgia, will have a selling office on.
the State Farmers Market at Atlanta, Georgia, and will be ready
for business by April 5, -1937. j



MORE MONEY FROM HOGS

In the-handling of recent hog sales it appeared to us that prices
received were relatively low and the spread between the lighter
weights and number one hogs was too great. So we took the
matter up with representatives of the packers in Georgia who buy
most of our hogs, and Mr. McDowell, Manager of Swift & Company,
gave us their side of the question, which we hav condensed and
.give you herewith for your information. :

First, he states that for a period of 10 to 15 years summer
_hogs have averaaed 1 to 1% cents a pound highr than winter 4
hogs.

Second, during ve past winter, hogs have been dumped, you
might say, on the packing plants beyond their capacity, so they
had to be carried over and fed in the yards several days at con-
siderable expense, This, with extra exposure, caused some loss
from sickness which resulted. in lower. market prices. This cr owd-
ing on the market should be avoided.

Third, hogs should be fed until shoe come to number ones
in weight, 180 to 240 pounds. Then they will pring top prices.
There were too many light weight hogs the past winter, 2s, \3s,

and 4s, when only a few weeks more feeding would have put them ;

in the higher weight class.

Fourth, Dr. H. B. Raffensberger, in charge of the Moultrie
Federal Station, has worked out a swine sanitation plan by which
hogs raised under this plan show 50 per cent more pigs matured
per litter than are matured in the old way. The additional cost
of raising hogs under this swine sanitation plan is slight and this
means hogs free from internal parasites. Mr. McDowell states
that practically all the hogs they buy at Swift Plants are heavily
infested with these parasites which cuts the year ket price at Moul-
trie about 30 eents per ewt.

It will be helpful in correcting this situation if hog raisers
would arrange feed. erops. so that hogs can be finished to number

ones in each month of the year, thereby lengthening out the mar- |

keting season and insuring top prices for all hogs grown

oe J M. Sutton, State Veterinarian, will furnish additional in-



sanitation plan | in future issues of the

The grading will be}

Jd. T. Stewart of Ochloch-:
nee, Georgia, was elected temporary President; J. W. Zorn, Ash--





A MESSAGE :
MUNICIPAL MARI
OF-ATLANTA

The Municipal Market
lanta was established a
1923, through the efforts c
group of eight people intere
in building a market where
-tarmers of our State coul
their products.

The building housin,
market is built entirely of
erete and brick and is fire
throughout. Jt is kept c01
tably heated in winter wit
large gas units and pleas
cool and ventilated in su
with a system of fans thre
out the building.

In addition to the 75 b
selling farm products onl
the center of the market b
ing, we have eight mea -
kets, two seafood departm
a barber shop, six cafes
grocery. stores, all. of wh
round out our food progra
help the standholders to
their farm products. 2

Ten of our farm. prod
booths handle fresh
meat all winter, and cur
try meat all year round. Se
thousand head of live po
are sold at the market each
and if desired by the.
it is dressed at our large ch
dressing room. Thirty-fi
forty thousand rabbits are
every season by our stand
ers. Most of the rab it
trapped and a lot are
to the market alive.

And for the. person \W.
sweet tooth we have, two. ho
made cake stands, one
booth and one booth that
made-in-Atlanta ice cre
ig eee and winter.

An exchange was open
year ago at the market fe
use of our farm women.
eral hundred cans of
Quality Soup Mixture ha
sent in for sale from
Home Demonstration De
ments and pineapple pear h
and sweet pickled peaches,
J new canned products, afe
| being introduced at this Dd
Several women have se
handwork and their pres
and jellies, also rugs, han
and purses from our Ge
Mountain Industries, an
and belts from the blind
Vocational workers are
from this booth,

To Socuinmeeed) our cus
ers we have a free parking
covering a. quarter of a
which is supervised on
days by our special office re
also have a parking space
aside for farmers trucks
which they wholesale to
| standholders each week |

jens, eges and meal and

truck lot is a butter st
place where surplus b
bought by one of the sta
ers and packed for ship
the creamery. No ret
allowed on any of our lots,

The standholders at
nicipal Market cooperate
and patronize the peopl
wholesale on the Georgia
Market Ict when they hi:
products direet from thei
farms or farm connecti
State Market is -egreat 4
to us and as a wholesale
lecting and distributing
for farm products is. an
tution that has long been
ed in Atlanta. The M
Market is located just
blocks from the State
i cn the corner of Edgewoo
nue and Butler Street an
largest retail food center
farm products in Georgia.

At any tim 12, that any re
of the Market Bulletin are it
jlanta I shall be glad it they
take time to visit our ma
and make themselves kno
me at the office where I will

glad to diseuss matters

them pertaining to the d
: tion of their products.
EULA M.-
Market.
Municipal |



By 1 T. 1. Hoshall
had a great deal of exneriencs as a grower, packer,
eiver and distributor of fruits and vegetables, and

he great difference between these commodities that are

i packed properly and the same commodities that are
ied. ind packed as they should be to get the best results, I
would be well to try to outline as briefly as possible
most necessary things that should or must be done to
of any market, used, as any grower or shipper would

rer first thing to get fixed in mind is the fact that any
commodity, whether it be some: vegetable, fruit or
OES NOT IMPROVE WITH AGE OR HANDLING. It is
; ig it comes out of the ground or off the tree or vine,
hing that is of a perishable nature starts immediately to
te, some commodities very slowly and some very fast, but,
going down.. g
xt thing to consider is the fact that the grade will not
the grade you put into a container will finally go to the.
r as you have graded it, and as a large percentage of the
are EATING WITH THEIR EYES INSTEAD OF
s well to see that the grade is right, and that nothing
ontainer that is not good enough for the retailer to dis-
ell to go on the consumer's table. As most people have |
and dislikes, I would say, do not put anything in any
: that you would not buy or would not want. your wife
she went to the market to get fruit or Tercenies for your

eX thing to consider is the market you expect to use,
ite a difference in markets. If you expect to use a
narket, grow the varieties that southern markets want;
or eastern markets, then grow the varieties that those
nt, It makes no difference what you prefer in the way
or color, but you should determine what market you
and grow the things that market will PAY THE
then determine at what age or size those varieties or

s should be to suit that market and harvest, pack and
dingly. Please the market you expect to use and you ;

op of that market,
t thing to consider is the kind or size of container
rket is accustomed to or likes best and use that kind
iner, Forget your personal preference in tife matter
or kind of container and use the kind that the particular
ou expect to use wants.
ext thing to consider is competition:
ie will fit in with: as little competition as possible. Try

BO that. no one else has at the time you are ready to
Iso consider freight and express rates so that you will

vantage. This, will be very much | to noe personal

grow. commodities that are in demand. Pack or ship
OU would not want on your own table, and pack so

in reach the Market in the best possible condition, and
the things that can be handled without being depend -

ie ce tain market and I feel certain that your: efforts will
success beyond the average growers BRecess in the past



Grow MORE corion PER ACRE

ihe

east Ciieek Soil Erosion aa Conserye and

oil Fertility. High Yield per Acre on Present

eage Will Mean More Profit per Acre and.
low More Land for Soil Improving and |
Food and Feed Crops

ow to Gio More Cotton Per Acre:

est the seed to be sure they will germinate properly.
he last year over much of the state has caused large
of immature seed, and improper care in harvesting and

e damaged some other seed. With an adjusted cotton

ners cannot afford to get poor stands from bad seed.
if SEED AND BE SURE.

Treat the seed with Ceresan dust to kill ok bo dis~-
Treated seed on 21 test farms in Georgia last year
rd better stand than untreated seed. Treated seed

stands of healthier plants, especially when the seed are

Fertilize the cotton Mberally with a high grade fertilizer
en adapted to and profitable in your locality and on

eave, a Good Stand. Plant the cotton in 8% to 4-foot
chop it so as to leave about 2 stalks every foot in the

repare the land well and cultivate shallow and often.

your county agent, teacher of vocational agriculture,

tlement farm supervisor for simple instruction about
testing seed and other recommendations that will

ds of cotton per acre, Oil Mills and ginners are

operate ey helping farmers test and treat their plant-

WALTER = BROWN, Acting Director,

Plant your crops |.

nt eee Seed of high SeHine, good staple, locally ae ;

The expansion in hog production which started in 1935 was
checked by drouth in 1936 with the high prices for corn in rela-
tion to hog prices.
to raise fewer pigs in 1937. However, if prospects for a good corn
crop are favorable this would result in a sharp increase in breed-
ing for the fall pig crop.

The yearly average of hog prices is expected to be about.
the same as 1936, with probably a larger than average seasonal
advanee in the summer of 1937.

An increased consumer demand in this country due to im-
proved business conditions and wage advance is expected, but.
little change in foreign consumption. The Sagete outlook is
for somewhat higher prices. :

BEEF CATTLE

In view of. the smaller supplies of grain-fed cattle in late 1936
and early 19387, and the further improvement in consumer demand,
prices of such cattle are expected to rise to higher levels,

Prices of the lower grades of slaughter cattle during the first
half, of 1937 probably will advance at. least as much as usual for
the period. ee

A rather broad aeviand for replacement stock of all kinds is
predicted and will result in relatively high prices for cows and
heifers, 8

Conditions in general indicate that prices for all kinds of
cattle in 1937 will average higher than in 1936 and will be fairly
well maintained for 2 or 3 years or until hog production is in-
creased to near the levels of 1929-1933.

POULTRY AND EGGS
With the number of chickens only. slightly larger than a year
earlier, and the less favorable feed-egg ratio, the number of
| chickens hatched in 1937 is expected to be somewhat less than in|
1936.

what less than in 1936,

Prices in the spring are expected to pverage somewhat a
because of the probable large storage stock, and slightly higher
in the fall than for corresponding periods in 1936, :

Egg production. per hen is expected to be about the same in
the spring as in 1936 and greater in the last halt of lee because
of a more favorable feed-ege ratio. sy 3 i

Egg prices are expected to follow their usual seasonal course
}and average about the same as a year ago, probably a little higher
in bs spring and lower in the fall for corr ae periods,

TURKEYS | ;
The ees of turkeys raised in 1936 is estimated to be about
one-third larger than in 1935,

The discouraging low prices received Jast fall will Rah aily
discourage production in 1937, This, pecause of a E Singlet num-
ber raised, will result in aucTedsed demand,

ee

MISBRANDING OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES

(

Maine and Florida have recently been seized under the Food and
Drug Act because they were misbranded. Sacks branded or tagged
U. S. No.1 have been found to contain as high as 30 per cent of
defective stock not permitted in that grade. Shipments marked

4 U. S. Commercial have been found far below that grade, while

some branded U. S. No. 2 have been little better than culls.

Care on the part of shippers to make every shipment conform
to the grade shown by brand or tag. will save much trouble and
expense. Seizure, with later release by the Court for rebranding
under bond, is an expensive process which all Biippery will want
to avoid.

Flagrant or. repeated offenses may result in the confiscation

of entire carloads and the citation of the ee or handler for
criminal prosecution. :

S Shippers are warned that the Bureau of Agricultural Econom-
ics will cooperate closely with the Food and Drug Administration

in.stamping out ee misbranding practice which has_ seeene so
prevalent,

Copies of the grades can be obtained \ on gequient from the
Bureau of Agricultural spines neahes in Washington, D.C.
oe 16, 1937. s

GEORGIA LEGAL WEIGHTS - PER BUSHEL

ad

880800000 60,0008820000000000 000000000008 60 Pounds

2 SOS SLD 2 SRC ES AP EN Cee AEE OS OS 6 O68 Be 56



Shelled corn
Corn in ear CO COT HCOOH OCEHCEOO LED OD DDD O OR OOO DCS OO OS TO
Corn in shuck cee Cc cw ee coo ce es pads easasseepensecnes OO
Peas '
Rye
Oats
Barley bps peach ea erst) hess asses ee cbs bedis C6 seuse 47
trish potatoes SORORSOSREDORED EOC EO COCO C000 CG COCR o + 60
Sweet potatoes FEE SO eee GET COP Ere
| White beans LEGS y desea otis Gals ue pb op eee te ee ee OO
Clover seed SPae a8 peNSbNS COMM be ORs Cont Cab bere esc cearex O00
Timothy seed snmnveeescenevesresesovecesuecerecsess 40
Flaxseed 56
Hempseed SNe ake see 605 6555 tab CN 0 Ev bees caccue scat
Blue-grass seed 14
Buckwheat eee eee eo oe oe se enarsnerbies *oag cy Rein ays 1s EE
Dried peaches (unpeeled) ove te etweesecccces serescc 00
Dried peaches (peeled) . 38
Dried apples .... 24
Onions Soc wae ab Chee a ow sso ew 1 sae bbe ke bees ce eeu ORL
Stone coal ELUTE TGR ETS CRPEES SESE VS SSS TAS Ry SEE Me .80
Unslacked lime SOCTOCLOH OOM LOOK COHHTOESSESSCEO HE OOOOH 80
Turnips Vase ook phew cee awe OCU es be ke Ee
Cornmeal, bolted or. UNDONGT .. ee cvececcecccrerceens AS
Wheat bran : sce ceceseooeessececscceccesss 20
Cottonseed ts 30

Covodeoepoasccanscercvecoposescoecsencoceeeses 00
oo oo eeweseserregesseo eso oLooDLeoDsoEDo Oe ScOCEC: 56

Gro b's 9.0 09:0 0-0 0b 066 6h. 0.0 866.0 bib bo 6 560 6 8 Gu abe Cesc 32

ee lCHORMBSSSOOSHSGCHOHOSOLAOSHRGOOBSOAGOLTCEOODOCOS

PoACC CPOE SCOSOALEOOOHEOH DEBE COON ODE

COMB EOTEDOOSO SCOR EODSESEDO OS

COLL Ce HOO SOOO ATOOLOOOLE COED ODOD OOS

SS ets eters esssezstetszzszeyese:



This, it was felt, would cause hog producers |

Marketing ak poultry threats 1931 is conpetted to be some- |

Several ehigdionts of eons from Wisconsin: Michigan, :



cas be moved and furnish

make crop. Small family.
work. Good farmer. H.
Hill, Tallapoosa, ss

Want job on farm. Baperict ced E
in driving truck. Self, wife and
child. ee Knight, a @
hem,

Widow 35 years old. tes res
day labor on farm or crop on
halves. Have 16 year old son
and other children large enough
to work. All raised .on farm.
Have to be moved. Mrs. =
Sullivan, Villa Rica.

Want a place in good hems
doing light farm work. Nice ra
raised country girl 18 years of
age. References exchanged. For
particulars communicate with
Mrs. Pope Gore, Villa Rica.

Young girl wants place in
South Georgia doing light farm
work. $6:00 per month. Send
RR fare or come after. Miss
abies dane Rt. 1, Cha: N=

Good, nice family of 5.
move anywhere any time. Com-
municate with Mrs. Pope yore 2
Villa Rica. i

Want hoeing, chopping= for
the summer where I can have |
a little garden, a few chickens
and some bees. . Yankee Jorda, 's
Gen. Del., Waycross.

Young couple (without chil-
/dren)~ want crop, 50-50 basi
27 years old, life time exper
ence farming. Sober, hone
willing worker. Have to be fure
nished and moved. Arthur Sane
ders, 488 Crew Street, Atla

58 year old man wants make.
& crops Prefer with old people,
within 50 miles of Atlanta. Bod
some good fodder for sale. W
ter. Sheriff, Egan.

Want farm work. 29 y si
old, single. 2 yrs. exp. Refer-
ences. Willie Brewer, Atlanta,
136 Estoria Bi 3 :

Want a good Christian
for self and two girls, ag
and 15 in South Georgia
Church of God or Holines
51 years old, not able
field work, but the girls are
and know how to work, Mart
A. Horton, Rt. 1, Alapoha. | e

Young man experienced in
general farm work wants wor
on farm. Can drive truck. Ref-
erences furnished. Bill Jones,
773 Primrose St., Atlanta.

Single man, middle aged,
wants work on farm. Lots of
experience in farming. D.
Johnson, Rt. 3, {doneebore
Atlanta.

Middle- ated man with wif

a and three children wants work

on farm. Life experience farm-
ing. References. G. W. Weathi=
ers, 567 Glenn St., S. ee
Atlanta Woolen Mill.

Young married man, age 20,
wants job as overseer of truck
farm or will consider anything.
B. M, Collins, 459 Broyles, St ;
Atlanta, :

Want: a farm near Holly
Springs, with good pasture, close
to school and church. Mrs. Vir
gle Lowry, R.F.D. Canton.

Country raised unencumbe
white woman 35 years old wants.
any kind of light farm work
for room and board and $10.00
per month. References ex
changed. Mrs. J. M. Bri ges
Danville, ;

Girl 22 years old, wats hom
with elderly couple or small
family, Board and $20.00. per
month. No field work. Refer-
ences exch. HEzma McClain, Gen.
Del. Tallapoosa, E

Married man, 24 years old,
wants job on farm, Can drive
truck, tractor, etc., or farm 50-
50 basis. Experienced. At once.
= G. Rae Rt. 2, Washing~
on.

Refined, educated, unencum-
bered Christian widow, reared 0
large plantation, wants hom
at work, raising cattle, poultry
and gardening. Mrs. Lucille
Turner, Gen. Del., Atlanta.

Young man, 25 years old, rit
wife, experienced in farm wo
dairy, would like position. Ca
drive tractor. 4 e
Point.

Middle aged. man, wife a 8

| boys want work on farm. Well

experienced. Shares or wage
H. B. Seay, 300 Lowe St., S.We
Atlanta.

24 year old man wants job
| farm, tending chickens, hogs,

fcows, or other light farm work,

for $10.00 month, board and laun-
dry. No bad habits except
smoking. John Lee Kennedy,
431 Marietta St., N.W., Atlanta
Young man, age 20, hone
good habits, can drive trucks an
cars, handy with machine
wants work on a good farm, Roy
Jesse, Folkston. ;
47 year old woman, good. char=

| acter, healthy and willing to



work, wants | job with good peo
ie Roberts, Rt. 2
Gain





_ water necessary.

ae

- Consider wages.

- POSITIONS WANTED |



_ Widow, age 28, boy age 10,
want home on farm doing. light
farm work. Mrs. E. L. Jackson,
303 W. 7th St., Rome.

Want job on-farm, halves or
wages, and one horse. Wife, 2
children. Have to be furnished
and moved. References. P.M.
Martin, 307 Crew St., S.W., At-
lanta.

Unencumbered young man,
willing worker, wants place in
Christian home on farm, poultry
or dairy, for moderate salary.
Some experience on farm. Will
go anywhere. .Must. have -work
at once. H.C. Malone, 507 Ware
Ave., East Point, Phone Calhoun
3633.

+ Want place as Supt. of farm.
Man with family; with exp. with
cows,: hogs, poultry.

halves.
poosa.

L. W. Stallings, oe

Want 15-25 acres land to cul-.
- tivate on halves;

near school,
church, mail route, etc. Can fi-
nance self. .Wife, 2 childrenc

Good house, plenty. wood and

Atlanta, 777 Primrose St., S.E.

Want small. place near Atlanta
and Scotish Rite Hospital, : to

_ farm on halves or other basis.

Mrs. Grady Campbell, Rome,

Want 1 h. crop, 50-50 basis,
hear
garden and truck patches. Pre-

_ fer truck farm. Raised on farm.
_ Have to. be moved and furnished:

until crop made. 4. in family.

. wood, Atlanta, 164 Rawson St.

wants home on farm. Can doj
light farm. work...For board,
clothes. and a little spending

~ on 50-50 basis.

- anywhere.

_ farm * work. References.
_ Yarbrough, Vining.
ee Young man with > wife and

< and good, .

daughter,

Mother and son (14. yrs) want

light work on farm for. room,
poard and small salary. No bad

habits. Mrs. J. .B. Blitch, Vien- |
ona, care Cc. A. Fountain. |
- Want. job: doing light - farm |

ee work for $12 per month, board
: and laundry. .
Johnnie Luck, Fair

Age 22.: No bad
_ habits.

ests, Atlanta. ys
- One arm boy, no bad habits,

money. Prefer place with an
elderly couple on poultry farm.
Bill Overby, Rt. 2, Gainesville.

Want job as caretaker. > Must
have good house, no salary. Rich-
ard: King, 1821 Lakewood Ave.,
Atlanta.

- Large, Seapeciahle family
wants 2 horse or 1 horse place
Must be good
house, equipment, well located.
Move at-once. - Write fully.:Go
Have to be moved.
Noel King, Gray.

cat oe:

33 year old man, . wife and 3
small .children want 1 horse

= truck farm on 50-50. basis. Big

garden and potato patch, with

river or creek bottoms preferred. .

Mr. George Little-
S.W., At-

_ Near school.
ton, 164. Rawson St.,
Janta.

he Experienced - man wants work
jn green house, yard. or light
GR:

child wants work on farm. Wages
or shares. References. B. Li

- Moore, 270 Central Ave., Atlanta.

17. year. old white boy wants

3 job on farm, Has never lived

on farm before. Howard Rob-

erts, P. O. Box 108, Grantville.

- Want place with some acreage
and small pasture, not over 12

PbOxld miles from Atlanta. Stand-

ing rent. B. M. Whitley, 364

Crew. St., Atlanta.

Widow wants light farm work
Christian country

home, and small salary. Mrs.

, James. Pyron, Rt. 1,, Whitesburg,

care J. R. Clark, at Hurchins

= Ferry.

Want job on farm. Mother and
Well exp. raising
chickens and field work. Small
house.- Move at once. Callie
Marsingill, Atlanta, 359 Form-.
walt St.

Blacksmith wants os State
particulars and salary paid.
Emory Hall, Bowman.

47 yr. old woman, good char-.
acter and health, willing worker,
wants light farm work with good

Oe ~people for home and salary. Mrs.

_ Annie Roberts, Cuthbert, care
foe be Prith:
Want job. Can operate any

kind machinery and keep up
same. Grady po Dewey
Rose, Rt. 1,

- Middleaged man, wife, 5 chil-

_ dren, wants work on farm. Well
experienced and ref. H. A. Pope,
_ Atlanta,
5.W.

122 Richardson St.,

' Want job with refined, elder-

ly couple (without children), to

do light farm work. 39 yrs. old,

_ ambitious, willing to work. Ref.

exch. .Mrs. A. Aldridge, Mar-

shallville, Rt.

Widow and 14 yr. old daughter

_ want home on farm. Assist with
Z -pouitry anand oe | light _ farm_



52. years.
old. Or might take 2h. crop on:

R. C, Jones,

school and church. Want

Jee over for .farm - work..

Dawson.

oe) basis,





POSITIONS WANTED

Want job. Exp. dairyman and

some exp. in poultry. T. N.
Burton, Atlanta, 338 Gray St.,
N.W.

Widow wants home in Chris-
tian family for light farm work.
Small salary. Mrs. Donie Ham-
ilton, Atlanta, 64 Dorothy St.

Married man, 35 yrs. of age,
wants job on farm. Raised on
farm. Work for 85c per day.
Exp. car and truck driver. Must
have houseand be moved. H. E.
Gibson, Barnesville, 120 Zbu-
lon St.

Want 1 horse crop on halves.

Have to be moved and furnished -

while making crop, with day
work when not in crop.
farmer, reliable, good workers.
B. B. Hall, Dalton, 10 Glenn St.



FARM HELP WANTED



Want man and wife to make
crop. Wages, house, wood,. gar-
den. Experienced in. farming.
Miss Lilla Wright, Rt. 1, Mari-
etta..

Want a nice Christian girl
9r woman to come and live with
me and do light farm work.
Must be able to work. Mrs. El-
ten. Pagett, Rt. 1, Demorest.

Want man for a one or two
horse farm; Must have own
stock and tools-and able to run
self. W. W. Childers, Union
Grove, Lithcnia, Rt. 1.

Want strong healthy young
man (with small family) who

has had a high school educa-.
j tion and who can keep up gas

engines, handy with tools, ete.
Orla. Cowart,
Kirkland.

Want 1 horse fear and a
wage hands: (colored) $10.00 per
month and: board... -12: eae
work for wage hands. *Geou

| MeGord, Rt. 2, Norwood.

Want a white man 18 to 45
years of age to do general farm
work. Exp:, sober and no bad
habits, Live in- home, $10.00
month, . board and laundry. E.
Nowell, Richland.

Want single white man, 21-
35 years old, sober, honest and
reliable, experienced, to. tend
small one horse farm and do
chores around place. 50c a day,

board and laundry. A. M. Camp-

bell,- Rt. 1, Hortense. .

Want.-good -plow. hand, man or
boy, white or colored, for small
one. horse -crop. Reasonable
salary. J.,H. Cannon, Rt. 2,
Loganville. - :

Want farm help,
need apply. OSs
botton. | :

Want white poy who-- can
milk cows and understands gen-
eral. stock farm. work. . Must
not drink. Fair wages to begin.

_.No loafers
roy, 'Tal-

Opportunity for future. Can
use single colored man. S. T.
Kidder, Meigs.

Want a good farm hand (one
that does not drink) at- once.
$12.00 . per month, board and
laundry. R. F. Canady, Rt. 2,
Graymont.

Want a. good man 25 or 35
years old, with good reference
to live as one of the family and
work on farm balance of year.

Robert Conner, Bloomingdale.

Want a. middle-aged woman,
white or colored, to do light

| farm work for- home and small

salary. Mrs, W. A. Tanner, Rt.
2; Broxton. SS

Want a cropper that can milk,

|Or a wages hand that can milk.

Can use both. J. J. Roberts,

~ Want two hustling young men
to do general farm work, Whis-
ky drinkers and cigarette smok-
ers need not reply. $15.00 per
month, board, laundry. Apply
in person. Thos. M. Bowles,

| Alma.

Want 2.or 3 good hands in
same family (white or colored)
to work on farm in field and
other work such as cutting wood,
etc. R. EH, F. Jenkins, Lithia
Springs. . 5 Coe :

Want a man for a good 2 horse
farm. Good building, land, water
and surroundings;
mules to -sell--or- rent. -.Price
reasonable, J. A... Thompson,
Rockmart 22 : ee

Want families. to . cultivate
corn, cotton and truck crops.
Good land. 50-50 basis. Also
want wage hands: ee K. Moore,
Rt. 3, Canton. :

Want middle aged woman for

light farm work. ~ Reasonable
wages. Mrs. J. J. Golden, Rt.
2, Bremen. Pe She ee ks ;

Want a nice -middle-aged

young man to help on the farm.
Giv cotton paich or so much
let cotton. A stout, healthy
hand who can plow and _ hoe.
L. O. Richards, Rt. 1, Canton.
Want good farm hand 18 to
25 years old, expeMenced, no bad
habits, good worker. Reascn-
able salary and board. &. L.
Burks, Lumpkin. ee

Want at once ine man or

Mman.and wife for day work on |:

farm and have few acres. on.

rnished, |

o

A. a Stan-

Exp..

also pair of |~

House and. wood.|.

truck.



FARM HELP WANTED

Want sober, honest, Exp. 18
to 20 year old man to farm.
$12.00 per month, board and

laundry. Quitman Byrd, Rt. 2,
Broxton,
Want good, settled couple

(white or colored) or family
of three for farm work. Mrs.
Ruby Clark, 1550 Piedmont Ave.
N.E., Atlanta.

Want reliable man for a 2 or
3 horse farm. Standing rent
or 3rd and 4th. Good buildings,
good land, water and pasture,
two public roads through farm,
mail route and school bus, J. N.
Willingham, 188 Elizabeth St.,
N.E., Atlanta, Walnut 0329.

Want young lady, 25-30 years
of age with good references for
light farm work. $8.00 per
month, board, room, laundry.
B. A. Baxley, Genl. Del., Savan-
nah,

Want two settled men to work
on farm and stay through the
crop season. $14.00 per month,
board, laundry for 26 working
days. Dewey K. Fletcher, Am-
brose,

Want woman or
light farm work.
month and board.
Ingram, Acworth.

Want colored girl to help with
light farm work. Small salary
and board. References.
J. L. Porter, Rt: 1, Decatur.

Want woman 40 to 45 years
old to do light farm work,. no
field work. J. A. Fowler, Rt. 1,
Doraville.

girl to do
$8.00 per
Mrs. H. L.

Want white woman to live
| with family and do light farm
work, ._Good. home, salary. Miss

Genie Park, Rt. 1, Austell.

Want a good white woman, 40,
45 years old to do light farm

work. Eugene Bishop, Madison.

Want good, honest orphan

boy to help farm. Good chance

for right boy. S. T. Parker, So,
Wall St., Calhoun.

Want a clean, honest, single
white man to work farm. $12.00
a@ month, board and laundry.
W. G. Robinson, Box 31, Atta-
pulgus. :

Want unencumbered white
woman for light farm work. Live
ag one of the family. Reasonable
wages. Mrs. N. J. White, Rt. ad;
Hartwell.

Want woman 20- 30 years to do
light farm work for home and
a little spending money. Miss
Louise Hammock, its 2, Butler.

Want a good wage and and |

good cropper on 50-50 basis, J.
H. Trice, Barnesville.

Want a strong and healthy
white woman (country bred) for
light farm work. Good home
and small salary. R. D. Broad-
hurst, Box 404, Americus,

Want white or colored man,

able to work large one horse
crop. $12.00 per month and
board; or will furnish land and
fertilizer for a large 2 horse
crop on halves.. Must be steady
worker, no bad habits. Mrs.
A. L. Barnes, Route C, Griffin.

Want good -wage hand at.

once, sober, honest, good worker,

good references, $10.00 - per
month and board. Come. Dont
write. W. P. Williamson, Rt. 1,
Rochelle,

Want colored man and wife,
50-60 years old, for general
farm work. House, wood, $20.00
@ month, N. Hi. White, Fit. 2;
Decatur,

Wanta sober, none man with

some capital to be a partner in
a dairy. Have 6 cows and a
grade A dairy barn. Ready to
operate: OH. Ak. Seay, Rt.
Ellenwood.

Want man to farm 30-60 acres
on share basis. Start immedi-
ately, White or colored. J. M.
Head, Rt. 1, Powder Springs,

Want man and wife (experi-
enced) to make crop. Wages.
Furnish house, wood, garden.
$15.00 per month for good hand.
Jesse D. Scoggins, Rt 4, Sum-
merville;

Want good man for 32 acre
farm, 24 acre cultivation, 11 mi.
Atlanta. 4 room house and barn.
Halves. F, B. Wilkes, Vinings.

Want man and wife, both to
work. Small farm near Atlanta.
furnish house, wood, lights,
$15.00- mo. -Hugene Harris, At-
lanta, 582..Piedmont Ave, N.E.

Wanted reliable person within
25 mi.. Perry, to raise English
Ww. Leg. chicks on. halves to 2
lbs. Can furnish 350 eggs at
a time; also sell eggs 5c each.
Baby chicks Same strain 12c ea.
Custom hatching 8c _ per: egg.
Mrs. Etta. Harrison, Kathleen,

Want partner to furnish 25 or
30 thorough bred hens and roos-
ter, any breed to raise on halves.
Ideal open range. Also take bees

| $ame way and give you a square

deal. Give gilt edge references.
Cc. Weymon a. Rt. 2, Hart-
well, :

Want. sinele: man from April
to. Sept. .1... $75.00 and board to
hustler.. Must. have truck .farm-
ing experionte. and able

Mrs.

laundry.

2,1



FARM HELP WANTED

man to work on yard, care for
chickens, garden and. general
light work, Room, board, small
salary. Details and references
in: first. letter to J. H.. Street,
P. O. Box 433, Atlanta.

Want a nice refined girl or
woman do light farm work for
home. Mrs. C. E. Smith, ae

Fayette.

Want a good farm ee exDp.,
for general farm work and milk-
ing. Honest and sober. $12.00
a month, board and laundry. G.
E. Wheeler, LaFayette.

Want unencumbered, middle-
aged man, for overseer of 8
horse farm. Well experienced,
able handle labor, sober, hon-
est, able get results and_ sat.
references. Good salary. J. E.
Whitley, LaGrange.

- Want middle
raised woman for light farm
work. Must be clean and _ heal-
thy. Board, small salary. Mrs.
F, E. Bowen, Rt. 4, Americus.

Want 1 horse man on halves.
5 room house; close to church

and school, Furnish reliable
family. -.9; . Jcilgore, Rte 4,
Duluth.

Want man or boy 18 to 40 yrs.

old for general farm work. $15.00

a month and board. W. T.
Hendley, Rt. 4, Vienna. :
Want unencumbered white

woman 28 to 35 years old to do

light. farm work, $3.00 a week,

room and board. Mrs. G. W.
Bogman, 1097 Oxford Rd., N.E.,
Atlanta, phone Dea. 43866.

Want a girl or middle aged

woman to do light farm work.
$2.50 a week until get started,
then increase wages.
ra Harrington, Rt. 3, Hazlehurst.

Want a nice white lady to do

light farm. work at once. W. J..

Weaver, Chula.

Want 2 good strong men, no
bad habits, willing workers, to
make crop. Wages, board and
Large 1 horse crop to
let. on halves. Good land for
corn and cotten, some good bot-
toms. Near school and churches.
Fulton County. W. B. Douglas,
Rt. 2, Alpharetta.

Want a colored man and wife
to work on farm. Furnish house,
wood and pay what is right. B.
EK. Putnam, Rt. 3, Lithonia.

Want man for one horse farm,

20- acres in cultivation, 3 pas-
tures, water in
springs,.2 houses3 and . rooms.
Standing rent only. Furnish half
of milk of fine cow for care of
same. 10 miles So. of Atlanta.
Miss Ida Rowden, Ellenwood.

Want good plow hand,.white
or colored, $15.00 per month and-
board, 20 miles east of Atlanta.
ys : Garner, Luxomni.

Want good farm hand for gen-
eral farm work: $13.00 a month
and ees 15 miles west from
Decatur, J. W. Garner, Luxomni.

Want. at once middle aged man,_

| Or man and wife (no children),

for farm work. Must know how
to farm. No bad habits. A. M.
Groover, Rt. B, Ludowici.

Want experienced, willing

worker, 20 to 40. years of age,

waite, to-work on farm, $13.00

nye nth, board and ee No
ved abits. WH. Ad NP Rt. 3, Al-
pharetta. ;

Want industrious wha oy 18
or 20 yrs. old, no bad habits,
to work on farm.

and board. Prefer one experi-

enced in farm work. W. A, Scott,.

Re. 1, Moran.

Want single man aha knows
how to plow for t horse crop,
Must be willing worker, healthy,
able to work, honest, sober, no
bad habits. $13.00. a. month,
board and laundry. Live as one
of the family. Lee oyun, Hines-
ville.

Want single man to make a
crop. Pay reasonable salary and
furnish home when not at work.
Could furnish house for man
and wife to make crop on halves.
Apply at once. /H. E. Jackson,
Htiz 25 Alpharetta.

Wanted young white girl, no
children, to help do light farm
work. Good home and good pay.
Taft Parker, Rt. 1, Bx 99, Con-
yers.

Want a family with one or two
good plow hands at once, Come
or write. No drunkards. - G.
Morris, Bowdon, =

Want large white family toi
South Georgia that can move
self to work tobacco crop. Plants
now ready. Write first. Neal
T. Williams, Buena Vista.

Want stout, able bodied plow
hand 20 to 45 years old at once.
$12.50 a month, board and laun-
dry. J. T. Speight, Rt. 2, Buch-
anan,

Want single colored man for.

farm work, $12.00 a month and
board.: Consider man and wife.
A. H. S; Ginn, Vanna. - s

Unencumbered white woman

40 to-50 years of age to do light

No oe work. Home



. Ret. ie

| Chamblee.

man, 502 Walnut St., Macc

|farm work. Live in house,
age country,

3, Alpharetta.

Mrs. Lau-~

each, wood,

laundry, or. a 00 a mon

$10.00 a month }:

plenty of

and. church.

| Work,













































































Thursday, A ) i
FARM HELP W

Want at once a man to
farm, one that knows
plow and do general farm
$10.00 a month, board and
dry. Owen Prescott, Fol

Want a settled woman
light farm work for ho
small salary. J. L. Claxton
rison.

Want a colored couple
afraid of work, man to helt
crop and woman do ie
work. At once. Mrs. O.
mon, Peachtree-Dunwoody

Want experienced farmer
sufficient help to operate
3 horse farm in 1938.
able to furnish self. R.S

Want settled woman for

a month and some clothes.
H. White, Rt. 1, Leesbur

Want white, settled, co

raised woman for light
work. No field: work.
home. Mrs. David.
Chula. |

Want farm hand wi
Pay well. Furnish house
wood. Middle age couple.
more than 3 in family
J. B. Mobley, Social Cit

Want a white man, experi
in general farming, honest
ber, good worker, age 20. to
$12.50 per month, board
laundry. L. E.: McCleske

Want a
hand.
time, board and washin.
erences. ea Lovett, Vi

Want a settled woman
with chickens and o
farm work. Room, ~
reasonable salary. . Mrs.
Chappell, Bloomfield Rd,

Farm day labor wan
tire families, white Ore.
Steady work year round.
Collier, Barnesville. :

Want middle aged neg
(no children) for light
work. Both to work.
home furnished and $5.
week for both. Dr. J. _
las, Albany.

Farm hand wanted: oe
Must be. aoneh ae to.
single man.

good

one horse farm, 50-50.
Furnish reasonable -amou
make crop. J. W. Sticher.
Carrollton.

Want a good Honbst Se
aged white man to he
a corn crop.and truck farz
sonable wages, board a

dry. Nice people.
write... Dack aa Rt
lonega.

Want a farm. hapa
with chickens, 50c a da

son.

Want a good man or.
farm, willing to. work. N
ard. $10 to $12 per
board and laundry. -
Bennett, Rt. 2; Bx 31; Si

Want experienced fat h
$10.00 a month, board an
dry. Come at once,
Mullinax, Rt. 1, Duluth.
Dixie Dood Farm. Sos vA

Want country woman
as one of the family to
work. Good home,
Bryant, Rt. 2; Cleveland.

Want a young boy or m
over 45 years, exp. plowin
farm work. $10 per mont
board, at once. H. B.
(colored), Rt. 2, Wadley.

Want a settled man
about 40-50 years old, w
live in house with me as
taker of farm. At once.
S. A. Prewett, Rt. 1, Winstc

Want -nice healthy whit
an, 25 and 35 years, to do 1
farm work for home and
salary. J. E. Hammock,
Butler.

Want good family with
stock, able to .run thems
and pay: standing rent, to
run a 2 1-2 horse farm. 5
house, good water and pa
out buildings.
paved highway near town,
W.





Mansfield.

Want man for 30 acres
land, 4 room house, 1 acr
cultivation, plenty woo
water. Near school and chu
Write H. F. Harrell, Tuck

Want a nice girl to
one of the family to d
farm work, no field work. _
manent home for right gi
good. worker. Mrs. Paul B
worth, Bloomingdale. |

Want man or boy for
farm worka good plo
$12. 00. a month, board ant
dry. Could use 2 plow
also want girl or 4
as one of: family
$4.00.
ilson, Re 4,



























. Ptr laying by time.

e







Ms



hay, grain, cane, potatoes.

Marketing flowers,
_ garden work, , Mrs. Paul Camp, |


















money, .

RED 4

ursday, April 1, 1937.
| _FARM HELP WANTED

- Want man 28 to 30 years old,
single, high school education, to
ork on farm. Room, board and
ionthly salary. . Dont apply un-
ss you can give best of. refer-
ences as to character. F.. N.
ills, Box 41, Hapeville.

Want 2 small families or 1
eon with 2 men for wages,

00 mo. ea, house and gar-
en spot. White or colored. FE.
_Hdenfield, Stillmore, Rt. i
ox 34.

Want partner interested
poultry with some money to help
finance, Sober, exp., references

2

- Want woman for light f-rm
work for home and small sal-
y,; also want party for 2 h,
crop on 8rds and 4ths. Mrs,
India Osborn, Clermont, Rt. 1,

work, for help on farm. Board
clothes and little spending
money.. Mrs. Maggicline Green,
Wadley, Rt. 2, Box 72.

Want nice, unencumbered, not
over 30 yrs. to do light farm

ary. S. M. Pritchett, Hazlehurst,
Hes,

_ Want middle aged unencum-
bered white woman for light
_ fatin work. No field work. State

. full particulars in first letter and
| wages expected.
Rt. 4, Eatonton.

W. J. Linker,

Want young single man, hon-
est and reliable, who knows how
eto farm, $12. 60 per month wun-
Hoke Cau-
. dell, Rt. 1, Homer,

white woman, 35 to45 years old,
for light farm work. No field
- work. Mrs. G. Ww. Bryant, Buch-
_ anan.

~ Want 18 to 22 year old high
school boy to work on farm: the
test of spring and summer. Able
drive car and truck preferred.


























and references. Hugh C. For-
ester, Head River.

. Want unencumbered _ white
woman, 35 or 40 years old, who
is not afraid of work fer light
farm work. $10.00 -per month:
Be board. No field work. Mrs:
, C. Ward, Geneva.

ee colored man and wife to
work on farm for wages. Not
Over 85 years old: Will furnish
house. Come at once. Mrs. C.
J. W. Camp, Rt. 1, Lithonia.

_ Want reliable, industrious man
to work on farm. $15.00 a month,
board and laundry. Loyal Groo-
ver, Ludowici.

Want general white farm hand
with extra help. Good workers.
Year round work. Good future
for right. help: W. A. Dough-
erty, Rt. 1, Americus. 2

Want a neat, celean, smart
white woman of good character,





farm work. Small salary =
board. Mrs. I. G. Goolsby, Rt.
Hampton.

~ Want: a. settled single man to
farm. Wages or halves. Live in
home with me.
curser need apply. T. V. At
Roswell...

Want country raised woman, |.

- 20- 45 yrs. old help with light
farm work. Board and $1.00 per
week. Bob Ragan, Coleman.

_ Want- young man, 20-35 yrs.
to. make gen. farm 1 horse crop:
No.
tobacco nor cotton. At once.
'Travis Davis, Folkston, Rt. 2,



Box 26.

Want refined, middle-aged
| woman to assist in growing and
and other

Marietta, Rt.

Want Fees, settled,
white woman to live as one of

Room, hoard and small salary.
Mrs. F. A. McRae, Boston.

a. and do light farm work.







Want good man first class 1
horse crop on halves. Every-
thing in extra good cond. Good
Proposition to right party. J.
W. Elder, Fairburn.

Want at once exp. farm hand

crop. Board, laundry, good
wages, Good proposition to right
Party. G. CO. Turner, Waco, Rt.



: Want settled, came hered:
refined, white woman for light
farm work. Good. home. and
mescs;. Mrs, b.. C. Parramore,

: Valdosta, Rt. 3; Box::219..



Want 2 good hands for wages
to work on farm,: by -month or
day. Pay cash, houses and wood
furnished, J. He Leverett, Par-
rott.
Want farm hand; 14-18 yrs.
old, to do farm work. Give cot-
ton patch and some: spending
Perry Payne, Cumming,
Want man for farm | ark for
3 mos, $12.00 mo. and board.

Can furnish house for man and



wite,

in

J. C. Ethridge, Fender, |

Want colored boy, exp, in farm:

work for home and small gal-l.

- Want a good middie aed eon:

State salary expected per month|

35 or 40 years old, to do light.

No drinker or,

t Lines,

to plant and cultivaate 1 horse |



J. ae asia A



FARM HELP WANTED

Want a family to work a 2 or
3 horse farm. 2 good houses,
One, 4 rooms; other 3 rooms:
Good barn, water. Near school
and bus line, 2 1-2 miles east
of Greensboro. EH. R. Joyner,
Greensboro.

Want man with familly for 1
horse farm on. halves, or for
wages. 3 room house on school
route. Or will hire single: man.
Board and salary. Bee. , Smith,
Sharpsburg.

Want colored single man to
work on small farm. Room,
board and wages. R. P. Yonge-
ma, Atlanta, Rt.-1, Box 669.

Want white girl to live in
home and help with, light farm
work. No field work, $2.00
week and good home, Mrs: EK.

P. Gunter, Aten, 2318 ist Ave.,

N. E.

how to farm, honest and re-
Hable, no bad habits, for farm
work. $10.00 mo. and board.

C. F. Waldrip, Gainesville, Rt, 2.

Want at once good sober, exp.,
honest, respectable, willing to
work wage hand. $10.00-mo. At
once. Robert A. Gaines, Elber-
ton, Rt. 3, Box 144,

Want thoroughly reliable fam-
ily to occupy roomy house, plen-
ty good water and wood, rent
free, to help gather crop of Eng,
peas, beans, butter-beans and
work in tobacco, make up large
crop sugar cane next yr. Lewis
W:. Thompson, Swainsboro,

Want single, - reliable; ' sober
man on farm for wages or part
crop, or full crop on halves. Bl-
mon H; Watson, Auburn, Rt. 1.

Want man with small family
with a truck to run;a corn mill
and haul-meal to town, on share

E. Callas, Gainesville, 39
Oak St. :

. Want middleaged woman | to
stay in home with elderly woman
and help: with light farm work.
ne Ss. Goggins, Marietta,
R ae

Want good, white,-single young
farm hand. John Pritchard,
Stockbridge, Rt. 1.

Want colored couple for gon:
eral work on small farm near
Buckhead: Able to make gar-
den and do all work. $25.00.mo,
and board. Mrs. J.:R: oe
Atlanta, 185 Roswell Rd. .

CATTLE FOR SALE





Reg. Guernsey bull calf, $75.

Splendid breeding on both sides.
Particulars upon application.
W.-A. Daniel; Tennille.

Pure bred not reg. 2 yrs. old

| Guernsey male, ready for serv-:

ice; gentle, work to cart or plow,
sell or trade for 10 B. Sree
yr. old hens, or 35 pure bred

(chicken) hens, any breed.
Ponza ea Waycross, Rt. 5,
Box 78. : :

2 Ceenes bull calves, reg. |

buyers name. 1 mo. old, $15;

4 mos; old, $30. 00. A.K, Cham- |

lee, Sparta.
Sayre
Island pioed lines, $50.00
farm. _C, Williams, Doug-
a Eg

6 yr. old cream Jersey cow,
fresh in, 3. gal. or more, gentle,

easy to milk, $50.00; extra large

pink Spanish peanuts, $1.60 bu.
not prepaid. Exc. for pure bred

W. L. eggs. Ray. H. Jordan,
Senoia, Rt. 2.
Reg. Guernsey bull, Arga-

mont. Tamer. Reg. No. 208,-
432. Born Dec. 7, 1932, $85.00;
5 thin, heavy springing 3-4
Guernsey ieafere. $35.00 to
$50.00. James E. Pace, College
Park, Rt. 2, Box 400-A.

4 gal. fresh in, good cond.
cow. L. H. Bates, Covington.

4 yr. old yoke oxen, horned,
well broke, good qualities, about

800 1b, ea.,-good workers, $100.

H. B. Cain, Auburn, Rt.

' Heifer, part Jersey, fresh in
May, $35.00; 7 mos. oid black
Jersey bull, $1500; 2 mules, 950:
Ibs. ea. good cond. Sell, or swap
mules for smaller pair, sound,
good workers, not over 11 yrs.
old. Martin Parker,- Austell,
Rt. 2.

Reg. 5 yr. old Guernsey bull,
good individual. Excellent blood
$75.00 F.0.B. Trade for
good cow. W. A. Taliaferro,
Blue Ridge.

12 head well bred Herefords;
3 bulls, 6 heifers, 3 calves. R. BH.
Aycock, Monroe.

Reg. Polled Shorthorn bulls.
Ww. R. Pullen, Damascus. "

Nice Jersey cow, about 2 gal,
daily, freshen - 3rd calf July,
$30.00, F.0.B.. Mrs. W. J.
Smith,: Odessadale.

High grade Jersey 9 mos. old
bull, ready for srvice. EH. W.

Hendon, Marietta, Rt. 2.

2 Guernsey males, 8-15 mos.
Best of breeding, sub. to reg.
Geo. M. Wicker, Americus,

Grade stock: 2, Jersey cows,
freshened March 16: other due
2-3 weeks: 3 Jersey: heifers, 1
freshened 7 wks.; others, 60-90
days; 2: Guernsey heifers, due
60-90 days, Govt. tested free
from bangs. H. G.: Harrison, At-

lanta, 232. State Capitol, or Sane}.

dersville. on. Saturdays... -

He FB Ee eee

MARKET

old reg. Jersey butt}
at)









CATTLE F OR SALE

t

Cow, never goes as ue
4 gal.; 70 last March W. L. now
laying pullets, $50.00. -S. J.
Se Atlanta, Rt. 5, Box

8.

Good cow for sale, J. Jolley,
Atlanta, Rt. 7, Box 109,

Pure bred Jersey 20 mos. old
bull, sub. to reg. $25.00' .0.B.
J. M. Gore, Camilla,

1 1-2 yr. old reg, 0. T. C. male,
$25.00; 2 yr. old S. P, C. 200
lbs. sow, $25.00; 1 horse wagon,
good cond., $20. 00. W. EB. Wall,
Monticello? Rt. 4.

Some milking and beef cows,
also syrup (in gal. pails) for
sale. Mrs. Minnie Tracy, Lake
Park, Rt. 2, Box 18. |

Extra fine reg. Jersey cow,
frshen April 12, 2nd calf. Per-
fect type; over 3 gal: 1st calf

| (which won 1st prize at county
Want young man who knows

fair). Moderately priced. Lin-
ton G. Ray, Covington, Rt. 2.

Reg. yearling horn-type Here-
ford bulls; also few reg. heif-
ers, Percy A. Price, Albany. |

Reg. Polled Hereford bull
calves, reasonable prices. E. T.
Boswell, Jr., Siloam.

3 good milch cows, with young
calves, for Bale. A. K. Chamlee,
Sparta.

Cow, fresh in with second calf,
priced right. Mrs.'S, A. Phil-
lips, Palmetto, Rt. 1.

Thoroughbred Jersey male, 22
months old; can be reg. $35.00
cash at my barn. W. R: Thomp-
son, Lawrenceville, Rt. 1.

Cow for sale. Mrs. Clyde San-
difer, Locust Grove.

Jersey cow, 2nd calf, 7 days
old, 4 gal. if well fed; also good
country ham at market price.
Dozier Barnett, Riverdale.

8 gal. milch cow, freshen in
May. -B.H. Dunn, Brooks.

CATTLE WANTED. .

Want pure bred Shorthorn
calf. Advise what you have and
price; Harvey Miller, Hogans-
ville. ee Lee

Exe. 75 AAA Plymouth Rock
pullets for good plow: ox.: A. A.
Cannon, Covington, Rt. 1, Box
Woe ;

Want young heifer to freshen
in Fall, cheap, or will exc. -baby
chicks; -also want good:. breed
sow, cheap. Charles Brown,
Stone Min., Rt. 1. .

Exc. $15.00 value for young,





bred heifer or for. young hens},

and. rooster, any. kind. J. T.

| Hubbard, 200 Whitehall St., S.W.,

Atlanta.

Want 4 gal. cow, reasonable.
C. S. Tidwell, Stone Mtn., Rt. 1.

HOGS FOR SALE

2 S. P. C...brood--sows,. pure

bred, not reg,
farm. Lollis W. ;Undermoot,
Devereaux, RE 2.
: Champion blooded, reg. B., P.
C. pigs. Large litters.
able prices, F. H. Blunn, Mid-
ville.

Duroc Jersey 5 mos old, about
80 1b. pigs, cholera immuned*for





life, treated, reg. buyers name,
Mi ene

$15.00, ea. F.. O.: B.
nedy, Collins. Nae

10. hogs, $75.00 at my Bien!
J. H. Smith, Chipley, Rt.'2, >

L.

pigs, Clan breeding. Males;

$12.50% gilts, $10.00 ea. Emmett a
up, 12 1-2 Ib. male .and. female; |
Lite: treated,

a Gauldens, Jakin.

100 feed pigs, 60- -100 Ib. not
fat, good cond., dbl.

Frank S. Singer, Lumpkin. .

Light * red (few black | spots)
7-10 pigs litters, }
about 300. Ibs., $40.00 F.0.B. Mrs.

brood. : sows,

Lula DeFoor, Toccoa, Rt. 2...
Pigs, 6 wks. old, March 30,

$3.00 ea.; few thoroughbred Big

Bone P. C. 6 wks. old April 1,

$5.00 ea. R. H. von Seeberg,
Smarrs, Rt. 1.

Ped. O. I. GC. pigs, best of
breeding stock. AS tn inn,

Hampton, Rt. 1.

Little Bone Guinea black male
pig, weaned and treated, $10.00.
Money order. No chks. J. C.
Hargroves, Marlow, Rt. 1, Box
75:

16 P. C. pigs, $2.50 ea. W. W.

Fleeman, Waverly Hall.

Big Bone Black Guinea hogs, Guineas: bred sows, $30.00; bred:

4. males, 8 wks. old, $10.00 ea.;
2 sows, bred, $30.00 ea. at barn.
J. A. Harrell, Mitchell,.R.F.D. 2.

Berkshire pigs, few bred gilts,
from.Ga. oldest Berkshire herd.
Cc. J. Hardman,. Commerce.

Duroc-Jersey pigs, reg. buy-
ers. name, $7.50 up; 25 head
mixed: S. P.:C. and Duroc, 100
Ib., good cond., feeders. N. W.
Jones, Glenwood. oe
- 8 pigs, 2'mos. old, mixed with
P. C.,: and::Blue Guinea, $2.00
ea. at barn. Mrs.-M..E., Steph-
ens, Warthen..

SP. Cs: -shoats, 14 wks. old,
reg, buyers name; 8 mos. old
Guernsey bull, ent. to reg. $25.00;

50. bu. No. 1 Brab peas, $2.50 bu.: f:
, 90-day running: Velvets,

bu.; 25 W. L. laying hens, about:
yr. ois $1. 00) te






dade dd ccees

: ea.

$10.00;

Sale.

. Cheap: ab my:

Reason-'.

Psey gilts, $7.50'ea. C20
McRae, Star Rt.

Reg. 10 wks. old Hampshire | 100

inoculated.
for cholera, 7c Ib. F.O.B. | barn. |

$1.50"



T. Re pie :





_ HOGS FOR SALE

oe ca Berkshire pigs,
farrowed March..1, papers, $8.00

Big type S. P. C. pigs, $5.00
ea.; reg., $7.00; also Cleveland
big. boll cotton seed (stands the
drought), '$1.00' bu: oe Ty. Snead,
Milledgeville,

Big Bone Black Canes. boar,
gilt, bred, $12.00. Wes-
ley Hester, | Thomson, RF.D. 4.

9 males, 5. gilts, 8 mos. old,
about 50 Jb. S. P.. C. pigs, reg.
buyers nanie, dbl. treated, $10
S F.O.B. Geo. W. BEY: Guy-

n,

SS. P.-C. boars and aii, big
bone, cholera immune, old enough
for service, reg, $15.00 ea. and
up. H. M. Woodward, Waycross.

6 White Chester pigs, 6 wks.
old April 10, $3.00 ea. at barn.

Will not ship, R. L. Albea,
Metasville.
6 wks. old, thoroughbred

Hampshire gilts, $6.50 ea. Want
2 or 3 bu. O-too-tan beans. Chas.
R. Duggan, Cochran, Rt. 4.

--Reg. Duroc. Airmans Miss,
farrowed Sept. 15, 1934. Daugh-
ter of Model Miracle and Air-
mans Queen and Miracle: want
20 bu. sound Brabham or New
Eras, Leroy Mann, Newnan.

Pure . bred: Little Bone Black
Guinea. 8 wks. old pigs. . Fine
breeding stock, Located at Boyn-
ton. Mrs... W. N. McCullough,
Rossville.

2 pure bred, bub. to reg. S. P,
C. hogs; 225 Ib. sow, 150 Jb. or
more boar, $50.00 cash, or sell
separately. Farm anvil to exe.
for 8 wks. old pigs, or heifer
calf, 4-5 mos. old, at my place,
Mrs. Henry Welch, pecan

Some 3 mos. old O. I. C. pigs
for sale;
for 1 horse wagon, excellent

cond. Mrs. Mary ix Kimbell,
McDonough, Rt. 3. .

Reg. Duroc Jersey pigs for
T. M. Pullen, Damascus.
11 pigs, 8 wks. old,;\2 brood
sows for sale.
Monticello, Rt. 4.

Black P, Chinas, young boars
Prize winning,
pork producing stock. ng

and bred sows.
ed:
May, Washington.

17. Duroc-Guinea cross, 8 wks.
old :pigs, treated: for life, $45.00,
or $3.00 ea. F.O.B. Ready. April
10. Lobe Johnson, Mitchell,

Reg. Duroc 4 mos. boars, best

breeding, cholera inimune, rea-.

sonably priced. Aubrey Stallings,
Carrollton, Rt. 3.

2.5. P. Gr 4 nios. old boars,
reg. buyers. name:

Litter of 10 out of Siminole

| Louise, No. A242212 and Simi-

nole Evidence, | No. ~A103027.
Male pigs at 6. wks.,. $50. 00 ea.

.R.:E. Barnes, Summit.

35 second litter Chester Coun- |

ty sows, farrow. next month. Geo,

-W. Myers, Stone: Min.

12 thrifty shoats, 10c Ib.: 10

-bu. Wannamakers cotton seed,

$1.00 bu. F-O.B. risa Newsome,

| Warrenton Rt. 2..

3 pure bred, 75 Ib. Due Jer-
. Phillips,

4 Berkshire 7 mos. old around
Ibs. gilts. Not stunted,
$8.00 ea. J. L. Andrews, Moran.

Big Bone Guinea: hogs, 100 Ib.

60-99 Ib.. 15e db.
crated, F.0.B.; 30. grade feeder
shoats, just weaned, 15 Yb. at
barn; Summerours Half and
Half cotton seed, $1.25 bu. $4.00
CWT: F.0:B. L. H. Edenfield,

' Stillmore, Rt. 1, Box 32:

Durecs from the. Grand Cham-
Pion herd of. Ga. Male, female
pigs,. $15.00 ea. reg. F.O.B. Hen-
ry T. Lumsden, Talbotton.

60 shoats, 40. lb. av. Sev. sows
with pigs, some. farrow soon.
W. M.. Rockel, Jr.,

Big Bone Blue | Guinea pigs,
$5.00 to $8.00 ea. Exe, for Iron
or Brab. peas. W. A. Sumner,

| Adrian.

2 extra good bred sows: 1
P. C. and other half P.-C. and
big bone Guinea, 250-300 Ib. wt.
Carge litters), $25.00 ea. W.. A.
Henderson, Norcross.

Thoroughbred Black African

gilts, .$25.00,.. service boars,
$25.00: 8 weeks old. igs, $10
ea, either sex. A-1, Ae ~ Sani

ders, pepaally,

HORSES AND MULES
oo _FOR SALE





950 Ib. anddte horse, Kenta?
plenty style and: pep, 2 good farm
mules; Hastings ' Bronze gob-
pler and: 2: laying hens, hardly |-
yr. old,..$12:50;. or $5.00 ea, Je: L.
Bailey, Dunwoody, . ~3

13 yr: <old, 965. Ub. cite in |

good shape, for sale at my. barn.
J. W. Bell,: Bremen, Rt. 1, Bx 69.

1 6M db) gray? horse: mule,
smooth mouth; pOod cond.,;' work
anywhere, $75.00. Exe. for: mare,
or = of. 900 Tbs. ea





ls ae Porter, Decatur, Rt. 1.}

exc, 2 horse wagon].

Ww. V. Wilson, |

Herman |
; Price, Wrightsville, Rt. 3.

Thomasville..

tand

| sire:

. plowing *





HORSES AND MULES -
FOR SALE



Nice, small, gentle Shetland
pony. Sell or exe. B. B. Neal,
Norwood, Rt, 1, Box 19.

2 good plug mules, , 8- 900 bs.
Sell or trade. W. W. Childers,
Lithonia, Rt. 1.

Good size, dW yr. old: black
with white points jennet, bred to
reg. Kentucky gray jack. Want
reg. Duroc sow and male. S. E.
Vandiver, Lavonia...

For service, Z00 Tenn, jack.

Hutcheson, Temple, Rt. 2.

Mare, about 18 yrs. old (has
1 buck knee), wt. about 750 Ibs.,

der, hay, anything can use. J. D.
Watson, Graymont, Rt. 1.

Mare mule, in good shape, wt.
about 1 M Ibs., $75.00 cash,
Claud Harper, Wray, Rt, 2.

Good 6 yrs. old, 1 M Ibs. farm
mare, cheap for cash. W:. M.
Williams, Rhine, Rt. 1.

Good 12 yr. old, about 900 Ibs.
plug mule, good worker, $50.00.
Take corn, fodder, cows, etc.,
in trade.
bridge; Rt. 1.

Black saddle, bred mare, 9
yrs. old, bred to saddle stallion.
Both reg. Sell or trade for gocd
dairy cattle. B. McH. Cline, At-
lanta, 400-1 Grand Theater Bldg.



HORSES AND MULES

Want good mule, wt. 8-900
lbs. not over 12 or 15 yrs. old,
good cond., work. anywhere,
cheap for cash, W. P, Clayton,
Quill,

Want iaies, black colt, under
2 yrs. old to be trained to sad-=
dle. Miss Pat Stokes, Green<-
ville. : :

Want buy stallion, some jen-

J. F. Hutcheson, Buchanan.



LIVE STOCK WANTED



_ Want brood Sow or 2 gilts, al-
ready bred, any good breed; also
sey. old fashioned horse apple
trees. Frank M, Coley, ws
Fairburn, Rt. 1.

Want reg. Duroc- Jersey pigs,
male and female.
Seckinger, Rincon.



FOR SALE



Nice Toggenburg doe, freshen
1st. April by reg. Tog. buck,
$10.00;
service. F. F. Hughes, Atlanta.
425 Harold Ave. N. E., De.
4120-W.

Pure bred reg. Nubian buck
goat, sire from Shirley Rhoda;
at stud, fee.
to home. F, E
orest.

- Grubbs, Dem-

genburg bucks, $2.00 ea.; Saan-
an-Toggenburg yr. old buck,
$5.00; Tog. 3 qt. milk goat, 2nd
kids, $15.00.
Bluffton, Rt. 2, Box 8.

75 or 100 sheep, $4.50 per
head, at my barn. V. L. Lov-
ell, Clarkesvilte, Rt. 1.

_ Brown with white stripes goat,
$3.00 F.0O.B. M. O. Jinks, Locust
Grove Rt. 2.

20 head common goats, $1. 00
per head; 200 gal. P. O. J. cane
syrup, gal cans, 40c gal, Exc.
either. or both for corn. BE. E.
Lord, Bainbridge.

Southdowns: Ram, $10.00: 5
| Ewes, $5.00 ea.: 4 lambs, $2. 50
a.-F.0.B. J. Youngblood, Gor-
don, Rt. 3.

Large, pure-blooded heavy
milk strain Saanan doe, should
freshen about April 10. Rea-
sonable; also goats milk for
sale. Bring containers. |
Hynds, Atlanta, 93 Warren St.
N. E., De. 0489-W.

Toggenburg-Nubian cross
goats: 18 mos. old buck, $5.00;
15 mos. old bred. does, $7 50 ea.
Want 3-5 bu. Yellow Mammoth
soy beans. C. L. Stracke,
Sparks:

100 goats, cheap at my barn.
J. N. Byrd, Macon, Rt. 5, Box

14,.care W. D.. Mercer.

Fresh, classy. milk goats, open
bred milking and
young, bred does, doe and buck
kids, 100 per cent Nubian 5 qt.
fee, $2.00; straight goat
manure, $1.00 per CWT. Exe.
for farm produce. Edwin Simp-
MWe) 695 Paynes Ave.,

RABBITS FOR SALE





2 white, | female .N. Zealands,
$1.75 ea. or $1.00: ea,
lard; : cae Gap. =

Reg. NZ Whites, papers
tarnished, 8. 005 | air N- Z,. Reds

0. jrrade. for
Ta alia.












; _ Page Five :

Season, $12.50, $5.00 cash. John

$25.00 cash. Exc. for corn, fod-

P. W. Smith, Stock-

"WANTED. a

nets and some seed ribbon cane. _

HOGS WANTED *
Write Lester |
oo ;
SHEEP AND GOATS |.
also Toggenburg puck :

$2.50. Bring does

Four 3 weeks old Saanan- Togs

W. E. Harrison,

John.

aes c. (Dil





ie







as

+

=

ee Rt. 1,

| & 40; 80c M. del:

- booking orders Insp; P. R. po-
gerald, Rt. 2.

Sop):

-- zone, Money order. S,

to plants, $1.25 M: 5 M, $5.50:

z a 10th. D. J. Johnson, Wrights-

_ P. Musselwhite, Arabi, Rt. 1.

RABBITS FOR SALE

= White, pink-eyed
~ $1.75: -pr., $1.00 ea.
Long, Bremen,
8 pink-eyed whites, 3 mos.
- old, 50c ea.; 2 white, bred, yr.
old does, $1.50 ea. Money order

rabbits,
Amilee

: __M. C. Patrick, Winder, Rt. 4.



PLANTS FOR SALE



Chas. W. cabbage, Bermuda
onion plants, 90c M; Marglobe

and Greater Baltimore tomato,

$1.25 M. Del. Mrs: C. G.. Wil-
liams, Baxley, Rt. 4,
' Genuire, Gov: insp. P.. R.

potato plants. Red Yellow Skin,
$1.25 per M; $1.50 M. Del. Ready
April:20th; 300 bu. bedded Mar-
globe or Gr. Baltimore tomato
85e M del. Count guar. W. B.
Ncbles, Baxley, Rt. 4 Bx 144.

New Stone tomato plants,
$1.00 M. FOB. April and May
del. Mrs. J C Campbell, Bax-

ue _ ley, Rt 2.

Blakemore strawberry, 40c C.

" $1.75 for 500, $3.40 M del. Guar.

. Exc. for baby chicks or anything
,can use. W. S. Griffin, Adel,

* Genuine Early Triumph po-
tato plants, $1.50 M. FOB. G.

es J. Holton, Baxley; Rt. 2,

Booking orders P. R.. potato,
April-May del. $1.00 M. Mar-
globe, New Stone tomato plants,
ready May ist, 75c M not pre-
paid. A. F. Maddox, Fitzgerald.

* Crystal Wax Bermuda onion
plants 75c M. del. Money order
preferred. N. F. Taylor, Hawk-

imsville. Rt, 1. Box 34.

-.. Youngberry plants, 50c doz.
prepaid
we Gilleville; At: * 1,

. Mrs. R. Q. Thompson,

_. Booking orders pure P. R. po-

_ tato plants, del. April and May,

- $1.00 M. FOB. Also lead. var.
tomato plants, 75c M. B. A, Mad-
dox, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.

-- P. R. potato plants, $1.25 M.
-- del. $1.00 M. FOB.: flue cured
tobacco 10 Ibs. $1.00 del.. Will
-exch. Mrs Jessie Dykes, Baxley,

Te ORt: 2,

Cabbage plants, -200, 25:; 400,
65e M. Exp.
_Col; Vigorvine tomato, 10 for
30 seed, 25 for 100; $2.00 M.

tato. April del. $1.35 M. 5 M.,
$1.25 M; 10 M. del, $1.00 M. Bon-

nie Smith, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

White and Yellow Bermuda

onion plants, 500, 50c: 75 M.

All del. T. L. Swanson, Fitz-

Rust- proof. Super Mar-

globe tomato and New Stone to- |

mato plants now ready, 35 C.
$1.00 M. Prepaid. Satisfaction.
Paul Lightsey, Screven, Rt. 2. -
_ Pure Red and Yellow Skin P.
+ Plants, Insp. and treated,
$1.25 M; $1.50 M prepaid to 3rd
L. Nor-
+ Tis, Quitman, Rt. 1,

-_ Marglobe tomato plants ready,.
- 90c M;

*25c C del. Mrs. G. J.

-_ Griffis, Screven.

_.. Gov. insp. P. R. potato plants,
$1.25 M -del: Marglobe tomato.
90 M del; 25 C, George Grif-

_ fis. Sereven.

Purple Skin P. R. potato,

Black Beauty eggplant, Ruby

- King pepper plants, ready ist of

_ May, $1.25 M. R. J. Boatright,
Mershon.

Pink skin P. R. potato plants,

' Gov. insp. and treated any quan-

tity, $1.25 M, del: Marglobe to-

-mato, $1.50 M, del. Ready April

Ist. R. R. Smith, Screven,

_ Eldorado blackberry and .Lu-
eretia dewherry plants, $1.00
_ C,del. Ga. $7.50 M. Maude Ham-

.. by. Greenville,

P. R. and Naney Hall pota-

tomato, onions, cabbage, any
mixture, $1.00 per 1200: 85c M;
Ruby King, Bull Nose, Wonder
pepper, $1.25 M; 5 M, $4.00. Exp.

es _-W. H. Morris, Baxley.

Raspberries, $2.50 C@: Pro-
gressive Everbearing strawhber-

. ry, 25c C; 500, $1.00: catnip,
~~ hoarhound, 15 doz. bun: Black
Crowder peas, 10c lb. Add post-.

.age. Mrs Doyle Conner,
men, Rt. 2,
_Imp. purple skin P. R. plants,

$1.25 M, del: $1.00 COD: to-

Bre-

mato, Redfield Beauty and Mar-

globe, $1.00 M, del. Ready. April
ville, Rt. 3. :

_. Horseradish plants, 20c doz.;
-. foot, 20c Ib.; 12 Ibs. little lady
_. finger peas, 7e Ib. Add postage.
. Mrs. 1. A. Woodring, Alto, Rt, 1.
=o GOV.
. Skin P..R. plants, $1.50 M.

insp. and treated Pink
rT:

Cabbage plants, $1.00 M; Red
and Pink P. R. potato plants,
April del., $1.50 M, del: Cab-
-bage seed, $1.25 lb. Vigorvine to-

Mato, 25e per 100 seed. EF. B.

Wetherford, Gainesville, Rt, 2.

Cabbage plants, 300, 40e: 75e
M, del; Red Speckled Crowder
peas, 8c tb. Add postage under
5 ibs; Vigorvine tomato, 10c
for 35 seed: 25c, 100; $2.00 M,



. Porto Rico potato plants, April
del., $1.40 M, del.; 10 M, $1.00
collect. Clyde Smith, Gaines-

le, Rt, a

| Blakemore strawberry, 40c C;







PLANTS FOR SALE
Cert. Marglobe tomato plants,
10 C, plus postage. Ready April
ist;. Everbearing strawberry,
40c C, postpaid. Mrs. R. K. Cash,
Jesup.

Rhubarb planfs, 50c doz.;3
doz., $1.00; Himalaya black-
berry, $1.00 doz.; catnip, pepper-
mint, spearmint, hoarhound; yel-
low root, 35c doz.; 4 doz., $1.00:
yellow meat watermelon seed,
25e for large eupful. Mrs. T, H.
McCurley, Hartwell.

Cabbage and onion plants, 50c
M; lettuce, $1.50 M; Beets, $1.00
M, FOB; G. W. Coleman, Tifton.

Sweet pepper, Calif. Wonder,
Ruby King, World Beater, Ruby
Giant plants, $1.00 M; 25 C. All
dei. H. Lightsey, Screven. .

Chas. W, cabbage plants, 75
M, prepaid; 10-C, plus postage;
100 Everbearing strawberry free
with 500 order; Tomato, 30c C.
Also 250-500 lbs. Gov. insp. P.
R. potatoes, 21-2c 1b.; 35 gal.
syrup, 60c gal, I. H. Anderson.
Alma, Rt. 4,

P. R.. potato,. $1.20 -M;5 M,
$5.50; Greater Baltimore and
Marglobe tomato, 20 C;. 500,
60c; 95c M. Prompt shipment.
J. D. Crapps, Baxley.

No. 1 Red Skin P. R. potato
plants, Gov. insp. Ready middle
of April.to first of May, $1.25
M. Tom Gray, Baxley, Rt. 1.

Hastings extra early Break

ODay and Pritchards tomato
plants, 30c C; $1.50 M. Roots
mossed, prepaid, Now ready.
ao D. E. Cason, Blackshear,
Rt. 2.

Million Cert. P. R. . potato
plants, from vine cuttings, $1.50
M, del. or $1.25 M FOB. S. F.
Hilton, Baxley.

Special plants, Potatoes, $1.25
M; $5.50 per 5 M; Gr. Baltimore
and.Marglobe tomato, 20c C;
500, 65c; $1.00 M. J. P. Morris,
Baxley,

Young dewberry. plants, 25
doz.; $1.00 C; Concord grape
vines, $1.00 doz. Exc. for Brab,

Iron peas, day old chicks. Ben- |

jamin Hicks, Adel, Rt. 1.

Gov. insp. treated Red Skin
P. R. potato plants, $1.85 M; 5
M up lots, $1.25 M. Ready April
10th. ,-W. T. Carter, Rockingham.

Dutch and Wakefield cabbage
plants, 400, 40c; 75e M; P. R.
potato, $1.25.M; April, May del.
Vigorvine tomato seed, 25c for
25; 50c for 100; Collard, 30c Ib.
All mailed. L. A. Crow, Gaines-
yille, Rt. 2. : :

Marglobe, Bonnie Best toma-
to, 90c M; 25 C. Sweet pepper
plants, Royal King, Calif, Won-

der, 90 M; 25 C, del. ready.

Phillip Lightsey, Odum, Rt. 2.

Gov. insp. P. R. plants, Pink
Skin, $1.25 M del. April: Mar-
globe,. Bonnie Best tomato, 25
C; $1.00 M, del. . Royal King
Sweet pepper, $1.00 M, del. April.

Calif, Wonder, $1.00 M, W. D.
Lightsey, Screven,
Cabbage plants, 60c; white

Bermuda onion, 75c M: Toma-
to (April 15th), 75 M: pepper,
Big, Sweet and Hot, 50 C; $3.00
M. Willliam Tools wilt-resist-
ant. cotton seed, $1.00 bu.: old
Runner seed peanuts, $1.25 bu.
W. W. Williams, Quitman,

Genuine White, Yellow Ber-.
muda onion plants, $1.00 M,
postpaid; Booking orders for.
Gaddis imp. P. R. potato plants,
$1.20 M, postpaid. May. 1st. Geo.
R, Hunt, Kathleen, , PAR)

strawberry plants, 25 ; 75c,:
500; $1.50 M. Dorothy Durand,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1, ee

Kudzu vines, $1.00 C: $6.00
M, well rooted, del. E. 0. Pat-
terson, Waco, RED 2. i

Mastodon strawberry, 35c.C:
$1.50 500; $2.75 M; Lady T., 30c
C; $1.00, 500; $1.75 M, No chks.
Miss Verdine Whitmire, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 1.

1 8d5e, $1.50 per M_ del.;

Mastodon strawberry plants,

35 C; $1.50, 500; $2.75 M; Lady
T., 380 C; 500 $1.00: $1.75 M.
Mrs. Lonnie Prater, Gainesville,

Rey 4

New Stone, Brimmer, Red Ox-
Heart tomato, $1.00 M,. del;
April, May del. Mrs. J. M. Tom-
berlin, Surrency, Rt. 2.

Mastodon everbearing straw-
berry plants, 40c : 500, $1.50;

$2.50 M; Lady Thompson; 30c
C; 500, $1.00; $1.75 M, cash,
Montez Bennett, Flowery

Branch, Rt. 1.

Flat Dutch, Chas. W., Copen-
hagen cabbage, 50c M: Bermuda
onion. 60 M. Satisfaction guar.
FOB. Francis A. Carter, Baxley.

Mastodon Bverbearing straw-
berry plants, 40 C: 500, $1.50:
$2.50 M. Lady Thompson, 30c
C; 500. $1.00: $1.75 M. Cash
only with crder. Mrs, T. C. Ben-
nett, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.

Tomato plants, $1.00 M. Ready
April 15th. Multiplying onion
plants, $1.00 500. D. L. C. Har-
per, Surrency, Rte 258 ;
Mrs.

500, $1.75; $2.75 M, del.

on





=

~ PLANTS FOR SALE

Marglobe and Gr. Baltimore
tomato, $1.00 M, del.; 90c M.,
FOB. Ready April 20th. P. R.
potato, $1.50 M. up to 5 M. Zella
Crummey, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box
Be

Earlina | tomato, BHgegplant,
Hot, Sweet pepper plants, 40c
C, del; 400, $1.00. Mammoth
White Pekin duck eggs, 85c per
12, del. B. L. Lynn, Waycross,
1610 Madison St.

- Million. certified Porto - Rico

potato, Ruby King Pepper;. 85c-

per M; 5 M or more, 80c per M;
Marglobe Baltimore Red Rock
Tomato, 65 per M; 5 M or more
60c per M. Roy Boatright, Pat-
terson,

Sweet. Pepper, Calif. Wonder,
Ruby King, Bull nose, World
Beater plants ready. $1.00 per
M; del. 25 per C. Hiram Light-
sey, Screven,

Booking orders for purple
skin Porto Rico potatoes, $1.50
per M, 3 M and up, $1.25 per M
del, L. C. Tanner, Rt. 1, Alma.

Early J. and Dutch cabbage,
500, 50c, $80c. per M, postpaid.
Monia Reed, Oakwood.

Mastodon strawberry 25c per
C, 500, $1.15; Progressive straw-
berry, 20 per C, 500; $0c; all
postpaid. Mrs. A. F, OKelley,
Rt. 1, Maysville.

Cabbage plants, collards, let-
tuce, onion, 300, 35e; large
curled mustard seed, 25 lb.; 5
lbs. $1.00; seed cane, red, green,
robbon, L. E. Harrison, Dublin,
Reo62.

Mastodon strawberry, red,
gold, $1.00 per C; Gibsons 60
per C; 2 yr. old asparagus, $1.50
a doz.; Red thornless raspber-
ries, 75c doz.; blatkeye peas, 8c
lb.; okra seed, 15c pint. $1.00
orders or more postpaid. Cash
or M. O. only.. John B. Nix,. Rt.
2, Alto, Balmy Breeze Farm,

Red Skin Porto Rico Potato,
April and May delivery, $1.25
per M; Marglobe Tomato, $1.00
per M. No checks. J. W. Sellers,
Rt. 4, Baxley,

Chas. Wakefield cabbage,
white Bermuda, Prizetaker on-
ion, $1.00 per M: del. H. R. Wil-
liams, Baxley,

Govt. insp. yellow skin P. R.
$1.25 per M, April, May and June
del.; Marglobe, Stone tomato,
$1.00 per M = postpaid in Ga.
Money order only. L. W. Grif-
fin, RFD A, Box 169. Odum.

Lady T. Strawberry, 500, $1;
$1.75 per M; Klondike, 500,
75e, $1.50 per M del. Bthel
Crow, Rt. 2, Gainesville,

- Mastodon Strawberry, 40c per
C; $1.50 for 500; $2.50 per M:
Lady T., $1.00 for 500: $2.00
per M; Klondike $25 per C;
500, $1.00; $1.75 per M. Prompt
shipment. Mrs. Ray Whitmire,
Rt. 1, Flowery .Branch.

Klondike strawberry, 500, 75c:-
$1.50 per M. Sugar crowder peas
10c Ib.;
beans 12c a lb. Sherman Allen,
Rt. 2, Gainesville. ~

Booking orders-for April de-
livery of Porto Rico and Nancy
Hall potato plants, $1.25 per M.
A. R, Jones, Pelham.

Klondike Strawberry, 500,
Sugar
crowder peas, 10 a Ib:;: white
bunch butter beans, 12 a Ib.

Prompt shipment, Hazel Allen,

Rt. 2; Gainesville,

Early Jersey and Chas. Wake-
field cabbage, 50 per M, express

1 | collect or 75e per -M. postpaid.
Latest var. Imp. Klondike:

Good count. Prompt shipment.
J. H. Sumner, Rt. 1, Omega.

St. Regis Red raspberry, 1 and
2 yr. rooted, 60c a doz.> $4.50
per C postpaid, W. R. Hatchell,
College Park, Calhoun 3678.

Govt. Insp. New Acme Thorn-
less Youngberry and New Boy-
senberry.
25 for $3.25, 100 for $10.00, 1,000
for $65.00. Prepaid... H. A.
Neal, Ashland.

Yellow skin Porto Rico potato,
$1.25 per M del. to 3rd zone;
Marglobe tomato and cabbage
plants 75c per M: Ruby Giant
pepper $1.00 per M del. to 3rd
zone. J. F Gruber, Odum.

Cabbage and onion plants, all
varieties 500, 50c; 75e per M:
5 M. $3.00. Certified tomato
and Porto Rico potato, 500, 75:
1M, $1.25. All varieties pepper,
also egg plants, 500, $1.00; $1.50
ner M. W. R. Peters, Ray City.

Govt. insp. Porto Rico potato,
$1.50 per M del.: Marglobe to-
mato, $1.00 per M, .F.0.B, Ready
April 15. W. J. OQuinn, Jr., Rt.
2, Box 165, Odum.

Red Skin Porto Rico potato,
govt. insp., $1.50 per M: certi-
fied Marglobe tomato, $1.00 per
M, F.O.B. J. C. Edgerton, Baxley.

K. J., Chas. Wakefield, Suc-
cession, Barly Flat Dutch. cab-
bage, 15 C, 80c per M: Icebureg
lettuce, 15 C, $1.00 M:~ white,
yellow Bermuda onion, 200, 25c;
80 M; Marglobe, Barliana. New
Stone Tomato 15 C, $1.25 M:
Ga. P. R. potato ready April 15,
Mes: (He--E: Brittingham, Guy-
Lone ase.

Cabbage, Barly Jersey, now
foc. per M, F.O.B, Cola.

ready
Baxley



Box 42, Baxley,

ET BULLETIN

white bunch, butter-.

Wither, 12 for $1.75, |.



onions,
, 3 -





PLANTS FOR SALE

Wakefield, Dutch, Copenha-
gen cabbage; white, yellow Ber-
muda onions 90c per M prepaid,
5 M $2.50; 10 M, $5.00; Stone,
Baltimore, Marglobe tomato,
$1.25 per-M prepaid, 75c per M
Express collect. EHstie Crowe,
Valdosta. :

Pure Impr. Porto Rica and
Nancy Hall potato, $1.25 per M.
C. R. Redmond, Pelham.

Cc. H. and E. J. cabbage, Ber-
muda onion, 75c per M. Impr.
potato red skin $1.50 per M.
W. F. Miles, Baxley.

Dutch Wakefield cabbage, 20c
per C, 75c per M prepaid, 50c
per M express collect; red and
pink skin P. R. Potato $1.25
per M mailed: Vigorvine tomato
seeds 25c a doz. VY. A. Crowe,
Rt.. 7, Gainesville, -

Leading variety cabbage plants
800 45c, 1000 75 mailed; Porto
Rico. potato $1.25 per M;.: Viz-
orvine tomato seed 50 for 25c
all mailed.. H. P. Crow, Rt. 7,
Gainesville.

Missionary Strawberry 500
$1 25, $209 per M: Rhubarb 50c
doz.; 3 doz. for $1.00: Pepper-
mint, spearmint 50c doz.; yel-
low root _50c a lb.; yellow meat
watermelon seed 25 teacupful.
Miss Cecil McCurley, Rt. 2,
Hartwell.

Genuine red skin Porto Rico
potato, govt. insp.. and treated
$1.25. per M del. in Ga. Milton
Arnold, Surrency.

Missionary strawberry $2.00
per M; rhubarb 50c a doz.: gar-
lic heads 10c each: peppermint
40c doz. Miss Mattie McCurley,
Rt. 2, Hartwell.

P. R: potato $1.25 per M
F.0.B.;. Marglobe, New Stone,
Gr. Baltimore tomato $1.00 per
M F.O.B. Ready April 15. D. D.
Miles, Rt. 4, Baxley,

Govt. insp. Porto Rico potato

$1.25 per M. May delivery. Ben

OBerry, Rt. 2, Surrency.

Wakefield, Flat
Copenhagen cabbage ~-100 20c,
1000 75 del; 5000 $2.50, 10,000
$4.50 express collect: white and
yellow Bermuda 20c 100; 80c
per M; $6.00 for 10 M collect.
wee Crow, Valdosta.

Tomato _ plants, Marglobe,
Scarlet Globe, Red Rock, $1.00
per M del. 25c per C. L. Light.
sey, Screven.

_ Marglobe, New Stone, Gr. Bal-

timore tomato plants $1.00 per
M; 5 M or more 85c per M;: Del.
April 15. J. P. Mullis, Rt, 4,
Baxley,

Early Jersey, Copenhagen,
Flat Dutch cabbage 50c per M
F.0.B.; Certified red and pink
skin- Porto Rico, limited amount
Daniels pure white skin Porto
Rico $1.25 per M, 5 M $6.00:-10
M, $11.00 del.; N. W.. Daniel,
Bt dy yy Py,

Pie plants, 3, 25c: tansy
plants, 6, 25c; peppermint, 3 doz.
25c; hoarhound, 3, 25c. Add
postage. Mary Grindle, Dahlon-
esd, At. 1

Lucretia dewberry, true to
name, 75c per C; 200, $1.20; $5.00
M; Giant gourd .(1 bu. cap.)
seed, 25 for 15c, postpaid. Mrs.
B. L. Robinson, Greenville.

Mastodon Everbearing straw-
berry, 35 C. $2.50 M: Red Gold,
true to name, 50c C: $3.00 M:
catnip, 10 bunch: true blue
Damson plum sprouts, 10 ea.
Add postage small orders. Mrs.

A. J. Stansel, Cleveland, Rt. 4
Box 38.

Mint plants, $1.25 C: less, 25c
doz. Also gourds. Add postage,
Mrs. T, B. Thomas, Thomasboro,

Pure Red Skin P.R. potato,
$1.35 M; Lady Thompson, $2.00
M; Klondike, $1.50 M, . Preraid.
C. F. Waldrip, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Lady T. strawberry, $2.00 M:
Klondike, $1.75 M:; pure Red

2

Skin P. R., Gov. insp., $1.40 M.|

Prepaid. Ready last April and
May. Mrs. Clara B. Waldrip,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Lettuce plants, 15e. Add post-
age. Mrs. Lester Phillips, Roys-
ton. Gov. insp., Imp. P.R. potato
plants, May ist del,. $1.25 M
del Ga. W. W. Williamson,
Bristol, Rt. 1.

P. R. potato plants, Gov. insp.,
$1.35 M; Marglobe tomato, 75c
M. del. R. M. Deen, Baxley,
Rt. 4, Box 99, 2.

B.J., C.W. cabbage, Prize Tak-
er and Bermuda: onion. plants,
(ac M. Del. Loyd Steedley, Bax-
ey. be

Stone, Baltimore, Marglobe,
other lead. var., tomato, Chas.
K.J , W., Flat Dutch, Copenhagen
cabbage, Head collard, Crystal
Wax, Yellow Bermuda onion,
25, 150; 300, 50c; $1.35 M_ post-
paid; crate 6 M. B. onions, $2.40:
Pepper, Hgzg-plants, 25, 10c. D.
G. Smith. Cloudland.

Porto Rico potato plants, Govt.
insp., $1.15 per M. Ready April
10. Cash with order. B. D. Bran-
nen, Bristol; Rt. 1.

Porto Rico potato plants $1.25
M, Tomatoes, Marglobe, i5c M.
Pepper, ($1.50: Cabbage, 60c;
_60c,.. Prompt shipment.
W..T. Beckworth, Baxley, Rt. 2.



|$1.00 M. Ready April 10; yellow

Dutch andf

-plants,



Rt. 13

Bee a ee ad





Thursday, April 1, 19































































PLANTS FOR SALE _

Klondike Strawberry plant
500, 85c. White Bunch Butter
beans, 1l0c Ib. Hazel Aller
Gainesville, Rt. 2. ee

Pink Skin Porto Rico Potat
Plants. Government insp,
treated. Any quantity. $1.25 M



$

del. Marglobe tomato plant;
$1.50 M del. R. R. Smith
Screven. :

Marglobe tomato plants. $1.0(
M del. to third zone. Guar. safe
del. Ready April 10. T. B. Are
nett, care A, C. Altman, Odum
Rt. 1, Box 183.

P. R. Plants grown from yi

cutting. Govt. Insp. $7.50
V.0.B., $1.65 del. Ready April
10. Cash with. order, - Grady

Sellers, Alma, Rt. 3.

Cert. P. R. Potato plants, $1
M; 5 M_ $1.00. _Rubhie Ki
pepper, 75c M. Marglobe B;
timore and Red Rock tomatoes
65c M. 500 lets, 60c. LL.
Beatright, Patterson. :

Pink Skin P. R. potato plants,
$1.25 .M. Mareglobe tomato plar
25e C, $1.10 M, postpaid. Rea
April T. J. Thornton
Screven, Rt. 1, Box 178, s

P. R. plants, $1.75 M, 3M up:
$1.50 M del. L: C..Tanner, AL
ma, RE:

Imp. P. R. Potato plants, Goy,
insp., $1.25 M; 5 M, $5.75: 10 MW
up, $1.00 M. Ready April 25
Mrs. J. R. Batten, Winokur. ~

Klondike strawberry, 25 ;
500, 80c; $1.50 M; Lady. T., 30
C; 500, $1.00; $2.00 M del. Mrs
Ara Waldrip, Flowery Branch
Rt. 1. OS

Marglobe, Baltimore, Harly
Polifie tomato, 25 C; 85 M
Wonder sweet pepper, 25e

Ready April 7; Ruby King, Calif,

we

skin P..R., $1.25 M. Ready Apri
15. Prepaid. Otis Odell Light-
sey, Screven, Rt, 2, e

New Stone tomato plants, $1. )
M del. Ga. R. W. Tomberlin
Surrency, Rt. 2. : ;

Wakefield, Dutch cabbage
plants, open field grown,
40c; 65e M prepaid; 50e M :
press not prepaid. M. O. pre
ferred. Major Crowe, Gaines=.
ville, Rt. 1. ee

Marglobe, Bonny Best toma
500, 60c; i

Ready April 15
I. L. Stokes, Fitzgerald, Rt. 1,

Wakefield cabbage plants,
M del.; all var., strawberries
$1.75 M_ del. Amos Garrett,
Gainesville, Rt. 7. :

White, yellow Bermuda onior
plants, 65c M; Wakefield, Copen-
hagen cabbage, 65c M. Sat. guar,
Earnest Lewis, Baxley. ee

plants, $1.25 M. Break O Da
Marglobe, New Stone tomato,
$1.00 M; Black Beauty egg plant
and Pimento, Calif. Wonder pep-
per, 30c C; $1.75 M, FO,
Dewey G. Crosby, Graham,

Genuine Yellow Skin or Ga
dis P. R. potato, Gov. insp. from
vine, $1.25 M;. pimento pepper,
$1.50 M; Brimmer, Marglobe,
Now Stone tomato, :
W. G.OQuinn, Surreney, Rt. 2, ~

Imp. Red Skin P. R. plants,
Insp. treated, from vines,
$1.00 M, F.0.B.: New Stone to-
mato, $1.00 M F.O.B. Ivey Camp=
bell, Baxley. es

Break OQ Day tomato plants,
$1.00 M postpaid. Mrs, Dewey
aa ornton, Screven, Rt. 4, Box
Lice me

_E. J. Wakefield cabbage plants
75e M; Break O Day tomato,
$1.00 M postpaid. J. B. Page,
Odum, Rt. 1. oe

Booking orders, April 15'to 20,
Marglobe, Bonny Best tomato,
500, 60c;~$1.00 M; Imp. P. R,
potato plants, from Cert. seed,
$1.25 M. Leon Gaff, Fitzgerald,





Red Gold sugar saver stra
berry plants, 2 doz $1.00; thorne
less red raspberry, $2.50 C; sage
35 doz. postpaid. Nc
stamps. Mrs. W. B. Allan, Alto,
Rt. 2, Box 59.

Klondike strawberry, $1.35 M3?
Progressive everbearing, $1,50
M. Del. True to name. Fay
Martin, Flowery Branch, Rt.

Hastings Extra Barly Pritch
ard and Break O Day tomato
plants, 30c . $1.50 M prepai
Ready. Mrs. D. BE. Cason, Blac
shear, Rt. 2. ae

BR. J., W., Chas. W., Flat Dute
cabbage, 500, 55c; 85e M post= |
paid; Bermuda onion, same price.
April, May Del. Potato, tomato,
pepper and egg-plant plants. :
Chanclor, Pitts. oo

Bonny Best and Marglobe to
mato, 500, 60c; $1.00. M. Boo
ing orders Apri] 15-20. Da
Stacks, Fitzgerald. =

Chas. W., W. cabbage, Cry:
tal; Wax Bermuda onion plant
75e.M. Glenn Dasher, Ray Cil





sday, April 1, 1937 :
"PLANTS FOR SALE



SEED FOR SALE. *





SEED FOR SALE



SEED FOR SALE _

| BEANS & PEAS FOR SALE








Millions P. R. potato, $1.25 M;





yrd, Bristol.
Ga. collard plants,



t. 4, Box 127 A.



. Turner, Fitzgerald, Rt. 3.





M_ $6.00;
omato, 20ec C; 300 50c;
. Andrew Crapps, Baxley,

$6. 50 postpaid.



$150 M; Marglobe,
New Stone tomato, 500,

ele Cash. A..H:



; Geaby s Early Prolific,



_Winekur.
Pink
ants,
.0.B. Jobnnie Dixon, Bristol.
= Mareglobe, Gr.

~mato, $1.00 M del.:
Ready April 20:

or Red Skin









mey, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 37.

.0.B. Gov't. insp. treated. L. E.

$i. 00 M
0.8. J. M. Roberts, Waycross,

cc. W. cabbage and White Ber-
nuda onion plants, 65c M. Mrs.

Pp. R. potato plants, $1.25 M;
Greater Baltimore
$1.00

blished Kudza crowns, 2
rs., and more, 75c C; 300,
Money
J. W. Toole, Ma-

Pure Red/ Skin P. R. plants,
Baltimore,
e 103
125 M. Ready April 15-20.
Lynch, Bax-

$1.35
M: $1.10 M: Few Nigger
ica. a 50 M. O. K. Herrin.

potato
ready. Anril 1,- $125 -M.

Baltimore to-
90c M F.O.B.
P:R. potato,
$1.50 Mupto 5 M. Zella Crum-



PLANTS WANTED






































Lula, Rte 2.
, Coleman, Glenwood.

best price del. and at bed.
Entrekin, Bremen, Rt. a

Send prices on 100 .



Bowdon.

eranberry plants. R.
oe, Br:

> ants by May Iist..
value.
Suzar Valley, Rt. 1.

Want 3 M Nizgg

D. Ricketson, Broxton, Rt. 2.
Want genuine

. Stephnson, Coolidge.

L. Thomnson,
. Box 295.

ato slips.
. Kimsey, Bishop, Rt. 1. -

2 xe.
Roosters, ,$3.50 ea. for plants;

red. sweet potatoes. Herbert J.
3 ower, Covington.

_ Want best price on guaranteed
'P. R. and Boones potato plants,
10 M to 25 M del. Elzie Barrett,

_ Want at once 10 M old fash-
joned Banana potato plants, H.

- Want several thousand P. R.
potato plants by April 15th. are

Kudzu
vine roots, prepaid. E. C. Burns,

Want hear from party having
A. Raines,

Rn exc.
Mrs. Claude W, Davis,

er Killer po-
ttato plants. State price. Ernest

Norton Yam
weet potato slips. State price
nd eariest date can ship. A. L.

Want tobacco plants, prefer-
bly Bonanzo, Gold Dollar and
Virginia Burly. Advise, Mrs. C.
Thomasville, Pp:

Want by May ist few hundred
ld time: Yellow Spanish po-
Quote price del. R.

12: young \S.3, C. Rack

rooster for 3 M. Want 2509 to-
mato; 500 pimento pepper, 1500



SEED FOR SALE
















seed, 25c; small,
: stamp. Roy Brown Buckhead.

ul. Mrs, Gussie Alexander, Mi.
Airy, Rt7-1.

Vine peach seed, 100 for 10c.
-M. G. Cheatham, Roy.

~ Calif. multiplying beer seed,





good milch cow. Mrs.
- Rockmart, Rt. 2.

o Jones watermelon seed,
Sl. 20 Ib. 8% Ibs, Pride of Ga.
elon, ely Ib. Del. Ga.,













12 Walnut St.

Sev: thousand P. oO. J.
ed, 75c- per hundred at patch.
Del. 5 M at 90c C
Mt. Vernon.

Limited
watermelon seed; 25c per 5 doz.
Covington, Rt. 2.

Watson melon seed, 75c 1b.;



~50 Ib. del,
Ye
About 2
Beed, 20c lb. Add postage. C: A.
Chastain, Adairsville, Rt3.

Hagans Ice














@mount. W. H. Hagan, Morrow.
Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box 46.

stage or. exp. paid, H,
eer ene :

-Vigorvine tomatoes, large pkg.
15e and 3c

- Okra, bunch kind, 10 pint;
sugar pumpkin seed, 10c cup-

10c per start, plus postage; 1
Sallie

No
BE. Smith, Locust

40 Ibs. long green podded okra
eed, 25c lb. E. H. Ries, Macon

cane

2 uW. cB. Cadle,

amount Big Giant

60e per 11 doz. L. C. Rawlins,

Stone Mountain or Dixie Belle,
J. F. Goodson, Wad-

Ibs. Mammoth okra

Cream melon
seed, 20c oz. $2.00 Ib. Limited

ts tender cornfield bean
8eed, 25c ee John Wilson,

Cuban i melon seed, 60c
= Stone Mtn., Dixie Bell, ae





Honey Drip cane seed, 4c tb.
Mark T. Warren, Dewy Rose.

Vigorvine tomato, 150 seed,
45 del. Will C. Smith, Roy.

Purple Hull table peas, .20c
pt.. Stone Mtn. watermelon, 35c
lb.; -Banana muskmelon, 25c
ceacupful: okra, 10 1b.:. pump-
kin, 15 teacupful. Add "postage.
Rosie Crowe, Cummings, Rt. 1.

Honey Rock cantaloupe seed.
yenerous pkg. seed, 10c or 3 for
25e. Postage paid on 25c orders.
Mrs. L. B. Landrum, Adairs-
Ville, Rt Be]

Good, clean, selected Stone
Mtn, watermelon seed, 25 1b:
FOB. B. E. Daniel, Ty Ty. -

5 lbs. pure Dixie Bell water-
melon and 5 tbs. pure Rocky
Ford cantaloupe seed, $2.50 for
either lot, or 60c lb. 3 lbs. pure
yellow crockneck squash, $1.50:
60 lb. prepaid. Sat. guar. Mrs.
R. C. Moore, Rockmart, Rt. 3.

Slightly mixed tender corn-
field beans, 20e pint; baby lima
pele beans, mixed, 20c pint;
mixed field and pie pumpkin,
10 pkg. ; fancy and best mus-
tard, 5 pke: M. L. Clayton, Roy.

Old fashioned, large type
white, half-runner bean seed,
25e Jarge cupful. Mrs. Hubert

Bryant, Ranger, Rt. 2.

Coffee berry seed, sample,
15c; 5 White Rock big type
cockerels, $1.50 ea. J. K. Noland,
Augusta, 1477 Gwinnett St.

Stone Mtn, melon seed, 1-4 Ib.,
10c;. % Ib. 20e;
postage, Frank Pearman, Chula.

300 Ibs. Cuban Queen melon
seed, 75 Ib. up to 50 Ibs. Z 00
per Ib. smaller lots. FOB. A. F.
Harvey; Ruperts) =:

Langford choice melon seed,

Limited amount. 1 Ib. 60; 2 Ibs.,

$1.00. W, A. Langford, Mays-

ville.

100 Ibs. Dixie Belle water-
melon seed, 35c. Ib.; .100 Ibs.
Suban Queen, $1.00 Th ALCL.
Brady, Rupert.

Few hundred Ibs. imp, White
Dixie watermlon seed, 55c Ib.
R. Calhoun Hogan, Dexter.

Stone Mtn. and Round Yellow
Meat watermelon seed, 34 cup-
ful, 14; 20 cupful, del. Stamps
accepted. Exch. some for dried
apples. Write first, Otis O-
Kelley, Comer, Rt. 1.

50 lbs, guar. Watson water-
melon seed, 50c Ib. del.; 50 W.
L. April pullets, now laying,
"bc 6a. FOB. No chks. M. C.
Padgett, Stilson. \

Yard long peas, 15 Ib.: Ghu-
fas, 20c 1b.; pumpkin seed, 15
cupful; pie- plant, 6 bun. 25;
garden horsemint, peppermint,
10e doz. Add postage. Sarah
Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,

Mammoth long pod okra, 10
cupful; Hastings Gold Medal
Honey Rock cantaloupe, 15c
cupful;. Exe. for tomato. plants,
large multiplying onion _ sets,
FOB. Mrs. B. L. Ashe, Bishop.

Shoo-Fly plant, 30 seed, 10
and a 8c stamp; running okra,
15 seed, 10c and 3c stamp. Mrs,
Nonnie Owen, Adaisville, Rt. 2.

Calif. multiplying beer seed,
10 this. cream sugar crowder
peas, lady peas, 3 Ibs. 25ce. Add

postage. Mrs. R.-A. Nolen, Rock- |

mart, Rt. 2.

Fancy Stone Mtn. melon seed,
80c per 1-2 Ib.; 50c Ib. 21-4 Ibs.
$1.00. Add postage. W. L. Pear-
man, Chula,

4 or 5 bu. Ribbon Cane seed,
i 25 bu. COD.: garlic bulbs. 6
for 25c; catnip, 6 bun. 25c. De-
witt White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,
Box 37.

Kaffir corn, $2.00 bu; Sag-
grain, $2.00 bu. Calico Crowder

| peas, $3.00 bu. H. F, Jackson.

Taylorsville,

Cucumber, 10c: Smell melon,
yellow gold water melon 10c;
large early beet, large pke. 10c;
Prolific seed popcorn 15 Ib.;
pure Impr. honey. drip syrup
cane seed, 3 lbs. 25c. Postpaid.

5, as Vollrath, Winston.

Cuban Queen melon seed 60c
lb.; exchange 10 Ibs. for full
stock male pig or full stock
eggs, or syrup. Starling Yawn,
Rt. 2; Bx 113, Vienna.

10 M-stalks P. O. J. seed cane
$10.00 per M, F.O.B. V. B. Jen-
kins, Blundale.:

- Improved Watson melon seed
40e per Ib. del. Marvin Gladin,
Rt. 2, Milledgeville.

1936 cushaw seed, 15c tea-
cupful postpaid. Josephine Ra-
ley, Mitchell.

Kansas Wonder watermelon,
15. seed 10c, -45,.25e, 100 50c.
Accept stamps. L. G. Watkins,
Grantville,.

Multiplying Calif. beer seed 5c
per half cupful. Nora Smith,
Rt. 2, Bx 80, Tallapoosa.

1986 Cuban Queen water melon
seed $1.00 a lb.; Dixie Bell 40
a lb.; 50 copper skin fig sprouts,
18 to 36 in. $5.00 lot: 5 for $1.00.
R. L. Bloodworth, Rt. 1, Bx 75,
MelIntyre.

Cuban Queen watermelon seed,
50c per lb, del. a less than 1
lb. shipped. J. D, Means, Elko.

Cuban Queen oo. seed
75e a lb. prepaid; Stone Mtn.
ue




ae =

-up to 50 lbs. 40c a Ihb.;

35 ib. Add.

Lott Warten. Rt





heavy breed.
et N

200 lbs. genuine improved Cu-
ban Queen melon seed, $1.00 a
lb. F.O.B.; 50 Ibs. Dixie Bell,
50e a lb.: 50 bu. mixed field
peas for hay $2.00 a bu. F.0.B.
W. QO. Birdsong, Gordon.

Pure, Rocky Ford cantaloupe
seed 40c a Ib., 3 Ibs, $1.00; Long
green pod okra seed 20 a Ib.,
8 Ibs. $1.00. All del. Mrs. Don
Clark, Rt. 2, Buford.

Benne seed, 50c a Ib._ post-
paid; Crotalaria Snectabilis, 25
a lb. PP;. Cash. Exchange for
other seeds. B. M. Thompson.
Rt. 1, Bx 153, Bainbridge,

- Mixed tender cornfie!d bean
seed 25e pint; Everbearing
strawberry plants 25e a hun-
dred. Exchange for any kind of
onicns. Mrs.
Rt. 1, Bx 81, Fairmount.

Early Market: Queen water-
melon seed, 1-4 acre, pkz. 50;
acre $1.50 postpaid: early, de-
licious cantaloup, trial pk. seed
25c. -W, M. Thornton, Jesup. .

Pure Stone Mtn. watermelon
seed, 40e per lb. del. Amos Ben-
son, Rt. 3, Dallas.

One hundred fifty lbs.. white
Stone Mountain watermelon
seed, 50c per lb. F.0O.B. H. H.
Lake, Rt. 1, Wrightsville.

Stone Mtn. watermelon seed
100 lbs.
35@ a lb,; over 100 lbs. 80c a
lb. Half and half cotton seed
$1.00 per bu. F.0.B. W. A. Moore,
Rt. 1, Haddock.

Stone Mtn. melon, pure strain
50c a Ib. exchange for 2 bantam
hens (now laying) and 1 bantam
rooster. W. P. Williamson, Rt.
1, Rochelle,

Old fashioned Georgia sugar
cane for seed. 1 cent for 3 seed
at farm, ~Tom Linder, Dublin.

Pure Pride of Ga. watermelon
seed $1.25 a Ib. prepa. Mrs.
Alton Smith, Rt. 2, Chipley.

600 Ibs. sound, en white
bunch butter pean seed 10 per
lb.. over 5 tb. lots.. Miss Dixie
Crummy, Rt. 2, Jesup. _

' Williams Impr. watermelon
seed. One pound seed and in-
structions $2.00. Elder Morgan
Williams, R.F.D. 4, Greenville.

Pp, O. J. Sugar cane, $1.00 per
100 stalks F.0.B. farm. Exchange
for anything useful on farm. H.
L. Williams, Baxley.

Red speckled sugar crowder
peas, black eye 10c per Ib., 3
Ibs. 25c del, larger lots 7c per
Ib. del; white and Barred Rock
eges mixed, both pure bred, 60c

|per 15 del. crates to be retd.

Exchange for Porto Rico potato
plants $1.25 per M del. about
April 15. Mrs, A. L. Hudgins,
Rt 2, Bremen,

5 lbs. Hales best cantaloup
seed (T. W. Woods strain). 40c
a lb. postage paid.
Moorhead, Rt. 1, Canon,

7 Ibs. pure Stone Mtn. or Dixie
Bell watermelon seed 45c per Ib.
postpaid. Geo. F, Holland, Rt.
1, Empire.

Several thousand P. O. J. cane,
fine, good tengths. J. M. Cal<
houn, 5th St. S., Cordele,

100 Ibs. No. 1H. B. 36 canta-

loupe seed, 60c a lb, C. 0. D.

Jimmie T. Garvin, Byron.

'Hales best cantaloupe seed 50c
a Ib. No orders less than 1-2 lb.
No stamps. Lot 6 1-2 lbs. for
$2.75. Mrs. Clyde a Rt: 4,
Bx 502 C, Atlanta.

Several hundred Ibs. Stone
Mtn. and Dixie Bell melon seged,
50c a Ib. del. B. R. Andrews,
Haddock. ea

10: pkgs. for 10c and 3c stamp,
1 pkg. each, cucumber, mustard,
collard, rape, okra, rutabagas,
beans, watermelon, peas, W.
Pearce, Rt 2, Cairo.

. 85 Ibs. Pure Lifsey watermelon
seed 25c per Ib. W. L. Graham,
Rt. 8, Eastman,

Pure Watson melon 75 a Ib.;
Stone Mtn., 50c a th.; pure
Hales Best cantaloupe 50e a lb.
No checks. B. L. Lucas, Vienna.

Genuine Ga. red sugar cane,

for seed $1.20 per hundred stalks
wrapped in burlap for shipment

by freight. Write for prices on
larger lots. John Underwood,
Blakeley. oe

Giant Gourd (1 bu. size) 25
seeds 15c:; Lueretia dewberry
plants 75 per 100, $6.00 per M.
Mrs. B. L. Robinson, Greenville.

Imp. Pure Pride of Ga. water- |

melon seed, 75c a Ib.; 60 a Ib.
10 Ib. lots or more. J. M. Tur-
ner, Lovejoy.

Tender, cornfield bean seed,
tender half runner garden bean
20c a cup del.; popcorn on cob
del. 15c a lb.: mustard, 3 table-
spoonstul for 10c; pimento pep-
per seeds 2 tablespoons 10c. Mrs.
J. BE. Stone, Adairsville.

Brown, white, cream speckled
sugar crowder peas 10c a lb.
mailed; 6 a lb, in 100 1b. lots
F.0.B.; New Stone, Baltimore
tomato 75 a Ib.; Marglobe $1.25
per Ib. Chas. Woodliff, Rt, 1,
Flowery Branch.

Pure Watson watermelon seed,
25c a lb. Add postage. Ben F. Al-
len, Rt. 3, Gordon.

Pure Augusta rattlesnake
melon seed 30 per Ib and post-
age. Trade for pure eges, any.
Herman Coving-

Bu Vist



Dessie Hughey..

Charles W..

21,



Certified tomato seed, Stand-
ard Margiobe $1.10 a Ib.: Balti-
more, $1.00; Rutgers $2.00 a lb.;
tomato plants $1.00 per M. May
delivery. W. R. Stephens, Rt. 6,
Gainesville. 3

20 Ibs. Stone Mtn. melon seed,
50e-per Ib. Add postage. Money
order. William HB, Ward, Rt. 2,
Cordele.



BEANS & PEAS FOR SALE



Hendersons Bush lima beans,
20c Ib.; 2 for 35c del. or $1.50
pk. FOB. Exe. for anything can
use. R. C. Smith, Danville, Rt.
2, Box 32,

4 pu. Yellow Mammoth Soy
beans, $4.00 bu.; few lbs. speck- |*
led crowders, 12 Ib. in 3 Jb. lots,
or more. G. J, Brown, Ball
Ground.

Q-too-tans and big speckled
crowders, $4.75 and $3.75 re-
spectively. Exc. either for cot-
ton seed, Dixie Triumph or
other pure, wilt-resistant ped.
seed. Alton McLendon, Carroll-
ton, Rt. 3;

O'd fashioned cornfield bean
seed, 60c gqt.; MHalf-runners
buneh bean, 30c pint. Mrs. Tom
Ross, Adairsville, Rt. 2.

Choice, recleaned, hand
threshed O-too-tan beans, $5.00
bie FOB. C. M. Lowry, LaFay-
ette.

250 bu. Iron peas, $2.50 buw.;
Biloxi beans, $2.50 bu.; 25 bu.
Brabhams, $2.75 bu.; 75 Ibs.
Dixie watermelon seed, Clarence
A. Sasser, Bonaire.

Q-too-tan beans, $4.00 bu. W.
W.. Meadows, Good Hope.

Striped Half Runner garden
bean seed, 20c cupful, postpaid.
Mrs. R. T. Bennett,-Jasper.

6 bu. Blue Goose peas, $4.00
bu.; 5 bu. white, black-eyed ta-
ble "peas, $4.50 bu. A. W. Arnold,
Newnan, Rt. 3.

6 bu. white crowders, $4.00 bu.
at my home; purple hull peas;
turkey eggs, Red and Big Bone
srassed. Mrs. Joe Griggs, La-
Grange, Rt. 6, Box 66.

Native grown O-too-tans,
$4.50; Mixed peas for hay, $2.25;
white Spanish peanuts, 100 Ibs.,
$5.00. W.-B. Norton, Ft.. Valley.

Home-grown Q-too-tans, $4.50
bu. Clay mix. peas, $2.25 bu.;
white Spanish peanuts, $5.00 per
100 Ibs. Clarence Fagan, Ft.
Valley, Phone 278-W.

. White and tan cutshort corn-
field beans, 20c cupful; large
speckled crowders and string-
less green pod bunch beans, 15
cupful, Exe. for white sacks, at
10c ea. Add postage. Rosa Rich-
ards, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

30 bu. Unknown peas, $2.00
bu.; 5 tons good, prea peavine
hay, $20.00 ton. B. H. Warren,
Louisvile,

Large; sound, white Crowder
peas, 15 lb: 2 Ibs. 25 prepaid.
Mrs, W. L. Stephens, Tallapoosa,
Star Rt.

No. 1 90-day velvet beans,
$2.00; -Brab peas, $2.50; mixed
peas, $2.25 bu. FOB my. station.
Charles B. Tanner, Sandersville,

FRED: 1

About 80 bu. Brabe: $2.50 bu.:
50 bu. Clays, 2.25 bu. FOB

Mitchell in new, 2% pu. bags.

C. D. Cheeley, Mitchell. :

-175 bu. Iron peas, $2.00 bu.
bu. burlap bags. WwW. L.. Ren-
froe, Byron.

11 bu. Unknown peas, Gsead,

rpure $2.00 bu. FOB. Cash. . F.

Walden, Harlem. Rt, 2. :
: 100: bu. No 1 New Era. peas,

$2.30 bu; 3 tons baled oat
straw, $8.00 ton. FOB. J. H.
Patrick, Jackson.

Genuine Q-too-tans, recleaned
and graded $4.50 bu.; Whatleys
Prolific seed corn, $2.00 bu.;
Cane seed, $1.50 bu. R. M. Tur-
ner, Royston.

50 bu. Biloxie beans, $2. 15 bu.
FOB. A. L. Sasser, Bonaire.

Sugar crowders, 15c lb.; 2 lbs.,
25e: 10 Ibs., $1.00 Postpaid. E.
W. Walton, Temple, RFD 2.

25 bu. 90- -day velvet beans,
sound and recleaned, $1.25 bu
FOB. S. A. Thompson, Vidette.

75 Bu. Unknown peas $2.50
per Bu. F.0.B. es S. Drake, Jef-
ferson, ;

5 Bu. white anid speckled sugar
crowder peas, recleaned. 10 per
ibs Co Va. Henderson, Rt. 2,

Chickamauga...

. 90-day A-1 seed velvet penis
$2.25. per bu. 10 bu. or: more,
$2.20 per bu. J. Frank ears
Rt. 1, Sandersville.

Velvet running beens. $2.00

per bu.; 5 ot and up $1.75 per.

bu. F. 0. . G. M. Young, Re-

becca.

115 Ibs. pure Jackson bunch
lima beans. A-1 quality. $10.00
for lot F.0.B. here. Ship in 10

Ib. lots 10e per Ib. Will not ship.

less. No check. Money order.
W M. Yeargin, Hartwell.

225 Bu. 90 day velvets even
wt. 2-1-2 bu. bags, $1.85 per bu.;
10 bu. or more $1.75 a bu. F:0.B.
Bastman, Lawton Parkerson,
Chauncey. :

| order,





Tan sugar. crowder peas 6 per
Mrs. GL. D. Spr

F.0.B. Ralph S.

Red hulled

sound, $3.00 per bu. F:.0:B.3

John
ton.

bu. del the 38rd zone;
half bu. del.
Head River,

50 ous.
bus. New. Eras
F.0.B. 10c a bu. more for Jess
than 5 bus. P. AR
.Greensboro,

Urknown or Clays;

20e cupful; white speckled and
sugar crowder peas 2 cups 15e;3
pumpkin seed 2 cups 15c.
Henry Ellis, Rt. 3, Ellijay. :

8 bu. clay peas, sound and

25 gal. honey drip

6 gal lots. Money order or cash-

Rt 2, Thomson.

ibs: 50c; red speckle crowder
peas, 10 a Ib. No orders less
4 Ibs.; Klondike and Lady. T.
strawberry plants $1.00 500;

Gainesville.

W. L. roosters $1.00 on F.0.B,
Gladys Crump, Rt.
Hllijay. .

PWhip, Iron, Unknown,

Hood, Rt. 4, Cleveland.

Velvet beans $1.00 a bu.;
2 1-2 bu. bags. W.
Ree 2, Chauncey.

Silver Hull crowder peas $1. 00
peck, $2.00 half bu., $3.50 a.

U.;
500. $4.00,
500, 80c, 1 M, $1.50. del,
Crow, Rt. 2, Gainesville,

Hastings Impr. L
10 per lb., plus postage. - Exch,
for peanuts. W. W. Callis, Rt.
8; Ellijay. ue

Striped half-runner

H. ee

1M, $1.75; Kiondike
sd,

garden

A. L. Dodd, Alpharetta.

paid 30c. D.
B 20, Acworth,

checks.
2, Box 36, Comer,

Era peas $25.00 for lot. SB.
Fagan, Martin. Bes

3 bu. Mathews impr. soy
beans $3.00 a bu.; 1 bu. little

av Lady peas 7 a Ib., $1.00
a pk.;
R.. L. Albea, Metasville. >

Cash with order, Pure pigeon
peas, prices on request.. LL,
Dickey, Springfield.

20 bu.

Rt 1, Lavonia.

coe.

per bu. Special
amounts. Sample

prices
on. request,

Devereaux.

F.0.B. here.

ville.

beans $4.50 per bu. W, F.. Mc~
Afee, Tennille.

Hood, Rt. 1, Barton.

; lapoosa. S

$2.40.a bu. F. H. Cadle, Swains-
boro,

20 bushels each, 2-crop fron
and Unknown peas.

Bowman.

bushels, at right price.
Flanders, Jjr., Rockledge,

Black Mexican _ pole bean,
slightly mixed, 15 cupful; corns

Ibs: mixed butter beans i0c a Ih.
plus postage.
worth, Rt. 4, Loganville,

Red speckled or. (polecat)





oh ao _ Simmons,





5 bu. pure sound Brabs $3.00:
per bu. Leo Helms, Buena Vista, _
20 Bu. pure Whip, 30 Bu. pure ~
red ripper: peas $2.25 per bu. -
Collier, Comer,
speckled peas,

Brown sugar crowder $1.00 per
peck, postpaid up to 2nd zone. |
W. Moseley, Rt. 2, SOPs 3



Blue Goose peas, sound, $2.50 :
$1. 30 per:
Hugh Forester,
75 bus. No. 1 Brown Whipps:
26
$2257 per bie
Stanley,

White tohder orhtield beans,
white and striped half runners

Mrs. .

practically pure $2.00 per bu.;
sorghum
syrup 50c per No. 10 bucket: in

ier check. All F.O.B. K. R. Smith,

White bunch butter ane ce

$1.75 per M. Guy row, Rt, z, .

10 Ibs. rice peas 10c a the 2 ae
3, Bx al, ?
10 or 12 bu. peas $2. 00 per bu. Se

About
-4 bu. each. All punch peas. Fred :

90 e
day velvet beans $1:50 per bu. |

Lady. ne strawberry plants ;

Ming beans ~

bean seed, white, green hulled:
running bean seed. Harly string-
less. green pod bean, 15 a tea-
cupful, plus postage. Exch. Mrs, .

White Lady _ peas 3 lbs. post= :
F, Puryear, Rt. aye

1-2. bu. white table peas, 126 a

per Ib. or 10c a Ib. for let. No
Mrs. Jessie Gordy, Rte ea

10 bu. sound iron clad or New :

speckle peas $2.50 a bu. 2
Cow peas, $2.50 per bu. F.0.B. _ :
P, Pe
Alabama: clay peas,

pure, $2.00 a bu. F0.B. No or=
der less than bu. Estes Bellamy, a

Fifty bu. No. 1 Biloxi beans
$2.50 per bu. J. W. Sewell, Ros-_

140 bu. 90 day-velvets $1.85
large .

H. E. Blankenship, Rt. 1, Chaun-- e

cey.
200 bu. sound Clay peas $2. 10 ah
a bu. F.0.B. C. W.. Coleman, :

White peas, brown-eye sugar Se
crowders, $2.50 per.bu. sacked
Send M. 0. with ~~
J. C. Newsom, Sanders- ~

20 bu. 1936 crop O-too-tan soy .

Velvet beans in hull, $1.00 per
hundred lbs. at my home. EB. W.

30 bu. New Bra peas $2. 35 a Fei
bu. F.0.B. E. A. Pope, Re 2, Tal-

5 bus. table peas, wile plack-
eyed, mixed with pure white

crowder peas, $3.00 a bu. F.0.B. ~
faceart trickland, Rt. 2, Roys=
on. ee Sa

Genuine bunch velvet beans

I, O. Siler,

Warrenton. -
Iron peas $2.50 a bu. No
checks, L. E. Barton, Rt. 1,

90 day velvet beans, one to 100 3
Po Bee

field, 20c cup. Add postage: 15 an
Mrs. L, R. Ash= eae!

crower peas 8c a Ib, SS :




































ae




























































































































/

Page Bight



\BEANS & PEAS FOR SALE



175 bu. Iron peas $2.50 per Fi

in 2-1-2 bu. burlap bags. W. L.
- Renfroe, Byron.
Several bushels genuine O- too-
tans 1936 crop, hand thrashed
and. cleaned $4.75 a bu. F.O.B,
Toccoa. J.
__ wille.
Red speckle
beans 15c per q
B. Leghorn eggs

bunch . butter
plus: postage.
be per 15. W.

D. Kea, #83 Jackson St., Dublin...

New Eras $2.50 a bu. (about
4 1-2 bu.); 1 bu. Brabham $2.50;
Indian Chief yellow corn for
seed 75c pk. All F.O.B, Jim
H. Gable, Tallapoosa, Rt. 2
is Colored | bunch. butter beans,
eaec.ip.; 2. Ibs. 25c.
Wonder bean seed, 25c Ib. Add
postage.
Will sell or exc.
McLendon, Carrollton, Route 3.

a 30 bu. New Era Peas, $2.25 per:
~ bu. f. 0. b. .G. R. Pope, Tatla-

poosa, Route 2.

\

Tender corn field beans: 20

lb. Postage unpaid. Mrs. Frank
Abernathy, Robertstown.
White Crowder peas,
Brabs $2.25. Mrs. T. H.
Route 2, Oglethorpe.
10 bu.
per bu,
wille,

$3.50,
Hall,

J, P. Leverett, Luthers-

: Black pole tender beans; 30c

ib. Small white peas, 10c ib,
.2 1bs., 15c. Klondike Strawber-
ry plants, 25c, $1.50 M. Ait-del,
_ Royce Waldrip, Flowery Branch,
Route tT:

Tender, Early, brown cornfield
bean seed. White tender corn-
field bean seed, 30c pt., add. 5c
postage per pt. Red speckled.
crowder peas 15c pt. prepaid.

Miss Irene Overby, Oakwood.

4 or 5 bu. sugar crowder peas

$2.00 per bu. f. 0. b. P: B. Ste-.

phens, Lithia Springs, Box 22.
40 bu. No, 1 Brabham peas;
- bright, $2. 60 per bu. f. 0. b.
even 2 1-2 bu, bags. J. 1. David-
son, Bonaire. q :

Bunch Velvet Beans. Sound

for seed, $3.00 per bu. Running

100-day 90- -day Velvet . beans,
$2.00 per bu. Wilmer Beasley,
Nunez,

_" White black eyed peas, 6c per
Ib. $3.00 per bu. Tyler Heard,
Canon,

3 20 bu. unknown peas, slightly
mixed. $2.00 per bu. f. . b.
my barn, E.. A. Whelchel,

ay Gainesville, Route 10.

at

Sea,

Colored . bunch
15c Ib.; 2. Ibs., 25
Wonder bean seed, 25c tb. Add
postage. Few: bu.. Black. wal-
nuts. Will sell or exe,
er McLendon, Carroliton,

butterbeans,

30 bu. New Era Peas, $2.25.

per bu. F.0.B. G. R. ROPE; Tal-
_ Japoosa, Rt. 2.
Tender corn field Beane. 20 tb.

Postage unpaid. Mrs. Frahk Ab-

_ernathy, Robertstown. |
-. White Crowder peas, $3.50.
Brabs., $2.25. Mrs. T. H. Hall,
Rt. 2. Oglethorpe.

. 10 bu. gen. O-too-tan: beans, |
J. P.~ Leverett,

$5.00 per bu. .
Luthersville.

Black pole tender beans, 30c.
}exec for chickens, turkeys, ducks,

ib. Smatl. white peas,: 10c Ib.,
2 Ibs. 15c. ~Klondike Straw-
berry plants, 25c, $1.50 M. All

. Royce Waldrip, eiowary
Branch, Route 1.

Tender, early brown cornfield
bean seed: White, tender corn-

- field bean seed; 30c pt., add post--

- age per pt. Red speckled crow-
der peas, 15c pt. prepaid, Miss
Trene Overby, Oakwood.

4 or 5 bu. sugar crowder peas

$2.00 per bu. F.0.B. P. B. Steph-

ens, Lithia Springs, Box 22.
40 bu. No. 1 Brabham 3

bright. $2.60 per bu. F.0.B.
even 21-2 bu. bags. J: I, David-
son, Bonaire, -
Bunch Velvet Beans. Sound
for seed. $3.00 per bu. Run-}
ning 100-day, 90-day Velvet
beans, $2.00 per bu. Wilmer

Beasley, Nunez.

20. bu. unknown peas, slightly.

taixed, $2.00 per bu. F:O:B. my
barn, . A. Whelchel,, Gaines-
ville, Rt, 10.

_ 25 bu. O-too-tan, hand thresh-

~ ed; re-cleaned, $5.00 per bu.,-15

bu. big speckled. crowders; "10c
_ tb... $5.00 bu. Better prices on
a) bu. or more.
_ don, Carrollton, Rt.

> White black-eyed peas, 6c per
tb. $3.00 per bu.
anon,

10 bu. nice red ripper peas, :

32. 00 bu. F.0.B. J. F. Archer,

e oe RE do
8. bu. CaS

peas, $2.40 bu. 1 bu. unkraown
peas, $2.40 bu. 1. bu.
crowders, $3.00 bu., 1 bu. pole
at crowders, $3.00 bu. All .0.
_B.. Tallapoosa. Emmett, Chand-
ler, Tallapoosa, | Rt, Bey oe,

.. Bunch. beans, seed. white: half
runners, all.. tender. . Cornfield
bean seed, deep strings, cnt-
shorts, Mixed beans, All kinds,
2be per cup eee. _No checks








H. Farmer, Ayers-.

Kentucky.

Few bu. Black walnuts.
Miss Beatrice |
\tb., $3.00 per: bu.

In:

Kentucky.

Miss | cpossed. Shelled, $2.00 bu: FOB.

| Exe. for pure Dixie Rose cotton

Tt . McLen- :

-Tyler Heard, |

gen. O-Too-Tans, $5.00 |.

| 1b.;



hen

: sound Brabham |
peas, $2.40 bu., 2 bu. New Bra.

sugar |

|Jeff, Marchman,



| young | hens. >

MARKET BULLETIN gs



| BEANS & PEAS FOR SALE

Red hulled speckled peas,

sound; free of weevils, $3.00 per
ibu., $1.00 per pk.. F.0O.B..

John
Ww. Moseley, Soperton, Rt. 2.

Beans, O-too-tans, Biloxis and
Velvets.
ey makers, Flotschers.. Write
for prices. R. S. Parham, Green-
ville. :

White. crowder, peas,
slightly mixed, 10c Ib., or $6.00
bu. F.O.B. C. Q. Trammell, Chip-
ley. -

300 bu. No. 1 Iron. peas in 2

1-2 bu. new bags. 40 bu. No. 1
Biloxi Soy $2.50 "Bon
410.5. Bonaire. . Hays,

aire.

90-day Velvet Beans in hull,
$1.00 per cwt., at my barn. E, W.
Fiood, Bartow, Rt. I.

White brown-eyed peas, 6c per
20 bu. mixed
peas, $2.25 C.0.D. Ben H. White,
fiartwell, Rt. 1.

Old fashioned tender cornfield
pean seed, 25c cup. Purple hull
white pea: red and white speck-
Jed crowders, 35c qt. Mrs. W. V.
Robbs, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.

CORN & SEED CORN
FOR SALE





Justi big ear seed corn, white,
very prolific, $1.00 peck, $3.00

bu.; also P. C. bred gilt, 140-150
ibs:., $15.00. HE. C. Justi, Alta-
maha. :

Ear corn, shucked, mix cow

peas and syrup cane seed, for
sale. J. B. Harbin, Lavonia.

Douthits prolific seed corn,
80c peck, $2.75 bu. F.0O.B. W. E.
Douthit, Ellijay, Rt. 5.

Big, prolific pop corn, for
grain, forage and silage, $3.00
bu.; $1.00 peck, del. J. S. Mor-
ton, Lunipkin, Rt. 1. : ae

75 bu. corn, $1.25 bu. at my |:

home. B. M. Edgar, Winder,

50 bu. pop corn in ear, Red
and yellow. 7c lb. in any amount.

Mrs. H. N. Roddenberry, Soper-"

ton, Rt. 1:

._ Poor land corn deed: shelled
$2.50 bu.: white lima beans, 15
tender brown striped or
white cornfield beans; 30c 1b.;
crowder peas, 15c lb. L. E. San-
ders, Buchanan, Rt. 2.

Greens 2-ear prolific seed
corn, $2.50 bu.; Black-eye
white crowder peas, $4.00 bu.
$2.00 per 1-2 bu. FOB my home.
Geo, L. Green, Jasper.

Marlboro prolific seed corn.
White Dent and Hickory King,

seed, not mixed. .Nelson Pope,

Tallapoosa.

Mexican June corn. Limited.

amount, 30 for qt. J. L.. Moore,
Bethlehem.

Hastings | Prolific and Marl-
boro, $2.50 bu. 75 pk.,. FOB. Exc.

34 bu. for case of 6-10 1b.:can

No. 1 Ga. cane syrup. Ea: pre-.
pay ches. W. A. Moon, Waco.

3 dif. var. seed pop corn, Jum-

bo yellow, red, red yellow mix- |

ed pure white, 6c lb. Value to
hams, other farm produce. Mrs.
E. Spence, Bs 130 West
Wesley Ave.

200 bu. corn, $1.25 bu. at. erib
J.-C. Thomas, "Adel,

Pucketts Impr. seed corn,

shelled, $2.50 per bu. FOB. -J. J. ;
4 Craig; Rt, 1, Ranger.

Hastings: select prolific sect

| corn, first yr. 75 pk., $2.50 per

bu. FOB; 2 bu. extra early: pro-

4 lifie black crowder peas, . 10
415, or $5.50 bu. -Net less than
16 Tbs mailed. H..3. McCollum,

Rt. 2. Canon,

Whatleys prolific seed corn,
nubbed and sheiled, $1.40 for

11-2 bu. $2.50 per bu. Charles

W. Adams, Jr., Social Circle,
Impr. Marlboro Prolific seed

corn 60c. per peck, FOB. J. W.

Pierce, Rt. 6, Gainesville.

6 or 8 hundred Ibs. So. Amer-
ican popcorn: also walnut
meats, Miss Willie Mason, Cut
Cane,

Marlboro prolific seed corn
mubbed .and. shelled, 75. pk..
$2.50 a bu. FOR. Chas. 7 MeMil-
lan, Rt. 8, Gainesville.

300 Ibs. Golden queen popcorn,
fe per. lb. PP: Mrs. W:. uns
hook, Cut Cane.

Pure Hastings Trucker nese

ite seed corn, first yr., $2:50
per bu., 75c a pk.: 300 bu. good
sound hard white corn in shuck,
EVen Moore, Suwanee,

i bu. Dynamite pop corn, 10c
a 1b.;. 8 lb,.in larger amounts.
Prepay orders over $1.00. Mrs.
White Plains.

Impr, White dent, Marlboro
Prolific corn, shelled, . pk. Gol-
den -dent, $2.00 a bu. FOB: $1
2 pk; syrup cane seed. seed $2. 00.
a bu., FOB. Exchange for O-too-
tan beans; 1' piow in first class
running shape, 8.50, or ex.
for good feed oats or 8 good,
aes. Pope, Talla-



poosa,



Pecans, Stewarts mon- |

46.00 | bu. $1.50: peck 90c here. W. H.

| cotton seed, 2nd yr.

ae gal.

$3.50: per 100. Ibs.



COTTON SEED FOR SALE

Stoneville No. 2 cotton seed,
= 00 per hundred Ibs. FOB. H.
. Moore, Box 204, Jackson.

rie Rose cotton seed 1 and
2 yrs from originator. $2.25 per

bu. E. H. Adams, Box 32, Cairo.

Stoneville No. 2-A first. year,
re-cleaned, 100-lb. bag. $4.15
each; Whatieys prolific seed
corn, shelled, $2.75 a bu.; half

Bolton, Griffin,

Pure D. P. L. No. 11. dotton seed,
in 3 bu. white cotton bags. About
600 bu. W. O. Hudson, Fortsonia.
Post office, Elberton, Rt. 1.

Coker Strain, 1st yr. wilt-re-
sistant farm relief $1.25 per bu.
FOB; Brown sugar crowder and
large black clrowder seed peas,
$2.75 per bu. E. Hi, Jones, Way-
CTOSSS4

.Pettys Toole Cotton Seed from
first harvesting, 90c per bu.,
FOB my farm. John H. Allen,
Fort Valley.

Several hundred bushels Cooks
Impr. wilt-resistant cotton seed.
5 bu. or less $1.25 per bu. 5 to
25 bu. $1.15. per bu.; 25 to 100
bu., $1.10 per bu; carload. lots,
$1. 00 per. bu. All prices FOB
here.. D. D. Garrison, Box. 227,
Fitzgerald.

About 60 bu.. good half and
half cotton seed for planting,
$1.00. per bu. Mrs. B. J. Wil-
liams, Rt..2, Brooklet.

About 1000 Ibs. pure No. 11
Ruckrs Cotton seed, 1 yr. from
origin at $5.00 per CWR. IL. P.
Forrester, Rt. 4, Gainesville,

Choice Stoneville No. 4 A cot-
ton seed, :1st year. $1.25 bu.;
8% bu. O-too-tans, $5.00 a bu.
All FOB -W. Coleman Tanner,

RFD 1, Sandersville.

Wannamakers Cleveland, $3. 00
per hundred; few hundred lbs.
Farm Relief, 2 yrs old, sound,
$4.00 per hundred; exchange for
Spanish peanuts. iL. E. Adams,
Rt. 2, Hartwell. ma

ton-seed, first year, $1.75 per bu.
$5.00 for 100 lbs. FOB. Arthur
Smith, Monticello.

Pure College No. 1 cotton seed,
$1:00 per bu.; few bu. Farm Re-
lief cotton seed, $1.00. E. N.

. Hopper, Ranger.

50 bu. Galloway Impr. ' Dixie
Rose cotton seed, $1.50 per bu.
Freight paid. on 10 bu. or more.
He smith, @ Rt. 15 Bx, 88;
Hilltonia,

40 bu. Stoneville. No. 2 cot-
ton seed, $1.00 a .bu.; Qualla
cotton seed, $1.00 a bu. All FOB.
J. H, Mosley, Rt. 1, Rockmart.

100 bu. Half and Half cotton
seed, $1.20 per. bu. W. B. Hen-
derson, Rt. 2, Fitzgerald, .

4 tons Imp. Petty Toole big
boll,.$1.25 bu.; over 10 bu., $1.00

} per bu. cash. J . Walter Crummy,

Rt. 2, Jesup.

100 Bu. A-1 Stoneville No. 2
( in 100 Ib.
bags $1.00 per bu. FOB. Bryce

L. Jordan, RFD 1, Carrollton.

Pure Cokers Farm Relief cot-
ton seed, 90c per bu.; $2.75 per

CWT, FOB. Special price. on
large orders. O. L. Stone, Rt. 2,
Logansville.

.25. bu. Dixie Rose eotton seed,

ist. year, $1.50 per bu. FOB
wile R. F. OKelley, Daniels-
ville

Stoneville No: 2 cotton neal

| $1.15 per bu., $3.90 per hundred.

Honey drip sorghum syrup 50

. Smith, Thomson.

eau Rose, $1.50 per bu.
freight paid on 10 bu. or more;

3 bu. Brannons three crop peas,

$1. 25::per pk, postpaid. ic HH.

Smith, Hilltenia,

25 bu. carefully ginned Wan-
namaker Dixie Triumph wilt-
resistant cotton seed, 1st yr.
90c per bu. FOB. Reginald Story,
Thomson.

Pure D. & P. L. cotton seed,
90ce per bu. FOR. W. A. Wil-
son, Rt. 2, Bremen.

Galloways Dixie Rose cetton
seed, 2nd yr., $2.00 per bu. B.
f. F. Collins, Rt. 2, Bx 76, Coch-
ran, :

50 bu. Stoneville No. 2 cot-
tonseed, Ist yr., $1.00 per bu. in
not less than 3 bu. lots, FOB.
J. A. Crawford, Rt. 2, Calhoun.

Pure Cleveland Big Boll Wan-
namaker, also Half: and. Half,
second year, $1.00 a bu. All FOB
R. R. station. L. ae Strange, Rt
2, Cobbtown. \

Cokers: Farm Relief,
$4.00 for 100 Ib. bag.
C. Oliver Carnesyille. ~

About 30 bu. good cotton seed,
$1.00 per bu. Mrs. R. L. Wil-
mss Boston. G

~D. P. L.. 11. cotton seed, first
year, $1.35 per bu. W. J. Bren-
nan, 1511 19th St. Columbus.

Impr. Big Boll Dixie Rose cot-
ton seed; $2.50. per -bu. FOB.
John C.. Johnston, RFD 3, Ho-
gansville.

500 bushels each selected
Stoneville No. 2 and Stoneville
No. 5," grown on separate farms,
Gi1- Bi bus.)
yo ae

ine
strain
W.

bags, FOB here, BR
RCP CEN: ah









100 bu. Dixie Ros Boll cot- |.
and recleaned, treated, $1:25 bu.

$3.50. Russell Brown, Helena.

$10.00.

in 6 gal lots. Thomas

|. Everlay B. L.,



AG. C.



COTTON SEED F OR SALE



Stoneville No. 2- cotton ee
$1.25 bu; few bu. Mars Rose
same price. FOB. W. H. San-
ders, Rockmart, Ga. Rt. 3.

15 bu. ea. Wannamaker. and
Stoneville, No. 2 cotton seed.
$1.00 bu. Ex. for O-too-tan beans
or peas. C. W. McLendon, -Car-
rollton, Rt. 3.

50 bu. pure Stoneville No. 2
cotton seed, 2nd yr.. recleaned.
$1.15 .bu. Riley C. Couch, Turin.
200 Ibs: Farm Relief and 300
Ibs. Stoneville No. 2. All screen-
ed. $3.50 per 100 lbs. FOB. W. J.
Thurmond, Greensboro.

Stoneville No. 5 cotton seed,
ist_yr. pure. $1.25 bu. FOB. J.
H. Goolsby, Monticello.

Maretts Cleveland Big Boll
cotton seed, ist year., 1.25 bu.
J. N. Hargrove, Jr., Vienna,

Farm Relief No. 2 cotton seed,
2nd yr. from Coker, $1.00 bu.
FOB. Guaranteed. J: Ralph Dug-
gan, Warthen.'

Galloways Dixie Rose cotton
seed, 5=8 lock, $2.00 bu. Exc. for
Brab. or New Era peas; bu.
for bu. ea. pay shipping chgs. on
what he gets. A. B. Payne,
Temple, Rt. 2.

20 bu. Stoneville No. 2, $1.00
bu. at my place. Exc. for peas;
2 bu. for 1 of peas, B. D. Mc-
Leod, Stone Min., Rt. 1.

60 bu. recloaried D&PL cot-
ton seed, 90c bu. Ernest O.
Sayer, Douglasville.

Pettys Toole cotton seed, re-
cleaned, $1. 6 pu. D. J. McLean,
Alma, Rt 1 es

10 bu. Wannamakers
Triumph wilt-resistant, 1st yr.
Pure, sound, $1.00 pu. in any
amount, sacked, F.0.B. shipping
station. W. D. Harper, Way-
SrOss 1004 Plant. Ave.

' Cockers No. 2 cotton seed,
ei, 25 bu.: Stoneville No. 5, $1.00
bu. Unknown peas, $2. 25 bu.
E. R. Bailey, Harlem.

Pure Stoneville No. 2, culled

Dixie

F.0.B. GC. S.. Colley, Grantville.

POULTRY FOR SALE





\ LEGHORNS

28 W. L. Yr. old, now laying
hens, AAA strain, no culls, $1.00
ea. FOB. OD. Dixon, Register. :

' About 65 March, 1936, hatch,
bloodtested,' Imp. Eng. W, 1,
hens, $1.00 ea.; 7 Ped. and blood-
tested roosters, $1.50 ea. Exe. for
sound corn. FOB. Mrs. A. C,
Malphus, Tusculum.

125 W. L. hens and watioke
English str. 75 ea. if lot taken.
Mrs. P. N., Clifton, Graymont,
Rt; 1, Box. 180. -

100. Tancred AAAA Grade SS.
C. W. L. pullets, 50 AAAA Shep-
pard str. Ancona pullets, all
spring, 1986, hatch, now -laying,
$1.00 ea. "Mrs. R. Day, Dames
Ferry. ~

4 hens, rooster, yr. old, Buff
or Yellow Leghorns, pure bred,

120 Thompson str. W. I.
March, now laying hens, 75c ea.
FOB.. T. J. Holland, Empire. -

12 hens, rooster, pure bred
English str. W. L. 1936 hatch,
Money order or cash,
pee chks. Vivian Barnes, Sum-
mi

80 . W. ts April pullets, now
laying 80 per cent, 90c ea. W. O.
Ramsey, Gainesville, Rt. 6.

15 B. L. hens and rooster, yr.
old, $1.00 ea. Trade for Spec-
klead Sussex, turkeys or pigs.
Porter Thomas, Macon, Rt. 5.

50 pure bred Everlay str.
March 1936 hatch, now laying
Brown Leghorn hens, 75c. ea.;
roester with 15 hens given. Mrs.
pass Paulk, Willacoochee, RFD

10 S. C..W. L. yearling hens,
Booths AAA Ped., $12.00. del.,
$1.25 ea. Mrs. T. W. Hagood,
Powder Springs, Rt. 1.

4 AAA W. L,, April, 1936,
hatch, roosters, $1.00 ea.; at my
home. Mrs.. W. H. Morris,
Woodstock, Rt. 2.

4 W. L. Rusk Big Eng. str. 6
mos. old: cockerels. Sell or exch.
Mrs. J. L. Collins, Uvalda,. Rt.. 1.

100 young W. L. Eng. str. hens,

no culls. - Reasonable. E. R.
Abernathy, Goggins.
12 hens and
rooster, April, 1936, shatch, $10.00.
No chks. Mrs. Thomas Ss. Strin-
ger, Manassas, RFD 2, :

Barron Eng. W. L. 8-10 wks.
old cockerels, direct Roselawn;

$1.00 ca. FOB, Lester DeFoor,
Toccoa, Rt. ees
100 April, 1936, S. Cc. W. L.

pullets, Tancred str., good cond.,
laying, $1.00 ea. G, W. Shannon,
Lenox.

100 W.:L. hens, 15 Brown Leg-
horns and 12 Buff: hee horne, 75e
ea. All young. ae 4 . G. Duke,
Wray. Stee

65 big tyne Ene. W. L. hens,
10 mos. old, laying, $1.00 ea.
MeGinnis, oo Rt 5,











-cock, $5.00.

_ Thursday, April 1, 1937



POULTRY FOR SALE
33 hens, 2 roosters, Booths
AAA W.L., 2 yrs. old, all laying,
breeders, $30. 00, FOB, J. C. M,
Bohlen, Madison, RFD 3.

35 April, 1936, W. L., now lay-
ing, pullets, $34, 00 or -$1.00 ea,
Mrs. T. S. Shannon, Lenox.

' 40 W. L. April hatch - hens,



now laying, no _ culls, $25. 00.
Kermit Salter, Brooklet, Rt. i
MINORCAS

15 pure bred Golden Buff Mi
norea pullets, 2 roosters, $15.00
6 Ancona pullets, 1 rooster, $5.00,
Pullets laying. FOB, Frank Ben-
nett, Coffee.

49 pullets, rooster, Golden Buft _

Minorcas, laying, healthy, $40.00,
Mrs. J. W. Brown, Helena.

8 AAA grade Buff Minorca
cockerels, direct Kirchers, July -
hatch, $1.00 ea. FOB. Joe Law-
son, Gainesville, Rt. 7.

Rusk Golden Buff Minorcas, 30
hens, last spring hatch, $1.00 ea.:;
Eggs, $1.00 per setting. Mrs. Cc.
E. Phillips, Royston, Rt. 1.

8 ROP Black Minorca 14 mos,
old cock, $4.50. Also. Hy-bred,
Black Minorca-White Leghorn
cross eggs, $1.00: per 15, $5.00 CG,
del. J. J. Harvard, Hawkinsville,

GIANTS

1 Royal Blue Jersey, Black
Giant 4 mos. old 5 Ib. cockerel.
Not. reg. $2.25 Del. Ga, G@lement
W. Smith, Roy.

15 J. White Giant, 12 wks. old,
50c ea.s; booking orders for 200
Exhibition Grade Buff Orp., 3-
6 wks. old; cabbage-collard
plants; 10c C; 50 M. Sat. guar.
Aaron Sampson, Jr., Quitman.

J. B. Giant baby chicks, April
del., $10.50 C; Beggs, ae per
15, "prepaid. Mrs. L., B. Land-
rum, Adairsville.

Royal Purple J. B.. Giant. roos-
ter, $1.50; cockerels ,$1.25 and
$1.00 ea.; Eggs, 75c per 15, plus
postage, crate ret. Mrs. M. M.
Simpson, Waverly Hall,

Thoroughbred Jersey i
Giant cockerel, April 1936. hatch,

Stock reg. at State Capitol. $2.00, p

prepaid on receipt of money or-
der. GR. Arnall, Atlanta. 331
Peters St.

BANTAMS

Bantams, .5 hens, 1 rooster.
1936 hatch. $2.00 del. Exc. for
2 bu. corn del.
ther, Lithonia, Rt. 3.

4 Golden Sebright,.now lay-
ing, yr. old hens, $2.50. Not
prepaid.. No checks. Mrs, L. J.
MeArthur, Calhoun, Rt. 2.

Game Bantams, 4.. hens,
rooster, $2.00... Exe. for small

gilt pig. Lamar Davis, Sand-
ersville, Rt. 1. .
2 hens, 1 rooster, 11-2 yr.

thoroughbred Jap. Silkie Ban-
tams. $3.00 prepaid. Exc. for
Rhode Island hens.
Craven, Demorest, Box 79.

Golden Sebrights, ist, 2nd, 3rd
prizes at Southeastern Fair,
1936; Day old. chicks, 15c ea.;
Eggs 10c ea., Birds $1.25 ea.
R. B. Scarboro, Atlanta, 736
Lawton St. S. W., phone Ra..
3348.

Pure Single-comb white ban-
tams, 75c ea. $1.50 pr. $2.00
trio. Eggs 50c per a Sidney
J. Herring, Route 1, Hartwell
Georgia.

BRAHMAS

2 roosters, 8 hens, Light Brah-
mas: 8 mixed hens, large breed;
2 White Australian guinea roost-

ers. Mrs. Victoria Vasser, Comer,

Rt. 2.
GAMES

Pit games, Walker Falcons,
exclusively; cocks, $5.00; stags,

$3.00; pullets, $2.50; eggs, $2.50

per 15. G: W. Price, Ane

1678 Emory Road, N. E.

Black Breasted Red game bans
tams, from Prize Winners in
Shows,
Cleveland. Also pr. Dark Cor-
nish, good show type. W. K.
Herndon, PMEOES 1109 Adrian
Street. -

Irish Grey tees
Guar. please. No
letters or cards ans. J. A. Mason,

Ranger.
Trio Tassel, Clairbourne, $5.00;

trio, half Clairbourne, half Brown, | =

Red, $5.00: Warhorse 6 lb. cock,
$2.00; Roundhead 5-lb cock,
$3.00: cross, Smoke Ball-Brown

Red, Warhorse, 5 1-4 Ibs., $2:00.

William King, Blairsville, Rt. 3.

. Purebred Bacon Warhorse
rooster, ready . trimmed, 1936
hatch, $1.50 not prepaid. Mrs.
Ww. Ey Allred, Tallapoosa, RE: a;
Box 170.

Blue Cuban 6 he cock, $2.00.
Exe. for Roundhead stag, or Blue
and 2 Brown Red pullets for
Roundhad stag and 2 pullets; f
pen Brown Reds, 4 hens, cock,
$7.00;. Eggs, $1.00 setting. C. N.
Miller, Gainesville, Rt. 4, as

Few choice Gray cocks, yr. old,

guar. dead game, good shape. Sell
or exc. for setting of eggs from
pure Trish Gray, or Black War
horse; also few settings prize
stock pure white Bantams for.
sale at: 75c: set.:
Cavin, Menlo,

ie



" 4

Mrs. E. V. Pra=
4

Mrs. I. Ne {

New York, Allentown,

$3.50 eas

COD. RR, He












Red 3




CORNISH

ornish; 10 ea. hens and pul-
; Jaying, AAAA, Berry, Sun-
1 Str. Cheap. Garland K.
e, Conley, Rt. 1.

hens, yr. old, laying, av.
bs., rooster, same age, fine
ok, $20.00; Eggs, $1.00 per 15,
C. L. Purdue, Decatur,

10 Dark Cornish yr. old, laying,

oodtested hens, $1.00 ea.; 45

Atics, 7 wks. old, 30 ea. M.O.
. Lewis Duggan, Ha-

. Dark Cornish 2 yr. old hens,
ock, 10 late summer pullets
nd cockerel, $1.00 ea. FOB.
-g, Viola King, Pearson.
io large type Dark Cornish
prize winning str., blood-
ested, $5.50 FOB.: Eggs, $1.00
15 prepaid; 10 R. I. Red
and rooster, $11.50 FOB.
O. Sikes, Sylvester.
ure bred Dark Cornish cock-
8, $1.50 ea.; Eggs, $1.00 per
, postpaid. - J.B, Gardner, Lo-
ist Grove.
oxtra. nice, thoroughbred Dark

sh 1985 cock, treated, $1.25

James Brown, Helena,
6 pure bred Dark Cornish hens,
roosters, 1936 hatch, $1.00 ea.
ash or money order, Mrs. Al-

fred Gibbs, Rochelle.

12 purebred Dark Cornish pul-
lets, some laying, 70c ea. Mrs.
G. C. Davis, Greensboro, Rt. 2.

fine Dark Cornish Indian

ers, $1.00 ea. FOB.: Eggs,

We per 15, del: Mrs, J.
kern, Fender.

10 pullets, rooster, Dark Cor-

ish, April, 1936, hatch, $10.00,

O i M .O. only. Mrs.

arvey Foster, oo Rt.

Os

WYANDOTTE

80 White Wyandotte, 11 mos.
d, pullets. 12 cockerels, all of-
ially bloodtested, $1.25 ea. or
100.00 for flock. Trade for 100
. corn delivered my farm;
hite Rock hatching eggs, $1.00
15, money order or cash.
McCrea, Americus.
Purebred R. C. Silverlaced
eockerel, April 1
, blood-tested, $1.50 or
Mrs. A. Rumbold, Rt. 1,

Purebred white Wyandotte.

ullets from prize stock, $1.25
f.o.b.; roosters, $1. 00 ea.,
Mattie B. McPherson,

R. C. Siivarlaced Wyandotte
osters, $3.00, 1 for $1.25. Pure-
d, 10 mos, old, bloodtested.
postage. Mrs. E. L. Todd,
aldosta. cae
10 Pullets, 1 rooster, R. C.
erlaced Wyandotte, Tarbox
now laying, $11.25. Money
rder, Mrs. Howard Elkins, Rt.
iS, Cairo. |
8 Young Golden laced Wyan-
tte hens, $9.00.
anders, Rt. 2, Buchanan,

ORPINGTONS
, Dd Buff Orp., yr. old; also

g, th

roughbred Cornish game chick-
C. A. Malphus, Tusculum.
Buff Orp. pullets, 90c ea.;

old hens, 60c ea., all laying,

good condition.

ichols, Rt. 2,. Broxton.

15 pure bred Buff Orp. hens,
ooster, $1.00 ea., $15.00 for
f. 0. b. Mrs. Ben Dougherty,

D. 7, Gainesville. ~

10 pure bred Buff Orp. hens,
sold, Myers laying strain,
) ea. Exchange for seed
3, peanuts, or Irish potatoes,
sonably priced. Mrs. Gussie
oderson, Rt. 4, Alma.

7 Buff Orp. hens, 1 cockerel,
-old, pure bred, $7.00 for
also, gilt, 3-4 P. C., 1-4 Red

rsey, bred by pure pred P. C.
e, farrow in April, $12.00. Al-

rt Jones, Midville, Rt. 2.

PHEASANTS

2 pr. Golden Pheasants, $6.00
1 Golden cock, $3.50; also
rbon Red turkey eggs, 25
2a.. $2.75 dozen. New Hamp-
shire Red (chicken) eggs, 5c ea.
Mrs. J. H. Free, Box 137, Pres-

DS (RHODE ISLAND)

40 R. I. Red hens and pullets,
Donaldson strain, $40.00. Mrs.
ei<s: Miers, 346 Clifford Ave.,
N E., Atlanta,

50 Es I. Reds, 12 weeks old, av-

e 2 Ibs. 50c. Bloodtested,

purebred, free of disease. Aaron
ampson, Quitman.

Purebred R. I. Red pullets,
laying, young rooster,
a 0 plus trans, chgs. Money
ir Mrs. Ads igor Jr.,

| postpaid.

ea.

Mrs. Ethel

rooster,

| $5.00;

Mrs. M. S.



25 hen hatch R. I. Reds, Bea.
aldson strain baby chicks April
7th, 10c at day old, del. White

and Red English peach trees, 3

Mrs.
Buena

to 4 feet, 15c a tree, del.
G. EB. McDaniel, Rt. 4,
Vista.

REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRE)

75 6-weeks-old New Hamp-=

shires, 25 ea. Money Order. Mrs.

| Jim Sam, Berryhill, Rt. 2, Coch-

ran.

Cockerel, New Hampshire Red,
super grade, 9'mos. old, 11
pounds, purebred, . $1.00; also
want a setting purebred New
Hampshire eggs at $1.00 per 15.
Mrs. Lizzie Roper, Culberson, N
C. (Resident of Georgia.)

BARRED, WHITE AND
OTHER ROCKS

5 guar. pure Fishchel strain,
White Rock, yr. old pullets. $1. 50
ea. Eggs, selected, 75e per 15,
Mrs. Guynelle Her-
ring, Hartwell, Rt. 1.

3 pure bred Barred Rock blood-
tested roosters. Mrs. V. EH. Nix,
Valdosta, Rt. 4, Box 204.

8 purebred yr. old Fischel
Strain White Rock Roosters.
$2.50 ea. Mrs. Clarence Wal-
drop, Forsyth, Rt. 1.

Thompson Ringlet B. R. April
Cockerels. $1.25 to $1.50 ea. $2.50
pr. Eggs $1.15 per 15. Will exc.
Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin.

6 now laying, Thompson
strain, April hatch, Barred Rock
pullets, 1 rooster. $6.50, $1.00
ea. Eggs, 75c per 15.
Wilson, Martin.

Parks Barred Rock Rooster.
$1.25.. Collect. Elmer Ross,
Head River.

Few White Rock cockerels,
Thompsons best str., and few
W. L. cockerels, Ped. flock, $2.50
ea. W. A. Hilton, Ellaville, Rt. 2.

AAA Holtermans Aristocrat,
Barred Rock Cockerels and
roosters. $1.25, $1.50, $2.00 ea.
Hoarhound plants, 10c doz. Mrs.
B. H. Osborn, Roy. ~ :

Purebred Partridge Rock hens,
roosters. Excellent stock, $1.00
No fewer than 5 shipped at
this price. Eggs, $1.00 per 15.
M. O. with order. Mrs. Jesse
Mixon, Ocilla. ye

1 yr. old ida Rock and |

Blue Game roosters. $1.25 ea.
Also pure bred Bourdon Red, yr.
old toms, $3.00 ea. All FOB.
Mrs. Jim Wooten, Route 1, Box
36, Broxton, Georgia.

3 fine, 1 yr. old, Thompson
Barred Rock Roosters. $1.50 ea.
Cash with order. Mrs. A. J. Col-
lins, Demorest, Rt. 1.

20 young hens, ready start
laying, and 2 cockerels, pure
White Rocks, $18.00. No chks.
W. J. Brown, Fairburn, Rt. 1.

25 purebred April 1936 pullets,
now laying, $1.00 ea.; 2 hams,
guar. sound, 28 lbs, ea. 30c Ib.
del. Mrs.-B. T. Thornton, Bow-
don, Rt. Pes

SWSSEX

Fine year-old speckled Sussex
$1.25 f.0.b.. Valdosta;
Mrs. J. A. Morgan, Valdosta.

Laven GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE.
(40 Muscovy ducks, 1 drake,

eggs, $1.00 . setting 24
eggs. "$1.50, prepaid. Moline M.

_| Landrum, Adairsville.

Extra fancy Brown Chinese

geese, $15.00 pair; eggs, 30c ea.

C. S. Tidwell, Stone Mtn. Ee
way, Stone Min.

neas, 1936 hatch, pair $1.50, trio
$2.00, f.0.b.; eggs in season, $1.00
for 20;.-Miss Mattie J. Rowan,
Cartersville.

White African guineas, $1.25
each or $3.00 trip. Mrs. Arthur
W. Arnold, Rt. 3, Newnan.

A few. Bourbon Red turkey
hens now laying, best offer gets
them: also pecans, Money-Mak-
ers, Schleys and Stewarts. . Mrs.
R. L. Greene, Rt. 4, Cuthbert.

1 Mammoth bronze tom, May
1936 hatch, $5.00 cash at my
place. L. L. Holt, Rt. 3, Box 66,
Vienna.

Trio M. 3B. turkeys, 1936
hatch; eggs, $2.00 per dozen.
Mrs. C. J. Ligon, Talbotton.

Large young hens, purebred,
big boned, M. B. turkeys, ready
to lay, 25c Jb. or $3.25 \ each,
f.o.b.; Eggs, $3.00 per doz., pox
to be returned. Mrs. Fuller Stur-
divant, Rt. 2, Chipley.

6 Turkey hens, laying, 1
bler, Bronze stock, $17.00.
Leila Gullede, Bartow.

38 Bourbon Red M. .B.
turkey hens, $3.00 ea.; 1 tom,
same breed, $4.00, 1936 hatch,
cash with order, hens ready to
lay: eggs, $3.00 doz. del. Mrs.
Omie E. Faircloth, Rt. 1, Pu-
laski.

2 Bronze turkey gobblers, $4.00
ea.; 6 Bronze hens, $3.00. ea.;
1936 hatch; Mrs. S. L. Oglesbee,
Rt. 2, Box "191, Augusta.

gob-
Mrs.

3 Fee 18. Tb. fone April

Wallace |

|.C. Gosnell, Clarkesville, Rt. 3.

| ref,
Purebred White African gui- |



- BABY CHICKS

Quality W. L. baby chicks
from selected two-year hens,
for sale; want 2 males out of
300-egg hens, April hatch. At
reasonable del. price. M. W.
Kantala, Elberton.

Reds, Barred Rocks, White
and Brown Leghorn chicks, $9.00
per hundred; heavy mixed, light
mixed, $8.00 per hundred del.
Live delivery guaranteed, D. F.
Thomas, Odum.

80 Mixed chicks, 4 wks. old,
March ist, 19c ea., express col-
lect, money order preferred. Mrs,
J. aa Myrick, Rt. 2, Hawkins-
ville

100 purebred Buff Orp. day-
old chicks, $8.00 C prepaid, 6
wks. old, 40c ea. for 6 or more,
f.0.b.; Eggs, 60c setting of 15, 3
or more settings, 75c singly,
crates ret. Mrs. Lillie H. Jor-
dan, Rt. 2, Norwood.

MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS

16 nice pullets, heavy mixed
(mostly White Rocks), April,
1936 hatch, 75c ea. del. at ex-
press Office. J. L. Davis, Curry-
ville.

About-13 ready to lay, mixed
pullets, 2 roosters; yr. and 2 yrs.
old, $9.00, or swap for yr. old
heifer, zood breeding, in good
shape. Bring heifer and get
chickens. Mrs. Henry Welch,
Eatonton, Rt. 2. ;

A hen and 15 baby chicks, week
old, mixed heavies, B. R., Red
Cross, $2.50 not del.; also grown
duck and drake, $1.50. Mrs. W.
T. Bryan, Sharpsburg, Rt. 1.

. PIGEONS

Mated white Fantail pigeons,
$1.00 pr. J. P. Wilson, Quit-
man.. : ;

White .King pigeons,
Exchange for potatoes, corn,
chickens or syrup; also $150.00
value to trade for same products.
George W. Calhoun, Cordele.

White King pigeons, 50c pair.
Exchange: for chickens,
James Braddy, Butler.

1 pair fancy Red Saddle Fan-
tail pigeons, mated, banded and
working, $2.00, shipped in light
crate. J. D. Bryan, Lula.



POULTRY WANTED



BABY CHICKS

Want 2-300 chicks to raise on
halves to 8 wks. old, R. I. Reds
or B. Rocks.

age both ways; furnish feed.

Mrs. J. H. Hayes, Sparta, Rt. 2.}

' Want 1 to 300 baby chicks to
raise on halves to 8-10 wks. old,
any kind large breed. Mrs. J.
W. Peel, Leslie.

Want 150-200 baby chicks to
raise on halves to 10 wks. old.
Mixed or full stock, any kind;
have a thoroughbred, Avril hatch
Red cock, $2.50 del. Ollie Head,
Flowery Branch, Ris,

Want 500. full stock Reds,
W. L., or Brown L., to raise on

| halves to 8-10 wks. old, by April

15. -Party pay trans. chgs. Olin

Want 100 or 200 chicks to
rais on halves to 10 wks. old.
Mrs. J. B. Woods, Ocilla, Rt. 2.

- Want 100 W. L., or Reds to
raise on halves to 8 wks. old.
Mrs. tah Douglas, Alma, Rt. ais
Box 5. a

Want 100 W. ee B. R. to raise |.
Booths AAA White Leghorns,.

on halves to 8 wks. old. Good

Want 300 Wie Las large type
preferred, and 100 heavy breed,
any kind, to raise on halves to
8 wks. old. Mrs. S. Y. Windom,
Newnan, Rt. 4.

| BANTAMS

Want White or Black Cochin,
White Crested Black Polish, Sil-
ver Spangled Hambergs,. for
cash, or will exc. Golden Pheas-
ant eges. D. 'T. Jennings, Amer-
icus, P. O. Box 84.

Want 100 bantam hens, any
size, any color, at 25 ea. del.
my place. Write J. D. Daven-
port, Atlanta, P. O. Box 433.

BARRED WHITE AND OTHER

ROCKS E

Want White Ply. Rock, 1935
hatch cock. State str., wt. and
price. 2s S: Visscher, Decatur,
711 Chureh St.

GAMES

Want some game chickens to
raise on halves. L. A. Bray,
Dixie, Rt. 1. :

Want breeding stock and eggs,

cf Black Sumatra and Long
Tailed Black Japanese games.
Advise R. P. Dixon, Rossville,

LEGHORNS

Want 2 B. L., 6-8 mos. old
roosters, pure pred, at reason-~
able price; have 200 Ibs. Silver
Hull sugar crowder peas, rea-
sonable, James Sims, Villa Rica.

Bohs 6 W. ee laying hens and

25e ea. |

cee Hee

Party pay post-

Mrs. Bessie Rozier, Alma.

o McCETLAMESUE CHICKENS |

Want young pullets to raise
from on halves, right . away.
Glynn Mock, Forsyth, Rt. 3,
Box 15. :

Want broilers and friers and
heavy breed hens. Mrs. J. L.
Porter, Decatur, Rt. 1, De. 2505.

Want from party in vicinity

on. most any quantity. Mrs. P.
J. Toomey, Augusta, Kissing
Bower Road. 5

PHEASANTS

Want 2 Ringneck pheasant
hens. Miss Katherine Clark,
Waynesville.

Want at once 2 or 3 English
Ringneck pheasant hens, C. T.
Gaines, Buford.

TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS, ETC.. WANTED

Want some guineas, also young
Frizelly pullets, cheap for cash.
A. Lindauer, Savannah, 423 W.
Broughton St.

Exc. pure bred White Chinese

gander to prevent inbreeding;
also buy 2 White Chinese gan-
ie Mrs. John Edwards, Grif-
oe :

Want 5 Speckled guinea hens
and rooster, cheap for cash. H.
A. Smith, Dillard, Rt. 1:



EGGS FOR SALE



Eggs: Tassel, Roundhead pure
breed game, $3:00 per 15; Speck-

jied Sussex, 75 per 15. Money

Order. No chks. Mrs. Lizzie
Raper, Culberson, N. C., Hee. of
Ga.

Pure: bred 5 Shirleys Giant
Sussex eggs, $1.50 per 15, $2.75
for 30, postpaid. Exe, few set-
tings for turkey and guinea
eggs, Mrs. R. L. Shirley,
yonia, Rt. 1.

goose eggs, 20c ea. del.; few
geese, $4.50 per pair. Mrs. Fred
L. White, Buckhead, Rt. 1.

Select White Rock hatching
eges, :
Colonials Best E. G.
Small orders only, 85ce
15:. $1.60 per 30, prepaid:
Return crate, Mrs. Harvie B.,
Yates, Bowdon, Rt. 1.

' Giant Bronze turkey
from Southeastern Fair Cham-
pions and First young Tom,
Texas Centennial,
Oak.

cocks,

$1.00
CT;

ese Silkie bantam . eggs,
per 13, plus 15 POBIBEE.
Gaines, Buford.

eggs, $6.25 per doz. prepaid.
J. Ellis, Cumming.

Selected hatching eges from
Donaldson direct Reds, 75 per
.15, or 50c at my home. 100 per
week, Mrs. Nonnie
Adairsville, Rte

Guar, pure. pred, fresh, -select-
ed. Sheppards Ancona eggs. 60c

L.

{per 16, $1.15 per. 32, postpaid
and crates furnished. No- chks.
nor stamps. J. M. Turner, Gray--

mont.

. Pure. pred 8. Wyandotte
eggs, 75c per 15; also mixed
pigeons, 50c per pair. - Cash.
COD. Mrs. "R. B. an _Una-
pilla, Rt. 1.3

Begs: Pure heed putt orp.

75e for.15 prepaid, or 50c. for. 15
at my home. No _ stamps | nor
chks. Mrs. W. F. Martin,
wood, Rt. 2... |

Pure bred Buff Orp, eggs,
Booths Lady Day-a-Day
strain, 75 per 15, insured and
prepaid. J, H. Loyd, Milan, Rt. 2.

Pure bred Mammoth Bronze

turkey eggs, $3.00 doz. del. No

chks. Beth Cook, Pitts,

Mammoth White Pekin duck
eggs, ready, $1.00 doz. del.;
booking orders for baby duck-
lings, 15 ea. May and June
del. Mrs. W. I. Mobley, Ludo-
Wii, Rt...

Large type Dark Cornish eggs,
blood tested flock, $1.00 per 15,
prepaid; Rooster and 8 hens, R.
I. Reds, $10.00 FOB. Mrs. Vera
Dugger, Sylvester. _

Donaldsons dark Red eggs,
$1.25 per 16 del. ;$2.25 for 32; W.
L:, $1.00 -per 16, $1.75 for 32;
Red chicks, 10c ea. Leghorns,
8i2 ea. Mrs. H. G. Brown, Stone
Mtn., Rt. 1.

Hatching eges from Rose-
lawns, finest Pen-Ped. S. C. W.
L. Heavy English strain, direct
stock, $1.25 for 15 postpaid. Mrs,
Jesse Jackson, Austell, Rt, 2.

Booths AAA . C. W. L. and
Donaldsons dark S. GC. R. I. Red
eggs, $1.00 per 15 prepaid. Both
direct stock. Exe. for pure Gi-
ant White rabbit buck and doe,
Yellow Skin P. R. potato slants,
peas. Mrs. H. J. Seater, Fitz-
gerald, Rt. 3,



of Augusta, chickens, 4 wks. old-

$4.50 C.

La-

Pure bred Mammoth Toulouse |.

Booths AAA mated with }.
strain $1.00 per setting;

per |

eges

Be Ss Lee, Red :

Golden Seabricht and ie

Big Bone Giant Bronze. turkey |

Lace Wyandotte eggs,

Owen, |15 postpaid.

10e per root.
Blackshear. ,

Nor-|

ver Sebright CEES.

strain,



Bute bred M.
$2.50 per 12, $18. 00 for Cc
Mrs. Neal ~T.
Buena Vista.

Selected, thoroughbred B

| AAA White Ply. Rock eggs,

per 15, del. Dried apples, mi
butter-beans, 10c lb. Mrs.
Spruill, Bowdon, Rt. 1. :

eggs, $2.20 doz. prepaid. |

J. A. Milford, Ball Ground, Rt
Choice direct :

hatching eggs,

del.

Bowdon, Rt. 2.
Bagbys AAA White Jersey Gi

ant eggs, $1.00 del.:

$1.25 ea.; roosters, 2 St 50

PB: Brown, Ball Ground, Rt.
Mammoth White Pekin egg

32-34 oz. per doz., 75 pe

del.; Big English Tom Ba

AAA W. Ta (Oe per 1D =

per 30: del. Not. over 30. pe

order, Money orders only. Mr

Nellie Grubbs, Demorest.

M. B. and Narragansett _
key eggs, 25c ea, H. C. Rei
Milner.

Pure bred White Rock ege
$1.00 per 15, $5.00 for 100;
pure bred, White Rock Yr, ol
roosters, $1.00 ea. Kennet
Register, Hahira,.

Pure Golden Buff. Orp. an
pure Golden Sebright bantaz
eggs, each, $1.00 per 15 prepai
Mrs. R. Q. "Miller, Acworth,

Pure bred B. L. eggs, Byerla)
str., 65 per 16, post paid. J.
Norman, Lincolnton, Rt. a 30

95.

Tested B. R. Parke a)

hatching eggs, pen No, 1 |

per 155 pen No. 2, _85c pe

Clifton, Rt. G, Millen,

R. Ie Red eggs, 15 for.
yard.; Mrs. J..M-
Barnesville. vs

-B. R. eggs, 50 per. 1
postage. Mrs. J. Re-<an:
Rt. 1, Gainesville. he

Bloodtested | hatching
from Parks strain B, R. 7

F.0.B. my place, cartons

Mrs. H. E. Jordan, Rt. 12
Speckled Sussex, a

Reds 75c per setting. Cas Ww

order or will mail C.0.D. T. N
Frazer, Bx 241; Cornelia, ~

White Giant hatching | eggs,

Salmon strain, Imperial matin

$1:50.> per: 15. (Ge Re Beas ey,
Bona Bella, Savannah.

Pure bred S. C.. Brow Leg
horn eggs, 15 $1. 00 del., 75c pe
15 wot del. Pure pred Fawn
white Indian runner duck eg
9 for $1.00 del., 75c per 8 not
Robert Highland, HE. 1, Lave

White Pekin duck eggs, |
per 15 postpaid. Miss Gl
Harrell, Rt. 2, Bx 25, Ba
ville.

Large pure. bred R. Cc. 4 Ly
[0G 7
Mrs, Earl Wilson
Rt. 1, Clarkesville. ~~

Hatching eggs from
stock, Pape strain S.

moth Black Minoreas *

15, $2.00 for 30 postpa

erels $1. 50. each, also
Gc. W. Wilson, Elberton.

Giant Black: Minorca eggs.

B. _ Millians, Newnan,

Fall: bleodd -Buft~ Rock

ting eggs, 75e per 15, po:

added; Cultivated blue berries
WwW. M. ee

Brown. Leghorn eggs, 15d
for $1.00. Margaret De
ryville, ae

Mahood strain S.C. Ro

retd.: 275 lbs. large sound

art pecans $50.00, or 20 a-
Miss. Belle Timmerman, = 83
Bronwood.

. Golden Sebright eggs $1. 00.
ting of 13. Exchange for Sil-
C. T. Gaines
Buford. eek
Pure M. B.
per doz. del,
filled. Grady Cook, " Rochell

-Pure bred white Wyandott
eges, 60c 7 15. Mrs. R. F.'
rell, Rt. 3, Greenville. ee ae

Fishel ae White
stock direct from
$1.00. per 15 del.

few cockerels,
cott, Concord.

Pure bred Giant strnia R.

la et Brown, R.F
1, Box 195, Statham. :

Pure-bred Toulouse goose :
eges $1.00 per 8; Mammoth
bronze turkey eggs, Gold Blac
$250 per 12. Postpaid
in state. R. D. Massee, Tiger.

Light Brahma eggs $1.00

15, crate retd. Mrs. Mamie
Stone, Rt. 2; Adaiey ile,




Red eggs, We per 45, grate |

returned; one nice S. Cc. R.
~ rooster April hatch $1. 18.
J. F. Trawick, Tennille.

Thompson Ringlet Barred
k eggs, Ist pen $1.25 15, $2.25

r 30; 2nd pen $1.00 15, $1.75
ae 25 50 del. Cartons retd.

. J. EB. Steadam, Bainbridge.

B. Turkey eges now ready
; 00 a doz. postpaid. Mrs. E. A.
\dams, Rt. 3, Bowdon. |

ark Cornish Indian Game

eres $1.00 per 15 del. C. L. Per-
due, Rt. 1, Box 135, Decatur.

Mammoth White Pekin duck
ready, 75c per doz. del.
-W. I. Mobley, Ludowici,

atching eggs from Colonial
. strain, Barred Plymouth
ocks, Thompson strain R. I.
ds 75c per 15 postpaid. eo
ba Mrs. F. R. Ard, Rt. 1, Col-

2n lace Wyandotte eggs

25 per 15; Buff Orp., Barred |

Rock white Rock and W. Leg-
orn eggs, 75c per 15. All post-
id. R. TI. Reds later on. Ruby
2c Sanders, Rt. 2, Buchanan.

_ Jersey White Giant eggs, 15
for 90c PP. Stock direct from
Nabob AA grade, B. W. D. test-

Mrs. Wm. W. Gable, Har-

in. lots- of =
F.0.B. my place, Mrs.
ter, R-F.D. 1, Alma.

. R. eggs $1.00 per setting of
16 del.; 800 or 400 Ibs. paper
shell pecans. Mrs. J. B. Mathews,
Howar

Speckled | Sussex eges, Pad-
getts strain, $1.00 per 15, $2.00
) postpaid. Cash with or-
_ Cartons retd. Mrs. Wil-
Norris, Rt. 1, Watkinsville.
arge White Rock, Fishel

train eggs for hatching, 60c per : dhcsaciiaed F:

0c at my home. Mrs. N. E.
taway, 301 Ave., East

i Red eggs for iin
per 15 plus postage. Stamps
coin. Mrs. R. K. Cash, _ Jesup.

Wyandotte eggs, AAA

ested flock. 75 per 15,

25 for 30: del.
endon, Rt. 1, Sasser.

Hatching eges from SBooth

iin White Leghorns, 12 doz.

30 doz. crate

ure bred Donaldsons R. I.
eges $1.00 per 15 postpaid.

or money order,
Barrett, Rt. 1, Hawkinsville.

Barred Rock eggs 75c
; Exec. for 1 bu peanuts,
slips, plants or

Mrs. Roxie

00 for 15, carrier retd.
sters $1.50 each. Money

. Annie -B, NES: Rt.
. ene

prize wonnine:

-P re White Bantams, $5.00

' Exchange for pure R.
Bantam eggs or Black
se Game.
t. 1, Menlo.

ooking orders for turkey eggs
a doz. del.; White

gS crossed with pure}

hite Giants, 60c del. Mrs.
d Rt 3, Adairsville,

Donaldson

ivered., vat O.. - Craft, ee

from - blood
strain

ihing eges,
ted flock of

ceclay ati B. L. eggs $1. 00
er 16, $4.00 per 100; Watson
Sintatospe and Hales best

for peas; two plug mules.
hange for cows. H. is:
hael, SEitons, 2! oe

tle. English duck eggs 60c
setting postpaid. Mrs. B. M.

Hoboken,
Cc. W. L.

ees St 00 per 15 ee
Mrs. _C. W. Smith, Rt.

a eggs, AAA ode
th W. L. Champion layers,
per 15, del., or 50e at my

Jasper Land, Cumming,

1d AAA hatching eggs of
yxdtested hens, Donaldson S8.
i Reds, Byers Buff Orp.,
; Barred Oliph., Hubbards
Hampshire Reds. All direct,
15, del.; baby chicks,

.R. J. Fleming, Lin-

la eS. esky about 4-5

S$ per week, beginning April
also black walnuts, a size,

- | bred, 60c per 15, del.

|fron: R.O.P. stock, 75e per 15,

nutord, Fb. ke
| Large str. Indian Runner duck}
eggs, 75c per 12, del.

son str. officially
tested flock,

service,

Mrs. Dougias te

|Purple Skin P. R. potato plants.

Mrs. R: [-?
lan,

AS
-eges, 65 per 15, postpaid, or 50c

ters,
Mrs. Johnny |

doz.

| 85e per 15, $1.40 for 30 del.

pure bred, Booths AAA W.

] paid.

gon, Rt. 1.

be tb.; Schley pecans, 20 thb.;
Wes Ne 15 Ib. Money order. i



"Few settings Giant Black Mit-|:
dinurca eggs, $1.50 per 15: genu-

ine Buff Cochin bantam eggs,
same. O. H. Wright, Atlanta,
Peters Bldg., Wa. 7858.

S. L. Wyandotte eggs from
imp. flock, 75c per 15, $1.40 for
30, $4.00 GC. del. Crate ret. M. O.
only. Mrs. A. B. Courson, Rock-
ingham, Rt, 1.

Spangle Grist Grady pit game
eggs, $3.00 per 15; pure Skel-
ton Roundhead and Wild Cat
blue game eggs. $2.00 per 15. del.
P. B. Stewart, Tifton, Rt. 4.

Mallard Duck eggs, good stock,
$1.00 per 15 del.; 1 white Pekin
drake, $1.00 f.o.-b. Mrs. W. V.
McMichael, Brunswick, Rt. 1,
Box 66. :

Ancona egss, Sheppard sir.,
AAA grade, 75e per 15, postpaid.
Mrs. L. D. Elliott, Lavonia.

Large type W. lL. eggs, 75c
per 15, or $4.00 C. Mrs. J. L.
Parrish, Nashville, Rt. 1.

Pure bred Brahma eggs, $1.00
per setting. Richard Yaeger,
Dalton, Rt. 1. s

Pure bred Bronze and Copper
Back turkey eggs, $2.50 doz. B.
L. Jackson, Williamson.

White Wyandotte eggs, from
prize winning stock, $1.00 per 15
prepaid. Maude Hamby, Green-
ville.

White Wyandotte eggs,
Mrs.
Terrell, Greenville, Rt. 3.

English W. L. eggs, 50c.per
15, F.0.B. through April. Mrs.
R. F. Cato, Stapleton.

Wild Mallard duck eggs, $1.50
per doz. WHleen Lanier, Collins.

Bees from large Eng. W. L.

pure
R. F,

or $1.00 del. Marion F. Wager,

Mrs. J. L.
Roberson, Surrency, Box 6.
- Selected hatching eggs from
I. Reds, $1.00
per 15, postpaid. Mrs. D. F.
Watker, Warthen.
S. C. R. I. Red eggs,. Donald-
eulled and
$1.00 per 15;, 2
choice B, R. cockerels, ready for
$1.25 ea. Mrs. M. IL.
Peterson, Vidalia.
Mahood Red eggs, stock di-
rect, $1.00 per 15. Exc. some for

Write first. Mrs. Elbert Overs
ton, Bowdon, Rt. 3.

Thoroughbred | Buff L. ones) :

75e per 15; $1.40 for 30. Crates
to be ret. Also want 100 Buff
L. chicks to raise on halves to
8 wks. old. Mrs. J. A. MeMil-
Rockingham.

Large M. B. slightly. mixed
turkey eggs, $2.25 per doz. del.
March and April. Cash. Crate
ret. Mrs. ROL. Henson, Toccoa,
Reet:

Red and white mix. firey
eggs, general, barnyard, I5 per
ege del. Cash, Mrs. J. Ww. _Ev-
ans, Roopville, Rt. 2. :

Marcy. str. J. Black Giant
jf called for; also 2 young roos-

Oscar Millsap, - Calhoun, Rt. 3.

Thoroughbred Bourbon Red
Gives, str.) turkey eggs, $3.00
Mrs. R. W. Mauldin, ee
ford, Rt. 2.

R. CG. White Wyandotte eggs, |
65 per 15: $1.25 for 30; Exc.
<< loor 2 set: of same breed to get
new biood.

ck direct, fie for 15 | tom. Rochelle.

Parks str. bloodtested B. R..
eges, T5e per 15, F.0.B. Exc. for

Mrs. J. J. Coving-

Purple Hull or Sugar Crowder
pea seed. Mrs. M. F. Tillman,
Rockingham, Rt. ik.

Parks Bred- to- Lay B. R, eggs,

Crates ret. Mrs. J. S: Rauler-
son, Rockingham, Rt. i, Box 27.

Pure bred Buff Orp. eggs, also

eggs, 75 per 15, prepaid. ee
ret. Mrs. W. F. Martin, Nor-
wood, Rt. 2.

AAA white leghorn hatching
eges from Booth stock U.
S. Ga. Approved pullorum
tested, $1.00 per setting, post-
M. G. Brinson, Moryiand:
Farms, Rt. 4, Waycross.

Pure bred Dark Cornish In-
dian eggs, Weber str., $1.10 per
15, del. Cartons ret. Mrs. J.T.
Holland, Sparks, Rt. 1. |

Pure bred Giant str. Light
Brahma selected hatching eggs,
$1.00 per setting of 15. Mrs.
Wot Paul, Lexington, Rt. 1.

PEANUTS AND PECANS
: F OR SALE =

Imp. Valencia doe $1.75
bu. FOB. E. M. Landrum, Ara-



No. 1 Virginia bunch peanuts,

Norton,

$1.00 ea. postpaid. Mrs.)

FOR SALE

100 Ibs. Stewart pecans, 15c
Ib. 100 Ibs. good seedlings, 5c
Ib. FOB G. P. Nunn, Crawford-
ville, RFD 2.

40 Ibs, large, fancy papershell
Frotscher pecans, 14c aD for lot,
FOB. ate order. J. Smith,
Greenville, P. O. Box 439. s

15 bu. Hasting 3s Red Valencia
peanuts. Make offer. M. B. tur-
key eggs, $3.00 doz. Mrs. C. M.
Shaw, Adairsville, Rt. 3.

100 Ibs. Spanish peanuts,. sell
in bulk, or 25c gal. del. Mrs.
Dollie Hughes, Cummings, Rt. 4.

About 500 Ibs. fine quality
Stewart pecans, Chas. S. Morris,
Milledgeville.

White Spanish peanuts, 20c
gal.; Texas seeded Ribbon cane
seed, Te lb. Add postage. Mrs.
Alberta Ballenger, Buchanan,
Rt. 1.

Old fashioned Runner peanuts,
4c lb.; recleaned, 5c lb. FOB.
R. FEF: Thompson, Box .63, Shell-
man.

Good grade papershell pe-
cans, 20c ib. prepaid. Trade for
dried apples or peaches. P, E.
Johnson, Claxton.

13 bu. white Spanish peanuts
for seed. $1.25 bu. FOB, Mil-
ton Beall, Louisville.

Schley pecans, 20c tb. larger
var., 25 lb. Exc. for dried fruit
or turkey eggs; pure B. R. eggs,
75c per 15 postpaid. Mrs. Fred
Atkinson, Valdosta, Rt. 4.

About 100 bu. A-1 White
Spanish peanuts saved espe-
cially for seed, 4c lb. J. C. God-
frey, Davisboro, Rt. 1.

Spanish peanuts for seed, 5c
Ib:; also Cook .No. 12 and Sta-
ple resistant cotton seed, $1.00
bu. Joe M, Brown, McRae.

Virginia bunch peanuts, thrash
run, 2 tons, 44c lb. at my barn,
no sacks, 1% ton or more, 4c Ib.
BLP: Martin, Bronwood, Rt. 1,
Box 2. ;

4 bu. white Spanish peanuts,
Te Ib. 20 gal. $1.35 bu. Add
postage. L. A. Wright, Bremen,

Good grade papershell pecans, |

20 lb. del. Exc. for dried apples
or peaches. P. BE. Johnson, Clax-

ton,

No. 1 Ga. grown Runner pea-
nuts, 6 Ib. F:0.B. C. C. Giddens,
Jr., Adel.

PECAN & OTHER FRUIT
TREES, ETC., FOR SALE





State insp. peach trees, all
lead. var., guar. true to name,
$40.00 M; $5.00 C; 80 doz. R.
EH. Travis, Riverdale.

Black walnut trees, 20c each;
huckleberry, gooseberry, red,
yellow plum, erabapple, black
haw, 10c e2a.; 3, 25c; 3 ft., 20c
ea.; black muscadines, 15 ea,
Add postage. Mrs. Ivalene- Wat-
son, Toomsboro, Rt. 2.

Huckleberry, Gooseberry,
erabapple, cherries, plums, black
walnuts, 10c ea; 3 for 25; black
muscadine, 15 ea. Add postage.
Exe for white sacks. Mrs. M. C.
Connell, Toomsboro, Rt. 2.

Sun dried peaches, 15 Ib.;
garlic, 25c doz.; Fig, Damson
plum, old fashioned peach
sprouts, 2 ft., 10c ea.; crabapple,
35 em, NERS: Buren _ Bellamy,
Ashland, Rt 4.

2 yr. old quince bushes, 25e

(ea. Mrs. A. Oliver, Roy.
Brown Turkey fig sprouts, 2- |

3 ft, 25c ea. E. H. Ries, Macon,
972 Walnut St.

Stewart and Schley pecan
trees, 4-8 ft. 50c, 75c ea., FOB
my place. Can't ship. Exe, for
meat, syrup, peas, velvet beans,
at. market price. C. G. Oliver,
Barnesville, Rt. 5.

Old fashioned seedling peach
6 or|

trees, 10 ea.; $1.00 doz.;
more del. Mrs. ie Free, Bow-
don, Rt. 2.

50 white Niagara grape cut-
tings, $5.00: 40 white scup-
pernong 1 yr. vines, $6.00, at
residence. Mrs, W. T. Moore,
Newnan, Rt. 2.

Well rooted
bushes, 25 ea. Mrs.
gins, Covington.

Black walnut trees, 2-3 ft.,
| $1.00 doz.; $5.00 C; 1 yr. peach
trees, good var., clingstone, 60c
doz.; $2.50 C. Blanche Wood-
ruff, Greenville. i

Home orchard: 2 ea. June,
Horse, Delicious, Stayman. All
yr. old, State insp. $1.00 del.;
1 tree free, T. M. Webb, Bllijay.

. Lead. var. apple and peach
trees, 18 to 24 im. 10c ea.; 2 to
3 ft., 1be ea.; 2 yr. No. 1 Grape
vines, 10 ea. H. Alexander,
_| Cleveland.

May cherries, scuppernong, old
fashioned seedling peach, mus-
cadine, blue plums, brown figs,
10c ea., $1.00 doz., 6 or more del.
Mrs. J. H. Free, Bowdon, Rt. 2.

Red ee blue Damson
plums, a red goose plum,
horse aD) ae July Stripe. Good

pomegranate
J. L. Cog-



stamps. Enos E.

grade.
stamps.

| Be



Scuppernong vines rooted,
large white variety, 20c each, 3
for 50c, 7 for $1.00. No checks
Isia Hamilton, Rt, 2, Alamo,

Sugar Plums, cherry, blue
herries, raspberries, crab apple,
gooseberry, all rooted, $1.00 a
doz. Hobert Abercrombie, Min-

@! eral Bluff.

White and yellow cling stone
peach trees, mixed, 50c a doz.;
sugar plums, 10c -ea.; sugar
pears, 75c a doz.; crabapple, 25
each. No checks. Stella May
Hughey, Rt. 1, Bx. 81, Fair-
mount.

Peach trees, 10c each, or $1.00
a doz. Mrs. J..D. Franklin, 806
Macon Rd., Vienna.

Black Turkish Fig trees, 25c
each, 5 for $1.00; Youngberry

plants, $80c per C; $4.50 per M.

S. L. Phillips, Rt. tp Bk 2306
College Park...

6 Sure crop Nectarines, 2 to
8 ft. $3.00: 6 green gage plum
2t0-31t., $3. 50; 6 Cherry plum,
8 to 4 ft. $4. 50: or 18 trees for
$9.00, del. All pudded stock, W,
M. Skinner, Rt. 1, Ludowici.

FRESH & CURED MEAT
FOR SALE





~ 1 country cured ham, 25 Ibs.
30c lb. Del, Ga. Arthur Owen,
Barnesville,

171-2 to 18 Ib. cured hams,
32 Ib. postpaid. Guy Mallory,
Madison.

2 country hams, 25 and 26
Ib. wt. 25 lb. FOB. Guar. L. 8S.
Phillips, Bowdon, RFD 2.

Nice cured country ham, wt.
1644 Ibs.30c Ib. J. O. Waldrip,
Gainesville, Rt. 8.

4 Nice, sugar cured hams,
35 Ib. FOB. Charles L, Willis,
Talking Rock, Rt. 1.

2 country cured hams, wt. 25
Ibs, each., 20c 1b.; 1 middling,
wt. 29 ibs, 22c Ib. Del. Ga., No
Mullins, "Jas-
per, Rt. 2, Box 103.

Brooks county hams,.$29.00 per
100 =Ibs.;
M.

man, Rt. 1, Box 184.

8 nice, cured ne _ wt.
about 11 Ibs. ea., 20c Ib. net. T.
0: Whitchard, Blakely.

6 hams, wt about 18 Ibs,
smoked, 25c Ib.; 25 _ soghum
syrup, 5c: gal. Fe Johnson,
Senoia.

7 poe cured, 23-lb. ham, $7.00

a
checks. Mrs. Hattie Norris, Har-
rison. ;

Oak smoked country hams, 8
to 25 lbs., 25c ib.: shoulders, 16
Ib.; sides, 20c Ib. del. Syrup,
50c gal or exch. C. B. Hurst,
Meigs.

2 cured shoulders, 20 Ib.; 2
cured hams, 25c Ib., wt. 20-25
| Ibs, ea. wont ship. "Mrs, L. A.
Sanders, Ashland.

Shoulders, sides and hams,
12 to 25 lbs. ea.; hams, 25c Ib.;
others, 20 Ib. R. 7 Moore, Nich-
olls, Rt. 1.

8 cured hams, wt. about 11
Ibs. ea. 20 Ib. T. O. Whit-
chard, Blakely. :

Oak smoked, corn fed, home

cured bacon, hams, 8 to 15 Ibs.,

82 Ib.; sides and shoulders, 22c.
Will ship C.O.D. I. L. Jackson,
Colquitt.

Large Red and Ribbon. Cane

syrup, in reg. beer bottles, $1.10:

doz.; 2 doz. $2.10, Guar. best
Sample bottle for 25 in
~, rae Lake

Park, Rt. 1.



SYRUP FOR SALE



Best grade sugar cane syrup,
37 gal. bbls. $15.50 ea; 15 gal.
kegs, $7.00; 19 gal. kegs, sec-
ond best, $4. 50; case, 6 gal. best,

$3.00; 5 cases, $14. 00. Cash. Lee

Patrick, Quitman,

. 6 No 10 cans, $3,00; 12 No. 5e,
$3.25; 24 No. 2% cans, $3.50:
oak wood smoked sides
shoulders, 18Jlb.; hams, 25c Ib.
Malvin Collins, Whigham.

Uniform grade pure sorghum
syrup. Case 24-12 oz. jars, a 60;
cs. 12-32 oz. jars, $2.60. J. E.
Bailey, Blairsville, uae Co.
Farmers Asso.

No. 1 syrup in 5-lb. cans, 10-
gal. lots or over, 50c gal. Freight
paid. Mrs. J. P, Byrd, Fitzger-
ald, Rt. 4, Box 49. {

Pure sorghum syrup, in gal.
buckets, 50c gal. FOB. R. W.
Parks, Gainesville. :

1986 crop pure Ga, cane syrup
in 10-lb. buckets, 40c ea. FOB.
R. L. Baxter, Ludowici, Rt. 1,

BUTTER FOR SALE

Fresh Jersey butter, pound
moulds, eo Ib. del. 3 Ibs. $1.00,
del. Mrs.





4 Ibs. fresh putter per. week
del. Mrs. lizzie Free,

30ce lb. Ribbon cane.
syrup, 6. gal. to case, $3.50.
-O. only. C. R. Hutchinson, oat

in 2nd zone. No. personal |

and

Pp W. Hyatt, Bowdon, :



Pure Ext. Tupelo honey in

10 Ib. pails, $1.50 del.

shipment, Mrs. T. H, Flo rer
Jessup, Rt. 2,

New crop, pure Ext. hon
about April 15th, 6-10 Ib. pa
to case, $6.50, FOB; 1-1
pail, postpaid, and insured, $
bees and queens for sale. Pric
on request. John A. Crummey
gesup, Box 351.

POTATOES FOR SALE





Yellow Skin P. R. seed pota-

toes, $1.00 bu. W. T. Vickery,

Union City.

50 bu. sweet potatoes to truc
ers, 144 lb. also 25 bu. Am
ican Prolitic cotton seed, $
bu.; 50 bu. Stoneville - co
seed, $1.00 bu. FOB Walthou
ville. Lee Joyner, Hinesville. |

TOBACCO FOR SALE





Red and yellow 1936 crop to-
baceo, No. 1, 10 Ib.: No. 2,
No, 3, 5c; 11 bs: $1.00;
50c. Postpaid, M. ..B..
Rockingham, Rt. 1. -> 2

Good grade, 1936. crop 26a
co, flue cured, 12 Ibs. $1.00 del
in Ga. Mrs. Grady B.. ateel
Alma, Rt. 3.

Flue cured smoking tobae
12 Ibs., $1.00 del. in Ga.

| Ollizf, Bristol.

Bright leaf tobacco, 12 s
$1.00 del. in Ga. Lonnie Light
sey, Surrency, Rt. 2.

Fiue cured tobacco.
grade. 10 tb.; Grade No.
lb.; grade 3, 6c Ib. Prompt shi
ment. Full weight. Olive Trot
Baxley. Es

Flue cured tobaccos ap
$1. 00 del. Cash with ord

Tomberlin, Surrency.

Tobacco, chewing, 10_
Smoking, 9 Ib. No orders
than $1.00. Postage prepaid
Christine Harper, Surrenc

VEGETABLES FOR |

5 acres early Jersey Wa
cabbage now ready, for tru
J. R. Harrison, Alma, Rt.

2 acres galad turnips,
ready for trucks, by the b ne
the acre; Wannamaker one
seed, $1.00 pu. . F:0:3B:

Dollar, Bainbridge, Rt. 3, Box

GRAIN & HAY FOR SA









Jake Hicks, Toccoa, Rt. 2.
5 tons hay, $16.00 per ton
my barn, J. D. Beak, Lou
ville.
8 tons Ga. runner peanu
$12.50 per ton at my ba
Vaughn, Americus, Lee St. Ros
50 Ibs. pure Tennessee Lesp
deza for sale or exc, for othe
farm products, Clouds Eubank

| Smyrna.

40 tons bright Spanish: Pp anu i
hay, $9.00 ton: 25 tons br
Peavine hay, $18, 00 ton, FOB.

| R. Cannon, Dawson.

About 4 tons No. 1 peanut h
$10.00 ton at my place.
Terry, Shellman.

5 tons bright grass ney 12. 5
ton, F.0.B.;, 35 bu. Ne
peas (pure), $2.40 bu. I
H. D. Goodwin, Greensboro,

5 M to 8 M Ibs. good f
$1.25 per hundred, at my barn
tops or bottoms oo bal
when cured). D. - Wool
Dawson. |

FRUIT FOR SALE





Dried peaches, worm-free
crop, 15 tb. del. Prompt
ment. Mrs. Oscar Phillip
land, Rt. 2, Box 42. ~

Sundried peaches, worm.
14c lb. Mrs H. W. Shirley,
on. Rts, ;

Sun-dried peaches, - 1234 y
10 lbs. or more, del.; w
ning butter bean seed, 1!
dried sage, 25 ib. Mrs.
Hill, Maysville, Rt. 1.0

Nice sundried peaches, 1
Add postage, Mrs, J.J
Royston, Rt, 1. am

Sundried peaches, 12 4-2.
in 8 Ib. lots or more; Add
age. No. exch. Mrs. = V

Casey, Canon,

Dried peaches, onpelek = oa
crop, 18 Ib. del, Mrs. W
Walters, Jae bat



Wanted



Want a BO cad. Inc. in Of
cond. Electric preferred. M
J. T. Nash, Lithonia, Rt. #



Brooders,
iF or Sale



260 cap. Super :
Ege tester, the:

cond. ~ $12.50





Buckeye Ine, 2300 cap.
er heat, oil burner; au-
tray turner; used 3 sea-
splendid hatches. Jc MM.

Atlanta, 925 Waverly

rown Hen Ine. good
instructions, $2.00 cash.
yr good stock chickens.
path Housch, Summer-
eo 2.

Hatcher Inc. 540 cap.,
t brooder, 1 M cap. Good
15.00 or exc. B. W.

cap. Buckeye Inc. ther-
ter, good cond., $5.00. Mrs
Tucker, Macon, 422 Log

ot Twin Float brooder,
imes, $6.00; 2 Putnam
Ss, $2.00 ea.; $9.00 for
Good cond. S. F. Pir-
yson.
lectric inc., Buffalo, 720
d Ideal, 1 M, cap., $50.00
Oil burner prooder free with
: Mrs. B. B. Williamson,

ne., 250 cap. ea. pid gas
der, used .once, $10.00 ea.
>. Stacy,\College Park, 408
alker Ave.

Buckeye, 250 cap. cheap
place. Mrs. J. W. Brown,
as Rt 2.
cap. Queen inc., good cond.
); other inc. cheap. Want
ot pod pepper, T. J. Ray,
Mitn., Rt. 1.
cap Buckeye inc., for sale.
Saas Macon, Bloomfield

cap. Gigs Hatcher inc.,
ond. :$20.00. Mrs. Ed
, Cusseta.

c. 150 ecap., ea., $7.00 ea.

for laying hens or friers.
_pulletin prices. C. W.

Bank- |

e inc., 1008 cap. per-
. $50.00; 3 oil brooder,
ip. ea. $3.00 ea. C. M. Low-

feon, - Rt: 1.

OZ. 4- tier chicken patter-

$5.00 ea. Trade
rm products. John R. Gun-

Norcross, Rt. 2.

0- -cap. Super Hatcher inc.,
. Brooder free with ea.
Vio FOG. Mrs. Cech,

ossom, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4

eye brooder, 300 cap.
static control, $5.00 cash,
for 5 Eng. W. L. young
rs. W. H. McMillan, Syc-

ap. Buckeye oil brooder,
Sears-Roebuck coal
pie tM. Gap... $5.00; Big
coal brooder, $7.50; En-
ot cheaper. Grady Honea,
yersville, Rt ss

ap. Super Hatcher, - ine.,

. oil brooder for sale at
irmm. R. L. Scruggs, Mor-

Wilsons Home Hatch-
abinet style, 120 volt elec-
650 cap. inc. $50.00, FOB
on Mann, Abbeville.

eye inc., 420 cap., good

15.00. Exc for 18 bu corn.
ennie Mercer, Summit,

Box 28.
ckeye mammoth inc. No.
p. 2772, good cond. $75.00;

eream separator, No.
$30.00. o : Ry

90 per cent hatch,
Wires Re a. Rundle,

cond., used 1
Hiss Williams,

8 Red hens or baby
; Kudza roots, $2.75, 500;
- T. ZL... Wright, Yates-



nd-Hand Machinery
2 For Sale



D ) tools, blower 8, vise, good
anvil, fair, hammer and
$15. 00, F.0.B. Mrs. C. W.

son, Tallapoosa, Rt. 1.
k wheat thrash, fair shape,
y W. MeMichen,-- Dal-
as new 2 row !rotary
old style Cole

ents, $4.50 F.0.B. W.
an, Nicholson.
kade tractor, good cond.,
half price. R. H. HEth-
Macon, Rt. 5.
wagon scalesy
-1 cond. $20.00.
Conyers, Rt *3.
cultivator for sale
- W. Smith, Gaines-

7500 Ib.
Bed:

ch tractor, reaper and
used 8 seasons, perfect
R..V. Conine, Hazelhurst.
ony King separator. good

loodworth, Charing.

hi shing machine, 20 in.
team Frick

Guar. sat. $25.00 F.0.B. 0
| cond.



Fertilizer distributor, $3. 50;
spring tooth harrow, $4. 50; cot-
ton planter, $3.50; large. iron
beam plow, 14 in. 2 mule size,
$9.00; 1 h. iron beam plow, $5:
2 wagons and other implements.
F.0.B.- Mrs. G. J. Holcomb,
Bremen.

No. 10 DeLaval cream sep-
arator, good cond., very cheap.
Mrs. C. W. Jones, McRae, Rt. 2:

Section harrow, 44 Chatta-
nocga turn plow, Oliver middle
buster, good cond. Write 0. S.
Williams, McRae, Rt. 1.

Corn mill, Buick motor, scales,
corn sheller, etc. $100. 00 cash
or trade for mule or cattle, C. L.
Lance, Jefferson, Rt. 1.

Swing hammer feed
complete with direct
fan, collector, sacking spouts,
3 ' screens. Practically half
price... EH... TT. Boswell, Jr; Si-
loam,

McCormick - Deering: riding
cultivator with all parts, $25.00
cash. Exc. for 18 bu. shelled
corn, 25 B. R. or R. I. Red hens.
Ea. prepay chgs. Jerome Fow-
ler, Ideal, Rt. 1. 3

4 ten-inch 70-saw gins, now
in operation; also four 70-saw
brush gins and feeders, not: in
operation. H. Strickland,
Conford.

1 Bemis tobacco Liaieiaater,
good shape, $35.00. S. lL. Jar-
riel, Collins,

Messenger grain ~ thresher,
fair cond., powered by Chevro-
let 4 motor, cheap. S. Gibson,
Thomson.

McCormick binder, good cond.
J. A. Hyde, Newnan, Rt. 3.

Stewart horse clippers, per-
fect cond. except small blade,
$5.00. W. A. Mullikin, Alma,

Letz feed mill and belt, mo-
tor, work O. $125.00. Mrs.
W. Ya. Pruitt, Bronwood.

McCormick binder, $25.00;
tractor, 4 gang dise harrow,
425.00; 2 h. Avery riding 1 row
corn planter with guano attach-
ments.
yearlings as part pay, or sell
separate. H. T. Sexton, Adairs-
ville, R.F.D. 3.

Hardie Super Mogul - spray
machine or tractor take-off,
used only 3 wks. H. L. Joyner,
Ft. Valley.

International corn planter,
$5.00; Avery cotton planter,
$2.50; cotton planter, $2.50. Good
shape. At my barn. C. C. Clem-
ents, Chickamauga, Rt. 2.

' Two 70-saw gin outfit, mod-

mill,
driving

-|ern ball bearing gins, good op-

erating cond., cheap. Walter

Estes, Rex.

Small Meadows corn mill, good |.
cond., $75.00.
Tignall, Rt.) Box -18;

Good Fordson tractor, Oliver
plow and harrows, cheap. W. J.
ONeal, Lithonia, Rt. 3.

Pr. cotton scale beams, 700
Ib. cap. electric motor and other
implements. R. H. Warnock,
Brooklet.

Light weight dbl. section trac-
tor harrow, good cond., 140 cap.
electric incubator, 250. cap. oil
burning brooder, used 1 season.

| Cyp Bulloch, Manchester.

No. 10 Oliver 2 h. turner, $12;
8 in. Blount middle buster, $8.00:
Milburn 2 horse wagon, $18.00;
2 h. ripper, $5.00. No chks.
Trade for 25 bu. good shelled
corn at $1.15 bu: del. Chipley,
bal cash. R. H. McDaniel, Chip-
Tey, tt) 2

5 hp. twin cylinder Viking
garden tractor, turning plow,
cultivator, Acme harrow, corn-
cotton planter, garden seeded,
$125.00 A. M. Tate,
Rt. 1, Box 111-A.

Set 42 inmill rocks, complete, :

sheller and convey belts, kero-
sene Bull Dog Mack 70 h.p. mo-
tor for use in grist mill, etc. Ex-
cellent order. Make offer. L.
*Ven Moore, Suwanee. ;
Johnson binder, reasonably
good cond. Sell or trade for
zood. ox, hreke to work single,
or hay press. . F. Bohanan,

| Conyers.

_ Oliver cultivator, also small
pony, about 1:70 Ib, good cond.
T. H. Wiseman, Blakely, 231
River St.

Dbl. hopper Cole planter.
Planted 25 acres corn, 3 of
beans. $22.50. R. HE. Watts,
Forsyth, Rt. 1.

Cotton and corn planters, 6
plows, other small tools. Sell
or exe. for Hereford bull or
hogs. Mrs. W. E. Barineau,
McRae.

2 horse steel Sean plow, No.

12 Wulcan, practically good as |.

new. R. T. Jones, Dalton, Rt. 1.

Good, used 2 horse turning
plow, $10.00 cash. Mrs. G. W.
Hemperly, Atlanta, Rt. 1, Box
623, phone Ca. 3610.

Riding cultivators, 2 I. H. C.
and 2 Olivers, used very little,
$10.00 ea, W. C. Spivey, Social
Circle.

40 bhp. Tipps vertical crude

oil eng., complete and good
B. J. Rushing, States-
boro. SS : :

pinder, <

| place.

All running shape. Take

Jc Bradley, 4

Ringgold, ;



2 Centennial 80-saw gin out-
fit,. complete with dbl. press,
mechanical tramp and 50 h.
electric motor. Mrs. N. H. Lo-
zier, Sandersville. %

Cole planter, fertilizer attach-
ment, $16.50; good peanut plant-
er, $14. 50; "Perfection 2 horse
plow, $5.00, F.0.B. G: E. Duffey,
Palmetto, Rt: 1.

1 pr. 5-ton Howe ball bear-
ing scales, complete, extra good
cond. for sale or trade for
corn. HE. F.. Perry, Jr., Kelly.

DeLaval milking machine,
used 6 mos.; 2 single units, no
motor, $85.00; 6 Loudon Stan-
chions, $22.00 F.0.B. Mrs. Zeta
Mercer, Elberton, Box 395.

Anvil and some other black-
smith tools. Mrs. J. M. Lupo,
East Douglas, Rt. 3.

Small cane mill, good cond.,
16 in. rocks, $18.00. Trade. W.
E. Brooks, Ty Ty, Rt. 1.

Dbl. dise tractor plow, Inter-
national riding cultivator, good
cond. No. 23 Chattanooga turn-
ing plow. J.) Mack Brown,
Canon; Rt. 2: : -

2 horse tobacco transplanter,
O. K: in <every= way. GC... W.
Walker, Waycross, Rt. 5.

Covington Hill Dropper plant-
er. Chas. T. McMillan, Gaines-
ville, RES,

Harrow and 2 h. turning plow.
bisa Cochran, Luthersville, Rt.

Empire dbl. unit milking ma-
chine, 7 h. p. boiler, 32 stanch-
,ions, slat wing. John Deere
Hote plow, C, A. Hunt, Tunnel
Hill, P. O# Box 22.

cx ee used anvil, cheap, W.
N. Phillips, Royston, Box 203.
John Deere grain binder,

needs some repairs, $45.00 at my
Age J. C. Ragan, Pelham,

McCormick Deering new 4
cultivator, used very little: has
set spring teeth and 6 feet for
Sweeps, etc. Cheap. .A. W.
Sherwood, McDonough, Rt. 1.

Riding hammock, spring-
brake cultivator, $15.00. D. P.
Martin, Bronwood, Rt. 1, Box 2.

8 large metal ventilators,
good cond., suitable for dairy
or gin. Mrs. R. J. Rundle, Hi-
ram, :

Deering binder, $50.00; mow-
ing machine, $20. 00; 2 good.
cotton planters, $2.00 ea.: Guano
distributor, $3.00; side dise
complete for tractor, $4.00. C.
M. Adcock, Adairsville. .

DeLaval No, 17 , separator,
good cond., $35.00; 3 h. New
Way air cooled gas engine, good
condition, $50.00 F.0.B. Gray,
Ga. J. C. Manghon, Haddock.

Syracuse turn plow, No. 1459,
$4.00; Chattanooga turn plow,
$81.00, cash. F, 0: B. Good run-
ning cond. Nelson Pope, Talla-
poosa.

1 -each, Cole combination
planter, Covington, Dbl. Led-
better, 2 Middle Busters, farm
bell, disc harrow, other imple-
ments. Cash, or exc. for syrup.
Dan Browning, Bere Box
264.

Used, put good cond. flexible
mule clipper and | other imple-
ments. Mrs. J. M. Middlebrooks,
Barnesville, 419 Zebulon St.

No. 13 Oliver chill turn plow,

| used 1 season, all parts O. K.,

$12.00.. Geo. L. Green, Jasper.

Athens tractor side plow, good
discs, all parts for attaching,
$25.00 F.O.B. -. A. Chastain,
Adairsville, Rt. 3.

Stover hammer mill, Buick
motor er pulley and governor,
mounted. Richard L.- Hull,
Chamblee.

McCormick riding cultivator,
extra good cond., with all at-
tachments- except sweeps, $15.
Exc. for McCormick mowing ma-
chine. Watkins Oglesby, Col-
lege Park, Rt. 1.

1-3 gin condenser, good cond.,
for sale. J. E. Weaver, Milledge-
ville, Rt. 1. \
/Bethany harrow, db. section
harrow, almost new, at half
price; 8 fine Jersey cows, just
freshened, treated, $50.00 ea.

(A. . Teate,



Mrs. L. -P. Puckett, Jesup, Box
148, phone 94.

i
Good 100 gal. Barrel churn at |

reasonable price.
Fairburn, Rt. 2.

W. B. Dodson,



_ Second- Hand Machinery
Wanted



Want 1 bone grinder, grind;
by hand, in good shape. C. S.!
Waller, LaGrange, 116 Ridley
Ave.

Want 1 King Roller for eane
mill, 4 in. _journal, 11 in. face,
16 in. dia. T. B. Thomas, Thom -
asboro.

Want Fordson tractor, and
garden tractor. No junk. J. R.
Doster, Gainesville, Box 506. |



-}and bark; poke root.
ee PES 3:

a: cea

Want pair scales, 10 ton or.
more cap. S. Ss. Murphy, Cool-
idge,.

Want 2 stalk cutter wheels
with round dodged

cheap. M. L. Callaway, Rayle.

Want 3 walking cultivators,
Oliver or P & O, good \cond.,
cheap for cash. J. H. Howren,
Summerville,

Want good, second-hand boil-
er with stack, about 60 h.p.,
cheap. C. W. Stambaugh, Dem-
orest.

Want reaper. and binder and
peanut picker. C. W. DeLoach,
Groveland, Rt, -Box-34.:

Want 50 or 60 hyp. boiler in
good cond.
Woodstock, Rt. 2.

Want 2-70 saw gins and re-.
volving press in good cond. N.
F. Bray, . Wrightsville, Rt. 1.

Want Athens side tractor

plow in good cond. at bargain

for cash. C, Hy ae Dalton,
Rty ds .

Want good, used walking/ eul-}
\tivator with

attachments, also
blaeksmith anyil, cheap for cash,
T. B. Childs, Abbeville.

Trade some cows end brood
sow, part Duroc, for riding culti-
vator, also have syrup in gal,
pails for sale. Ivan Tracy, Lake\
Park.

Want cotton press for farm
gin, cheap for cash. T. K. Moore,
Canton, Rt. 8.

Want Martin Ditcher, mcdl
20 Z itth Wizard, in. S00
cond. Consider any other
horse ditcher. W. J. mhurmofd,
Greensboro,

Want a small gas engine. T..
Thomasville.

Want tracter with harrow and
plow, good. cond., cheap for cash.
G. L. Bramlett, Marietta, Rt. 4.

Want 25 to 35 h.p. Deisel en-
gine. Brown Blitch,. Stilson, Pe
QO. Box 60.

Want stalk. cutter
cond. EK. H. Jones, Waycross...

Want riding cultivator, Sie

in good

Deere preferred, or other good |
tools, in good shape, for sa
1a TY. Harwood, Buchanan, Rt. :

make, with disc and other at-.
tachments, cheap for cash. E.G.
Wood, Cedartown, Rt ges

Want new ground plow or root
cutter to put on common plow.
stock. A. N. Gambrell, Corne-
Has Rist:

Want Farmall tractor, - good

cond. also about 15 goats and few
sheep. H. S. Walker, Macon,

849 Turpin St.

Want second- hand ayil and
blowers, good cond, cheap for
cash, EX 6: Mulkey, Talking
Rock, Rt. 1.

Want few used Cole
grain drills with fertilizer at-
tachments, perfect cond. and i

small steel thresh with blower }-
cheap for}

pipe straw stacker.
cash. Leroy Mann, Newnan.

Want gear brake for 2 horse
wagon, cheap for cash. Claud
Wood, Monticello, RFD 4.

Want corn planter and Pea-
nut or Goober 1 h. turning plow,
good cond., cheap for cash. W.
P. Clayton, Quill.

Want mower and rake, good
cond., cheap for cash. L. C.
Stahl Columbus, Rt. 2, Box 88.

Want corn drill with guano
hopper, -Avery preferred, good
cond., cheap for cash. Major G.
Williams, Canton; Rt ts

Exe. dbl disc tractor plow for
mowing machine and rake. R.|
W. Parks, Gainesville.

Want a good cotton
cleaner. -G. B.. Moore,
Rte 6;

Want garden tractor, with or
without equipment. W. W. Riv-
ers, Albany, P. O. Box 247.

Want good cotton seed drop-

seed
Macon,

per and corn and bean plates}

for same, good make, cheap for
cash. Hubert Akin, Waco, Rt. 1.



Wiscellndeans For Sale =

40 Ibs. nice, goose feathers,
30 lb. Sample on request. E.
L.. Peek, Conyers, Rt. 3.

Good churn for sale. J. L. Car-



'michael, Canton, Rt. 2.

-Nerve root, 50c lb. del. Money
order. No stamps nor chks.
Will Ef. Martin; Dalton; -Ps: 0.

| 148

30-40 bu. Black walnuts, 1936
crop, dry, in hull, 35 bu. or
83 1-8 bu. for lot, fob; 50 Ibs.
Schley and Stewart pecans, 20c
Ib. Postpaid. J. B. Langford,
Sr., Maysville.

Black walnut MBATS, nice,
large pieces, clean, 6 lbs., 40 Tb.
No checks. Add postage. Mrs.
G. T. Kellogg, Cumming, Rt. 5.

Yellow root, green, wild cher-
ry bark, green, sassafras root
All 10e Ib.

Add postage. L. E. i

Ibs. deer $i 00: 3

$1.00.

tongue,
root,

order. | M



spokes, |

heavy

Soe Rt. 2, Box 7.

O. A. Blankenship,

p } Rolston.

| 27e in stamps del.
pure Stone Mtn. melon seed for
| 1 gel nice, dried apples.

2 tools;

shoeats.

3 row |

frattle root, Mayapple,

.20e cupful;.

| Bremen.

a L. M.



Nice, ean mutton tallow.
lb, . Add postage. Mrs.
Daves, Eliijay, Rt. 3, Bx 78.

_ bu. black walnuts,

and dry, $1.00 bu. FOB: .
oak, poplar and pine trees fo:
sale. Write Albert B. McKoy,
Newnan.

380 ibs. feathers, goose, sitet

used, $20.00; 5 ibs. loose feat

ers, 'g5 lb. Mrs. C. J. Getson

| Macon, 319 Log Cabin Drive.

Good 2 horse wagon, $45
cash at my farm, or exe. f
thimble skein 1 horse

J. A: Malnereo 3

af

Wagon,

3 bu. hulled, dried, biack w
dene nee 50 for lot, or $1.00
- J. Williams, Bishop,

Gid fashioned black walnu
some huiled, all perfectly dry

- pecks, $1.00, del.

more old fashioned . seedling
peach trees, white and yellow
presses and soft peaches, 25 ea.
not del. John W. Braswell, Em
pire, Rt. 1. a

. Martin gourds, $1.00 bu. aaa: S
5 pke. Eugene Stroup, Ey
anan, Rt. 1,

Unwashed chicken feed sac
100: >. cap. Te ea. dl. 10 @
more; White Wyandotte Latch.
ine eges, 75e per 15. Thales S: A
Brown, Bowdon, Rt: ee

% cans hog lard, made in 1936
anpkes imately 100 Ibs. for sal
L, P. Kicklighter, Glennyille. .

2 horse wagon, good cond,
cash, ct. exe.: fer. tear,
. Boyce Garner, Lilburn, Rt. 1

Black walnut meats, ni
clean, 40 Ib, M. M. Oe

Catnip, Heauhound, tans)
garden mint, garlic,. Be bune
tame blackberry and red Jap:

-amese wonder berry vines, 2:

doz, Mrs. Lula Hawkins, ei

4 retta, Rt. 3.

Nice, wlean walnut men 1
Exe. 1-2

Mrs
W. T. Kelly, Comer, RE is2

1 horse wagon and some farm_

3 fine mules, wagon, farming
_black- eyed peas, crow-
ders and Californias, pigs and
-Miss Myrtle Adams
Stockbridge, Rt. 1. oe

Bee gums and swam catcher
for sale; I. A. Manley, ve f
222 Lockwood Terrace.

2 hose wagon. Sell or exc. fo :
A horse wagon in good cond. Also-

8 mos. pigs for sale. Mrs. iow

i. Kkimbell, McDonough, Rt. |

6 bu. nice, sound dry, aes =
walnuts, $1. 00 bu. FOB. ee J :
Stephens, Luthersville.

Woel for sale or exc. for peas,
} Ea. pay postage. Mrs. E. V. P
ther, . Lithonia, Rt. 3.

Herbs and barks, slippery elm,
40e Ibis
yellow root, yellow dock, bear-
foet, queen of the meadows, poke |
| root, and others, 30 Ib. Exe.
rfor 100 Ib. sacks. Mrs. R: :
Stover, Rolston.

. Black walnut MEATS, 35c Ib:

white, Half Runner bunch beans, '
sweet pepper seed,

10c -tablespoonful . Add postage.
Mrs. Berry Wright, -Talona..

Nice, clean dried sage. 1936
crop, 60c Ib. del. M. O. only. Mrs.
J. E. Yawn, Rhine.

Horseradish, 30c Ib. with 6

perry plants, $1.5 :

dei. Mrs. W. A. Johnson, Alto.
Pure leaf sage, 30c Ib.:

Ibs., $1.00. Sam Twedell, Litho

nia, Rt. 2. 4

200 white, dairy feed sacks,
100 Ib. cap., 8e ea.; Exc for pe
beans for planting, butter bea
for eating. Mrs. E. L. Sullivan

Yellow root, 12c Ib.; wild
cherry bark, 10c lb. Exe for to
baceo or white nest onions. Add
postage, Mrs: Sallie B. Elam
Clermont, care Emma Frady.
Rt. . as

8 bu. black walnuts, 75c bu.
here. Owen May, Ellijay, .Rt. 1

Nerve root, 50c Ib. del. Will
T. Martin, Dalton, P. O. Box 14

25 lbs. white feathers, $11.
del. or 50c Ib. Sample on request
Pure M. B. turkey eggs, $2. 50
doz., del. 2 yr. old blue peacock,
$i5. 00. C.D Colne, Loc
Rt. 4,

.20 Ibs- wits goose feathers

85e ib: Miss Beulah Grier; Cler.

mont.

.Sassafras, yellow, Rattle root,
wild cherry bark, 25 Jb. pi
plant, 10c bunch, 3 bun. he
peppermint, spearmint, catnip,
yarrow, 25c doz. bun. del. Ga.

White, Dahlone
. 1, Box 35."

re Yellow root, 15 Tb Mayay ap
Beg 8)




good 1 horse wagon, |
cash. W. P, Lunsford,

lle, Rt. 3.
350 Ibs. hulled, black wafnuts.
Make offer or will swap for pig
chickens. Want a yoke cf
work steers, 760, 1200 Ibs. Swap
mule or pay right cash price.
Ed Underdown, LaFayette, Rt.
ay



Migccllaneons Wanted
BEANS AND PEAS



poe eble peas.
Jones, Edison, Rt. No. 1.
Want 25 bushels peas or 10
ushels velvet beans, Grady
Ridley, Franklin.
- Want 200 bushels of running
relvet beans at 11-2 cents per
pound: Also want 2. pushels of
Marlboro seed corn. J. W.
yreene, Thomaston,
Want 25 bushels 1936 velvet
beans, 10 bushels field peas, any:
ind. Must be sound. State
pest price. W. J.. McKennie, Sr.,

Want 25 bushels eet Hendrson:

2 ous Grif-
yo teas decom
want peas and peanuts all
nds. Exchange cabbage plants,
leading varieties at 40c_ per -M.
or peas at $3.00 per bushel and
ye Bi (both kinds) at 6c per
Sit
Tet he gets, Wire order. J.
. Lang, Omega, Ga.
iprade . 2 bushels good ela

too-tan soy beans. ~ -C.
Sg 88, Co-

Stahl, Rt. No. 2,
lumbus.

EGGS

eggs.
nee Rt. No. 2,

"want _
rice. Ss.
ud wici.

nt one setting of Sebright

n Bantam eggs.. Purebred,
xchange for setting of pure-
partridge rock. eggs of ex-,
Mixon, :

ce. at stock, Dwight
( sill O. :

ait eges to hateh on halves,

ot breed; white leghorns

Lots of: 120 to 600.

. Martin, Lumpkin, Rt.

peafowl eggs or. young

tice. full particulars,
ee

= Evans Vining,

Want to. buy 100 or more pure |
| cupfal.

red It, B. Turkey eggs at ence
at -10c each; also want 10-15
) potato seed or
draws. Mz Gaskins, Nashville.

ONEY, HONEY BEE
SUPPLIES, ETC.

t second hand honey ex-

acter, in good condition. Cheap
rcash, H. C. Reid, Rt. 2, Ho-
svi 4

Want to buy several gums of
bees in patent gums. State price.
. Braswell, Rt. 1, Buford.

See SYRUP
Want one 35 gallon barrel
good | ribbon cane syrup, State
best cash price.
barrels off grade.
and, Rt. No. 3, ein y

CORN AND CORN SEED

Strick-

t
- Want a peck of pure Thomp- |}

son Prolific Seed corn. State
best price delivered. Fonzo

Pochran, Rt. No. 1, Ramhurst.

pours COTTON SEED
: Want (10 or 12 bushels of
oneville No. 2 cotton seed.
ust be pure, not mixed and in
good condition. Quote price de-
livered, J. W. Elder, Fairburn.
ee SEED La.
ant running squash. see A.

olsom, Hahira.

fant honey drip Sorehum
seeds; also other good cane syr-
up. seeds. Also ist year wilt re-
istant cotton seeds, Pumpkin
ed, muskmelon seeds, and can-
od: H. Levereit,

SEED CANE
- Want 200 stalks green cane.
= D. Gill, Richland,
j POTATO SEED
Want 2 or 3 bushels seed
potatoes of the old fashioned
white Spanish.
W. Thompson, Swainsboro;
GOURD SEED
- Want 1 gallon or peck of any
kind of gourd seed. State best
2 BETES: Mr. J. James, Bartow.
PEANUT HAY ~
ant to buy peanut hay, H.
Williams, Box 262, Glenn-

FEATHERS .
Want 5 pounds small downy
ose feathers. State price, Mrs.
L. Batliett, Leary.

SACKS

: Want some white feed or gu-
mo sacks, free from holes,

exchange some cotton for.

Mrs. C. WwW. 'Fricks, White

TREES.

ae pineapple pear trees,
ae delivered at Gray-
ie ane Graymour,

Hach pay express on |

Fat plantation.

se :

| for "25e,.

ae several |

| vets,

Will pay cash,

more del,


: PLANTS

nigger killer potato
Make best price and de-
J. E. Perkins, Mu-

Want
lants,
ivery date.
sella.

Want potato, pepper and to-
mato plants. Give price and
description on 5,000 each. E.
W. Pritchett, 607 Kelly St., S. E.,
Atlanta.

CORN AND SEED. CORN
Want 1 M bu. corn: Make

= price at crib, in truck load lots.
Want five bushels of bunch:
Make best price.

Jos. Freeman, Blakely?

JX EGGS
Want fertile turkey. eges, 10
dozen, Black or aes or Mix-
ed. Mrs. JS. UpEPy, Whig-
ham, Rt. 1.

HONEY, BEES AND BEE

SUPPLIES * :
| Want 75 to 100 hives of Bees,
free of disease and in good cond.
Write.. P. Vu Ryals, Clayton,
Box 146. :

Want 50 or 100 hives Bees for
del. on or before April ist. Ad-
vise number and best price. Cc.
M. Miller, Cornelia.

Want few hives Bees in pat.
hives, in good cond:, cheap for
cash, within 50 miles. J. C. Os-
teen, Waresboro.

SEKD- FOR SALE





lb. stone Mt., b0 lo. All selected.
| Also Hale's Best Canreioupe
seed, 5uc lb. No chk. B. Ae
Lucas, Vienna.

Pure P; O. J. seca cane pneu
2 ft. tall, sound, 50c per 100 stalig
: Glenn ee
Juniper, R. 1.

100 Ibs. or more Lashes
White cornfield beans, slighily
weather stained. Make best of-
fer; 45 or. 50. Ibs unscarified.
Sericea Lespedeza seed, 25c Ib.,
or 20 Ib. for lot. Reginald FE:
Sawyer, Sulphur Springs.
_1936 crop pure O-too-tans, re-
cleaned, in new 2 1-2 bu. bags.
O. M. Ware e, Marshallvillle.

~ Q-too- -tans, $4.50 bu.
and free from cracks,
liams, Luthersville. |

$1.00 C; artichokes, 25c gali; 5
gal., $1. 00: melon plants, 10 C.
Prices FOB here at Field. LL.
i, Harrison, Dublin, Rt. 6.

Canteloupe seed, 25c, large tea-

Ground, Box 175.

90-day running velvet beans,
$1,.75 bu. in 2 1-2 bu. bags.

: FOB. F. B. Jackson, Donovan.

Stone Mtn, melon seed, grown
especially for seed, pute and true
to name, 60c Ib.. J.D
MecDonough..

Speckled Crowder peas, 100. Ib.
Dill, Muskmelon, 10 tbls., 3 for
253 pumpkin. seed, 10c cup, 3
Peas del. in 5 Ib. lots.
The rest del. Mrs. W. D. Ralston,
Ella Gap.

Ky. Wonder bean seed, 20
teacupful; few streaked half run-
ners, 20 cup. Exc. Chas, W. J.
cabbage plants for white, 100 Ib.
cap feed sacks. Also, have guinca
eggs for hatching, 75c per 12.
Add postage. Mrs. L. R. Ash-
worth, Loganville, Red

Speckled and white bunch put-
ter-bean seed, 15 Ib. Mrs. L.
Sics: Harris, ' Waycross, Rt
Bx. 14. : a

Henderson Bunch butter-bean
and running butter-bean seed,
guar, pure, 20c lb. Add postage.
Mrs. W. J. Smith, Odessadale.

White Stone watermelon seed,
Orig. and imp. by me, guar. not
to sunburn. 50c Ib. J. M. Liv-
ingstone, Dexter.

Seven Top. turfip seed, 40c
small cupful. Faye Poole, Jas-
per, Rt. 2. 45 :

30 bu. Speckled 90-day vel-
$1.50 bu.;' 10 Ibs. Hales
Best- -eanteloupe seed, 50c_Ib.: 10
Ibs. Cuban Queen melon seed,
50 Ib. D. H. Wiley, Cordele.

Velvet okra seed, 2 lbs., 25c;
4 Ibs., 40c; large mustard, 20c
cupful; Vigorine tomato, 50 seed,
25c. - All mailed.
Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Good, selected, clean Stone
Mtn. watermelon seed, 25c Jhb.
FOB. 8B. E. Daniel, Ty Ty.

Genuine Red Ga. Sugar Cane
for seed, $1.00 per 100 stalks,
FOB. John Underwood, Blakely.

Pure bunch velvet beans, for
seed, $3.00 bu. 90 or 100-day
runners, $2.00 bu. Milford Beas-
ley, Nunez. Ege OS

Seed rice, 5c Ib. FOB. L. L.
Beasley, Jesup, Rt. 2. ;

Few Ibs. ea.
mixed cornfield beans, tender
garden pole beans, Ky. Wonder |
beans and dried catnip, 25 lb.
del. in Ga. Stamps accepted for
less than pound. Mrs. Alma
Grant, Cleveland, Rt. 4.

10 bu. Clay peas, not mixed,
$3. 00 bu.; American pop corn,
7c Ib. in 100 lb. bags, FOB;
white tender Half Runner gar-
den beans, 30 is 2 cups or

TS.



| Vaughan,
183c>

-Puie Watson melon seed, Te

/95 per cent germination.

$1.00 bu.

- Sound |
Ray Wil-

Seed cane, Red Ribbon, Green,

Mrs. J. W. Cagle, Ball |

. Alexander,

\esEs.

Oy

L.A: Crowe, |

perfect tender,.

C. Mason,



4 pints old fashioned Sie.
Half Runner garden bean seed,
30 pint. Add postage. Nt chks.
nor stamps. MOUS Timms,
Auburn, Rt..1. :

EGGS FOR SALE _

' Pure R. GC. Folden Sebright ban-,
tam eggs, $1.00 per setting. Mrs.



-|P. P. Wood, Atlanta, Rt. 5, Be.

1106-W. : os
R. Cc. S. Le Wyandotte. eggs;

/pure stock, blocdtested, 5e ea.

del. Mrs. E. lL. Todd, Valdosta.

24 doz. -Booths AAA B. R.
eggs ea. week, He ae 50c
doz. FO3. Cash: Mrs. H. J.
Kitchens, Blythe.

Pure Donaldson selected eggs,
7c per 15 del. Mrs. W. D.
Jackson, P. = Box:

Pure bred B. L. eggs, 75 per
15, prepaid; 50c if called for.
Gcod hatch guar. Want Ti23p:
cld fashicned sunflower seed.
Mrg, Ij- BR. Hobby, Fitzgerald,
Rtas.

Carefully selected, bloodtested ey
| flock Parks pen ped. B. R. eggs, |

$1.25 per 15 postpaid. Entire
flock direct. W. M. Shivers,
Norwocd, RFD.



COTTON SEED FOR SALE |



Stoneville No. 2,- carefully |
ginned, $1.00 bu. FOB.: * few bu.
Clay peas, $2.00 bu: FOB. Ko
R. Smith, Thomson. (

Pure Farm: Relief cotton peed;
$1.00 bu.; want 10 B. L. hens.
V.. EL Bentley, Monroe, |

300 bu. Rhynes imp. Cook cotton
seed, wilt-resisting,free of black

$1.00
pu. Cash with order... Q. A.
Benson, Ty. Ty, Rt. 2... >

200 bu. Rhynes imp. Cook wilt-

resisting cotton seed, kept pure

at gin. 90 per cent germination.



HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE ~

5 yr. old Jack, 6 yr. old stal-
licn, 3 mules and 1 mare. ae



for description and prices,

all at my home. S. Barry,

Menlo, Rt." 1.
_ CATTLE FOR SALE

-Fine- muley Jeraue cow, extra
good for butter, milk, or beef, 4

=





years old, $35.00. Offer good for

30 days only. Mrs. G. A. Ad-
ams, Dahlonega, | Rt 22 :

~ POULTRY FOR SALE

BABY CHICKS FOR SALE
Ww. L. baby. chicks from Jarge,





pen-mated hens, $7. 45 Cc. Add

1-2c per chick for lots less than
100... Br: 0.23: Heely, River-
male Rt Tee ;
| BANTAMS

4 ~ Golden, Silver. Sebright and
Dark Cornish bantams, stock and
RW. Clark, Macon, AIT
Boulevard Ave. -

Thoroughbred Black - Tailed
Jap. bantams, $2, 00 pr. or exc.
for heavy breed, Indian Game
nreferred, 4 cockerels and sev.
hens: Eggs, 75e per 15. J. H.
Phillips, Commerce, R. 3. ~~ :
BARRED WHITE AND OTHER

ROCKS

BB. R. cockerels, disease-resist-
ant, from 260 ezg steck; trannest,
bloodtested $1.00 and up. FOB my
farm. Victor Jehn-on, Glenwood,
Horseshoe Bend Farm.

: LEGHORNS

30 S. Cc. W. L. hens, yr. old,
Lindstrom Royal Mating. 0c ea.
FOB. No chks. J. A. Hianegen,
Lumber City 3
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
_ PUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE

5 White Pekin ducks, 1 drake,
0e ea. Fat, good cond. Amos
Wilson, Ball Ground, Rt. 2.

POULTRY WANTED

BABY CHICKS
Want 250 chicks to raise on
halves to 1-2 lb. size; also want
25 little turkeys to raise on
halves.
etta, Rt. 2. 5

: CORNISH |
Want some White Cornish
chickens. Write prices on chicks,
eggs and grown stock. E. K.
Smith, Decatur, 811 Perioa Ave.

PLANTS FOR SALE









Brimmer tomato plants, ready,

25e C, 500 $1.00 del. Ga. Mrs.
G. EK. McDaniel, Buena Vista,
Rt. 4. > 4

EE. J.. Chas. W., Flat Dutch
cabbage plants, 50c, 500; 75c M.
del. Prompt shipment. Sat.
guar. H. C. Rowe, Ocilla, Rt. 2.

Booking orders Marglobe, Bal-
timore tomato plants for April
15th del. $1.00 M. up to 10 M;
10 M. up, 75e M. Exe. some for
seed peas, Ss. L. Crosby, Bax-
ley, Rt: 4.0 =

ree, Gr. Baltimore toma- fee
April del, 20 GC; E



Scarlet

Raulerson, Rockingham.

Skin plants, Gov. insp. and Ruby

plants, $1.00 M. del.

Rt, <2: |

; Cash with order. ds
.|A. Benson, Ty Ty, Re. 2. oi

dividual trees affected by borers.

Mrs. Cleo Waters, Mari--



~ Gert. P. R. plants, grown from
vine cuttings, $1.35 M, del;. $1.00
M. FOB. S. F. Hilton, Baxley.

BE. J., Chas. W. cabbage plants,
500, Bbc: 85c M., Postpaid. April,
and May del. Tomato, pepper,
egg-plant and potato plants. | _
Write for prices. R.. Chane.
Pitts. :

Imp. Red Skin P. R. pate
lots, $1.25 M. prepaid; $1.00 M.
FOB.; pimiento pepper, 25c C; |
Globe tomato, 25 Cc.
Frank Harris, Baxley. :

Lueretia dewberry plants, . 75e
C., $6.00 M.; giant gourd seed,
Bu. cap, 15 for 25 seed, prepaid.
Mrs: B. L. Robinson, Greenville.

Cert. Pe R: potato plants, $1.00
M. Gov. insp.. Sat. guar. R. D.

15th, $1.00 M.. del.
Lightsey, Surrency,

Gov. insp. P..R.
April 15th, $1.25 M. pre)
L.. Lightsey, Surrency,

CORN & SEED





Wood's Golden Prolific:
tings seed corn Ist. y
pa < Oe oneville cotton se

&.
Peter ADEE: 2thise:
mule and pay difference
for horse. TT. V. o
well. 4 hee

"FRESH AND C
MEATS FOR S$



King pepper, $1.25 M. del.: Me :



King pepper-, $1.25 M. del; Mar-
globe and Gr. Baltimore tomato
Ready April
Baxley,

4 nice country hams,
to 13 Ib., 30. Ib. del. 2 ce



25th. Ottis - Pittman, |

Rt. 4.



FERTILIZER ee TEST ON curien :

Our Coastal Plain Experiment. Station, in connection
United States Department of Agriculture, has found by a
experiments that where fertilizer has been placed inan

Of the eed has given higher yields,



PINE TREES DIE
State Dept. of pa
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Sir: ;

Borers are in our pine tress ye: have planted | Jong-

along our driveway. They have done well for. three. yea

four have died, due to borers. These were cut dow and

Others are sick. We have sprayed to no ee

what to a0 to save. the others.

: | Daugiasrie, Ga,

pas Reply By Tom O'Neill, Hotness

Your ara to the State Department of Agriculture ha
ferred to this department since the Department of Ento
is the one which handles ea mp ttery relative $05 control Oo

jand plant diseases.

The borers which attack pine trees rarely do. so unless |
are unthrifty from. some cause, or unless an immense p
of borers has developed in dying. trees" nearby, and thes
of insects are so numerous that they can successfull
healthy trees. I suspect that the: unfavorable weather a
| may have reduced the vitality of your trees and left th
ceptible to insect attack. Furthermore, the State Forest
ment has confirmed my opinion that your locality is not,
the area in which long-leaf pines thrive and specimens
outside such area are seldom thrifty.

There are no control measures suitable for the treatment of
In a forest, the affec
should be. promptly cut and burned, or otherwise destroy:

the protection of neighboring trees, as soon as signs 0!

injury become apparent. When the foliage of pine trees.
to turn yellow, they are definitely dying and cannot be
and they should be removed as soon as they reach th
If the borers are noticed before the condition is so far a
trees may often be saved by cultural practices which iner
their thrift or vigor. This may be by watering, fertilization
eon or some such means. |
Relative to the analysis of the soil sample which you have al
I do not know of any department in Atlanta that has f
for this service. Soil analysis is a very tedious and expe
operation. It is probable you can gt a report on the ge
type of soil in your vicinity by writing to the State Colle
Agriculture at Athens, or it may be they could take your s
and classify it as a type which has already been analyze 1,
information should be sufficient for your purpose, Soil sa
taken by persons not acquainted with the proper technique
practcally worthless since the chemical composition of soil
from month to month, and is also affected by the top_
sub-soil. and by various minor physical aspects of
which taken, such as slight elevations and depressions a

presence or absence of various types of vegetation in OF Tn

pet from which the Sar was secured.



THE- SOUL- OF-THE-MARKETEER
(By Elmer G. Campbell, Ph.D.)

I saw him in the market place, Su
His. eyes were dreamy, yet were pright: :
Hig hair was gray, but not pure white,

And formed a wavy crown of grace ~

Above his kindly beaming face.

eats him market. rumbles swell
- And crowds of noisy vendors ery - ~~
And shout to those who come to buy;
One blows a horn, one rings a bell,
- They rave like mad men, mad to sell.

But the market man with the dreamy eye ~
Smiled an honest smile on me
Let me serve you, sir, said he,

Y always labor hard to try

To give my best to those who buy.

is

_ Since then I always seek his stand:

But once I came and he was gone~
They said he left one day at dawn,
With head bowed down and hat in hand
I did not buy, as I had: planned. ,

I walked far out beneath the sky
And found a simple mound of clay,
ce: And lifted up my head to pray
- In the name of Him who came to die
And gave His best to those. who buy. :

Today I trudge where wizards vie
Beneath a sainted flag unfurled
And as they shout to a car <

I search for one who toils {

Te give hi b I