(CULTURE |
ISSIONER),
AMILTON RALLS, SUPERVISOR, MARKETING DIVISION.
STATE CAPITOL, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, MAY 1, 1937.
amare inf sat Pm
CUCUMBERS: There are 12,300 acres of cucum- | The area around Palteville and Glenville in the eastern
bers in two of the early states, Florida and Texas, as part of the state in Nvans and Tatnal Counties have.
compared with 12,600 acres in 1936. The Georgia about the same acrage as last year. Large increases
acreage igs placed at 1,400 acres, or the same-as in | are found around Pelham, Camilla and a new acreage
1936, but 1,000 acres less than in 1935. The condition | is planted at Cuthbert in Randolph County, The crop
of the crop was poor early in April and most growers ; was set out in the fields during the period of March
were. replanting. ees j | 15 to April 10. Very little damage from rains or frost
36. Carlot shipments this season to date, : es \ Lest was reported. : se
POTATOES: The 1937 Georgia crop is reported as : ae
ecbean to only 16 ue ipa ere 2
10 EATS eros receipts | 7g per cent of normal on April 1 compared with 80| WATERMELONS: The ero is ate. Rains and
per cent on same date last a Production forecast cool weather caused most growers to replant, Very
report is due May 12. as few growers had 25 to 50 per cent of a stand the first
a rf ee ya week in April. It now looks as if the first shipments
(SNAP): Heavy rains damaged the crop STRAWBERRIES: Georgias 600 acres are eX-| can not be expected before June 20. Planting is in
o 80 per cent in most sections. The crop | pected to yield a crop of 36,000 crates, or 60 crates progress throughout South atid Middle Georgia (April
delayed and picking is not expecte pen acre. Unfavorable weather has damaged the crop 7). Most of the crop will come up at the same time.
ee A a ee . e eee wert considerably and epee by express have perk very t - 2 e oe
10-15. Some replanting is likely, Impor- light. j Seo =a
Southern States have an expected acreage of | ee ee fn Oy REPORTS. FROM STATE MARKETS |
0 harvest during the next. three month h TOMATOES: The reining acreage for Geavete mee
acres in 1936, a a S with | nis season is estimated to be 5,500 acres, or larger - THE DOUGLAS MARKET
0 acres is the Geen of 15 per cent, Geor- | than the 3,500 acres planted in 1936 and the 1,200 Since April 15, we haye moved practically all cab-
e as in 1936. : : acres in 1935. Practically all the increase in South bage ready for market in this section. Several truck- 2
(LIMA): Stands are generally good na Georgia is found in the Southwest corner of the state. | erg came here saying they saw in the Bulletin that we _
n of the crop is fair. Shipments will robabl Ue . had cabbage on market. At present there are only
16 first week in June, : ee | ATLANTA SPOT COTTON - a few scattering patches in Coffee ae surrounding
fete area ready for. sale, :
Our potato grader is set up and we will have Irish :
potatoes ready for market around May 10, which will
be graded and packed in 100-Ib. bags, or to suit ee 's.
needs.
At present tomatoes promise to be our outstanding. ne
oe in Atlanta have been liberal. and || paid on six Southern markets was 63 points on for crop, with potatoes running close second. Potatoes
ock b : 2 with some fine quality Copen- 15/16 and 125 points on: for one inch. . . --}} are less diseased than usual, and those I have exam-.
i nore otered. At shipping point yields are -____!| ined are more uniform in size than usual; which prom-
age with quality fair to poor. Most of: - re ati ; pace 3 ises good percentage number ones. parte
County. moving from the Coolidge district in : ATLANTA WOOL MARKET | Beans are blooming in several larger fields in this.
a = : ne section. H me
: OUPES: It was necessary to do some re- Ware ee free. On Dae ec ene Work on increasing floor space in main oa began
of cantaloupes A rdvehout South Georgia, || Durty 84 12c; medium burry 31 1/2c; heavy |/ today and will be completed within ten days.
Si. |! purry 25
we are UD to a stand. urry 2oc. < ey oe z . A a / j is Ww. LONG, Manager.
April 29, 1937. ohana Spot Cotton toast steady
today at 13.75 per pound for middling,
The average price of middling 7/8 in. staple on |
| ten Southern markets was 13.05 per pound, the
average for the past 30 days was 14.36 per pound.
Staple premiums: April 29.The average premium
BAGE: The Gabrefa crop was reported to be
ent of normal on April 1 and 55 per cent of
eported on April 1, 1936. The pr oduction for
s placed at 14 000 tons as against 11 ,200 tons.
arlot shipments total 75 cars through April
HOG MARKET ~__|||____ PRICES ON FRESH GEORGIA eee Aan
7 See VEGETABLES | ate | ae
1 29, 1937, These prices quoted by The White s Prevailing on State Farmers Market, See oeene
ion Company on standard hard hogs: _ Atlanta, Today, (April 30, 1937). pee eek nee
180-240 Per Cwt : SiS sees Medium, fat types
150-180 per Cwt : go {|| Beets, per doz. bunches 3 5 Hat Dative types <<. yee ee cet
130-150 per Cwt Logs Cabbage, per Cwt. Lb. (Best) 1.25 1.65 - Medium tyes. 222.05 css. ees ee-s
130-150 per Cwt. 8.05 Carrots, per doz. bunches. . - .40 .50 Common types ..
$7.00 down Corn, green, per doz. 50 .60 Canner types
Seka and Sides ve A ean 7.55-8.65 Collards, per doz bunches, fies. 60 .90
thin and sow Rogs bought at prevailing English peas, per hamper. . sovwbee lO 1.00 Fat Cows
ae iS : Mustard greens, per hamper...... : yes) Medium Cows
Reg ee / Onions, green, per doz, bunches a 40 Canners, cutters, mostly ...... Soe age 3.50,
3 MOULTRIE Potatoes, (Spalding Rose) ...... -. 2,50 [i]: :
Ts ead up Hog AEE stendy, No, 1 New Bliss Triumph. 80 1.90 Fat types
80. to 240 eae Potatoes, Sweet (North Carolina) ee 2.00-w8.00 Medium types
150 to 180. : ....... g'50 [|| Radishes, per doz, bunches. 25 .B0
130 to 150 : : Spinach, per bu. .......... #% : 75 Fat types
ee ||| Turnips, per doz. bunches _ 50 Medium types
5.00 Turnip Salad, per hamper.- : ; 50 ||| Common
ws 2.00 under smooth hogs of SAETOT SE en
t basis: they make, stags 6.50. Strawberries, per 24 qt, crate Os 3.25 Throwout Aypee
MARKET REPORT OF GEORGIA PRODUCT. a8
Prevailing Wholesale Prices (F.0.B, Points Mentioned) Subject to cuaaie: April 30, 1937. e j
ATLANTA
28 98 986 999080
on
Atlanta |Clarkesville; Commerce ; Dawson | Franklin |Hawkinsvle Lakcand LaFayette Metter ;Mt. Vernon
f 22 201 . wl Oe 1 aes
SS ae es ae 5 : : - = ot s .20
20 : = j ee sah AE ALY: Sean
: aaa
ey oes 20:
15} 1! eo de | : \.12-.18 A a : .14-.15 :
pL : ; : : 5 ; . 12-.13: |
OO ; % go aa : ae Sa 07 F
3: AUS, eerie ; i : As ADs
.20- 23 . Bas: eo eae Ss ao 20 {! 2 ee
oe
Butter, best table..
Beas, mixed | 1.80
1.25
1.60
SS do
v 150
-18.00-20.00
ee
>
Qo
t
| bt pt ah
D SECT OU Sr Ol moot
Obotehouib
SONS
J Reh re
A MARKET B
Published Semi-Monthly
By
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Executive Office:
State Capitol, Atlanta, Georgia.
COLUMBUS ROBERTS
Commissioner of Agriculture
HAMILTON RALLS
Supervisor, Marketing Division
J. W. SIKES |
Assistant Supervisor, Marketing Division
MRS. ROBIN WOOD
Assistant Supervisor, Womens Division
F. J. MERRIAM, Editor
: SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1937
ae
__ Entered as second class matter February 15, 1922, at the Post
Office at Atlanta, Georgia, under the act of June 8, 1980. Accepted
for mailing at special rate of postage provided for sn Section 1103,
Act of October 8. 1917.
Notices of farm produce and 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, mcubator and
ornamental nursery stock notices are published in issue of the 15th.
Farm land for sale editions are published at intervals during the
year. Advance notices of these editions appear from time to time
advising advertisers when to mail us these types of notices.)
_ Limited space will not permit insertions of notices containing
more than 30 words including name and address. We reserve the
ght to cut down notices of more than 30 words, providing that
this reduction does not destroy the meaning of the notices. When
notices cannot be cut down they will be returned to the writer for
_ correction.
_ Limited space will not permit insertion of unimportant notices.
Under legislative act the Market Bulletin does not assume any
esponsibility for any notice appearing in the Bulletin: or trans-
action resulting therefrom, x
oes _THE MACON MARKET
Phere has been a slight increase in the business done on the
&
year.
_ turnips to supply the demand and this has caused the price to
| . These marke
Macon market for the last two weeks, although there has been
a scarcity of some items usually handled during this season of the |
ez It has been almost impossible to secure enough young |
-fange above normal. _ We have been receiving quite a few English |
peas and were able to maintain a fair price as long as they came
in in good condition, but some have come in that were of poor
_ quality or improperly gathered and packed and this caused the
- priees_to sag to some extent, - E
mk
Everything possible is being done to help farmers dispose of
produce brought to this market. If he is unable to bring his pro-
duce to market and writes us, we seek to get some trucker to go
to his place and buy it from him and we advise him as to what
it Should bring on the farm if the quality is good and properly
epared. In order to help maintain better prices for farm pro-
duce, we have had grading tables built here to be used for grad-
ing vegetables that may come to the market that are ungraded and
n unsalable condition. It is much better for the producer to.
5 rade his produce, sell the salable and keep the poorer grades on
the farm to be fed to livestock. In doing this he will be able to get
re money for that sold than he would trying to sell an inferior
rticle, Besides, he will have lost the use of the feed.
JOHN N. RAINES, Manager.
THE THOMASVILLE MARKET
April 26.The movement at the Thomasville
mereased considerably in the past few weeks.
From April 15 to April 26 we moved 582 tons of cabbage, the
price ranging from $15.00 to $25.00 per ton. -The-cabbage market
1a8s,held up exceedingly well this season. We have also handled
$94 hampers of peas which brought $1.00 to $1.25 per hamper;
twenty-five crates of strawberries at $5.50 per crate; and seventy-
five thousanc potato plants at $1.25 per thousand.
Other commodities such as onions, carrots, turnips, etc., are
still coming in in small quantities,
State Market has
: We are expecting the beans to start coming in in small ae ue
ties around.May 1 and the movement to be real heavy by May 1
From all reports we will have a very good season in beans, and
we have every reason to believe that the prices will be good.
Squashes wiil start coming in around May 10. :
Our poultry market was very gvod Saturday the 24th. This was
the second sale that has been held. We bought 700 dozen eggs at
Use and 20c per dozen, and 20 pounds of chickens at ide per
ound. : .
: J. M. JOINER, Manager.
THE VALDOSTA MARKET
April 26.Weather conditions have been good for the past two
weeks and crops are beginning to show up much better in the
icinity of our market. The outlook is now that we should have a
od crop of cantaloupes, watermelons, corn and other crops, and
we will be able to load several trucks daily when the produce is
ready.
TO THE FARMERS:
_ We have grading tables built and we will be able to assist and
advise you in any way in preparing and packing your produce for
sale. You will find that the better you grade and pack your pro-
| duce the quicker the sale and the better the price.
We are having some few English peas coming in on the market.
Dbage has been moving very good at a fair price. The demand |
nd round head cabbage is much better than any other
Jo enhagan the leading seller, 2 pot
re both making preparations but are not yet
quite ready to open for business. Grading tables are being pre-
pared for both, so they will be in shape to handle produce to
advantage.
UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION
The Marketing Division of the Department of Agriculture will
have daily information on the above crops and will act as a con-
tact agency between the producer-shipper and the trade. Any
promptly handled by this office or by the following managers of
State Farmers Markets in the different producing areas: :
L. EB. Payne, Manager, State Farmers Market, Atlanta, Ga.
John N, Raines, Manager, State Farmers Market, Macon, Ga.
J. M. Jones, Manager, State Farmers Market, Thomasville, Ga.
Harrell W. Long, Manager, State Farmers Market, Douglas, Ga.
Paul Carter, Manager, State Farmers Market, Valdosta, Ga.
IN CO-OPERATION
&
Varieties, Growing and Packing
The Extension Service at the College of Agriculture, Athens,
Georgia, will hold a number of schools at the different farm mar-
kets over the State, starting directly after May 15th.
. The purpose of the schools and meetings is to advise and in-
struct the producers of vegetables, fruits, poultry, eggs, butter,
etc., on better methods of production, varieties, grading and pack-
E ing in order that produce may be more readily sold and bring
a higher price.
_ The schedule of dates for these schools will be announced in the
May 15 Market Bulletin. Every one interested and every producer
should be interested, will look out for the announcement and at-'
tend the school nearest their farm;
it -will be well worth your
while, ee
THE MARKET BULLETIN
The Georgia Market Bulletin is a weekly publication published
weekly by the Bureau of Markets, of the Marketing Division of the
| State Department of Agriculture, and financed by the state for.
the benefit of the Georgia farmer. It carries notices, at no cost
to the individual, of those items that pertain strictly to Agricul-
ture, or Agricultural Products, or Articles used in the further-
ance of Agricultural interest. :
Although the bulletin is reccegnized all over the state as an
invaluable aid to the farmer in marketing his produce, compara-
tively few people know anything at all about its origin and de--
velopment since the first issue twenty years ago.
need of a medium of exchange for the farm products of our state.
any definite steps were taken, J. J. Brown (then candidate for
the office of Commissioner of Agriculture) broached the subject
to the voters of Georgia and was virtually elected upon the strength
of his promise of such an exchange, terming same as a Market
Bulletin.
The first issue came out in 1917, edited by Mr. Lowe, and con-
sisted of two small mimeographed sheets of paper with practically
no circulation at all. Then it passed through the stage of a 10x12
almanac. Under the administration of Eugene Talmadge, as Com-
Missioner of Agriculture, its form was changed to that of a reg-
ular newspaper, but the size was held at 10%4x14 inches; this form
containing an editorial page as well as an employment service
for the benefit of those seeking work on the farm, or employers
seeking help, in addition to its Market Reports and Agricultural
notices, : :
missioner of Agricuiture, the Bulletin in appearance remained the
same, and while the growth in circulation continued on the up-
wardreaching 114,000 weeklyits beneficial services were ina
measure sadly curtailed, on account of the drastic legislative re-
duction in appropriation allotted for maintenance and publica-
tion necessitating a 4, with an occasional 8-page weekly, instead
of the 8, 12, 16, 24 and even 36-page editions of the former admin-
istration.
In March, 1936, under the supervision of Tom Linder, Com-
missioner of Agriculture, and in spite of the necessity of the con-
tinuance of mostly 4-page issues, the Bulletin was greatly im-
proved in appearance, the Mast-Head being altered somewhat,
and the size changed to 11%x17 inches, Circulation increased to
160,000 copies weekly. Also, during this period the Bulletin was
Agricultural Publications held at the CapitolSantiago, De Chile.
|= The Bulletin was discontinued from December 19 until Febru- |
ary 1, 1937, when publication was resumed by Columbus Roberts,
monthly instead of a weekly periodical, under the guidance and
sympathetic influence of Mr. Roberts, Hamilton Ralls, Supervisor,
and J. W. Sikes, Assistant Supervisor, of the Marketing. Division,
Mast-HeadThe Cow, The Hog, The Chicken, Cotton, Cane, Po-
ing (a medium of sale, want and exchange, for all farm com-
modities) of the contents within. The Front and Editorial pages
devoted almost entirely to instructive and informative articles
regarding Agriculture, Agricultural Industry, the Needs of the
rural woman, Quotations from different sections, giving a more
adequate report on prevailing prices of farm products all over
the state, including Livestock and Poultry sales, Progress of the
state farmers Market system, and many other advantageous items
of help and benefit to the FARMER AND HIS WIFE.
In thus endeavoring to render every possible good service, the
help and co-operation of all concerned is asked for and welcomed;
and all helpful suggestions are accepted and used whenever feas-
ible and can be.
The aim and purpose of the Bulletinunder this administration
is worthwhile service to the Georgia farmers in the marketing of |
their farm products. | Sees
Soo __-ELIZABETH HYNDS, Assistant Editor.
inquiries concerning sales, purchases or consignments will be
fing at dawu. 0
he craved farm work.
Me / : | him an ad.
The Latest Up-to-Date Information on Production,
He approached Mr. Price on the subject several times, but before.
In 1933 and 1934, under the administration of G. C. Adams, Com-'
awarded First Honorable Mention among Agricultural Publica-'
tions from all parts of the world at the American Exposition of:
the present Commissioner of Agriculture, becoming a semi-
Department of Agriculture. The change in the drawing of the
tatoes, Watermelons, etc.typifying more clearly the true mean- |
THE BULLETIN
EFFECTIVE I
Reprint from Atlanta Geo
of April 15th
FARM WORKER ASKS
300 SEEK HIS SERVIC
Not long ago Calyin
45-year-old Pike County
negro, got tired of his job
ing on tables at the Old Sc
Home. ae
He yearned for the sig
cow, and he wanted to wa
to the sound of a rooster.
In other -
So he had somebody
It said:
Negro man, aged 45,
ower, wants light farm
Call Mr. John R. Stroth
the Grant Building, Atl
He put the ad in the M
Bulletin. eae
He knew Mist John wo
mind, cause Mr. John cai
Woodberry, which
across the Flint River f
farm where Calvin used to
So Mist John was |
surprised when his phone
ed ringing the day after t
came out. Folks from a
|town were calling in, wan
Calvin to come look after
yards. :
Letters Pour In
Then the letters starte
ing. They came from a
south as Savannah, w
dairyman wanted Calvin,
|as far north as Chattan
where a teacher at Me
School wanted him.
They came from nearly
| little town in Georgia, n
During the administration (1913-1917) of J. D. Price as Com-'
missioner of Agriculture, an employee, one J. R. Lowe (now em- |
ployed in the Motor Vehicle Department) in his contact with the
farmers of Georgia as a Fieldman, became autely aware of the
300 of them, in all, and
are still coming. we
Put that negro on th
and I will meet him, th
ters said. I will pay j
a month and give him a
to live in and furnish his mea
and clothes. :
Put him on a train,
| read, and let me know
he leaves. [ll pick hi
at the station. I will pay
$12 a month and his hou
rations.
Range of Pay
They ranged from $8 a
to 75 cents a day, and m
| them -provided food and
ing and a place to sleep
Then the folks starte
ing. John R. Strother
farmers standing before h:
fice door every morning,
of them have come from
miles. sn
Ive come after that
they say. Got my truck
stairs and Im ready to
made up his mind. He
all the letters and looked |
notes on the phone calls.
thought about his thre
here in Atlanta, and he de
hed' like to stay here.
them. Te
So he took a job that
keep him out in the open
ing, after shrubbery and a
etc. He has two rooms to
in, and a private bath. An
has a cook, ie
He decided that was th
he needed. ;
John R. Strother thinks
flood of letters and phon
proves something. He thin
definitely indicates bette
are back in Georgia, whe
| folk are so eager for labo
_ It also indicates an unp
dented scarcity of la
thinks maybe its because
of the folks that used
working as farm hands
working for better pay
Works Progress jobs.
He figures the Works
ress Administration has
done its work of providir
eral relief for men wh
find work when one (
an apply for a job an
offered him. Se
BUTTER |
u es and. Regulations on the Handling net -
. Labeling of Butter
gia code 1933, 42; 110. If any product for human or animal
ption, the quantity of the contents shall not be plainly.
icuously marked on the outside of the package in terms
ght, measure, or numerical count, with the name of the
Ee
manufacturer, packer or producer shall be termed mis-
d, and any person, firm or corporation violating this pro- |
shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.
try butter or butter of any kind comes within the meaning
law, and must be labeled showing the weight contained,
me ; and address of the producer and the type of butter,
er. COUNTRY BUTTER, PROCESSED BUTTER, RE-
ED BUTTER, or CREAMERY BUTTER.
owing are definitions of the types of butter:
ila. on 5, Paragraph 9. Butter is the clean, non rancid
made by gathering in any manner, the fat of fresh or
milk or cream into a mass, which also contains a small
of the other miik constituents, with or without salt, and
s not less than eighty (80%) per cent of milk fat. Butter
* may not contain added coloring matter,
graph 10. Renovated butter, process butter, is the product
y melting butter and: reworking, without the addition or |
chemicals or any substance except milk, cream or salt,
ains at least eighty (80%) per cent of milk fat.
aph 11. Butter which has been reworked and washed for
rpose of producing a uniform, marketable preduct is com-
known as Ladled Butter, may be labeled Reworked
Harmless coloring and salt may be. added. Butter of this
must not be melted or refined. :
Dek. Bui ee Chief Inspector.
TROL OF SWINE PARASITES IN THE SOUTH
Raffensperger, Associate Veterinarian, Bureau of Animal
, U. . Department of Agriculture, in Charge of Branch
Zoologicai Lberatory, Moultrie, Ga.
te: bred hogs, proper care of sow during the gestation pe-
and improved practices in herd management are all neces-
the program of swine production. In addition to these,
program of parasite control is essential for economical
roduction.
emonstrate the need ioe this latter statement I wish to
tention to the post-mortem findings by Federal Inspectors
laughter of approximately 53,000 hogs during the month
uary, 1937. I might state that these hogs came from Ala-
Florida and Georgia. On post-mortem inspection, 425.
S were condemned because of the following conditions: |
lia 30; icetrus 39 and for extensive kidney worm infestations
is makes a total of 239 animals. In most cases the pyemias.
result of kidney worm infestation and the same holds true
he cases of icterus. Of the other 186 carcasses lost for food
es 83 were condemned because of cholera and two because
erculosis. The remaining 101 animals were destroyed for
urposes for various causes such as pneumonia, septicemia,
will be readily seen that in this territory the losses in hog
ses from kidney worms are greater than those resulting
ll other causes. During this same month not one kidney
ved. for food purposes and 92 per cent of livers from these
went to the tank, The. exact amount of loins destroyed was
corded, but it is quite commonly found when the kidneys
ureters attached are pulled out from their locations for
m, that kidney worms are: present in the perirenal fat
ather commonly found penetrating the loin muscles. In
ses, the perirenal fat and loins are trimmed out until freed
presence or evidence of ee Thisy means a taps gee
loss.
e the 53, 000 age slaughtered during January, 1937, were
sed im several of the southern states, the post-mortem
to some extent should be representative of .the parasitic
ons that we find in the general run of market hogs in the
_ These figures mm st indicate: the need. of parasite control
territory. Seeiias~
uestion that it naturally arise is: What can be done
ar? The next question should be: Will the recommended
s of the Bureau of Animal Industry of the United States
ment of Agriculture control these heavy losses from kidney
infestations.
answer to the above questions we offer data based on actual
ince.
obtained during the past year. These are only some of
ults obtained from vocational agricultural students in Geor-
Florida who are using the set-up for swine parasite con-
recommended by the: Bureau of Animal Industry. These
ts were supervised by the vocational agricultural teachers,
riter co- -operating with the teachers and students.
report covers 61 projects under supervision, representing
p igs. Of the 61 projects we could rate 35 as very good, that is,
ils reeommendd. for parasite control were followed quite |
These 35 projects represented about
some of the project co-operators
nder farm conditions.
hogs finished for market;
ore than one sow.
ket on different dates and killed separately, thus affording
rtunity for a close examination for parasites. The results
minations showed that 86 per cent of livers were saved
food; 88 per cent of the kidneys were free of parasites. Of
35 projects there were,21 in which all livers were passed
od and all kidney regions were parasite free.
thers of past years, show definitely that kidney worms can
atly reduced in the herd or controlled if the set-up recom-
d is used.
next: question that will come up is whether the set-yp is
ive? If you will question those that have used it they
nswer No. Naturally you will want to know if it involves
work than the old way of raising hogs, You will receive
ly from the majority of those who have tested or used
stem: There is some extra work in inaugurating the sys-
ut after it is set up it will require less work to care for
ard. :
ly, I wish to state briefly some of the advantages in using
ite control set-up with the other recommendations to
pererence is ee in the beginning of this article.
shape,
time only, at bargain.
|Sampson, Jr.,
For 30 baby: chicks.
you have.
Want 20 h.p. steam eng. Cheap | '
for cash. State size of eylinder,
length of stroke.
You must be the judge of the facts. I will not
opt to cover the past. six years work, but only some of the
These project hogs were brought to
These figures |
and should be reason abl
| For further information. concerning the details of
fer swine production in
tural teacher in your district or your county agent. |
For assistance in the application of the swine sanitation system
for the control of swine parasites in Georgia, consuit with Dr.
J. M. Sutton, State Veterinarian, Department of Agriculture
At-
lanta, Ga., who will be glad to render every service possible in
this work.
Incubators, Brooders, Etc.,
- For Sale
Second-Hand Machinery
Wanted
150 cap. ine., Bell City, for
sale or exec. for 100 Ancona or
R. I. Red chicks. Write. Mrs.
'T. T. Holloway, Cobbtown, Rt. 1.
96 egg cap. electric Inc., good
$5.00. - Quillian Tuggle,
Buford. Rt. 2.
Oil burning brooder, used 1
William
L. Venable, College Park.
2250 egg ine., Bohan, $8.00;
other Wisconsin; $6.00. Crated.
Both perfect cond. Exc. for any-
thing can use. Mrs, Gertrude
Connell, Kingsland.
Oil brooder, practically new,
500 cap. $4.50, Martin Farmer,
Hamilton, Box 213. (Pine Mt.
} Valley.)
Automatic oil brooder, 1 M.
cap. used with only 2 broods, ex-
cellent shape, $7.00. F. W. Jones,
| Fayetfeviiie.
65 cap. Buckeye inc., good
cond. with instructions and
thermometer, complete, $4.00.
Mrs. J. W. Tucker, Macon. 422
} Log Cabin Drive.
Buckeye, coal burning brooder,;
1 M. cap. good _ cond., except
thermostatic control, used 1 sea-
son, $6.00. FOB. Otto K. Orr,
Flowery Branch. Rt. 1.
180: ege Ine, $6.00,
Quitman.
Brown Hen Inc., 50 cap., per-
fect cond., instructions, $3.00
postpaid, or exc. for thrifty pig
Mrs. EH. H.
Aaron
Roland, Morgan.
2150 ege cap. ea., inc., $7.00
ea. C. W. Collins, Atlanta. 13 1-2
Bankhead Ave. HE 8817.
1 Sol-Hot, 500 cap. Canopy
brooder, perfect. cond. cost
$17.50. take. $8.50. Iva F. Mc-
Minn, Ayersville.
Second-Hand Machinery
Wanted
Want. Fowler cultivator
good cond. E. P. Mason,
thonia, Rt. 1.
- Want Fordson tractor
in
: ies
com-
plete, with Tom Houston Skid-
der. A. N. Ellis, Jr., Riceboro.
Want a used Garden tractor,
J. KE. Verner, Atlanta, 18 Court-
lana St., S. B.
Exc. 15 h.p. ker, eng:, good |;
cond., for Fordson tractor, good
cond., with pulley. M. A. Clem-
ents, Gleenwood, Rt. 1.
Want. 1 used high tension
magneto in good cond., for old
style Fordson tractor.
Adams, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Want a No. 7 Vulcan turning
plow. in good cond., cheap for
cash, E. L. Dingler, Meansville.
Want Garden tractor, Mann
L. E.
Green Bone cutter, Poultry Feed
Gutter. R.A, Caldwell,
ville.
Want second-hand Haine cul-
tivator, good cond. State what
W. R. Walker, Dial.
Face-
H. C. Haynes, | Cy
Canton, Rt. 4.
Want corn binder, either mule
lor tractor power, S. E. Reynolds,
Albany.
Want to lease or buy a good
-gin outfit in a good location.
Earl J. Beavers, Marietta.
Want. peanut picker, trac-
tor, cultivator, grain binder
and other farm machinery. J. H.
Leverett, Parrott.
Want 8 h. p. gas and ker en-
gine. Roy Tilley, Taylorsville.
Want good dise harrow in A-1
cond. J. Ralph Duggan, Warthen.
Want late model, good make,
grain thresher. Must be in per-
fect cond. S. C. Ingram, Tal-
botton.
Want corn binder, either mule
or tractor power. G. E. Reynolds,
Albany. :
Want a small used feed erind-
er for farm use, 10 to 20 h.p. gas.
eng. R. G. Anderson, Wares
RFD.
Want grain cradle in first
class cond., cheap for cash, J.
H. Archer, Sparta.
Want good, second-hand Mc-
Cormick- Deering Binder within
50 mi. Newborn. Give lowest
cash price. W. G. Bryans, New-
born.
Want 1 Van Brunt or similar
type guano spreader in good
cond. W. R. Howard, Stephens.
Want second-hand side disc
plow for Fordson tractor. State
cond, and price, B. C. Teasley,
M. D., Hartwell.
Want garden tractor, Handy-
Man, or equally good, make.
3 or 4h.p. State age, price, de-
scription. S. V. Waggoner, At-
lente. Station A, care Gen. Del.
rReady.
$2.50
/50 or more del,
berlin, Surrency, Rt. 2.-
| Gov.
B. McCall,
25e doz;
Want good grain cradle, rea-
sonable distance. Exe. cotton
planter or guano. distrioutor.
Geo. W. Jackson, Fayetteviite,
HC oe
Want Athens
Fordson, in good cond., cheap
for cash. Advise where can be
seen and price. F. S. Barnes,
Stone Mtn., Rt. 2.
Want hay baler. Must be in
good cond. S. B. Carter, Toccoa.
Want to buy 1 steam turbine
pottle washer for dairy use. Geo.
.C. Lacy, Albany, Rt. B
PLANTS FOR SALE
1 million tomato,
and Gr. Baltimore plants, $1.00
per M; 5 M or more, 75c M del.
' Melvis Deal, Baxley,
Rt. 4.
P. R. potato plants, Gov. insp.,
$1.50 M del. $1.25 M F.O.B.
Mrs. Jessie Dykes, Baxley, Rt. 2.
. Mastodon Everbearing straw-
berry plants, 40 C; 500, $1.50;
Lady T., 30c Cc; 500,
$1.00; $1.75 M cash. Montez Ben-
nett, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Lady T. strawberry plants,
25e C; $2.00 M; Klondike, 20c
Ge Sis 50. M, prepaid. Cc. F. Wal-
drip, Gainesville, erUb. 2e
(
New Stone, Ox-Heart tomato
plants, $1.00 M del. Ga. Add
postage less 500 lot order. Mrs.
J. M. Tomberlin, Surrency.
New Stone and Marglobe to-
mato plants, $1.00 M. Orders of
R. W. Tom-
Yellow Mammoth tobacco
plants for sale. Mrs, Ida For-
ester, Buford, Rt. 2.
Red and yellow skin Imp. P.
R. potato plants, treated and
insp., $1.25 M. Ready. J.
Alma, Rt. 4.
Imp. F. R. potato plants, $1.25
M; Rpby King pepper, $1.50 M;
Marglobe, Greater Baltimore to-
mato, 85c M. A. H. Becewnre,
Baxley, Rt. 4.
E. J. Wakefield, es hhieee:
plants, 10e C; 75c M del.; Cert.
Marglobe and Break ODay to-
mato, $1.00. M. M. J.-B. Page, |
Odum, Rt. 1,
Imp. pink and red skin P. R.
potato plants, ready, by mail,
prepaid, 500, $1. 00 > Sib, ME:
express collect, $i 25 M 10 M
up, $1.00 M cash. M. O. pre-
ferred. Major Crow, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 1. :
Vigorvine. tomato (Prolific,
grow to 12 ft. 20 tons A.) plants,
Colossal Qargest over
4 lbs.(, Same price. Del. Will
C. Smith, Roy.
Pink or yellow skin P. R.
plants, Gov. insp., treated seed,
from vine euttings, ready. $1.25
M del. Leland
Screven.
Pure red skin P. R. an
cy Hall plants, $1.25 M.
C. R. Redmond, Petham,
Pink and red skin P. R. and
Nancy Hall plants, $1.25 M; 5
M $6.00; Marglobe, Gr. Balti-
more, Bonny Best tomato, 85e
M; 500, 50c; all leading var.,
cabbage, 50e M. Mixed orders
if wanted. James Wiloughby,
Baxley, Rt. 4. :
. P. R. plants, 20e C; 400, 50c;
$1.25 M mailed;
Exp. Col. Vigorvine tomato
plants, 25c doz. mailed. L. A.
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2..
Gov. insp., yellow skin P. R.
potato, $1. 25 M May, June del.
Postpaid in Ga. M. O. only. L.
W. Griffis, Odum, Rt. A, Box 169.
Red skin P. R. plants, $1.35
M F.0.B.: White Triumph po-
tato, $1. 50 M; Marglobe, Bal-
timore tomato, 06 JE A Of
Turner, Baxley, Rt. 4. :
New Stone, wilt-resistant to-
mato plants, $1.00 M_ F.O.B.;
$1.25 M del. Mrs. J. C. Campbell,
Baxley.
Nice catnip plants, 25c doz.:
also want baby chicks fo raise
on halves to 6-8 wks. old. Fred
Stubbs, Rupert.
Gov. insp. Red and Yellow
Skin P, R. plants, $1.15 M post-
paid. Full count. <A. Bowen,
Bristol,
Pink skin P, R. plants, insp.
and treated, $1.25 M del.; Mar-
globe and Bonny Best tomato,
75e M del.. All ready now. W. D.
Lightsey, Sereven.
P. R. potato plants, Gov. insp.,
$1.50 M del., $1.25 M F.O.B.;
tomato, $1. 25 M del; $1.00 M
Lightsey,
Nan-.
eady.
F.O.B. Grady Cauley, Alma Rt. 4.
- Gov.- Insp. Pan. plants, $1.10
5 $1.00 M; Ma: ao
tomat, 80c M; 60
2 program P
Georgia consult the vocational agricul-
10 M, $5.00, |
Now Stone,
Red Rock tomato, EL J Cha f
500, 50c; 75c M del.
H. C. Rawe, Ocilla. Rt. 2.
Gov. + insp.- P. R., $1.00 =
and Chas.
40e 500:
Ga. -s:
. Gen,
Cert seed, Marglobe tomato,
$1.25 M; Barly Triumph pota-
tO. Se 50 M Guar. i :
Baxley. ;
Gen. P..R. potato, Gov. ins
-yellow or pink skin, $1.25 M
W. cabbage plant
ide M. Ready. Del.
C. Rowe, Ocilla, Rt. 2.
5 M $6.00; 10 M, $11.50 prepai
iby masz] or exp.
side plow for
Ready.
J. B. Eason, Sereven,
Sat.
guar.
skin, from vine cuttings, ready,
5M, $5.00. EF. G. Tyre, Bristol:
Million Cert. P. R. potato
plants, new ready, $1.50 M-del,;
$125 M EF. O. B. S: F-. Hilton,
Baxley.
Red skin P, R. potato plants,
$1.00 M. Mrs. ss Higdow
Alma, Rt. 4.
hap. P; R. potato plants, Go
Jinsp., from vine cuttings, $1.50
Maregilobe |
M del., or $1.25 M F.0.B. Cash,
Grady. B. Sellers, Alma, Rt. 3.
Gov. Insp. P. R. plants, $1: 50
M deh Ready May 15: white
red speckled crowder peas, 10c
Ib All del. Guy Crow, Gaines-
vilfe;<Rt. 2.
Pure red skin P. R. plants,
Gov. insp., $1.50 M.
postage. Exe. for cabbage, onion
apples or peaches,
Latham, Felton.
All yar. _ cabbage wate per
Lillie beso
globe-and Gr. Baltimore toma-
to, $1:00 M; P. R. potato, $1.25
M. All del.
liams, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Marglobe, New Stone bourne
85c M:; Pi Re: potato, $1.25 Me
F.0.B. D. D. Miles, Baxley.
P. R. potato plants, $1.35 M;
Marglobe tomato, $150 M.
F.O.B.
New Stone tomato, $1.50 M
plus postage; P. R. potato plants,
Cert. $1.75 M; Chas,
bage, $1.25 M. I. H, Anderson,
Alma, Rt. 4
Yellow skin P. R. plants, Gov.
insp., $1.25 M del.; red skin
| P. R. potato, same price. Bi HL
Thornton, Screven, Rt. 1. :
Garlic, tanzy, T5 C; Calamu
horseradish roots, 6 for Aas
Add postage, | Miss ue Clay-
ton, Roy.
Gr. Baltimore ignite plants,
$1.25 M del.; $100 M F.OB.
S. M. Teston, "Alma, Rt. 4.
P. R. plants, unmixed, $1.50
M; Marglobe, Baltimore tomato
plants, $1.00 M: E. J., C. W.
cabbage and Bermuda onion
plants, 75 M; Ruby King pep-
per, $1.50 M Del. W. F. Miles,
Baxley.
* P. R. Gov. insp. potato plants
ready, $1.25 M del.; Marglobe
tomato, ready, $1 00 M del. J.
BH, Holland, Surrency.
Wakefield, Dutch cabbage,
80e M del.: Stone, Baltimore,
Marglobe tomato, $1.35 M. del.;
5 M $5.50, Exp. Col.;
tomato seed, 75e lb. Collard
seed, 30c Ib. Lee Crow, Gaines-
-ville, Rt. 2.
Gov. insp. P. R. potato plants,
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
P, R. potato plants, red skin
and yellow, ready, Gov. insp.,
$1.20 M. F.O.B. J. D. whittield,
Tifton, Rt. 4.
F.0.B. Crosby, Bristol.
Gen. insp. P. R. potato, red,
yellow skins, $1.25 M F.0O.B.;
$1.50: M del.; Marglobe, Gr. Bal-
timore tomato, 84c M del. Count
guar. W. E. Nobles, oe
Rt. 4, Box 144
Good, healthy 4 mee
plants, $1.50 M F.O.B. Ready
4. J, Bo Lewis, Basle
Red Gold strawberry pla
50c , $3.50 M. Add poste
Mrs. J. L. Henson, Talona,
Millions Marglobe, New Stone,
Favorite tomato plants, 75 M
10c GC: yellow and red skin P.
plants, $1.00 M not prepaid.
. F. Maddox, Fitzgerald.
Ty skin and imp. potato
plants, ready, $1.25 M del. Can
fill large orders. Hiram Ligh
sey, Screven.
treated, $1.25 M; $1.50 M del.;
lead. var. tomato plants, 75
M:.15c per C. B.A.
Fitzgerald.
Yellow : i
plants, Gov. Insp. $1. 10 M; 5 M
up, $1.00 M F.0O.B., by express
Gibbs, Ty Ty.
Gr.
tomato plants, $1.00 M; also
imp. P. R. potato plants, $1.00
M del. Mrs. -Courson,;
Baxley, Rt. 4, &B :
oy. Ins
Bonny Best, Gr. Baltimore, New
Stone tomato, Flat Dutch, E. J.,.
imp. P.R. plants from
.P. R. potato, Imp. pink or red
buneh butter beans, 4 lbs. 50cl a
J. B. Pat-
terson, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 104.
True to name, rooted Lucre-
tia dewberry plants, 75c C. Add
muda onion plants, 75 M:; Mar-
Mrs. C. G: wa
C. R. Williams, Alma.
W. cab-
New Stone
$1.40 M; Boones, $1.60 M. C. D. |
P. R. potato plants, $1.00 we
only, Fill any size order. H. AL
Baltimore and Maretobe.
or sweet potato plants, dried
(
t an Marcloba 4o-
ants, 00. 60c: $1.00 M;
ert. oP; Re plants,
Foon Sak Fitzgerald, REE:
ic; cabbage seed, $1.00 Ib.;
_ tomato plants, $2.00 M
HE. B. Wetherford, Gaines
ile, PEt 2.
- Red. Skin P. R. plants,
nsp.. $1.50 M: Marglobe toma-
to, $1.25 M. <All del. Cash. J. B.
Patterson, Baxley, Rt.. 4, Box
04, sa
= Rhubarb plants; 45c.. doz.;
4 doz. $1.10; eatnip, pepper-
mint, spearmint, hoarhound, 30c
doz, 4 doz. $1.00: yellow meat
ter melon seed, Qe large cup-
ul. Mrs. Thornton McCurley;
Ta well.
Fenuine Red and Yellow Skin
R. Gov. insp., $1.15 M; New
tone, Marglobe, Brimmer to-
0, 95 M del.. 20c C. May
June del. W. G. OQuinn,
ency, Rt. Ds
Marglobe, New Stone, .Balti-
re. tomato and yellow and
te Bermuda onion plants, 90c
5 M up, 75c M. Ovie Crowe,
inesville, Rt, 7.
Red - and Yellow Skin PER
and. treated, S3. 25
[_ postpaid, $1.50 M express
Limited amount. Money
S. L. Norris, Quitman,
-insp..
mp. Pele skin P. R. Splante,
state insp., $1.25
-M del. in- Ga. Full count, ied
Flowers, Jesup.
ants, 200,
~60ce:; $1.00 M. May del. All
i We RR; Stephens, Gaines-
Rt. 6. :
Chas. W. Long, Atlanta.
. 12 Fire Station, Ja. 0521.
rglobe, New Stone, Gr. Bal-
timore tomato plants, 75c M del.
8 acres snap beans ready May
s J. P. Mullis, Baxley, Rt. 4.
oarhound plants and garlic
buibs..
: Odom, Roy
FP R. plants, Insp, Cert. Ready
ay 3-8. $1.20 M prepaid: $1.00
collect: Klondike strawberry,
ec 500, $1.00 prepaid, John |.
row, Gainesville, Rt. i.
Earliest var., Imp. Klondike
rawberry,. 20e C; 500, 90c; ex-
a ae _Everbears, 25 C;
$1. 00 GOZ, del.
oes e Cumming,
red iG potato
tomato |
skin
oo
$1.50 per M;
Marglobe New Stone,
1.00 Der M, 5 M and up, 85c
per M. FOB. - 0. L. Mobley,
; ute 4, Box 45, Baxley.
P, R. Potato plants, Gov. Ins.
$1.50 per M, 5000 and up $1.25}
per M. Larger. orders write for
WwW. a Boyett, Bristol.
1.25 per M: 4 M, $4.50; Porto
Rica, $1.10 per M; 4 M, $4.00
B. O. K. Herrin, Winokur.
Baltimore to-
el... Mrs, Pithena Byake Route
Baxley.
Me rglobe, New Stone tomato
nts, $1.00 per M del., 85 per
OB. Mrs. Snodell Mobley,
oute 4, Box 85, Baxley, Ga.
eady May ist, 90c per M. No
ehecks. . A. J. Windham,
Guar. Imp. P. R. potato plants.
Gov. Insp. oe 50 per M. Guar.
ull | count, ORE a
ae plants, $1. 50 per M. Imp.
Spanish Boones, $1.75 per M.
ade as ee 1,
cabbage
_Y,; W.
t. Pa ee plants, $1.50
e _M; also, Marglobe tomato
orse. Radish plants, 20e per
Calamas plants, 15 per
Mrs. W. A. Johnson, Alto.
otato plants, $1.25: Early Tri-
U pee ie Us per M. oe ship-
DV; Insp. PR: Potato plants,
per M, $6.00 per 5 M, also
altimore and Marglobe to-
ato plants,, 20c per 100, 55c
00, 80c per M. Plants well
d 'and packed. J, P. Morris,
Baxley.
5 P. R. potato plants, State
+ $1.25 M. postpaid. Write
prices on larger order. L. J.
ines le, Rt. 1.
$1, 25
Phillips, Ashland, Rt.
| Route - 4.
j Money" orders,
Ka. 10c doz., | Te C. Mrs.
Gov. Ansp. BR. pants, $1.25
M del dy Ma W./cup. Purple hull
ea: 0c @q
Jerusalem aMichoke. plant i
Special prices on Pree or-
Add postage. Mrs. Oscar
3, Box 42.
Pure P. R., Gov. insp. potato
)| plants, $1.50 M; strawberry
plants, Lady Thompson, $2.00
per M; Klondike, $1.50 M. C. F.
Waldrip, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Gr, Baltimore, Red Rock,
Stone tomato. Large, strong
Ce
ders.
.|plants, 70c M; 500, 40c, prepaid.
Rochelle, |
Mrs.
Rt.<1,
Limited quantities Pink Skin
P. R., Nancy Hall and Japanese
(or Red /Spanish) Yam _ potato
plants, $1.50 M. f.o.b. fB Bate
Stair, Lenox.
Goy. . Insp. Pink Skin =F.
Roscoe Mays,
pepper plants $1.25 per M. Ralph
-B.: Tyre, Sereven, BONS 1, Box
150:
Cabbage, Collard, -Onion plants
35c per 300, 90e per 1,000. Large
Curled mustard seed, 25e per
Ib., 5 Ibs., $1.00... Li, BH. Harrison,
Dublin,
Imp. Red and Yellow kin Pus
Fotato, plants, Gov. Insp., $2.00
per M. F.0.B, J. J. Miles, Bax-
ly, Route 4,
- Gov. Insp. Gadbys Early pro-
jific poraoto plants, $1.25 per
M. P. R. potato plants, $1.00 per
M. <All P.0.B. Ww. R. Batten,
Winokur.
Pe
Early Triumph potato plants,
$1.50 per M. Nigger Killer po-
tato plants, $2.00 per M., Mar-
globe, Baltimore, and Stone
tomato plants, $1:25 per M.
F.0.B. H. C. Buchans, Baxley,
P. R. Potato plants, Purple
Skin, Goy. Insp, 1 to 5 M., $1.50
per M.; 5 M. and up, $1. 25 per
M. Del in Ga. T. WwW. Register,
LY lye
Marglobe, Stone, Gr, Balti-
more, June Pink, Brimmer toma-
to plants, Ready now, 90c per M.
paid. Hovis Lightsey, Screven.
Baltimore tomato plants, $1.00
per M. F.O.B. $1.10'per M. del.
Potato plants, Gov: Insp., $1.50
per. M.. F.0.B." $1565 2M. -del.
all good count. No checks.
exc. for 3 bu. some good hay
peas. Zella Crummey, Route 4,
Box) 37, Baxley. \
Marglobe and Baltimore to-
mato plants, $1.00 per M., up to
5 M., above 5 M., 70c; oP R.
Potato plants, $1. 50 per M., up
to 5 Miz 10b<S1: 25. Vernon Grif-
fin, Route 4, Baxley,
Gaddis imp. P. R. potato
plants, $1.20 M. postpaid; $1.00
M. Exp. collect. Geo. R. Hunt,
_| Kathleen.
Crystal Wax Bermuda onion
planis, 65c M. del. M. O. pre-
ferred... N. FV Taylor, Hawkins-
ville,
Red and Yellow Skin P, R.
potato plants, Gov. insp. and
treated, $1.20 M. del. Marglobe
tomato plants, $1.00 M. del; .
J., cabbage plants, 90c M. del.
A. F. Sheffield, Surrency.
Gov. insp. and treated P. R.
ay plants, $1.50 M. Ready.
sohleoinit he. "Baxley, RFD 3.
open field grown Mar-
globe wilt-resistant tomato
plants, 20c C; Black Beauty and
Royal King sweet peppers, 30c
C. Add-postage. Mrs. J. B.
Paul, Leesburg. Sega
Greater Baltimore and New
Stone tomato plants, $1.00 M.
del. in Ga. in lots of 500 or more.
|B. F. Aycock, Surrency, Rt. 2.
Gen, Harly Triumph potato
plants, $1.50 M. FOB. State
insp. G. J. Holton, Baxley, Rt. 2.
Klondike strawberry plants,
25 C;. 500, 80c; $1.50 M.: also
Black, tender Pole beans, 80
Ib. All del, Mrs. Ara Waildrip,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1,
Red Skin P. R. potato plants,
not mixed, $1.75 per M. Tomato,
$1.00 M; cabbage, onion and Ga.
Heading collard, 75c M. All del.
Loyd Steedley, Baxley, ae =
Po Re 2and= Trinmpe potato
plants, $1.25 M; Marglobe, Gr.
Baltimore, Break ODay toma-
to, 90 M: 5 M. $8.75; 10 M.
$6.00: pepper, $1.50 M. 5 M.
$6.25; C. W. Wakefield, 60c M.
Ship promptly and mixed orders,
Be J. Morris, Baxley, :
Klondike strawberry plants,
25 C; 80c, 500; $1.50 M: Black,
tender pole beans, 30 ib, All
del. Royce Waldrip, Flowery
Branch, Rt. 1. j
Pimient pepper plants, 25
C; 200, 35; cheaper in large or.
ders, Tomato plants, 15ec C;
200, 25c. Del. Mrs. Lois Pitts,
Smithville.
Imp. Red or Pink Skin pota-
to plants, $1.25 M. del. TT. P.
Musselwhite, Arabi, Rt. 1.
Cc. W. Cabbage and White Ber-
muda onion plants, 65c M. Mrs.
H. . Turner, Fitzgerald, THES es
Yellow skin P. R._ potato
plants, Gov. insp. and treated,
$1.25 M. Del. J. R. Draughon,
Array Rtet. s
cheaper at Bed.
Plants, $1.85 per M. P. P. Sweet}
per,
R. Potato $1. 25 per M.
Full count.Post -|
Will |
| teacupful;
be per doz,
stocky penta $1.00 M del.:
LBs Owens,
Duluth, Rt. 1.
Mastodon Everbearing straw-
perry plants, 40c C; 500, $1.00;
$2.50 -M; Lady: T., 30c Cc; 500,
$1.00; $1. 7) M cash. Mrs. T. C.
Bennett, Flowery Branch, Rt, 1.
Mastodon | strawberry plants,
35 C; 500, $1.50; $2.75 M;
tame dewberry, $1.00 doz. No
chks. = Mis... Bi Ll; Whitmire,
Gainesville, Rt. ae
Marglobe tomato plants, $1.00
M del.; Ruby King and hot
pepper plants, $1.25 M del, J.
H. Griffis, Baxley, Rte 4
RM fies R., Gov. insp.
treated, $1.50 M: 5 M, eh: 35 M
10 M,* $1.20. M. Exe, M- for
1 bu. good sound se peas.
H. M. Jordan, Alma,
Old fashioned Banana Yam
potato plants, $2.00 M del. T. T.
Winge, Hazlehurst, Rt. 3.
Bonny Best and Marglobe to-
mato plants, 75c M del.; 25e C;
Calif. Wonder and Ruby King
sweet pepper, 90c M del.; 25e C.
Ready. Phillip Lightsey, Screven.
Chas: and Flat Dutch cabbage
plants, 500, 65c; $1.00 M: P. R.
potato, $1.50 M: Calif. Wonder,
Ruby King sweet pepper, 25 C;
$1.50 M: egg-plant and hot pep-
same price. Postpaid, R.
Chanclor,. Pitts.
P. R. slips, $1.40 M; Boones,
$1.75 M; bunch, $1. 15: M, del.
Be Crow, Gainesville.
Genuine Red and Yellow Skin.
P. -7R cplants, $1.50: M. Imp.
Spanish, Boones, same- price. All
del. . Winfred Waldrip, Flowery
Branch.
SEED FOR SALE
Cuban Queen Meion seed,
hand saved, 50e per lb. Tom
Watson melon, 50c ver ib. Huies
best cantaloupe, 50c pes Ib, All
f.0.b. P._E. Ivey, Pinshaist.
125 lb. Improved Tom Watson
melon seed, $30.00, 25 per Ib.
for. orders of 10 Ibs. or more.
40c per lb. for orders under 10
Ibs. All del. Marvin Gladin,
Route 2, Milledgeville.
Okra seed, bunch kind, 19c
r1 pt. Sugar pumpkin seed, 16
per cupful, postpaid. Mrs. Guss
Aljexander, Route 1, Mt. Airy.
Marglobe tomato seed, Rocky-
fora cantaloupe seed, 20c per
also would like to
raise biddies on halves to 8 or
10 weeks old. Mrs, Bertha
Johnson, Faceville.
20 lbs. pure Lifsey Water-
melon seed, 35c per lb. W. L.
Graham, Rt. 8, Hastman.
Dill Large Pumpkin, Yellow
Meated watermelon, Cocozelle
Bush. (long green _ striped)
Squash, Cushaw: seed, 10c pkt.
postpaid, R. H. Long, Culver-
ton.
Broom corn seed, large cupful
10c; muskmelon, Carze kind),
5e big spoonful. ae seed,
Mrs, J: . Stapler,
Rt. 3, Bowdon,
Genuine Ga, Red Sugar Cane
for seed, $1.20 per 100 stalks.
f.0.b; Write for price on large
lots,
Kansas _Wond2r Waite: meion
seed, 15c per 25 seed; 25 per
50 seed: 50c per 125 seed, Send
stamps, L. G. Watkins, et
ville.
2 Ibs. Improved Jones ies
a
melon seed, $1. .20:per Ib.; 2 1-2 1-
Ibs.. pride of Ga. waterme!on
seed, 70c per lb. No chks. Emmet
Smith, Locust Grove.
Black Spanish watermelon
seed, 50c per cupful. Mrs. J. E.
Stone, Rt. 2, Adairsville, aa!
Lady Finger peas, 10c per 1b:
White bunch butterbeans, i12
Ib.; okra seed, few running but-
terbeans, 20 ib. del. or exc, for
good chicken feed sacks. Mrs.
Roach Hodges, Manassas,
Stone Mtn. and Dixie Bell
watermelon seed; 10c large pkg.
Mrs. W. A, Lewis, Toomsboro.
1 gal. Jackson wonder bunch
butterbean seed, 15 per cup-
ful or 2 cupfuls for 25c; drink-
ae size gourd seed, 10e per
| doz.
| Dodd, Alpharetta, Route 1.
Add postage, Mrs, A. L.
Pure honey drop syrup cane
seed, pure and clean, $1.40 per
bu.: 1 bu. Brab. Sound and
Clean, $2.75. Iso, Marlboro
Prolific and w
corn, nubbed and shelled, $2.35
per bu. or exch, for pure pink
skin P. R. potato plants, Euell
Pope, Tallapoosa,
Cofiee berry seed sample, 15c.
Grow in any soil. J. H. Noland,
1477 Gwinnett St., Augusta,
Cox pure watermelon seed,
15 per 1b, plus postage. W. g.
Murphy, Rt. 2, Chipley,
Improved watermelon seed,
25 per lb. in 10 lb. lots, under
10 1b. 40 per Ib. del, M. A.
Gladin, Rt. 2, Milledgeville,
Seed rice, 8e per lb. prepaid.
Te Ge Beasley, Rt. 2, Jesup.
Old Fashioned: tender corn-
field bean seed, 25e large tea-
ce Ball. crowders,
-weeyil free, planted 1 yr.
'25e per teacupful,
John Underwood, Blakely, |
$2, 25: also
ite dent seed}
white table bh
SEED FOR SALE
Faw hundred Ib. hand select-
ed White Dixie watermelon seed.
55 lb. R. Calhoun Hogan, Dex-
ters
10 Ibs. pure Stone Mt. melon
seed; selected, clean and pure.
50e per Ib. Money order. ;Wil-
liam E. Ward, Rt, 2, Cordele.
%5 lbs. White Dixie. water-
melon seed. from good, well-
shaped melons, 50c per 1b. Rus-
sell C. Jackson, Rt. 1; . Monte-.
zuma. ;
Sagat Stone Mt, Watermelon
seed, 15c Ib. in 50 or 100 Ib.
lots. Add. postage. W.. T.
Moore, Rt. 1, Haddock. fg
Sees Mt. Melon seed. Grown
pecially for seed, Pure: 60
r jb. Anderson Alexander,
MeDondieh.-
Pride of Ga. watermelon seed,
round. 40 or 50 Ib., 50 Ib. or
40c lb. in 5 or 10 Ib. lots. CN.
Foster, Rt, 2, Locust Grove.
Sev. hundred. lbs. Stone Mtn.
and Dixie -Bell melon -seed,
(treated against disease) 50c
per lb. del., 100 Ib. lots, 40
per 1b: Prompt shipment. B. Gs
Andrews, Haddock.
Honey Rock Canteloupe seed,
10c per pkg.; 8 generous pkgs.
25e prepaid. Moline M. Lan-
drem, Adairsville.
27 lbs. Star and Moon water.
meion seed for sale. Make best
offer Mrs. Mary Bryan, Route
1, Cordele.
: 100 lbs. Dixie Bell melor seed.
hand selected from good melons,
35c Ib. less than 10 Ibs. Add
postage, <A. LL. Brady, -Rupert.
Calif. multiplying beer seed,
10c per tablespoonful; also sugar
erowders, little white jady peas,
Bess 25e. Add postage. . Mrs.
R. A. Nolen, Rockmart, Rt. :
Sey. Ibs. Burpees stringless
green pod beans, select seed,
10
per 1b., not prepaid. Mrs. El-
bert Duvall, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Pure watermelon seed, 40e per
lb. Also Stone Mountain melon
Seed, 30c per Ilb.: Hales best
cantaloupe seed; 40c per Ib. All
hand saved from large melons.
No checks. B. L. Lucas, Vienna.
175 bu. mixed cane seed, $1.50
bu. Even wt. sacks, also some
good mixed cow peas, $2.00 bu.
F.0.B. J. B. Harbin, Lavonia.
Fure Stone Mt. Watermelon
seed, 30c lb, Banana Muskmelon
Purple Hull
table peas, 20c per qt.:; early
okra, 10c per Ib.; large pump-
kin, 15e per teaspoonful. Add
postage. Rosie Crowe, Route 1,
Cumming,
BEANS & PEAS FOR SALE
Tan Sugar Crowder peas, 6
per db. f.0.b. Mrs. L. D. Spriggs,
Rockmart.
40 bu. A-1 Brab peas. Will
ship entire lot at $2.60 per bu.
C. H. Cooke, Sandersville.
3 bu., Brown Crowder peas,
$3.50 per bu.; California Black
Eye peas, $3.50 per bu.:
Ib. Carlton Tyler, Rt. 3, Monti-
cello.
~30 bu. Nery Era peas,
per bu. f.o.b. W. G. Pope, Tal-
lapoosa, Rt. 2,
100 bu. mixed peas, 100 bu.
Whip peas,
best , offer,
gansville,
20 bu. Unknown peas, , $2.00
per bu.
ereux,
Iron peas, $2.50 per bu. New
Era, $2.25 per bu.. Whip peas,
Robert Cook, Ho-
Velvet beans, $1.75 per bu. All
in 214 bu. bags. Send remit-
aes Clarence Fagan, Ft. Val-
ey.
100 bu. Iron Clad, Whips and
Unknown peas, $2. 00- per bu.
f.0.b. C. J. Meaders, Gillsville.
10 bu. Iron Clad peas, $25:
800 Ib. early variety cane seed,
well matured, some cracked
from threshing. Lot for $22.50
or 3c lb, B. F. Fagan, Martin.
150 bu. No. 1 Iron peas in new
2 1-2 bu. bags, $2.50 per bu. f.0.b.
L. S. Hayes, Bonaire.
Silver Hull Crowder peas, 10
Ib, postpaid, $1.00 or $3.50 per
bu. f.o.b. H. L. Moore, Rt. 1,
Grantville,
Silver Hull White Saear
Crowders, 8 Ib. $1.00; Red Rip-
per, Iron Clad, and Unknown
peas, $2.50 per bu. Marion
Mooney, Rt. 1, Flowery Branch.
Pure sound red hull speckle
peas, $2.75 per bu; 80c per pk.
Cash with order. kL. E. Stone,
Thomson.
Early Speckle Velvet Beans}
$1.70 bu. Bush Velvet Beans
$3.50 per bu. J. A. Lott, Ches-
ter,
25 bu. pure O-Too-Tan Roy
Beans. Even weight 2 1-2
bags, $4.50 per bu. f.o.b. eee
Taylor, Marshallville,
White and Brown half runner
garden beans for seed, 20e per
cup. Mrs. J. M. Hall, Rt. 1, Cal-
MAY
| f.0.b.;
| preferable.
-|per bu. f.0.b. C.
also
90 Ib. Ala. Cane Seed, 3ihe per.
$2.00.
Good stock.. Make |
GoLG Courson, Dev-.
Spckled Running /
Velvet Beans, $2.0 00 7 per
my barn. V. AS
Abbeville.
Cream sugar crow e
10c per Ib, del, in 10.
also 10 young white leg]
hens, English strain, $1 0.
Money order, Mrs. G. Ww.
worth, Rt. 1, Lavonia, aoe
Clay peas $3. 00 per. bu
American pop corn, .7 lb. in
lp. lots, all f.o.b.;. also w.
tender half runner garde I
25e per cup, 2 cups del. BI
walnut meats, 45c per Ib., 10
del. Mrs. M. Cc: Mason,
Cane. :
50 bu. mixed bay peas,
f.o.b.; 10 bu. Old Fashio
runner clays and 10 b
Rippers for hay,
also 50 - Ibs. - Di
melon seed, 50c Ib. f.0.
Birdsong, Gordon, a
f.0.b.;. also 40 lbs.
bush- butterbeans,:
Few Stone Mountain melon ;
60c per Ib, f.o.b. H. R. Sm
Thomson.
1-2 bu. Little White Lady p
7e Ib. $1.00 pk.; speckle p
$2.50 per bu.; also, woods In
cottonseed 95c bu. ode Ag, Al
Metasville.
2-= 150 Ibs, Haatines s Mung Be
1936 crop, thoroughly clea
and sound: 10c ver Ib, f
J, B. Hudson, Rt 2, Sst
Mountain. ces
80 bu. at crowders- 5
black eye; 5 bu. late crowd
slightly . mixed and cracke
Make best offer. Del. to tru
Hoe Peac
Eastman, Ga.
125 bu. good Clay peas, $
Ww. -Coler
Devereux,
20 bu. red ripper bean
per bu. f.o.b. M. E. -MeKin
Flowery Branch,
150 bu. New Era peas: 50
cream Brown Hye peas; $
per bu.; new bags. F.O.B. A
Maddox, Griffin, %
Genuine O-Too-Tan Be
$4.75 per bu. W. H. Ly
Zebulon,
25 bu. New Era peas $
per bu. Jas. M. Gunnin, Rt
Marietta,
100 bu. No. 1 Iron peas,
per bu. in-even wt. burlap.
F.0.B. W. L. Renfroe, Byron
Cream Crowder peas $3.60.
bu. F.0.B. my station. Mr
J. Campbell, Rising Fawn.
White, brown eyed
slightly mixed (fine for hay
table); No. 1 New Eras, $
per bu. F.0.B. J. H. Patr
Jackson. 2
25 bu. O-Too-Tan beans: $
per pu. g Sees 5 Evans, Mon
Rt. 3
100 bu. genuine 1936
O-Too-Tan beans, $4.50 per
F.O.B.; also 100 bu. Pure >
Era peas, $2.35 per bu.: $2.00
mixed peas, $2.25 per bu. FB,
E: D. Patrick, Rt. 33, Jacks
Little white bloom mush t
10 Ibs, Exc. for. 1,000 Tom
plants; 500 June pink, and
marglobe or later variety,
size plants, Postage prep:
Mrs. J. H. Rooks, Springvale
: nd . prolific) _
also 25 Ibs. nice
art or Schley pecans, 1
ibn J. aA. seimberty, Rt.
pire.
35 bu. (Pure) New Era pe
$2.35 bu. 3 stacks good hay,
per ton or $25.00 for 3 st
H. D. Goodwin, Greensboro
Gigantic beans 5 ft, lo
20 Ibs.; yard long beans,
beans, salad peas, bushel d
nest egg, martin gourd sed,
Dkt.; 3: pkt: for: 25e7.;
accepted, Want tomato
and onion. plants. J. R. Bra
lett, Rt 2, Hiijaye ;
Long tender green pod.
seed, 25c per Ib.;_ catn
bunches 25c; popcorn: on
i5e per Ib.; old fashioned |
nut (some. hulled, all perfe
dry), $1.00 per bu. del, Mo:
with order. Esther Gay, Rt
Jasper, 3 5
Tung oil nuts (good t
plant) for sale at my plac
J. I. Patten, Abbeville.
Collard, millet, amber.
hum, 10c per Ib.; dent corn
qt.; runner peanuts, not
'cleaned, 5c per lb.; reel
N. C. variety, 100 Ib. bags,
per Ib, Orla Cowart, Pears
200 bu. straight Iron p
2. \1<2 bu: bags.
tance. No order less tha
bu: J:--H.: Baird, Fort
Georgia.
-Genuine O-Too-Tan.
$4.50 per bu. Cane seed
per ewt.: farm relief cotto
$3.50 per cwt. New Era
$2.15 per bu., mixed $2.0
bu. R. M. Turner, Royston
_ 90 day running velvet b
suitable for planting, $1.75
bu. 2 1-2 bu. bags. n
mittance. Ww. :
Valley.
New Era p
gute
igar erode 4 peas, 6c|__
aoe order less than |
in neon 20 per
hn Wilson, Rt. 3, Box
ma beans A Ib. 50c
eckle crowders, $3.75. per
Money with the order.
Garner, Rt. 1, Felton.
Ned speckled peas,
= weevils free, $3.00
-O.B.: $1.00 per pk.
in Ga. John W. Mose-
25 Soperton,
New Era, clean, not
eas, $2.50 per bu. here.
pr lifie seed corn, field
: ubbed and
$2.75 per bu., hal
* 90c. F.0. B.
n; Griffin. es
own peas, $2. 00 per bu.
Triumph cotton ~ seed,
pu. Coker No. 2 cot-
$1.00 per. bu.. EH. R.
iy 1, Harlem, y
Speckle peas; 10. bu.
as, clean and sound,
r bu.; 5 bu. Mung beans,
bu. S.G. Lowe, Mans-
hand
bu.
LT.
bu Ad speckled or pole
er'peas, $3.60 per bu.;
dies Slippers Sorghum
seed, $2.50 per bu. 2 1-2
Hendersons Baby Lima
beans $6.00 per bu. All
th order, F.O.B. Thos, J.
Cumming.
5 bu. Whipp peas, $2.55
- Speckled crowders and
black eye peas, 6c per Ib.;
bulbs, catnip, 6 punches |
attle. root wild cherry bark
lb.; pie plants, 6 for 50c.
-Martha White, Rt. 1, Box
hlonega.
-stringless
never destroys; bear
frost; excellent eating),
OZ. seed postpaid. J. J.
. 19 Brookwood . Dr.,
sGa. =
beans
_ Q-too-tan _ beans.
yer bu.; cane seed, $1.50
wt. Farm relief cotton
$3.50 per cwt;, New Era
$2.50 per bu. Mixed. peas,
per. bu. R. M. Turner,
u. recleaned brown crow-
Ss, in even wt. bags, $3.00
25 bu. white brown-eyed
1$2.25 per bu. F.O.B.
-Cullough, Stockbridge,
u. 90-day velvets, $1.75
bu. bush velvets, $3.00
$5.00; Biloxi, |
uaredo, $5.00 bus J A
hay peas, $2.25 per bu.
heckled and brown sugar
also or-J
|hives, at my home.
black,
Biloxis,
90 day velvet and
bs, Eras,. Whips,
_crowders;
beans. Samples and
J. H. Cole-
nd white speckled crow-
as, $2.00 per bu.
ound, mixed peas, $1.75
20), F. Pharr, Lithia
early speckled velvet
75 bu. S. A. Rogers,
te tender cornfield beans
r eupful, Stringless green
nder bunch beans; large
ed crowder peas, 15 per
Exe, for white sacks.
ostage. Rosa Richard, El-
Se
dried Chufus, free from
uts, 10c per Jb. Sugar
peas, $3.00 per bu. Fop-
10c per lb. Add postage.
Wright, Buchanan, Rt. 1.
Red Ripper peas, $2.00
5 bu. Whips, $2. 00 per
ae bam, J. W. J. Lord,
Ges =
extra fancy Sag peas,
free, $2.50 per bu. F.O.
samples. Add postage.
Anthony, Juniper, Rt.
bu. spotted crowder peas,
3.00 per. bu.
S. 8 bu. Coffee peas,
d, $2.00 per bu. in bu.
Large brown peas, 200 bu.
hite brown-eyed crow-
5e per lb.; 2 bu. mixed
00 per u. Will exc.
d crowders for P. R.
J. Nelson,
cked, $1. 50. per bu. W.
ibley, Milner.
; June, Seed Corn,
mixed; nubbed
; June corn,
corn, 80c peck; $2.75 bu.
Clean |
| checks.
| Jessie Dykes,
"lea een ee yellow |
corn, field selected, bred up to
two ears, $1.00 pk. or $3.00 bu.
F.O.B. Olin McLendon, Rt 3;
Carrollton,
Hastings prolific corn select-
ed for seed, ist yr, pure and
perfect, $2. 50 per bu. F.O.B. or
exc. for potato plants;
bright sound mixed field peas,
weevil-free, $2.25 per bu. F.O.B.
Je eb Beasley, Lavonia,
700 bu. corn in Shuck, $1.25
per bu. F.0O.B. my barn. J ay
Hill, Gough.
- 5 bu. Acox prolific seed corn,
hand selected, $2.00. per bu.
Also, '3 bu. A-Too-Tan soy
beans, hand. threshed and re-
cleaned, 1936 crop, $5.00 per bu.
Aynold A. Robinson, Rt. 3, Bow-
don.
Limited amt. of white Mexican
nubbed and hand
shelled, 1-2 pk. 60c, 1 pk. $1.00.
Postpaid in ist.-zone. J. -T.
Morgan, Rt. 2, Senoia..
-Douthits prolific, 2-3 ear seed
F.O.B.
W. E. Douthit, Ellijay, Rt. 5.
COTTON SEED FOR SALE
Mars Rose cotton seed, kept
pure at gin. $1.25 per bu. -W. E.
Kirk, Rt. 3, Rockmart.
150 bu. Mars Rose cotton
seed, $1.75 per bu., long staple
big boll very prolific, F.O.B:
EK. A. Wilbanks, Buford.
- Pure Farm Relief Cotton Seed
(kept clean at gin); also pure
college No. 4 cotton seed, $1.00
per bu. E: N. Hopper, Ranger.
Pure Mars Rose, 1st yr., 2nd
(kept pure at _gin) 20 bu.,
Also white black-
yr.
$1.75 per bu.
eyed peas, 20 bu. at $3.00 per.
bu. Whole lot at $2.85 per bu.
Res Blackwell, Calhoun, F.O.B. |
Mars Rose cotton seed, $1.25
bu. W. E. Kirk, Rockmart, Rt. 3.
GRAIN & HAY FOR SALE
1 ton. velvet bean vine hay,
$15.00 at my barn. Sam D.
Flanagan, McRae.
12 or 15 tons baled oats as soon:
as cut, about May 10th or 15th.
8 or 4 tons hay at $15.00 per
ton F.0.B. my farm. H, H. Lake,
Wrightsville, Rt. 1.
5,000 to 8,000 Ibs. bded fod-
der, no tops nor bottoms, $1.25
per icwt, -at my--barn, =D; J.
Woolbright, Dawson.
Peanut hay, delivered in 5 to
6 ton lots., W. Jackson, War-
wick.
12-15. tons nice, -_pright, well
cured grass hay, $12. 50 per ton,
at my barn. Joe Bird, Colquitt.
HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
14 colonies bees,
*| quantity, $3.00 ea. H. A. Par-
rish, Barwick,
New crop honey, 70 lbs. $7. 00.
Tupelo and Gallberry. J.T. Hol-'
land, Rt. 1, Sparks.
New extracted Tupelo Honey,
$1.50 per 10 lb. pail, 75ce per 5
Ib. pail.
E. Henry St., Savannah,
Bees and young bees,
for young swarms,
frame hives with supers, $8.00
not-del, Will exch. for regis-
tered Jersey calves.
ris, Lula, Georgia. :
/Good 1937 Huckleberry and
Maple Honey, 10c per Ib. F.O.B.
Add postage. John i: Benuett,
Sereven, Rt. 2, Box 381.
New crop honey, chunk, comb
or strained, No. 10 pail, $1.30
del. 2nd zone; *No. 5 pail, 75c.
Send 10c extra exchange on
- Devoe Sey Adrian,
Ries
TOBACCO Ee OR SALE -
Red and yellow flue cured rich
and mellow tobacco, No. 1, 10c.
lb.; No. 2, 8 per 1b.: No. 3, 5c
per Ib.; 11 lbs. smoking or chew-
ing $1.00; 6 lbs. 50c, postpaid.
M. B. Swain, Rockinghorn, Rt. 1.
Home grown,. flue cured to-
baceo;--10.. Ibe $1,004 .dek. i.
Griffin, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Flue cured tobacco, $1.00 per
10 lbs.; 50c per 5 Ibs. Mrs.
Baxley, Rt. 2.
Smoking tobacco, 75c per 12
lbs. Also leading varietties to-
mato plants 25c per C; 85c per
M. One | Lightsey, " Screven,
MRE 2;
FRESH & CURED MEAT
FOR SALE
Oakwood smoked hams 25c
per lb.; shoulders and sides, 20c
per lb. Postage extra. Also,
pure sugar cane syrup, $3.00
per case 6 10-lb. cans, $3.20 per
412 5-lb. cans: $3.50 per 24 2 1-2-
Ib cans, Melvin Comins, Whig-
ham.
Country cured smoked hams,
18 to 25 lbs., at 25c per Ib. del.
Ta Be Thomas, Thomasboro,
Brooks County
iz!
also |
| Austell,
in standard
Any desired
B. E. Sheppard, 1222)
$1.50 |)
- bees in 8-
Docia Har-
Ty. smok-
hi g
Oak smoked,
cured bacon; also hams from
8 to 12 Ibs., at 32c per Ib. Sides
and shoulders, to 15 lbs., 22c
jper 1b. Cut from young Hamp-
shire hogs. Will. ship C.0.D.,
I. L. Jackson, Colquitt.
SYRUP. FOR SALE
Several canicae gals. sugar
cane syrup. Make best offer.
J.-B exer, ee agent,
Blakely.
No. 1 cane syrup in 5 lb. cans;
10 gal. lots or over, 50 per gal.
Freight paid. Mrs. Pod eyed,
Rt. 4, Box 49, Fitzgerald.
Ribbon cane syrup, best grade
in regular beer bottles, $1.10
d0z.,. 2. doz., $2.10, sample of 1
bottle. 25e in stamps. W. L.
Dasher, Rt. 1, Lake Park.
100 gal. sugar cane syrup in
1 gal. cans, 40c per gal. at my
place. I. R. Moore, Cobbtown.
CATTLE FOR SALE
2 cows, both 3-4 Guernsey, 1
with 2nd calf 3 wks old, $75.00;
other, first calf 2 weeks old, $40.
Both calves are heifers: 200
mixed pigeons, 10c ea. Come,
dont write. D. A. Bagley, M. D.,
_ Fine reg. fresh in Jersey cow,
$100.00 F.0.B. here, including
calf. Ped. furnished, R. A.
Nunnally, Statham.
2 cows, black, His head Jer-}
sey and. Jersey- Holstein. Ha.
with 4 mos. old heifer calf; 3
gal. with good feed. $35.00- for
ea. cow and her calf. Mrs. T.
D. Fussell, Rhine.
Reg. Guernsey bull, 2 yrs. old,
$85.00 F.O.B. barn, M.. F.' Cox-
-| well, Warrenton, ;
High grade Torsey cow, Ist
calf 10 days old. Gentle, with
heavy feed, 3 gal. $40.00 at my
barn. E. G. Duke, Palmetto,
4 reg. Hereford bull calves,
Woodford breeding; 1 reg.
Shorthorn bull calf. Be WY: Neely,
Waynesboro.
Reg. yr. old Jersey male, 1
sub. to reg. mo old male. Jer-
sey Island strain, L. C. Shipp,
Rockmart, Rt. 3.
4 milch cows, half Guernsey
and half Jersey, with young
calves, 1-4 Jersey and 3-4
Guernsey, Well fed, priced ac-
cordingly, A. K.. ee
Sparta.
6 yr. old (thin pond) milch
cow with heifer, 4 mos. old calf,
$25.00 cash at Wyatt Spanns
place. Mrs. M. S. Nichols, Brey
ton, Rt. 2.
4 gal.-
mixed cow, fresh, 2nd calf, Mrs.
Wek. Dorris, Douglasville,
2 Jersey milch cows, 4 yrs.
old, 1 fresh, other, freshen June.
3 gal. $50.00 and $55.00 respect-
ively at my barn. B. A. Bishop,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 42, Box 131.
Full blood Jersey male 2 mos.
fold calf, $7.50; also want 3 bu.
Brabham peas. J. T. Speight,
Buchanan, Rt. 2.
Reg. ~Polled Hereford bull
calves, reasonable prices. Apply
E. T. Boswell, Siloam.
Light red Jersey 4 yr. old
fresh in, 4 gal. cow, $45.00. Hoke
Grier, Covington, Rt. 1.
38 gal. cow, fresh within 60
days, with ard calf. Now giving
1 1-2 gal. perfect quality, $40.00.
J. M. Housworth, Lithonia, Rt
2. (At Klondike),
Reg. Hereford bulls, yr. old.
wt. about 800 Ibs., for sale. Fer-
cy A. Price, Albany.
Ree. Jersey 3 yr. old bull,
$50.00; 2 Jersey male calves, 6
and 8 wks. old, $20.00 for poth;
2 1-2 gal. Jersey cow, $60.00.
All F.0.B. Mrs. G. B. vee
Buchanan.
29 fresh in (second elves!
young Jersey milch cows, 3 and
4 gal. gentle, no bad _ habits.
A. J. Payne, Reynolds.
4 yoke good working oxen for
sale. Come see. J. H. Me-
Veigh, Waynesville. =:
8 yr. old, reg. Jersey bull
from the Ga. Experiment Herd,
gentle. Sell or exch. for young
cattle, horse, mule or hogs. Want
1 or 2 unbroken Western horses
or mules. B. H. Manry, Gog-
t gins.
Nice, muley Jersey heifer,
fresh in, $40.00 at my barn; also
2 nice country cured hams, wt.
about 25 Ibs. ea.. 30c Ib. Jesse
M. Black, Cleveland, Rt. 4, Bx 5.
- Light color Jersey cow, 8 gal.
on feed, 3rd calf, $40.00, or exc.
for heifers, at my barn. Chas.
Seiferman, Sylvester, Rt. 5.
Sev. Grade Jersey milch cows
with young calves for sale. J. C.
Ragan, Pelham, Rt. 2.
HOGS FOR SALE
Reg. S. P. C.
sired by New Charm,
pigs, Herd boar
5c Ib.;
lines.
| $5.00 ea. F.0O.B. BE. W.
Guernsey and Jer sey.
|for field peas;
1934.
World Champion: and SOWS of
Pure bred S. P. C. gilt,-13 mos.
ee home |old, $20.00; 4 mos. old gilt, $10;
3 mos. old male, $8.00.
for cows or. calves,
Smith, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 161.
Blue boars, around 80 Ibs.,
around 120 lbs., 12 1- 2c
ib. < life treated, crated, F.O.B.
Exe,
cH. Edenfield, Stillmore, Ra
1, Box 34.
2 fine F.C. brood! SOWS, far-
row about June. Reasonable
price. T. D. Hester, Plainville.
White Chester male, wt. 135
Ibs., $15.00; African Guinea
male, 80 1b. wt., $12.00: sev.
bred gilts, $15.00 ea. HE. C
Brown, Statesboro.
Ree 3 POS
ready for service,
pigs: All from Champion blood
lines. Reasonable price. F. H.
Bunn, Midville,
young boar,
and young
~ Med. type, long bodied regis-
tered Durocs (that are red).
Gilts, shoats, pigs; Wavemaster
and Orion Cherry. King blood
-P. C. Herod, Kathleen.
Fine Hampshire yr. old. male,
104 lb. pigs, 8 wks. old April 22,
Oglesby.
pene: 44 Bass St. SoW., Ma.
03 i
10 little- bone Ruineh 8-10.
weeks old pigs, $5.50 ea. crated,
or $5.00 at barn; want to trade
for peacock | )fowl). 1 oB Wale
liams, Ty Ty.
Reg. S. P. C. 10 wks. old pigs,
cholera immune, males, $7.50;
females, $10.00 ea. L. W. Lewis,
Summit.
Young Hampshire boars, pure
bred, 40 6 mos. old, $7.00 to $10
ea. Odis Duggan, Chester, Rt. 1.
Ped., of good breeding O. I. C.
pigs. ot L. Linn, Hampton.
Yoke of 5. yr. old 2100 1b.;
trained steers,
double. $140.00.
well, Winder,
Good 6 wks, old Black F. C,
pigs, ready to ship 1st week of
May, $3.50 ea. males and fe-
males, F.0.B. express, J, H.
Womack, Greensboro. ~
6 little bone black African
Guinea male pigs, treated, $7.00
ea, C. E. Knight, Ft. Valley.
60 pigs, av. 25 lb, in nice
shape, $3.00 ea, this week (April
12) 2 ee Cox, eee P;
O. Box 92.
well
Work single or
Eee - Har-
1 reg. S. P. C, sow, abl. treated,
from world champion stock, 50-
50 in color, bred to male from
world champion stock; also 8
pigs. Go NN; Hackney, Blue
Ridge.
6 Essex Sows, farrows in May,
av. wt. 200 Ibs. at 10c per Ib.
W. B. Ouzts, Tennille,
Reg. B.-P. C. (March farrow)
and reg. O. I. CG. pigs, ready to
move. All best quality, L. R.
Langley, Marietta, County Agt.
2 black African little bone
Guinea Sows, 15 mos, old, pure
blood, stay-fat kind, $25. 00 ea.
crated and shipped. Mrs, P. J,
Zeigler, Pineora, Box 116.
Ree. O11 Gand Be pee
pigs, ready to move, for sale.
eR: pia Marietta. County
Agent. .
2 O2E GC, 4 P. C. cross pigs,
7-8 and 1-8 respectively. 6 wks.
old May 17, $3.00 to $4.00 ea.
YN, Bruce, Dial.
Duroc Jersey male, 160 Ibs.,
17 mos. old $25.00 at W. W. Fer-
gusons barn in Bonaire, Jerry
Lashley, Thomaston, 174 O St.,
Tuiroe Jersey. pigs, 6 mos, old,
about 90-100 lbs. Cholera im-
mune and reg. $16.50 ea. Trade
also cured ba-
con, sides and shoulders, 22c
Ib.; hams, 26e lb. L. M. Ken-
nedy, Collins,
4 mos. old Reg. Duroc boars
and gilts, of . worlds finest
breeding.
Talbotton.
6.0. I. C. pigs, sub. to reg.,
2 gilts, 4 males, 8 wks. old May
19, $8.00 ea, F.O.B.;. $7.50 at
home; also 28 B. L. hens, 2 roos-
ters, 2 yrs. old, pure bred, blood-
tested, $1.00 ea. F.0.B.; %5c
ea. for lot, here. W. C. White,
Winston, Rt. 1. |
~Black P. C. boars, ready for
service, reg. and dbl. treated for
cholera. Sired by 1st prize boar
at National Swine, Show, and
from high bred dams, C. J. May,
Washington,
Boar and 2 sows, big bone
Pp. C. yr. old ist April, wt. 925
lbs. Sell boar by itself at 10c
lb. K. L.. Steinek, Augusta,
2100 Milledgeville Road.
7 Beikshire pigs at reasonable
price. W. P. McRae, Atlanta, Rt.
4, phdne RA. 6436. Sea
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
- Nice sheep and goats for sale
cheap; also big bone turkey
eggs, $3.00 per doz. or exch. eggs
for R. I. baby chicks. T.
Smith, Jr., Bremen. oa
19 head common stock goats
and 1 black mammoth sow, wt.
$30.0
ash f or. lot. Li
Gerald
| choice doe kids,
Henry T. Lumsden, |
Wee
1 full blooded Nabi. ad
from gallon breeding, both si
to freshen May 10. for first ine
no defects, gentle and will b
fine producer, $12.50. No checks
F. BR. Grubbs, Demorest.
Large pure-blooded, long:
haired, Toggenburg doe, -fresi
milking 5 qts. or better per day
Wonder ful breeder of fine stock
with quality unsurpassed. $75.
F.0.B. John Hynds, 93 Warren
St. N. E., Atlanta, pee De
0489- Ww. 4
Fresh milk edate. eae mes
ers, open. and bred -does, also
100 per cent
Nubian buck, 5 qt. sire, fee $2.00
will rade; also black breast-
ed red game bantams, hatchin
ges $2.00 per 15. Edwin Sim
son, Atlanta, 695 Paynes INS
nue, N. W.
Tosgenburg doe ;
best type, sub. to register. Sac-
rifice doe, $15.00; buck, $5. 00.-
| Want some peafowl and Indian
dunner duck eggs, KE. eee .
Newtons. as
<0 young ewes, 2 rams, 25
spring Jambs, practically all full
blood Hampshire. P. Ss. Knox,
Thomson. ae, ser
50 sheep and 15 lambs, $4.50
per head. Harry Hopkins, Ath-
ens, Milledge Ave. i
Reg. Nubian goat; ded
March 20. Cheap. Ay. Bulloc
Douglasville.
2 fresh in yileh goats, hes
milkers, Sell or trade for fresh
in heifer cow. J. R. Strickland,
Austell, Rt. 2.
4 . Toggenburg, freshened
March 16; $15.00; F.O.Bi; 1: rez,
Ss ees 18 mos. old, 225-250 1b
male, $25.00 F.O.B.; less at barn,
R. B. Phillips, Damascus, Rt. 1.
2 nannies and 1 billy goat for
sale or trade for 12 hens. G. W
Gravitt, Atlanta, 18 Roswell Rd :
Nubian buck, 9 mos. old, gen-
tle, sub. to reg. Nubian doe,
pred,, 1 doe, fresh in, All, $5.00~
SS Howard, Columbus, 1106
31st. Se cen
4 nannie goats, 1 pr. small
goats, 1 brown nannie to freshen
soon; want small cow, to freshen
soon; also tobacco stems, cheap; -
Mrs. Alice E. White, Egan, 61
Pennsylvania Ave.
Nubian buck and Saanan _
buck, 12 mos. old, butt-headed,
also 1 Toggenburg and Nubian
buck, 18 mos. old, with horns,
$5.00 ea. or exc, for potato plants
or O-too-tan beans. Clk
Stracke, Sparks,
50 head kid goats, 15 to: 252
Ibs., $1.00 ea. F.O.B. my barn,
Want an O. I. C. male shoat,
large enough for service, 1. G.
ae Brooklet,- Rt. ae
oe
HORSES AND MULES
= FOR SALE.
12 yr. old, 950 1b.- mare,
*
-|good cond., a good saddler and
plow. horse. , $80.00; 5 yr. old;
pony, gentle, blind in one eye,
about 500 lb: wt., $40.00. Mrs
| A. R. Curry, Mt. Pleasant.
Large jennet, black with white
points, bred to my $1,000. 00
jack; also yr. old, reg. Hereford
bull. S. E. Lavonia.
12 yr. old bay mare, 950 Ibs.
mule, $150.00; 2.yr. old reddish
brown, 950 lb. mare mule, $125
F.0.B. B. H. Bennett, Screven.
Extra fine saddle horse,
gaits, dark bay, 5 yrs. old;
Grade butt-head large size, well
broken. J. P. Bobo, Brooklet.
Good plug mule, $50.00, or
trade for good cow, fresh in;
also want 15 or 20 yearlings to
pasture at 50c per month, R. E.
Neely, River dale, TE
1 plug mule cheap for cash:
also fresh Jersey cow. W. ae
DeLong, Roswell. :
Young mare, guar. to wor
for sale or trade for value in
hogs or pigs. R. L. Burden,
Atlanta, 872 Edgewood, |
7340- Ww. Ss
1 good gonditished jack: age
approximately 12 yrs., for sale,
Francis Bowen, County Agent,
Greensboro. ,
RABBITS FOR SALE
Yellow, gray, white with pink
eyes rabbits for sale or
for anything can use. |
terson, Canton, Rt. 3.
5 fine gray grown Chinchilla _
bucks. Parent stock. were
Stahls, $1.00 ea. F.O.B. Mrs.
Ed. Stone, Adairsville, Rt. 2.
4 doe rabbits, 6 wks. old, ped.
Chinchilla, $2.00 ea, F.0.B. Cash
or M..O. No chks, Bona oe
III, Buford. :
HOGS WANTED
Want pure bred, little bone:
Black Guinea male, 8 wks. to 6
mos. old, short- legged, sh t,
nose and head type, for bre
ing stock. W. N. MeCull
ory =
Exe. 10 Gere: Imp.
otato plants at $1.25 M for
Duroc-Jersey male and female,
: also 1 M got
ayhood or Donaldson str. D. J.
hnson, Wrightsville,, Rt. 2.
Want male Guinea about 18
os. to 2 yrs. old., del. Leary.
-R. Bridges, M. D., Leary.
HORSES AND MULES
WANTED
Want 2 or 3 med. size Shet-
and ponies, cheap for cash, R.
L. Hull, Chamblee.
CATTLE WANTED,
Want a yr. old Guernsey male,
Robert Cook, Fairburn, Rt. 2.
Want 2 bull calves. State what }
Prefer |
ou have and _ price.
ame color, same age and wt.
olsteins.
thoroughbred Jersey
maie, about 16 mos. old. State
price, etc. Miss Willie Ruth
McKinney, Cave Springs, Box 54.
Want a reg. Jersey heifer, |
about 10 days old. Joe eet)
- Stone Min; oRt els:
SHEEP AND GOATS
i WANTED
Saiant ~ a Nubian buck. State
what you have and price. . D..
Truitt, County Agent, 901 Court
House, Atlanta.
ECAN & OTHER FRUIT
REES, ETC., FOR SALE
Black walnut, black haw,
crabapple, plums, gooseberry,
uckleberry, 1 ft., 10c,,3 for 25;
black muscadine, rooted, 15c ea.
dd postage. Mrs. M. GC, Con-
nell, Toomsboro, Rt. 2.
Crabapple, black haw, black
walnuts, huckleberry, goose
berry, well rooted, 1 ft., 10c ea.,
3 for 25c; black muscadines,
ooted, 15c ea. Add postage.
rs. Freeman Watson, Tooms-
t bore, Rt. 2.
40 old fashioned plum trees,
ready to set. Call for them.
Exc. for peas or Bienen H.
B. Tiller, Brunswick.
Miscellaneous For Sale
2 horse wagon, good cond., for
sale. H. V. Bates, Tunnel Hill.
it horse wagon, good cond.,
$25.00; 150 friers, av. 1 3-4 to 2
bs. 27 1-2c lb.; few hundred
bundles fodder, $2. 25 cwt.;
bu. corn, $1.40 bu. at my barn.
ont ship. W. H. Yancey, At-
anta, Rt. 3. (Gilbert Road).
Yellow root, 10c 1b.; cherry
bark, 25 Ib. Mayapple root,
30c. Ib.: life everlasting, 50c Ib.
Add postage. Gladys DeHart,
Mineral Bluff.
11 bu. black walnuts, hulled
and dry, 1936 crop, 90c bu. F.O.
B. Bascom Hines, Shiloh.
$3 Ibs. Deer Tongue $1.00; 3
ibs. red root sassafras bark,
e 00. Prepaid. Money order.
Chas. McGahee, Townsend, Rt.
Mrs. R.
liams, Boston.
Slippery elm bark,
mayapple root, 40c Ib.;
rattle,
yellow
root, birdock, yellow dock, mul- |
-lein roots, Queen of Meadow, 30
- Exe. for sacks of potato
os plants: Mrs. R. C. Stover, Rols-
n.
8 bu. black walnuts, 75c bu.
Owen May, Hilijay, Rt. 1.
_ Goose feathers for sale or
trade for a nice Jersey heifer,.
brood sow or hens of large
breed. Mrs. Linnie Doles, Tif-
: ans Rt. 5.
g Yellow root, 12c Ib.; ratshane,
"956 db23 poke root and wild |.
cherry bark, 20c lb. Add post-
age. Mrs. Sallie Belle Elam,
Clermont, Rt. 1, care Emma
ady.
Very light one horse farm
excellent cond., $25.00.
Mrs. Velma A. Hale, P. O. Box
256-A, Rt. 4.
-Heal-all, dbl. tansy, garden
horsemint, peppermint, 2 doz.
garlic, 10c doz.; horse-
radish, 4 bun, 25c; artichoke
slips, 2 doz. 25c; yard- long peas,
pumpkin seed, 45 cupful. Add
; Exe. for white feed
Sarah Grindle, Dahlon-
. 14 Ibs, new goose feathers,
$1.00 lb., postpaid. C. R. Thorn-
ton. Screven, Rt. 1, Box 175.
Hoarhound, garlic, 3 for 25c;
ae horse wagon, ood running
nd., a for cash, or exe.
? - Ww. Whitaker, Vi-
-one- -horse wagon, $30.00
ae or will exc, for
W. E. Cause, Bre- |
grown.
for entire lot.
| Roy.
15}
1 Mrs.
50 washed feed sacks. Free
from holes, 10c ea. Evelyn Shi-
vers, Cuthbert.
Heavy one-horse wagon, good
condition, (can use for 2-horse
wagon); sell or exe. for light
one-horse farm wagon in good
condition. - Mrs. J. O. Morris,
Rowre 2, Austell.
Green Wild Cherry Bark, Sas-
safras Root, Poke Root, 10 lb;
| Strawberry plants, 25c C; $1.50
per M. Add postage. Mrs. Iva-
lene Watson, Route 2, Tooms-
boro.
Good one-horse wagon in good
condition. Sell or trade. G. A.
Sims, Route 2, Rome.
Nice, clean dried sage, 60c
lb. Del. Send P. O. Money Or-
der only. Mrs. J. E. Yawn, Route
1, Box 115, Rhine.
Large one-horse wagon, for
gale, W. L. Goolsby, Route No.
, Jonesboro.
Votlow Root, 30c 1b; -Ratsbane,
25 |b; Catnip, 10 Bunch; Pep-
permint; 25e per doz; Blue Ber-
ry Bushes, 75 doz. Add _ post-
age, S. . Crambie, Mineral
| Bhuff.
Cherry Bark, Yellow Root, 10c
per lb. Will Almond, Mayapple
Root, 20c lb. Gooseberry Sprouts
T0c ea.; Sassafras, Poke Root,
15 1b.: Blackberry, Dewberry
Roots, 10c Ib. Huckleberry Bush, |
-10c ea.
Add postage. Everett
Ray, Route 3, Ellijay.
POULTRY FOR SALE
BANTAMS
First Prize Golden Sebrights:
Hens, $1.25 ea., Eggs, 10c ea.,
$1.00 per doz. R. B. Scarboro,
736 Lawton St., Atlanta, Ra.
3348. ~ :
40 mixed Bantam hens and 4
roosters, 25c ea.; also 12 W. L.
one yr. old cockerels. Siedel,
=
'Tancred, Roselawn, Tom Barron
strains, mixed, $1.00 ea.. F.O.B.
No Checks. Ben N.
Conyers.
8 small, mixed type Bantam
hens and 1 cockerel, wt. 1 Ib.
Best of layers. $4.50
M. G. Cheatham,
Buff Cochin Cock and Hens,
Biack Cochin eggs from ist prize
winners, at Atlanta and Augusta
shows. Also 1 R. I. Red cock,
direct from Harold Tompkins. D.
A. Asbury, Jenkinsburg,
Japanese Silkie and golden
Sebright bantams; young chicks
of each, 5 wks. old, 50c ea.; also
/eges of each, $1. 00 per setting
of 13, plus postage, C. T. Gaines,
Buford.
Pure bred, show type Jap.
Silkie and Golden Sebright
chicks, some 2 weeks old, 20c
| @a.; eggs $1.15 per 13, prepaid.
c. T. Gaines, Buford.
Few pr. Exhibition quality
bantams in B. B. Red Games,
Buff Cochins, Dark Cornish.
Money back guar. Eggs 30c ea.
W. K. Herndon, Augusta, 1109
Adrian St.
Golden Sebright hen, pure
bred, yr. old, now laying, 50c;:
-2 pure bred white Jersey Giant
_yr. cockerels, $1.00 ea. F.O.B.
pein Wallis, Gainesville,
40 bantam hens, 5 roosters,
$17, or 40 cents each. Charlie
Seaboat, Buford, Rt. 2.
BARRED WHITE AND OTHER
ROCKS
5 guar. pure Fischel str. W. R.
pullets, $1.25 ea.; 1 cock, 1935
hatch, $1.50; eggs 60c per 15,
del.; also Ss. C. White bantam
eggs, 50 per 15, Sidney J. Her-
ring, Hartwell.
12 fine bloodtested roosters,
Parks str. yr. old, red combs,
yellow legs, $1.50 ea. Mrs. Gra-
dy Hendley, Millen.
250 pure bred B. Pl. Rocks,
100 pullets, 150 cockerels, 9 wks.
old, reasonable prices. Aron
Kemp, Bowdon, Star Route.
Pure Buff Rock April 1936
roosters, $1.00 and $1.25
; eggs, 75c per 15, del.; large,
wits Shasta daisies, 35 doz.;
3 doz., $1.00; lilacs, 15 ea. Mrs.
CoRR. sorrels, Monroe, Rt. 1.
1 Holterman Aristocrat B. R.
cockerel, now in service, $1.00.
Miss Catherine Bridges, College
Park, Box 10%
6 fine Holtermans Aristocrat
Barred Rock Roosters, pure
bred, $1.00 ea. Eggs, $1.00 per
15. -Also nice tender cornfield
beans, .25c per cupful, Mrs. B.
H. Osburn, Roy,
3 very fine Thompson Barred
Rock Roosters, 1 yr. old, $1.50
ea. Cash with order. Mrs. A.
J. Collins, Demorest, Route 1.
Booths AAA Pure Bred White
Pl. Rocks, 13 laying hens, 1
rooster, April, 1936, hatch, 1
ccockerel, July hatch. Fine stock,
$14.00, or $1.00 ea. Mrs. Hoyt
Spruill, Bowdon, Route 1,
One fine pure bred Thompson
Ringlet B. R. Rooster, 1 yr. old,
$1.50 f.0.b. Hees for hatching
(same strain), $1.00 per 15 del.
R, L. ve Route 2,
Canon. a eee
cock, $3.00;
Rogers, |
ea, f.0.b.
POULTRY FOR SALE
CORNISH AND GAMES
Trio, Tassel, Clairborne and
Brown Red cross, June hatched,
1936. $5.00 net prepaid. Willie I.
Duvall, Warne, N. C., Route 1,
Box 37. (Resident of Ga.)
15 hens (cross between pure
bred dark Cornish and mixed
Reds). Fine layers, . Spring
1936 hatch. 75c each, No checks.
Miss Florence Horne, George-
town.
Dark Cornish Game Rooster,
1 yr. old, 7 hens, same age.
$8.00 for lot. Mrs. S. J. Akers,
Fender.
Large type, blood-tested stock
Dark Cornish young rooster,
$1.75 FOB; Eggs, $1.00 setting,
prepaid, Young hens, $2.00 ea.
Cc. O. Sikes, Sylvester.
DOVES
1 pr. White Sacred doves,
$2.50. Mrs. G. C. Lawrence, Ma- ;
rietta, 108 Moon St.
GAMES
2 Dam cocks, $2.00 ea., 4 stags,
$1.50 ea; 4 pit game hens, $1.00
ea, Carl ) Gainesville, 85
Oak St.
Warhorse games; hens, $3.00; |
pullets, $2.00; roosters, $5.00;
-eockerels, $3. 00; eggs, $2.00 per
4b. 6: DeForest Decker, Bruns-
wick.
. Pure bred Irish gray pit games
for sale,
L. Ponder, Oakman.,
| Pure bred Ky, Dom 6 Ib. brood
stags, $1.50 to $2.00
eggs, $1.00
Mor-
ea.; hens, o. 25. ea.;
per 15. Richard Panter,
ganton, Rt, 1.
1 pit game 5-6 lb. cock, $2.50.
Blood lines, Red Quill, Round-
head, Warhorse. C. S. Framley,
Sylvania, Rtot:
7 nice hens, 3 stags, yr. old.
All pure bred black and. red
games, $9.00. Exe. for P. C.
gilt. James Brock, Carrollton,
Rt. 6.
1 pure bred Silver Gray Duck
Wing cock, 2 yrs. old, $2.00. E.
L. Patterson, Talking Rock, Rt.
1, Box 10.
GIANTS
I Royal Blue Black Jersey
Giant 5 mos. old cockerel, wt. 6
lbs., $2.00 del. Mrs. Dixie Smith,
Roy.
LEGHORNS
40 pure bred Buff Leghorn
hens 1 1-2 yr. old, now laying;
2 roosters, $40.00. Money or-
der. Mrs. W. D. Bryant, Cot-
fee.
40 white Leghorn pullets, 1 yr.
old, all good layers. $30.00 for
the 40. Mrs. R. Robertson, Tal-
lapoosa, Route 2.
50 Booths AAA Grade Ped.
Ss. C. White Leghorn Pullets, 7
wks. old: also 20 S. C. R. 1.
Red 8 wks. old pullets, 50c ea.
Cockerels, 40c ea. All well de-
veloped, healthy; F.0.B. Mrs.
T. W. Hagood, Powder Springs,
Route 1.
White Leghorn Pullets, 8 wks.
old May ist. Breeders direct
from Hansons 300 eggs, pens,
35e and 40c ea.; also Sires of
these pullets for sale. F. R.
Kennedy, Stone Mountain,
Route 2. :
H. and P. Cockerels, direct
from Rucker, Feb. 22, for sale
|5 generating male line pedi-
grees.
-jrest,
Mrs. F. R. Nalls, Demo-
6 pure bred Brown Leghorn
pullets, now laying, 75c ea. Mrs.
L. L. Patterson, 213 16th Ave.,
Cordele.
TAAA S.C. W. Leghorn yr. old
Rooster, thoroughbred, Windsor
Strain, $1.50. Mrs. J. E. Hunt,
Alpharetta,
12 White Leghorn hens, Tan-
cred Strain, 2 yrs. old. Good
for Breeding, 80c ea. F.0.B.
Mrs. G. J. Holcomb, Bremen,
25 Booth AAA Grade White Leg-
horn, 8 wks. old Cockerels, 50c
Mrs. M. N. Putnam,
Villa Rica, Route 1.
100 Champion Tom Barron
English str. W. L. cockerels, 8
wks. old May 19, approximate
wt. 2 lbs: ea. From By BeAr.
old hens and rooster dir ect, 45
ea. or $65.00 for let. B. J. Jack-
son, Culloden,
140 fancy 10 wks. old W. L.
pullets, mated, bred, hatched by
A. E. Guinn, $1. 00 ea. if taken
at once. L. T, Peed, Butler,
50 pure bred W. L. March
hens, AAA oo all laying, no
culls, 75c ea. C. M. Sapp, Ohoo-
pee.
25 or 30 pure bred Berrys W.
L. pullets, 6 mos. old, now
ing, $1.00 ea. F.0.B. Mrs, W.
Barnes, Sale City.
150 Barron AAA Leghorn
hens, laying 50 per cent, 60c ea.
at farm. BST: Budden, East
Point.
500 W. L. 6 wks. old pullets,
40c ea.; 300 8 wks, old, 45c ea.
GD: Fain, Edison, Rt..1.
8 big type, bloodtested W. L.
yr. old cockerels, $1.00 ea.; 3 M
W. 1. pullets, 6 wks. old, 40 ea.
Chas. Braswell, Edison.
hou 225 Colonial, Best Ege
str
hens, layin
time for 75e ea.
Also eggs, 10c ea., Lo
roosters, for quick sale.
W. A. Tanner, Broxton.
rooster.
Weel. a 1936 hatch :
POULTRY FOR SALE
31 choice, young laying S. C.
W. L. hens and 5 cocks, 11 mos.
old. Best Hollywood str. $27.00.
Mrs. J. N. Carson, Griffin, Rt. 4.
90 W. L. April 1936 hatch, from
Rusk. Laying 75 per cent, 60c
ea, at my farm for lot, E. EH.
Beasley, Avera, Rt. 2.
54 Eng. str. W. L. hens, May,
July hatch, $40.00 for lot. W. A
Clements, McDonough, Rt. 2.
6 wks. old W. L. pullets, dams
and sires direct Hansom 300
egg pens. 35c ea; 14 mos. old
cockerels, sires of above pullets.
F. R. Kennedy, Stone Mtn., Rt.
2.
Big type S. C. W. L. cocker-
els from bloodtested flock, 8 wks.
old May 1. Will deliver at that
R. E. Adair,
Adairsville.
ORPINGTONS
Pure bred Buff Orp., 4 to 6
wks. old, 25ce ea.; 8 to 10 wks.
old, 50c ea. FOB. Baby chicks,
$8.00 C, prepaid. Eggs, 75c set-
ting, 3 or more, 60c set, prepaid.
Mrs. Lillie H. Jordan, Norwood,
R27. =
125 Exhibition Buff Orp.
chicks, 8 wks. old, 35c ea. Aaron
Sampson, Jr., Quitman.
10 Booths AAA Buff Orp.
hens, $1.00 ea. unrelated roos-
ters, $2.00, or $11.00 for lot, or
15 hens and rooster, $15.00. Mrs.
EH. H. Roland, Morgan.
PEAFOWLS
Young and old peafowls for
sale. Jno. B. McCollum, Colum-
bus, 1104 Broad St.
3 blue peacocks, yr. old, $15.00
ea.;2 blue peahens, yr. old, $10
ea.; also 2 sheep-ewes, .$10 ea.
All F-.0.B. W. C. Day, Thomas-
ton, R.F.D. 1.
4 Blue peacocks, $15.00 ea.;
2 blue pea-hens, $10.00 ea. F.
O.B. All 1936 hatch. W. C. Day,
| Thomaston, Rt. 1.
PIGEONS
4 pr. and 1 odd bird thor-
oughbred Red Carneaux, $2.00
for lot, F.0.B. Also pomegran-
ite seed, 10c pkt. Durward Ed-
wards, Jefferson, Rt. 3.
QUAIL
Young quail for re-stocking
purposes. July, August and Sep-
tember del. Book early. Ed
M. Furlough, Thomasville.
REDS (RHODE ISLAND)
10 wks. old Red cockerels, di-
rect from Parmenters Double
Ped. mating, 240-300 egg sired,
Bers ea. H. J. Hardin, . Cullo-
en,
Donaldsons Red cockerels
from eggs direct (toe marked),
February 15th hatch, large size,
finest cond. $1.00 ea. 2 or more,
80c ea. Lot of 15 cockerels, 35c
1h 2 ROR. Mrs. Sikes,
Cochran, Rt. 2.
Young rooster, 5 hens, laying,
thoroughbred R. I. Reds, $5.00;
also fine Golden Minorca yr. old
hens, 85c ea. Mrs. Jesse Brown,
Helena.
REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRE)
60 N. H. Red hens, Hubbard
str. yr. old olf, also 150 Bag-
bys AAA W. L. hens, ars 10
TS:
REDS (RHODE ISLAND)
1 young rooster, 5 hens, pure
bred, healthy, $5.00. Mrs. Jes-
sie Brown, Helena. ; \
Trio S. C. R. I. Reds, Owens
and Donaldson str., 2 hens and
Pure bred, fine breed-
ing stock. $5.00 F.O.B. here;
eggs, $1.00 per 15. Crate ret.,
Chas. P. Ezell, Eatonton, Rt. 4.
10 pure Donaldson str. Red
hens, now laying, $10.00, del.
Mrs. W. D. Vaughan, Jackson,
B..Q. Box. 183:.
Fine R. I. Red Hens, $1.00 ea.;
1936 hatch rooster, $2.00; large
type Cornish game 1936 hatch
rooster, $1.50:. eggs, $1.00 per
15, prepaid. Mrs. Vera Dugger,
Sylvester, Rt.
Tompkins R. I. Red March
Hen hatch cockerels and now
laying pullets, baby chicks with
mother hen and eggs, $1.50 per
15. All at popular prices. Mrs.
A. H, Freeman, Atlanta, 1499
McLendon Ave.
SUSSEX
10 pure bred Red Speckled
Sussex hens, 2 yrs. old, $15.00
or $2.00 ea.; 8 same breed 10
mos old pullets, $10.00 or $1.50
ea. -All laying. Money order.
ae Creseh, Cobbtown,
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE
Fair pure bred, about 25 Ibs.
ea., M. B. turkeys. Hen, sev. yrs.
old, now laying. Gobbler, 10
mos. old, $10.00 . S. Waller,
LaGrange, 118 Ridley Ave.
5 young Speckled Guinea hens,
now laying, 50c ea. Mrs. G. C.
Mims, Cuthbert, Rt. 4.
Trio M. B. turkeys, hens lay-
ing, $10.00 FOB Exp. office;
Eggs, $2.00 doz. postpaid, Mrs.
C. J. Ligon, Talbotton.
Orders now taken for baby
keys for May 13 del. 50c ea.
: ronze turkey
| Dahlonega,
Quote prices,
Perry.
| Quote price,
Villa Rica,
Saturday, May
POULTRY FOR SALE
5 pure bred Mammoth To
louse goslings, 5 wks. old, 60
Mrs. Fred L. L. White, Buckh
RED i= :
Baby turkeys. Bourbon Reds
and Bronze cross, due to hatch
May 18, 40c ea. postpaid, Mrs,
Bettie Roberts, Taleo R
2. BOX ts;
10 head geese and 6 gosling
$6.50 at my home. Exc. for seed
peas. S. J. Taylor, Waycross, R
1, Box 43.
Pure bred White Peking, 4
ducks, now laying, 2 drakes, $
F.O.B. Mrs. E. P. Powell, Colle
Park, Rt. 2. ;
4 ganders and 3 geese, 80c. e
Mrs. W. T. Strickland, Ho
Inerville, Rt: 2,: Box 152 oe
2 geese, 2 ganders, $5. 00 f
lot; $3.00 pri, $2.00 ea. N
laying. Virginia Blankens
Buford, Rt. 2.
6 turkey hens, now laying, an
gobbler, $5.00 each or $28.00
lot. Willie Tuggle, Buford, Rt.
2 thoroughbred Narragan
19 mos. old, about 20 lb. tom
Star Rt.
3 Blue Speckled guineas,
hens, rooster, 50c ea. or exc. for
1 turkey hen or 12 turkey egg
also 38 white goats, sell chea
Ferd Cochran, Baldwin.
WYANDOTTES
20 pure bred White Wyan
dotte pullets, $20.00; 2 youn
same breed roosters, $2.00 for th
2; 3 mixed hens, 80c ea. F.O.1]
Mrs. Mattie McPherson, Rabu
Gap.
10 young S. L. Wyandot
hens and rooster, $11.00 prepaid
eggs, $1.00 a 15 prepaic
Money order. B. T. aean E
berton, Rt. 3.
BABY CHICKS FOR SALE
J. B. Giant baby chicks, Apri
del., $9.50 C, or lots of 50; Hes
$1. 00 per setting, oor ec:
drum, Adairsville. :
Barred Olipp baby chicks. Re:
ular price, $1.00 ea.; Spe
during June and July, 35c ea
Not over 50 to any customer,
Limited supply. E. D. Und
wood, Austell,
Strong, healthy, heavy mixe
baby chicks, del. $7.00 C; $
for 50. Ready. April 27. A
C.0.D. Book orders now, en
closing deposit. Clyde Strick
land, Screven. =
W. L. baby chicks oN select,
large English stock, $7.45C del.
Less than 100, add 1-2 ct. Dp
chick, Dr. 0. J. Heely; River
dale, Rt. 1.
Pure bred Buff Orp., $8.00 |
50, $4.50; 25, $2.50. prepaid:
wks. old, 50 ea. in lots o
or more, F.0.B.; eggs, 75c s
ting, or 3 or more, settings
lot, 60c per set. Exc. some
good dried peaches at 12 1-
Ib. prepaid: Mrs. Lillie H. Jo:
dan, Norwood, Rt. 2.
POULTRY WANTED
BABY CHICKS WANTED
Want 100 chicks to raise 0
halves to 10 wks. old, Ap
hatch: White Wyandottes _
Barred Rocks. TI furnish feed
other party trans. chgs. bot
ways. Mrs. L. W. Maxwell, Ar
agon, Rt. 1.
Want about 100 baby ot
to raise on halves to frying siz
Experienced. Paul T. Pritch
Lithonia, Rt. 2.
Want 100 and 500 B. L., ar
W. L. Chicks to raise on hal
to 10 wks. old. Good ref.
P. B. Sanders, Hartwell, Rt
Want 150 or 200 Dark Cornish
or Brahma biddies to rais :
halves to 8 wks. old. Party f
nish trans. chgs. both Algo :
furnish feed. Mrs. . Ww.
anan, Pitts, Rt. 1. |
BRAHMAS
Want 1 Light Brahma Yr. ol
rooster. E. R. Yarbrough, Mi
shon,
CORNISH.
Want some White Cornis
chickens, Write prices on chick
eges.and grown stock. E. E
Smith, Decatur, 311 Superi
Ave. \
GAMES
Want 1 thoroughbred Frizzl
rooster at once, cheap. x
Dora Corbin, Soperton, Rt.
LEGHORNS :
Want W. L. rooster of la
breed for breeding purposes,
less than 10 mos, old.
breed, wt., age and price.
BE. G. Vanner, Indian Spring
PEAFOWLS
Want pr. unrelated W
Peafowls for breeders. HE.
Preston, Flovilla.
QUAIL
Will pay $2.00 pr. for
White quail; also want Qi
eggs, and pay 25c ea. for Db
tam hens that will set. E
Justi, Altamaha,
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEES!
DUCKS, ETC., WANTED
Want turkeys, ducks, fr
and butter for eating purr
Jas. J
Want 4 or S gu
- Mrs.
Strain Light Brahma
g eggs $1.00 for 15 del.
some for new goose or
feathers. -Mrs. Mamie
Adairsville.
re bred Giant Str. Light
ma selected hatching eges
r setting of 15. Mrs. W.
ul, Lexington, Rt. 1.
hing eggs, in quail, pheas-
White Holland turkeys,
bred bantams, ducks.
e ee 2028 Boulevard
2s from 5 to 7 Ibs. pure
Cornish game hens, stock
ated. $1.00: for 15, del. Mrs.
ohnson, Rt. 2, Dawson.
e bred M B eggs, $2.25 per
15.00 per C.- Del. Also
turkeys del. in May $35.00
00. Mrs. Neal T. Williams,
Vista.
, Tbe per 15 del.
50c at my home. Cash or
order. Mrs. Nonnie Owen,
Curryville.
jant Black Minorca eggs $1.50
5. L. B. Millianns, Newnan.
jant strain Light Brahma eggs
er 15 del. Also Mammoth
_ duck eggs $1.00 for 12
rs. H. EK. Haynie, Rt. 1,
ki sville. :
ure bred Mammoth bronze
y eggs $3.00 a doz. del.:
sbred dark Cornish game
.00 per 15 del.. No checks.
Beth Cook, Rt. 1; - Pitts.
re bred Buff Orpington eggs
Booth Lady egg a day str.
or 15 eggs prepaid and in-
d. J. H. Loyd, Rt. 3, Milan.
Giant Bronze Turkey
$3.50 per doz; Purebred
Orp. Eggs, Lady Egg a
Mrs.
strain, $1.00 per 15.
Ridley, Franklin.
rsey White Giant Eggs, $1.00
5 del.
R. L. Carter, Brew-
ik Cornish pure bred eggs
for 15crates returned. No
Miss Florence Horne,
wn.
ire bred- Ringlett Barred
ggs 50c per 15. Add post-
No stamps. Want feed
at 5c each; also yellow
narcissus 5 doz. 50c, 20 doz.
Miss Myrtle Adams, Ri.
ant Bronze Turkey eggs, also
1d and started poults. Z. J.
Bourbon red turkey eggs
a doz: also Pecans. Mrs.
Greene, Rt. 4, Cuthbert.
Imp. Pekin eges, 12 for
Big Eng: Tom Barron W.
n eggs A.A.A., 75c per 15;
er 30 postpaid. No checks.
over 30 per order. Want 12
Holland Turkey eggs. Mrs.
Grubbs, Demorest.
Golden Buff Orp. eggs
ne unrelated stock, and
ose comb. Golden Sebright
am eggs, ea. $1.00 per 15 del.
R. Q. Miller, Acworth, Rt. 2.
arragansett turkey eggs $2.50
9.50; for 50: $17.00 for
H.C. Reid, Milner.
yal Purple J. B. Giant eggs
er setting, 75c plus postage.
es retd. Baby chicks 10c
P lus postage, box retd. Mrs.
Simpson, Clover Heights,
erly Hall.
oroughbred Bourbon red fin-
strain turkey eggs, $3.00 doz.
aid. Mrs. R. W. Mauldin,
Buford.
Traveler eggs, $1.50 per
noney order only, postpaid;.
15 eges for 1 M good to-
to plants, if ordered at once.
pay postage. Z. EH. Dunlap,
|, Chauncey. :
bred Millers White Jersey
eggs $1.00 for 15 FOB; 1
bred Buff Orp. rooster $1.00.
elvia Greene, Rt. 2, Gaines-
te Jersey Giant Eggs from
AAA Grade hens, 80c per
pullets and roosters $1.00
rs: Gennia Brown, Rt. 1,
round.
e pure bred S L Wyan-
hatching eges, 65e per 15
, 80 for $1.10. Mrs. Earl
Rt. 1, Clarkesville.
. fresh, selected Sheppard
a eges 60c per 16, $1.15 per
ostpaid. Crates ret. Parent
unrelated. J. M. Turner,
. Graymont.
re Mammoth bronze turkey
A 00 per doz. prepaid. |
Milford, Ball Ground.
. Turkey eggs from unre-
tock from hens weighing
25 per 25: $8.00 per 50;.
100. F.C. Payne, Rt.
- a
toms 30 Ibs, $2.25 per 4
Mrs.
_ EGGS FOR SAIL
Turkey eggs, Bronze and
Bourbon Reds, crossed, $2.25 a
doz Aen ge Mrs. Bettie Rob-
ert, Rt. 2, Bx 71, Tallapoosa.
White and speckled guinea eggs
50e a doz. FOB. Exchange for
potato plants. W. L. Walls, Rt.
5, Gainesville. :
Jersey white Giant eggs 15 for
90c PP; stock direct from Nabob
AA grade BWD tested. Wm. W.
Gable, Haralson.
Hatching eggs from Colonial
AAA strain barred Plymouth
rocks, Thompsons strain R I
reds 75c per 15 postpaid. Crates
retd. Mrs. F. R. Ard, Rt. 1, Col-
quitt. '
Pure bred barred rock eggs
for hacthing 15 for 75e postpaid.
A few Parks: strain Barred rock
cockerels at $1.25 FOB. T. J.
Steed, Buena Vista. s
Big bone Giant bronze turkey
eggs $6.25 per doz. prepaid. Ex-
change some for pigs,
chickens,
Rt. 5.
M. B. Turkey eges now reaay
$2.00 a doz postpaid, pure Buff
meee eggs, 75c for 15 del.
laa . A. Adams, Rt. 3, Bow-
on.
S C RI red eggs Donaldson
strain direct, fertility 100 per
cent: Pri epaid $1.00 per 15; also
white bunch butter bean seed
15e plus postage. Mrs. J. E.
Sikes, Rt. 2, Cochran.
Sussex eggs, pure bred, 75c
for 15. Money order. No checks.
Tassel round head purebred di-
rect from O. L. Harris, 15 eggs.
Mrs. Lizzie Roper, Rt. i: Culber-
son, N. C. (Resident of Ga.)
Golden pheasant eggs $2.00 a
doz; want pure bred fancy ban-
tams or eggs, also S S Ham-
berg hens. D. T. Jennings, P. O.
Box 84, Americus.
Eng. duck eggs 60c a setting,
postpaid. Mrs. B. M. Thomas,
Hoboken.
Hatching eggs, pure bred R I
reds, yellow Buff orpington W
L. Leghorn, some black Minorcas
33 a doz, for orders of 10 or
15 doz. or more at the time.
Cash with order. Mrs. R. O.
Hodges, St. George. :
Booths AAA selected white
leghorn hatching eggs, hatch 80
per cent, 85c for 15. Postpaid.
Write for prices on 100 lots,
Wilburn Speight, Ashburn.
Pure bred Buff Orp. Booth
AAA white leghorn eggs 15 for
15G prepaid or 15 for 50c if
called for. Mrs. W. F. Martin,
Rt. 2, Norwood.
Ring neck pheasant eggs $1.50
at doz. Clabus Lloyd, Gaines-
ville.
Eggs from J M giants 75c per
setting at my home, $1.00 shipped
| PP; Incubator lots furnished on
short notice. Miss on Ham-
mond, Rt. 8, Augus
Mammoth Bronze pokes eges,
Goldback strain $2.50 per 12;
Id. Ellis, Cumming,
Guinea eggs; $1.00 for 18. Post-
paid in state. R. D. Massee,
| Tiger.
Parks bred-to-lay Barred rork
hatching eggs, $1.25 per 15. W.
M. Shivers, Norwood.
4 doz. fine purebred tavkey
eggs 18c ea; after this month 15c
ea. Postage paid. No checks.
Mrs. B. F. Morrison, Gainesville,
Rt. 8.
Few settings select hatching
eggs, Parks bred-to-lay stock
direct, 75c for 15. Exchange for
following rooted plants: Thrift,
Jarge type Mums, Gardenias or
Azaleas Indica. Mrs. M. Grif-
fin, Clermont.
TURKEN or Spencer Wonder
| Bird (part chicken, part turkey),
20 eggs $2.00 or will exchange
for 12 turkey eggs. Mrs. John.
R. Turner, Williamson.
Choice dark Donaldson Red
eggs, big type; White Leghorns,
$1.00 for 16; $1.75, 30: $5.00
hundred. Del. Also baby chicks
9c ea. Exchange eggs or chicks
for potato plants or shoats. Mrs..
H. G. Brown, Stone Mountain,
Rt,
Pure bred, selected B. L. eggs,
65e per 15. Crate returned.
Mrs. J. T. Rutherford, Union
Point.
Pure dark Donaldson S. C. R.
I. Red; Booths AAA S. C. White
Leghorn eggs $1.00 for 15, pre-
paid. Exchange for peas, giant
purebred white rabbits or 8
weeks old nice pigs. Mrs, H. J.
Chandler, Fitzgerald, Rt. 3.
Pure Cornish, Indian game
eggs $1.00 15; Carrier returned
P. P.: roosters $1.50 ea, 2 in lot
for $2.75 money order. Exchange
for dried apples or white dairy-
sugar or guano sacks 200 Ibs.
cap. F.P. Annie M. King, Ha-
hira, Rt. 1, Box 124.
Purebred Brown Leghorn
eggs, Everly str. 65c per 16,
postpaid. J. S. Norman, Lincoin-
ton, Rt. 1, Box 95.
tam eggs $1.00 per doz.
postage; ke ue Carts wae
calves, |
also purebred Australian white
4 Cockerel,
Purebred Golden Sebright ban- |
Add |
a-
R. I. Red eggs $1.50 for 15;
from choice mating $2.00 for 15.
Robert Decker, Brunswick.
Large white Indian Runner
duck eggs, 75 per Setting of 12,
del. Mrs. J. L. Roberson, Sur
tency, Box 6.
Park strain Barred Rock hatch-
ing eggs, 75c per 15 del. Mrs.
Lewis Carter, Rockingham.
Black Minorca hatching eggs
75e setting del. 3rd zone. Ex-
change for Buff Minorca set-
ting. L. V. Jones, Cuthbert.
Guinea eggs for sale, 18 for
15 postpaid: also Kentucky
Wonder bean seed 20c teacup,
two cups 25c; Black Mexican
pole bean, slightly weeviled, 15c
a cup. Add postage. Mrs. L. R.
Ashworth, Loganville, Rt. 4.
Turkey eggs, purebred M. B.
99 per cent fertile $2.50 per doz.
P.P. 3B. L. Jackson, William-
son; Rt, 1.
Select white Plymouth Rock
eggs, fertile, 85 per setting (17)
$1.60; 2 sets (34) postpaid and
erate returned. Mrs. Harvey
Yates, Bowdon, Rt. 1.
Bourbon Red Turkey eggs and
young poults from prize win-
ning stock. Mrs. J. H. Free,
Preston.
Thompsons Ringled Barred
Rock ek eggs 75c for 15
del. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin.
Blue See ce Guinea Eggs,
$1.00 for 18. Exe. for Porto Rica
Potato Plants. Wilson Carson,
Route 4, Griffin.
Pure M B., Turkey eggs for
sale, $2.00 per doz. del in May.
Grady Cook, - Rochelle.
AAA Holterman Aristocrat B.
R. eggs, $2.00 for 16. Stock di-
rect from Holtermans Special
Show (dark) pens. A. P. Chap-
man, Rt. 2, Moultrie.
Pekin Duck Hatching Eggs,
$1.00 per doz. 15 White Leghorn
eggs, $1.00. Del. E. W. Jewett,
Route 2, LaRoche Ave., Savan-
na
Pure Bred Brown Leghorn
eggs, 85c per 15 or $1.50 for 30.
Postpaid. Cash with order. No
checks. Mrs. Maud Dudley, Route
3, Summit.
Pure Bred Brown Leghorn
eges, 75c per 15 or 50c if called
for. Postage prepaid. Good
hatch guaranteed. Mrs, I, R.
Hobby, Route 3, Fitzgerald.
Carefully selected improved
large S. L. Wyandotte eggs, 75c
per 15, $1.40 per 30. $4.00 per
Cc. Del. Crate ret. Money or-
der only. Mrs. A. B, Courson,
Route 1, Rockingham.
Eggs for hatching from Booth
Strain White Plymouth. Rocks,
AAA grade, and AAA grade
Roselawn Strain Tom Barron
White Leghorns. T. S. Visscher,
711 Church St., Decatur.
Indian Runner Duck Eggs,
'$1.00 per 15 del., or will exc. for
setting of same Breed or Barred
Rock or Black Giant eggs. Ira
C. Anderson, Roy. -
White Wyandotte eggs for
hatching, pure bred, fine chick-
ens, 60c per 15 del. Mrs. R, F.
Terrell, Route 3, Greenville,
Pure Bred Donaldson R., I.
Red Eggs, $1.00 per 15, cash or
money order. Mrs. R. L. Bar-
rett, Hawkinsville.
Selected Hatching eggs from
Booths AAA Barred Rocks, 60c
per 15 del. Mrs. J. F. Clark,
Route 1, Coosa.
Selected hatching eggs from
improved strain Rhode Island
Reds, $1.50 per setting 15. Ivon
Overby, Buford.
Pure Mammoth Bronze Tur-
key eggs, $2.20 per doz. Post-
paid. Mrs. J, A. Milford, Ball
Ground, Route 2.
Ancona eggs, Sheppard Strain,
AAA Grade, 75c per 15 eggs,
postpaid. Mrs. L. D, Hlliott,
Lavonia.
Jersey White Giant Eggs, 85c
per 15, P. P. Stock direct from
Nabob B. W. D. Tested, March
15 hatch pullets and roosters,
85c ea. 11 for $8.50. Not: pre-
paid. Mrs. Wm. W. Gable,
Haralson. ;
Little English . Duck Eggs, 65c)
per setting, R. I. Eggs, 65 per
setting, postpaid. Mrs, B. M.
Thomas, Hoboken.
Large Type W. L. Eggs, 75c
per 15, $5.00 per hundred. Del,
Marion we; Waees, Route 1, Bu-
ford.
Pape Strain Ss. C. Black. Mi-
norcas, (Stock Direct) Hatching
eggs, $1. 00 per 15, postpaid. Also
Cockerels and laying pullets at
bargain. G. W. Wilson, Elberton.
Warhorse Game Eggs,
per 15; Roosters, $2.00 to $5.00.
L. M. Seaborn, Brunswick.
Carefully selected hatching
eggs of Parks Bred-to-lay Bar-
red Rocks, 85c per 15; $1.40 per
30, del. Crates ret. Mrs. J. S.
Raulerson, Route Box 27,
Rockingham.
1
a
Pure Dark Cornish eggs $1. 00.
per 18, del. Also, 10 2-yr. old
Dark Cornish hens, 16 1-2-Ib,
all $1. 00 ea. FOB.
_ zon King, Pearson.
SmReeion eges from
blood-tested flack ale, Mr
ia Bucha
$2.50 |
| $6.00 month.
f
3 as , im 4, Asse
Limited number of settings
frommy Giant Strain Black Mi-
norcas $1.50; Genuine Buff
Cochin Bantam Eggs $1.50 per
15. O. H. Wright. WA 7858 or:
HE 0648-W. Peters Bldg., At-
lanta.
50c; Also, Star Cypress seed,
running vine variety, 15c per
cupful, Martin Gourd seed, large
size; make offer. Mrs. Harry|
J. Floyd, Route 2, Chipley.
Blue Speckled Guinea eggs,
3 doz. $1.00 or exc. for 1,000
potato slips. Pure Barred Rock
eges, 75ce per setting or exc. for
potato plants. Mrs. Roxie Robin-
son, Route 3, Bowdon.
Thoroughbred Bourbon Red
(finest strain) Turkey eggs, |
$3.00 per doz. postpaid. Mrs. R.-
W. Maudin, Route 2, Buford.
White Jersey Giant eges (from:
large AAA grade hens), $1.60
for 15, del. Also rooster and
laying pullets, (same _ strain).
$1.25 ea.22P. B; pron, Route 1,:
Ball Ground.
Gold Tipped Hronze
eges, 15c ea. postpaid.
@. Huskey, Look Out.
Turkey ezes, $2.60 per doz.
del,, or exe. for 2 settings pure
pred White Giant eggs, also 1
Tom, 20ce per lb., if called for.
2 nice White Giant roosters,
$1.00 eac. if called for. Mrs. Roy
Heard, Adairville, Route 3
oe
Pure bred Mammoth Bronze.
Turkey eggs, $2.50 per doz. Ship
by return mail. Mrs. B. L. Jack-
son, Williamson.
POSITIONS WANTED
Turkey
Mrs. E.
enced truck driver. White, sin-
gle, sober, 20 yr. old, high school
education. Salary or commis-
sion. A. C. Faulk, Rentz, Box
121,
Middleaged widow, refined,
reliable, unencumbered, wants
place on farm with good people,
doing light farm work for home
and reasonable salary. Prefer
room, as have own things; have
to be moved. Mrs. L. M. Pin-
nell, Atlanta, 470 Woodward
Ave., S. E. a
34 yr. old widow, alone, want:
rhome with nice people doing
light farm work. $3.00 week.
R.R. fare to be furnished. Nora
Bradford, LaGrange, 933 Green-
ville St.
Widow, 26 yrs. old, 2 children,
wants job doing light farm work
with good people for home and
reasonable salary. Mrs. Lattie
| West, Rockyford, Rt. 2, care of
Mrs. A. E. West...
35 yr. old woman, boy 7, wants
place with good. people on farm,
doing light farm work, for home
for self and boy, and $5.00 or
Lizzie Flinnings,
Lithonia, Rt. 1, care J. H: Bart-
lett.
Want light farm work
field work), $10.00 mo., board
and laundry. Mrs. Juranie But-
ier, Millen, Rt. 3, Box 163.
Refined, middleaged woman
wants job doing light farm work,
for $10.00 mo. and home. Mrs.
Maloy J. Taylor, Alma, Rt. 1.
Man and wife want work on
farm near Atlanta. Wages pres,
ferred. Have to be moved.
Harry Davis, Atlanta, 341 Cen-|{
tral Ave., S. W.
Refined, settled white woman
wants job with nice people do-
ing light farm work, no field
work, for home and salary. State
particulars. Gloria Meredith,
Atlanta, 570 W. Peachtree St.
Exp. man with references,
wants hear from parties inter-
ested in poultry. J.C. Ethridge,
Fender, Box 37:
Want suitable truck farm, not
over 15 miles Atlanta, large
house, well located. Write.
Lewis King, Atlanta, 1821 Lake-
wood,
Want job on farm, repairing
binder and thresher, also job
operating same. W. W. Esco,
Danielsville, Rt. 2.
on dairy or farm, 3 in family.
6 yrs. exp. dairy, life exp. in:
farming. Sam Ramey, Atlanta.
198 Fair St., S. E.
Boy 17 yrs. of age, wants work
on_farm in Fulton county, Exp.
Ref. Joe Reavis, Atlanta. 995
Morgan St.
36 yr. old man, small family,
wants job as overseer on farm,
or light crop on 50-50 basis.
Prefer place in Fulton or Dekalb
county. Hard worker. No bad
habits. Life time exp. W. C.}
Ford, Decatur, Rt. 1.
Refined widow, 43, and 2 small
children want place with Chris-
tian family doing light farm work
for home and small salary. Mrs.
Annie Blankenship, Clarkesville,
Rt. 4.
Middleaged white woman wants
job doing light farm work for:
good people. Reasonable salary.
Young, high school girl wants
place with good people, doing
light farm work for ponte ae
le
Setting of (18) Guinea eggs, |
4 por,
Want job on farm. Experi-:
| Barnesville. |
40 yrs. old man, wants work f
Mrs. Georgia Allen, Atlanta, care f
Gen. Del. -
POS!
Young, refined woman,
-years of age, wants job at once,
doing light farm work for nice.
people. Home and wages. RR
fare to be re-paid with work.
Louceal Yawn, Chauncey, eare
Gen. Del. W. M. Yawn.
25 yrs. woman with 10 yr. old
daughter wants light farm work
with nice people. Raised in
country. Home and wages. Mrs.
Rosalie Watkins, Atlanta, ae
Windsor St.
Widow with 1 child 6 mos. ola
wants place doing light farm 2
work fer home and salary. Can |
milk cows, attend to poultry, etc.
Mrs. Bertha Duncan, Ray City,
care H. H. Pevey.
Want 1 horse crop on negroes
or for wages. House furnished,
8 in family. Grady Bagley, At-
lanta, Rt. 71, Box 49 (10 Ridge-_
way Ave. 22
46 yr. oid woman wants job
doing light farm work for home
and salary with good people. Mrs
A, BR. Roberts, Douglas, 312 Pe- =
terson Ave.
Want job on farm. Exp. nd joes
Communicate with: T. G..
Grindle, Decatur, c/o Homer
Watlrup, Rt. 2. oe
|. Woung man, married, no chil- -
dren, wants work on poultry
ing and farm work. J, .
Atlanta, c/o Gen. Del.
29 yr. old widow, 2 yr. old
baby and 56 yr. old mother
want a home together on farm
in exchange for light farm work, .
Small salary. . Mrs. Ruby Hart-
ley, Ashburn, ; Rt. 1; uk Tom
Smith.
Want place in small connber.
town for blacksmith shop. Have
own tools, Can move self. Sober,
reliable. Will J. Akers, Tucker.
Exp. dairyman, small family,
wants dairy job at once. KE. N.
Waller, Atlanta, 463 Hill St,
Sv EB.
Middle-aged widow, 7 yr. old
boy, wants place doing light
farm work in exc. for home, in-
surance paid, small salary. Mrs.
Frances Jones, Rome, c/o Har- |
per Store, Calhoun Ave..,
Woman wants home and small |
salary for light farm work, no
. Lee,
Bowen, Stockbridge, Rt. 1.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want at once, single, white
man, exp. in general farming;
honest, sober, good worker, 35-
50 yrs. old. $16.50 mo., board
and laundry. Pay every. 2 we
T. Taylor, Talking Rock, Rt. ae
Want white woman, unencu
bered, to live in home with
couple, and do light farm work.
Good home, board, small wages.
Mrs. H. W. Baird, Douglas, 11
| Coffee St.
(no |
Want unencumbered quite
woman, middleaged, for light
farm work, Must be clean,
smart, At once. Mrs. M. |
Peel, Jr., Waynesboro, R.F.D..
Attrnotive proposition for 7 Te-
liable, energetic farmer to de-
rvelop 137 acre farm, 16 mile:
Atlanta. Prefer able finance >
self, Howard Parrish, Atlanta.
1It Huntington Road. ;
Want. middle aged woman te:
(do tight farm work. Small sal-
ary. Mrs. O. J. Davis, Atlanta,
Rt. 4, Box. 457-A-
Want single woman for ie
farm work, No field work. $2.50
week and board. Ref. required.
J. B. Johnson, Decatur, 49 Ars
cadia Ave,
Want good man with small
family, 10 miles Atlanta, for 1
}horse farm, 20 A. cultivation, 2
houses, 6 and 3 rooms, 3 pas-
tures with water in each. Stand-
ing rent. Furnish fresh cow for
care of same. Miss Ida Rows:
iden, Ellenwood. |
Can use entire - family, toe
ing and picking cotton on big
farm at Piedmont. J. A. Cason,
Want good, reliable, sober
wage hand, white or colored at.
reasonable wages with board.
Can furnish house if married.
| Grady Wilson, Butler, Rt. 2.
Want healthy woman to live.
in family of 2 and do light farm
work. $5.00 mo. and_ board.
Mrs, Nora Bradford, Americus.
1208 McGarrah St.
Want good worker on farm.
Give board, every-day clothes
and share in crop. 4
Want family to work on veg=_
etable, berry and fruit farm.
Nice, 3 room house, $1.00 day
for man; plenty work for women
and children, R. K. Sams, ality:
: Clarkston,
Want smart colored woman
for garden, light farm work.
Beard, room, $6.00 mo. for 5 days
week, Mrs, W. B. Cooper, At-
rlantag East Atlanta Station.
Want smart orphan boy
over 16, to Hive as one of f
Land help with farm (no ;
iwork), fer board, clothes,
ay oa _jittle spending 1
not
farm. Some exp. in ber rais-
field work, with nice people. Re- |
fined, unencumbered. Mrs. Allie
day, board and. laundry, TP Ke
Moore, Canton, Rt. 3.
Want good plow hand, 25-50
yrs. old, $15.00 mo., poard and
laundry. J. T. Speight, Buch-
nar, Rte 2:
Want woman or girl to live
as one of family and help with
light farm work, No field work.
. Hammock, Butler, Rt. 2.
Want. plow hand at once.
10.00 mo. board and laundry;
als ie horse crop to let on 50-50
family with 2 or 3
al oe know how to hoe,
for farm work. 75c per
day and furnish house,
pasture and wood. At
Herman Goss, Jasper.
ant. single, reliable, exp.
man for dairy and small farm.
d e ($14.00 mo., board and
Apply F.C. Brand,
ta, Rt, 2 Box 3 (Brands
Browns Mill ~ Road).
a Ma. 5288. :
Want 100 good hard working
) +. Pay 10c
M. Write. at once. J. D.
barn,
once.
Want wage ha ad or share
ropper with small family. Ref.
required. Good Bas for
practical farmer. E. E. Bishop,
masville, Rt.
- Want 2-3 ects tainities. chop
and hoe cotton, also pick cotton
: fall. Steady work entire
year on. pig farm at Piedmont.
. Collier, Barnesville,
Want girl or woman, raised
farm. for light farm work;
no field work. B. Edge, Savan-
- 1009 Waters:Ave. |
Wi nt white or colored woian,
vis. old, for light farm
vork. Mus be neat and clean.
$2.50 per week, room and board.
pply Mrs. B. M. Mathis; Thom-
pony 727 Goodrich Ave.
tk colored girl or woman,
18-35 yrs. old for light farm
work. No field work. Must be
clean, honest and dependable.
2.00 week and room and board.
-ay raised if work satisfactory.
rensportation free. L. R. Ho-
gan, Atlanta, 3451 Stratford
Veit IN.. We. . ee
Want healthy, able to work,
man or boy to plow and help
ith other farm work. Monthly
or part of crop. No drunk-
4 or loafer need apply. J. M.
Ls ie, Chatsworth, Rt. 2.
Want boy, white or colored,
work | on arm, $15.00 mo.
board, Come or write.
mas Smith, Stockbridge, Rt.
ey
a Want. zood, settled, honest,
1$10.00 month, board,
Middle-aged preferred. Come,
dont write. W. L. WOE: Talk-
ing Rock, Rt. 2.
Want man, white or sotbved:
with family, reliable, to work
for wages. Prefer with 1 or 2
extra plow hands, or do gen.
work on farm. -M. A. Long,
Chamblee, Rt. 2, Dunwoody
Road. :
Want good truck and car driv-
er for work on farm. Reasona-
ble salary and board.
Charles, Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box -.
Want at once, good field man
or boy to-.work for wages or
shares and live as one of family.
Let me hear at once. F. L. Gar-
ris, Hampton, Rt. 1. -
Want at once good, sober,
honest wage hand with good ref.
Want good, middle-aged man
for farm work, one who can do
blacksmith work also.
Charles, Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box 1.
Want good farm hand, white
or colored, with family, Pay
good wages, board, laundry, and
3 acre patch cotton, planted. Let
me hear at once. C. F. Gray,
Danville, Rt. 2.
Want man with farm sa dai-
ry experience at once. Good
salary, room and board. Single
man preferred. H. A. White,
Savannah, Rt. 3, c/o - Whites
Dairy.
Want good plow hand, honest,
upright, interested in stock
growing, $10.00 month and
board; also want 2 good hands
who know how to cut wood.
Mrs. L. P. Puckett, JD. *phone
94,
Want good white man or boy,
18 to 45 yrs. of age, for farm
work. $11.00 mo. laundry,
board with family nice people.
Dock Grizzle, Dahlonega, Rt: 3. |.
Want good, reliable, middle-
aged woman to live in home and
do light farm work. No field
work, T. A. Cox, Lilly.
Want middle-aged, unencum-
|bered, country raised colored
woman for light farm work.
Home and salary. Must be
clean. W. E. Mote, Carrollton,
Rte
Want good, honest, willing
worker to work on farm. $12-00
mo., board and laundry. J. B.
Cowart, Hahira, Rt. 2.
- Want good plow hand af once.
$15.00 mo., room and board. W.
S. Ledford, Vienna, Rt. 6.
Want family, 2 or 3. plow
hands, Pay 90c per day for
aduits and furnish house, wood
and pasture. Come or write at
once. Herman Goss, Jasper.
Want man for good 75 A. farm,
good pasitire, 6 room house, mail
and bus line by door, 15 mi. At-
lanta, near Flat Shoals. Standing
rent. B. Parker, Atlanta, 660
dwoman for light farm | Biyont St.
and boy to help. farm.
ae ; 2 Mrs.
Milledge-
RE 6, Box 27, :
Want. single, white man to
wer
on MS EE, Pittman,
: 10., board and
Peco doe a Alpha- |
Gee Rt, Bs
Want good family of willing
vikers to help make a 4 horse
crop and gather it, and help
work in tobacco, Must -have
enty force,
ible, J. H. Dekle, Register.
Want white man for farm
ork. $14.00 mo. Must work
d know how to farm. P, F,
eard, Sycamore, Rt. 1.
Want. _.onest, upright, white
r, 12-15 yrs. old, to do light
chores around the farm, milk-
family; small wage, oppor-
tun ty to attend school, if
e likes, C. W. cael Atlanta,
823 Dixie St. Ssh
ant woman or girl, white
olored, for light farm work.
i salary, room and. board.
oe _McKinzie, | Swainsboro,
= strong, healthy, -Indus-
lenest young man with
mall fanziiy to work truck farm,
Must be able to keep up gas}
and handy with tools.
_Waddelle, Pearson.
unencumbered white
nm for light farm work. No
Pework. Mrs; T.-C; -Pana-
Valdosta, Rt. 32
ant unencumbered, 35-45 yr.
: -bodied white woman
light farm work, No field
wk. Must furnish health cer-
te, . Mrs. Josephine Clark.
maston.
Want middle- aged woman or
n, without family, to look aft
mall farm and live as mem-
of family. Small salary. Mrs.
ia Varnedoo, Decatur, Rt, 1,
Want at once healthy white
oman, 80 yrs, old, to live in
nd do light farm wrk.
milking nor field work. $8. 00,
th, Miss Mary B. Bradford,
AW
on farm, $10.00 mo., board}.
See at once if!-
Want wage hand for farm.
$13.00 mo., board and laundry.
Need at once, Je -Heath, Dud-
ey.
Want hand able to plow, white
or colored.
kinds farm work.
and good wages.
we will trade, if can agree,
O. Campbell, Dalls, Rt. 4.
Want good man to work on
farm for wages. Must be sober,
reliable and xp. with good ref.
Mrs. J. E. Eller, See
Rt.:2,- Box 40.
Want family of 3 is work tor
wages on truck farm. 3 room
house. $1. 00 per day. . Ref. exc.
Rginald E. Sawyer, Sulphur
Springs. ; :
PLANTS WANTED
Want hear from party hav-
ing, pole cat crowder peas, also
brown-eyed crowders. Mrs. G.
M. Pope, Glenwood, Rt. De
Want some Se seed, pre-
ee long type. SN: Quinn,
Washington, Rt: 2
Want 2 lbs. old time sunflower
seed. State price. T. Oliver,
Franklin Springs. :
Want 1 qt. of willow butter-
bean seed, also white wyandotte
and bufz minorca eggs for hatch-
ing. Must be pure. Mrs. L. M.
Baiker Thomaston, Rt. 8.
Exc. 1 bu. white, pink-eye
crowder peas, lightly damaged,
for 8 M P. R. potato plants, R.
C. Smith, Danville, Rt. 2, Bx 32.
Want some bunch sweet po-
tato draws,
have and price. Miss Jennie
Seago, Vienna, 410 Church St.
Want, tobacco, also Nancy
Hall potato plants, Quote price.
R._S. Moseley, Newborn, Rt. 1._
Want a quantity egg-plant
plants and pepper plants, K. N.
Sharp, Commerce,
Want 1 M egg-plant plants,
dei. May 15. State best var.
and prices. F. P. _ Brinkley,
Marietta, Rt. 1,
Want old fashioned punch
Good home
Come. on and
ay
yams (with creamy meat), also.
any other bunch potato. De-
scribe in full, price, etc. Mrs.
Agnes Butler, Greenwood, Rt. 2.
laundry. |
sible,
Johnson |
Clyde.
also 1 good, used
-both,
Must be exp. in all
| binder,
State what you
nee wih 10-ft. bl ee
Wazt 50 M bunch yam potato|
slips at as early a date as pos-
W. 4H. Cosby, Preston.
Want old. fashioned pink
Spanish sweet potato slips. Fay
good price, J. A. Edge, Albany.
Exec. 5 lbs. ~ood, sound Ky.
| Wonder bean seed for 1 M yel-
low skin P. R. potato plants, or
exc. 1 teacup of seed for 3
: white sugar sacks. Ha. pay post-
age.> Mrsv\Le R. Ashworth, Lo-.
ganville, Rt. 1.
Want 25M. tokacco plants.
State price, kind and when can
del. C. C.: Gates, Screven.
Want 10 M. White Triumph
sweet potato plants. Gordon
Saussy, Savannah.
Second-Hand Machinery |
For 3 Sale
McCormick - Deering Combine,
No. 8, in A-1 cond. A, L. Thomp-
son, Cochran. ~
50 h.p. Atlas eng., for eotton
gin or other farm uses, cheap.
We Ce Turpin, Macon. 376
Orange St. :
4 Continental 70-saw plain
gins, 4 Continental Feeders, 1
dbl. box screw press and. me-
chanical tramper, belts,, shaft-
ings, pulleys. Outfit. used last
season, I. M. Cole, Sharpsburg.
Fordson tractor .with almost
new motor,.80 ft. of shafting,
also new Letz 180 feed mill,
cheap for cash. Mal J. Harper,
Jt, Gardi. P. O. Box 23.
Case Thresher,
good cond.,
ordson trac-
tor and 1 steam ngine. J. T.
Hays, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
Good International
riding cultivator, cheap. Exc.
for good milch cow, or some-
thing else of equal. value can
use. Jas: M. Mareams Sycamore,
Rt. 1, Box 255.
Steam pressure canner cap.
76. No, 2 cans, and automatic
sealer, good cond.
KR. A. Giles, See Mtn.,
Rt 1 2
Oliver No. 25 satentde culti-
vator, good as new, for less than
half price. H. L. Rawlins, Avon-
dale Estates, Rockbridge Road.
Gravely garden tractor, per-
fect cond., $257.00 machine and
tools for $100 cash. W. J.
Hartrampf, Atlanta, 103 Atl.
National Bldg., WA 2055. ~
2-horse Chattanooga turning
plow in good cond. for sale or
exe. for a guano distributor in
good shape. J. M. Davis, Elli-
jay; Rt.2. Box 882.5
Tractotr plow with 2 wheels
and 2 turn plows, good as new,
for sale or trade for good 3 1- 2
gal. cow; Reversible hillside disc |-
for sale or swap, D. A. Halli-
day, Statham.
1 threshing machine in good
order, $50.00. W. B. Hutchinson,
Leesburg, -
2 steam eng., 40 and 20 h.p., 2
tractors, Fordson, Farmall trac-
tor plows, harrows, 1 Big Bill,
other farming tools. Good cond.,
ready for use. ee Come
see. Dont write. W. I. Dorris,
Douglasville.
1 Racine grain thrashing ma-
chine (thrash peanuts also),
ready to -xrun. -. Cheap: ~ , P.
King, Wrens. ee
Second-hand short cotton gin,
also 1 long cotton gin and 1
press at your own price for
quick sale. (William . Drury,
yaverly, Z
4 to 6- horse boiler and eng.,
first class cond., for sale. or
trade for Ga. cane syrup: half
now and half next Fall, or for
young hens. B. F. Beller, Green-
ville.
8-ft. McCormick- WeeriAe grain
binder and 6-{t. Deering grain
kinsville,
Good grain thresh, Sood run-
ning cond., $100.00, or will take
cows, hogs, or anything can
use on farnr.td oC. Reese, Mid-
land.
Moline single planter, ised 1
season, cotton seed and barn
and corn plates, $17. 50; Chat-
tanooga: turn plow: No, 72:1-32,
$9.00. Good cond. All FOB my
station. Will exc. Kvell Pope,
Tallapoosa. :
3-roller syrup mill, walking
cultivator, dise plow, Osborn
mowing machine, and rake. All
good cond. J. C. Eades, Gaines-
ville; Rt. 7.
Corn planter, practically new,
complete. Terrace King make.
Sell or trade. Frank Cochran,
La Grange, 201, Baugh Sts - >
~ Fordson tractor pulley, $5.00;
1 Lilliston peanut machine,
cheap. Day Davis, Rutledge,
2 dbl. unit Fairbanks-Morse
milking machine, practically
new and highly satisfactory, for
sale or trade_for cattle, at my
place. Value $150.00. Mrs. N.
Thomas, College Park,
Roosevelt Highway.
Middle buster, good cond., 2
single plow stocks, hoes, garden
rake, 2-horse wagon, cheap for
cash, Mrs. Tom Hill, Daniels-
mee Rt. oe
H. C. No. 2 2, power driven
power
F-20,
ade;
- Second.
$75.00.
2-horse |
$25.00 for,
Ss Anderson, Haw- |:
Hand Machinery
For Sale
No. 10 pebaval ee food
cond., $25.00. Mts.
. iH. James,
Oakfield. :
Fordson tractor (need some |
repairs), $50.00; Fairbanks-
Morse eng., 6 h.p., good shape,
$50.00; Meadows grist mill, 14-
in, rock, nearly new, $25.00;. Mc-
Cormick binder, ready to run,
fH. "Lake, Wrights-
ville, Rt. 1. /
Complete gin outfit, cheap.
J. T. Harwood, Buchanan, Rt. 2.
Davis swing churn, 40- -gal, cap,
DeLaval separator; bottle cap-
per. Miss Genie Hammond, Au-
gusta, Rt: 3.
Beeman water eons heavy
walking garden tractor, $50.00;
implements, $25.00. lL. D.
Pherson, Bremen.
Barrel churn, good cond., 12
or 15-gal. cap., $5.00. cash or exc.
for A No. 1 1936 lard or meat,
L. B. Landrum, Adairsville.
R. D. Cole grist mill, 36-in.
rock, good shape, for sale or
exc. for an upright mill, 18 or
20-in, J. W. Smith, Bowdon.
Johnson binder, reasonably
good cond. Sell or trade for
something can use profitably. S.
F. Bohanan, Conyers.
Good, used 20 h.p. Fairbanks- :
Morse Deisel eng., $250.00. H. K.
Ross, Springvale.
John Deere binder for 3 mules,
some repairs needed, $35.00 at
farm, if taken at once. J. C.
Ragan, Pelham, Rt. 2.
A -No. 21 1-2-A Sterling pea-
nut. picker and grain thrasher,
used only 1 season, good cond.,
cheap for cash, or exc, for young
calves. Mrs. : W. Matthews,
Woodland.
DeLaval Cream Sebaeaioe No,
12, in okay cond., $25.00; Buck-
eye Incubator, No. ols cap., 2772,
cheap. E. R. Bailey, Harlem.
1 power Pepper or Tobacco
Setter, good cond., cheap. T. H.
Parker, Milner, Rt, 2.
Mower and rake, dise har-
row, farm bell, 1 ea. Covington,
Avery Cole and Ledbetter plant-
er, and other farm implements.
Dan Browning, Helena, Pz O.
Box 264.
Binder, good shape rceant
needs bottom sheet), cut not
more than 125 acres of grain,
$75.00 cash.
Dawson,
Swing Hammer feed mill,
complete with direct fan, col-
lector, and sacking spouts and
3 screens. Practically half
price. E. T. Boswell, Jr, Siloam.
30-in. Williams grist mill,
Master Jay Bee mill, motor,
pulleys, belts, shafting, J 4:
Davis, Elko, RFD.
Complete corn mill outfit, 15-
hip. eng., $75.00; 20-in, Mead-
ows mill, $75.00; 2-hole sheller,
$25.00; pr. Howe scales, $12.00.
All good. cond. G. M. Williams,
Covington, Rt. 2.
Boiler and eng., fair shape,
for sale. B. Crow, Gainesville.
80-saw gins. and equipment |
with dbl. box press, reasonable.
| Mrs. M.-H. Cook, Dunwoody,
7 - ft. McCormick - Deering
binder, good cond., curtains
almost new, cheap, T. J. Mor-
gan, Americus, Rt. D.
Deering New Deal Type P
Reaper, not a binder. Run last
season, not worn much. 2 horse,
light, saves grain too short for
binder, $25.00. J. EL; Gaissert,
Madison.
New Ideal Derite eadee 6
ft., cut, good cond. except trip
needs adjusting (and perhaps 1
elevator canvas), $50.00.- Jas.
L. McDaniel, Norcross, REESE,
1 Williams grist mill and trac-
tor for sale. GC, cs Teyeeens,
Kelle, Box (8s 35 8 e 2
PEANUTS AND PECANS
___ FOR SALE
No 1 aeirsn grown N. C.
- x
runner peanuts, 5 1-2c per Ib.
{fO.bo = Ce: CO. Giddens, Jr., Adel.
Selected Spanish Seed Pea-
nuts, 12 1-2e per lb. del., 6 lb. or
more lots: Remit with order.
AE, Haddon, 1827. Montgom-
ery-St,, Savannah,
Extra fine selected paper
shell pecans, new crop; (50 or
less nuts weigh a pound), 5 lbs.
for $1.00, 11 Ibs. for. $2.00: 16
Ibs. for $3. 00. Postpaid through
3rd zone, Mrs, T. C. Floyd, Route
2, Box 74, Chipley, \
Red Spanish Peanuts, 8c per
Ib; also, White Black Bye Peas,
6c. per ib.: Tan Crowder Peas,
6c per Ib. All F.O.B. Glenn
Hays, Rockmart.
No, 1 Virginia Bunch Peanuts,
5e Ib; also Schley pecans, 20
per Ib.; Stewart Pecans, 15c
per lb. Money order, Ww. s.
Norton, Edison.
Nice White Spanish Peanuts,
2te per gal: also Texas Seeded
cane seed, 6c per Ib. Artichokes
6e per ib. Add postage. Mrs.
Alberta oe Buchanan,
Ree aoe
MUTTON aioe
Mc-
D. Ds Woolbright, ;
Sheppard str.
Want 1 bu. O-too-tan
beans. Eixc.. slightly mixe
peas. Roy Tilley, Tayl
Exc. 10 or more bu. sou
weevil - treated, new crop J
peas for same grade pure Iro
Clays or Whippoorwill peas. M
J. C. Bryan, Reynolds.
- Want 8-10 bu. early Bun
Speckled. peas. S. H. James
field.
Want cream sugar rs wi
poas, Whippoorwills (bun I
Brown Crowders. Send sa
jand lowest price. BoM. T
son, Bainbridge, Rt. 138
Exc. 1 bu. Brown sugar
der peas for 1-2 bu. O-t
beans. W. T. Brown, FE bu
Rta te
PEANUTS AND. PECAN
WANTED |
Want 2 bu. pure an
Valencia (Red Spanish) ~
nuts about May 10th. Exch. 25:
nice Marglobe and Baltimore
mato plants for 2 bu. ea
Exp. ehgs. Send: samples,
Young, Rebecca.
ee HERBS WANTED. ;
Want 1-2 Ib. fresh black s
root. State best cash price. Mi
Ethel Wooten, Summervi
Rte2.
COTTON SEED WANT
Want 200 bu. best cotton s
Send description and- pri
H. Felker, Monroe, Rt. 1, Bo
GRAIN. AND HAY WANTE
wane 200. bundles good. fod
R. M. Corley, de e
~ GRASS ROOTS WANTEL
Want Bear-foot grass
- W. Brewn, Lincolnton.
Want some
Bunch Yam potnice 2 runn
bunch var. Also have 2 Ib
lard seed for sale. M. J.
ran, Monticello, Rt. 3, B
- SEED WANTED a
Want some seed of the big 1
bus* gourds. 77. ; Blair,
Airy. | e ;
: Want 10- ibs. Garnah 4
Grass seed at reasonable pric
Mrs J. a; Hurst, Sylveste
BEANS AND PEAS WANT
Want 15 bu. sound, pur
peas, at not over $2.00 bu.
transportation chgs. Sends
ple. Mrs. Harry. D. Hamr
Augusta, Rt. 3. |
Want to buy some Afri
Cane seed. Write price.
Stephens, Athens, 428 Firs
Want fresh Calif. beer.
Send best price. Mrs.
Green, Atlanta, Rt. 2 (C. B
Road).
Mrs. F. M. Snow, eta Rt
Want eggs to aie on halt
any breed, W. L. preferred.
10. Martin, Lumpkin, Rt.
Want Narragansett turkey e.
Mrs, J.J. Hurst, Sylvester.
Want 50 eggs for hatchi
the following: White Cor
Spangled Hamburgs, Colum
Wyandottes, Blue Andalusia
Kewi, white, Buff Cochin
tam. J. D. Paramore, Bainbrid
P: O; Box: 853533 Ste
Want some TURKEN ;
turkey eggs). State price,
when can del. SQ. =o
Ludowici, Rt. 2. c
Exc. white running
bean seed (bear until fros
Ancona egg:
Ibs. for 17 eggs. Mrs.
Holloway, Cobbtown, Rt
BUTTER FOR SAL
4 Ibs. fine Jersey butter
week, 25c Ib. in Ist and 2nd 0)
Cash with order. No chks.
Virgil. T. Chamblee, Cummi
Box 53. oe Ree
FRUIT TREES
Old yellow clingston
time
peach and or clear seed
trees, 25c.ea. Rooted. Add
age. Exe, for seed bean
cabbage plants. Bob Loe
men, Rt. 2.
Horseradish, garlic, 25e do
cherry sprouts, 3 for 40c; h
zlenut blueberries, 6 for
Goose, red, yellow plums,
35c; mint, 20c doz. Add
age. Harold Heaton, M
Bluff. a
4 ibs: nice butter, $1. 00,
in 1 shipment to 3rd zone
exe. for 1 M. strong P. R.
tato plants, del. at once.
first. Mrs. L. A. Sander :
land.
4 Ibs. fresh Jersey putt
week, 25c Ib. del ist a
zones. No. chks,. _nor
Cash, Mrs. A. L,
land, Rt. A, Be