Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1937 May 15

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HAMILTON RALLS, SUPERVISOR, MARKETING DIVISION

Sc han SE naa RA

STATE CAPITOL, ATLANTA, GEOR GIA, MAY (15, 1937

BEANS: First Georin beans arrived in At-

The movement has increased rapidly

. Quality is generally good and ship-

have been made mostly by truck. Hd oe Sariet
s moved on May 11. He

BAGE: Cabbage continues to ie in good
rom South Georgia points. Recent sales in
a, have ranged $1-2.25. per hundred pounds bulk,

ding to quality, with most sales from $1.25 to

otal shipments by rail for the present season

amount to 188 cars. (May 12,3
LISH PEAS: Movement to Atlanta ker has

light and most offerings of ordinary quality,

quality stock has sold high as $1.50.
ACHES: On May i, 1937, the Georgia crop. was
| to be only 36 per cent of normal, while on
1936, the crop was_ reported to be 70 per cent

The crop in Georgia this year is expected |
The crop in Georgia this |

per cent of normal.
ected to produce a 340,000 bushels compared

TOHS: The first truckload of Irish potatoes,
~The Georgia
ov ment. is expected to begin around May 15..

d in Atlanta on May 11.

Ss Triumphs and Cobblers will be available

. The crop is reported to be 77 per cent
May 1, 1937, or 5 per cent higher than

me date in 1936.

Ww ERRIES: Movement continues: very light, |



3 predominated on the Atlanta market.
erally good. Atlanta prices have ranged from $1.50-

limited 16 a few shipments by express and fick: Re-

ceipts from nearby points are arriving in Atlanta in
very light volume,

SQUASH: Yellow Crookneck squash commenced |

moving from South Georgia on. May 8. Shipments
have gradually increased by truck until Georgia stock
Quality is gen-

3.00 per bushel with best offerings now. available at

$2.25 per bushel. (May 12.) 5:
TOBACCO: From Georgias 1936 crop of 85, 000 acres

of Tobacco, there was produced 82,450,000 pounds, The

average seasonal price was 21c per pound, making the:

crop value equal to $17,314,000,
WHEAT: Georgias crop this year is placed at oe 734,-
000 bushels, with 1,560,000 bushels produced in 1936.

| Georgia has 204 000 acres for Daye

w



Bay: ATLANTA SPOT COTTON

- May 1451937 oe Spot Cotton closed steady
tage at 13.60 per pound for Iiddling. es

The average price of middling 7/8 in, staple on |
ten Southern markets was 12.90 per pound, the
average for the past 30 days was 13.39 per pound.

Staple premiums: April 29. The average premium
paid on six Southern markets was 63 points on for
ante ane 125 ake on. a one inch. oe





ATLANTA. -WOOL MARKET ~~

washed wool. 45e; free from burs 37%4c; light
burry 34%6e; medium burry alte; heavy burry 25.



Se

REPORTS FROM STATE MARKETS

THE DOUGLAS MARKET -

Irish potatoes are beginning to move from Coffee
County and by the time this issue is out we shall be abl
to load trucks packed in either hampers, standard po
tato boxes of one bushel, or in hundred pound bags.
These potatoes will be packed at the Market under
my direction, graded according to United States stan
ard grades and specifications, We have the machinery
available for the farmers use here at the market. Bh
Is selling one-fifty to one-sixty.

Beans are also moving slowly. Trucks are invited to-
contact me and [I will assist them in obtaining a load
here at the Market. Beans are selling here Sas
one- -seventy-five to two dollars, A 3) 2

All of the cabbage are gone from this section with
the exception of small lots, which are bringing from
one to one and a quarter cent, ;

Would like to call special attention ae Bountifu
beans. Will have few loads of these. All beans will |
be graded .here at the Market on tables which we

iy have constructed specially for. this purpose. 2 ae

H. W. LONG, Manager. 4

THE MACON MARKET

The prices of farm produce have held fairly el

during the last 15 days, and the quality has been exe
ceptionaly. good considering the unfavorable weather
_ conditions.
Th maintain good prices for all Georgia produce
Spring and Summer,

The late Spring weather should help

According to reports from
truckers of Florida vegetables, their crop is practically

exhausted and since the late Spring has delayed. the

Georgia crop, there will be very little overlapping and

-Should help to maintain good prices for Georgia pee

duce where properly prepared for market.
ones. 25. Page Two)



Hoa MARKET

a 3 ATLANTA
4, 1937. These prices quoted by The Ww hite
n. Company on standard hard hogs: |
No. 1 180-240 Perewt (o. $10.35
Bee TOOTS 0 eer ws, 53. 3, css
8 130-150 Per Cwt.
<< Jo0-150 Per Gwt. 5
& 180 Per Cwt. down $7.00 down

cet eoesee

_ 6 sows and stags......; CA 407.85 @8.85 |

edium oe and sow hogs bought at Prevailing
MOULTRIE ~

it e, Ga., Mag: 14.Sott Hog mar kot steady
e 240 Sates and up





PRICES ON FRESH GEORGIA
VEGETABLES __

- Prevailing on State Farmers. Market,
Atlanta, Sater (May 14, 1937).

$ .50$ .50

We liskaeees cee 00 205.
dO 50
40 45 -
60-= 90
1.40

Bets, per. doz. iakcued
Cabbage, per ewt, (Best)...
Carrots, per doz. bunches,
Corn, green, per doz.. .
Collards, per doz. bunches.

cee eseees eer eres

Ceoreoneeeras |
-% @Se@ensere

Mustard greens, per Ten ;
Onions, green, per doz. bunches
No. 1 New Bliss Triumph, per cwt..
Potatoes, Sweet, per cwt..
Radishes, per doz. bunches. <
Spinach, per bu.. es
Turnips, per doz, meee |,

Turnip Salad, per hamper.
Strawberries, per 24 qt. crate









ATLANTA.

ne ere eoenae

STEERS AND HEIFERS
Fat Beef types
Medium, fat types ...
Fat, native types ..
Fat Cows

_Canner types
Canners, cutters, mostly

Fat types . Speaias
Medium types .,.

Fat types .... :
Medium types 7.00 a
Common: 35: 445. pokes B00 @ 95507)
Throwout types ~ 4.50 down |







/ MARKET REPORT OF GEORGIA PRODUCTS |

eo evailing. Waolesiie Prices (F.O. B. Points Mentioned).

Subject to change.

May 15, 1937.



' ~ Atlanta

| Barnesville 2

Gommerce| Clarkesville, Sava { Glenn

"yHawaineville| Mt. Vernon|

Sandersville |



18-207

toes, er100:Tbs. .. 2. :,.
ge (green, per 100 Ibs.) . ee ek
White, per 100 Ibs) .....
a No. if see





Ie Te | 22
20 a : SES 4 -
20 2045-0 18.20 20 | 20

15 = 14
Le sf re
09 | 3 09
112 : 2

20
10
08
wae?

LI]

Thoth Sty

Ovo ocs 1

| | aren is
SUST HS bo
DON

-
ot
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.20 doz.
: 20 ase
-19-.21 420 234420. doz.

Me! .20 epee
20. sao
Set Aa Tb:
Aes 10 lb.
07
412
2)











a

JORGIA MARKET BUL LETIN

Published Semi-Monthly
es By ae
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





elation aa MAY 15, 1937

5 Sintered as second class matter February 15, 1922, at the Post
Office at Atlanta, Georgia, under the act of June 8, 1930. Acceptd
for mailing at special rate of postage yoo for m 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
nly when request is accompanied by new copy of: notice.





Second. hand farm machinery, flowers and seed, incubator and
ornamental nursery stock notices are published in issue of the 15th.



Farm tand for sale editions are published at intervals during the

year. Advance notices of these editions appear from time to time
dvising advertisers when to mail us these types of notices. -

Limited space will not permit insertions of notices containing
re than 30 words including name and address.
right to cut down notices of more than 30 words, providing that
this reduction does not destroy the meaning of the notices. When

otices 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 Builetin or trans-

ction resulting therefrom,

REPORTS FROM STATE MARKETS .
(Continued From Page One)
We wish again to call attention to the importance of properly pre-
paring all produce offered for sale. Poorly graded and packed
produce never brings top prices and has a tendency to lower

he prices.on better grades and consequently no one is able to

get the price to which he is justly entitled.

a

ather conditions, while some were exceptionally fine. Now that

Spring has opened up we feel that we will soon have some excel- |
ent Georgia produce on the market and will be able to demand

price for all offered. J. N. RAINES; Manager.
THE THOMASVILLE. MARKET

_ There has been a considerable improvement of the conditions
the Thomasville State Market.

usy season is just beginning.
_ At the present time the leading produce is beans.
for them is just beginning, but we have already moved a large
ount from this section... The price on these beans ranges from
50 to $1.75 per hamper. Squashes are moving in small quan-
ities and are bringing from $1.75 to $2.00 per hamper. The cab-
Db ge season is about over; however, we are still moving
some at from $25.00 to $40. 00 per ton. We have hada very good
eason for cabbage and the price has held up remarkably well.
The acreage of tomatoes planted is a good deal larger than
last year. With favorable weather conditions we should have a
ry good season. Cantaloupes and watermelons will not begin
ving until about the 20th of June.
We have established buyers on the market to take care of the
ans, etc., coming in. The packing shed which is now being
built, will probably be completed by the end of the week. Half
of the space has already been rented by established buyers.

With our present set-up we will be able to take care of all the

acne of the truckers and carlot buyers. J. M. J OINES, Manager.

2 THE VALDOSTA MARKET
Snap Beans, Squash, Red Bliss Potatoes, are beginning to
come in and we are moving them at a fair price.

_ he farmers are falling in line with the idea of grading their
roduce, and they have found out that the preducer who takes
an interest in grading and packing has no trouble in selling.
have good grading tables here at the Market, and a plenty for all;
but it would be a good idea for the farmers to do some of their
ding at home, as this would save the hauling of culls back
ome for the stock.

We are here to help you in any way that we can to prepare

roduce right for marketing.

_ Cabbages have come back up in price, and we have been able
to load some few trucks lately, and I have some cabbage listed on
the Market that will be ready to ship in 10 days.

The outlook is good for us to start loading trucks daily with
all varieties of produce.

You can get any kind of containers that you want here on the
markethampers, potato crates, cucumber baskets, etc.-and
_ we are having several inquiries daily from truckers wanting to
know when we can load. We are glad to say it will not be long.

eS PAUL W. CARTER, Manager.

THE CLAXTON MARKET

Putting cover on top of Market Building this week. The acreage
0) different crops and date of going to market are as follows:
Cucumbers, two hundred acres, May 20th; green beans, sixty
5 acres, now; Trish potatoes, seventy-five acres, May 15th; tomatoes,
600 acres, June 5th; fordhook beang, hundred fifty acres, June
1th; green corn, 200 acres; watermelons, 350 acres, July Ist.

ets ae T. CAVENDER, ee ee

for their products. .

We reserve the

We have received only a few South Georgia snap beans up to.
yw and some of them are a little off in quality due to unfavorable

The quantity of produce being
andled has increased enormously dn the past few days, and the

The season.

Wel

and thereafter in



increased doub i _ A potato g Eredicd machine and grading tables

4

have been erected for the purpose of assisting the growers in>

the grading and packing of their. produce, in order that it may
sell faster and that they may obtain the best prices available

Squash and [Irish potatoes are ee now.
itiec such as: tomatoes, onions, cucumbers, snap beans and ford-

hook bush Limas are expected to begin moving about May 25th.

The outlook of the crops is very good, and it is our aim to

jrender to the farmers of this section every service possible in

helping them in every way to handle their produce to the very
best advantage. WALTER BRITTINGHAM, Manager.

NOTE: Harry S. Petty, County Agent, writes that farmers in

Tattnall County will have two hundred acres of white Bermuda |
Jonions and one hundred and twenty-five acres of Irish potatoes

ready to move through the Glennville snarkots = to

| June ist.

Continuing, he says: We want buyers to come to the Glenn-

| ville Farmers Market and it will be to their interest, for we
lhave approximately 1,000 acres of tomatoes, 125 acres of cu-

eumbers, 50 acres of beans, and 50 acres of squash in the county,

all of which will be ready to move about June ist.Ed.

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
inquiries concerning sales, purchases or consignments will be
promptly handled by this office or by the following managers of
State Farmers Market in the different producing areas:

L. E. Payne, Manager, State Farmers Market, Atlanta; Ga.

John N, Raines, Manager, State Farmers Market, Macon, Ga.

J. M. Joines, Manager, State Farmers Market, Thomasville, Ga.

Harrell W. Long, Manager, State Farmers Market, Douglas, Ga.

Paul Carter, Manager, State Farmers Market, Valdosta, Ga.

Walter Brittingham, Manager, State. Farmers Market,: cpornee
ville, Ga. ; i

DATES OF SCHOOLS ON GRADING AND PACKING |

We are giving you below schedule, of schools to be held on

the State Farmers Markets by the College of Agriculture Exten-

sion Division:

Thomasville, Tuesday, May 18, at 10:00 a. m. and 2:00 p. m.

Valdosta, Wednesday, May 19, at 10:00 a. m. and 2:00 p. m.

Douglas, Thursday, May 20, at 10:00 a. m.;
meeting.

Glennville, Friday, May 21, at 10:00 a. m. and 2:00 Dp. mM.

At all of these schools, Mr. L. E. Farmer, Marketing Specialist
of the CoHege of Agriculture, and Mr. Elmo Ragsdale, Extension
Horticulturist, College of Agriculture, will lecture on and give
demonstrations in proper grading and packing of fruits and vege-
tables. h
son, Extension Economist, will lecture on and give demonstra-
tions in the handling, grading and marketing of eggs and poultry.
The county agents in the area surrounding the different markets
will assist in the days work.

Mr. J. W. Sikes, Assistant Supervisor, Marketing Division, State
Department of Agriculture, will attend all of these schools and

represent the Department of Agriculture.

We feel that the proper grading and packing of Germ produce
is essential to its:successful sale; therefore, farmers who are pro-
ducing fresh fruits and vegetables, poultry and eggs for market
should attend one of these meetings listed above which is nearest
to them. : HAMILTON RALLS,

= he ee a, a

THE GEORGIA FARM PRODUCTS

. MARKETING ASSOCIATION

On May 4, 1937, a group of producers and incorporators of the
above Association met at the State Capitol in Atlanta and per-
fected- its organization. z

J. T. Stewart, of WebNdines, was elected President. J. W.
Zorn, of Ashburn, Vice-President, and J. a: Gay, Secretary .and
General Manager.

The present Board of Dircters are:

T. E. Phillips, Jr

Tifton, Georgia
J. W. Zorn

Ashburn, Georgia
Valdosta, Georgia
Ochlochnee, Georgia
Giger ee . Claxton, Georgia
Hogansville, Georgia

Columbus, Georgia

Se T. Stewart.
H. N. Daniel

A. F. Randall

_ The purpose of the Association is the economical and profitable

marketing of the produce grown by members of the Association
and also produce grown by farmers who are not members, which
may be shipped or turned over to them for sale. |

CONDITION OF MEMBERSHIP

In Article 5, Section 1, of the By-Laws, it states: No person,

including individuals, firms, partnerships, corporations, or asso-_

ciations, may become or continue to be a member of this Asso-
ciation unless such person is and continues to be a bona fide
producer of Agricultural products, and agrees to comply with
the By-Laws, rules and regulations of the association.

Each member shall also pay at the time membership is granted
advance upon the beginning of each fiscal
year of the Association the sum of $1.00.

COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS.
To form a local or community organization it is necessary to

| have at least twelve members before they can elect a Director

to serve on the State Board of Directors of the Georgia Farm
Products Marketing Association,

Complete information, together with the necessary forms to
be used in, the organization of community affiliates may be
obtained by writing J. D. Gay, Secretary-Treasurer, Georgia Farr
Products Marketing Association, 101 Piedmont Avenue, Atlanta
Georgia.

NOT ORGANIZED FOR GAIN.

The Georgia Farm Products Marketing Association was not
organized to make money. Its primary object is to help farmers
put their produce in marketable shape and dispose of it to the
best advantage and to help keep the Produce Market stabilized
To start with, a charge of 10 per cent will be made to cover cost
of handling, etc. Any profits made by the Association will be
prorated ee its. members on a participating basis.

s

813.

Other commod-

| personally.
seemed to us of so much

bage at the same time.

no afternoon.

At the afternoon sessions, where listed, Mr. R. J. Richard-

th Association is now open for
) Atlanta, Georgia, at |:



Saturday, May

More About Prod cti
And Marketing

By F. J. Merriam <

Since the publication of
T. L. Hoshalls article on
etable Production and -Mar
ing in. the: April Ist Bull
we have had an opportuni
discuss . this subject with
What. he had te

that we give it to you just
he told it to us. He said:

You folks up there at,
State Capitol, Mr. Roberts,
Ralis and the rest of you in in
Agricultural Department
working along the right lines,
said Mr. Hoshall, and I am gl

to see it. There is no fellin
| how much money can be bro

into this state when you get t
produce business organized.
Now the thing to do, a
see it, is to work with
around your market ma
and through the county a
and have. them organize
growers. By. this I mean
all the growers of cabbage,
in a given market radiu
plant the same variety of
If you
folks plant a round-headed ve
riety let them all plant irour
cabbage..and not some fr
and some pointed. Then
will be able to ship a unifo
grade in ear lots and mo
them, to markets other:
Atlanta and thereby net a]
er price. ie
Get the idea out of
growers heads that Atlan
your only market. The At
market is very easily glutted.
Only this morning I bow:
truek load of cabbage
left the trucker no
whatever. Likely he pai
grower as much as I paid h
but he was stuck and had
move his load at a price. N
if that cabbage and a lot mo
like it could have been shippe
out ef the state it would |
brought the grower more
start with and relieved the

sure here so that I might hay

had to pay twice what I
see?
All right. Now get your | di
ferent communities-to plant tl
same variety of beans at
same time. Concentrate t

beans at your markets and s!

in carloads. "Phere are eae
of big cities ready to ye
your beans.

The same holds good wi
tomatoes. Let everyone pla
the same seed at the same tim
Then you will bave enou
one time to warrant car
shipments. Then see that th

are picked, graded -and pack

right and your selling machi.
very ean work to advantage. Yc
will then have enough produc
one kind atone time to war

1 keeping in touch with all t

large markets and sell the stu

where it is most needed and w

bring the highest price.
Loading Cabbage
Mr. Hoshall next proceed

| tell me how he loaded out

lots of cabbage so they wou
carry and not turn yellow.
said, You see these refrig
tor cars have slatted floors
are supposed to give ventilatic
but for a car of cabbage this
a delusion. If you load cabb
in bulk into these cars witho
the necessary made ventilat

| they will turn yellow on you
| spite of .the world.
| thing

Now tl
to do is to make a
Shaped frame work to |
through the middle. Take twe
pieces 2x4, 34 imches long -
make six triangles, nailing t
pieces together. Place these
equal distance apart starting
feet from each end of the
Bevel off the bottoms and

nail in so they will stand. Th

run two pieces of 1x6 along
top clear out to the end of
car, being careful to have the
make a smooth joint at the
so your gates will slide witho
catching. I will tell you abo
these gates directly. Well, t
you run slats ix4 imeh st
along each side close enough
gether so the cabbage won
erowded through. When
get this done build .four chi
neys, one foot square and lo
enough to run from the top
your frame to the top of vo
load of cabbage or about
feet from the top of the ce
You. can make these out of 1
inch stuff and set these up
equal distances along as
fill in your load. Then bui
two gates that will fit over yo
frame across the car and h
enough to hold the cabbage bi

car until you reach the ce
when you take out your
and elose up the gap with
bage.. For this frame we
the .cheapest lumber we
get. and charged the buyer
for it and they never kie
Loaded this way, you can ea
put 20,000 pounds of ca
in @ car and still have t

|} three feet to spare at

I have shipped a
cars of _cabba. =











Ne

a







5
os






















one-crop and tenant''system of farming.
not livethey cannot live successfully on non-produc-






red hills of Georgia.

Be.

eee

3

will not have
_ we take pleasure in quoting as much of them as we |
have space for, because this whole matter is the very
foundation of successful marketing. The first step |
in successful marketing is successful production and
it is practically impossible to produce successfully on |

only three gained perceptibly.

aiurday, May 15, 1937 :

IF WE DESTROY OUR SOIL

WE DESTROY OUR LIVING

CIVILIZATION OF THE PRES PRESENT AND FUTURE

MUST TURN TO THE SOIL FOR INSPIRA-
TION AND HOPE.

_ FirstHow to stop the loss of our fertile top soil.

SecondHow to build back the top soil on our farm
land which has been lost through erosion, due to the

People do

tive land and they will not live on non-productive
land if there is any productive land left on which
to move. This has been proved definitely by the mi-
gration of our people from the Piedmont section of this
state, as the top soi] has been allowed to wash off the

in the world and there would be none today if it
could be restoredgiiiigits original state.

There has been a continual migration of farmers |

from this section for the last fifty years. As the land
pecame poorer, they have moved with their families

to South Georgia, Florida, Sand Mountain in. Alabama,

Texas, California, and other irrigated sections of the
West. The population apparently has barely been
maintained by an increase in the development of man-
ufacturing enterprises, such as the textile mills.

During this period South Georgia has made won-
derful strides. The stumps left by the sawmills have
peen replaced by homes and farms equal to those any-
where in the southeast, but it is painful to see, when
you. ride through this great section today, that the top
soil is rapidly getting away.

All of our people must be aroused in some way to

_ the seriousness of thissituation. There is not a citi-

zen in Georgia, great or small, who is not affected, or

whose etten will not be affected by this tremendous |

loss.

_ The recent General Assembly session led by Gover-
nor Rivers made available for the first time for Geor-
gia the machinery for a state-wide system of soil
cohservation. A careful analysis of this legislation,
together with the problems which it is planned to
solve, was made in four very splendid articles by
Tarleton Collier, in his columnBehind the Head-
lines, in the Atlanta Georgian, beginning May 5. We
commend these articles to everyone interested in the
welfare of Georgia and for fear that all our readers
an opportunity to read them.

poor, washed away land.

We quote Mr. Collier as he begins with a report of
his findings in the course of a recent tour over the
Little River Soil Conservation Project near Gaines-
yille, Ga.

As a start of the days activities, the group of farm-
ers and farm agents who assembled yesterday in the
Federal court room at Gainesville heard Henry Estes,

the growthor lack of itof Georgia, and particularly

In that period Georgia gained in population, he re-
called, only four-tenths of one per cent. It lost, by
virtue of its lag behind the nations general growth,
_ two representatives in Congress.

of 18
counties in the district Mr. Estes pointed out, 10 lost
in population, one small county losing as many as
2,100; five gained fewer than 1,000 people each, and
An increase in indus-
trial development accounted for the gain in two of

these counties, Hall and Cherokee, and only one of |

them which grew to any extent was an agricultural
county, Habersham, One of the causes submitted by
Mr. Estes for this decline was the waning productivity
of the land, the loss of its fertility and wealth. Its

substance is washed from the fields with every rain,
smudging all out streams, filling their beds, causing |

* floods and dank pools.



















After much more on this line was said, the group '

went out and took automobiles to ride over 28,000

acres of the county in which something is being done

to stop this waste and tovhold the land foi the people
who live on it and work it.
ivity on a program which is most fateful in Georgias
history in its prospects of success or failure. The first

stop in the tour was at a field beside the Cleveland
; It was a spot typical of the land: in this |
hilly region, the land which is so rich and bountiful
Ee as long as man suffers it to remain where nature put

Highway.

it for his service.
But the field a year ago had been like many an-

- other, you may see on every handa plot that sloped

steeply from the road to a little depressed valley, then

Steeply up again to a summit crowned with trees, |

tawny and bare of vegetation, washed by gullies, good
for nothing except to hold the earth together.

Today it wears the misty pale green of young rye, |
The soil- |
_ builders had gone about marking the contours with |
Many little ridges, each of which was designed as a

and in another year will be a fair pasture.

dam to hold the water from the slope above. Nu-

: merous short, deeper trenches had been dug, to serve |
_ as reservoirs. ~'The tract had been sowed thickly with |

rye, bermuda grass and lespedeza and fertilized. Dams

_ of brush and stone, dams of chicken wire and gal- |
| concerning mans responsibilities and rights.

vanized iron strips from the tornado-wrecked roofs
of Gainesvitie were set up in the gully courses. The
Soil is beginning to grow, to accumulate.

Down the road a little piece the visitors paused to_
inspect terraces made in the arduous old-fashioned |

ay of the Tarmer working alone, without precision,

: : Georgias two greatest economic problems today are:

There was no finer cotton land:

| is a unique and individual soul.
a farmer who is suspicious of the conservation pro- |

president of that.brave towns Chamber of Commerce, |
recite some intresting figures which touched upon |

; of Georgias. Ninth Congressional District, in the dec- |
ade 1920-1930.

What they saw was act- |

} enthusiasm and drive.



:
pueY oe EQuTR 1s BS ae
See SSeS . = oN se paeEss

MARKET BULLETIN

| without machines, with drains that made new gullies. |
In another field a government terracing machine |

was at work, turning up the hillside along the contour .
dines, :

shaping trenches and embankments to catch
and hold the water. They moved easily and swiftly,

| performing as the men watched in course of a brief |

stop the work that even a team of three mules, the
ultimate of old-fashioned power, could not have per-
formed 'in hours, if at all. :

Machinery and engineering efficiency are neces-
sary in this task of rebuilding the land, and even at

that it is slow work. It will necessarily be slow, be- |

cause the havoc which it seeks to remedy was gene-
rations in the making,
and enlightened could do it alone except by back-
breaking labor for his men and his stock. Many re-
sources must go into iis pursuit and a huge organiza-
sion must be recruited. Everything that is being tried
may not work out well.

Because the task of rebuilding our soil is so tre- |

mendous and because it involves the welfare of each
and everyone of our people, we believe that it can neo

longer be considered as the farmers problem alone. |

This is unquestionably a public problem. Therefore,
we believe that the state and county authorities should
take steps as quickly as possible to insure the check-
ing of top soil erosion on every farm in Georgia, even
to the extent that the proper machinery and equip-

j ment and supervision be furnished to the farmer, he

only being required to furnish the necessary labor
which he has on his own farm.

Again quoting Mr. Collier:

At the present rate of impoverishment and downright

waste of the productive soil in this country, it will
all be gone in two hundred years, and America will be
a sterile desert, This doleful calculation was heard
often Tuesday in course of the tour over the Little
River soil conservation project in Hall County.

But those who made the tour, and who saw what
is being done to stop the waste and to reclaim our
land, displayed anything but a doleful spirit.
saw proof that. erosion: can be stopped, that ravaged
land can be rstoredwith long, hard work and every-
bedy helping.

Oddly enough, when it comes to getting the work
started on a broad scale and with the central direc-
tion that will be necessary, you find the farmer him-
self many a time among those most difficult to con-
vince as to the merit of the program.

The farmer, and the Georgia farmer in particular,
You will find many

gram and of its rules and agreements. He is afraid
the government will tie him ap, that he will lose his
free will, his right of free action. He is afraid in-
stinctively that he will be hooked for expenses if he
signs anythingand he has so little money for his
necessities now.

He bristles at the suggestion that anything can be
done to prevent his doing what he pleases with his
own land, even if he wants to blow it up, and many

j-a small farmer has had his fill of crop restrictions |

enforced by the government.
It is hard to see, however, how a conservation pro-

gram will do any general good in restoring the land |

if it isnt of general application, if it doesnt involve

everybodys pulling togetherperhaps in the harness |
of regulations and obligations, perhaps only with vol- |

untary bonds,

Erosion, after all, isnt confined to the land of the
man who owns the gullied stretches and the wasted
slopes. In its origin and in its results it involves his
neighbors, his county, his state and at last his nation.

| The water pours from his broken terraces and his
The population of the Ninth District, in which lie |
_ Gainesyille and Hall County, decreased 1,000.

hillsides into the nearest stream, carrying his soil
to choke the channel and to cause floods that touch
all the land for miles. :

The water which he should have held on his land |

by proper methods of cropping and simple engineer-
ing is loosed upon the fields of his neighbors and the
damage spreads like an infection.

There is no need to give further evidence of the
need for the Georgia soil conservation program. We
have made a start. As we have said, this present state

administration has provided the means for beginning |

the work on a state-wide basis. Let Mr. Collier tell

you about this legislation in his own words. We quote |

him again as he explains it:

It is a matter of old record that Georgia spends |

each year for commercial fertilizers between 25 and
30 per cent of its total farm income. Only one other
state, North Carolina, uses more fertilizer. This ne-
cessity of ours would indicate that something has gone
out of our landsome quality of productiveness that
must be regained, if we are ever to have a substantial
and natural well-being. __

The conservationists, who are working out the dem-

onstration programs of the Washington bureau in |
many a galled spot in Georgia, are a little chagrined

now and then when all the farmers wont share their

a little wary of signing contracts that involve the use
of his own land. He is hesitant of thus taking his
chances of being directed in cultivation or retirement
of his own land by a bureau, either in Washington
or Atlanta.

The conservationists, aware of this feeling, are
straining perceptibly in their program of legislation
and otherwise to make the arrangement as democratic
and as nearly voluntary as possible. This is the ob-
vious intention of Georgias new soil conservation law.

The law, which bears all the earmarks of Washing-
tons handiwork, bcause it seems oi standard design

and will link Georgia with the national program, is

too little known. It is of immense significance, be-
cause it actually may transform many of our old ideas

THE NEW PLAN

By virtue of this law, there exists in Georgia today, |

a Soil Conservation Committee, which is empowered

to adopt a seal, which seal shail be judicially noticed,
\ and may perform such acts, hold such public hearings,



No farmer however diligent |

tion.

They |

| to see whether the regulations are followed.

But the farmer naturally is





: Page Tice
and promulgate such rules and regulations as may be ~
necessary for. the execution of its functions. Z

The committee is definitely another bureau. lis
members are the directors of the state agricultural
extension service and directors of the experiment sta-
tions at Experiment and Tifton, but it may become
quite an organization, since the law. stipulates that it
may employ an administrative officer and such tech-
nical experts and such other agents and employes,
permanent and temporary, as it may require, and
may employ its own counsel and legal staff

The machinery is in hand for putting a soil conser-
vation program towork in every part of Georgia.
There is nothing in the law about raising, money for
expenses, which may be huge, but ail state agencies
which, may serve the work are directed to assist and
the participation of federal agencies and their re-
sources is implied.

The law provides for creation of soil consenvatern
districts, which may be of any size or any composi-
The factor which will determine these things
is probably to be a homogeneity of interests and prob-
lems. ;

THE DISTRICTS

For example, a district may be determined as to
extent by a common topography, or soil composition,
or distribution of erosion, or land-use practices, or

| watersheds. The determination of this pdint will be-

the task of the state committee.

However, the creation of a district in which a soil
conservation program is to be applied will be
a matter for the landowners to decide. Any
twenty-five landowners in a district proposed to be
organized may petition the state committee for this
arrangement, showing that such need exists in the
interest of the public health, safety and welfare.

There will be a hearing, at which the state com-
mittee will decide whether this need exists or whether
prosecution of a program is practicable. It may ac-
cept or revise the proposed limits of the district or it
may call the whole thing off: If, however, the plan
looks to be good and necessary, a referendum of ali
Jandowners within the district will be held.

it is decided to: proceed after the referendum, the
state committee appoints two supervisors for the dis~-
trict, the landowners elect three. There is a survey.
Demonstrational projects are undertaken to show how
erosion may be controlled and Pave es measures
carried out.

GO TO WORK

The district supervisors will seek out methods of
cultivation, the best uses of the land, probable changes.
from existing uses. They may buy or sell land to
operate, to retire from cultivation or to be used for
other purposes. They may help local agencies fi-
nancially, make available seed, fertilizer, heavy equip-
ment and material, construct structures, take over
and administer any soil conservation projects.

A lot of farmers may be interested to note that they
may require owners and occupiers to enter covenants
and agreements for permanent use, and may formu-
late regulations governing use of land

Do you fear that some of your rights might be in-
fringed and your land tied up, by contracts of this
sort? The law provides for public hearings and addi-
tional referendums on the rules. The majority will
prevail for or against. -

The supervisors regulations may require construc-
tion of terraces, outlets, check dams, dikes, ponds,
ditches and other necessary structures; particular
methods of cultivation as proved by the demonstra-
tions; changes in cropping systems, contour work,
planting land to trees, grasses and soil-conserving
crops; retirement of highly erosive areas or areas
on which erosion may not be adequately controlled
if cultivation is carried on.

A NEW POWER

Georgias new law gives to the supervisors some
interesting powers. They may go upon any jands
If the
Jandowner is recalcitrant, or perchance tells the su-
pervisors to get off his land, they may go into the
Superior Court and ask the judges to nae him
comply. {

Their petition must show that such non- ~phierenes
tends to increase erosion on such lands and is inter-

fering with prevention or eontrol of erosion on other

lands of the district. The court issues process, brings
the non-complying landowner before the bench and
hears the case.

It may dismiss the case, or it may order the land-
owner to do the work. If he doesnt do so, it may give
the supervisors authority to do the work themselves
and recover the costs and expenses, with interest at
five per cent, from the owner. A judgment for these
sums, and also for the costs of suit including a rea-
sonable attorneys fee to be fixed by the court, may
-be entered against him.

Landowners may terminate a district by the same
method of public vote, after petition to the state com-
mittee, as that by which the district was created.

DRAWS PICTURE

The question is raised once again, in light of the
provisions of this new Georgia law. Is the farmer an
individual without relation to his neighbors, owning
and working land as an empire secure from inyasion,
or must he fit himself into a system of co-operative
and rautual effort in which his neighbors rights are
as important as his own? And to what extent is com-
pulsion justified?

Perhaps you may conclude that society has a right
to take a hand and use the law, if necessary, to end
it. Perhaps you still feel that liberty is individual
and personal and that a mans land is his own, to do
with as he will.

In the solving of this erosion problem, as well as
ali other problems affecting the welfare of Georgia
and her people, the Department of Agriculture stands
ready to render every assistance possible.

COLUMBUS ROBERTS,
Commissioner of Agriculture,











Large type chrysantheniuine:
now white, lavender, ball yel-
w, bronze, jewel . pink, black
aw, red, shaggy cream, honey
dew, pall pink, flesh, canary, 25
plants. $1.00.. Mrs, R. L. Sil-
Ver, Cuthbert, Rt. 5.
Tee Lace and Sprengeria
: white and purple
iris, pink almonds, 25c doz. ;
Xmas and May cactus, 15 doz.
cut; red spider lilies, 35e doz.;
dD rriwinkle land zennias, 15c doz,
iss Sarah Agnes Smith, Wad-

hail Peete. 3, $1:00; large,

nt lilies and century plants,
: .25; -banana- plants, $1.00.
Well rooted and packed, S. M.
Seaborn, Brunswick.

eat 1 doz. large, different

d mums, 50c for lot, or ex.

omething can use. i "Mrs. A.

Price, Locust Grove.

Tiger lilies, long trumpet daf-
ils, single, red cannas, $1.00
C2: white, August lilies, pink al-
mond, pink perennial phlox, 30c
punch; rooted sweetgum gera-
niums, 2, 35c. Add postage.

elma. Harrison, Bremen.
Tiger lilies, red cannas, long
rumpet daffodils, $1.00 C; pur-
ple German iris, 12 for. Tbe; red
repe myrtles, 25 ea.; white Au-
gust lilies, pink phlox, 30c. ea.
Add postage, Mrs. Lee Wrieht,
Bremen, :
Calliopsis, 206 ea.;
lilies, Toc. C;
d abl. yellow cannas, 20

lemon day

April. blooming: narcissi,

C: white. August lilies, 15
= airy lilies, 25c doz. Add}
Miss Mildred Conner,

Shasta: daisies, 10 ae x
udzu vine, 25 ea.; wild. fern,
filles 250 Ibe ea,; white pigst.

e emon and day lilies, $1. 00 C;
mon verbenal, 50c doz.:
lilies, 10c ea.; iris, jonquils, 15
doz.; snow on the mtn., lady of
se lake, Adc doz. Add Eaeraey

; 20

L.* ine: and ae sities.
bird-eye and burning bush, 10c
e 3 for 25c; day. lilies, 15c
dog: deep pink, hardy phlox, 1d
bunch, Add postage, Mrs. Min-
nie Charles, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

.ugust lilies, red, yellow can-
as, perennial sweet peas, mix-
ed iris, 50c per 12; white, lav-
ender altheas, 6, 50c. Exe. for
otato and tomato plants, Game
chicken eggs, or anything can
use. Fred Kown, White.

- Blue flags, 50c doz.; narcissi,
_jonquils, blue, white violets, 30
doz.; little, yellow rose bush, 20c
2 pink monthly rose bushes,

10 in.; 0c .ea.: 6, in,, 25 ea.;
k lilies, 25 "ea, bush, Post-
d= > irs: Lizzie Casey, Bow-

urple, white iris, 80c per C;
cannas, 25c. doz.; verbenas,
phlox, Sweet Williams, petunias,
primrose, 10c doz. plants; rooted
evergreen and boxwood, 15c ea.

ixe. for friers.
lant, Cumming,

-100 lilac sprouts, 4 ft. tall, 25e
2., blue flag lilies, jonquils, 15
doz bulbs. Add postage. Mrs.

_ Pearl Moss, Silver Creek, Rt. 1.

_ Perennial phlox, pink, purple,
40c doz.; hardy salvia, blue and
hite, 40 doz.;
loz. z.; dahlia slips, red pink varie-
ted, little bronze button mums,

3, 25C, Mrs. S. W. Sloan, Au-
burn. iz
Over 200 Madonna lilies, 20c
ea; lot of purple and white iris
and Jemon. lilies, 65c ; hya-
-cinths, some shrubbery at rea-
sonable prices,. Mrs. A. By
Wood, Alpharetta, Rte tk _

Dbl, white Easter rose, win-
ter jasmine, 25 ea.; geraniums,
begonias, fuchsia, weeping lan-
_tans, 10 ea, cutting; giant and
ahlia flowering zinias, 25 doz.
Stamps for small orders, Miss
Eva Cogburn, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.

- Several thousand plants, gail-
_lJardia, coreopsis, red yard cole-
s, artemisia, primrose, zinnias,
arigold, cosmos, daisies, phy-
-sostegia, violets, be doz. 35 C.
$1.00 orders postpaid. Mrs. -R.
Gable, Haralson.

Mammoth fern, 3 large size
bunches, 35c; white and spruce
pines, 10c; white jonquils, yel-
low daffodils, 20e doz; purple
and yellow iris, 20c doz: Yal-
sam bush roses, 3, 25c; balm of
ilead, 10c ea, Mrs. W. F. Bai-
ley, Ellijay, Rt. 2.

Cactus: 1 Pink, 8 yrs. old,
3.50; red and pink cuttings, yr.
old, 25 ea; rattail, rooted, 50c;
fish, grape. and pine-bur gera-

ium cuttings, rooted, 20c ea;
6 boxwood, :7 yr. old, nice shape.
AN FOB. Cash. Mrs. E. H.

yeaver, Temple, Ro 2.

bl. tansy, snow on the mtn. 3

lies aa bowl, 380c doz;

lupine plants, 15

Flor ida

-| postage.

| Eng. dogwood, 2,
cactus, 2,-25c; Dwarf peach rose |

Mrs. G. L. Tal-{

red yer bena, 30 |:

| bow], blue flags 45. a doz.:

LOWERS AND SEED _
FOR SALE -

Red japonicas, red. and yel-
low azaleas, spruce and white
pines, $1.00 doz., 15 ea:; pink,
trailing arbutus, 50e doz: sugar
plums, crabapple, i5e-a; red
dogwood 10c ea; well rooted.
Add postage Extra plant given.
Tildon Parris, Loving: =

- Pink perennial phlox, 35e doz;
red and yellow japonicas, 20c
ea; rhododendrons,: 15c.. Add
postage. Mrs. T. M. Lock, El-
lijay, Rt, 2.\

Hastings rust-proof snap-
dragons, 25c doz; pompom chy-
santhemums, Ermalinda, Gold-
mine, Claire, 5 ea; labeled;
daisy type, all colors, and half
dbl. car. 50c doz. Add postage.
Miss Carlie Kemp, Marietta.

Blooming snapdragons, Eng-|
lish daisies, pansies, giant car-
nations, petunias, dianthus, wilt-
resistant asters,. perriwinkles,
snow on the mtn., marigolds,
zennias, baby breath, 25c doz.;
$1.00 C. . Mrs. | Willie Wise,
Wadley. > sf :

Large type mums, golden yel-
low, Bal pink, Oconto white, va-
vriegated pink, lavender, Ball
cream, Man .~OWar, _ pink,
bronze, Shirley Temple, Honey
Dew, red, 25 plants, $1.00. Mrs.
Minnie. Bell, Cuthbert, Rt. 5.

Green leaved caladiums; young
plants, 25e postpaid. Geo. M.
Moseley, Menlo,

Bird of Paradise, 6 or inch-
es, 25 a., 3 for 60c; white
conch begonias, rooted, 10c ea,
Add. postage. Mrs. W. J. Wal-
lace, Conyers, Rt: 3.

Blooming size bulbs, yellow
jonquils, dbl. yellow putter and
eggs, white. narcissi, yellow cup
in-center, $1.00 C; $6. 50M; wild
ferns, $1.75 C; running ~ cedar,
$1.00 doz. Mrs. -Thornton Me-
Curley, Hartwell.

- Ferennials: yellow button
-}mums, yellow iris, verbena,
sweet williams, blue phlox, Fai-
ry lilies, blackberry lilies, 25c
doz.; Dwarf boxwood and nan-
dinas, 50c doz. Blanche Wood-
ruff, Greenville.

Water lilies, James Brydon,
red, Gladstone, white, 4, $1.00;
,| Parrot-feather, yellow poppy,
loating heart, 10c ea. Add post-
age. Mrs. H. E, Bell, Duluth.

Rooted Sword fern, pink June
cactus, 2 for 25c; blue and white
hydrangea, yellow goldenbell,
cuttings, 4 for 25e; white Peru-
vian daffodils, $1. 00 Cc. Add
postage. Jack Harrison, Bre-
men. 1

Crabapple, wild fern, Shasta
daisy, 10c ea; Kudzu vine, 20c
ea; purple, lavender iris, 15c
doz; wild iris, purple, gold, 10c
doz. Sweet shrubs, 10c-ea. Add
J. R. Owen, Ellijay,
Ree ; ;

Purple, yellow iris, 2, 25c;
white pine, hemlock, 10c ea;
white cactus, 3, 25c; mammoth
fern, 3 good. sized punches, 2OGs
daffodils, jonquils, 15 doz. Bu-
gene Bailey, Ellijay, Rt. 2.

White, spruce pines, 10c ea.
POC

pushes, 6, 25; wistaria, 3, 25c;
other shrubs. Miss Blaine Bail-
ey, Bllijay, Rt. 2.

Dbl. red and pink japonicas,
50 ea; red and pink honeysuc-
kle, 25c ea; red dogwood, 25c ea;
big, white geraniums. Well
-rooted.. No. chks. Charles Sil-
ver, Talking | Rock, Rie 2.

Everblooming roses rooted,
red, rose, pink, white, 20 ea.
Kerria Japonicas, dbl. type, 30c
ea; Amaryliis, hybrids, 3de Ga.
Cammellia jJaponicas, 30c_ ea.
Baby button mums, 25 doz. Add
postage. Miss Bula. Conner,
Bremen.

Pink and white conch bego-
nia, 5c cutting; rooted, 10c;
salmon color sultana, same.
price. Sprengeria fern to exe.
for Lace ferns or beefsteak be-
gonia. Mrs. Willie M. Stewart,
Alma. >: 4 e
300 Vinca Miner, $1.50; 500
Nandinas, 4-5. in. seedlings,
$8.00; 25 . Ligustrums, $1. oe
Lois Woodruff, Greenville, Rt.

Shasta daisies, purple iris,
dusty miller, 50ce; red hot pok-
er, golden glow, January jas-
mine, 25 clump; peppermint.
garlic, catnip, dbl. stansy. 20c
doz. Miss Mallie English, Dem-
PrestcRt. te

Silver maple Soreais 18 to 24
inches high rooted and ready to
set $1.00 per doz postpaid. Can |
send immediately. .Mrs. W. B.
Freeman, Oakman.

American flags, mixed - iris,
dbl. daffodils 25c per doz: long
trumpet daffodils, April narcis-
sus, yellow cluster narcis-*
sus 75c per C:; coltsfoot, spear-
mint 35 per shoe box full: Will
exch. for potato or tomato
plants, eggs, or anything use~,
ful; Have lot of shrubbery too
large to ship. Nan Kown, White.

Primroses, phlox 40 a doz:
plackberry lilies, lemon _ lilies
40c a doz; spruce and white
pines 55c a doz; ladies wash
Add
Mrs. oe eran,



woods 25 each;

a doz:

Cher. 2418.

white |.

Rt.



RS"
FOR SALE.

Dbl. long triim pet: daffodils,
$1.00 C;. black lily India, 25c
bulb; white, August lily, pink
phlox, 30c ea.; tiger lilies, $1.00
Osepink, June cactus, pink jus-
ticia, rooted, 2, 25c. Add post-
age. Alice Harrison, Bremen.

Black lily; India, red crepe
myrtle, 25c ea; dbl.
dbl. red and orange variegated
mums,
lilies, pink phlox, pink almonds,
80c ea. Add postage. _ Mautill
Harrison, Bremen.

Red hot: poker and January
jasmine, red perennial phlox,
25e clump; cream iris and pur-
ple and lavender, 4 col.
C; wild iris, 50c; everbearing
strawberry plants,. "25e. Gs: Sarah
McConnell, Demorest.

Bronze mums plants 2c each:
black-eyed Susan plants 15 per
doz; Gaillardia, coreopsis, phys-
ostegia plants 20 per doz; pur-
ple fall asters 30c per doz. Miss
Willie Woodward, Jenkinsburg.

Boston and Sprengeria ferns
10c each, pink: oxalis, conch
begonia, all rooted, cuttings of
dbl. apple bloom and deep pink
geranium; salmon sultana, pink

fuchsia all 5c each. Orders over
30c prepaid. Mrs. N. B. Overby.

Rt. 1, Oakwood.

Violets, Tansy, ferns, iris,
daffodils. narcissus, parsley,
orange lilies, 15c per doz.; 2 Ti-
ger lilies, 25c. Well rooted. Add
postage. Myrtle Lee 7 Rt. oe
Ellijay. 2

Dbl, pink and red coponicn
6 yrs. old 50c each; red dog-
red honeysuc-
kle 50c each or 3 for $1.00; big
dbl. white geranium 75 each or
2 for $1.00. All well rooted. No
checks. Mrs. Annie Gentry, Rt.
3, Ellijay.

Dark purple iris, _primroses
2be a .doz; pink hibiscus, aza-
leas, white, pink altheas 2 for
25ce; paper white narcissus 15c
per doz; orange lilies $1.00 per
C; white English dogwood 3
for 25c. Will exch. for white
feed sacks. Manda Henderson,
Rt. 3, Ellijay.

Achimenes plants blue purple
20c-a doz: stiff leaf caladium
bulbs 10- bs 20c ea; large size
2-25-35c; water lilies if_inter-
ested, write. for ES - Miss
Mittie Collins, Rt. 1, Smithville.

Dixie Sunshine, oe gold
and yellow supreme marigolds,
red asia zinnias,
altheas, rooted Dorothy
Perkins pink roses 6 for 25c.
Add postage. AS Ce vinter,- 7,
Roanoke Ave,. N. E., Atlanta,

Sultanas, salmon and cerise
red col. bloom with striped
leaves 5 cutting or exch. for
other box flowers. Add postage.
Mrs. W. H. Brock, Cornelia.

April blooming dbl. narcis-
sus 60c per C; white iris. 75e
per C; Shasta daisies, 50c a
doz;

C: Star of Bethlehem 25c a doz.

Mrs. J. E. Lewis. Machen.
red, white and,

Dbl. bright
single geranium cuttings and
white begonias rooted 5 for 25c
del. Ida wright, Wt Ate,

Siberian lilies, orange lilies,
mixed iris 75ce per C, 200: for
$1.40; rose verbena, ysllow win-
ter jasmine, well rooted 6 for
50c. Mrs. Christine Mcleod,
Rt. 2, Box 166, College Park.

Purple iris, bronze day lilies,
bulbs 35c a doz; $2 per C; gold:
englow plants, 35e a ,doz; dusty
miller, 35 a doz; all
ed, wet moss packed: Mrs. Flor-
ence Heaton, Mineral Bluff.

Bunch azaleas well rooted 60c
per doz: Xmas cactus cuttings
10c each or 83 for 25c; baby
breath fern, small cuttings 15c.
All postpaid. Mrs. BE. A. Smith,
8, Greenville.

~25. bu. St. Augustine lawn

grass $1.15 per bu. Prompt de-
livery; also 10 elephant ear ca-
ladium bulbs 15 each or $1.25
for the lot. Mrs. W. D. Bare-
field, Fort Gaines.

Blue Roman _ hyacinths, red
spider lilies 25 a doz; bloom-
ing size, mixed colors: gladiolus
75e per C;\ variety rose bushes,
flowering shrubs, iris. and bed-
ding plants reasonable. . Mrs.
C. &. Leverett, Phone Ra. 5966,
Rt. 1, Box 582, Atlanta.

Dahlias: White Wonder, Fort
Monmouth, Satan, Sharazade,
Imperial pink,
Jerome Kern, Jersey. Beauty,
Treasure Island, Glory Mon-
mouth, mixed $3.00 a doz. Mrs.
Poe: Blackmon, 306 W. Wash-
ington, Hast Point,

Box geraniums and yard shub-
bery, also privet hedges 5c each
or exchange for potato plants.
Freeborn WANs, Re 4; Talking
Rock.

white dbl.

Paper. narcissug,

Single blue hyacinths 35c a doz;

yellow jonquils, dbl. daffodils
75e per C; red spider lilies 50c
a doz; Hemerocallis lilies 60
per C. Mrs. Cliff C. Dye, Re.
Middleton,

Jonquil, butter & egg bulbs

60c per C; May narcissus and

| short cup

ets.

years,

daffodils, |
$1.00 C: white, August

stamps or money ..order..
$1.00.

cutting; |
white. and variegated | red and

petunias 15'

butler & eggs 50c per C;.
/ small yellow jonquils $1.00 per

well root-"

_plants.

Betty Colter,



Saturday. May 15 _



F LOWERS AND SEED.
FOR SALE.

Dwarf box wood transplated_ 3
heavily rooted, . bunchy
tops $2. 49 for 128 to 10. Mrs.
BE. A. Smith, Rt. 3, Greenville,

Box flowers cutting s and yard
shrubbery, privet /hedges,; well
rooted 5c.each or exchg.. for. po-
tato :plants.. Write. Minnie L.
Willis, Rt. 2, Talking Rock. .
~ Rooted Cape Jasmine in. pots
85 each plus postage. Bessie
Martin, Rt. 5, Gainesville.

Dbl. geraniums, large cut-
tings, colorsred, lavender, -or-
chid, white, light and dark pink,
10 each or 12 for $1.00. Send
Mrs.
Duk: Summerall, Rt. 2, Baxley. }

Jonquils, daffodils; twin sis-
ters 1i5e per doz; King Alfred,
Emperor, Empress 50e per doz;
Old fashioned narcissus, paper-
shell and other varieties 25 per
doz; lavender iris 50e per doz.
Will exch. for corn or peas.
Mrs. W. P. Beman, Sparta.

Over 200 Madonna. lilies 20c
a bulb if you take them all; lot
of blue and white iris 25c a doz;
lemon lilies same price. Mrs.
A. B. Wood, Rt. 1, Alpharetta.

Perennial philox,. deep rose
and blue 20c a doz. Add -post-
age. Lucile Walker, Dial,
Dahlias, Jarge . type, Jane}
Cowl,* Good Night red, <purple
and pink 10c each; ap}. gera-
nium red, pink and : white be
dbl. petunias . purple,

white..b a cutting. , Postage
paid on or ders | 50c,, or more.
Mrs. Fred Duvall, Bastonollee.

* Wanted: Shasta daisy. plants,

also perennial hardy .. phlox

plants.

Azaleas pink and white 2 for
25;
doz:
25 a doz;
each. Mrs. W.
loam.

About a hundred thousand
mixed bulbs, about equal
amounts of dbl. orange Phoenix,
April. white narcissus, jonquils,
King Alfred and common daf-
fodils $3.00 per M: Several thou-
sand hemeroallis, dbl. and
single $3.00 per C. <All govt.
insp. for 8 years. $3.00 orders
PP. Lillian Thomas, Haralson.

Poeticus, white narcissus,
trumpet daffodils, white iris
60c per C, $5.00 per M; Chinese
sacred: lilies (white cluster nar-
cissus) 30c a doz; exch. for
gladiolus, giant snapdragon.
Mrs. John Saye, Newbro,

Dahliahs 15c each $1.50 a doz,
Warner, Wilson and Sagamore;
chrysanthemums 50c doz, mari-
gold yellow, Early pink, pink
Doty, Her Majesty and Salbach.
Mrs. W. H. Nelson, Rt. 1, Pow-
der Springs.

Dahlias $1.25 a doz. postpaid:

tube rose. striped foliage
Rex Begonia. 15c
M. Vickers, Si- j

Jersey Beacon, Warner, Sylvia,.

Mrs. Harrell, Alex. Waldie,
Queen Mary, White Ball, Mrs-
Anderson, Mina Burgle. Mrs.
John Bell, Rt. 2, Duluth.

Purple iris, physostegia, day
lilies, primroses 10 a doz; nar-
cissus and jonquils $1.00 per C;
eoreopsis, sweet peas 10c a
bunch; chrysanthemums . 10
a doz; parma violets and white
10c for 25. Add postage. Mrs.
M. Highfield, Rising Fawn.

Cannas, red, yellow, red &
yellow 15c a doz; periwinkle
vine, light blue, day lilies, Queen
Anns lace, Dusty Miller 10c a
doz. Exch. for white feed sacks,
each pay postage. Mrs. Buren
Bellamy, Ashland.

Jacksons large shasta daisies,
blue, white iris, pink verbena
10c. a doz; pink June, red May,
monkey tail cactus, pink, white
oxalis 5c; mixed zinniah seed
10c teacupful;- brown marigold
seed 5c tablespoon.. Add post-
age. Mrs, Ralph Williams, Guin.
ming.

Johnny Jump ups 30e a daz.
Will send sample. of
flower. Mrs. M. E. Jones, Rt.
1, Shellman.

Mums mixed colors 20c a doz;
white and yellow narcissus 75c
per C; white flag;
lilies, physostegia 15 a doz;
iris, lavender, orange 30c a doz;
pink and red _ begonia,

Anns lace 10 a doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. J. C. Mize, Ashland.

Ageratum 15 a doz; white
iris, physostegia, Dusty Miller,
little yellow narcissus, sweet
scented, butter & eggs, spear-
mint 10 a doz; Dorothy Perk-
ins pink, Cherokee white roses
10c each; pink verbena, button
hole chrysanthemums 20c a doz.
Mrs. J. T. Stokes, Rt. 3, Box
358. Macon. e

Star of Bethlehem, physos-
tegia 15c for 25; day lilies single

and double $1. 00 per C; purple}
iris $1.50 per C: Queen of May
pink iris 6 for 30c;

white Au-
gust lilies 25c each. Add post-
age. Mrs. Emma Clayton, Roy.

Wisteria 10c each: crepe myr- |
tle watermelon pink 25c; trum-
pet vine 25c; purple flags 60c a
doz: Beauty bush 50c; spider

- Vio- | lily bulbs 50c per doz; mimosa
rti= aoe 80c each. :
z 20S is E

Mrs. Robert Shingler,
616 N. Main St., Ashburn,

pink hardy phlox 25 a

;80ce a doz;

yellow day

Xmas
cactus cuttings 5e each; Queen



FLOWERS AND D SEE ,

Arbor-vitae seed sayed fr
last. year 5 teaspoonful.
Ww. J. Lentile, Rt. 3, Lys

The finest, exhibition
ehr ysanthemums all color
winners, labeled, growin
structions furnished. 25. pla
prepaid: tor $1.25. Mrs. W.
Rucker, Milner.

Gladiola bulbs 20 a.
doz.-50c.. Miss Leila
Rt: 3, Monroe.. _ :

Chrysanthemums 29 vari
plooms. 6 to 8 inches across,
grown,, labeled _ pions 35
$1.65, 40. for $2. Instrue
furnished: 26 Raciatios por
-& button. type 25 plants $
coral pink Vines 20c each,
Je Chapman, Edison.

Laree: type -chrysa
0c per d
labeled: 6 LORY SL 00
beled: 100 smali type fo $3
postpaid. Mrs. |H. G. Woo
Rt, 3, Donalsonville.

Physostegia 25 strong

25c, 100 plants 75c: small
large late summer and _fall- db
asstd. colors mums 25 per d
mixed postpaid; will exch
for verbena, all colors canna
any kind except single; or
feed sacks. Mrs. R. W. R
Rt. 1, Lawrenceville.

_ Yellow jonquils, whi sea?
cissus, long trumpet daff
dbl. butter and eggs $1,
C; blue spider lilies $1.00' ad
yellow dbl. regal lilies ~ s@
price; wild ferns $2.50 per
Nora McCurley, Rt
well. 7
Purple foxglove 20c-
white primroses, old fas
purple hollyhocks, ol
white fall pinks loc a doz
peachtree rose 10c each
gene Tallant, Rt. 2, Cumm

Red and pink begonia
June, Xmas cactus, swo
rooted 10c each: lace fer
@ach; red, purple, pink gera
ums 5c a cutting. Mrs
Hart, Rt. 1, Royston.

Iris, Dalmatica blue, 6;
dark blue, MHonorbile yell
Lohengrin orchid, May
pink, Quaker Lady rose,
wine, Gypsy Queen red; {
reau and. prety variegated $1.

Mrs. J. M.
CSiliveuh:

Running roses red and
red Japonicas
each; red, pink, yellow aza
40c a doz: vine hone 3
red, white, yellow 35c
white English. dogwood, p
crabapple, spirea 10c each.
well rooted. Add postage.
Davis, Rt. 2, Ellijay. =
Mixed hardy phlox, mums
tor 25c; mixed colors: da
slips 25e a doz; 1 each, not ro
ed, Jasmine, justicia, Le
vine, cherry, begonia,

oxalis, love tingle moss, i

all for 25c. Add postage
change for white-Sacks.
Blackwell, Rt.245 Dahlone;

1 each cuttings not es
ger, anium, hydrangea,
oago, justicis, hibiscus
wing begonia, Kmas-June
tus, carnation, lantana,
geranium; rooted begonia,
alis, cactus, lilies, grap
nia, hen and biddy, all
Add postage. Sarah G
1, Dahlonega. bad

Hine spider ee a

ooo. $1.00 per Co Miss
McCurley, Rt. 2, Hartwell

Camelia Japonica 35
Kerra Japonicas double
each; Forsythia gold:
each: Ligustrum eutti 1g
putton mums white,
cream 25 a doz: Lupine a
Bethlehem bulbs 15 adoz;
trumpet daffodil bulbs. Tbe
C. Add postage. Exch. fo1
feed sacks 100 Ib. cap.
Gussie Conner, Bremen.

3 erepe mrytle bushes
prepaid:. Money order, |
MeGahee, Rt 2, Townsent

FLOWERS AND SEEL
: WANTED

Exe. okra and Dill se
flowers,, or sell seed, okr
dill, 10e. Mrs. A, i Dodd
pharetta. ee





white " sultanas, "Exe. for
orange or red sultanas,
duke jasmine, geraniui
tanas. Mrs. L. E, Wiseins
Vista.

Want rooted oultings vel
riegated red and white: pe
and rainbow moss. Mrs. A,
Law, Chula.

Want yellow jonquil
fodil bulbs. lo

price. John

Nae

tin, Box 364. a

Lemon bushes ;
25e: white Englis

each 3 for 25;: y
: Ada





an atone
00. per M.-W.
syille, Rt. 6.

pasibue! Bonne Best,
alia now,. _90 per M.

sp. Pure old fashioned
potato plants, $2.00 per M.
ull count, prompt ship-
o Klondike strawber-

. Te per 500, $1.25

: Iso silver crowders
1.00 pkg. Lisbon Allen,
le, Route 2:

sp. P. R. Potato plants,

M del: Guar. <A. M.
Baxley, Route 3.
Jy Chas. Wakefield, Cab-
Plants, Bermuda onions,
er M. Also, Marglobe, and
Baltimore tomato plants,
per M. P. R. Potato plants,
per: M. All del... Mrs. C.

e mixed. with

eading kind, 18 per
lel. Mrs. Annie L.. Ford-
Roomsboro,

; Wonderbearer and. Gib-
rawberry plants, 60c per

arge yellow pumpkin seed.
Dwarf green pod eyerbear-
ra seed, lic. per. cupful.

or M. O. Postage on or-
than $1.00. John B.

2

d. Also Marglobe
lants, 75c per M (1 M:

). Cabbage plants, 75c
M or more.

i. Gov.: Tho

-20 per M. F.O.B.
ield, Route 4, Tifton.
Potato plants,. Gov.. Insp.
er M del,, Boons, $1.75

. Also tomato plants,
by May 15th, $1.50 :per M.
Waldrip, Ets ee

JD:

sbage, Collard, onion and
u lants, 50c per M by ex-
All leading. varieties,
lants, prompt shipment
firs. Hural cae Lake
Georgia. .
Baltimore, Nel Stone,
be tomato plants, ready
$100 per M F.O.B. $1.25
del. J.

ohe, New Stone tomato
full count, $1.25 per M
Now ready. Mrs. Della
oute 4, Baxley. _
i sprays, 15 per doz. Post-
Emma Lou Martin, Vienna,

R Potato plants, [be per
1.50 per M. Mailed. 10,000,
per M, Express col. Also
vine tomato seed, 25c. per
ed, mailed. A. Crow, Gaines-
ute 2. i
r Pink Skin a R. Pota-
s, Gov. Insp. and treat-
a per M del. in Ga. oe?

2b Ber CG, $1.50
Wakefield

1, Postpaid: Tbe per M
_ Now ready. ~ Marcus

msp. P. R. Potato. plants,

/ per M. Also, Marglobe and

more, $1.25 M or 75 per

Dillard Thomas, Baxley,
, Box 152.

Also. Marglobe tomato

ts. 90c per M del. -Ruby
epper, $1.25: per M del.
eee worthy Baxley, Rt. 2.

Presid: Also, icmakine: to-
5e per 12 Ybs., Postpaid.

Aghtsey, Sereven, Rt. 2.
Pitts, Smithville.
Imp. Goy.. Insp. Pp, Aes Potato |

tomato plants, 25e per
_per M, also Postpaid.
llow Skin P, R. Potato plants,
2. oo M. Postpaid. . Otis

Vv. Te Gian s taxis Pro-
otato plants, $1.25 per M.
, P. R. potato plants, $1.00

aOR. Ws Re es
| tomato plants, 35 per 300, $1.00

ts, Seed - grown | "from vine
ings. $1.50 per M. del. J.
arker, Rochelle, Route 2.
Insp. Cokers Golden Pro-
R. Potato plants, $1.50
Also Pink Skin P._R.
)- plants, $1.35 per~M_ del.
thin. 8rd zone. C. H. Red-
k, Sylvania, Route 2.
farglobe tomato plants, 80
M del. Now ready. Good
t, prompt service. Mrs. No-
t pore 2, Surreney:

-|on what he gets.

: C. 70e per

Cash vines :
1M.
New.

D. Mullis, Baxley,

#3

Hazlehurst, Route 3.

mailed. 10,000, $9.50 _Ex. Col.
Also Vigorvine | Tomato plants,
25 per doz. mailed. LL. A. Crow,
Gainesville, Route 2. et

Red Skin P. R. Potato plants,
Gov. hsp. Guar. Count; }

per M del.. Cash with order
J. B. Patterson, Route. pA Box

1104, Baxley.

New Stone, Marglobe, Bremer

M. del. No orders accepted -un-
der $1.00:. Strong plants, full
count. . B. Tom berlin, Sure
rency, Route 2.

Hastings Super Maiblobe and

New Stone Tomato Plants, 85c

per M.. Govt. Insp. Red Skin. or.
Pink P..R. Plants, $1.25 per M.
Paul Lightsey, Sere-

Prepaid.
ven. *

New Stone, Baltimore tomato
plants, Also Chas. Wakefield
Cabbage, and collard plants, All
/20c. per C, $1.00 per M. Pre-
paid, Exp. Col. %5e per M.

Prompt shipment. Frances Wil-.

liams, Route 1, Gainesville.

Marglobe and Stone Tomato.

plants, also Wakefield
Duich Cabbage
plants, now ready.
$1.00 per M. del. 75c per M.
Col. Marcus Williams,: oe
1, Gainesville.

Marglobe - idinieto plantsist: 10

and
and. Collard
20c per, C.,

Gov. Insp: 'P. R. Potato plants,
$1.50 per M del. Now ready.

Also, white bunch butterbeans, i
Red Speckle

50c per 4 Ib.
Crowder pe eas, $1.00 pk. Prompt
shipment. - Guy Crow, Route 2,
Gainesville.

Old Fashion Banana yam Po-
tato plants,
T. T. Winge, Hazlehurst.

State Insp. P. R. Potato plants,

$1.50 per M. Marglobe and New

Stone Tomato plants, $1.25 per
M. Cabbage plants, $1.00 per
All del. Also vigorvine to-
mato plants, 15 per doz. 10,000
Exp. col. 90c per M. V. A.
Crow, Route 7, Gainesville...

Tomatoes, red rock, Gr. Bal-
timore,- Stone, 50 per 500, 75c
per M. Del. Also leading yari-
eties cabbage plants, same price.
Guar. Prompt shipment... H. C.
Rowe, Route 1, Ocilla, Georgia.

mato plants, 75e per M. Also,

all kinds: hot pepper $1.75 per

M.; also P.
$1.50 per M.
grown. Mrs.
Baxley. ;

Mareglobe and Gr.

R.. potato plants,
All open. field

Ramile Barber,
eg aiieidre

Bermuda onions 75c per M.
Also, Wakefield cabbage plants,
75c per M. Mrs. J.-A. Crapps,
Baxley.

Pink Skin P. R. Potato plants, 5

Insp. and treated, seed grown
from vines. Ready now. $1.20
per. M. del.
' Sereven,

Wakefieid and Flat Dutch
cabbage plants, New Stone and
Baltimore and Marglobe tomato.
Also Collard plants, 20e per C.
40e per 400, 95 per M. del.
5 .M, $3.50. col. P. R. Potato
plants, Cert. $1.20 per M del.
$5.10 per 5 M,
Gainesville.

Tomato plants, 90c her M,
per M. Also, egg plants, hot and
sweet pepper plants, ready May
20. All F.0.B. Jimmie Buch-
anan, Route 4, Baxley.

Million Red and Pink skin
potato plants $1.40 per M.
Boons, $2.00 per M. Also, Vigor-
vine Tomato seed, 5c per 100

Cabbage Seed, $1.00 per Ib. E.

B. Wetherford, Route 2, Gaines- |

ville.

- Tomato plants, 8 in. Marglobe
wilt res. 75c per M. P. R. Pota-
to, pure and imp. $1.25 per M.
Calif Wonder sweet peppers,
os 00 per 500, $1.50 per M. z
Stokes, Route 1, Fitzgerald.

onan pepper plants 25 per
C, 85 per 200. Also early to-
mato plants, 15e per Cc. All
cheaper in larger lots.

all del. postpaid. Mis, Lois

plants, treated and cert. Also
Marglobe tomato plants, $1.35
per M. del. F. N. Lewis, Baxley.

Also Marglobe wilt resistant
plants, $1.25 per M. del. D, A.
Campbell, Route 2, Baxley.
Marglobe tomato plants, 50c
per 300, $1.40 per M. Stone Mt.

per M. Also Dutch cabbage, $1.00
M. P. R. Potato plants 70 per
500, $1.35 per M. Bonnie Smith,
Route 2, Gainesville.

Flat Dutch cabbage a
65 per 500, $1.00 per M. P.
Potato plants, $1.50 per M. bau
wonder, Ruby King sweet pep-
per, hot pepper, egg plants, 25
per 100 or $1.50 per M. Match-
less and Baltimore tomato

M. R&R. Chanclor, Pitts.



oJe W. Hinson,

<P, Potato: plants, She. per.
500, $1.35 per. M4

$1.75 | |

Heart tomato plants, $1.00 per

per M. Del; Hinton Tyre, Odum.

$1.50 per M del.

Marglobe and Baltimore to- |

tomato plants, $1.00 per M. Also

os |

col. Lee Crow,

Collard and Cabbage plants, 50

seed, the plants, $1. 00 per 100.

Plants |

Imp. Red and Yellow Skin}
P.R.: Potato plants, $1.50 per M.

plants, 75c per 500 or $1. 25 per |

Ir. Red Skin P. R. Potato and | '
| Pink Skin Sune aot tato plants. | J- p
i Rios

per arglobe tomato plants,
le 00 per: Meee rO.By RR. Tee
Rentz, Baxley. Sans

Cert. Red Skin pe R. Potato

and Satisfactory. shipment,
C Nail, Pine Grove..

Red Gold Strawberry. plants,
50c per C, or $3.00 per M. Mas-
| todon
plants, 35 per C or. $2.50 per
M. All true. to name. Mrs. A.
J. Stansel, Route 4, Box 33
Cleveland: --*' :

Red and Pink Skin P. R. Po-
tato plants $2.00 per M. Also
Patesaws, $2.00 per M. Brown
Crowder pee 10 per Ib.
F.O.B. M. Smith,
areas

New Stone and Marglobe to-
mato plants, $1.00 per M del.
Strong plants, full count, ready
to ship. R. W. Tomberlin, Route
2, Surrency.

. New Stone, Marelobe, Ox-
heart and Bremen tomato. plants,
$1.00 per M. del in Ga. B. F.
Aycock, Route 2, Surrency. :

D.

Route 1,

plants, Insp. and Dipped, $1.25
per M F.O.B. or $1.50 per. M.
del. D. C. Dear Route 3,
Tifton,

State Insp. Be R. and Red
Yam sweet potato plants,.$1.50
per M. Prepaid in Ga. W. B.
Lineberger, Route 8, Valdosta.

Yam sweet potato. plants, $1.50
per M.. Prepaid in Ga. T. T,
Lineberger, Route 3, Valdosta.

Imp. Klondike Strawberry

feathers.
Cumming.

Red and Yellow Skin -P. R.
Potato plants, $1.50 per M. del.
Also, Imp: Boons: $1.75 per M:
del, Prompt: Shipment. . Win-
fred Waldrip, Flowery Branch...

New Stone Tomato plants 20e
per C, 60c per 500, $1.00 per M.
del. Vigorvine tomato plants,
25e per doz. $1.25 per C. del.

Rosie Crowe, Route 1,

|C. L. Crow, Route 1, Lula._

Red and Yellow Skin P. R.
Insp. and treated, by express
collect $1.20 M: by mail P.P.
$1.50. Zones 1 and 2, $1.40 post-
paid. Money order. S. ie Norris,
Quitman, Rt. 1.

Red Skin PR. planta! not
mixed, $1.50 M; tomato, $1.00:
onions, foes Ruby King pepper.
$1.75; cabbage, 75c M. All del.
Loyd. Steedley, Baxley.

Goy. insp. Red and Yellow
Skin P.R. potato plants, $1.25
M; Early Triumph, $1.50 M. W.
H. Orvin, Jx:; Baxley, to

Red or Pink Skin P.R. plants,
insp. cert. ready now, $1.50 M.
at the Beds or shipped collect;
$1.75 M. prepaid. M. O. pre-
ferred. John C. Crow, Gaines-
ville-Rt iss

Pure PRs Gov.
Skin potato plants,
Lady Thompson
plants, $2.00 M:; Klondike, $1.50
af He gS Waldrip, Gainesville,

Gov. insp. Pink wa Yellow
Skin P. R. potato plants, $1.40
M. del. M. C. Crowe, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 2.

Gen. imp. P.R. ptato plants,
- $1.25 M> Cert. Marglobe toma-
to, 90 M; gen, improved Karly
Triumph potato, $1.50 M. Guar.
J. P. Beck, Baxley, Rt. 3.

Guar. big, Cert. Marglobe to-
mato plants, $1.00 M; Imp, Red
Skin P.R., potato, $1. '50 M. All
del. Prompt shipment. J.
Edgerton, Baxley.

P.. R.. potato plants,
$1.35 M; . Vigorvine tomato
ae 25c doz, All mailed. L.

. Crow, Gainsville, Rt. 2.

ee P.R., potato plants, $1. 25
M. F.O.B.; Marglobe, New Stone
tomato, 85c M. del. by express.
Cash. No chks. nor stamps. O.
L. Mobley, Baxley; Rt. 4, Box 45.

Marglobe and New Stone to-
mato plants, $1.00 M. del. 75c M.
.0.B. Cash with order. Mrs.
Snowdell Mobley, Bere Rt. 4,
Box 45.

P.R. potato plants, Gey: insp.
and treated, $1.25 M. del. A.
B. Lewis, Alma, Rt. 4.

All kinds tomato plants, $1.15
M; white and yellow Bermuda
onion, 85c M; cabbage, 75e M;
-P.R. potato, Gov. insp. $1.50 M.
All del. H. R. Williams, Baxley.

Baltimore and Marglobe_ to-
mato plants now ready, 70c M.
del in Ga. No chks. Mrs. Nolie
Lightsey, Surreney, Rt. 2.

insp. Red

25e OC:

and Bonny Best tomato, Flat
Dutch, Chas. W. and HE. J. cab-
bage, 40c, 500; 75 M. del.; Gov.
insp: P.R. potato plants, $1.25

Rt. 2.

Genuine, Inp. P.R. potato, Red
Yellow Skins, $1.15 M. F.0O.B.;
$1.85 M. del.; Gr. Baltimore and
Marglobe tomato, - 85e M. Del.
Count guar. W. E. Nobles, Bax-
ley, Rt. 4, Box 144.

Marglobe, New Stone, Gr. Bal-

Mullis, Hanley: Rt. 4.



| plants, $1. 50 M;

plants, $1.50 per M. Guar. Count

everbearing Strawberry |

| Mrs.
mE R22.

All.

sistant, 40 doz.:

Pure Yellow Skin P. R. Potato :

State Insp. P. R. and Yellow |

No,

plants, 20c per C, or exe. for | count.

baby chicks or duck or goose.

| Golden

$1. 50 M;:-
strawberry

tomato plants now ready, 75c

tomato piants, 75c M, del.

plants, 300, 35c;
cs.

'from vines, $1.20 M. del.

-. New Stone, Greater Baltimore |

M. Sat. Guar. S. C. Rowe, Ocilla, |

timore tomato plants, $1.00 M. |

P.R. potato, $1.75 M. Del. for 25c.



to,

5 | Bowen, Baxley, Rt,

PR, cand Tr fumph_
5b M 8 25 M:
Marglobe, Gr. Baltimore, Break
OQ Day tomato, 75c M. 5 M $3.00;
Ruby King, Calif Wonder, 500,
$1.00: $150 M; egg-plant plants,
50e Cz 500, $2. 00: $3.00 M;. cab-
bage, 60c M. B. a Morris, Bax-
ley. cay Fs
Yellow Yam - otra slips and
few Red Skin. slips, $1.25 M.
Lula McFarlin, Blakely,

' Cert Imp. P.R., and Pink Skin
potato plants, $1.25 M. Ready
to ship promptly. H. M. Burke,
Baxley, Rt. 3.

. Sikes famous white collard.
plants, 15 C, $1.00 M; Ever-
bearing strawberry, same price;
also honeysuckle vines, cold-re-
and Bermuda
grass. to give away. Cc: 0. Sikes,

| Sylvester.

Gov. insp. P.R. potato plants,
Red Skin and Yellow Skin, $1.25
M. Del. W. H. Orvin, Baxley,
Rt. 3. a

Jrusalony artichoke
45c C or exe, for 100. Ib. eap.
flour or feed sacks, white and
free of holes at 6c ea. Both to
pay postage... Mrs. N. B. Bur-
den, Elberton, Rt. 6, Box 89.

- Established Kudzu Crowns,
Ibe C;- 800, $2.00; 500, $3.25;
some extra. large ones, 12 for
40c; Red. River tomato plants
ready May 20th, $1.40 M. J. W.
Toole, Macon, yates. i
. Gov.
Skin P.R:., plants, $1.25 M. del.
chks.. Good plants,
George Griffis, Screven.
~P.R: potato plants, $1.25 M;
Bodie: and Bunch, ea. $1.60 M.
del. B. Crow, Gainesville, Rteez.

Tobacco plants, 20 C. Also
Percheron stud horse service,
$10.00 cash; and Hickory smok-
ed, sugar cured hams, wt. about
20 ibs., 300 Ib. =. 3220. Hardy,
Demorest.

Imnp. Red and Pink Skin Pie
and Boone potato plants, $1. 50
M. prepaid; $1.25 M. Exp. chgs.
collect. Cash. M.O. preferred.
Major Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Gov. insp., and treated Pink

or Yellow Skin P.R. potato

| plants (seed from vine cuttings).

Now ready. $1.20 M.
up, $1.15 M. cel.
sey, Screven. ~

Insp, and treated Cckers
Prolific potato plants,
$1.50 M; Pink Skin P. R., $1.85
M.. Del. within 38rd zone.
H. Reddick, Sylvania, Rte
Box 274. . ; :

Pou. potato plants, Gov. insp.
$1.25 per M., 5 M.and up; $1.00
M. W. J. Boyett, Bristol.

Tomato plants. $1.00 M; Ruby
King pepper, $1.50 M. el.
Money orcer, Mrs. Ethel War-
ren, Baxley, Rt. 4.

ER, potato plants, Goy. insp,
from vine cuttings, $1.00 M.
BOB: 291: 25 M. del.
shipment, Gr ady Cauley, Alma,
Rt. 4, ; a

Marglobe and Gr.

del: 2 M
Leland Light-

2

Baltimore

Mrs. Pithena.
Reo
Marglobe and Gr.

Dyal, Baxley,
Baltimore
PR;
potato, $1.25 M. JOR. No chks.
Mrs. G. W. Courson, Pay: Rt.
4, Box 73.

Cabbage, collard, onion and old
fashioned multiplying onion
90c M: large,
curled. mustard seed, 25e Ibs. 5
Ibs., $1.00. Mixed or all one kind
order,. LL. #. Harrison, Dublin.

Pure Red Skin Gov. insp. P.
R. potato plants, $1.35 M., 5 M.
or more, $1.25 M. del-; Ruby
King and pimiento pepper, same
price; Marglobe, New Stone to-
mato, $1.00 M. del. Cash. A. H.
Lynch, Baxley.

P. R. plants, $1.25 M FOB.;
$1.40 M. del.; Marglobe tomato,
$1.00 M. FOB.; $1.25 M. del.
Lee Leggett, Baxley, Rt. 4.

P. R. plants, imp. Red or Yel-
low Skin, from vine cuttings;
5 M., $6.00. EF. G. Tyre, Bristol.

P. R. imp. potato plants, Gov.
insp. treated, Red and Yellow
Skin, $1.25 M. J. B. MeCall,
Alma, Rt. 4.

Gor. insp. and treated yellow
or pink skin P. R., plants, seed
Leland
Lightsey, Screven.
~Gov. insp: P. R., Yellow or
Pink Skin plants, $1.25 M: 5 M,

$6.00: 10 M, $11.50. Prepaid by

mail or express. Sat. guar. Now
ready. J. B. Hason, Screven.

Imp. Red or Pink Skin Pota-
to<plants, $1.25. M: del. TSP,
Musselwhite, Arabi, Rt. 1.

Mastodon ever-bearing straw-
berry plants, 40c C., 500, $1.50;
$2.50 M.: Lady Thompson, 30
C5: 00; "$1.00: $1.75 M. Cash.
Montez Benncit, Flower y Branch,
Rt. 1.

Dill plants and sprays,
doz.,
New. Stone, Matchless, Golden
Queen, 30e C.: horseradish, 6

10c

Box 38.

plants,

insp. Red and Yellow
full

CE

Prompt

M./y. oo Crow,

40e C; tree-tomato plants,

Mrs. Mary Lou Eaton,
Dahlonega, Rt. i Eee



* aad Jo Jane, Jel.

Be exchange on ail chee 2S.
G. O Quinn; Surreney, Rt
= Pea potato - plants,
$1.10 M. prepaid.
Sat. guar. ee Ws
LEney, a= :

Hot and Sweat popper | |
20c C. Add postage.
sie Martin, Gainesville, Rt
Red Skin P. R. potato plants,
Goy. insp., $1.25 M. FOR. Mrs.
Ruth Ahi, Baxley, Rt. 2. 3

Marglobe, Gr. Baltimore, New
Stone tomato plants, 45G,2

read
Gov. insp.
Sees ey Sur-

00 M. Ready June Yat,

. Miller, Baxley, Rt. 4.

_ Strong collard plants, be
del.; long handle and. dipper
gourd seed, 20e large pke. del
Mrs. A. H. Price, Locust Gro
Cabbage, collard, Ga. collard
and Hot pepper plants, 10c C
also large dbl. zennia plartts, 1
doz. Now ready. Add postage.
Mrs. W. A. Lewis, Toomsboro,

Imp. Red Skin P. R. potato
plants, Gov. insp., $1. 25 M: Ma:
globe and Bonny Best tomate
plant, 500, 60c: $1.00 M..

Gaff, Fitzgerald, Rt. >.

2

Godbys Early Prolific olan
plants, $1.25 M.: 4 M., ee
$1.15 M.: 4 M., $4. 00... 0. KL
Herrin, Winokur. :

Imp. Red Skin P. R. Gow: ise!
$1.00 M.; Cert. Marglobe tomat:
Gr. Baltimore, 65e M. B. se ee
Varndore, Pine - Grove, 4

Cert. Pink Skin P. R. potate
seed grown from vine cutting
and treated, $1.40. ee prepa:
$1.25 M. at bed. . Barke
Rochelle, Rt. 2. ee

Yellow Skin F. R, Gov. in
$1.25 M. del.; Red: Skin P.-
plants, same price. B. E. Tho
ton, Screven, Rt. 1.

Gov. insp. Red and Yellow Ski
| P. R. plants, also Boones, $1
M. Mrs. Win, Palmer, le
land; Rt. 1

Yellow Skin P. Re, Gov!
and treated, $1.25 M. del.
Draughon, Arabi, "RET.

insp., $1.10 M.;

more, $1.00 M. Ship by expres
: Ge

only, FOB here.
Ty Gye
Stone and Baltimore (one
plants, 500, 50c; 90c M. Wakse-
field cabbage, 65e M. All del
Amos Garrett, Gainesville, Rt

New, Stone, Baltimore toma
plants, 500, 50e: 90e M. del
| Wakefield cabbage, 60c M. d
A. G. Garrett; Gainesville, Rik

Red meated P, R. a plants,
$1.85 M. Marglobe omato, $1
M.; Black Beauty egg- plant, 25
G: $2,002 Mi Rak Boat
Mershon, Re
Gov. insp. P. R., potato: plants,
$1.50 M.: Boones, $1.75 M. C.
Dp. Crow, Gainesville, Rt. Des

Gov. insp. P. R. Red and Pink
Skin, $1.25 M. del.; $1.00 M. EX
Col, Cabbage, 75e M. del. -
mato plants, 15e C., $1.00 M. del.
Vigorvine tomato plants. 10 doz.

Gainesville. :

E,



SEED FOR SALE

- Cuban Queen melon seed
per Ib., or exe. 10 Ib. for full
stock | Duroc Male pig or syruy
Starling Yawn, Vienna, Rout
Box 1138. :

Kaffir Corn, 25 per 4 Yb: Rice
peas, Pumpkin seed, 15c per: 2
cupfuls: Also, white tender cor
field beans, 25c per cupful. or
exc. for P. R. potato plants. Mrs.
Henry Eller, Ellijay, Route 3

Calif. Beer seed, 10c per star
Mrsii. "i Puckett, Wal: ska,
Route 1.

Sound 1936 serop Hastings =
muskmelon, cantaloup and Stone
Mt. Watermelon seed, 10c large
pke. 3 pkg. 25c. Also, nice broom
corn seed, 10 per cupful, Ri
pop corn, 10c per pt. Add Pos
age. Alene Younge, Clevelan
Route 4.

Hastings "Stone Mt. Water =
melon seed, 10c for 1-2 cup
Also Hastings Rockyford mu
melon seed, 10c.per 2 ta
spoonfuls. Texas (very larg
muskmelon seed, 5c per 2 ta
spoonfuls. Comer Moore,
wanee. eS .

Vine peach (grows large as_
oranges), 100 seed 10c. M.

Cheatham, Roy. ;

50 Ibs. Dixie Belle melon seed
hand selected, 25 Ib. F.0.B
A. L. Brady, Rupert.

Large muskmelon, large, yel
low squash, ornamental hot pep
per, tender okra, cucumber seed
Each, 10c large pkg.; 2-4 Ibs.
nice butter ea. week, 80e 1b
postpaid. Miss Eva Cogbur
Alpharetta, Rt. 1.

Tomato seed, Marglobe, $1,
lb.; New Stone and Baltimo
65 Ib. All del.~ W. O. Waldtiy
Flowery Branch.

-Vigorvine (most prolific t
mato grown: grows 12 ft., ove
20 tons per acre), 150 seed, (25 ;
del. Will Cy Smith, Roy. :









Ge Ib.:
ib. or exc, for sugar sacks or}.

Calif. multiplying beer seed, |
c tbis., lady peas, cream sugar

crowders, 3 lbs. 25c.. Add post-
age. Mrs. R. A. Nolen, Rock-
: mart, Rt? 2. :
Dill seed, old fashioned musk-
melon, 10c tbls., 3 for.25c; large
pumpkin seed, 10c cupful; spec-
kled crowder peas, weevil- free,
10 Ib. Del. Mrs. W. D. Ralston,
Bula Gap.

A-1, 90-day running velvet
bean seed, $1.90 bu. Lots of

+ 10 bu, or more, $1.80 bu. J.

Frank Tanner, Sander sville, R.
2 hb. 4:
Pure white velvet. okra seed,
free from trash,. 15 lbs. or more,
20c tb.; single Ib. postpaid. Mrs.
E. C. Argo, Douglasville, Rt. 4.
Speckled bunch butter-bean
seed, 15c lb. Add postage.
ccin or money order. Mrs. J.
_#H. Dailey, Millen, Rt. 4, Box 59.
Seed Rice, 5 lIbs., 65c; 10. lbs.
or more, 10c Ib; Prepaid. Hu-
delle Beasley, Jesup; Rt. 2.
Running okra seed, 25 for
10c; Silver Hull crowder peas,
little white lady peas, 6c

good tomato plants.
Heath, Douglasville.

Calif. multiplying beer seed,

Mrs. T. H.

f tart, ta Aso:
10c per start, plus postage; also: 1ots.

extra large Yellow Dent pop
corn, 10c Ib. Mrs. Sallie Floyd,
Rockmart, Rt. 2.

CORN & SEED CORN |
FOR SALE

1M. bu. good; yellow corn in
_shuck, free of weevils, $1.50 bu.
F.O.B. my farm, 12 miles South
Douglasville, at Pumpkin Vine
Ferry. N. M. Smith, Atlanta.
1271 Glenwood Ave., Ja. 3656.

_. Mosbys prolific seed corn, 2-4
long ears, white, extra. drought-
resistant, $1.00 peck, $3.00 bu.
F.0.B.; white lady peas, Calif.
black- -eyes, white bush and Fla.
ae butter-beans, 7c Ib. 5 Ib.
lots. . C.. Kimsey, Cornelia:





Sa Mexio. June corn, $1.00

peck; Stoneville No. 2 cotton
seed, 90 bu. All F.0.B. Exc. for
sound, weevil-free peas at $2.00
bu. Bryce L. Jordon, Carrollton,
Hon)...



_ BEANS & PEAS FOR SALE



12 bu. white brown eyed peas,

238. 00 per bu. Also 15 bu. mixed

peas, $2.25 per bu. C.0O.D. No
orders filled less than 1 bu.
one H. White, Route 1, Hart-
we :

Lady peas, crowder peas, 10c
: per Jb. Brown eyes, 8c per Ib.
Ue hs. Osborn, Roy.

<i 125 bu. good clay peas, $2.10
per bu. F.0.B. C. Ww. Coleman,
Devereux.

_,. Brabs. pure and sound, $2.50
per bu. Also running Velvet
Beans, 80 per cent sound $1.50
Bau bu. F.0.B, es A. Bargeron,

ardis.

White peas, rotae -eye sugar
rowders, $2.50 per bu. Sacked,
F.0.B. Send money with order.
J.C. Newsom, Sandersville.

40 bu Cokers O-Too-Tan

means, $4.50 per bu. F.O.B. wee

Morgan, Vienna,

Couch peas, absolutely pure,
I db. 25 or 2 Ib. 35c. Postpaid.
Also, LaConch peas at same
price. Earl S. Redwine, Madras,

30 bu. unknown peas, 90 per
cent sound. Make best offer.
J. -W. MecMichen, Dallas, Rt. 3.

10. Ib. pure sound white pole
butter bean seed, also pure sound
pole speckle butter bean seed,
-15c per ib. Plus Postage. G. L.

_ Jones, Brownwood, Route 1.
Sugar crowder peas for sale,

10 Ibs. $1.00 postpaid. Write
for prices on larger orders. E.
Ww. Walton, Route 2, Temple.

_ Few bu. pure sugar crowder
peas, $3.00 per bu. F.0.B. G, E.
Duffey, Palmetto, . g

Red Hulled Speckled peas,
sound and weevil-free, $3.00 per
bu. F.0.B. $1.00 per pk. Post-
paid in Ga. -John Ww. Moseley,
Route 2, Soperton.

Genuine O-Too-Tan beans,
_hew_crop, sound, hand-threshed,
ecleaned. $5. 00 per bu. Hugh
4d. Stanley, Greensboro, Route 3.
ton O-Too-Tan beans, $4.50
per bu.
per bu.. New Era Peas, $1.15
per bu. Mixed peas, $2. 00 per
bu. Farm Relief Cotton seed,
$3.50 per cwt. R. M. Turner,
Royston, ~
; -Hendersons White Limas, 35c
per 2 Ib. Red Speckled sugar
crowders, 12 per Ib. Also
i brown-eyed Crowder,
Little white lady finger peas,
ide per lb. Add postage on all
orders. Supply limited. Miss Cc.
L. Retlos; Route 4, Cumming,

OT 122" pu. unknown peas,
$3: 00 per bu. Sample on request.
Also some good 4 hand bunches
fodder, $2. 00 per cwt. Mrs. . A.
Phillips, Palmtto, Route 1.

140 bu. 90-Day Velvet beans,

a even. wt. 21-2 bu.) "$185: per

10 bu. or more $1.75 per
be "FOR. Sample on request.
ton Parkerson, Chauncey.

60 bu. New Era peas, clean,
te aed | Clark, Gillsville, Rt. 1.

9 per bu. No order |

Send

Hall,

poorwills and mixed peas.

Also Cane Seed, $1.50

-Money order.



Brown Sugar Crowders, sound,
$3.00 per bu. Not prepaid. Cash
or Money Order. A. L. Nichols,
Rock Springs.

1h bu. New Era peas, $2.25
per bu. F.O.B. Guar. sound and
not mixed. J. E. Pool, Route 1,
Box 79, Waleska.

20 bu. Red ripper peas, not
mixed, $2.50 per bu. F.O.B. J.
W. Wright, Alto.

20 bu. Unknown peas, $2.00
per bu. .C. C. Courson, Dev-

ereux.

Good sound bright Hay peas,
some mixed, $2.40 per bu.
Straight hay peas, $2.50 per bu.
in 21-2 bu. nex bags. J. G.
Jordan, Ft. Valley. :

30 bu. Brabs, also mixed spec-
kled and clay. Make best offer.
Inez Rheney, Wadley.

. 50 bu. Mixed hay peas, $2.35]
F.0.B. Also 10 bu. old fashion

late runner clays and 10 bu.
Red Ripper for hay, Ha. $2.50
per bu. F.0.B. Also 50 lbs. Dix-
ie Bell Melon seed, 50c per Ib.
F.0.B. W. O. Birdsong, Gordon.

500 bu. sound field peas,
Brabs, $3.00 per bu. Brabs and
Irons mixed, $2.75, New Era,
$2.75 per bu. in even wt. bags.
del. anywhere in Ga. in 250 bu.
Chas. H. Neisler Estate,
Reynolds.

Cream crowder peas, Mrs.

W. J. Campbell,. Rising Fawn.

Little lady finger peas, 8c Ib.;
white. bunch butter-beans, 12
lb.;. okra seed, 10c cupful; few
running putter-beans, 12 Tb.
Add postage. Exe. for No. 1
chicken feed sacks at 8c ea. Mrs.
Road Hodges, Manassas.

10 bu. white crowder peas,

|21-2 bu. bags, 5 Ib. or $7.00

per bag if take lot. Mrs.
Oglethorpe, Rt. 2.
Brabhams, Clays, Irons, Whip-
W.

ae Et

C. Coffin, Richland.

Red Rippers, -
knowns, Whipps, Irons, New
Eras, $2.25 bu.;- Brabs, $2.75
bu.; cream, brown, white, spec-.
kled sugar crowder peas, 6c Ib.
Add postage. B. R. Woodliff,
Flowery. Branch, Rt. 1.

Straight Tron peas, $2.50; na-
tive grown O-too-tans, $4, 50
bu. 21-2 bu. bags. D.C. Stroth-

Clays, Un-

er, Ft. Valley.

_ Few. bu. pure, genuine sugar
crowder peas (made 700 bu. on
15 acres), $3.00 bu. F.O.B. G.
EK. Duffy, Palmetto, Rt. 1.

O-too-tans, sound and pure,
gathered by hand, $5.00 bu.. R.
E. Rowe, Alvaton,

50 bu.. Velvets, $1.50 bu. in
lots of 21-2 bu. or more. F.O.B.
J. H. Rowland, Wrightsville.

Native grown Q-too-tans;,
$5.00; Brabham and Iron peas,
$2.50 bu.; Mix. peas for hay,
$2.25; white Spanish peanuts,
$5. 00 per 100 Ibs. W. B. Nor-

|ton, Ft. Valley.

150 bu. 90-day velvet beans, ;
2'1-2 bu. bags, $2.00 bu. F.0.B.
J. M. Sutton, Sylvester.

10 bu. Iron Clad or New Era
peas, sound, $24.00; 800 Ibs.
early Cane seed, some cracked
from threshing, $22. 50; -B.F:
Fagan, Martin.

12 bu. A No. 1 Speckled peas,
$2.35 bu.; 15 bu. sligthly dam-
aged, $2. 00 bu. Sample on re-
quest. Paul Cramer, Ideal.

500 bu. Iron-Clay mix. peas,
$2.10 bu. and quantity. Cash.
G. A. Lewis, Waynesboro.

150 bu. Iroms in new 2 1-2 bu.
bags, -$2.50 bu. F.0.B.. LL. <S.
Hayes, Bonaire.

Laredo soy beans, sound and
clean, $3.50 bu. Archie G. Hyde,
Senoia,

100. bu. No. 1, 90- dae Velvets,
$2.00 bu. F.0.B. N. G. Jordan,
Wrightsville.

38 bu. yellow mammoth soy
beans,
bu.; few pounds speckled crowd-
er peas, 15 lb. in 2 Ib. lots or
aoe G. T. Brown, Ball Ground,

Sound, bright seed peas,
mixed, $2. 40. bu.; Clays, Whipps,
New Eras, $2. 50. bu. New, 21-2
bu. bags, 10c bu. extra if. re-
Hoses C. P. Barrett, Ft. Val-
ey.

Few bu. Brabhams, mixed
some, $2.50 bu.; 1-M. bundles
of 4-hand fodder, good length,
No. 1 grade, $3. 00 per hundred.
A. M. Hooper,
Norcross.



Miscellaneous Wanted

PLANTS WANTED
Want Pink Skin P.R. potato
plants in May and June. Exe.
Ga, collard plants: 1500 for 1
M. Have Ruby King and Hot
pepper plants for exchange later.

Mrs. F. Happoldt, Lewiston.

Want 1500 Yellow Skin Bunch
potato plants. Quote price del.
by parcel post. B. F. Fagan,
Martin.

Want. sweet Sis slips in 2
M lots: Exchange 2 gal. okra
seed, 2 M. All Season cabbage



plants and 11-2 bu. green Eng-

lish peas for ea. lot. Sudie

old | eos Spanish

clean and sound, $4.00 |

Want 20 M. Red Skin P.R.|
fresh soon. |

potato plants for immediate del.
Quote best price del... Will wire
money order for same.. Hie ds
McCorvey, Pavo.

. Exe. 7 Ibs. sun-dried apples
for 1 M. P.R. potato plants. Ea.
pre-pay postage. Mrs. Joe Schell,
Carrollton, Rt. 4. *

Want 10 M P.R. sweet potato
plants by May ist.. State best
cash price del Willie Davidson,
Alto,
_ Want 3 M ea. Black Beauty
Egg-plant and Calif. Wonder
pepper plants. Quote prepaid
prices. J. M. Burkhead, Col-
lege Park, Rt. 2.

GRAIN AND HAY WANTED

Want some Peavine hay. State
price. L.. M. Cross, Albany.
Wildfair Plantation.

Want i-2 ton hay and 10 bu.
corn, at once, near: Vidalia. Send
prices. Will come after. B. B.
Haynes, Vidalia, Rt. 4.

SEED WANTED
PEANUTS
Want 50 Ibs. shelled seed

Spanish peanuts. C. R. Hor-
ton, Covena.
BEANS AND PEAS

Want peck large, white
Crowder peas for seed. Exc.
Laurel. seedlings or other shrub-
bery. Mrs. O. D. Woodruff,
Greenville.

Want some old fashioned pot-
hook. or the old. fat-horse
(creaseback) cornfield beans.
State price. :

PERSIMMONS ;
Want some Japanese persim-
mon buds. R. T. Goodson, Chick-
amauga.
GARLIC
Want 3 or 4 Ibs. garlic bulbs.

Quote best price per pound del.



W. M. Thornton, Jesup.

CHURN

- 2-gal. barrel churn in good
cond., cheap for cash. Mrs. S.
Cc. Cochran, Silver Creek, R.F.
Et

WAGON

Want good, heavy wagon,
suitable for use as 1 or 2 horse,
at a bargain for cash. D. B.
Hayes, Griffin, Rt. 3. :

CATTLE FOR SALE

Milch cow, 4th calf 7 wks.
old, for sale reasonably. Mrs.
Kate Phillips, Palmetto, Rt. 1.

Pure bred, not reg., 4 yr. old
Hereford pull, $100.00, or exe.
for saddle horse or beef type
cattle of equal value. > A.
Carlton, Coolidge.

3 gal. Jersey cow, Hoshen 2nd
calf 28th of May, for sale or
exc. for beef cattle or heifers.
H. J. Chandler, Buchanan,

Jersey cow and very young
heifer calf, $38.00; Jersey male,
fine stock, 18 mos. old, $20.00.
At my home prices. Albert B.
McKoy, Newnan,

3 dairy cows with young calves,
$40.00 ea. at barn. Miss Mattie
Loyd, Ocilla, Rt. 2.

2 young Jersey milch cows.
Considers offers, at my farm.
Mrs. J. C. Camp. Blakely.

6 yr. old Jersey cow, 4 gal.
milk and over pound butter,
$60.00; also 100 toe and 5 bu.
oat. sacks, free of holes, 5c
each. Don Pallenzy, Blue Ridge.

Guernsey cow, 4 1-2. to.5 gal.,
$65.00; Blue Jersey, $45.00; 1 to
freshen about 20th, $50.00. Come
see. H. R. Gentry, Taylorsville,
Rie es =

Guernsey bull, $175.00; 1
Hereford bull, $100.00; 2 Jer-
sey heifers, $100.00 ea:; Hol-
stein heifer, $75.00; 1 P.C. boar
hog, $50. 00. All reg. except





Holstein. H. P. Stuckey, Experi-~

ment, Experiment Station.

1 extra nice pure bred Jer-
sey cow, due to freshen May 21.
For sale at my place,
phens, Luthersville.

2 young Jersey cows with ist
and 2nd calves, $35.00 ea., or
$65.00 for both, Not including
calves. Mrs. Alice Moran, Mo-
ran,

Fine Reg. Jersey cow, fresh
in. Pedigree furnished. Frice
(including calf) $100.00 F.O.B.
R. A. Nunnally, Statham,

1 Pure Bred Jersey Bull ealf,
entitled to Reg. 4 mo. old. Make
best offer at barn. Mrs. C. F.
Elliston, Rupert.

Yoke of matched steers, broth-
ers, born same day. Wt. about
750 Ibs, ea. Work to plow, cart,
and ride (gentle and fast). Also
heavy army cart for two steers
with low cart attachment, high
arched axle, $140.00 for all. L.
W. Thompson, Swainsboro,

1 3 yr. old reg. Jersey cow,
fresh with 2nd calf. Priced rea-
sonably,, at barn. Mrs. C. T.
Hallman, Douglasville, Route 1.

1 Jersey cow to freshen lat-
ter part of May. $35.00. S. P.
Sanders, Colbert.

1 Butt headed jersey cow, 3
yrs. old. Will freshen in fall.
$25.00 cash. Mrs. Martha Hor-
ton, Alapaha, Route 1, Box 81.
1 ae Bull, 8 mos Sub.

i

Js
for cash. Mrs. Lela Davis, Sugar

Male pigs, 3 mo, old.

oe Os Ste-



CATTLE FOR SALE

2 milk cows, 1 fresh, 1 to be
Reasonable price.
Also i bu. Brab peas, $2.40 F.O.B.
1-2 bu. white Brown eyed peas,
$1.35 or exc. for 1,500 pure Pink

Skin potato plants, not mixed.|

A, J. Pope, Tallapoosa,

6 mos. old, reg. bull calf, out
of 3 gal. heifer, sired by grand-
son of 1 of Pebblee Hills. best
cows, $20.00 at barn;
shipped. A. A. Fowler,
Mountain, Rt. 1.

Thoroughbred Jersey cow,
when fed, 3 gal. yr. old, and

calf, $30. 00. Mrs. . Clayton Doug-
las, Alma.

Good cow, 31-2 gal., $30.00;
good horse, work anywhere, 7
yrs. old, to trade for mule. W.

Brown, Fairburn, Rt. 1. :
Choice of 3 good milch cows

Valley, Rt. 1.
HOGS FOR SALE

4 very fine P.C. 8 wks. old.
pigs, wt. about 40 Ibs. ea. males
and females, $5.00 ea. F.O.B.
J. H. Womack, Greensboro,

Big Bone Black Guinea. boar,





about 10 mos. old, wt. about 150
lbs., for sale.
Decatur, Rt 2.

John H, Tinsley,

Pure bred, reg. Durocs, 8 wks.
old pigs and 4 mos. old boars.
Best breeding. Priced: reason-
ably. Aubrey Stalhheet Carroll-
tom, Re 3:

5 thoroughbred | Duroc Jersey
Will reg-
ister in buyers name, $1.00 ea.
Mrs. J: F. Drury, Waynesville,
Route 1.

Big Bone Black. Guinea: Pigs,
10 wks. old for breeding, $15.00
per pr, $8.00 ea. T. T. Proc-
tor, Eastman. !

Registered Duroc: Jersey
Boars and Gilts Reg. in buyers
name, double treated for chol-
era, choice breeding stock. Gilts,
$25.00; Boards, $15.00 AND UP.
N. W. Jones, Horseshoe Bend
Farm, Glenwood,

1 or 2 truck loads feeder pigs;
also Duroc Gilts and Males. For-
rest Jackson, Donovan.

S. P. C. Pigs, 10 to 12 wks.
old, $10.00 ea. Reg. in buyers
hame. C. H. Trussell, Sanders-
Ville. :

S. P. C. Gilt, bred to Reg.
Boar, $35.00 Reg. in buyers
name. Also Guernsey Bull calf
from high producing dam Ent, to
Reg., $25.00. 90 day running

'velvet beans $1.50 F-.O.B. sta-

tion or here. .P.C. boar male or
female ready to ship in June. T.
R. Duggan, Warthen,

4 shoats, $3.25 ea. or $12.00
for lot at pen. Wt. about 45 or
50 Ibs, on feet ea. Good stock.
Not shipped. E. 3B. Warren,
Toomsboro, Route 2.

Pure Bred, Subject to reg. I. O.
C. and B. P. C. pigs, now ready
to move. L. R. Langley, Coun-
ty Agent, Marietta, ;

1 fine Duroc sow, due to farrow
Aug. 10, $25.00, or exc. for
good milk. cow, or let out on
shares, near Lula, R. C. Brewer,
Star Route, Lula,

6 mos. old Big Bone Black P.
C. boar, good cond., sub. to reg.,
$20.00. No exch. J. HE. Bailey,
Newnan, Rt. 3

Pure Black African Guinea
hogs; service boar and _ herd
sows, $30.00 ea.; bred gilts,
$25.00 8 wks. old pigs, either
sex, $10:00 ea., $18.00 pr. <A.
P. Sanders, Tignall, Rt. 1.

3 mos. old _ thoroughbred:
Hampshire pigs, $6.50 ea.; want
about 2 bu. peas. Chas. R. Dug-
gan, Cochran, Rt. 4. |

7. March boar S.P.C. pigs, out

of Fascination, out of Mae
Jean by Fascinate (both re-
serve world champions); Sired
by Prince Charming, half
brother to present world cham-
pion. Dnl, treated, reg., $10.00
ea. F.O.B. Fred Colweil, Blue
Ridge.

Reg. Berkshire brood sow, 2
yrs. old, 400 Ibs., $35.00; good.
farm mule, 900 lbs., $75.00. H.
Tk Barnett, Smyrna, Rt. 1. (At-
lanta phone, Belmont 1317-J.)

Reg. Big Bone Black Essex
pigs for sale. Leman Over-
street, Lenox.

Black P. C. 250 Ib. 2 yr. old
male Hog, $20.00 here.
Lumley, Soperton, RFD 3.

3. S..-P..C. pigs; 4 mos. old,
about 70 Ibs., treated and reg.,
$12.50 ea. G. W. Burney, Guy-
ton.

Blue Boars, 80 to 125. Ibs.,
12. 1-2c per Ib:; 30 feeder
shoats, 12 1-2c lb. All life
treated. Boars crated, FOB;
shoats at my barn; also new
crop comb honey, No. 10 cans,
$1.50 del. by parcel post; in bulk
70 lb. tin at 12 1-2c Ib. del. by
express. L. H, Edenfield, Stil,
more, Rt. 1, Box 34. :

150 Ib. P. C. sow with 7 pigs
10 wks. old May 15th. $25.00.
Cc. B. Cook, Buena Vista.

Pure bred Big Bone Essex: Yr.
old boar, $16.00 at my barn;

$18.00 crated: -6 wks. old pigs,

$4.00 ea, at my barn: $4.50

crated; also a 250-300 Ib. sow.

W: nsley, Elberton, Rt. 4,

$25.00.
Stone

tered buck.

wici.

Grover |-



_ Saturday, 1

HOGS FOR :

PURE BRED POLAND
+. HOG SALE: -
95 heads pure bred.
boars sold at auctio
Springs, Ga.,+12. oclo
Sey May 25th. Q...
, breeder.

August, and 1. boar.
the 3 at my lot. :
Michen, Dallas, Rt. 3.

2 pure bred S. P. C.

from 500 Ib. sow and 600

male, 4 mos. old, $13.0
reg. in buyers name. _
Rogers, Quitman, cee

SHEEP AND GOAT:
FOR SALE

Beautiful pure-bloode





genburg doe kid, about 11

old, from 6 qt. dam. Wond
markings. First $15.00 me
order gets him. FOB.
Hynds, Atlanta, 93 Warren.
N. E., DE. 0489-W.

Nice, full Nubian doe,
old, freshen May 12th, from
lon dam and sire; pred te :
Excellent quali
At bargain. F. E. Grubbs,
orest. ;

2 Toggenburg-Nubia
goats with kids and.
billy; also some Speckl
sex roosters, 1 yr.. old
Mrs. A. J. Connell, Nash

1 large milk doe, .
386 days old (ready to
$20.00 without kids; warm
large milk buck. H. B:
son, Carnesville.

Extra. fine milkers, also
milk for sale. H. A. Evan
lanta, 369 Augusta Ave.,

HORSES AND MUL
FOR SALE _

1 plug mare mule for sale,
L. Moore, Grantville, Rt. 1.

1 pr. steel gray Percher
mares, 2 yrs. old, gentle, pe
fect, beginning to wor
about 30 head common s ock
tle for sale. E. H. Jones, hae
cross,







COTTON SEED FOR SAL

Recleaned Petty Toole co
seed, $1.00 bu. F.0.B. Joh
Allen, Fort Valley. Se

100 bu. Mars Rose cotton s



Buford. a
Callaways Dixie Rows eo
seed, 2nd yr. planted alone
kept pure at gin. $1.50 bus,
per OW. O22. Baas <-
purn; .. *

VEGETABLES FOR

2 acres cabbage yeady
15th to 20th. Sell patch or
pound. Write or see me.

R. L. Shirley, Lavonia, Rt.
2 acres green, yellow
muda onions, now ready |
market. 6 miles north of Lud
Ross Hodges, Ludowi

GRAIN & HAY FOR S$

De
W. M. Jack









Peanut hay for sale.
5-6. ton lots.
Warwick. ~

4 or 5 tons Peayine hay, .
ton at my pldce, 10.
Louisville. T. F. Rhodes, wr

LIVESTOCK WANT

HORSES and MULES WANTI

Want Draft Stud colt, 4.
to 11-2 yrs. old. Give full pa:
ticulars. W. R. Wilkinson, .
Claxton. .

SHEEP and GOATS. WANT

Want pure bred Saanan bu
and 1 or 2 doe kids, 3 to 8
old, with papers to reg.,
percent pure. Consider open
bred, older does. Give full
tails. J. G. Simpson, Atla
695 Paynes Ave., N. W. ~

CATTLE "WANTED

Want 2, now over 5 yrs.
cows that will give 4 gal
each, and wont go dry, del here
State best cash price when del.
E. W. Anderson, Ochlochn
Bt 2:

Want few beef type for
ers, within radius of 150-2(
Atlanta, H. bee ioe
stead.

HONEY BEES AND B
SUPPLIES FOR SALE

1937 honey in comb, 10
20 lbs. or more, 10 Jb. p
in 10 lb. cans. All F073
Cravey, Milan, Rt. 1, Box.

Good honey, 5 gal. cans,
case, and in big parrels, 2
Stamp for reply. Sampl
Ed Bradley, Hazlehurst.

New crop honey, 9c Ib. i
to 70 Ib. cans: source of ho
Tupelo, Blackgum, Pecan, ]
lar, Persimmon, Blackb
Huckleberry, etc. C.D
Macon, Rt. 3.

3 well made, home-made
bee hives and supers, $6.00.
B. Tom Kittle, Temple, Rt.









Band Italian Queens and p
age bees: 3 Ib. pkg. wit
tested queen, $3.15; 2
and untested
Queens, 75c ea,
mey, Jesup, Box 117.

New crop honey, 1

$1.10 del.. Comb or

R. oe Mi



RNS FOR SALE

Vhite Leghorn: Hens; 100,

old; 125, 1 yr. old., 75
ke Martin, Flowery |
Route 3.

W. Leghorn hens, 80c ea.
ens at Kansas, Ga. ) F.0.B.

for good milch cow. Harl

son, Waco, Route 2.

Leghorn pullets, 1 yr.
Direct from Kauder: Freavy
$1.25 ea. F.0.B. Wil-
rsley, Columbus, Box

mo. old, $1.00 ea.;
Leghorn Cockerels, 2 mo.
5e ea. Buff Leghorn: Cock-
2: mo. old, 75 ea. Phone
861. Mrs. C. F. Boynton,
6, Box: 344, Atlanta,
oselawn AAA (Wing-
d at Roselawn = Poultry
large white
from 245-320 egg
Mar. ist and April ist,
atch, 10 wks. old, $1.00
' 80e ea. in lots of 5 or
12 wks. old, $1.25 ea.,-or
a. for 5 or more. F.O.B.
Lassiter, 182 2nd Ave.,
Atlanta,

) laying Buff Leghorn hens,

; also 1 S.P.C. male, ready
vice, $15.00. C. G. Cal-
Wayeross, Rt. 4.5.5. .

huge type Eng. strio W.L.
and 2 yrs. old, $35.00.
ewallen, Ashland, Rt. 1.

pe English W. L. pullets.
or price. Chas. T. Mc-
Gainesville, Rt. 8.

.L. cockerels, direct from
ths AAA Ped. up to 342 egg
ings. 6 wks. old, well devel-
syoec ea. F.0-B. Exc. for
. Mrs. T. W. Hagood, Pow-

prings, Rt. 1.

Hollywood big type Leghorn.

ters, 75c ea. or swap for any
breed hens.

AAA W.L. cockerels, from |

s, directly related to Na-

al Laying Contest -Champ-.

arch 30th hatch, 50c ea.
er in large lot, at my farm.
Etheredge, Jackson, Rt.

k. old Pen Ped. .C. W.L.

rels, from Roselawn str.
po ers or Tom Barron Eng.

- WwW. G Wil-
i. at, Palmetto, Rt. 1.

._ BANTAMS

pure. bred Buff Cochin ban-.

hens, 75c ea, if both are

Wilford Emory, Jeffer-.

le, P. O. Box 65.

ack Breasted Red and Black
(all show type) ban-
2 ooo 00 trio; ee cores

ition Buff Cochins, Dark

ish and modern
1 ok Red game pbantams.
W. K. Herndon, Au-

1109 Adrian -St.

ths AAA Barred Rock
lets, February 25, 19387,
sh. 100 for 60c each. Sell |
,of all. FOB. J. M. Wheat,

fine, laying, bloodtested,
ks str, hens, all laying, $1.00
mos. old rooster, $1.75;
arch hatch, $1.50; Hatching
85e per 15 prepaid. Cartons
Mrs. George COtt Rs Mil-

) Imperial B. oR.

- and pullets,

h, $1.00 ea;
5 pullets, 1 cackerel, $5.00;
tbe per 15, $1.25 for 38.
J. E. Steadam, Bainbridge.
pure bred B, R. 12 wks.
le and some W. L.
All 65e ea. FOB. Mrs. C.
arke, Flowery Branch,

hompson str. B. R. pullets

_cockerels, March hatch,

larger lots, 85c ea.

8, Tbe per 15: $1. 25 for 30.
Jee estan,

CORNISH
ne, full bloeded Dark Cor-

oster, grown, $1.50; 2.

r. old, $1.25 ea, FOB. J.

age, Hawkinsville.

rize str. bloodtested large
Dark Cornish hens, $1.75
oster, $1.50; March, April,
piddies, Si 1-26, 25e and
day old, 15c ea; Eggs,
er. 5, prepaid. Mrs. Vera
r Sylvester,
ark Cornish chicks, 3. wks.
5e ea. del; also 25 chicks,
ks, old, 12c ea. del, Miss
na Simpson, Culverton, Rt. 1.

len Roundhead and Gray
e cross, pullets and cocker-

ats, $1.25 ea. cockerels, or
llets and cockerel, $10. 00.
. L. Wallace, Bowersville,
53. :

ne Warhorse games, hens,
0 ea; roosters, $5.00; young
sters and young hens, $1.25
ges, $2:00 per 15, C.. De-

t Decker, Brunswick.
ice, pure bred game roos-
1 Allen Roundhead, -yr.
1 pee Teer old black
00 - $5.00 for.
Money order.

Lit

White Leghorn: Cocker-: Mrs.

leghorn

Black

March.
large lots, 85c.

Bainbridge,

| yrs. old, $15. 00, del.;

oe GIANTS ES
J. W. Giants, 10 wks. old, from

winners, 75 ea; 10 pullets, 1
cockerel, $8. 00: not prepaid
baby chicks, same breed, May
28th, $8.00 per C; Eggs,
per: 15. eS

LEGHORNS

50 W. L. big English Tom Bar-
ron str, hens, now laying, yr.
old, $1.00 ea. 50 pullets, same
stra., 6 wks. old, 50c ea. Cash.
H. E. Hartley, Conyers,
Rtas

25 large type Eng. str. W. L.
10 wks. .old cockerels, 50c ea.
FOB. Mrs. W. G. Bush, Stock-
bridge.

80 W.
ea.

L. hens, 1936 hatch, 60c
Ss. ie Bohanan, Conyers.
50 W. L. 8 wks. old pullets,
Booths AAA up to 342 egg ped.
matings, also 20 S. C: R. I. Reds,
9 wks old, 50c ea, FOB. Wes-

ley Hagood, Powder Springs.
March hatch Booths AA grade

W. L. cockerels, 50c ea. FOB.

Bernice Sellers, Donalsonville.

MINORCAS
6 Rusk Buff Minorca hens,
yr. old, pure bred, $6.00 del.
Mrs. J. E. Passe, Madison, Rt.
2, Box 39.

MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
100 heavy breed mixed 4 wks.

or $18.00)for lot. Money. order.
/Mrs. J, S. Berryhill, Rt. 2.

' ORPINGTONS

Day old chicks, $8.00 Cl $4.50
for 50; $2.50 for 25; Eggs,, 75c
setting, 3 or more sets, 60c Set-
ting. All prepaid; roosters, 12
to 14 wks. old, $1. 00 ea; 3 for
$2.75. Mrs. Lillie H. Jordan,
Norwood, Rt. 2.

-PEAFOWLS
Peafowls for sale. Mrs. P. S.
Cummins, Brinson. :
PIGEONS

Extra choice Fantail pigeons,
white and colored, mated and
working, $2.00 pr. Tom Arnau,
Savannah, 221 H. 49th St.

120 W. K. pigeons, most of

{them mated and working, $20.00

for lot. J. L. Heard, East Point,
CA. 2864.

| White Kings and Carneaux

for sale or exec. for 8 wks. old
chicks. F. W. Cheek, Stene Mtn.,
Rt.,1, Covington Road.

QUAIL.

Calif. Valley quail and mutant,
Golden and Silver pheasants, 15
var. pure bred bantams for sale.
will. buy Bob White quail
Charles Fullman, Atlanta, 413
. 6th t., N. EB.

Young quail for restocking
purposes. Book early. Some
select quail eggs for sale. Hd
M. Furlough, Thomasville,

REDS (New Hampshire)

New Hampshire Red cockerels,
March 15th hatch. Hubbard str.
Very choic, 2 Ibs. wt., $1.00 ea.

Mrs.
tense.
REDS (Rhode Islands)

15 R. I. Red hens, all young,
$1.00. ea. Mrs. Fannie Maloy,

Rhine, Rt. 1.

Pure bred R. I. Red, Barred
Rock and White Wyandotte
hens and pullets, now: dJaying, and
roosters, $1.50 ea. FOB. Money
order - with order. Mrs. H. O.
Daniel, Decatur, 167 Superior
Ave.

John L. Raulerson,

WYANDOTTES -

2 thoroughbred erade
White Wyandotte 7 mos. old
cockerels, $3.00 or $1.75 ea. An-
drew Sackett, Stone Mtn,

R, C. White Wyandotte pul-

(Parent stock hens wt. 8-9 lbs.,
cocks, 10-11 Ibs.) Pultlets, $1.00

tea; cockerels, $1.25 ea; 10 pul-

lets and cockerel, $10. 00. Can
furnish unrelated stock. Mrs. J.
L. Wallace, Bowersville, Box 153.

Cc. R. I. Red pullets and cock-
erels, 2 Ibs.,
-epes, 60c for 15. Crates ret.
Mrs. J. F. Trawick, Tennille.

' 15 pure bred White Wyan-
dotte pullets, Linstrom = str.,
$15.00 FOB; .also 3 young roos-
ters, same breed, 90c ea. FOB.
Mattie B. McPherson.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,

DUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE

16 Jb. Mammoth Bronze gob-
blers, nearly 2 yrs. old, 18c
pound. Miss Necia Powell, Hel-
ena.

3 Jan. 1st hatch M. B. turkeys,
2 hens, 1 tom, av, wt. 8 Ibs.,
$2.00 ea; also 1 Blue peacock, 3
25 lbs. nice,
new, white, downy feathers, 50
Ib: $11.00 for lot, del. C. D.
Collins, Cordele, Rt 4.

1 pr. white African Guineas
(hen now laying), $2.00 for pr.
Mrs. J. Ei Wisenbaker, Valdosta,
Rt. 3, Box 78.

20- baby turkeys, 35c ea, del.
Be off next week; another lot in
June, 25 ea. CoD. No chks.
Mrs. B. F. Morrison, Gaines-
heed Rt. 8.

' 18 large size Blue Sete $1.0
ea. oo Mrs. 5 Winder



_POULTRY FOR SALE

stock direct from Nabor prize
oe

-ing eggs, 75c per 15.

old chicks, now ready, 20c Ca.

FOB. Reduction on larger lots.
Hor-:

furnished.

A.}

lets and cockerels, March hatch.

Few White Wyandotte and .}

60c ea; also Red

-80 yrs.



Golden Pheaseit Eggs,
per doz. D. T. Jennings, Amer-
icus, P. O. Box 84.

Pure Bred Brown Leghorn

eggs, 75e per 15. Prepaid, or 50c
if called for. Guar. good hatch.
Mrs. I. R. Hobby, Fitzgerald,
Route 3.

Big type white leghorn hatch-
$4.00 per
L. Parrish, Nash-

100. Mrs. J.

ville,

Pure Bred M. B. Turkey eggs,
$2.25 per 12, $16.00 per 100.
Poults, $25. 00 per 100. Mrs.
Neal T. Williams, Buena Vista.

Speckled Guinea eggs, setting

{of 20 eggs, $1.00. Postpaid. Josie

Davis. Curryville.

White Pekin duck eggs, 75
per doz. postpaid; yellow mam-
moth tobacco plants, $10.00 per
M. postpaid. Mrs. Ida Forester,
Buford, Rt. 2.

Pure bred White Pekin duck
eges, 60c doz. Mrs. B. Cc. Hus-
key, Menlo.

Pure bred M.B. turkey eggs,
$2.00 per 12; $15.00 per 100 for
balance of "season; baby tur-
keys (3 wks. old), 50c ea.; day
old (June ist) ones, 30c ea.
Mrs. N. T. Williams, Buena
Vista. :

Parks BR. eggs, Cream

'|.Grade, selected, 65c per 15 post-

paid; nice cockerels, 8 wks. old,
90c ea.; Cream grade English
White Leghorn, 8 wks. old cock-
erels, 80c ea. Mrs. W. R. Smith,
Chester, Rt. 2.

Mammoth Mallard duck eggs
from good stock, $1.00 per 15,
del. Mrs. W. V.. McMichael,
Brunswick,-. Rt. 1, Box 66.

Giant turkey eggs, 15c ea.
$4.50. for 30. Sent C.0.D. Mrs.
Cc. D. Byrom, Senoia, Rt. .2.

. Turkey (slightly mixed) eggs,
$1.50 per doz. Miss Jessie Ad-
ams, Bowdon, Rt. 3.

Turkey eggs, $1.75 per doz.
del. Exc. 1 doz. for 2 settings
pure bred Jersey White Giant
eggs. Mrs, Roy Herod, Adairs-
ville, Rt. 3.

Pure bred Dark Cornish eggs.
$1.00 per 15; $1.75 for 30. Mrs.

Fred Johnson, Dawson, Rt. 2.

Setting eggs of Quail, pheas-
ants, wild duck, White Holland
turkeys, pure bred bantam
chickens. Stock for sale, also.

J. H. Street, Atlanta, P. O. Box :

438, or Rays Road, Stone Mtn.
Highway.

Hatching eggs from Kerlins
Quality Leghorn hens, mated to
big,
Reasonable or trade for good.
thrifty pigs,
(in June) Leghorn hens, laying
good, for sale. H. C. Snyder,
Marietta, 721 Kennesaw -Ave.

$2.00

husky Nichols cockerels. |

also few Yr. old.



FARM HELP WANTED

Want good, settled woman to
care for garden, and other Hght
farm work, for room, board in



good farm home and small sal-

ary. Ref. required. Start at

ance.

Want temperate, reliable, col-
ored couple as gardener and|{
care-taker. Steady work. Cabin
18 miles Atlanta.
Write,
715 Rhodes-Haverty Bldg.

Want experienced farmer to
work by the month. Pay right
price. Must be healthy, sober,

not curse nor other bad habits

and good worker, Write or see.
Rey. J. Frank Conner, Bloom- |
ingdale.

Want for general farm work,

(1 large family of workers and

2 single young men of good hab-
its. Wages from $20:00 to $30.00
per month. State age and ex-
perience. F. B. Jackson, Don-
ovan.:

Want young, white woman,
unencumbered, for light farm
work. No field work.
salary. Write at once,
Parker, Conyers, Rt. 1.

Want middleaged woman,
white or colored, to do light
farm work, no. field work. Sal-
ary and good home. Mrs. John
F. Solomon, Jeffersonville, Rt. 1.

Taft

Want good family with 2 plow

hands, also any other farm help
ean be used, also. Pay average
salary. 4 room house, garden,
milk if you can milk. H. M.
Harp, Ashburn.

Want boy, 14 to 17 yrs. of
age to work on farm for board

and meals and share in crop;
also party with some capital to:

help raise chickens and quail.
Mrs. Leila McFarlin, Blakely,
Rt23

Want boy, exp. in farming, to
help on my farm. Good home
and reasonable salary. Must
be dependable and industrious.
J. M. Long, Kennesaw, Rt. 1.

Want unencumbered woman,
22-25 yrs. for light farm work.
$12.00 month, room and board.
Give details in first letter, as
to age, wt., ht., and exp. John
Groffman, Atlanta, 741 Pryor
St. SW.

Want strong, honest, white
woman, good character, not over
for light farm. work.
able to milk and ner 5

ri

Mrs. J. F. Goolsby, Lin-
colnton.

Cc. E. Conkin, Atlanta, |

uO.

Small |}



Want clean, healthy, industri-

ous white woman for light farm
work for board an@ reasonable
salary. State age and give ref.
Mrs. EH. A. Pope, Glenwood.

no field work. B. Edge, Savan-
nah, 1009 Waters Ave.

Want farm boy, married or
single, to milk cows, and other
farm work. Good wages. Give
full description about self and
write for particulars. J, L. Bent-
ley, Thomaston,

Want reliable white boy to
live as one of family and learn
florist trade, also help with
farming. Small pay at first.
Send references. F. E. Grizzle,
Buford.

Want honest and respectable
single white or colored man for
dairy farm. Must be able to
milk, plow and work corn crop.
$12.00 to. $15.00 per month with
poard and laundry. Mrs. W. H.
Cramer, Savannah, White Bluff.

Want at once a good farm
hand. $12.00 mo. board and
laundry, live as one of the fam-
ily. Must not drink. Write
at once. J. G. Espy, Summer-
ville, Rt. 2, Box 77.

Want man with family or sin-
gle man, white, responsible, for

|regular farm work. House and

grounds ready for family; good
home for single man. Write.
us He Culpepper, Lake toe
Rt.

ae a small, country euts
for farm, or single man for gen-
eral labor on farm. About 40
yrs. old, honest and respectable.
15 miles So. Atlanta, 3: mi. North
of Jonesboro. . Willing worker
with good ref.
Riverdale, Rt. 6.

Want good blacksmith, also
good miller who can _ operate
eorn mill run by electricity.

Must be good, sober and honest.

W. H. Gabriel, Winterville, Box

Be

Want colored, single woman
for light farm work, no field
work, on farm, 15 miles At-
Janta. Roony and meals, $3.00
week and 1 day off. References
req. Write W. H. Wilson, At-
lanta, 750 Virginia Circle. :

Want woman, 40+50 yrs. old,
with good health for light farm
work, for good home and small
salary. Myrtle R. Hensler, Route
1, Stone Mountain.

Want experienced farm hand
to plow cotton and. corn. $15.00
per mo. and: board. H. B. Gar-
ner, Lirxomnti. : ~
_ Want young, intelligent, re-
spectable, single white man to
live as one of family and do
light farm work. Pay not large
to. start but good proposition for

{right person. Write full partic-

ulars to R. M. Taylor, Blythe,
Route 1.

Want middle aged white wom-.

an to do light farm work (no

field work) Good wages to right
|party. Write Mrs. A. W. Lucky, |.
-Grovetown, Route 1.

Want man from -45-60 yrs.
old to do light farm work, for
Jaundry and board and live in
home .
595 Box 63, Marietta.

Want. clean, smart, unencum-
bered white woman with good
character to do Hght farm work.
No field work. Home and $9.00

per month. Write at once. Mrs.

H. C. Miller, Helena.

Want two farm hands to work
by day. Experienced. Must
know -hhow to plow and hoe. J.
H. Leverett, Parrott.

Want at once sober,
able-bodied man, well experi-
enced in training and working
horses and mules, for general
farm work for 31-2 mo. $15.00
per mo. to the right man.
Garland, Dial.

Want unencumbered, middle-

aged, white woman for light)
farm work, no field work. $8.00

mo. Must be clean, smart and
know how to milk. Mrs. J. W.
Lawhorn, McDonough, Rt. 1.
Want unencumbered
woman, not over 40, for light
farm -work. Furnish house and

salary. R. W. Durden, Summit.

Want: to use a farm family
for chopping cotton, with man
who has_the ability to operate a

tractor when necessary. A. M.
| Aiken,

Newborn.

Will pay $10.00 month and
board for white woman to do
light farm work, no field work,
for old couple on farm. W. E.
Hudson, Atlanta, 570 St. Charles
Ave., N. E.

Want reliable, sober, exp.
man, good worker, 25-45 yrs. of
age, for gen. farm and orchard
work, dble drive car or truck,
and other work. $12.00 mo.
board and laundry. C. G. Oliver,
Barnesville, Rt. 2.

Want a motherly woman, mid-
dleaged, good character, reli-
able, ete., to help with light farm
work, no field work, $1.00 week
and board in home with widow
and 2 children. Mrs. Jewel An-
Pde Macon. . 612 Bailey Ave.,
Rt..2

Want boy not over 16 to live.

on farm in home as one of fam-
ea oe eee :

| formation.

Posey, Bremen, Rt. 2.

H. Brocklesly,

Stroud, Atlanta.

Miss Mary Moon, Route:

honest, |

E. mont 1285.

white |
garden,



Want atc once > colbeed man and
wife, reliable, with 1 mule and
its feed, for. farm work. 3 acres
well watered land. Give house

|rent and part of crop (no wood).
Want girl for light farm work,

for services. Must have 3 ref-
erences, Write for further in-_
Mrs. D. G. Farmer,
Dunwoody, Rt. 1, Roswell Road. ,

Want man or boy, white or
colored, for farm work. Must
be sober, know how to farm,
and thoroughly reliable. $12. 00
mo. board and laundry. Mrs.
Ora Cain, Buford, Rt. 2. s

Want unencumbered white
woman of good -character, to
milk 1 cow, tend to garden and
other light farm work. Board
and small salary. Mrs. S. E.

Want unencumbered, Healn
honest woman (must be fond of _
children) for light farm work.
Good home and $2.00 per weck.
Mrs. Anna Lee, Hazlehurst, a
of H. Corbitt.

POSITIONS WANTED

A man, 76 yrs. old with no.
one except self, very good health,
wants job tending to stock and
poultry and other light, odd jobs
for home. E. W. Dunn, Atlanta,
Rt. 7, Box 214.

28 yr. old white woman wih
child of 38 wants job. Can do
any kind of garden and field
work. Home and small salary. |
At once. Bert Lou Dodd, Law-
renceville. R.F.D. 2, care of Ee
M. Jacksons box.

Want job for self and wife on
farm. for. wages. Can drive truck |
and repair most any part about
one, also can milk cows and
exp. in farming. Faris Da
Lawrenceville, Rt. 1.

Middleaged couple wants job
on farm as overseer. Can han-
dle labor, expert truck farmer,





poultryman, refined, well edu- a .

cated, farmed all life, painter,
earetaker, etc. Begin at once.
Need furnished room. Make best

(offer with and. without board.

J. H. Brown, Atlanta, care of
Gen. Del.

Want job on poultry iden. ie
| Prefer near Atlanta.

Reason-
W. &E.
746 Hilbert St.,

able wages desired.

S. W.

Want job with good dedi
farm, milking cows or driving
milk truck. No bad habits,
mt John Pose Kite, R..

Young man wants work on |
farm anywhere in Ga. Exneri-
enced and can. give ref. Clif-
ford Allen, Atlanta. 33 Wood-
ward Ave., S. W. ; .

Man, 67 yrs. old, but able to
do light work (no heavy lift-
ing), reliable, honest and well
experienced in -poultry and
stock, etc. Alone. Want home _
and small wages. Henry Vick-
ers, Atlanta, 388 Windsor St,
Ss. W. ay

22 yr. old young man wants,
work on farm. Can drive trac-
tor and exp. in farm work.

Johnny Luek, ae 23 sce

St.

Unencumbered, young ae i
wants place with good people
doing light farm work, for home
and reasonable salary. Ger-
trude Corbett, Nicholls, care of

eet bP CO,

Want place with nice, iuick:
people doing light farm work,
for home and reasonable salary.
Have 7 yr. old girl. Prefer near
Augusta. Mrs. Mary Roper,
Irwinton. ~ ae

Man, single, wants work on
farm or dairy. Well exp. No.
drinker. Ref. R. A. RwsseH,s
Atlanta. 379 West Lake. Bel-

Want job.as Overseer of farm.
48 yrs. old, life time exp. Handle
labor and _ stock successfully.
State salary paid. Bennett
Segraves, Commerce. 11 Brook-
wood Ave.

Man, age 33, wants 1 horse
crop on 50-50 basis. Good house,
well of good water in yard, big -
some truck patches:
near school: 5 in family, 2 to
work. Have to be moved and:
furnished until crop made.
Se Littleton, Spb ics

Young man with wife, 1 child, :
wants job on truck farm. Life
time exp. Truck or tractor
one Frank Goss, Clarkes- ie
ville i

Want 2 horse crop for 1938, :
2 horse, preferable in Cobb.
County with good man. Want
close to school and church and
good land. E. A. Ce Ken-
nesaw.

Want small farm to improve a
for rent. Write'for full particu-
lars if interested. G. P.
as, Tifton, Rt. 6. A

Widow, age 39, educated, re-.
fined, unencumbered, wants job
doing light. work in country on
farm with nice people for rea-

sonable salary, room and board.

Mrs. Maybelle Howell, aes ay

care of Gen. Del. > 2
Want job on farm, 1 horse,

wages or shares. Wife and =

| children. Reliable honest,
and well in fa:





of oe and ces
Xp. G. D. Campbell, At-
lanta. 693 Cascade, Ss. W.

~~ Want: work in the Peach Sec-
tion by a middleaged, honest and
hhard working man, sober and do
hot use tobacco. Have good edu-

i cation. Can handle men. Wil-
liam Jesse, Folkston,

| job attending - stock,
poultry, incubating chicks, over-
seeing farming, Bee culture
uck driving, exp. painter and
rpenter, or running grist and
State offer.

. Bluffton,

. Want work on farm,
boys that can help.

Have 2
Can drive

uck and car and keep them in |

repair.

Iso farming.
References,

Cave Springs. ey

Exp -man with ret. wants to

hear. om purties. interested ze
poultry, Good proposition,
. Ethridge, Pender, Box ae

4 yrs. mechanic exp.,
No bad habits.
Rudolph Manor,

- Want job on farm with go od, :

liable folks. Have 2 girls, 8
nd 18 yrs. Do any kind of
work. J. H. Shirley, Alma.

Boy, age 14, wants job on
farm for board and small Wages,
Near. Atlanta preferred. Com-
-municate with: Mrs. K. i. Haw-

orne, Avante, 198 Peachtree

ant- joy va farm w iti ge Ou ta

Can cyerses,
Family of

and woman,
: lso do farm wet ok.

r 8 large enough to work; 1:

Ak.
41280. 24th

Jackson,

St.

52-0
plenty . help.

Young man, unencuintered, Ye-!

iable, sober, 32 yrs. oid, wants
b on farm for reasonable
wages, board and laundry, Some
experienced ae farming, also
ri Leory Hppinger,
110 eee: tn C2
old, wants

ite man, 32 yis

on farm. Dc not drink. nor |

James C/ at Dem-

rest, Rt, he

M: scellaneous Ror Sale

f



ie athe Black: Walnuts, Dry.
and ee now hulled, $1.50
10f 100. #O. Bo RK, -C. Williams,
Route 2, Soperton. :

Want to hear from someone |

Boon potato slips for

Dp. A. Jenkins, Route 6,

ainesy le.

arb So Te. per Bas ;

orse Radish, 30 per doz. Gar-
lic (small kind), 25c per doz.
Lavender Iris, ~'g5e per doz.
herry. sprouts, apricots, $1.00
Will exc. for white feed
each pay postage. Fisie

, Mineral Bluff.
l ve Root, 50c per Ib. Del.
Ga, Also May ae root,
per Ib. del. Will T. Martin,
Box 143, Dalton, Georgia.

Ibs. pute goose feath-.

- Price for
Oe Ds

20 gal. 8 Cost | abe 00.

hens not over 2 yrs. old.
Trowell, Douglas.

sbane and Yellow root, 25

yer bunch, Crabapple and sassa-

root, 20c per lb. Wild fern

eart leaf, 10c ea. Azaleas

1 colors. Add Postage. Mise
ys" Euler, Ella ae

id dried sage, Qe per th.
2 bright (free from worms)
ied peaches 12c per Ib.
0 Ibs. bees wax. Make
ffer. Add Postage. Mrs.

-Rylee, Route 1, Maysville, eS
airy. feed 100 lb, capacity ;

for sale or exc. for O- Too-

50 sacks 1 bu.
Mr. BLL,

eed corn:

0. Pinneniot plants,
[OZe* yet postage. No
Be ne:

00. Mrs, W, L. Brantley, Jr.,
ut ox 27, Harrison,
ood 1 hor se wagon, painted
and running gear. Price
2 W. C. Adamson, Route
Box 216, Turin.
Dill plants and sprays 10c per
Oz Catnip, calamus, Balm,

ransy, Hoarhound, 6 bunches |

iso star and grub root, 35c
Trillums, 25 per doz.

aton, Route 1, Dahlonega.
Chicken, White 100, Ib.

feed sacks, 7c ea. or 50

ae Onl Cae

Ib. wool tut -eut from
: Make best offer.
d Valley,

; 20c ib. Add postage. |
Lewis |

!

| Stewart pecans, 20c th,,

grate .
Will | -
$7.00 or exc. for 10 large |

CO. S. |

ers, been used some, adc per Ib.
or $8.00 for lot. Add postage.
dusk Knight, Glennville. my

Sassafras, rattle, poke and
yellow root, 25e Ib.; peppermint,
spearmint, garden horsemint,
balm, catnip, hoarhound, 25c
doz. bunches; dill seed, pie plant
seed, 10 pke. Del. Ga. Miss
L. M. White, Dahlonega, Rt. a
Box35o "3

Mullein, winter green, alien
wid cherry and sweet gum bark,
Mrs. Pratt
Butter, Clermont, Rt. 1.

Tung oil nuts for sale cheap,
ait Clasgro. a MES: dds et.
Abbeville.

FRESH AND CURED
MEATS F OR SALE

8 nice hams, et, 25 or 30 lbs.
ea., 25c per lb. Also 3 shoulders,
20c per lb. All from full blood
berkshire hogs, 4-0-8, :. J. 1.
Oliver, Route 8, Commerce.

Country cured hams, wt. from,
17 to 20 Ibs., 24c per Ib. Also
shoulders,, 19 per ib. del. Guy.

Mobley, Madison. : ae

Hams, 8 to 15 Ibs., 32 per Ib.
Also sides and shoulders, 8 to
16 Ibs., 22 per 1b. From young
Hampshire hogs. Will ship C.O.
19s Ee Te: fackson,* Colquitt.

@ nice sured, washed and
ried hams, wit: 20 to 25 Ibs. ea.,
Gc per lb. 33c del. by parcel
nost, Also nice dried side meat,
2%e per ib. Also nice fat Barred

Rock hens, 16 per Ib. Mrs, G.
HH. Hayes, Route 3, McDonough.

Country cured hams, from
corn fed hogs. Wt. 15 to 20 Ibs.,
27 Ib. del. Guar, o.k. in every
way. Mrs. = ae Lewis, War-
then.

_ Brooks count y, ieckar smok-
ed haras, 10 to 25 Ibs. ea.: also
hickory smoked link sausage,
W. A. Walker, Quitman.

Good, gel wood, smoked hams,
25 Ib, Shoulders and sides, 20c
db. Add postage. Money orders
only. Ose: ar Heath. Soperton,
Rt. 2
. Choice, Hickory suoked, hams,
wt. 17 to 30 Ibs., 20c Ib. F.0.B.
C. M. Lowry. LaFayette. Rt.

PEANUTS AND PECANS.
FOR SALE _

295 Ibs. 1936 crop, large, sound
small
lots, not postpaid, $50.00 for lot;
S. C. R.I. Red, Mahood str. eggs,
$1.50 per 15, os Miss
Belle Timmerraan,
Box 832. e i

Imp. Valeacia peanuts, $1.75
bu. F.0.B. a: it Bil te ile Car-
tersville, Rt. :

SYRUP 1 FOR SALE

be =e bbl. wt. 460 Ibs. A-1 syrup,
partly sugared, $15.00; 1-415
gal. keg, Mar 1, $6.00; 1-10 gal.
keg, No. 1, $4. 55. Lee pete
ee Re I:

TOBACCO FOR SALE

. Good, home- made tobacco, 1926
crop, Red and Yellow, flue cured,
11 Ibs. of smoking or chewing
for 00; 6 Ibs., 50c. Postpaid.
M. . Swain, Rockingham, Rt. 1.

ae cured tobacco. -8 Ibs.
$1.00. Will sige Wo. McCoy,
Baxley, Rt. 2. \

BUTTER FOR SALE

5 or 6 Ibs. shee Jersey but-
bor per week, sent sub, to in-
spection, 30c Ib. del. Mrs. J.
D. Melear, Bowdon, Ri. 2. :















ter each week, 30c lb. del. Sat.
| guar. Freebon | Willis. 1s
Rock, Rt.

RABBITS F OR SALE
Thoroughbred Chinctilas:





a

a2 mos. old bucks and does, 15
ea. Money order. Beyer Mc-

| Kinley, Atlanta, wae Gilbert St.,

S. E.

"FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE

\ Fairy: lilies 25 a doz; August
lilies 10c each or 3 for 25e; ama-
ryllis lilies 15c each, Add post-
age. Mrs. Emma Ballenger.

6 palm leaf. ferns, 6 running:





sprengeria, 25 sword ferns and 6

Feb. cactus, all well rooted, 10c
each, Add postage. Mrs. Noel
Payne, Rt. 3, Canton,
Lemon lilies 40c a doz;
phlox $1.00 per C; real. Tiger
lilies 75 a-doz; all colo dog-
wood and azaleas, pink Chero-
kee roses, rhododendrons, lau-
rels 3 ft., $1.00 a doz: boxwoods,
arbor-vitaes, 6 for $1 Oe Sadie
| Wilson, Morganton. |
Large blooming size bulbs
crimson ,amaryllis 40 a doz;

pink

daffodils, yee ace ee cannas
an (meyer used) ents
mle. feed | s
7 fd



"35 or 30 1b good goose feath- |

410ce doz. bulbs;

| Star -

ay onwood,

ja doz;

10 to 12 Ibs, good, fresh but- |

Yr. old buck, poorly marked, |
1$1.00; 1 doe, 3 mos. old, $1.00;

| Te per doz;

FLOWERS AND ae
"FOR SALE

pr idal wreaths 10 aah 3 for
ae fairy lilies, blue iris 25

doz; red Amaryllis lilies 15c
ok: August lilies 3 for 265e.
Add postage. Clarence Ballens
ger, Rt. 1, Buchanan.

: Daffodils, narcissus, orange Lil-
ies, parsley, lavender, foxglove,
Star of Bethlehem 15c per C;
red rose, white rose, velvet rose, |



| azaleas L0 each; Seven sister

rose 5c per. cutting. Add post-
age.
3,. Ellijay:

Dbl. yellow ever-blooming lil-
ies, red spider, tiger, lemon lil-
des 15c; white fairy lilies, white
star lilies, dewdrops, snowdrops
blue star lilies
5c.. Mrs. Mamie Lewis, 2 OOUNs*
boro. \V

Pink conch re oink Ox-
alis, rooted, cuttings salmon or
purple sultanas, pink fuchsia,
deep pink geranium all 5e each.
Add 5c: postage on orders under
30c.. Coin preferred, Miss Irene
Overby, Rt. 1, Oakwood.

Red and pink honey | suckle
50c each; dbl. pink and red

: Japonicas 10 yrs. old 75e each.

~ Will exch. for
No checks.
pts 205 Om

oy
i

All well rooted.
anything can use.
Mrs. Mart. Gentry,
-61-A, Ellijay. |
Pink cactus, Christmas cac-
tus red, white ladys wash bowl
15 a doz; white, snowball, lav-

spruce, pine, cedar 10e each;
lavendar foxglove 15e a doz.
Well rooted. Add postage. Miss
Lela Davis, Ellijay.

Deep blue, grey iris,
ftayendar phlox, blue, white
Calif. violets, cream buttercups,
-Blethlehem, Goldenglow.
25e a doz; velvet rose, redrom-
ble boy; white Perkins, pink
premium rose, palm umbrella
bush for shade 80c each: bleed-
ing heart, peony 60c_ each. No
check. Trene Powell, RY Bs

| Bllijay.

Little boxwoods cil cdoteet
15 each; candle lilies $1.00 a
doz; blue | August lilies, large.
dark pink oxalis 15c a bunch;
geranium cuttings 3 for 25c:
_Justicia, Boston ferns same
price. -Mrs. Mae Turner, Rt. 6.
Gainesville.

Butter & eges, epi tril-
liums, water lilies 35c a doz;
verbena, phlox, trailing arbu-
tus, Rose Sharon, Maiden Hair
ferns 6 for 25e postpaid, moss
packed.
Rt. J; Dahlonega. |

20c per doz; yellow daisy chrys-
anthemums. 30@ a doz. Miss:
Kate Harris, Leesburg.

Large ball yellow mums, also
white and deep lavendar, all
large incurved type 25 per doz;
pink, white and yellow pom-
pons 15c per doz. Mrs. M. me
Kelley, Lithonia.

10 a doz; white scuppernong,
May cherries, sage plants 10c
each; Will exch. for white feed
sacks. Mrs: yo: asia Rt.
8, Waco.

White Tris, rea cannas, lative
yellow and red chrysanthe-
mums;
ias, corn seed, cantaloupe or
sugar crowder peas at market
price. Mrs. Pauline Kerce, Rt.
2, Cartersville:

Purple iris, October pinks 25e
foxglove 20c doz; azaleas
all colors "35 a doz; dbl. pink
almond, white spirea, snowball,
red Japonica 10 each; boxwood
1 to 2 ft. high $1.50 each, All
well rooted. Add postage. Miss
= os Davis, R.F.D. 2, Ellijay.

_ Magnolia, crepe myrtle, red &

4 ft.
red -cannas '20 a

10c each, 2 ft, 25 each,
35 each;

Star
Bethlehem same price as. mag-
nolia; exch. for white feed sacks,
No checks. Add postage. Mrs.
Nellie Pitts, Toomsboro. :
Altheas, red Japonicas, bridal
wreath, pink dbl. almond 10c
each; all colors azaleas 35c a
doz; fall pinks, purple iris 25

Sa! doz: foxglove, 20c.a doz; a few

poxwoods from 15 to 25: in. high
$1.50 each. All well rooted. Add
postage. Miss Teleta Davis, Rt.
4, Ellijay. ee
- White spirea,. altheas, snow-
ball, red Japonicas, pink dbl.
almond 10 each; all colors aza-
leas 35 a doz; purple iris, Oc-
tober pinks 25 a doz; foxglove
20c a doz; boxwood 1 to 2 ft.
high $1. 50 each. All well root-
ed. Add postage. Mrs. J. M.
Davis, Rt. 2, Box 88, Bllijay.

Red dogwood, Min. laurel,
Sweet bay, crabapple, azalea,
magnolia 1 ft. 10c, 3 ft. 20c. Add
postage. No stamps or checks;
white dogwood 8 ft. 10c. Mrs.
Ralph WwW. Starley, Rt. 3, Dan-
WALI. 6

Want some unrooted cuttings
of boxwood. Prices must be
cheap. Mrs. W. Ee Pearson,
Greenville, cS

All colors of. double hollyhocks
wisteria, cydon-
onica and Spirea 20c

wood pl 60c



set up and operate a market.
. ers: sirenry AU Vick, Bt.

endar lilac 10c each; white nar-| |=
cissus ,25 a doz; red Japonicas, |

pink

Mrs. Mary Lou Baton, s

White daisy Chrysanthemums. :

Red and yellow oe bulbs

Will exchange for dahl-.

pink, tea olive, dogwood. tat

doz; wood vine red 20c a doz:
_ | yellow. daisies 20c a doz:



WOMEN S

Dear Fair al Women:

"DIVISION,

We have two new markets opening. next week, one. in

and the other in Camilla.

The Camilla market will have its first day next coe

18.

My first visit to Camilla in the inter est of a womans m

was three weeks ago, upon the- invitation of Mrs. Eugene.

President of the Camilla Womans Club.

Mrs. Hackett hear

explain at the annual convention of the Federated Women

in Macon how the town women

could help the country

She. immediately invited me do

We spent a week together, visiting the rural women, gettin
suggestions, finding out what they had tor sale and what

could place in the market.

We also contacted the merch

Camilla and found that the citizens were anxious to ren

nite service to the country ladies.

The Lions Club de

stand back of the project and secure th eplace if. the Woman

would sponsor the movement,

Mrs. Hackett was appo:
|man and Mrs. Bell Faircloth, President of the 4-H Clubs of
ell County, was selected as market manager.

a

The chairman

market manager are busy this week telling the various
what to bring to the opening. Some will bring dressed chic
some cake, candy, pies, hams, salads, nuts, vegetables, bedspr
luncheon cloths, aprons, sun-suits, childrens dresses, pillo
eut flowers, pot plants and shrubbery, in fact, the rural
may bring to the opening some things to sell and other a
for the customers to sample and give orders eu to a brou
to market the following market day.

I will write you about.the opening when [ get back. te a la
The next issue will also have a detailed account oe es openi

the vou glas market.

Gincaraly!
MRS. ROBIN WOOD,

_ Director, Wonsen's Division.

_ Refrigeration Charges Reduce

a

Dear Mr. Ralls:

Macon,

GEORGIA PEACH cROP EXCHANGE

Coole a: May 1 193

J am glad to tell you that after continuous fight over,
years period-the Interstate Commerec Commission has -
handed down a decision which provides fora substantial r
in refrigeration charges from Georgia to Central Freight
tion Territory, including the Buffalo- Pittsburg Zone,su

as Cincinnati, Chicago,

Louis.

Pittsburgh, | Detr eis

Buffalo | ;

per car anal become effective June 24th, 1937. This case
| stituted by the Georgia Peach Growers Exchange more than

|years ago and we have carried the fight on single - -hande
Yours very truly,

all OF ene intervening year

ur

W. . BEWLEY, Ma age:

EXCHANGE ESTIMATES 3,549 CARS PEACHES ee

THIS SEASON
Variety.
Mountain Rose ......... io.
Uneedas
- Miscellaneous Earlies
Early Rose
- Carmens
Hileys ...
Georgia Belles .
Elbertas

A FOLLOWS:

Chae be ep eee ver eeses ve



: _ FLOWERS AND SEED |
FOR SME

Tae dark yellow Pumpin
seed 15c cupful; dill seed 10 ta-
blespoon; 19 Ibs. honey drip cane
seed 5c a lb. or all for 90c. Mrs.
Hubert F. Turner. Rt, 6, Gaines-
ville.

Foxglove, purple and yellow
iris 25 a doz; forsythia 10c
each; hollyhocks 25 each; or-
ange. lilies 75 a doz; Mtn. lau-
rel, rhododendrons, mixed col-
ors azaleas $1.00 a doz. Add
postage. Estell Duvall, Ellijay.

- Double Japonicas, red and

-pink, 4 yr. old well rooted, 50c
each; hardy phlox 35c.a doz;
King iris 35c a doz, Miss Dennie
Mae Barnes, Ellijay.
_ Blue, pink phlox, pink, purple
foxglove, yellow, blue iris, white
golden showers 25c a doz; yel-
low goldenglows, lemon | lilies
385c a doz; white, pink bridal
wreath, blue lilac, snowball 30c
each; white, rose, mums 30c a
doz. No checks.
Ellijay.

Azaleas, - rhododendrons, Ja-
ponicas, coral berry, . butterfly,
roses $1.00 per doz; Fine red
raspberries $1.00 a doz; blue
bells, tiger lilies 10c each ; sum-
mer lilac; parsley plants, pe-
| rennial phiox, Calif. violets $1.00
| per. Cc; fine mixed mums, iris
and dahlias 25c a doz. slips. Mrs.
J. H. Penland, Ellijay.

Lavendar foxgloves 10 each;
altheas, red Japonicas, spruce
pines, rhododendrons 10 each;
azaleas, red, yellow, cream 385e
a doz; white ladies wash bowl
10c a doz; pink, red, running
roses 50c a doz, <All well root-
ed. Add postage. Mrs. B. M.
Davis, Rt: 4, Ellijay.

All colors azaleas 40c a doz:
mtn. laurel, pink almond, red

Cc. C. Vick,

; Gap.

\ing thrift 10 a doz:



altheas, white Spirea, wisteria |
| 10 each; pink hardy phlox, but- ;
ter cups, blue lilies, butter and:
eggs 15 a doz. Add ostage. |
Claudia V. James, Rt. 8, Hli~ |
Jay.
Double Japonicas, red, pink, ?
white, yellow, 4 yr. old well |
rooted 50c each: boxwood wll}
rooted $1. Of each: dogwood 4{
for $1.0 S hollyhocks: as noes :

orange lilies, dark oe
endar iris, leopard Se

sythia, snowball,

pink aletheas, weeping Su

white English i
postage. Exch. for white
sacks. Mrs. Mollie Hende

Rt. 3, Box 49, Hllijay.

Royal blue, yellow. Ger
iris, pink, white. phlox, blu
pink speckle foxglove, yell
buttercups, white, red mums,
colors primroses 25 a doz; pin
blue butterfly, white lilac, 1
weigelia, forsythia, pink myrt
well rooted 30c each; lemon _
ies 40c a doz.

Vick, Ellijay.

Double Japonicas, i
pink, well rooted 50 eac
hardy phlox 45 a doz;
$1. 25 a doz. Mrs. M. M, Ba
Rt. 3, Ellijay. ne

Lady Wash, Bowl oF
velvet rose bushes, wild
azaleas, Star of Bethleh
each; daffodils 75 per,
lilies 50c each; Will
for white feed sacks. A
age. Mrs. Mattie a

Blue violets Te per C:
ang day lilies 60c per Cy
leas, wild ferns 10 each;

tle pushes 25c each. Ex

white feed sacks. Add post
Miss Ruby Lee cds
Ellijay.

Double yellow day lilies, sing
day. lilies, blackberry
blooming size 25c a doz; |
talis 25 plants 10ce; pink pbloox

white feed sacks. Mr

| Heath, Rt. 1, Douglasvil

20 varieties iris 50c. _
emt cannas 25 per doz;
and cream narcissus, single .
double daffodils, jonquil
colors verbena, Shasta dais
; physostegia 10 a doz; Ww
; daffodils 15 a doz;
few pot plants.
Eller, Rt. 3, Ellijay.

small: palms $1.00
rt | privet h 00; banang

e