Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1938 April 1

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FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1938

aN



hipping Point iploriintion and dt Proaree of on

CROP 1 REPORTS

ge and hid of Georgia crops furnished by U.
S. Crop aenerene Boge =.

SPARAGUSThe Georgia crop is the smallest in

years, being estimated at 50,000 crates from
2100: acres. In 1937 there were approximately
erates from 2700 acres. Much of the crop will
rect, to canneries, although a few cars have been
ed this month and some shipments are made
aS and 1. c. 1, express. The crop has been in



LIVESTOCK

following is a revised schdule of differentials

grades which will be used by packers until

notice in buying hogs at all pelhis in Geor-
Florida and Alabama:

Heavy smooth hogs, 240 up %c under Top No. 1.
h hogs, 180-240 ibs., Market Top. No. 2 smooth
150-180 Ibs., 4c under Top. No.3 smooth hogs
50 Ibs. le under Top. No. 4 smooth hogs 110-_

0 lbs. 1%c under Top. No. 5 Pigs 60-110 Ibs, 2c

Top. Fat sows, 1%c under smooth hogs of
ver weight. basis they make. Culls or thin un-.
ed hogs, all kinds, priced at varying discounts

\der fat sows based on condition, Stags, 244c under-

op Pigey Sows docked 20-40 Ibs. Stags docked 70

e understand that Georgia ees are paying
bove the prices quoted below on special lots
ogs. Therefore before selling your hogs we
st that you talk to your nearest packer and

ALBANY SOFT HOGS oa
Li March 28.These prices as fur-
d by Cudahy Packing Company are on stand-
t hogs and subject to change daily:
$7.25; heavy smooth hogs, $6.75; No, 2s,
; No. 3s, $6.25; No. 4s, $5.75; No. 5s, Pigs, $5.25;
hs, $5. 15; stags, $4.75,



: ATLANTA SOFT HOGS
T ANTA Ga., March 29.These prices as. jar
ed by White Provision Company are on stand-
t hcgs and subject to change daily:
No. 1s, 7.50c; heavy smooth hogs, 1.00; No. 2s,
No. 3s, 6.50; No; 4s, 6.00; No. 55, Pigs, ons
6.00; stags 5,00.

sae CATTLE... i
sANTA, Ga., March 29 Fat steers, 7.00-7.50;
on steers 4.50-5. 25; common heifers 4.50-5. 00:
cows, 5.00-5.50; common cows, 4.50-5.00; can-

cutters, 3.50- 4.00; common bulls, 4. 50-5 00;
ills, 5. mes 50.

oo CHICAGO HOGS |
HICAGO, March 29.Top, $9.25; strietly good
and. hoice, 170-240 Ibs., $9.00 @ $9. 25; 250- -350>1bs.,
8.50 @ $8.85; 140-160 1bs., $8.75 @ $9. 15: good 350-
bs. packing sows, $7. 65 @ $8.00; small butcher
$8. 10 @ $8. 25.



3







p

fair condition, but cold weather during the elcly. part
of March held back the harvesting of the crop.

SNAP BEANSThe estimate of Georgias crop for

this year has not yet been received, but shipments
. are expected. to be earlier than usual.

_ CABBAGEThe government report on acreage and
estimated yields will*be available for the second
group of states including Georgia on April 13th.
Shipments are now being made from South Georgia
farms in light volume by truck pnd will drier ease
gradually during April. Na ey

ENGLISH _PEASGeorgias crap is. now moving
/from South - Georgia in light supply. The quality is
fairly good and offerings will increase during April.

POTATOESSouth Georgias early commercial crop

of Irish potatoes is estimated at 1,000 acres. compared :

with 1600 acres planted in 1937. The second group of
early states, including Alabama, California, Georgia,
~ Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Texas other
than Rio Grande Valley have plaated an. estimated
acreage of 110,400 against 118,200 acres in 1937,

SWEET POTATOESGeorgias preliminary estima-

ted acreage for 1938 of 120,000 acres represented an
aioe of about 5 per cent over the 1937 aprency of
14,000

WATEAME ons ahe prospective acreage in the
state for 1938 is placed at 62,000 compared with 64,000.
acres in 1937. The early and second early group ot
states including California, Florida, Georgia, Arizona,
Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas North and
South Carolina have an intended acreage of 200,400
while 197,600 acres were pated ees season.

{

PRICES OF FRESH VEGETABLES

Prices of fresh vegetables prevailin oO. State
Farmers. Market, Atlanta, today, March 29: :

Apples, U. S. No, 1 bushel packages sas 1.00
Apples, bulk, per ele ae ;
Asparagus, per doz. bunches, fancy__

Beans, Lima, per bushel hamper

Beans, Snap, per bushel hamper

Beets, per doz. bunches

Cabbage, *PUlE Der CWhi ee

Collards, per doz, bunches.

Corn, green, per doz ears
Cucumbers, per bushel hamper
Eggplant, per bushel hamper
Mustard Greens, per bushel hamper
Onions, green, per. doz, bunches__
Peas, green. per bushel hamper

f



Spinach, per bushel
Squash, per bushel 15-$1.25 ff
Sweet potatoes, bulk, per ~ _:...$1,50-$1,.60
Turnips, bunched, per doz. bunches_____-____

50-65

Turnip salad, per bushel

These and other quotations on farm peace are
|| broadcast every week- Soe OL RERE: at. 6: 00 a, m.
over. WGST. : : By tee



- 90c to $1.25 bulk per hundred pounds.

:

30-400 |
Radishes, per doz. punches 20-3 A



THE ATLANTA. MARKET

Receipts of Georgia cabbage have | been increasin
daily on the Iccal market with sales ranging fro
Some bes
quality has jobbed high as $1.35. Collards have bee!
in very light supply and demand has been slow. G
onions have been meeting a steady demand at 3

per dozen bunches and supplies have been modera
Supplies of Georgia English Peas have increased co
_ siderably during the past few days and the marke
| has dropped. sharply from $1.75 - $2.00 to. 90c-$1.0

today. Quality is very good and demand has ee)
fair. Radish receipts have declined, but prices -

held around 20-35 per dozen bunches. Local spinach
-is supplying the trade with good quality availab:

moderate supply and prices holding steady at mos
50-60c per bushel basket. Several crates of Georgi
strawberries have arrived by express, but the m:
has been supplied with Florida and Alabama stoc
at moderate prices and fairly good demand. S ee

~ potatoes have been unchanged for several weeks
large lots selling mostly. at. $1.40-$1.60 bulk per |

dred pounds according to quality and variety, Turnip

_ and Greens have been in liberal to heavy supply a

prices have held at a low level with some greens bein:
dumped. Demand has been about moderate, but sup-
plies have sometimes been, carried over for severa
days. Asparagus supplies have. been confined to a

express receipts and demand has been rather | slow.

THE DOUGLAS MARKET.

Cabbage are moving this week at slightly highe
prices for best cabbage. Good Copenhagen are 11.



ing at $15.00 per ton. Last week prices were runnin;

around $10.00 for best. Quality is fair to good.
Tomatoes are looking good with some farmers: st

setting plants in the fields.

Some snap beans are up and cantaloupes are br
ing ground.

There will be an increase in the acreage of |
crops with the exception of Irish potatoes in this
tion, Watermelon acreage about the same as last | al

We have ear corn listed with this ofifce at 65c
dee Pet bushel. Be

- HARRELL W. LONG, Manager.

ATLANTA SPOT COTTON

ATLANTA, Ga., March 29.At the close of th:
market today Atlanta spot cotton was quoted
50 ponits on the New York May future or 9.14c
pound for middling 7-8 inch staple. The avera
price of middling 7-8 inch cotten on ten southern
markets yesterday was 8.76c per pound. The aver
age price for the past 30 market days was 9. 00c per |
pound. Staple premiums being paid on ten south-
ern designated markets yesterday averaged 42
points on for middling 15-16 inch cotton and- 6
points on for middling 1 inch cotton. 2
New York futures closed today, May 8.64; New.
Orleans futures closed today May 8.72. :









~ MARKET REPORT OF GEORGIA PRODUCTS

Prevailing Wholesale Prices (F. O.B. Points Mentioned) Subject to Change March 29, 1938



| Atlanta Augusta Barnes-
ville |

{

Com-
merce

Bowden Clarkes-

ville insville

Dawson Hawk- Macon

Metter Sparta Tifton



uggs, Taree (aes. fe 151 L088
pgs, Medium: _.....__ 15 Bees
, Crnt, Rets. yd. rn. -14-.15 5

5 20 12 a ae 20
A191 ea ee as ag
AT we abi ib 20



= Graal x 2 a2
gs, Unclassified

20



s Heavy-breed Gib: JS 61-. 46
tens, Leghorns 2 | 14 = $4
toosters | 10-.11 10
te 15 16
24

untry Butter, best tbl.

Id Peas, mxd. (Bu)

aid Peas not mxd. __
tar Corn (80 lbs. to bu.)
shelled Corn

Sweet Potatoes (ewt:)
abbage, green ______ SS
sabbage, white ____. eee

avine Hay No. i, ton
eanut Hay, No. 1, ton

16 ai 13 14

i ap se
: 07 06| -.08
1b) eo a ie 14
25 20 20

. 08

19 ey 215:
165 : 13
18 < : : 1d fb.
16 12
16 oT
sa, eon Reale
15 12
10-.11 10
ode. : :
27 2 = ; 20.



Ao = 094





20



20



4

12
L 50

15







Panish Peanuts, No. 1, ta
ottonseed, prime, ton
ottonseed. Meal 8% ____

























tonseed Meal 7% ____



























































































, Established by J.-J. Brown, Commissioner of
a March 1, 1917 :

Published Semi-Monthly by

- DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE |
COLUMBUS ROBERTS, Commissioner

Executive Office: State Capitol, Atlanta, Georgia

es Publishing Office Covington, Ga.

Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of Markets, 222 State Capitol.

Entered as second class matter August 1, 1937, at the Post
Office at Covington, Georgia, under the Act of June 8, 1930. Ac-
cepted for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Sec-
tion 1103, Act of October 8, 1917.

Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable under
postage regulations inserted one time on each request and re-

Limited space will not permit insertions of notice containing
- more than 30 words ineluding name and address.
Ponder Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not

SHORT

The following report on the peach crop by W. C. Bewley,
Manager, of the Georgia Peach Growers Exchange, in which
we concur, appearing in the Atlanta Journal of March 22nd.
Macon, Ga., Mareh 22.Georgias peach orop will be
earlier than wenal this year, but in size it will be 25 per cent
or more below normal, according to a survey just completed
by the Georgia Peach Growers Exchange, made public here
5 today. This is due to frost and freezing temperatures during the

Hileys in middle Georgia were mig to a greater
extent than any other variety, the survey showed.

Blbertas, especially in young orchards and in those in
low places where drainage was not good, also heavy damage.
The Exchange reported today that the damage ranges
all the way from nothing to 100 per cent in individual orchards.
of blocks of trees. 4

Although some individual growers have suffered ser-
jous damage to their fruit crop, said the report of the sur-
vey, Georgia will at least have a moderate size crop if there
is no further damage during the next few weeks. It is certain,
however, that the. crop has been materially reduced, probably _
25. per cent or more.

Experis figure that with tapershle weather during the
next sixty days grewers should begin shipping Early Rose
during the first week in June; Hileys should begin to move
bout June 35th and Elbertas perhaps during the last week
in June or certainly during the. first week in July. This ripen-
in period is a little earlier than usual and with only a mod-
erate crop in sight the outlook is encouraging to the growers.
oees = orchards generally are in good condition.

'GLENNVILLE AND CLAXTON
MARKETS ~~.

Bar Com has been moving steady at 65 to 70 cents per
bushel. Pure Cane Syrup in No. 10 cans has been selling
at 35 cents per gallon, but the barrel Syrup is about exhausted
1 quantities of Sweet potatoes have been moving at 60
cents per bushel. The supply of vegetables have been selling .
jocally.





Strawberries a day, but. by the time this information is available
through the Bulletin, it is estimated that this seston will be
able to supply 560 to 600 erates a day,

Some growers started planting tomatoes in the fields on
March 8th, after they had planted a number of other crops.
fe have made a special effort to make a record as near ac-
urate as possible of the approximate acres of each crop that
has been planted in these adjoining sections, which is as fol-
ws:Snap beans 100 acres, Squash 150 acres, Cucumbers 300
res, Okra 20 acres, Early Corn 50 acres, Irish potatoes 100
cres, Onions 200 acres, Lima Beans 50 acres, Peas 50 acres.
weet Potatoes, Watermelons and other crops have also been
lanted, but the acreage has not been completed.

- Due to the scarcity of tomato plants in Florida, and also
aving three car Jeads of Texas plants to arrive in Glennville
amaged to a great extent, there has been only about 2,000
cres planted at the time this letter is written, but, it has been
estimated that there will be from 3,000 to 5,000 acres planted
by April 1st, depending upon the supply of plants.

The above acreage does not include that of susrounding

produce through these markets.

The crops are looking good, and with favorable etna
oo there should be an abundant harvest in these sec-
ons,

ee ee: WALTER BRITTINGHAM, Mer.



= THE MACON MARKET

: South Georgia farmers are. now selling nice hard headed
ubbage on our market and the quality seems better than last
eason, The first Georgia English peas reached this market
von the 20th. This is somewhat earlier than last season but
he price is under last year due the overlapping with the Flor-
crop, The supply of turnips and turnip salad exceeds the





e last few days.

From reports eoming to the market from truckers it is
tirely possible that we will have string beans from South
Georgia within ten days or two weeks. Apples are more plenty-
1 now than any time since the season opened last fall with
ices the lowest: for the season,

es N, RATNER, Manager,

A Seo icaeee



GEORGIAMARKETBULLETIN.

peated only when request is accompanied by new copy of notice. |.

assume any oe for any notice appearing in the a

The Claxton nection is moving approximately 100 crates of

sections, which sections will probably ee a portion of their -

emand and this has caused prices | to drop ees for





MA .KET BULLETIN ~ = a

INSPECTOR OF FERTILIZERS.
WARNS FARMERS REGARDING |

_ PURCHASES OUT OF GEORGIA

Atlanta, Ga, March 29th J sbriie farmers of Georgia to
puy their fertilizer from companies that have registered to do
business in Georgia, C. A. Gillespie, Chief Fertilizer Inspector
of the Georgia Department of Agriculture has warned farmers

that fertilizer bought in bordering states is not subject to
inspection and analysis py his department, and is therefore

pought entirely at the Farmers risk and he has no way of



determining if he has purchased sand or fertilizer. ie

Mr. Gillespie said: We find that Georgia farmers are
going into other states and purchasing fertilizers that are not
registered with the Georgia Department of Agriculture and are
not made up according to the laws of Georgia and this depart-
ment has been called upon to take sample of this fertilizer
and furnish the purchaser analysis on same. .

This /is to advise that when a Georgia farmer goes into
other states and purchases his fertilizer which is not made up

according to the laws of Georgia, and is not registered with.

the Georgia Department of Agriculture, then-he dees it at his
own peril...

In other words, this department has no power and cannot

protect you when you purchase fertilizer that does not con-
form with the laws of this state and this department advises
you to purchase your fertilizer from a manufactarer that is
registered with the Georgia Department of . Agriculture, then,
you are protected by this department as you can have your
fertilizer inspected and if it fails to come up to the guaranteed
analysis, the manufacturer is subject to a penalty and the
Georgia Department of Agriculture can collect same for you.

| When you buy your fertilizer from a fertilizer manufactur-
er that is qualified to do business in the State of Georgia, you

can then cali upon this department to have fertilizer inspector :

take sample and = will be protected Basins inferior goods.

SOIL MEETING AT ROME
APRIL 19th.

_ The second annual Soil Conservation Field Day will be
held in the Rome, Ga., project demonstration area April 19th.
Visiting farmers will be grouped on Broad Street between Sec-
ond and Fifth Avenues as they arrive from 8:30 to 10:30 in
the morning for a tour of the demonstration area where they
ean observe the construction of improved terraces by power
and horse drawn equipment,

There will be fifteen hundred acres of crimson clover in





- bloom. The crep tree method of woodland improvement will be

explained. Pasture improvement methods will be emphasized.

The farmers carrying on these soil saving fertility prac-

tices will be on hand to answer questions and explain all phases
of the work to the visitors. At 12:30 all tours will meet at
the American Legion home at Lindale for a barbecue dinner
which is being served by the Legion. After the barbecue Dillon
S. Meyer, Assistant Chief of the Bureau of Soil Conservation
Service, and J, Phil Campbell, for many years Director of ex-
tension work in Georgia, now in the Washington office of the
Soil Conservation Service, will talk. Emphasis will be placed
on giving visiting farmers definite information about soil con-

serving practices.

This Field Day is sponsored by the Board of Supervisors
of the million and one-half acre Coosa River Soil Conservation
District, which is the first district m the United States to have
its work plan approved by the Secretary of Agriculture.

It will be necessary to charge 50 cents a plate for the bar-
becue to reimburse the Legion for this expense, but it has been

- suggested that visitors bring lunch with them if they like.

The Board of Supervisors of the Coosa River Soil Con-
servation district is composed of the following five farmers:
S. S. Johnson, Chairman, Rome; Robert Campbell, Cedartown;
R. P. Bryson, Lyerly; J. G. Brandon, Cartersville; T. W. Malone,
Sugar Valley; W. H. Howell, Rome, is Project manager, and can
give information.

The district is composed of 1,450,000 acres in Chattooga,

Gordon, Floyd, Bartow, Polk, Paulding and Cobb Counties.



ROBERTS ADVISES FARMERS TO
SHOP AOUND FOR PRICES ON.
FERTILIZERS

State Commissioner of Agriculture Columbus Roberts advised
farmers Friday to shop around before buying fertilizer.

Mr. Roberts said queries from farmers had reached his
office regarding varying prices on potash and fertilizer quoted
in certain areas of the state, He quoted one farmer as saying
potash cost $4 per ton less on the east side of the Savannah
River than on the west side.

The situation is simply this, Mr. Roberts declared, Fer-
tilizers have been priced high, especially materials, to begin

with this season, but it now appears pretty certain that total

Sales in Georgia will be at least 25 per cent less than last year.
Therefore, it appears to us that farmers should shop around
before buying their fertilizers this time, and should not. be in
too big a hurry to buy.

We do not think farmers should fall for the old sugges-
tion by some companies that they buy now and if prices decline
.a refund will be made, because if farmers get a refund the gen-
eral price list will have to be revised downward, which we do
not look for, We do believe, however, that you can buy ferti-
lizers for cash cheaper than they are listed.

The commissioner said price cutting on fertilizers had been
reported on fertilizers widely in the Caaelinas, BEE =
_* Sexigin parts of ee,







Friday, April 1, 1!







Farmer's Golden Tex .











Tf ye walk in my statutes, ee
and keep my commandmen, s
and do them!

Scripture; Lev. 26:3, 4, 5.

Then I will give you rain in |
due season, and the land shall
yield her increase, and the
trees of the field shall view z
their fruits.

And your threshing chall
reach unto the vintage, and
the vintage shall reach unto
the sowing time; and ye shall |
eat your bread to the full, an
dwell in your land safely.



- on farms since January, 1934, b
ig still much below that of.

year earlier.

163,000 head, or a reductio

-of both north and south Geo!

jted the Georgia Coastal -





FARM BRIEF

Farm News ws. of | Interest
Farmers Throughout
The State.




































































The Federal Surplus Commod-
ities Corporation , has been
thorized to buy surplus eggs, the
Agricultural Adjustment Adm
istration has announced, if there
is a break in the present price
levels or if the levels of a
mal seasonal advance, which
expected soon, should be below
normal. The Corporation w
make the purchases to assist th
industry in stabilizing and
strengthening the market. Dis-
tribution of any eggs boug
would be made to needly perso
through relief agencies.

The number of hogs on fa
January 1 is estimated by the
Bureau of Agricultural Econ
ies at 44,418,000 head, or 3.3 p
eent more than a year earth
This is the lagest number of hogs

year in the 30-year period befo

1935. Nearly all of this iner
occurred in the Corn Belt stat
The value per head was $114
which is 68 cents lower than

The number of horses, inch
ing colts, on farms January
1938, is estimated by the Bure
of Agricultural Economics at

25 per cent from the year earlie
This was a Jarger reduction tha
in 1936. The number of mules.
farms was only 2.1 per cent le
than a year earlier.

Arthur Gannon, exte
poultryman, says that recent
by the United States Departm
of Agriculture show that he
hatched from small eges may
expected to lay small eggs.
these tests, the eggs averaging
tween 23 and 25 ounces to th
dozen hatched best, which the
under 23 ounces and over.
ounces hatched poorly. Gann
said that this is the reason
National Poultry Improve
Plan, in which Georgia is
operating with 41 other sta
and the Department of Agri
ture, has a minimum egg we
as a requirement in each of
five breeding stages.

While on a trip through p

last month, Extension. Serv
Specialist H. W. Harvey ma
plans for improving and :
ranging 11 school grounds, |
church yards, 3 club houses, o
court house, and a county |
nery. He said that 450 ped
attended meetinge held at t
various places for the purpose
making these improvemer
The improvements are:
ing the walks and driveways,
lecting parking space and ph
ing the grounds. :

A large number of farmers

Experiment Station at Tift
during the Livestock Field D
which was held Tuesday
Wednesday, March 29 and
Under the supervision of S.
Starr, director of the station,
meeting was held to sho
various _ livestock
being carried on.

the two-day program was a
of pastures, and a study |
sanitary hog raising pr
being cares on at the A

our economic tte Conte so in view.
the necessity of reducing our plantings |

Of eshiae: successful aed e os

rimary importance in this, as well as in
production of all other crops, but the
rmers of Georgia have gone a long way
n meeting production problems, but this
ivision feels that much needs to be done
o perfect our marketing system in order
hat our farmers may receive all that they
hould for their hogs and cattle.

The State Department of Agriculture
alled and held two meetings early last
all in an effort to establish uniform
rades and classes for the sale of hogs in
reorgia on which price differentials could

be based so that the better quality hogs,,.

e to breeding and condition, would
ng the premium, to which they are en-
itled, over inferior grades of hogs.

tials established for the marketing sea-
on just passed, but for various reasons we
re opposed by a majority of those pres-

t at the meetings. The main reason giv-
was that the farmers of Georgia were

ot yet educated to the point of selling their
(We main-

gs on the basis of quality.
ned at that time, and still do, that it is
i necessary for a farmer to be a college |
raduate in order to receive, the market.
alue for his. products.)

We feel that some constructive action
vith reference to this matter cannot be de-
ayed much longer if our livestock industry
to survive. Therefore, we plan to call
me or two general meetings early this
ummer, at which all parties interested
ay participate in a. general discussion of
r livestock marketing problems with the
ope that some definite plans may be

rked out for the improvement of the
situation before the next marketing sea-
on begins in the fall:

ht

In order that we may arouse the think:
of our readers concerning these prob-
ams, and for their information previous
o these meetings on one method of sell-
ng, we present the following article by W.
Fullilove, Agricultural Economist, Geor-
Experiment Station, Experiment, Geor-
Lon Livestock Auction RSrROS in
eorgia: | ae

The nictiow method Me yelltug livestock
in Georgia is comparatively new. The first
market was established in June 1935. To-

We >
ped to get these grades and price differ-

- commission for representing him.
- questonable, however, in. many markets



, i Industry |

day we have about thirty, ie lai of |
|) .which. are located in the southeastern part |

' | of the state. :
markets, if handled properly, serve a use-

Private livestock auction

ful purpose in the marketing system. Sales

are held weekly and provide a ready: mar-
ket: for all classes of livestock. es

In November 1937; a study of the: auc :
dione was undertaken by the Georgia, Ex-
periment Station in cooperation with the
Farm Credit Administration,
markets wre visited. The study included |
- observation of the auction and an interview
-with the management. Very few farmers

Fourteen

or stockmen were interviewed.

Selling charges in the private auctions

appear relatively high, Average charges
per head for selling cattle are 75 cents to
$1.00, calves 50 cents, horses and mules
$2.50, sheep and goats 25 cents, hogs un-
der 150 pounds 25 cents, hogs over 150

pounds 40 cents. Some auctions charge 10.

cents per head plus 8 per cent commission
for hogs. On this. basis the, selling charges

market operating in the state. It is charg-
ing 114 per cent commission. The selling

charges in this market for a 240 pound hog

at 8 cents would be only 29 cents as com-
pared with an average charge of 68 cents

in the private auctions. At most of the co-

operative hog sales handled by the county
agents 10 cents per head is charged.

The auction operator is the agent of the
farmer in selling livestock. He is paid \a
It is

whether auctions protect the farmer. It
appears to be a very bad market practice
for the auctioneers to buy and sell in the
ring for their own account, also for auc-
tion employees to buy livestock on the yard

before the sale. This is done, powever, in:
several markets.

There is some nacker-<buyer representa-

- tion at most of the auction markets, The

greater majority of the buyers, however,

are country traders and speculators or the

operators of other auction markets. To at-
tract more buyers representing the larger
concerns it will be necessary to assure them
that a sufficient volume of livestock will
be available at each sale to make it worth
while for packers and others | to send rep-
resentatives,

Farmers ideas of livestock values are
based largely on Atlanta and Moultrie

quotations. Market quotations in local pa-

pers are usually misleading. Instead of car-

rying actual sales and weights they usually |

quote the highest price paid for a particu-

lar grade that day. This consignment
could possibly belong to the auction man-

tified by a paint mark adopted by



ae omant. and ouilt be bid i in oo hii

der to establish a fictitious top for ad
tising and competitive reasons. It wo
be beneficial to farmers to have a comp
hensive system of accurate market re
giving volume and a record of re

tive sales.

Testing of siaue and. d Woiahl ZO
stock should be done by a disi
party rather than by" auction empl

Stockyards, and. livestock. auctio
kets tend to spread disease. Strict en

ment of sanitary measures would era

and prevent the introduction of infectic
and contagious: diseases affecting livestogk

With the increase in the number of au:
tions which has taken place in the
two years it is doubtful whether the v
ume of livestock available for market
be sufficient to support them all: So
failures seem likely. As a protection
livestock producers, : all auction oper
should be bonded to insure paymen

farmers for livestock
on a 240 pound hog. at,8 cents would be | ors = ee ag them fo

68 cents, There is one cooperative auction

Bureau of Live Stock mi
_DR. J. M. SUTTON, Btate Veterinaria,
. ATLANTA, GA.

SPECIAL ORDER NO. 4

Effective on and After April 1, 1938

No hogs shall be held in trucks: or.
fered for sale from trucks within on
(14) mile of any public stock yard or liv
stock auction market in this State outsid
of such yards unless they have been pro

| erly immunized against hog choler
- permanently identified by ear marks o

ear tags and accompanied by a healt
tificate issued by an approved, license

veterinarian,

Hogs sold out of public stock yards an
live stock auction markets to local butch
ers for immediate slaughter must be iden
the

yard and registered with the State. Vet
inarian.

All breeder and feeder ngs must b
properly immunized against hog choler
and thoroughly disinfected before leavin

_ public stock yards and live stock auctio

markets. Such hogs must be permanen

identified by ear tags, ear marks or othe

satisfactory marks and accompanied
health certificate issued by an appro ec
licensed. veterinarian.
Persons found moving hogs in viclatie
of these regulations may be prosecute
By order of: 7
J.M. SUTTON,
State Veterinaria

rst Tenant Purchase Loan In Georgia Made Last Weel

A Wilkes county farmer realized a life-
ng ambition last week when he became
land-owner through a tenant purchase
oan, provided under terms of the Bank-
ead-Jones Farm Tenant Act.

He is 37-year-old Jim Webb Fanning, of |

e Irvin Court Ground community. He
received the first of 175 such loans to be
de in 35 Georgia counties this year.

_A large crowd gathered to see Senator |

ichard B. Russell, Jr., present the gov-
rmment check for $2, 500 to Fanning at

blic ceremonies held here Saturday. The
rogram was presided over by R. L. Van-

ant, state director of the Farm Security

ministration. Local arrangements were
charge of Farm Supervisor George W.
obinson and County Agent J. R. McDan-

With the tenant purchase loan, Fan-

LECTRO. DEVELOPMENT FARMS ARE
ACTICAL, SPECIALIST DECLARES



Electrical equipment on Georgia (avin
ust be practical in that it will save mon-
, improve living conditions, and increase
come or save labor, J. L. Calhoun, exten-
n rural electrification specialist, told
eorgia farmers this week. \
In giving this advice, Calhoun mentioned
there are now three Electro- Develop-



ning bought a 148-acre farm, 12 miles

from Washington. He paid Owner Guy |
Norman, also a Wilkes county farmer, $1,-:
500 for the farm and will use the remain-
ing $1,000 for making improvements... His

1938 farm plan calls for 75 acres in culti-
vation, with an estimated income of more
than $700 from all sources. |

Born on a Wilkes county farm, the son |

of a share-cropper, Jim Webb "Fanning
helped. his father work the crop until he
was 22 years old. Then he married and
settled down, and had his own farm.

The younger Fanning himself worked
as a share-cropper, and all went will until
the combination of a financial depression
and continued erosion of the soil made
profitable farming a thing of the past.

From the relief rolls of Wilkes county,

ment Farms in the state, and added that
these farms have complied with the stan-
dard of excellence, which includes good
wiring, good lighting, and running water.

According to Calhoun, the J. 8S, Chris-
tian farm, in Catoosa county, has recently
been certified as the third such farm in
the state. The others are the L, P. Keith
farm, in Walker county, and the White
Brothers farm, in Catoosa county.

These farms are selected on the merits



Jim Webb Fanning was taken on the Ru
Rehabilitation program | of the Farm |
curity Administration in February, 19:
He was loaned money to buy a mule, farm
equipment, fertilizer, feed for livesto:
and the necessary food and clothing

his family,

Since that day three years ago wh
Uncle Sam came to the rescue, the Fan-
ning family has made great progress,
When taken on the rehabilitation program,
their net worth was $25; today their net
worth, as reported by the Farm Superviso:
George W. Robinson, is $620. Once d
couraged and down-and-out the Fa
nings are now healthy, happy, and a
tented. a

The Ranwings Nive five children, feae
girls and a boy ranging in age from 18 :
years down to 18 months,

of the equipment as applied to the ioe of
farm, Calhoun pointed out, and not on th
amount of high priced equipment a fal

-er has installed, He said the recogniti

carries with it the honor and distinction
that these men are progressive leaders in
electrified farming. .
Signs giving the name of the farm, the
owners name, and the fact that it is an.
Electro- Development farm are to be er

ed on each of these farms.









MA RKET BULLE f. IN

{



LR







Friday, April 1,

INCUBATORS ANI
BROODERS FOR SALE =

















ant 2 bh walking puitivelier,
ry.- preferred. Write when
ug) t, cond., and ues L, F.
ng, Ri erdale, Rt. 1
$2 h. ealking ciiltiva tor,
er or other good make, in
i cond., cheap. Exc. or for
Fordson tractor, $50.00;
thal peanut picker, $60.00; I;
ay press, $50.00. J, H,
tt, Parrott, Rt. 1.

Want drill for blacksmith shop.

good cotton planter or guano.
ibutor, $4.00 and $5.00, or
be i . Geo. W. Jackson, Fay-

- Robin Adair, Stone |

Box 100. :
r 22 or 30, tractor
puller. Quote low-

d state where located.

n, Atlanta, 1983 Howell | ra
Ww. ti ei SL OO Shape, and dbl tractor har-
stor | TOW, $195.00 cash for both. G.
7; -W.: Whitworth, Lavonia, Rt. 1.

and
cond. State what
3. W. Brown, Jones-

pond-hand

an eae:
Oo a Seren, Richland,

i a small cae good |

riding or walking cul-
th 4 detachable feet.
ormick, Elko. poe

a So for Fordson
good cond., also Ham-

practically new John
bottom automatic light

or 3 or 4h. garden
- windmill and
E, . Joy, Barnesville, Rt.

value for 1. horse

good running cond.

wagon or write, N. ~ Mee
hellman,

(has been treated),

bu FOB., for grist mill,

upright preferred; also

mill at bargain. N, A.

other farm equipment.

"| R. A. Mantooth, Eton,

Peanut

in oa |

| mill, complete,
horizontal type for sale.

| Talbotton.





Second-Hand Machinery Second- Hand Machinery | eed Head Machinery
Wanted F OR SALE | FOR SALE
Want 20 or 25 horse gas or Sanitary Economy King No. 36-in, <aptietit Meadows corn

crude oil MOtOr to operate grain
se tor, McCormick Deering Or
ee eeionel preferred. O, S.
Garrison, Homer.

Want at once cylinder head for
17-28 Twin City ee H. M.
Flewellen, Griffin, Rt.

Want second-hand Lae steam-
er. State what you have and
-price. Levi Bradberry, More-
land. Rt. 1,



Recond-Hand Machinery
F OR SALE

20 h. p. Birdsal eng. and boiler,
complete, mounted, $150.00. Take
in trade young cow, Ist or 2nd
| calf, also gcod plug mule. Homer
S. McCard, Molena, Rt. 1.

Kincaid garden tractor, culti-
A ee harrow and plow. Sell or



trade for mule or brood mare.

=| oma Walker, ceetaiee P. O.
Box 1174;

_ Horse drawn _ sub-soiler and
Sell or
exc, for peas or anything can use.

John Deere tractor. No. GP,
| perfect cond. Sell or trade for
mules, purebred Jersey or Guern-
sey cows. oO. R. ao Colum-

bus,
Bostrom Terrace leveler: com-

plete, $10.00. Money order or

cash. ; A, M. Jones, Quitman.
Fordson tractor, overhauled,

Good Binder, reaper, 2 h. rid-

|ing cultivator, harrow combined,
-and - other machinery at reason-

able price. Mrs. E. Spence, At-

jlanta, 130 West Wesley Road.

Cole Plainview corn and bean
| planter, $15.00; 1 ea. dbl Ledbet-
ter and Avery planter, $14.00;

| Covington and Avery cotton hill
| dropper, $13.00 ea.;

farm bell,
and other Sues Dan Brow-
| ning, Helena, P . O. Box 264.

36-in grist Se ker. power,

full outfit, ready to run, can be
seen in operation any time, very
cheap for cash.
p ecebiow.

D. P. Martin,

334 h. p. standard garden trac-
tor and tools, good cond., $70.00
cash. W, A. Scarborough, Gardi.

Tractor plow with 2 turn
plows on 2 wheels with trip rake,

first class cond. Sell or exc. for

Sy BOS peas, or beans; 1 Hillside
reversible disc plow. Make of-
fer, D, A. Holliday, Statham.

Avery walking cultivator, used

about 15 -days, for sale or ex-

change. W. A. Sumner, Adrian.
50 h.p. crude oil eng., good cond.,
for sale at my place, Bs mi. Millen
(on paved highway). . W. A.
Smith, Millen.

sali each, swing hammer feed

mill, No. 16 DeLaval cream sep-

arator, Long system roller mill,
| complete, fidget Marvel roller
48 in. grist mill,
EB.
Boswell Jr., Siloam.

Mower ae rake, good cond.,
McCormick-Deering, also Chat-
tanooga disc reversible plow, 4
horse, cheap. J. B. Jones. Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.

Economy King cream separa-
| tor, used very little, $25.00, or exc.
|fo. cow or hogs. C. T. Helms,

2h, Oliver plow, No. 12, good)
cond., $8.00. Robert Drury,
Waynesville.

1 ea. 2 horse wagon, 1 h. ignore.
Sprull No, 1 distributor, Coving-
ton planter, complete, 2 h. rip-
per, and other equipment. Virgil
Bentley, Rockmart, Rt. 2.

Farmall tractor, size 20, in ood
cond., $300.00. cash; 1 stump pul-
ler or skiddr mounted. Wray
Smith, Sparta.

_ New Ideal tobacco Transin
good shap, always kept under
shelter when not in use; cost
a sell at real bargain. A.

D, Lindsey, Quitman,

Improved Carolina cotton
-plauter, practically new, in No. 1

shape, $2.40, or exc. for 3 bu P. R.

potato seed, or 3 M. 2 R. slips,
delivered May ist. Ea pay frt.
chgs. Carl Rutledge, Powder
Springs, Rt. 2;

- Single Hopper *Gole. planter,

good cond., corn peanuts, bean}
i- | plates and gears, $7.50 or exc, for
a Spanish seed peanuts. John B.
: bila Fitzgerald, Rt. Ge ae:

International Riding cultivator.

le| used about a year, in good cond.
cheap for cash, Mrs, Mabel - J. pi

Duffey,

18 cream separator, with 1-3 h. p.
motor attached; Taylor Reliable
churn, with 1-4 h. p. motor; 1
Union No, 3% feed cutter. Bought.
separately . or. together. Mrs.

-| Wade G. Sanders, Wrightsville.

2 h, Middlebuster, cheap or exc.
for 2 horse turner. W. G. Owen-
by, Marietta.

2h. and 1 h. iron beam turn:
plow, $8.00 and $5.00 respectively;
1 h. cotton and corn planter,
$3.00; 1 h. guano and fertilizer
distributor, $2.50; 1 h. spring
tooth cultivator, $3.00 FOB. Mrs. |
G. J. Holcomb, Bremen. *

1 practically new I. H. C. riding
cultivator plow, 1 heavy 2 1-8 h.
Moline Vulcan turn plow, other
farm implements for sale or exc."
for corn, oats, and hay. R. R.
Carrollton. Mt. Oak
Farm.

2 horse International riding
cultivator, $15.00 cash. No chks.
Percy Atkinson; Madison, Rt, 1,
Box 24.

2h. walking cultivator, wed 1
season, good cond., $40.00 FOB. No
chks. A. W. Powell, Metcalfe, Rt.
1, Box 1i.

No. 16 Cole Plainview dbl.
hopper corn planter with sev ex-
tra plates, in good running order,
except needs new guano hopper,
$15.00 cash, FOB. K. aE TICEe,
Cleveland, Rt. 4.

_ Fordson tractor, equipped with
Bisch magnero, in A-1l cond:
$50.00 cash. J. Cc Bivins, oe
dock.

No, 55 Chattanooga hillside
plow, 1 David Bradley feed as
and some other. equipment. J
Kimsey, Cassville,

4-70 gullet gins, and other farm
implements, for sale. Bought to-
gether or separately. T. E, aun
ilton, Flippen.

Good Fordson tractor, pulley
and db. dise plow, $85.00; 1 No.
18 Oliver turning plow, $8. . E.
C. Greeson, Resaca, RFD 1.

Hart parr tractor. $75.00. or |

exc, for milch cow or heifer
calves. Fairly good
Wetherford, Gainesville. Rt. 2. |
Riding cultivator with disc
and plows and other attach-
ment, $10.00, or exc, for Fow-

ler Sweep in good cond. J. E.

Walkins, Ranger.

Chattanooga turn dee: No.
72; first class cond., newly paint-
ed, $5.25, or exc. for 6 gocd hens;
steel beam plow for a 25 Avery
75c,.or exc. for 2 good hens -or
dried apples. Nelson Pope, Tal-
laposa. :

Tractor disc plow ae harrow
and sulky plow, $125.00 (Just off
McDonough Boulevard on Key
Rd.) R. G. Harrison, ey Rt.
8

- Fordson a eenice reasonably
good cond., for sale or trade for

=

| Hammer Mill, tractor. harrow, or.

something I need on farm. S. F.
Bohanan, Conyers, Rt. 1,

60 h. p. Caterpillar unit with-
out board pulley (will take care
of 2-80 Gin outfit) at bargain.
C. R. Carter, Scott.

Good Houston peanut sheller,
shells large and small, good con-
dition, $4.00 FOB, Mrs. Daniel

McCook, McIntyre, RFD 2, Box

148. 2

John Deere riding dics culti-
vator with Gee Whiz attachment,
$15.00; John Deere riding sulky
plow, 17 in. bottom, $20.00; Oliver
N.. 10 plow, $6.00; 1 h, Oliver
plow, $5.00. Good condition.
John Shahan, Lafayette, Rt. 3.

_ Almost new No. 13 Oliver turn
flow, $10.00; Deering Ideal mow-
ing machine and rake, $25.00 for
both. Exc. for peas and O-too-
tan beans. G. C. Edmondson,
Temple, Rt. 1, ,

Deering grain binder, gcod
shape, complete, $75.00 FOB.
Exe. for anything can use.
eek M. Adcock, Adairsville,

- tractors, Farmall and Ford-
son, tractor plows and harrows;
a 3-60 saw gin outfit complete,
other farm equipment. Come
see, dont write. W. I. Dorris.
Douglasville.

1 set Tobacco Gach flues for
16 ft. barn, all fire joints of heavy

-neterial, used. only season, good -
shape, $13.00 (cost $20.00) 6 mi. |

Thomasville-Pavo Rd. CC. H.
Wiggins, Thomasville, Rt. 4.

2 Cole cotton and grain drop-
pers, $9.00 ea., FOB, K. L Dor-
ough, Vienna. 3

Riding cultivator with ali at-
tachments, good cond, $25.00 or
exc, for corn, peas, or sOw and





. Mrs. J.C. Goolsby, Baxley,



duty Hackney farm wagon, good

cond. E. B,

Royston.

-exc. for full blooded O. I. C. pigs

.$18.50; want.to buy 5 to 10 Ibs.

Incubators and Brooders





| ogansyille. Ri. a ae

mill, 1. Wise hammer mill No. 5,
1 McCormich-Deering eng. Model
P-12, good cond., now running.
See for prices and particulars,
together or separately. W. W.
Goodroe, Buena Vista. -

Set of blacksmith tools, in goed
cond., used very little, $22. 00 cash,
J. R. Nichols, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4. .

Skid eng. stm. boiler, size 12-20
slight repairs, $50.00, exc for 60
Leghorn hens or fresh im cow.
R, W. Moon, Suwanee, Re.

Small grist mill, complete with
sheller, etc., gas eng., good con-
dition. All for $100.00 Mrs. Ed-
gar Haun, College Park.

75 h. p. Continental eng., first
d class cond., Lombard boiler, 1

automatic steam tramper, per-
fect cond. Sell or trade. J. R.
Odom, Gerard,

John Deere Riding cultivator,
6 gang, $20.00; Oliver 16 in. 8 disc
harrow, $20.00; Cole corn planter,
$12.50; Planet Jr., garden seed
planter, $3.00; Stover feed mill,
No. 55, $75.00 ;other implements.
W. C. Hammcck, Blomingdale,

Moline corn and cotton plant-
er, good shape, $5.00; 2 h. turn
plow, $5.00, D. B. sMCETOR, Dal-
ton, Rt. 3.

2h. wagon, $10.00; 2on, folean
plow, $2.50; 2 sng. stcok: plows,
$3.00. C. B. Huie, Forest Park.

32 in. clutch pulley, a6." de
M. Jones, Grayson.

3h. p. gas eng., good cond., ex-
cept gas tank, $15.00 cash at my
place. Exc. for 3 P. C. 60-70. Ib.
shoats. Bring shoats;. > D. Mc-.
Donald, Jefferson, Rt. ;

Large peanut a. fair
running cond.; $25.00; 1: heavy

cond, $12.50 without body. Take
cows and corn part pay. Je a.
Moon, Shiloh, RFD.

4-10 saw .Munger gins, com-
eae overhauled. Reasonable.
. J. Saywell, Jr., Ft. Valley.

McCormick Reaper and Bind-
er, good cond., cheap, or swap for,
cattle or hogs. PING Ae _ Wynn,
Glenwood.

Case tractor, good cond., sina:
V"_N. Phillips, Royston, Box 203.

20 in. Meadows corn mill, 2
hole Hocking Valley sheller, ex-
tra good shape. Accept corn. Ga.
cane syrup or h._s part pay. G.|
M. Williams, Covington, Rt. 2. -

Farmall Athens, 3 disc plow,
cost $200.00, sell, $80.00; John
Deere 2 bottom tractor plow, lit-
tle used $35.00; also 3 yr. old
Farmall, thoroughly reworked.
Wm. J. Brennan, Columbus, 1511
19th St.

1 3-70 saw. complete Gin outfit
with automatic tramper, huller
gins, open drive brush gins,
etce., at bargain. T. V. Phillips,

No. 11 Chattanooga syrup
mill, 3 roller, 9 ft. copper pan,
fine outfit. Reasonable price or

or sow, or for full blooded Jer-
sey heifer calves. Will James,
Ellijay, Rt. 3.

Avery riding cultivator, $20.00:
International Riding cultivator,
S. Anderson,

citron seed. R.

Hawkinsville.

Fordson tractor. good running
cond., $135.00 my place. J. P.
Anderson, Atlanta, 423 Atlanta
Ave., Ss. E. Ma 4246.

~Good Pea thrasher for. sale.
Mrs. Fannie A. Owens, Lawrnee- |
ville, Rt. 1.



Wanted

Pay cash for slightly used, all
electric incubator. State what
you have. R. D. Winn; ee
ald, P. O. Box 571.

Want battery equipment for
raising broilers. G. W. Darden,
Athens, 794 Prince Ave. .

Want electric Inc., in good
cond., Exc. R. I. Red. friers at
prevailing prices or thorough-
bred Tompkins Red Young hens
and roosters. Mrs. M. H. Walker,
Grantville. Rt. 2.

Want battery brooder for broil-
ers, 3 wks. to 1 wks. old, cap.
500, good cond, ata cheap for
cash. E. M. Herron, Atlanta. 721
Kirkwood Ave., S. E., Ja. 9060,

~ Want. set of good _caponizing

sh

cash, or trade for what have. you?

ts wanee.

Sone thermometer. and dnstru

64 inch, canopy fair cond. $5.00

cond., and attachments, 500 cap.

er, 300 to.1 M. cap. $20, or exc. for

cluding egg tester, thermomete:

ton. Rt. 3.

jmett. Screven, Rt. 2. Box 31.



























































150 cap. Super. Hatcher. Ine,
$9.00; 2 1500 cap. Drum Type
brooders, $7.50 ea. FOB. R. H.
Stanton, Aionis. 281 Norway
Ave. N. E.

Little Brown Hen -ine., used
once, good as new, $3.50 cash,
FOB, or exc.: for. Buff Orphing-
tons or White Leghorn chickens,
Mrs, AL. K, Kersey, Stillmore. Rt.

Broodets: No, 18 Buckeye: coal
burning, $5.00; 2350 cap. Blue
Flame, $4.00 ea; 3500 cap. Blue-
Flame, $5.00. C, S. Burden, ie
gansville,

1 used ker. 150 cap Inc, wean
cond, $5.00 or exc. for. anything z
can use, Mrs. Tom Tidwell, More-
land. Rt, 1.

Sears-Roebuck Super Hatcher .
Inc., 260 cap., $16.00; 150 cap
$12.50; also 1 M. cap. oil burn-
ing brooder, All good cond: Mrs.
Emmett Trammell, Duluth, be
1,

100 cap. Prairie State inc., use
once. Sell or trade for 2 healt
pigs. Mrs. R. J. Rundle, Hiram

Sear s Little Brown Hen inc., 50
cap., good as new, $3.00. Mrs. B.
E, Freeman, Bowdon, Rt. 3. os

Super Hatehe: inc., 250 cap.
kerosene burner, good cond., $5.00

H, L. Wilson, Clarkston. eae

350 egg Buckeye inc., 1 Sears
| Drum, type oil brooder, 1 ;
Cheap. te. ee Westbrook, Ss

_Big Gray Hen inc., 100 c.
heated by ker. burner, good

tions, $5.00 plus trans. ches. - Mrs,
J. C. Alexander, Meansville, Rt. i

60- 10 cap. Old Trusty inc., call
parts. included, $4.00, or-exc. for
3 S. L. Wyandotte - hens. and
| rooster, not over yr. old; also ni
dried apples, worm free, 12c
Add postage. Mrs. Clyde M
Whitesburg. Rocha :

-Drum-type oil burning brooder f
1M. Cap. perfect cond. Miss Lois
Plowden, Cuthbert. y

Twin Float Sol Hot phioae
good cond., used with 4 broods,

for both at my farm. S. Pe liad
kle, Sera yson:

Coal burning bioeter a
$4.50. Mrs. J, P.. Chappell, Tem-
ple...

23%4 x 36 ker. brooder, nsed'4
mos., hold 50 biddies to 4 wks.
(can be-used as electric brooder.)
$7.00 FOB. Mrs. .Norman Will-
iams, Oglethorpe. Rt. 2. nog

New Phelan Drum Type. prood="
large hens. H. Konigsmark, Smy-
mao. S ae

Super Hatcher, inc., 150 cap.
set only twice, good as new, in

3

instruction book. Cost $18.50; sell
for $10.00. A. W. Gilley, Carroll

600 ege cap, inc., guar, ior
sale or exc. for smaller (250 cap)
one and the difference in price.
C. W. Dugger, Higgston,

Honey Bees and Bee
Supplies For Sale



Pure extracted TiTi honey; six
10 lb. pails to case, $4.50 fob here,
one 10 lb. pail, $1.10; two 10 lb.
pails, $2.10 postpaid. John A.
Crummey, Box 117. Jesup. :

4 Ibs. bees wax, 25c jb. Ex-
change for Heifer, hogs or any
kind. stock. Mrs. J. C. eek =
Look Out. Star R.., Box 3. 4s

9 old time bee gums with bees.
Write for prices. =. S Bios
Ambrose, Rt. J. z

_ Fresh extracted honey in 10 1b.
pails. case of 4, $3.50; case of. 6,
$5.00 fob. W. G. Chamblee, Daw- :
son, Rt. 3. :

14 modern bee hives and frames
used one season, $14.00 here. T.
L, Cooper, Ashburng Rt.2. -

Ext. Tupelc honey, $1.50 per
10 lb. pail, 75c per 5 lbs. B. EB
Sheppard, 1222 EL _ Henry St,
Savannah.

Nice, clean 1938 str. and oma
honey, $1.00 per 10 lbs. or 50 Ibs.
$4.00. Add. postage. Cash with
order. No staoke, John L. Ben-



40 lbs. good sound pees wax
15 lb. not eee ea
aw ne eae



tools. State price. H. S. OKelley,



AW



10c. M
Hill, Maysville, :















Biss

iitisev. thoubahd P. - Bunch
-potato. draws.

_ 10. lbs. white conch -peas
M tomato | plants, 500, C8.4:

au Nice: size plants. - Mrs.
. Rooks, eprmgrale.

'F, Sutton, Lyons.

nd P. R. potato plants del. by
20th April, also prices at bed. E.
Entrekin, Bremen, Rt. 1,
Want 10 M. Bunch potato slips
out last of April or first of May.
. B. Barfield, Ft. Valley.

Want 5 to 10, M. Klondike
tt wherry. plants, well rooted

moss packed. T. L. Han- |

ck, Summerville, Rt. i,

Want some old fashioned Yel-

Yam potato plants. O. S.
geron, Millhaven.

Want 15 M. pink skin P.
slips, April 15th to May ist
- in two shipments,
ar. Quote lowest price del,
1 R. Camp, Marietta. Rt. 4

Want some Jerusalem arti-|-

chokes for planting,-Mrs. Ben].

Reese. Shellman,

Want about 10 M. bunch Yam
potato slips, from
yarty who will ship when order-

N. E. Daukins, Canon, Rt. 1.



PLANTS FOR SALE

p. red skin... oP. R. potato

ts, Gov. insp.,. beeaind. $1.50

Marglobe, Gr,. Baltimore to-

, $1.00 M. All. del. Ga, Cash.

chks. O. i Mobley, Baxley,
Rt. 4, Box 45.



ed skin P,R. plants, Goy. in-|

spected, treated, $1.25 M. del.
Ready April 1th.~ C: - seeT

Brimmer aie ake now
ready, 25 C.; 500; $1.00, Del, Ga.
rs. G. E. McDaniel, Buena

49 M.; Onion, 75 M. All del.
Cash with order. L. L. Groover,
Baxley, Rt. 4.

Strong cert, Marglobe tomato |

slants, now ready, $1. 00, 500; $1.50

M. Del, 3rd zone; Red Skin P, R.

otato, $1.50 M. Ready April ist.
O chks.

Potato slips to see vines, $1.50
M.; Boones and P.'R., Ea. $1.40
M. Del. W. T. Crow; Gainesville.
Large quantity Tobacco plants
now ready to set, Bt .00 - R.

. Burch, Eastman.

Red Skin P. R., Gov. insp, and
reated, $1.50 M: also Tomato
ants, $1.25 M. del. Ga. No
chks. Ww. A, Pearce, Surrency,
hee 2?

Marglobe tomato lants,\ $1.25
M. postpaid. Moss packed. Mar-
1 Mullis, Odum, .
P.R. potato draws, $1 AQ M.;
eading v. ., tomato: plants, $1. 25
Ready. Del. Also 25 bu, No.
Spanish peanuts, $1.00 bu. at

No. 1. red skin P. BR. potato
plants, Gov. insp., $1.40 M. Del
io chks. Cheaper in large lots
-rom- April 20th on.
"Tom Gray, Baxley, Rtz1.
Marglobe and Baltimore to-
mato plants, $1.15 M., mossed,
ready ow; Ruby King pepper,
150 M. All del. Good count
and plants. Mrs. Magy Tyre, Bax-
Rt, 4.

Nice, strong, Gov. insp. P. R.
etato plants, $1.10 M.; New
tone and Gr, Baltimore tomato,
Sc M FOB. G. A. Lewis, Bax-

$1.00 M.
. for Marglobe and Gr. Bal-
and: Wakefield

Miss Iowa Mes-

quality and
\ No
per. " Alma,

State when}

week

responsible

| with, order.
{.ma, Ri. 4. a be sap

J. C. Edgerton, Baxley.

Marelobe. and - New. Sean -to- |
unto plans., $1.25 Ms, del wth

"Gow. in: POR? potato pints

zou 25) to Marglobe, New Stone s

Pp. R. slips, State |

| s004 plants, .$1.35.M. del,
B, Tyre,..Baxley, Rt. 1,

P. R. potato; red:skin; Gov, im a
Tiesto
Ready April Ist. BL a. Smith,
Ody a

$150 M, del in Ga,

Chas W, cabbage plants, 50
M, FOB, 1M or less; 5 M, del,

1500 M, L. A. McDonald, Ray City.

Marglobe, Gr, Baltimore toma-
to plants, $1.00 M; Gov. insp.\P.
R. potato slips, $150 M; Ruby
King pepper, $1.50 M. All April
del. Moss sees Melvin Deal,
Baxley, Rt.

Early ee and fivetbeating
strawberry plants, $1.00 M; red
currants, Goose plums, 10 ea.
Mrs. Sam Smith, Austell, Rt. oD:

Wakefield and Duteh cabbage,
$100 M; Stone and Baltimore
tomato, $1.25 M. * * Ready April
20th: Alldel. A C. Garrett,

. Gainesville, Rt. 7.
R. po- |.

' Marglobe tomato plants $1.00 00.
ual, postpaid. Moss packed? M
. only.: Allen Thorriton, Sere- |:
ven, Bb Pei

| Marglobe and New ,Stone to-
mito plants, $1.25 per M. del,, or
$1.00 fob. Cash with order. E.

|S. Cauley, Alma, Rt. 4.

Porto Rica potato plants, sa
insp., $1.25 per M.}
globe, and..New Stone.
plants, $1.25 per. MM. fob, . Y
_ Grady Cauley, e

tomato

A ee tatisake plants, end

to plan.ts,. $1. 00 per M. Messed
and packed. Mrs. J, A. .Crapps,
Baxley.

Gov't: insp., PUR. potato plants,
$1 5 M. Mareglobe tomato, Ruby
King pepper plants, $1.50 M. J.
W. Beckworth, Baxley, Rt,. ps

Gov't) insp., Red Skin Porto
Rica Potate plants; Marglobe to-
mate plants, $1.25 per M. del. in
Ga. CC. B. Tomberlin, Benen:
Rt. 2... , Se

Rooted Kuda crowns, $1 00
per C; $7.00 per M postpaid in
Ga., Miss Marcelle Patterson,
Waco. Att. 2., Box 136.

Marglobe a New . Bienes to-

mate, plants from certified seed,
25e: ; $2.00 M. postpaid. Mrs.
R. K.-Cash, Jesup, 578 Orange
St., Jesup.
; Red Skin Porto Rica anaes,
$2.00 M; Marglobe and Baltimore
Md. tomato plants, $1.75 M; Ruby
King sweet pepper, $1. 50 M, W.
T,. Beckworth, Baxley, Rt. 2. >

Genuine Red Skin Porto Rica

. potato plants, gov't inspected and

treated, $1.25 M. del. in Ga. John
H,. Lee,, Baxley, Rt. 2.

Imp, Pink Skin Porto. Rica po-
tate -plamts, gov't inspected,
$1.25 M. fob., Apr. del. B. F.
Mallard, Millhaven.

Certified Red Skin Porto Rica
potatoes, $1.50 M. del.; $1.25 M
fob., 80c, 500; $7.00 5M; Marglobe
tomato plants, $1.35 M;: 25c C
del. Apr.. May and June del.
Mrs. Ds; Johnson, "Tarrytown,
Rt. 2.

Imp. Porto Rica. plants, Mar-
gute tomato plants, $1.25 del.

C..B. emberlin, Surrency, Rt. 2.
-ptato' plants, P. R., $1.25 M.;
$450 4 M; Goodbys Early, $1.40
M; $5.00 4M; Niggar Killers,
$1.65 M; $6.00 4M. O. K. Herrin,
Winokur.

Have 1,400 yds. Gold Dollar
tobacco plants to sell by the M.,
sq. yd., or by bed. Ready Apr, 5.
Geo. Asbell, McIntyre.

Artichoke plants, 20c C; dried
ratsbane, 20c pt.; green 15c pt.
Add postage. Mrs, Della San-
ford, Ellijay, Rt. 5.

Red and pink P, R. and Boon
gov't inspected potato plants, 20c
C; $1.50 M;, $12.00, 10 M del. Apr.
del. | E,.B. Wetnertord; Gaines-.
ville; RE 2

Tomato plants, - Moss
$1.00 M del. No checks.
) | Lightsey, Screven.

Imp, iRed- and Yellow: Skin -P.
R. potato plants, $1.35 M. del. in
Ga: Cash: - with order. CG. e:
Payne, Titton,; Rol. 28

P| Rotand Yam. potato. plants;
$1 251 M; del J. S. denies SS

packed,
Hovis

: Hauhicy, Register. .

also Mar-1-

April, May, June =

$1.00 M. del.

$1.00 M.'del.;
>| Moss packed. i.
Hi Screven: ae
Klondike, Lady ee Everberaing
and Mountain Delicious straw-!

berry plants, $2.00'M. del.; 6 Red A
; _| Ready April 10th, good count and

Hiverbensinge icaategly plants,
50M or exe. for: sottitig eBeS; OF

tate! ing sa0d

. se B15 50! MES ny Mas Zot
Agi 65M. May atidi. June del: i
Clay: Evans,: Gainesville; R41. | .
* (Pink skin P) Re potatoe plants,
Ttasp. and. treated,;full.count and uM

Se eee Vidalia, Rt. 1.

'Gov. insp, P, R. polos abe
$125 M: del.
to, Greater Baltimore and New

: Messiabe ee plants, now Ee

ready for transplanting, , from

cert,; seed: $1.00, M. del, Ga... Mrs.,
| Agnes Williamson, Bristol, Rt. 1.

True to name Dewberry
plants, well rooted and hardy, 75c
C; $6.00 M; Eldorado blackberry,
same price. Prompt shipment.
Mrs, C. M. Robinson, Greenyille.

Choice 2-5 yr. Kudzu plants,
$1.00 C; $6.00 M, FOB. Prompt
shipment.
furnished. B: W. Middlebrooks,

| Barnesviile.

Orders booked for April del.,

Cert, P. R. potato plants, Pimien-.
to pepper, Scarlet Dawn, tomato, .

$1.40 M; del. .J. H, -Day, Tooms-
boro.

Sage plants, 4 for 250; 8, 900%!
artichokes, 6, 90c postpaid. _ Mrs.
J, B. Batchelor, Wao, Rt. 2%

Frost-proof ee A
lard: plants, 500;35;
and Up, 50c M. State insp.;

80c; $1.00 M., Ready March 25th,
Sat. Guar. Mrs. , Eural Carter,
Lake Park, :

Himalaya. . blackberry a

large..type;. first glass, for .sale-or |
sees trade, 3H. L, Wilson, Clarkston. -

Fine market blackberty, Texas
| wonder,reduced to 50 doz.; 3'|
doz. $1. 00; P. R. Fine busties |
Bermuda, onions, 75 per Mes + 6 St Gut! :
Marglobe an Baltimore. toma- f

State. insp,. P. BB and. Nancy

Hall potato. plants,, $1.2 25 M. Ct
RB: Redmond, Pelham 235

--Marglobe tomato: plants, eee
muda and: Crystal Wax. onion

| plants,'$1.00'M; P. R. and. Early |:

Triumph potato, for April. del,
$1.50 M. H. D, Salter, Pitts. ~

Cert, P-R; potato, red, pink,}

white, $1.40 M. del, in Ga.;. Mar-
globe tomato, sweet peppers, $1.00
M. FOB; Cabbage plants, 60c M.
N, W.
Daniel, Ty Ty.
' Everbearing strawberry plants, |
7c, 500; $1.00 M. postpaid; Red
Gold. Sugar: Saver plants, same
price. - Sudie
RFD 1. =
P. R. potato Bienes, Tes and

treated, $1.25 M FOB, or $1.50 M.
Margilobe (special tomato,

del;

$1.25>Me del.; Stone tomato,

guar. H.C. Rowe, Ocitlla, Rt. 1.

Blakemore strawberry plants,

D2 Oe oe om M. S: A. ay Clete:
land.

Gov. insp. P. R. niente slants: |

$1.25 M; del. No personal checks. |
J. C, Dykes, Baxley, Riya

Chas. W., Dutch and Copen-

hagen cabbage; white and yellow |.

asics onion, 300, 50c; 85c M;
5 and.10 M., 60c:M. Ovie pune
Gainesville, "15 Grove St... #
Genuine Mareglobe Momab
plants, true to name, ready now, |
2M., es 90e' M del.

Gold plants with. ea: order: L
K. Rice, Enijay, Rt. 2

Klondike strawberry plants, 25c
C; 80c, 500; $1.50 M; Everbearing,
30c C; $1.15, 500; $2.00 M. del.
Prompt shipment. Mrs. Ara Wal-
drip, Flowery Branch Rt. 1

Red Skin P. R. potato plants,
Gov. insp., $1.00 M.; Gold Dollar
tobacco plants for sale, and some
good, sound Spanish peanuts, 5c
lb. Leon Gaff, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2

E. J., Chas, W., Copenhagen
cabbage plants, 60c M; 5 M., $2.50,
Good plants, prompt shipment;
also Marrose cotton seed, $1.75
bu., $5.00 OWT: Rood: Fossett,
Baxley. :

Marglobe, Baltimore, New
Stone tomato plants, ready now.
Moss packed, $1.00 M. del.; P. R.
from vine potatoes, ready April
ist-15th, $1.75 M. del. Ali good
plants, prompt ae

| Buchans,) Baxley...

Gov. insy.*red and colton ski





|.Cross, | Rt. a ae ea BOS

iP. a ee ae ote oe M.

Planting instructions |

60 My 5M |
Big 1
Stem Jersy and Imp, P.R. po- |
tato, also Mareglobe tomate, 500,

All April del. Sat. |

Lightsey, |

OMY

| 10th. Loraine Murray,

;

"| globe, wilt- resistant,
| {low ground, 500,

7.|guar, Del< a
Fitzgerald." Fitzgerald Gea.., Rt. 7

Clark, Gillsville, ae



Pure red skin; Gov. insp: P:R.

| potato plants $1, 50: Mi Marglobe |

chard, , Sioceane hacieweeas and
Baltimore,

20th. L. H. Allison, Sylvester.
Tobaceo plants, $1.50 M.

Now ready; toma-

Stone, 60c, 500; $1.00 M, del, 1st
of May. S. C. Rowe, Fitzgerald,
Rt: 2.

Tobacco eid Virginia Bright
Leaf and Gold Dollar, now ready.
Rev, Jake Griner, Blackshear,
Rt. 2, care Dr. Odens Farm, -

Pink Skin P, R. potato plants,
Gov. insp., reday April 10th,
$1.25 M. del Ga.
and count. W. G. Murray, Odum,
Rt. 2, Box 158.

Marelobe tomato. plants, 1 moss | .

packed, good - count... and plants, |.
$1.20 | M. del. Ga. Ready April

Re. 2:
Tomato plants,

Moss packed,
Ga. Ready. E.

2, Box:236 A

: Strawberry ~ plants:
Klondike, 100; all for $2.00; root-
ed sage, 6, 30c; pie plants, 6, 50c;
peppermint, 24 for 25c, Add post-
|age small orders.
' Dahlonega, : Rt. 1, Box-58.

| Mint. plants, 35 doz., P, Pp,
packed: dni damp: moss}. also. gourd.

seed,Cleaned, 10c :for 50; plus
postage: No-stamps, - oe

, ea Thomasboro,

'p. E imp: disease tie. $1 25 M:

|5 M., $1.00 ML; tomato, Marglobe, aD

Baltimore; Bonnie Best, 500, 60c;
$1.00: M:; 5 Mlots,:75c M; sweet
pepper, 500, T5c; Ga. collard, hot

pepper, '75c: M. ee , Fitz-|

gerald, Rt ely

. Field grown from cert. seed,
-Margiobe and: Baltimore tomato
plants, now - aa EL Ras ill,
Americus. at i

, Nice; large TPobaceo" plants for
sale. @, C. Daughtry, Register,

Klondike
20c C. in 500 lots; exc. 500 for 10
nice, white feed sacks. 7a. pay
| postage. Clyde Mason, Cleve-|
land; Rt. 2.

del, Ga. Gov. insp. and treated;

Bermuda Onion, 300, 35c; cabbage |

plants, 300, 50c; tomato: plants,
30c C. postpaid. Ge: Ww. a
Hawkinsville.

Pink and Red Skin: P.R. pota-
to plants, Gov. insp, and treated,
$1.25 M. del. Any quantity ready
April: ist. New: Stone tomato,

|50c M. R&R. L: McRee, Meigs, -

Pure Red Skin P.R. potato
plants, $150 M. FOB; Marglobe
tomato, $1.00 M. Frank Harris,
Baxley. . ;

Marglobe, Baltimore, Stone
and Red Rock Tomato plants,
500, 60c; $1.00 M.; Wakefields,

|, Dutch: and: Copenhagen cabbage,

50c M.-R. L. McGee, Meigs;

| Red skin P. R. potato plants,

from vine cuttings, Gov. insp.,
treated, ready April 1st, $1.25: M.
FOB. C:-G. Wellmaker, Lineoln-
ton, Rt. 3.

Hastings extra. earlye- prolific
tomato plants, $1.25 M, FOB;

Ruth Ahl, Baxley, Rt,2:-
Super Marglobe, Oxheart and
Extra Early prolific and Marglobe
tomato plants, also P. R. Gov.
insp. and treated potato plants.
Mrs. R. T. Grace, Cordele, P; O.
Box 125.

Kudzu crowns, ready to grow,
moss packed, $6. 00 M, collect.
Yonge Walker, Toccoa, Rt. 3

Tobacco plants at market price.
C, E, Perry, Beuna Visa, Box 4.

Vigorvine tomato plants, 450,
30c; 100 seed, 25c; Marglobe to-
mao plants, 25c; large yellow
pumpkin seed, 24c eupfull. All
ee L. A. Crow, Gainesville,
Rt. 2.

Tomato plants now ready.
Master Marglobe, Ruger, Pritch-

ard, 500, $1.00; $1.50 M, FOB. C. | 2.

M. Sims, Pembroke, ~ :
Genuine P, R. potato plants,
; Md

Fred

Good. plants |.

Odum, a

Master ~ Mar-.
grown on.
50e; Tbe M.
full count, ee

ae Lady
Thompson, 300; Red* Gld, 200;

Mary Grindie,

kent

P. R. potato. aha $1 25 M.

Cae 2 dict ve
eaper im: M. lots,

_ grown. from | ;,.
Cert. seed, $1.25. M.- Ready April

"S10
Baltimore, rk oO Day
plants, $1.00 M; 500, 65,
packed. Ready now. Del; O
and Cabbage plants, 75c M
P, Mullis, Baxley, Rt, 4.

Tomato plants, Bonnie
Baltimore, June pink and
Stone, April 15th shipment.
packed, 80c M; 500, 45c. Pre
Mrs. Roscoe meee Abbevi
Ro 2. = ae
Gov. insp. P. R. plants, $1:
Mareglobe tomato, $1.50 M. W.
-Orvin, Jr., Baxley, Rt. :

inspected and
May ist., $1.35 M:
boi F, Wililams,

$1.25 M. C. W. Smith,
ville, Rt. 2.
Imp. Stone and Mare

mato plants, sprayed and
ed, 906 M; 25 C. Can fi
trucks | gt beds. Leroy Ligt
Screven) Rt. 2. eee
_ Ruby King pepper plants,
oe oe or more: ae Ms

Bing pepper ons

M, FOB. Ready. Apr. 1
Graham, Baxley.

... Mastodon everbearing si
berry. plants, 25c C;. $2.00

| scullion buttons, 15c. at:

mustard, seed, 25c Ib.; art
25c gal., long green pod
seed, 15 Ib. Add postage.
Gussie Conner, Rt. 1. ???

Guam. certified Maregl

| mato plants, $1.25 M; 75c
strawberry plants,

Black, es hatehi
$1.00. per 15.
Waycross, Ro, L

Certified, Saniche

full count, Apr. del.
Deal, Baxley, Rt..

35 C. Orders over BOE. past a
Mattie Belle, Sanders, Bue vad

Porto Rica polite: oi c
inspected. and treated, $1.25 M
Marglobe tomato plants, $1.20.
del;, moss cae
No checks, |
ven, oe

Will have 100.000 Mareiegs
mato plants for saie py A
10th, $1.25 per M, fod; ise
Thornton, Surrency, Rt. Dea

~Geunine improved purple
Porto. Rica potato plants $1 pei
M. fob::Coffee; April.and Me
Shipments, or exc. fo s
Prank Bennett, Mers

Red skin. Porto Rico.
and treated potato. plant
amt. ready a 10th,
M,; postpaid. S. a Norris,
man, Rt. 1...

Govt..insp, red ae ye
Porto. Rigo. , eae Bc
per M. del. G,
Screven, geN S .
Genuine Barly Triu p
plants $1.50 per M:
Porte Rico plants $1. 25 per
.fob, state insp. G, J. Ho
Baxley, Rt, 1. ae

Tomato plants, Mar, ots }
Gwreater Baltimore, New Stone
$1 per M. Del. cash with order
no checks accepted; Mrs, Snod-
ell Mobley, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 45,4

Genuine imp. Porte Rico pota,
to plants $1.50 per M. del; R. Ws
Rentz, Baxley, Rt. 2...

Certified New Stone_ tom,
plants $1,25 per M, de pe
treated Porto Rico: potato plants
$1.35 per M, del. Emory
Rochelle, Rt. 1.

Certified Mee a
plants $1.25 per M, ready Aprik
ao L, C. Mullis, Surrency, Rt.

Tomato plants, Break 0 I

$1.15 per M,: Or: 25

| paid; yo Mirs.c Grace: Toston ,
* i Ra, 1. Box




















































































































Govt. insp. Porto Rico: Latah:
ants: $1. 75 per M, 500, $1, post-
aid to third: zone, 10,000 $2.60
r M by Exp; Cash or money
rder, no checks; L. M. Wether- |.
ord, Gainesville, oS Pa

Marglobe. tomato plants, $1.00
| fob. or $1.25 M del. ready
now; P. R. potato plants, $1.25
{ fob. or $1.50 del. Ready Apr.
a E, Nobles, Sey Ri.



PD ner Ss Nace. 90c M;
25 C; Pink Skin potato plants,
a M. Rees. Paul Lightsey,

d@ Skin POR. Seis plants,
0 M del. or exchange for val-
e 'T. Winge, Hazelhurst, Rt.

ee notto. $1.35 M: Mar-
obe, Earliana, Baltimore to-
ato, 85. M; Ruby King, Calif.
nder pepper, $1.50 M; ab-
ge, 50c M. All plants ready Ap-
ith. C. N. Strickland, Mer-



Cert, tomato plants, 5-6-7 in.
igh, Marglobe and Gyr. Balti-

potato plants for sale, also
e R, I. Red eggs, 60c doz. Ver-
1 May, Norman Park. Rt. 1.

. larglobe New Stone, Gr. Bal-
more tomato, $1.25 M; sweet
ep pper, Bull Nose and Bell pep-
er, $1.50 M. Mrs. Mary E, 'Tom-
lin, Surrency. Rees |

ae Early Triumph potato
| Marglobe tomato plants, $1
igger Killer potato plants,
0 M, Sat. guar. Gov't insp.
M. Carter, Rockingham,

rglobe tomato plants,
$1.00, 500; $1.50 M.5 M; lot
. del, Moss packed. Mrs.
3rannen, Hazlehurst.

usalem artichoke plants,
; $1.75 M. exc. for tomato,
1 and pepper plants, or 100
cap. white feed sacks. Mrs,
eb ti Roberts, TeNeRCory Rt.







orseradish plants, 20c doz.;
ung: dewhberry, 35c doz. $1. 50
500, $6.50; calamus plants,
02.5 senna seed, 10c pint in
nna, leaves, 10 pint. Mrs.
A hnson, Alto. Rt. uns
ndike strawberry, -20e- C;
500; $1.50 M; extra large,
meat strawberry plants,
Mrs, Effie or Cum-

i ink and Red skin P. R. good
plants, prompt shipment,
dy April 1st, $1.50 M. del. Hi-
Lightsey, Screven, ~
plants, well rooted, and
oe $1. G. Collins, Cobb-

trawberry plants, Mastodon,
C, $1.75 500, $2.50 M; Lady

A; peppermint
ait ey 25 doz. Mrs. EB



" weet bolato planta pink ski,
to Rican, April, May, June,
$1.25 M; Col, or $1.50, M;
Ga. J. M. Knowles, Alma.

imalaya plants. Sell or exc.
Porto Rican sweet potato or
farglobe tomato plants, Will pay

R. F. Cochran, Cran-

ly. iS San 0c C; also Wan-

naker Dixie. Triumph cotton- |

( first yr. $1 bu. Lawson GNED:
le, Rt. 1,

omtao. penis) Baltimore and

I ss, $1 M, del. Prompt
ipment.. 3s G. Nicholls, Baxley,



Bermuda onion pitts wile
: ellow, large, 65 M. del, Cash
, &. Glisson, Hawkins-

Cabbage, plants, large fresh
rT extra early Jersey, Char-
Eon Wakefield, Flat Dutch, 500,
5c M; $3.25 5000; certified
Rican potato, $1 35 M, $6.50
S 5000. All del. F. F. "Stokes,







"o bacco, 100 yards tobacco bed,
rginia | bright leaf, ready pull
aoe Charles Chaffin, Way-

Sy Thompson strawberry
$1; $1.50 M, del. 80
ith. ea. also Brown Leg-
mm eggs, 75e 15, $1.25. for - 30,
irs, M. B. Scroggs, Alto.
Strawberry plants, Klondike,
ee ar $1.50 M; nice
ung plants. All del. Mrs. Guy
e, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Tomato Plants, Marglobe, $1. 50
A Edward Campbell





a Dollar tobacco nil P.}

50c, |

50 C; Shy:
can. treated, $1.25 M del. genuine}

tage; ee mint plants. for)





| PLANTS FOR SALE

"Sweet potato, red. skin, | Ansp
and treated, ready | about Apr.;
20th. Book orders $1.50 per M. C.
J. Gordon, Warwick.

Himalaya berry plants, siaae:
rooted, 6 for :25c, not postpaid.|:
Miss Hazel: Westbrook, Gaines:
| ville, Rt. 41, :

Strawberry plants. Keastodon,
35 C: 500 for $1.75; $2.50 per
M.. Lady Thompson, 30 C, 500,
$1.25, $2 M. Miss Verdine Whit-|
Mire, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Tomato plants, guaranteed, true
to name Marglobe, $1.50 M; 75
per 500; also Black Minorca eggs,
$1 for 15 del. Carl Callahan, Me

| cross, Rt. 4.

Youngberry, Acme -Thornless,
Boysenberry, New Strawberries,
raspberries, also roses, etc. Plants
govet. insp. M. A. Neal, Ashland.

Kudzu, 10 yr. old, $8 per M.
W.R. Vines, Leary.

Gen. Red skin P. R. potato,
Govt. Insp. and New Stone to-
mato plants $1.25 M. Fob.; Exc.
for pimiento or other good var.
pepper seed. G. C. OGuinn, Sur-
rency, Rt. 2.

Cabbage plants, ready n now, Ear-
ly Jersey, Charleston, Conepha-
gan and Golden Acre, 5c M,
$2.50 5,000. O. HH. Owens, Pem-
broke.

bearing. $2.00 M del. 30c per
J. M. Porter, Cumming, Rt.

Tomato, Iceberg lettuce, pep-
per, bell; hot and pimiento, egg
plants, 35 C, carrot, beet, cab-
bage and spinch plants 25c per C.
Del, on $1.00 orders; Mrs. = V3
Franklin, Register.

Strawberry plants, Klondike
gnd Lady Thompson, 25c C, 90c
for 500, $1.60 M; Wakefield and

Flat Dutch cabbage plants, 20c

C, 65c 500, $1 M, del. Amos Gar-
rett, Gainesville. Rt. 7. eo

Rhubarb or pie slants: horse
radish, comfrey and sage plants,
will rooted, 10c bunch. Add post-
fae Mie: Celia eee. Bib ley, wt:

_ Tomato ane Marglobe or
Red Rock, New Stone, ready Mar.
15, $1.25 M. del. 25 C, Moss pack-
ed, J. T, Lightsey, Screven.
Tobacco plants $1.50 M; cab-
bage, 75 M; tomato, $1.00 M;
bell and hot pepper, $2.00 M;
White Bermuda onion, 75c M;
certified Porto Rican potato, $1. 50

| M; Williams Toole wilt-resistant

cottonseed $1.00 bu,. ae Ww. ee
jams, Quitman; =.

Tomato plants, cert. Marglobe,
Greater Baltimore, $1.25 M del.
Moss packed. Full count. Melyin
Deal, Baxley, Rt. 4.

Cabbage and onion plants, $1
| M del. Now ready; H. R. Williams,
Baxley, Box 112, ee oe otf

Cabage and Bermuda onion
plants, 20c C; 50c 300, or $1.00
M. del., 5,000, $3.75 collect; To-
mato plants, Apr. del. Lee Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 2. cs

P, R. Sweet) potato plants
$1.25 M, Godfrey s early yams
$1.35 per M, del. ready Apr. 1.
J. S. Griffis, "Waycross, Rail.

Sweet: potato plants, Porto Ri-

Early Triumph $1.50 M del. Ap-
ril del. J; P. Beck, Baxley, Rt, 3.
Tomato plants, Marglobe, $1].
|M del. moss packed, 25 C gov.
inspected Red and. yellow skin
Porto Rican sweet potato plants

$1.25 per M del. George Griffis,
| Screven.

Porto Rican sweet potato plants
pink skin, inspected and treated.
| $1.75 M del. now ready; Marglobe

| tomato. plants, $1.25 M del. 25c.

. Moss: packed. Woodrow Light:
sey, Screven.

Sweet potato plants, Porto. Ri-

con, . Eovemmens inspected and
Tonkbe- ($1.25 M; Marglobe. to-
mato, 35 C, $1 M, moss packed.
April, May, June del. pee
in Ga. Money. orders only. LL.
Griffis, Odum, Rt. A, Box. 169,

Tomato plants, Margiobe . and
Baltimore, $1 M. del. Guaranteed.
EB. H Bupchans, Baxley, Rt. 4.

- Sweet potato plants, red skin,
govt. insp. treated, $1.25 M fob.
also Marglobe, New Stone and
Matchless, Red Rock, Favorite
Earlina, $1.20 M. fob. April May
del. W. G. OQuinn, Surrency,
Rt. -2. : i

Sweet potato plants, improved,

$1.25 M. J. T, Goodrum, Warwick.

Strawberry plants, Lady
Thompson, 30c C, Jungs wonder-
berries and Jungs Gibson, 40
Cc: pie plants, 3, 25c. Add postage:

Grindle, Dahlonega. Rt. 1.

Sweet potato plants, Porto Ri-
can, pink or red skin, insp. treat-
ed, ready April, $1 30 M del, Mar-
globe or Scarlet Globe. tomato.
Ready Mar. 18th. $1 M del. -25

Lightsey, Screven.
Young berries, (25 for $1. 00, 50
r $1.50 100 $2.75, properly |.





ge: Haskell,

Strawberry plants, early ever-|.

fob, trucks;

gen. Market;

certified pink skin Porto Rican,|

Exc. for white sacks. Mrs. Sarah]

per C, del. moss packed. Leland

"PLANTS. F OR: SALE

Calihace and onion: plants,! all
var, 15 Ms tomato plants: $1.25
M; potato ate $1.50 M, from
cert seed... S. E: Thompson, nee
ey. oe

Strawberry . plants, Klondike,
25e C, 80c 500, $1.50M del, Ev-
erbearing 30c, Well rooted young
plants. Royce ee SOwerY |
Branch, Rt... 1.:

Strawberry: plants. Klondike,
500, 60c, $1.00 per M__ Everbear=
ing, same price; rooted . gocse!:
plums, red currants, 6, 50c, 90c
doz, rooted seuppernong 1c, Add

~ Garlic plants 45 C. Exc. for
good, sound seed peanuts or ver-
bearing strawberry plants. Each
pay postage. Mrs. ae Clay-
ton, Roy.

and Charleston, frost-proof, 500,
65c; $1.00 M postage pd.; white
and yellow Bermuda onion, same

pepper, egg plants and potato
plants. R. Chanclor, Pitts.

Strawberry plants, Red Gold! y,
Sugar Saver, 35c per doz. Red
raspberry,
50c doz. Asparagus seed 25c per
doz, also large type yellow Chry-
santhemums 35 doz. All post-

paid. Cash -or M. O, Mrs. W. B.

Allan, Alto, Rt. 2. Box 59

Strawberry plants, Klondike
and Lady Thompson, 500, $1.00,
$1.75 M, del. Prompt shipment.
pee Crowe, Gainesville. Rt.

Porto . Rican, potato plants,
govt. insp. and "treated, $1.50 M;
Marglobe,; New, Stone tomato,
$1.25 M. All del. to and in 3rd

zone. Milton Arnold, Surrency.

Strawberry plants, extra- large,
sweet meat 25c C, $2 M; earliest
variety Klondike '20 C, $1.50 M,
blue Damson and purplish skin
free stone plum, 3, 40c del. Exc.
for pecans, died. beans, etc. Mrs,
J. S. Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.

Lettuce and onion plants, 20c
per ; Chinese mustard, 10c pkg.
Martin gourd seed 5c pke., hardy
chrysanthemum plants 25 per
doz. Want some big ones. Mrs.
Fred Atkinson, Valdosta, Rt. 4.

Kudzu crowns, $6.00 . per M,
$6.75 fob railroad;
also want. a good work animal.
Y. M. Anderson, Williamson.

Dewberry, young; well rooted
plants, 35c doz. $1.50 C, $6.50,
500, $12 M; Horseradish plants
20c. doz. Calamus plants 15. doz.
Add pattage, ne eae A, Johnson,

Alte, Rt. 1

- Tobaceo. _ plants, 200 yd. bed,
ready by -March 20, 30 thou.
plants. Make best offer on bed
and plants: early var. tomato
plants, ready March 20: 25 C.

Postpaid, $2.00 per M. J. H. Cham-
pers, Milan.

Cabbage plants, Early Jersey
and Charleston Wakefield, white
Bermuda onion plants. "15 per

'M. del. ee Cc. G. ve Bax-

ley, Rt. 4

Kudzu crowns for sale, R. E,
Lee, Concord. Z

_ Strawberry a cae
ing, 25e C, $1. M; Klondike 30]
per C, $1.30 per M. Add postage.
Cash with order; 1 ft: sugar pear
trees 10c ea. $1.00 doz. Miss. Beul-

ah Frye, Dallas, Rt. 3.

- Cabbage plants, - Charleston
Wakefield, Dutch and: Copenha- |
Heading. collard;
yellow and white Bermuda onion,
300, 50c; 500, 65c, or 85c M, 5,000-
1 000 60c: per M. Prompt shipment

O. M. Crow, Gainesville.
Strawberry plants, Lady Thom-|.

pson, 25 C, 500 for $1, $1.5 M;
Klondike, 500, 80c, $1.50 M; Sil-
ver hull Crowder 90 pk.
$1.60 half bu. $3 bu.; del prompt
shipment. Bthel Crowe, Se ges
ville, Rt. 2. 5

Se ge Per
Break *O Day, 20c

Marglobe| and]
, $1.50 M,/

Rican, white triumph, white yams,

Apr. 1 del. Dewey G. Crosby,

Graham. :
Sweet potato plants, Foe ~

can and Nancy Hall, Sta

$1.25 per M. A. R. Jones, | Dhan

Tomato plant, Marglobe, $1.00
per M, del. to. 3rd zone: after
March 15th collard plants 60c
per M. , Satisfaction guaranteed
or money refunded. Mrs. Edna
White, Coffee.

Sweet potato Deanet govt. insp.
Porto Rican, pnik skin, $1.40 M.,
del: Marglobe tomato plants $1
M. April and May del. W. J.
oe Jr, Odum, Rt 4, Box

: ; Ly
Booking - cries for pure more
Rican sweet potato plants, govt.
insp. at $1.25 M. or 15,000 for $10
April, May del. also Marglobe
tomato plants, now ready, 25c C,
or $2.00 M. B. A. Mateos, Fitz-
gerald.

Tomato plants, Marelobe: now
ready, 25 C; $2 M; also pure
insp. Porto Rican potato: plants,



May ~ del. A ES Maddox, Pitz-!
CRE..2. igi ag ne



price. Apr. and May del. Tomato, |

40c doz. sage plants) |

$1.25 M, 10,000 for $10, April-

postage. Charles Thomas Smith, :
Austell, Rt. 2, Box 90.

Cabbage plants, Early Jersey

.| DOW Tedy; booking orders, Porto 5

=



"PLANTS F OR SALE

Sapte iiante.. Early Jersey
and Chas: Wakefield, 15 C; $1.25
M; Iceberg lettuce, white Bermu-
da onion; Marglobe' tomato; 7 in.
plants, how ready. 25c per C,
$1.50 M del. Porto Rican potato
plants, ready Apr. 10, $1.50 M

ready Apr.del. Mrs. H. i Britting*

ham, Guyton,
Cabbage _plants, Charleston
wakefield: Crystal Wax Ber-

muda onion plants 75c M, 40c
500: Prompt shipment. Guaran-
teed count. D. L, McKinney, Pine
Grove. es

Tomato and cabbage, leading
vars. onion plants, guar. del.
in good condition, 25c per C, 300,
60c" $1 M del. 5c M in 5,000 lots
or more, Exp. Col. Ernest Will-
jams, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Tomato plants, Stone and Pon-
derosa, April. 1 del. Call trade

only,.or will exc. for any farm 3

produce or meat. Geo. Bedinge-
field; Macon, 717 First Street.

Tomato plants, Marglobe, $1.00
M, moss packed; Porto Rican po-
tato plants $1.50 M, del. April

Mary Crosby, Baxley, Rt. 4.

Tomato plants, Marglobe and
Greater Baltimore, $1.20 M del.
ready March 15. Cach with order.
No stamps. Mrs. D: S. Deen, Bax-
ley, Rt. 4. Box 99.

Strawberry plants, Klondike,
25c C, 80ci 500, $1.50 M; Lady
Thompson 30 G, $1.15 500, $2.00
M. All del. Mrs. Verna Strick-
land, Flowery Branch. Rts a:

Strawberry plants, Missionary
$1.50. 500, $2.00 M; garlic 10c
head, $1.00 doz. peppermint,
sparmint, 50c doz, medicine
rhubarb 50 doz. catnip 50c doz.

yellow root 50c: lb. Miss Mattie!

McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.

Cabbage plants, Jeading var.
(5c. GC, postpaid to 2nd zone,
or 50c M in crates of 2,500 by
exp. Exc. for field peas. J. W.
Lang, Omega.

Strawberry plants, Missionary,
500 $1.25: $2.00 M; catnip, pep-
permint, spearmint, yelllow root,
hoarhound plants, 35c doz. 4
doz. $1.00; Himalaya blackberry
plants $1 doz. perennial yellow
larkspur 50c doz. Mrs. i ee
McCurley, Hartwell. .

Kudzu, strong healthy crowns,
2 to 5 years. old, $4.00 per M.
Exe. for N. . runner peanuts
at market price. Clyde Lanier,
Graymont, Rt. 1.

SEED WANTED

Want 10 Ibs., amber cane seed,
or early orange, for feed. Exc.
Marglobe tomato plants. Also
want 8 bu, iron peas. H. L. os
liams, Baxley.

Want Texas ~ watermelon and
individual (small sized) water-
melon seed, red or yellow cushaw
seed, thls., of ea. kind. Miss May

ane







| Sims, Rhine,

Want 20 ibs. eens Excell
watermelon seed. Send sample
and quote price. oN. M. Perry,
Ellaville. _

Want 1 qt. old fashioned onion
buttons, not scallions or shallot
buttons (onions grow from but-
tons, make onions next year).
Have garlic bulbs and buttons.
Mrs, W. H. Kinney, Parroliion.

{47
Want 10 bu. or Jess of sugar

crowder pea seed. Exc, insp. P.
R. potato plants. Quote best
price. Mrs. E. A. Lambert, Den-
ton.

Want sev. bu. hace beans, o-
too-tans, Lespedeza, seed and
Italian grass seed. W. L. Cou-
sins, Jr., Decatur, Rt. 2.. or Ve
ae

SEED FOR SALE

Vigorvine inate ceed 25 ai
1-4 pt, $1.00; Rocky Ford Canta-
loupe 25 pkt., 60c pt. Stone Mtn
Cuban Queen Watermelon seed,
50c pt. del. B, . Moore, Cedar-
town. Gen. Del.

No. 1 Hale Best Seksicionoe
seed, 40c lb., Guar, J. R. Parnell
Unadilla.

Marglobe. tomato seed, $1.15
Ib.; New Stone and Baltimore
toamto seed, 75c Ib.; Klondike
strawherry plants, 500 for 90;
$1.40 M del. Prompt shipment.
E, C, Waldrip, Flowery Branch,
bo 0:

Honey Rock cantaloup seed,
50c teacupful postpaid. Horace
Burrell, Elberton, Rt. 3. .

Pure, sound, 1937 crop Cuban
Queen watermelon seed, 90c Ib.,
white, speckled pole butterbeans,
white bunch butterbeans, 15 Ib.
plus postage. Exchange for. dried
fruit, good setting eggs or fertile
guinea eggs. Mrs. G. L. 1
-Bronwood, $5





- Pure white bunch Buttetbeaii
20e lb. not Deatpeld: Mr e a.

Miles, | Harlem. nee

| aldsons
hatehing eggs, 75c per 1

: postpaid, Mrs, George Pome

running butterbeans, brown sug

Gainesville, -Rt. 2.

Buckhead.

and floated; $4.00 bu. W.

Valdesta, Rt. 4, Box 254.

Dallas, Rt. 3. oes

shade, 45' Ib,

- Pure Langford watermelon
ville, Bt. oa







Friday, April












































































































Ee plant: _seed, 30. for
plus. 3c stamp:;: Directions
eare with each: order. Also
purebred R. I.



or 50c at my home. Mrs, |
Owen, Adairsville, Rt. 2.

Cornfield bean seed: ane cut:
sharts and. deep. strings, 25
ful; also prolific corn, $1.00

per, Rt. 2. Box 21.

Long green pod: okra see
lb.; Mammoth gourd, 25 for
20 Jbs.. white rice peas, 10c
J. P. Morgan, Rt. 2, Senoia.

Scarified Sericea lespe
seed. Low prices. Govt. allows
$2.50 an acre for planting. Wi
J. Brennan, ijl 19 St., Colum
bus.

Kansas early uaterieion. ee
tough rind, 40c Ib. in 5 Ib. lots.
W. N: Spiers, Dublin, Rt. 1.-

Fine sorghum seed, 5c
bright baled oat straw, 3 ba
$1.00. W.H, Holt, Fayettevi'le

Henderson Bush limas, Ha
ings Dwarf okra; small w

crowder peas, 20c postpaid.
Ida B. Bailey, Buffton.

500 stalks Ribbon Cane
seed; also 500 bundles fodder
L, Adams, 247 Rockyford Ay
N. E., Atlanta.

tone finger red pepper se
red pepper, 10c thls.; bani
mushmelon 5c this. Cuvan Qi
watermelon 25 teacup; ie. er
watermelon, 25 cupful. Miss Eva
Harris, Keysville.

- 90-day velvet beans,, $1.0 00
in new 2% bu. bags. C. H. C
Sandersville, Rt. 2. ~ 5
Large yellow pupkin seed =
cupful; vigorvine tomato 100, 25
or 50 plants, 25c; Marglobe w
mato plants, 50, 25 H. P. Crow

Tomatoes: Colossal (grow over
4 lbs. ea.- and White Beauty,
(no acid), 150 seed, 25c del. J. H
Champion, Roy, RFD

Marglobe tomato seed, $1.1
~altimore, Stone Favorite,
Ib.: 10 lbs. $6.50; turnip seed:
Seven Top, $1.00; Purple Tf
75 Ib. eollard.seed, 60c lb. W R.
Stephens, Gainesville, Rt. 6.

Brown Streake: Half Ru
bean seed, 25c cupful; 2 for
Cash or M, O. Add Postage,
L. R. Ashworth, poh fai:
Fe ;

About 30 Ibs. bial Q
Watermelon seed, 50c Ib.
Postage. L. M. Graham, Unad

White bunch butterbeans,
lb.; Hastings collard seed
half cup; Dixie Triumph cott
seed, 75 bu: E. T; Smith, Wadk

Little white bunch lima bu
tebean seed, 20c lb. Excha:
5 lbs. for 10 Ibs. Mrs. ;
Rucker, Funstor eae
Vigorvine .tornato seed, sm .
fruit, wilt-resistant, bear un
frost, pkg. 200, 25c. eee R.

ENO. Y Chufas- seed,. ma

Strickland, Wayeross, Rt. _ B

Apr. Vigorvine voniats see
seed, 25c; $1.00 per. M, enou
for 1-4 acre, with | instructio
Will C, Smith, Roy. sii

12 gourd seed, 15c from. a pus-

shel gourd. Mrs. M. F. L
California multiplying

Mrs. Ola girs OCKIAGY
2.

Stone Min: S enfermloly
20c Ib.; over 100 Ibs, 150%
Cream Crowder peas, 6c Ib.; ov
2 bu.; lots: 5 Ib. You pay. pos
tage. No stomps. W. A. Moore
Haddock, . Rt:

seed, harm picked, dried in

Vine okra, 10c doz.; ee
12 pt. in pod; senna, beans, J
pt.; dill seed, 10 large pkt.
Johnson, Alto,

$1.00 Ib., W. A. bang: M

California maltigtvles
seed, 10c start, Add 3c posi
Mrs. Sallie. aor, Rockmart,
2. ey

Visorvine tomato seed, -10
C: vine okra, 10 50. Mrs,
Collins, Rising Fawn, Rt. 3
Gourd seed, 10c iozen.
Mashall, Reo: F. .D, Pitts.

20 but uit. seed, 1
3c postage shange
headed collard seed for. |

y,



_ for $4.00. Jesse "Ay: Tay-
gerald, Rt. Beas ae

.| hand selected, 30c lb.;

wi liams, Greauile, Rt.

Texas Ribbon Cane
Ib.; less than 10 lbs., 8
only, Lewis F. MeCoy,
ot a6
Chantenay carrot seed,
sas! Mathews, Bow-

in need? 3 qts., 65c; large
box full for i5 del.;
ts, 4c ea. or 30c doz;
del. Exchange 100: for

roma, strawberry -plants. :

: Moon, Waco, Rt. 2.

dried chufas, 10 Ib. or
shelled pop corn, 10c}

postage. Melis Weenh

day akciincton bee. 10
half pt. No checks or
uther Norris, Harrison.
xie watermelon seed,
aie: eae Houan;

teiniain watermeion
; Cushaw seed, 50 for

: Floyd Sargent, Cor- |

a Arthie. - Griffis,
1, Box 42:

pod okra, seed, 20

C large pack. Mrs. fei
Jpharetta.

oS postage on small
Hubert F. Turner,

eed, ripens 60 days from
ae pkg., 25c; acre bag,

corn field bean seed,
and tender, 30c qt.; 2 qts.
: r- 80C, gal, pore ie Mrs.
ilton, Rt. 2, Box 88 A.

if] kra seed, bears until
10c per 2 tbls. ;_ Speckle
ler peas, 2 Ibs., 25. Mrs.

: pure Stcne Mountain
seed, treated, 50c. Ib.
R. Andrews, Haddock.

4 hion. Speckle bunch but-

Ma. O. No Stamps.

mek Conley.
tings Texas seeded Ribbon
eed, ist yr., 2 Ibs., 20c 5

43% bu. Hastings su-

bu. pure bunch velvet}
for seed, sound, $3.00 bu.

Hastings cin sunflow- ;
16 Ibs. crotol-
, 25e Ib. Mrs. N. B. Bra-|

0 pkeg.;

), Rt, 2.

tone Mtn. watermelon
ated and improved
guar, be best of ship-
), 50c Ib. J. M. Liv-
t xter, Box 68...
oe Queen watrmel-
50 lb.;
eeper peas, 10 Ib. del,
lots; also White duck
oe s, 40c doz. Add post-
red D,; Brooks, ot

1g Rocky Ford semia
ad, 10 this.; very. large
aloup seed, same. Bree,

-1 bu, White |

Bushel
gourd tic. guinea
beans, ee pkt,; 2a8 for well
| Footed Concord ee

-vines,

: "}Bramitt, "ailiay. Rt, 2.

100 Ib. Dixie Belle ee. og
ae than.

10 Ibs. add postage. A L. Brady,

; _| Rupert.

Sweet pimiento pepper seed,

dill seed, old fashion muckmelon |

seed, 10c thls.; 3 for 25c del. Mrs.
liettic Ralston, Ella Gap,

Calif. beer seed, 5c tsp. Ada
postage. Clellan Jackson, | Waco,
Rt. 2:, Box 91,

Good variety okra seed, 13;
2 -tbis.; . Burpees _ Mammoth
pumpkin seed, 15c pke.: mixed
color cornfield seed, 30c. cupful,
postpaid. No stamps, Mrs. E. F.
Edmonds, Trion, Rt 1. i
~ Large size Martin and Long
Handle Dipver gourd seed, 10c.
large pkg. del. Mirs. A. H. Price,
Locust Grove. . ie : :

COTTON SEED for SALE

Pure Stoneville No. 2 Cotton
seed, $3.00 per 100 Ibs.; Stone-
ville No. 5 extra prolific cotton
seed, $4.00 per 100 lbs.; Stone-





ville No, 2B, $5.00 per 100 lbs.| otto, seed, $4,00 per 100 Ibs. fob.

| Alton Mahan, Rydal.

D. Tatum, Palmetto.

25 bu. pure Farm Relief No. 4
cotton seed, $1.00 bu. fob, Jce
W. Bickers, White Plains.

25 bu. pure D. P. L. No. 11
cotton seed, 3rd yr., kept pure
at gin, 42 per cent lint, $3.00 per
100 Ibs. fob my place. Linton G.
Ray, Covington, Rt. 2. e :

Stoneville and Lone Star cot-
ton seed mixed, 75c bu, at my
place or exchange for anything
of value, Pat McRae, Buckhead.

100 bu. D. P. L. No. 11 A cot-
ton seed, ist yr., $1. 00 bu. M. F.
Harrell, Covington, Rt. 4. HS

800 lbs. pure Farm Relief No.
4 cotton seed, $2. 50 per 100 lbs.
S.. J, Brown, Bowman.
100 bu. Wannamaker ~ conten,
seed, Ist yr. wilt-resistant, kept
clean at gin, free from black
seed, $1.00 bu. Cash with order.
Grady Benson, Ty Ty, Rt. 2.

25 bu. Rhymes Cook cotton
seed, ist yr., kept pure at gin,
$3.00 per 100 lbs. M. O. only, fob

| C. O. Griffin, Fitzgerald. Rt, 2.

100 bu. pure D. P. L. cotton
seed, $1.00 bu. or $3.00 per 100
Ibs, Jonathan Bryan, Philomath.

Stoneville No. 2. cotton seed,
pure and clean, 80c bu. Cheaper
in larger lots. E. J. Sanders,
Rockmart, Rt. 3.

Half and Half cotton seed, $1.50

bu.; May: cherry sprouts 10c ea.|
Ast yr.,

rattlesnake roots, 20c Ib. and
other herbs. Lonnie Rundles,
Gainesville, Rt. 7.

Half and Half cotton seed, Ist
yr., kept pure at gin, $1.00 bu.

or $3.00 per 100 Ibs. fob. Ray Tay} :

lor, Gainesville, Rt 5. |

Pure Rucker No. 11 cotton. oe
ist yr., 75: bu.; $1,10 per. 100. Ibs.
Fred Senkbeil, Hartwell, Rt. 2.

Few bus. Extra, long staple
Williamantic. cotton seed, $2.00
bu. Cash with order. P. H., _Mon-
fort, Buena | Vista.

Todds staple cotton seed, Ast

a ye kept pure at gin, $3.00 bu.

Green Greeson, Bethlehem.
Pure Stoneville No, 2 Cotton
seed, $2.50 per 100 Ibs. freight
paid; seedling ribbon cane seed,
15 pk. postpaid. No checks. J.
H: Davis, Milledgeville, Rt. 5.

Pure -toneville No; 2 Cotton.
seed, 75c bu, or exchange for
blacksmith tools or combination
planter, with duplex Donner: UR.
P. Bomar, Palmetto, Rt. inighs

60 pu. Pure -atoneville: No, 3
cotton seed, | ist yr., $1.00 bu. or
t $3.00 per 100 Ibs, also 30 bu.
Cokers No, 4 cotton seed, 1st
yr., pure and sound, * 50 bu. or
$4.00 100 Ibs>fob. S. B. Duncan,
Bowdon Junction,

30 bu. D. P. L. cotton seed, gin-
ned 43 to 45 per cent lint last
year, $1.00 bu., $3.00 per 100 Ibs.
Walter E. King, Lithonia, Rt. 1.

500 bu. long staple Farm Relief
cotton seed, privately ginned, 1
1-8 inch staple, guar. pure, 75c
bu. You furnish sacks, Ralph P.
Walker, Wharthen..

- No. 11 D. P. L. cotton seed, 1 in.
staple, 85c bu. fob. Ralph 8S. Col-
lier, Comer.

Wannamaker Dixie Triumph
wilt-resistant cotton seed and
Cokers Farm: Relief cotton seed
$1.00 bu. fob. Mrs. J. E. Peddy,
Davisboro:*

Clevewilt,



Cokers
change for. extra early potato | than

ae iL. E. Fass a.

Dipper | and . Maxtin |
ae per | 100 Ths. A
ee

ton seed, Ist
Jint 144 in

resistant cotton

wilt-resis- |
tant cottonseed, 75c bu. Ex-.





-'Wannamaker Glvetand Svvtbit
babe $2.25 per 100 Ibs.; also 1

: S| good Old Hickory two horse wa-

gon in good condition, J, Ww,

Greene, , Thomaston | ete A
150 bu. Cokers 100 str. staple

cotton seed, 1st yr., $2.50 per: 100 |
Ib. bag. -fob. Cash with order.

Ben FR. Tanner, Sandersville.

400 bu. Stoneville No, 5 cotton:
seed, high lint producer, 75e. bu.
fob. W. R. Turk, Monticello. -

Stoneville. No, 2 cotton _seed,
$3.00 per 100. lbs.. fob. Hammond
Simmons, Alto, Rt. Ae te

95 bu. Stoneville No. 2 ectton |
seed, 2nd yr., 75c bu. W. 1 Ee

Culloden,

Cooks wilt-resistatit, Cleveland
Big Boll, Dixie Triumph and Co-
kers cotton seed, 80c bu. J. F.
Fussell, Fitzgerald.

Cokers Farm Relief. str. 4;
Cokers 100 cotton and Cokers
5, str. 7 cotton seed for sale. B.
Cc. Teasley, M. D., Hartwell.

Pure Seabrook Sea Island cot-

ton sed, 7c Ib. fob. S: L. Calfee,

Brunswick,
Pedigreed, recleaned Stoneville

Half and Half cotton seed, ist
yr., $3.00 per 100 Ibs. fob. S. P.
Reed, Varnell, Rt. 1.
Pure Gallaways Dixie Rose
cotton seed, kept pure at gin, 5c
bu.; fine little rice peas, 10c Ib.
white rice. pop corn, 10c lb, Add
postage. Mrs Marie Holland, Dal-.
ton, Rt. 2.

Wannamaker with - resistant
big boll cotton seed, pure and
clean, 3 bu., $2.00; also nice cow;
calf 2 wks old in March. ist calf
$40.00. W. W.. McPherson, Villa

| Riea, Rt. 1.

Stoneville 2-B cotton seed, 1st

yr., ginnled one variety gin, 90

| per cent germination, $1.00 bu. in

3 1-3 bu. sacks; also. want good,

sound horse about 900 lbs.; 5 to
10 yrs. old to ride or work. W.
E. Rheney, Hephzibah. ae

Nice lot D, P. L. 11-A cotton
seed, 40. pers cent lint, 95 bu.
del. H. Grady Adams, er Cir-
cle, :

Coker's No. 100 cotton eee
$1.00 bu. or $3.00 cwt. fob. L, 8.
Kelly, Maxwell.

Pure CGokers Farm Reliet No.
4 cotton. seed, $1.00. bu.; pure
Rucker cotton seed, 90c bu. Ex-
change for two 90 lb. shoats
(Hampshires . preferred.) DA
Hutcherson, Ashland.

recleaned, - germination
92 per cent $2.50 per 100 Ib. bags;
Whatleys prolific seed corn,
hand shelled, $2.00 bu.; % bu.,
$1.25; 75 pk. here. W. H. Soe
ton, Griffin.

wilt-resistant cotton seed. 1st yr.

$3.50 cwt.; 2nd yr.$2.25. J. J, Oli-

ver, Commerce, Rt, 3. ca

1,000 bu. Dixie Triumph cotton |

seed, ist yr., $1.00 bu. J. H. Wim-
berly, Munnerlyn, RP De

seed, ist yr. Fertilized 600 Ibs.
per acre, from bottom cotton
saved from second bale through

gin, $1.25 bu. Mrs. J.-M: Deen,

Axson,

Farm relief cotton seed, $3.00.
per 100 Jbs.. Exe. for corn, peas,

O-too-tan beans. Nix me

Machen, Rt..1. .
160 bu. Cokers long staple cot

yr., ginned c
$4.00 per 13 abs 1.
J. Stone, McDonough, Rt

Boe: and. Half cotton. aL: 1st

yr., $1.00. bu.; Big a prolific
flint corn, $1,00 a ee Ss. W. PWhit-

00 bu. Wee wilt-re-
Epon cotton seed, str. 6, $1.00
te Aubrey Roberson, Temple, Rt.

_ Bartow,

Pure Cleveland. Boll, wilt-
$1.60 bu,
fob. R. A. Mallory, ar Concord.

100 bi pure Rhyne Cooks imp.
big. boll, wilt-resistant cotton
seed. $1.00 bu. Jewell Benson, Ty
Ty. Rt. 2, ;

25 bu. Stoneville No. 2 cotton
seed, 1 in. sbaple, $1.00 bu, fob.;
Pride Ga. watermelon seed,
eer sorters enue seed, Be:
2a postage. L. P. Wri
Chipley, Rt, 2,

Extra fine cotton seed, 1% in
staple, $6.65 cwt. fob. D. D. &, Bond,
Lithonia.

Piedmont Cleveland, Big Boll }

Cotton seed, ist yr., A in.

wilt-resistant, $1,00 bu

. Hickman, antoeeaio

eg. P. L, No. 11. cotton

2. per owe fob.; no oe
haga Willie: eee Bu-

1B, SOON,



Stoneville No. 2-B wotton. iseea:

Wannamaker Wonder. No, 6.|
seed, 2nd yr.,



Hfob.. Bramitt Caldwell, SARUR

ie



Sa0e. bu: eae Toole, ines e: cle

ant qoton esd. 1 to 4 bu., $1.25
|bu.; over 4 bu., $1.00 fob. Cash.

cs Walter Crummey, a Rt.

pictnoak Gleveland,, Big Boll
ether seed, Ist yr. Y-16 -in.

"; staple, $1.00 bu. or S00 cwt.

fob; W, T.. _ Bagley, Jr,, Cumming.
100 bu. Piedmond Cleveland
cotton seed, 90c bu.; $1.00 cwt.
= red farm. M. C. Parker, Point
eter,

bi ae Triumph cotton Seeds 75
UL ay peas, sound and brigiht,
$1. 5 bu... fob. T,
Thomason, Rt.. 2.

No. 11 Rucker cotton seed, 45%.
lint, $3.50 cwt.
| Gainesville, Rt, 4

Stoneville No.
$1.00 bu. M. .
Ground, Rt, 4.

400 bu, No. 11 D, P. cotton
seed, 1 to 1 1-32 in. erie, 40
to 43% lint, ginmed in one varie-
ty gin, 75c bu. Ernest O. Sayer,
Winston.

40 bu. Wannamaker Wonder,
wilt-resistant. Dixie -Triumph,
str. 6 cotton seed, 1st yr., pure,
clean and bright, W. D. Harper.
1004 Plant Ave.. Waycross.

5 bu. Mars Rose cotton. seed,
kept pure at gin, $1.00 bu. Lea
Wella Elliott, Lavonia, Rt..1.

Wannamaker Wonder Wilt cot-
| ton seed, Ist year, recleaned;
Stoneville No. 2, $1.00 bu.; $3.00
bu., $3.00. 100 lbs. fob. Jahn L.
Hattaway, sDavisboro. |

Several hundred pie Coksr's

5 cotton seed,

J.

Farm Relief cotton seed, str. 3}

and 4, 2nd. yr., guar. pure, sound,
$1.00 bu., $3.00 per ewt. K. D.

Sanders, Eatonton, Rt. 2.

Pure Wannamaker, wilt-resis-
tant cotton seed, kept pure at
gin, 70 bu. R. se Sta tey. Har-
rison.

85 percent germination, $1.00 bu.
H. B. Ward Watkinsville.

Pure Wannamaker Cleveland
and Ruckers cotton seed, sound,
clean, $1.00 bu. Exchange for seed
peanuts, velvet or O-Too-Tan
beans. L. E. Adants, Hartwell,
ie:

-No. 11 improved Rucker cotton
seed, cleaned and graded, $1.25
bu.; $1.10 Gu. in 3 bu. cotton bags.
fob J J. T. _ Rt. 4, Mariet-

Cokers Feral Relief cotton

seed, recleaned, $1.00 bu, Exch.

for hay at $15.00 ton or seed run-
ner peanuts, $1.00: pu.;-also \pure-
bred black Poland Chinas, 3
mos. old, $20.00 pr. R. es Barnes,
Summit,

40 or 50 pu: Stoneville 2-A ee
ton seed, 1st yr., ginned clean,
$3.00 per "100 lbs. J. M. Nix, Hien

ery Branch,

- Pure unmixed Half ae Half
cotton seed, ist yr., $3.00 per
190 Ibs. fob. S. Py Reed, Varnell,

| Rt. 1.

Wannamakers Clevewilt.. cot-
ton seed, ist yr., and Dixie Tri-
umph, 2nd _ yr. Privately ginned.
No orders less than 10 bu. Ww: W.
Quinn, Washington, Rt. 3. cee
Pure Stoneville No. 2. -eotton
>1 in. staple, Te |
bu. ow. A. Hendon, . Woodstock,
Rt. 3g, es

Pure Stoneville and Farm Re-
lief cotton seed, 7T5 bu. Ae tae
selected seed corn, $2.00 bu. W

Vandiver Heavy Fruiter cotton &: Spivey. Social Circle.

600 bu. Pettys Toole ae
seed. Wilt-resistant, pure, select-
ed, re-ginned, re-cleaned. Made

15-16 staple last 2 yrs. $1.00 bu.

D. I. King, Unadilla.
Cokers No. 100. cotton : seed, 40

percent lint, 1 1-16 inch staple, ;

clean, $4.00 per 100 Ibs. We aa so Calif. white blackeyed peas

Cox. Roswell.
80" bu, New Deal Farm Relief

doa seed, $2.50 per 100 lbs. or
75e bu. G, wW. Swain, Lumber city,

Rt. 1. 5

200 | , Clevewilt cotton seed,
str. 6, ist. yr., $3.00 per 100 Tbs.
or $1.00 pu. fob Fort Valley. John
M. Rice, Byron.

- 1,000 bu. pure Farm Relief,
str. 4 cotton seed, $1.00 bu. fob.
J. R. Nunnally, Monroe. aoe

50 bu. D. P. L. No. 11 cotton
seed, almost pure, average oe
43 1-2 percent, 75c bu fob. BE
Briscoe, Loganville.

"5 pu. Delta No. 11-A cotton
seed, guar. pure, Ist yr., $1.25
pu. fob or. $1.50 bu. del. Exchange
for corn, -velvet. peanuts,
or O-Too-Tan beans. F, Mul-
lins, Mansfield, Rt. 1.

Sound Rucker cotton seed, 60c

bu. at my barn. Felix R. Arnold,

Philomath, /
45 bu. No. 2 Stoneville cotton
seed, 2nd yr., pure and clean,
90c bu. Exchange good stock pigs.
J. A. Crawford, Calhoun, Rt. 2.
15 bu. Cokers No. 5 Clevewilt
cotton seed, recleaned, 75c bu.
65 bu. O-Too-Tan soy beans, $4.00

eh 15 bu. Biloxi, 22.25 bu, fob.

S. B. Goodwin, Marshaliville.

3 aes recleaned Stoneville No.
2. cotton seed, $2.00. per 100. lbs

BE. Ansley,
aL, P, Forrester, |

Goss, Ball :

| seed, $1.00 bu.;
- Cokers 100 aon seed, 1st yr.,|

(per acre,

Rican Red sweet potatoes, seed
or Slips. L: L, Morgan, oe Me
morial Dr., Atlanta. ae

Wannamaker Clevewilt : :
seed, | 1st yr., ginned absolutely
pure, $1.00 bu. Bee ee
Winders BS

seed yrs, 40 percent lint,
toi 1-32 in. staple, 90c bu.; 20
bu. Stoneville No. 2. cotton st
2nd yr., 38 percent. lint, 1 to 1

inch staple, 90e bu. Kept

at gin. Carey B. Willis, Molen.

1,000 bu. Steneville No. 2-A cot=|
ton seed, 1st yr., $1.00 bu.: $60.00
ton fob. John Wilkinson Se
Hogansville, H

100 bu. Cokers Hiri Relief
and 100 bu. Cokers One Hundred
cotton seed, $1.00 bu.; 300 -
Hastings seed corn, $2.00. bu. AW
seed ist yr. Also 10 tons ea. mead= 5
ow peavine ha es $15.00 ton. fob
Penfield. M. T. Sanders Com~
merce,

Farm Relief cotton seed, teste.
ed 90 percent germination. Mrs.
EH. T. May, Warthen. :

Cleveland Big Boll, wilt-resies.
tant cotton seed, 90 bu.: also
few bushels Half and Half, 1st.
yr., $1.50 bu. fob. L.. E. bah
Cobbtewn, Bite 28s) Q

Pure, elean Stoneville No. wi
cotton seed, Toc bu.; 10 or more
bus., 70c bu. M. H. Barnett, :
Washington.

3,000 Ibs. Cokers 100 Be
seed, 1st yr.; $3.50 per 100 lbs.
1,500 lbs, Farm Relief str. 4. All

kept pure at gin, $3.00 per 100 y

W. T. Allen, Danielsville, Rt. 1.

35 bu. pure, long cotton seed, |
$1.00 bu. Jim Bryant, Bristol.

100 bu. Stoneville No. 2 cotton:
Whatleys seed
corn, $2.50 bu. Hand selected,
N. W. Parham, Warm Springs.

Good Farm Relief cotton se
2nd, yr., 60c bu.; also good plug
mule cheap. C.E. Baggett, ae)
ville, Bt 8. His

Stoneville,
boll, Ist yr., 75c bu.;
globe tomato. seed, $1. .00 lb.; New
Stone and Baltimore, 15e. lp.3-
cream brown, white and speckled |
sugar crowder peas, 8c lb. B. R,-
Woodliff, Flowery Branch, Rt. ke
75 bu. D. P, L. 11-A cotton seed,
Ist yr., ginned at one variety gin,
$1.00 bu. te. een aer, Care
rollton. - oe

Cokers big. boll, wilt. resistand
cotton seed $1.00 per bu. shipped

it eae

runner bean seed 30c per lb. 2.
lbs. 55c del. C. A. Wilbanks, Be
>, Commerce.

200 bu. D&PL No, 11- A cotton
seed, ginned at one variety gin
and recleaned average 43%%. pers
cent lint, 1 to 1.1-32 inch ae
per bu. - Arlin Davenport,

FOP ey

| hanan.

30 bu. dears staple cotton Saal |
privately ginned, pure when
pought last year, $5.00 per bu |
prepaid. B. N; BOwn, Rt. 1, Doug= ae
lasville.. = ,

-Impr. Mars Rose cotton: ceed,

5 locks to boll, pulls from 1 i :
to 1 1-4 staple, ee
acre. $2.00 per bu. Mrs. J.
Eley, White Plains. 23405 5

Cokers 100. cotton - seed 1 ye
from. breeder. Pure, sound
felean. 1 1-16 inch staple, small
stalk and. foliage. $1.00 per. bit,
B. FP. Fagan, Martin, 3

Rucker Early Impr. cotton seed
(1150 Ibs. make a 500 lb. bale)
$1.25 a bu. Thomas Bat aa! noe
land. :

DP&L No. 11-A T5 per bu: aly

$3.50 per bu. Exch. either for.
good Brab peas, O-Too-Tan beans
or anything can use. Willie rR
Smith. Rt. 2, Villa Rica.

100 bu. GPaniagnakers Dixie
Triumph wilt resistant, Ist yeas .
from breeder, ginned pure and
clean, 40 percent: lint, 1 in. ote
and better. 3 bu. for $2.00. Exch,
ee for peas or velvet beans:

W. W. McPherson, Villa Rica.

25 bu. pure Wanamakers wilt
resistant cotton seed, oe
tested, 1 yr. grown, $1.00.
per pu. C. A. Phillips, ort ts ee
dalia,

150 bu. ne ae Stoneville No. 4.
cotton seed $1.00 per bu. H.
Rigdon, RFD 2, Roberta.

200 bu. Farm Relief cotton seed,
43 percent lint, $2.25 per 100 lbs
fob. Geo, C. Young, Tennille.

400 bu. No 11 DP&L planti
seed. Ginned on D&PL gin. o
per bu.; also ae to buy 100: pe
field peas. E. O
ville.

Rucker No. 11 cotton seed lat
year 47 percent lint $3.00 per

40 a Ip. Marlin Alexander, Re
5, Cleveland. | S oe
Impr. College No. 1 wilt ellen =

rain on. a Hand selected, ;



| Hatcher, RAL

39 percent lint. a




also Mars

fob.; 90c at home; White Half

. Sayer, Douglase
100 lbs.; 100 Ibs: Big yellow comm

tant cotton seed. Picked without Ae








eae sotlhd aa clean Stone-

= ginned and . recleaned - 70e per}
f= Dt: Riley | C Couch, ue, .3

Pure Stoneville. cotton seed No.
92-52 staple length 1 3-16 inch,
extra early $1.00 per bu: fob. 10
bu. lots 90c per Se a ae:
Bishop. ;

26. bu. Spacamakecs, Dixie pris!
umph,, $1.00. per. bu. fob;. Exch: for}:
O-Too-Tan or field .peas;. also

_-$3.00a bu. fob." T.
Rt. 3) Carrollton.

Piedmont Mont. Clevland cot-
ton seed No. 2, 1 inch to 1-1-8
inch staple $1.00 ae bu. $3.00
. per 100 lbs. fob. A. B. Payne, Rit.
2, Temple. Sop}
1,000 bu. Cokers 100, Aes
tion test 88 percent; 1,000 bushel

_ Stoneville 2-A, test 86 percent;
300 bu. Wanamakers Dixie Tri-
mmph strain 2-A-20, test 82 per-
cent. All ist year. Guar. pure.
$1.00 bu. fob. J, H. Goolsby, Mon-
ticello,

Pure clean Stoneville No. 2 cot-
ton seed 75c a bu.; 10 bu. or
more 70c per bu. M. H. Barnett,
Washington,

fs O, McLendon,

41. Ehese seed:- are Se aa 8.
Floyd, heganville, i :

Cokers selected Farm Relief
$2.00 per 100 fob.;O-Too-Tan
_ Soy beans, 100, bu.. 1937. crop, res
cleaned im 2, 1-2 bu. bags $3.00, J.

roe.

Dixie Rose cotton seeds, roll
_ dropped. at.gin,- kept pure, ~ 85
fou. fob.; White rice,popcorn 10c
Ib. on. ear. Miss 'Thelma,,Burnett,
_ RFD 2, Box. 196,. Dalton, ..
Pure Rhyne Cook cotten seed

ist year $1.00 a bu. fob. W. O.
_ Wilson, Rt. 1, Cusseta.
200 bu. Cokers Ist yr. 5 str.

cotton seed $1.25 a pu., 5 pu a
or more $1.00 per bu. fob.
; Kirkland, Rt. 2, Box 86, Nicholls:
_ Stoneville Cotton No.2 sed,' |
ginned on one variety: gin and re-
cleaned T5c ee bu. fob: Newnan |:
or Ramond..,
a 3, Newnan, ee
200 bu. pure Bbpne Coke: tauis
Big Boll wilt. resistant cotton
seed $1.00 bu. Jewel, Bao me
2, Ty Ty.

Wanamakers wilt eeisatt eee
fen seed.7-8 inch ,staple $2.50

_ MoRae.

: - Wanamaikers - Cleveland. Big
5 Boll cotton seed, 1st yr pate 90c
bu. $2.75 per cwt. fob. J M. Kemp,
& Acworth, Rt, 2.-

DP&L No. 11-A 1st yr. $1.00
bu. fob. Pure Stonevill *O0c bu.

Ibs., gentle, work anywhere, Ty
Ww. Simmons, Douglasville. -
- Wanamakers Cleve 1 1-16 stap-
le 40 percent. lint. 1937, ginned
100 percent pure, ist year from.
originator $1.00 ye bu., $3.00 per
100 lbs. fob. W. D Milam, Rt. 1
Austell: a

Heavy Fruiter, greatest yield-
ing cotton I ever grew, good lint,
first _yar, and worth--the price
$3.50 cwt.; also few cwt. Stone-
Ville No. 2 at $2.50 cwt. All sack-
ed and.del. to. transportation, Co.
. R. Morris, Rt. 3, Newnan.
200 bu. Addison, extra. early
_ prolific cotton seed, 1 in. staple,
- 45 per cent lint, $1. @0 bu. fob.
. Clarence Brown, Helena,
35 bu. Dixie Rose cotton seed,
$1.00 bu.; 90c bu. for lot; few bus.
old Brabs New Brabs and Tilman.
peas. Ki S. Bere Ses
Rt 3 :
_ Cokers, Cleve it eoton seed,
first year from breeder $1.00 bu.
in new.3 bu, bags fob. Zebina. L..
A. Griffin, Rt, 2, Wrens.

49 Bu. pure Hi bred. Half and
Half cotton seed 75c per bu. F.
D. Garrard, Vidalia. e

50 bu. D&PL No. dt A cotton |
seed, first year out, ginned on
one variety gin: $1.00 bu. plus|T,
express. Aton Kemp, Star Rt.,
Bowdon:

35 bu. Wanamaker door No. 2
wilt resistant guar. pure. Plant-/|A
ed here 2 years, $3.00 cwt. fob.
/ Toccoa. G. W. Watkins, Rt. 1,,
Eastanollee.

- 100 bu. No. 12 wilt resistant
Cook cotton seed 75c per bu. fob.
E. L. Giles, Rt. 2, Fort Valley.

~ 80 bu. Stonevilte recleaned. Ger-
ination guar. Good staple. 75c
per bu. Buyer pay freight. Money
order. No chesks:; Mrs. Clara
Johnson, Rt. A, Tennille.

cent lint, 1 inch staple, 60 bolls
per Ib. record 2 bales to acre,
$1.00 per bu. fob. Jesse Brown,
Helena. ee

50 bu. nice clean DP&L cotton
seed, 5c per bu. at. barn, 90c
fob. Milan. R. F. Jones, Rt. 3,




















COTTON NSEED. for SALE]

"ville. No. 2 cotton. seed privately +

2 eared yellow Core $1.00 pk,,}
at The per Bile fob, Mrs. W. H.|}-

Cokers cotton seed No. 3 and|_
100 percent, also Pine Delta No.

per bu, fob. Am R. Breedlove; ee: E
y No. 4 4,

buy 90- day beans,

KE. 5d; ee Brot
\ Bryan, Canon, ;

per cwt. 0. 8. Williams, Rt. 1].

_ in 5 bu. lots fob or exch. for peas; |
_ Also i black mare mule, wt. 1,000

- Addisons early prolific 45. per-|



hee No. 11 A cotton seed a
in.. staple: and better: Gininied on
onesvariety: gin 46 percent lint:
$1.00 per bu.;.orexch. for white?
crowder or. Brady, peas: 2.bu: for
Li. C. Davis, Rt:,1s Buchanan.






























































































































seed $1.00" bu. A. Mt. Buits, De-
ph verev. 7%
,Pure, clean Stoneville No. t

Cobion Seed, .90c. buy SiiFys Ginn,
Royston... =.

Cotton. seed DP&l, Noe a 25 bu: .

Walker Rt. 2, Grantville.

BO bu. pure Stoneville - No
cotton seed, $1.00 bu., 42 percent
lint this: year, 11-32 in. Staple.
Exch. 15 buy: for: a big purebred |
bone black or blue Guinea gilt
bred to farrow in March. T. E.
Shepherd, Rt. 1, Adairsville.

seed 90c bu.; 150 bu. Genuine
Half and Half, 90c a bu.; Also
25 bu. Biloxi Soy Beans, $1,50
a bu.; 100 bu. 90 day velvet beans,
95c a bu. Foster Graham, RFD
1, Wrightsville.

About 90 tons pure D&PL No.
11, cotton seed for sale, W. QO.
Hudson, Rt. 1, Elberton.

75 Bu. Nice Rucker Cotton seed
1 yr. from oa K. eae
can, Douglasville:

500 bu. Coker Glevwilt Pin
staple, strain 5,..$3:00: per cwt.
sack. fob.; also... Br, tons . white
soa pe nuts No.1, 4ce-lb, fob..,

Sm ith, Carnegie. .

Cotton, *Seed-Colser-Clevewilt
81 percent .. germination...
$2.50 per 100. Ib. bags, Hastings
Super Prolif eorn | $3. 00" per bur

., W. oChilds;" Omaha.

, Coker 100 eotton seed, ist yre
$1.00 oper bu: Exch. fot good
shoats. Chas. M. Miller, Calhoun.

200 bu, Cokers cotton seed, .1
1-16 inch staple, 42 per cent lint,
$2.10 per 100 Ibs. bags; 10 bu.
O-Too Tan beans, .$4.per bu.; 50
$1.00. bu. fob.
Geo, C, Young, Tennille. :

: Egrly, prolific King. cotton. seed,

pure and. sound, 90c per bu. F. co

Bunn, Midville.

Stoneville cotton seed, kepts
pure at gin. Ti oe oe Hoyt 6.



Cokers Fann. relief: Feotion: ed
No. 4 recleaned 85c per bu. $2.75)
per cwt.; 3 bu. red huli speckle
peas $2.00, per bu. fob ne station.
B. Tanner, RED
aa coe :
10 bu. No. ft Dixie rump
wonder maker long staple cotten
sed. $1.25: pet bu.) or: exch. for
runner, peanut .seed bu. for. bu.
T. A. Clack, Rt, 2, Pitts. Ba

Select Stoneville cotton seed
$1.00 per bu. fob Hartwell New-
ton E. Reid, Hartwell... :

15 bu. Sikes wilt resistant cot-
ton seed, ist year. POR originator
$1.00 bu. fob. A. _ Whifaker,




ite. Mansfield.

* Rucker cotton 3 No. 11 43
to 45 percent lint, - 50 per cwt.
I. P. Forester, Rt. , Gainesville.

150 bu. Impr. oe long staple

Summerour cotton seed 80c per

bu, Made a bale per acre on en-
tire crop this year. J. A. Stone,

Rt. 5, Cumming.

DPa&L 11-A,. 1 yr. 693 lbs... lint
acre, 39: per cent lint, privately:
~ginned: $5.00 per cwt.;
Impr, wilt resistant Toole Seed

| 632 Ibs. lint acre 34.4 per cent lint,

staple 7-8 inch to 29.32 inch $4.25
ewt, W. L. Houser, Fort Valley.

Coker 100 cotten seed, first yr.
from Coker, $1.00 per bu. del.
Satisfaction guar. A. F. Miller,
Calhoun. i

ers wilt-
resistant Dine Triumph cotton-.
seed, str. 6, ist yr.,
clean, $100 bu. in sacks. WD
Harper, 1004 Plat sale Way-
eross. os

Stoneville No. 2, eotior ge $4
bu. or 85c bu.-in lots of 50 cbu..
or. more,..H,, L., Greene, Brooks.

Goker s Clevewilt- No, 6 cotton.

seed, 1st. yr., . pure and sound,

$3.25 bu. in 90 Ib. bags fob. J.
, Goodrum, Vienna, Ret

yr., 1 3-8 inch staple, ginned 100
= cent pure, $1.00 ou. fob J.

. Maxwell, Covington,

No, 2 Stoneville cotton seed, 75c
bu. at home. A. E. Eavenson,
Marietta, Rt. 3.

45 bu. Stoneyille No. coticn
seed ist yr., $1.00 bu.; 6 bu. $5. 50

1M. OG. or Cashier check. fob. Mrs

R. R, Roan, College Park.

Petty Toole and Cook 307---6
varieties, wilt-resistant kept. pure
at gin, seed recleaned, $1 bu. Al.
C. Price, Bronwood.

250 bu, Rhynes - ip? fea eS
sistant cotton seed yr.,

pure at gin, almost free of. Sek
seed, $1.00 bu. cash with order,
Q. A. Benscn, Ty Ty, Rt. 2.

20. bu. Todds staple cotton seed
Yst yr., kepb-pure at gin; $5.00 bu.
[ee exchange for or .calves |



60 bu. cotton seed pure "Toole
&Coker mixed $1.00 bu.; 12 bu. |;
Bunch velvet Seans $2.00 per bu. fp

Ridiland, 4

mos, old, J. T. Sasa



30 bu. Stonevitie No. 5 cotton,

No. 2,

200 bu. Cokers Clevewilt cotton |}



= 1 Sanders- ,

- Housers:

pure and |

Cokers No. 8 cotton seed, Ist]



Dixie Triumph.





ebtten seed,

Bailey, Harlem, Rt. ae
e715 Bu Farm Re
tant Cotton: seed: $1. oy a an
ces Fanning, Coning. SRE

75> buy pure Stonevilie: No! is
cotton sed,.75e bus er: exchange





[for peas: on; baby. chicks: Ma oT

Minshew, | Magon;: VB Big
Limited amount ahi Cenintack

| Farm _.Relief. cottonseed, 15, buy)

fob.. John. af 1, Coilins, Rt. |,



_ Parriel,

100 bu. Seren e No. 4 -golton |,



seed, ist a2 1 1-16 ifich staple
$1.00 pu, C. Borders, LaFay
ette i

str. 5, 1st yr., kept clean at gin |
$1.60 bu in 100 lb. bags, J, W.
Richardson, Lithia Springs, Rt.

Pure Farm Relief cotton seed,
1 in. staple, culled $1.00 per bu.
Cash or exch. B. P. Smith, Rt.
2, Commerce.

No. 11 Rucker cotton seed, $4
per C. Mr. Chester Forrester,
Gainesville, Rt. 4.

Tooles staple cotton seed, 1
1-4 to 1% inch oe ne $3.25 pk,
or $12.00 bu. B.. Barksdale,
Norwood.

D. P-L. No. di- a joe as.
ist yr.) ginned,in. private gin, $1
be ee Henry Taye Douglasville,
R
_ Stoneville No, 2 patton goed.

pound: and: pure. ~~ care Cousins;|

Greenville. - 8

oPure Stonevilie NO: 2 cotter
seed, $1.00 bu: er exchange for
Q-Too-Tan beans: or field: peas.
S. Boyt, Yatesville, Rt. 1.

Halt: and Half cotton seed, av-
erages about 47% per cent lint
last yr., $1.00 bu. or $3.00 per
100 Ibs. Ez, N. Eslinger, Ringgold,

500 bu, Petty Toole and Imp.
Cocks cotton seed, ist yr. wilt-
resistant, guar, sound, $1.00 bu,
here, O: FY Whitchard, Blakely.

eee No. 2 cotton seal, 1
privately ginned. $2.85

Wille ia er ie on ia]
ger lo 7 yar sey,
Janta. . 305 Central Ave., 5, W...
ow Coker a cotton.. Seed, ist. ITa:
189 sper cent germination. Guar,
pure, H. B. Ward, Watkinsville.

<o%6 bu. No. 2 Stoneville cotton |
seed, $1.00 bu; -also:200 bundles
Hes: Virgil Bentley;: Rockmart, :
Rt, 2

DD Pate cotton: aged;. 1. in, stap-
le, Wannamaker Cleveland, pri-
vately ginned and recleaned, $1
bu. fob. Exchange for 25 gal. Ga.

Cane Syrup in cans, J. L. Tho-
|mas, Madison, Ril.
Large quantity pure . D. Py

No. 11 cotton seed, $3.00 owt W

QO. Hudson, Elberton, Rt. 1.

15 bu. Qualla-cotton seed, 42
per cent lint, 1 in, staple, 59 to
60 bolls per ib. $1.00 bu. fob. W.
L, Joiner, Stuckey.

Rhymes Cooks cotton seed,
Make best cash offer'fob. Arnie}
Pearson, Richland, Rt: es,

Addisons Early Prolific cotton

seed, no black seed, $3.00 cwt, fob_
Also. want purebred. Duroc Gilt
and Boar, 6 to 10 wks. old. No
relation. Morris Phillips, Cran-
dall.
30 bu. D. P. 'Le-No, 11 cotton
seed, $2.50 cwt. Exchange for.
pure Hastines corn. to amount
of 1 bu. P. W, Smith, Stockbridge
Rt. de

COTTON SEED
WANTED

Want some Sea Island cotton
seed, of 1% in. staple. J. W.
Oliver, McRae, Rt, 1. i
Want 5 bu Broadwell dbl joint-
ed..cotton seed, pure, at once.
Also want 200 Brown or. white
Leghorn: baby chicks to raise,0n.
halves to 4 mos..old. punie Mine
Jarvis Glenwood, RFD 1...)

BEANS AND PEAS _
WANTED |







sample and best price.
Waddell, Bremen, Rt. 2.

for peas. $1.00 in shuck, or bu
for bu. Hand nubbed and shelled,
also exc. for thrifty shoats and
%c Ib, above market if del. my
farm. N, A. Boyette, Hahira.

Want 2 bu. unmixed black-eye
white crowder peas, 1 bu, imp.
black-eyed white California peas.
at best cash price; Exc. good.
dried apples for P. R. potato



\Homer G. Cline, Canton,

Want Half Runner beans, any
jamount up to 2 bu, K. N. Sharp,
Commerce,

Want some black-eyed white
peas. Quote prices on: peck lots }
and more; oe Gladys, Marks,
Austell, Rt.



Want the, oe white eer
00 98as, Send |

rices and sample.
? peer Winston, Rt.
Prwett



pure and sound, $1. me bu, E. ae :




mn






-Cokers Clevalene cotton seed, |

Want some crowder peas. Send
Roy]

plants, May Del. 10 lbs. for 1 M.



SS








{> BEANS: -AND PEAS: |) BEANS: AND PEj
FOR SALE: | | FOR SALE

50, pu... -Q-too-tan - beans, - 1937 _ Pidgeon, peas, 20 gt.

Ns Sra: (few. cracked),,, $3.00..bu.,; or, |.pK,; ales Kleckly wa

ot $2. 30 bu, W. P;, Gomclas: Lu-

No, 1 90-day running. velvet...
Peans,.. $1 00 bu..FOB.. J- Prank,
anner, Snadersville; ads

300 bu. sound: 90-day running}

VJ. H. Rowland, Wrightsville. =




ac Ib. $3,00-bu.. Add , postage,
Mrs. Rt Greene, Cuthbert, Rt..

5 Retes 20. bu Whips a New |
Bras. for sale at my barn. T. N.
Hurst, Luthersville,

About 2 bu. Cream Crowders,
Te tb. Also some Whippoorwiils,
$2.00 bu. Add postage. Mrs. J.
A, Puckett, Buford, Ride

30 bu. O-too-tan soy beans,
hand gathered, for sale. Joe
Morgan; Vienna,

230 Ibs. recleaned Red Speckled |

Crowder peas, $3.00 bu., 4c Ib. for
lot, FOB.; 40 lbs. pure. Jackson

FOB Hartwell: No. exc. gr COD
awgneede WwW. MM: ees
Hartwells, sae ;

* 100 bu. Iron peas, $2.00 bu.; 50
pu: Brab peas, $2.25 .bu.; 15 "bu.
Bolixi beans, $1.75; 50, pu. velvet
sbeans, $1.10. bu, in, 216 bu bags,
Clarence E. Sassa. Bonaire.

10 bu. Brab peas, $2.50 pu.
Looks Mts. sed Iris Potatoes,
3c lb. fob. John H. Gable, Talla-
poosa, Rt. 2.

12 bu. No. 1 Brab peas. J. D.
Davidson, Bonaire.

-1 bu. sound and clean. Speckle

Crowder peas, $3. 00; 2. bu. yellow

Mammeth. soy. beans, $3. 00 bu. G.
Z Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1,

; 5O
velvet beans, $1. 25
bt fob. A. L, Sasser, Bonaire. :

9Good, sound 90-day velvet
beans, 1937 crop, $1.00 _ bu. fob.
Bob Davis, Tennille,

Brab peas, $2.25 bu.; _ Iron peas
$2. 00 bu.; Mixed peas, $175 bu.
in good. grade bags. C, P. Bar-
rett, R. F D., Fort Valley.

Genuine bunch velvet. . beans,
70 per cent sound, $1.50 bu. fob.

Joe Benson, Buena Vista..

200 bu. Iron peas, $2.00 bu, 100
bu. Brab peas, $2.25 bu. In even
amount Burlap bags.. fob. W. L.
Renfroe, Byron.

8 teacups full, Striped Half
Runner beans, "5c, No, stamps.
Mrs. G. L, Alexander, wit. Airy,
Rt. 1.

30. lbs. Speckle bunch patter:
bony seed, 15c Ib, 5 lb. lots, Ex-
change 3 lbs, beans for 4% ib.
dried fruit or 3 lbs, beans for
5 Ibs. good pea seed. Mrs. Lillie
Hutchinson, Fitzgerald, Rt. 3.

40 bu, 90-day velvet beans,

guar. sound, $1.00 .bu. fob, J. D.

Kitthens, Wrightsville, Rt. 1.

30 bu. good sourid peos for hay.
$2.00 bu.; 90-day velvet beans

in pod, $1.00 cwt. E, W. Hocd,

Bartow, Rt. 1.

Genuine O- Too-Tan soy beans,
hand threshed and recleaned,

1937 crop, $3.50 bu. L. M. Rain- |

water, Greensboro.

100 bu. pure Brab peas, pure
Whips, pure New Eras and mix-
ed, peas, All clean and sound.
Clyde ses Hanyah, Logansville.

About 30 bu..O-Too-Tan soy
beans, $3.00 bu. fob. C, H. Trus-

sell, Sandersville.

20 lbs. Red Speckle oud
peas, Pole Cat. $2.00:.fob. Ex-
change. 10 Ybs. for 10 lbs, acid
fruit apples. aS Li. td Powell,
College Park, Rt.

Red hulled oe peas, new
light brown table peas, free from

| weevils, $1.00 pk. aes in Ga.
Exc. imp. Whatileys seed cor: $3.00 bu. fob. oT ,

. Moseley,
3operton, Rt.

200 bu. se pene. 25 bu, spec-
kle peas, $1.75 bu. fob. C. W.
Coleman, Devereux.

100 bu. old fashion late run-
ner Clay peas for hay or eating
purposes, $2.00 bu., 100 lbs. Gen.
Imp, Cuban Queen melon seed, |
$1.00 lb.; 75 lbs. pure Dixie Bell,
50c lb, fob. W. O. Birdsong, Gor-
don, Rt. 1.

Running velvet beans, $1.10 bu. !
in 2% bu. bags O-Too-Tan beans
$3.00 bu; also Whatleys prolific
seed corn, nubbed and recleaned |
in 2% bu. bags, $1.50 bu. Cash
fob. W. D. Tharpe, , Ft. Valley.

5 bu. Show Horse Coffee aud
Spotted. Crowder pe
or $15.00 lot. fou 7
Cariton.



: Davis,







hersville, ae Ca eyed

4 | perniination,

velvet sbeans, $1:00 bu: FOB. Cash. :
2 Her, Ashburn,

lima beans, 10 Ib., for the lot)

5 New Era peas, $3,001 bu. fob. Tf
G. OKeliey, Maysville. :

400 | pu, Tron. peas, $2.00 bu.,|}
60 bu... Iron peas, $2.25 bu.;
OU: 90- day

Kelley, Lithonia, Rt, 3:








































































































seed, $1.00 lb. fob. Cc. J,
Amerigus. ig
125). DH 90-day - rumin?
beans; $100 bu.; guar. 99
Walton
Sandersville, Rt. 1.

i. 15? bu. clean,

Bg: :

cotton. seed, 1 to 1.
yr., $1.00 bu.: $2.75 -
Amos Floyd, Canon, Be 1

20 bu. New Era peas, $$
R, P. Rowe, Moreland,
1937 crop little whi
eyed peas, 8c lb. postpa
zone, M. O. only, Minor T
2, Gainesville.

100 per cent sound little
brown-eyed |

"Brown eyed white crow

less than. 50c, Add postage
OnE AE: Williams, . ;
Rt. 2,

100? bu; recleaned~ O
beans, .in 2% bu, bag.
fob. ..W. Exum, Stoc

Old . fashioned spec

buttetbedns, 15e Ib. A
No stamps. Mrs. C
Buford.

Early speckle velvet
bu.; O-Too-Tan beans,
also velvet beans in pod
ton fob. J. A. Lott, Cher

100 -bus O-Too-Tan
recleanied, 2% bu. bags
Ponkle, Hampton, Rt. 2

10 bir: White Black-E
der peas, 5c lb. in bu.

1937 crop oe
$3.25 bu.; also Biloxi
bu. fob. Calvin Harman, -

2 bu. Red Ripper pea
bu, fob; Ellijay. will Smith,
mond. .;,.

106 bu. No. 1 Tron peas
bu. Burlap bags, $2.00
Sample on request. R.
borough, | Byron,

: 250 bu, No, 1 Brabha
Crowder | , peas, $2.25
Shealy,. Oglethorpe.

White tender hull
bean seed, 25c cupful; w.
tiplying onions, 40c
Anderson, Cartecay.

White and Pink Mctl
butterbeans mixed, 20
30 lb. postpaid in Ga.
accepted. Mrs. W. H. Evans
ery Branch, Rt, 1.

1 bu. Brown Crowder
slightly cracked, $4.00 b
change % bu. fob % b
Lady peas. C. LL. Boe
roe; Rt 3.

100 bu. sound Brab pe 5 il
bu. ies "$2.35 bu. M, C. Hi
laville. .;

8 bu. gure, sound Bra
$2.25 bu.; 8 bu. mixed pea
bu. J. L. Nelson, Ogletho
2. a

13 bu, Lareda soy bear
| cleaned, none cracked, $3
at: my home or fob. a

90- day, Speckle vel
$1.00 ba m exchange fe
peas; or Soy beans. Ox
Chester,

50 tons velvet beans
$17.00: ton at barn; 90-.
beans, $1.00 bu.; O-T00-1
beans. bu. fob.
Chester.

OQ=To0d- Tan beans.
cleaned, re, 1937 cro

corn, selected, nubbed,
$1.75 bu.; pure certified
seed oats, recelaned, er

Good, sound 90-Day velve
$1.00 beans, $1.00 bu. fo
| Davis, Tennille. : :

50 bu. extra good 90-!}
vet ibeans, 50 bu. Half au
cottonseed, $1.00 bu.; I
Stonevilie and Gokers 10)
90c bu. fob. Inman R.-
| Wrightsville, Ri. 1

Henderson Bush lima
beans, 15c lb. Exchange so)
g00d patden bunch bea
tought hull). Ea, pay po:
T. H Martin, Cumming

Bunch and runni

Mew Era: velvet. bee
stock, peas. J. H.
\Mitohell,

| CORN. AND

FOR SALE _



CORN AND SEED CoRN|
FOR: SALE



_W. B, Hudgins,
Rt 1.

_ Crowder peas

ad. buneh velvet
. Norris T. Beas-

ple peas, 250 ate
tain watermelon, ba-

on Bush Limas; Hast-
pod, dwarf okra |.
wder peas; white
ing butter beans, 20c
s. Ida B. Bailey

lf Runners, Striped
ts, 20c teacupful, 2
Mrs. Louvenia Bell,

h butter bean seed

ostage, Also Red-
seed peanuts,

ne seed, 8c lb., $2
: Oliver, Barnes-

ay snivek beans.

rr cent germination,
bu. old O-Too-Tan

. Cash with order: F.
Sandersville, Rt. 1... 7
be Runner bean seed
3 also white ten-.

_ beans, same price, 5c:
ge. Mrs. Prank

| $1.50 bu. Not prepaid. B

nubbed and hand shelled,

"Golden Queen pop corn for
planting seed, clean, sound, shel-
led, 5 lbs., 50c del. in Ga. Alex
Barfield, Louisville, Rt. 1.

Mexican June corn, a pk. or
. H, Bul-
loch, Manchester,

Red and yellow pop corn, 5e
lb. Any amount, Add postage.

Bibert Davis, Toomsboro, Rt: 2,

Hastings super-prolific corn,
Ast yr. nubbed and shelled, 75

pk. del. inlst and 2nd zone. Lee
Akins, Cumming, Rt. 5.

Pure Whatleys seed corn,
$2.06
bu.; 5 bu. $1.75 bu. fob. J. T.,

Miller, Wellston.
Little Cob seed corn, carefully

selected, nubbed and shelled. $t.
pk, postpaid: $2.75 bu. fob. J.
Taylor, Vienna,

Hastings seed corn, 1st yr.,

nubbed and shelled, "5c pk. del,
- H. Pierce, Stone Mountain, Rt.

Hastings super-prolfiic seed

corn, Ist yr. nubbed and shelled,

15a pk. del. in 1st and 2nd zone.

J tees Martin, Cumming, Rt. 5.

Whatleys prolific corn, $1.00]
ae $1.75 half bu; $3.25 bu. T.

C. Whatley, Helena.

Imp. Marlboro and Hastings
Prolific mixed, $1.75 bu. Exc. for.
% bu. for peck yellow pop corn.
Nelson Pope, Tallapoosa.

Whatleys Prolific seed corn,
1st yr., carefully selected, $2.00
bu. fob. Bennet F. Rigdon, Ft.
Valley.

_ Browns Imp. big, white Flint
corn, weevil resistant, $1.00 - pk.,
$3.00 bu. fob. J. W. Brown, Hel-

$2 | ena.

Tan be $1 00: i
ennille, Rt. 1,
recleaned brab. peas,
: 2 C. Murphy, Jr.,

ning butter beans,
No ous Add pos-
ie FE. Faircloth,

v skin. Cream Crowd-
ni elled, 8 Ib. $3.00
m H. Gable, Talla-"

abt velvet beans,
wder peas, $2.00 bu.;
seed, $1.25 bu. A.
Buena Vista, Rt. 3,

92.00 bu. feb, S.
ure, $2 u. fo
Peron Rt, 2.
mch butter beans, 2.
jifornia multiplying

start, 3 for 25c. Add

R A. Nolen, Rock-

: eeicere te Tb.
rs. V. Brambald.

a White Crowder
or ue 50 bu, Mrs.
; Oglethorpe,

ae $2.25 bu., Hast- |

bundles, $1.50 per 100
syrup seed, $2.00 bu;
) want pure Half Run-:

oT C. Watson,



ys aks pea-
oun at farm, J.

dred 4 hand bun-
er, $1.50 per hundred.
10 ee pan, Cleveland,

dred bundles; also
in shuck, $80.00 oi

orn, 8 Ib. del. 3rd.
wen, Baxley, Rt.





| hand nubbed and shelled,

Old Fashion yellow seed corn,

bu. fob. T. W. Kemp, Ohoopee.

- Whatleys seed corn, ist yr.
$2.00 bu. fob. Jack ae Ohoo-
pee.

- Goldeu: Queen pop corn, $1.00 |

per. 10 lbs. postpaid in Ga.: 3; 5e
{lb. in: "100 Ib. lots. fob. J. F. Lind-

sey; Tifton, Rt. 6.

100 bu. corn in. shuck, 75 bu.
also 1000 lbs, poultry house ferti-
lizer, 50 per 100 Ibs. All at farm.
J. G. Drexel, Sycamore, -

Whatleys Prolific seed corn,
hand nubbed and _ shelled, re-
cleaned, $2.00 bu. in new 2 bu.
bags; also genuine Petty Toole,
wilt-resistant cotton seed, $1.00
bu. in 100 lb. bags. J. B. Hunni-
cut, Ft. Valley, R. F. D.

Haastinges Super Prolific seed

corn, nubbed, ist yr. 65c pk.,.

$2.50 bu., Exchange for good field
peas. Quiller Cole, Dallas, Rt. 2.

Malboro and Hastings prolific
seed corn, nubbed and shelled,
$1.75 bu.; alsoHoney Drip Syrup
Cane seed, 50c pk. Exchange for

nice dried apples. A. J. Pope,

Tallapoosa.

Nice large ears yellow pop com
15c Ib., also nice, large black
walnuts foi seed, 15c doz.; catnip
and hoarhound plants, 10c ea.

| Mrs, E. L. Butler, Moreland, Rt.
4

--y bu. good grade, mixed color,
small grain pop corn, $1.00 pk.
o $3.00 fob. S. A. Thompson,
Vidalia. : :
Whatleys seed corn, $2.00 bu.,
$1.25 per half bu.; 80c pk., pre-
paid; good meadow hay, $11. 00
ton ai my barn, J. E. Sisk, Lex-
ington. ;

100 bu. ex. goou corn in shuck
80c bu. fob. B. S. Cobb, Wharten. |

1% bu, good slip shuck corn in|

| ear; 3,000 lbs. good bright fodder;

10 bu. white hull speckle peas,
slightly damaged. Quote prices at
barn, Mrs. W. E. Mills, 321 S.
College, Stateboro.

16,00 lbs. Golden Queen pop
corn, 6c lb. Cash, Also English
peas, begin moving April. Ist.

| James M. Henry, Doerun.

600 bu. No. 1 slip shuck corn,

| 5c bu, at my barn, Exchange for

fresh Jersey milk cow, (2nd calf)
,2% to 4 gal. milk. Y. S. Gibbs,
Abba.

3,000 lbs. shelled yellow South
American pop corn, 3%%c Ilb., in
100 lb. lots fob. E. W. Corneli-
son, LaFayette.

Earliest Indiana field corn, 2
lbs., 25e large old fashion field

pumpkin seed, 25 seed 10c, L. J.

Vollrath, Winston. :

114 bu. or more seed pop corn.
Exchange for farm products or
sell reasonable, Mrs. E. Spence,
130 West Wesley Rd., Atlanta.

White 2-Ear corn, $1.20 pk.
mustard leaf, 50c Ib. postpaid.
H. W. Justi, Sr., Altamaha.

25 bu. Big Rockdale seed corn,
hand. picked, nubbed, for sale fob

Ge

$2.50



Whatleys prolific aa corn,
$2.00 bu.; velvet beans, $1.00 bu.
Ww. 1. Smith; Dawson,

4-5 bu. Hawkins 2-Ear prolific

seed corn, nubbed, handshelled, |

50 pk.; $1, 75 bu. fob R. M. With-
row, Mineral Bluff, Rt, 1, Box
24 A.

600 bu. Jarvis Golden ear corn,

75: bu.; 100 bu. or more del. 50
mi.; 80c bu.; 125 bu, in shuck,
same price.;. also speckle brown

Sugar. crowder peas, 75c pk.; 90

Ib. sack, $4.25 fob. 10 or more
sacks del. 50 mi. E, P. Pope,
Woolsey.

40 lbs. nice, yellow shelled pop
corn, 10c lb. for whole lot. Mrs.
-Verlyn Bentley, Tallapoosa.

Hastings super prolific corn,

1st. yr., 75 pk. fob. Geo. W. Jack-

son, Fayetteville, Rt. 2.

Pure Hastings seed corn. Ex-
Ciange for O-Too-Tan soy beans
or peas. W. A, Cook, Ceeere Park
Rt. 1.

Pure Piedmont, Two Ear seed
corn, $1.00 pk.; $3.00 bu.; cot-
tonseed, 1 in. staple, 42 per cent
lint, $1.00. bu.; $3.25 per C Ibs.

fob. H. W. Thurmond, Greens-"
| boro, Rt. 1. Box Ik

Scotts Imp. Marlboro prolific
seed corn, $1.00 pk. prepaid; $1.50
bu. not prepaid; 250 bu. Stone-

ville No. 2 cotton seed, 75c bu.

Z. L. Scott, Concord,



HORSES AND MULES 3

WANTED



yearling for a young very gentle
mare that will work to wagon and
pl. z not over 12 yrs. old, 500 to
1500 lb. wt. - B. Ss. Myers, bade s
lors Creek. {04

Exe. extra large jennet . for :

breeding purposes. Quote full

information. C. Ee ee

Box 183.
Want a good ute mule,

cheap. Mrs. dene A. Owens, |

Lawrenceville, Ri,

HORSES AND MULES:
FOR SALE

Tennessee Jack, good size and
good. breeder (have colts to
show). Dont write, come see. S.
E. Vandiver, Lavonia.

Shetland pony for sale, cheap.
W. J. Greenway, Chamblee, Rt.
2 nee





Good. work, 6 yr., 1200 lb. brood
bay mare, $165.00 cash, Exc. for
small tractor and 1 way tractor
disc plow with about 6. discs,
Farmall preferred. Also 2 big
bone Black African Guinea, 4
mos. old, $22.00 or $12.50 ea FOB.
#.F: Prather, Monroe, Rt. 1.

Good plug mule, about 800 Ibs.
and new 1 h, wgaon. Sell or
trade. Grady Edmondson, At-
Janta, 218 Crumbley St., S. W.

Mare and mule, can be work-
ed anywhere, also 3 gal. milch
cow, fresh and calf, part Jersey.
S. T. Spruill, Chamblee, Rt. 1.

Good, all around, pert, 9 yr.
old, 1 M Ib. mare mule, $135.00
cash. Guar. R. L, Albea, Metas-
ville. .

At Stud: reg. Spanish grey
Jack, 1040 lbs. wt. Mare taken
care of while being bred (may
leave them until bred). J. S.
Furstenburg, Ben Hill, Rt. 1.

Good mare mule, in good work
order, smooth mouth, good eater,
plenty life, $135.00. See 3 mi, S.
E. Dalton; Dixie Rose cotton
seed, 85c bu. $2.50 per 100 Ibs.
Stamp for reply. Bud Holland,
Dalton, Rt. 2.

Fine gaited bay saddle horse,
about 1M Ibs., 10 yrs old, for sale.
R. E. Rowe, Alvaton.

Good farm mule, plows, etc.,
also miich cow for sale or trade.
H.C, Jones, Columbus, 2455 Wyn-
ton Road. ,

Horse mule, wt. about 1 M Ibs.,
gentle, work anywhere, healthy,
$50.00 cash. Mrs. Mary F. Law-
son, Valdosta.

560 lb. pony, rides and works
good, nad pony wagon, $65.00
cash. D. F. Elrod, Gainesville,
Thompson Bridge Road.

1 M. lb. mare mule, 12-14 yrs.
old, excellent worker. Bargain.
1 mi. So. Fairburn, Tom Wood,
Fairburn, Rt. 1.

Young, 1 M lb work mare,
$125.00; bright pea and Cane hay,

ton: "Claude Tuck, Winterville,

| Taise on halves. "Wilmer cuaaiee

Want to swap good. cow -and :



Jos, F. Hutcheson, Buchanan,

barn prices.



Want good milch cow, fresh-in.
State amount milk giving now
and price del. Savannah: Mrs.
H. G. Blakely, . Savannah Rt. 354

Montgomery Road.

Want sev. aoe IDEs State size,
cond., and price, R, E. Lee, Con-

Want small Ceocrnsey heifer:
calf, 3-6 wks. old, sub. to reg.
Slight defects or off-color no
objection. Comsider exec, reg. B.
P. C. pig. M. T. Bryson, Greens-
boro, Rt. 3. oA

Want 10-15 helfer hips 3
mos. or older, 1 heifer giving
mitk, also 100 White or Brown)
Leghorn young hens and 10 or 15
bu. field peas. Quote best prices.

| A. D. Giles, Douglasville, Rt, 2.

_ Want Guernsey bull about 1 yr.

reg. State what you have. L. T.
Lane, Franklin, Rt. 2,

Want good milch cow with
calf, 2 or 3 gal. daily.
and. raise calf for use of cow. Mrs.
J. E, Horne, Eastman, Rt. 5.

Want 25 head cattle to peau
3 mi. west of Riverdale. S. as
Bing, Riverdale, Rt. 1, Z

Want reg. Guernsey heifer or

_| bull calf, 4 or 5 days old. Swap

pure Wannamaker wonder-wilt

Dixie Triumph cotton seed, or

buy if cheap for cash. Clem

Roberson, Temple.
Want young yearling calves to.
raise on halves; keep until No-
vember Ast... Best of pasture and.
care; also want baby chicks to

Nunez,

Want nae reg. Guauey.
calves. State price of both male | ,
and females. 2M: stalks off cane,

_ CATTLE F OR SALE

Fine, ihotoushirea. 5. yr. old]



cow, Jersey and Holstein, crossed, gilts, young setvice boar.

immune. Best breeding. i

4 gal., gentle, good cond., fresh-
en May 20th, $45.00. Mrs Hattie.
Wofford, Gainesville. Rt 8.
.6 yokes good - working - oxen, |
also 4 M. POJ seed cane, Ho
per hundred, long lengths. J. H.
McVeigh, Waynesville. _

10 yr. old, reg. Jersey. cow,

Rosemary Handsome Lady H.

R. No. 821648, drop calf in May
(bred to scrub bull), 4 gal. milk,
1% Ibs. butter, $60.00; Yr. old,
purebred Volunteer breeding,
reg. buyers name, $25.00 FOB.
Ned J. Bond, Watkinsville. _

Guernsey-Jersey, crossed cow,
fresh, 3-4 gal. daily. Sell or con-
sider exc. for well-bred year-
lings or springing heifers. W. L.
Clements, Greensvoro. Rt. 3.

2 yr. old Hereford bull, full
blood, not reg., also good milch
cow, fresh, no calf, for sale or
swap. A, H. Phillips, Moultrie. Rt.
5, Box 30. !

Calf, half Guernsey and half
Jersey, $20.00 at my barn., Miss
Georgie Nichols, Clarkesville, Rt.
3: ;

Nice yoke of bulls, well broke
to farm work, wt. about 700 lbs.
ea.; 1 thoroughbred Jersey, other
muley head. Both in good shape.
W. E. Weaver, Buchanan, Rt. 1.

4 purebred Polled Hereford
bulls, 1 3-yrs., 3 about 10 mos. old,.

| now ready for light service, $75.00

and $50.00 ea. respectively at my
barn, C. H. Hunt, Oxford.

Nice Jersey cow, 2 gal day. Calf
3 mos. old, due freshen Decem-

-ber, $30.00 cash, also nice lot of

Chattahoochee river bottom corn
in shuck. $1.00 bu. All at, my
H. A. Garner, Lula.

Reg. Bull, 2% yrs. old, also 1
1-yr. and 4 mos old. Good breed-
ing. R. C. Williams, Douglasville.

Reg. Polled Herefords, some
calyes and 1 herd bull. Apply E.
T. Boswell, Jr., Siloam,

2 to 5 yr. old bulls out of im-
ported reg. Jersey cows with exch.
for heifers of serviceable age.
Write O. R. McGill, Columbus,

}care Woodcrest Dairy.

Reg. Jersey 22 mos. old bull,

$50.00, or exc. for Hereford or.

Short Horn bull yearling. Z. J.
Hall, Sandersville.

Fine high grade Jersey young
cow for sale. C. R. McElreath,
Adairsville, Rt, 3.

Bull calves, 7 and 10 mos. aid,
from reg. Polled Hereford stock.
Prices reasonable. Thomas
Alyeby, Tennille,

.2 pure bred Red oll bulls,
not ent. .o reg. Ready for serv-
ice. Good individuals and of

excellent breeding, $50.00 ea. at| ~
| $17.00 ton; Meadow hay, $11.00, my barn. Write before you come.
Lae a. Gillespie Pulaski. a

Will keep }

"| Duyers name, $10.00 ea.
_ | Jackson; Brunswick, Rt. 1

jsome old ae
Write for pictures and prices. _
Unless best breeding stock want~-

Write your needs.







5 mos, old bull calf, half Guern-_

psey and. half Jersey, $15.00 at my.

barn. J. O. Moon, Godfrey.

HOGS WANTED.

Exc. value $25 00 for some hogs, ee
chickens, or what have you? Mrs, |
Lloyd Neiman, Dunwoody, Pow-
ers Ferry Road.

Want hogs, cattle and chickens





to raise for half.. D. C. Hannah, -

Luthersville, Rt. 1, Box 78...

HOGS FOR SALE.

Duroe sub to reg., Pigs, 6 mos.
50-60 lbs., 2 males, 4 gilts, $12.00
ea., reg, 18 amos old, 160 Ib. male,
$20.00. . J. Von Wurst, Ochloch=





nee, Rt. 25 j
old, well marked and preferably |.

Reg. black P. C. stock of pier
bred pigs, 8 wks, old from chame
pion blod lines, $12.50 a., ship-
pion blood lines, $12.50 ea., ship-
ea, extra. Bill Bowman, quit~
man. |

Black P. C. pigs from fast ee
growing, large blood lines, pa- __

pers in buyers name. Boars,

$10.00, gilts, $12.50 ea.: without:
papers, $7.50 and $10. 00 ea.
oR Bryson, Greensboro, Rt. 3. ee
S. P. Cc, male, dbl. treated, reg,
champion blood lines, ready for
Geo, M. _Ganann, Hal- See

service.
cyondale.

2 purebred Guinea ; SOWS, bib:
to fine, Daeery Giunea boar,
big pone type..- (Kasy. keepers,
large litters,. ood mother's). $30.00

|ea; few purebred pigs, $8.00 ea.

Frank T.Mindler, Griffin, Rt. C. _ =

Thoroughbred S. P..C. pigs, 2
mos, old, 5 males, 1 sow, reg. in
EE

. 2 pure bred Duroc Jersey. gilts,

|5-mos old, sub. to reg., $10.00 ea.

Mrs. J. F. Drury, Waynesville. :
Reg. Durocs, spring pigs, sows,

era

Priced. reasonably. Also Has- .

_ 4 tings super Prolific seed corn, 75:

peck, $2.50 bu.. et Stallings, i

Carrollton, Rt.
Big Bone ee PL gilis,

enough to breed. .

ed, dont write. C. J. ~, Wash-
ington. : ; ie
Full stock black African Gives
male, about 10 mos old, wt. about
125 Ibs. $10.00 at Kea Mill pond.

| . D. Shealey, Adrian, RFD 3. .

1 Red Jersey male hog, ready
for service, for sale or trade for _
young hens at market price. |
Bring hens and get hog. J. N.|

| Austin. Atlanta, 833 Warner St.

- Purebred S. P. C. brood sow, 2
yrs, old, around 300 Ibs. for sale.
T. G, Presley, Eatonton.

10 to 12 wks. old S. P.C. pigs,

reg in buyers name, $10.00 ea.
H. Trussell, Sandersville.

S. P. C. pigs, out of Worlds
best blood sows, sired by half-
brother Worlds Junior Champion ~
boar, 1937, Worlds champion sow
1936. Dbl. treated, reg., at 8-10
wks old. L. J. Washington,

Co:

| Jackson, Rt. 1.

Reg. S. P. C. pigs and shoats, -
from Champion blood lines, 8
wks. old, $10.00 ea.; 14 wks. $14.00
ea. Rufus Adams, Jackson.

5 Duroc J. sows (all bred) and

12 boars, $20.00 ea. Reg. in buy=

ers name. Finest blood lines, wt.
150-175 lbs. ea., 11 mos. old.
James Cowan, Monticello, RFD 2.

9S. P. C. 8 wks. old pigs, med.
blocky type, easy feeders, good
breeders. Reg. buyers name.
Treated and crated, $8.00 ea.,
FOB; also Saanan milk goats for
sale. W. H. Roughton, Sanders-
ville.

6 wks. old pigs,:$3.50 ea. Stacy
Jones, Hendersonville Road, near
Midway Church, near Atlanta.

Reg. O. I. C. hogs, all ages.
C. M. Stalling,
Carrollton, Rt. 3. eg

8 nice Red Duroc pigs, ent. to
reg., $5.00 ea. my place at 6 wks.
old on April Tth. U. G. Yates,
Culberson, N. C., Rt. 1 (Resident
of Ga.)

20 pigs, $2.00 ea.; 11 shoats,
$4.00 ea. Sam Sneed, Macon, 417
Pine St.

Reg. S. P. C. pigs from cham-
pion blood lines for sale. Carl
Daniel, Morgan.

Reg. S. P. C, boar pigs, best of
breeding and perfect marking.
Wm, E. Sickel, Rt. 1, Box 546,
Savannah, 5

Nice, 2 yr, old 0. See

bred to farrow im May, =" | ee 2 se
_P. Fay, Oakman, Se



A

Chole





tnt

SERIE me

Hos FOR SALE



20. mos. old, reg. Duroc Jeieey
board, World Champion blood,

$50.00 FOB Cornelia. Mercer
_ Dalton,. Alto. sa
Reg. Berkshire boar, approxi-

mately 300 Ibs. sow, 275 lbs, with
7 sub. to reg. pigs, 3 wks. old,
1 bred gilt, sub. to reg. Sacrifice
for quick sale. F. M. Coley, Fair-
burn, Fayetteville Road.

8 mos,
reg., wt. 300 lbs. $30.00, or exc.
for good mule and pay differ-
ence; young swarms of bees,
$1.59 ea, Bring hives to put them
in. Docia Harris, Lula, i

SHEEP AND GOATS
. WANTED

Want to buy 5 to 10 head tame
beep. T. A. Bowen, Blakely.

; Want as many as 5 sheep for
grazing purposes on lawn. M, P.
Carter, Atlanta, Box 2112.

_ SHEEP AND GOATS
|. FOR SALE

1-~Toggenburg doe and Tog,
; cross, both dry, for sale reason-
\ able. H. . Kessler, Blue Ridge.
: 6 goats, $13.00, or $2.00 to $3.50
each; also 50 bu. Rucker cotton
~ seed, No: 11, 60c bu. Been plant-
ed 2 yrs. but kept clean at gin.

J. E, Walkins, Ranger.

Pure-blooded young Toggen-
burg doe, fresh with ist kidding.
Excellent stock and milk strain.
Also young Nubian dee, first
freshening. Reasonable,
nice kids for sale. John Hynds,

Atlanta, 93 Warren St., N. E., De-
5140.

' 3 fresh Nubian milk goats,
$15.00 for ea. goat with her kid.
M. Roose, Louisville, Rt. 1,

35 ewe sheep, $4.00 -ea.; 20

lambs, $2.00 ea. at my farm, 12
= mi. S, EB. Ocilla. W. Y.;, Harper,

. Wray.: {

Nice Toggenburg bill, 18 mos.
old. Mother was reg., $6.00 FOB;
also 5 nice White Giant chickens,
last yr. pullets, $450 FOB, Mrs.
R. W. Wingo, Newnan.

2 young, god milk goats, $40.00
for the pr. thoroughbred stock.
J. B. Bass; Chipley.

RABBITS FOR SALE

6 prs. white N. Z., 6 wks,
2 prs. solid Blacks, 7 wks_.
$1 3 pr., 1 pr, Reds, 2 mos.
$2.00. Lockard Bell, Atlanta.
Alexander St. N. Ww.

_ Pr. white N. Z, rabbits, 10 mos,
old, sub. to reg., $5.00 postpaid.
_ William Z. Rackley, Loving.

Fine ped. N. Z. whites, 2 mos.
., old, $1.50 pr.; 6 to 8 mos, old,
$2.50 pair; bred does, $2.50 a.;
.. also fine white guinea (cavies)
pigs,.2 mos. old, $1.50 pr.; 8-10
mos old, $2.50; large size, 20-30
~ oz. (sows bred), $3.00 or. C. A.
-; Dobbs, Gainesville.

POULTRY WANTED

BABY CHICKS WANTED

100 ea, purebred W. L. and

= Bast Orpingtons to, raise on
_ share basis. 1 furnish feed, la--
bor and trans. Mrs, Thena Ker-
gey. Stillmore, Rt. 1

Want 100 io 300 W. L. and

- 100 to 200 B. R. to raise on halves

bo & wks. old. I furnish feed. Ha,

pay trans. Mrs. Ernest Thomas,
Loganville, Rt. 3.

Want 100 to 300 baby chicks
to raise on Pa to 10 wks old,
Ref, Mrs. W. E. Allgood, 57 Clairy
St.' Thomsen. -

; Want 200 baby chicks to raise
\S on halves to 8 wks. old. Furnish
; 206. chicks every 8 wks. jr.
around. Prefer heavy, Mrs. Rob-

ert Koon, Whigham. _

Want 500 chicks to raise on

ie halves to 8 wks. old. Will furnish
- feed. Other party to pay trans.
Prefer R, I. Reds or Buff Or-
pingtons, Mrs. S. E. Graham
_ Abbeville, Rt. 1, Box 169,
Want to raise on shares 100
or more heavy breed chicks to
8 wks. Other party -urnish trans.
; charges or will buy 50 chicks
a peasonanle, J. D. Casey, Grif-
ee Want 100 Buff or Wyandotte
baby chicks by ist of May to
raise on halves to 8 or 10 wks,
old. Other party pay trans.
charges. Will Prurnisn eed. Sell
_ other partys half and send mon-
ey when ready for market. Mrs,
Emma Frady, Gainesville, Rt, 6.

Want 100 or more baby chicks
fo raise on halves, any breed,
are: Andrew Scott, Carrollton,
Peat Rt. 2
Want 50 baby chicks to raise
< on halves to 6 wks. old, Prefer
N. +H. Reds, Jersey White Giants
or Buff Orping tons, Mrs, A. Z.
Persons, Marshallville.















old,
old,
old,
264









*









old Duroc gilt. ent. to

Few |

-icus.

MARKET. BULLETIN

- Poultry Wanted

POULTRY | FOR: SALE



Want 300 purebred B. R. baby
chicks to raise on halves to 8
wks, Will furnish feed. You pay

ns. Mrs. L, J. Hammons, Li-
t onia, Rt. 3.

BANTAMS
Want 50 Bantam hens. Must
have clean. legs. .. State price.
Mrs. E. F. OConnor, Jr., Mil-
ledgeville.

Want 4 bantam hens and roos-
ter 1 yr, old at 30c ea, or will
trade 3 pr. Racing Homer pig-
eons, Mrs, Milas Patton, Atlanta.
415, Venable St. N. WwW.

BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS

Want 1 thoroughbred AAA
Holtermans Aristocrat B. R.
cockerel, B. H. Osborn, Roy,

Want 50 - 75 B, R. cockerels,
4-6 wks. old, from chicks bought
direct from any well known
breeder. Jeff A. Hedden, Cham-
blee. Rt, 2.

MINORCAS

Want 1 thoroughbred Black
Minorea rooster, 2 yrs, old or
older; also have for sale, 15 Ibs.
nice chicken feathers, $5.00. Mirs,
Jim Robinson, Calhoun. Rt. 2,
MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS

Swap 1 hive of Yellow bees in
old time hives for 3 hens, also
swap other good value for chick-
ens or a shoat. W, D. Stringfel-
low, Midland, Rt. 1. -

PHEASANTS:

Want ringneck pheasants, Bob
White quail,. common bantams
and Guinea hens, Write Mrs,
W. M. Hanna, Atlanta. 2028
Boulevard Dr, N. E,

Exc. 2 Silver pheasant cocks
for 2 Silver pheasant hens. W.
M, Nixon, Atilanita.- 581 Stewart
Ave. S. W.

PEAFOWLS

Want buy 2 peafowl hens, 2
yrs. old. W. D, Anderson, Madi-
son, RFD 2, Box 200.

GUINEAS

Want 3 or 4 Blue Speckled 1-2
yr. old hens. Will exec. first class
sundried apples from acid fruit,
or pay cash. Mrs,. J. M,. Hall,
Calhoun, Rt. 1

Exe. 1 Pearl white ~African
male guinea 8 mos. old for. fe-
male of same breed and age, or
2 Speckled females + same age.
Ha, pay trans, chgs. L, M. John-
son, Acworth. F

POULTRY FOR SALE

Australorps
10 purebred Osborn str. Aus-
talorp hens and 1 cockerel, some
weigh 38 lbs., $15.00 lot. J. H.
Getzen, Pendergrass, .
Austra-Whites
Can make deliveries of Aus-
tro-Whites hybrid making rec-
ords for laying and making. 2 lb.
friers at 8 wks). Ship 10 or more
at 10 ea. E. K. Smith, Decatur.
311 Superior St., De 9076.
Bantams and Brahmas
Purebred Galden Sebright
bantams, $1.00 ea,; Parks str., B.
R. rooster and 3 puillets, fall
hatch $3.00. Not prepaid. No
checks. Mrs, L. J. McArthur,
Calhoun, Rt, 2.

Midget R C. Blacks, R. I. Reds,
Buff Cochins and standard S. S.
Hambergs, $3.50 pr. or $5.00 trio;
eggs, 10c ea.; Golden pheasant
cock, $5.00; also want prices on
200 Ibs. yonne apple leaves. D.
T. Jenning, P. O. Box 84, Amer-





4 Bantam hens and 1 rooster,
$1.00 lot. M, O. Geo. W. Rowland:
Denton, Rt. 1.

4 purebred Golden Sebright
roosters, 9 mos. old, 50c ea. Mrs,
J. T. Lambert, Forest ieee

Few pair. banbams, I, Reds,
Silkies, R. B. at hin: J. H.
Street, Stone Mountain

9 mixed bantams and 1 roos-
ter, 1 yr, old, layi 30c ea. H.
a Wiggins, Smithville,

Pr. Sebright bantams, $1.25;
bantam eges. 60c per 15 not post-
5 M.- B. Bailey; Buchanen,,

1 pr. pure black Jap bantams,
7 Ray Johnson, Hartwell, Rt.

2 white and 3 dark bantams,
1 rooster in lot, 25 ea. not pre-
pete Mrs. Charlie Hayes, Lil-

urn, Rt, 1.

1 trio Buff Cochin bantanis:
Black Cochin cockerels and eaes.
D. A. Asbury, Jenkinsburg,

2 White Cuban game bantam
2 yr. old roosters, small type, real
games, $3.00 del. in Ga. Butler D.
Smith, Roy, Box 125,

-4 -purebred Golden . Sebright
hens and rooster, 1936 hatch,
now laying. oo or $1.00 ea.
FOB, Mrs. L. D. Miller, Bmory
University. De 4248.

Royal Red game bantam 2
old cock. $2.75 del, Ga. Ww.
Southern, Roy.

Quality bantams, Dark Cornish
and Buff Ccchins. Show and
breeding; Also 1 pair quail for
$5.00; want 1 setting large Cor-
nish (low blocky type) eggs. State
price del. W. K. Herndon, Suge

W.



ta, 1109 Adrian .

Barred and Other Rocks

20 Parks str. B. R. hens, Apr.
1987 hatch, $18.00 lot. Li! B.
Chambers, Sautee.

lected eggs for hatching 15 per

1 purebred B. Ply, Rock yr., old
rooster, $1.50 FOB. Cash or mon-

renceville. Rt. 3,
Heavy breed hen and 10 1- wk.

Stone Mtn,,
sound, pure, 35c Jb.
Bryan, Sharpsburg. :

Cornish and Games

Large type, Dark Cornish roos-
ters and few hens; R. I. Red
hens; some mixed hens; eggs
from flock, 70c per 15; early

white heading Ga. collard seed,
15 pke.; 50c Ih. O. Sikes,
Sylvester,

Pure bred Dark Cornish hens,
$1.00 ea; non-related roosters,
$1.50 ea. Mrs. C. A. Patterson,
Ty Ly,

Warhorse cockerel, crossed Hoag
ban Blue, 15 mos. old, $2.00; Miex
ican Red cross with Irish Muff,
10 mos, old, $1.50. Exc. both for
50 boi chicks, any heavy breeds.
Mrs. : or Hamby, Covingson,
Rt. 3. ;

2 Sostied Cuban Blue stags,
pit. games, 10 mos. old, about 4
lb. .wt,. $1.50 ea. express collect,
light crate, Mioney- order, S. O.
Huff, Monticello, Rt. 3. E

5 Ginn Gray and trish cocks,
$2.00 ea, 6 same, January hatch,
very game males and females,
$1.25 ea, Will accept Crowder
peas at $3.00 bu. S. M, Seaborn,

| Brunswick.

2 Dark.Cornish hens and roos-
ter, unrelated, about 5 mos. old,
$5.00. Jesse Sikes, Cobbtown,

- Giants ..

1 pure - White Giant rooster, x
yr. old, $1.50; 1 White Giant hen,
$1.00. M. b. Griffin, Lavonia.

Jersey White Giant me
chicks, Mar, and Apr. del,
in lots of 50 or more; eggs, 00
per setting: also Mammoth
White Pekin Duck eggs, $1.00
doz.: ;5 Muscovy Ducks, $4.00.
Mrs. L. B, Landrum, Aidairsville.

Booking orders for Royal Pur-
ple J, B. Giant chicks, 10c ea.;
select eggs, 75c per. 15, plus post
age. Cartons ret. _Mrs. M.
Simpson Waverly Hall.

Lamonas

5 pure-blood Lamona cocker-
els, direct from Osborne, $10.00,
or $2.50 ea. J. F. Hiscock, Quit-
man. RED 5, Box 112.

Leghorns
45 W. L. hens and 2 roosters,

50c ea. Lee Mason, LaFayette.
RFD 3.

90 March 1937 hatch W, L. pul-
lets, producing 60 per cent, $80.
FOB. Jos. Freeman, eet
Few extra fine Barron str.
L. cockerels, ready to ship. no
hatch, $1.00 ea. FOB Express of-
fice. H. RB. Purser, Glenwood,

50 purebred, select Everlay str.
B. L, hens, Yr. old, now layi
$1.00 ea,.: rooster, unrela
same breed, given with ea. 10
a, G. W. Paulk, Willacoochee,

5 W. L, pullets, Superior
grade, 2 mos. old March 23rd,
65c ea. $30.00 for lot. FOB. No
personal checks. Also want 300
chicks day old, to raise on halves
to 6 wks, Mrs. J, E, Locke, But-
ler, Rt. 1.

MINORCAS

7 Black Minorea hens laying
and rooster, $1,00 ea. Mirs Mrs. W. H
= Homerville, Rt. i Box

8 purebred 1937 hatch Buff
Minorca hens now laying, $7.00
or $1.00 ea, Not postpaid, Also
Bantam hatch eggs, purebred
Golden and Silver Sebrights,
Geri packed, $1.30 for 13,
postpaid. No checks. Mirs. O. M.
Hunt, Decatur. Rt, 1,

Pure hybrid Golden Buff Mi-
norea* chicks. Hatchings, April
2, 6, and 9th, $10.00 C; $5.50 for
50; $3.00 for 25 del. J. H, Wo-
mack, Greensboro,

ORPINGTONS

3 purebred Buff Orp. roosters
1-2 yrs. others 1 yr. old, also 1
R. rooster, $1.00 ea, L. E. Sanders,
roosters, $1. 00 ea. L, E. Sanders,
Buchanan. Rt. 2.

Bloodtested 6 wks old Buff
Orp. pullets and cockerels, mash
and milk fed. extra large, 35c ea,
Buff and Golden Sebright pan--
tam eggs, ea. $1.00 per 15 del.
Mrs, R. Q. Miller, Acworth. Rt. 2.

4 fine Buff Orp. April 1937
hatch roosters, and some hens for
sale Mrs. B. G. Crawford,
Chauncey, Rt. 2.

PIGEONS

10 to 15 pr. White Wee
eons, young birds, Hoss ot

working, $1.25 del, D. Ww. Phen



mack, Edison,

B. R. Roosters, $1.25 fob; se-,

15 del.; also willow leaf pole lima
or butter beans, 15 kt, = J,
Steed, Buena vista. }

ey order. Mrs, A. Ss, King. ae

old chicks, Barred Rocks and R.
T. Red crossed, $2.00 for lot; also
, watermelon. ;seed, |
Mrs, W.;T.|

| ters, 1 yr. old. Make best offer

| POULTRY FOR SALE |

20 prs. my Homing pigeons,
working, 75c pr. Exe. for laying
hens or ducks, T. J. Sinelair, Sa-
vannah, 1302 Moore Ave.

1 pr. ea. Silver and White

Kings, $1.10 ea. pr. prepaid. J.
G. Myers, Jr., Atlanta, 361 Ari-
zona. Ave, N. E, :
+: Sev pr. purebred Red Car-
neaux, mated, raising, very good
cond., $1.00 pr. 3 prs. $2.50, FOB
W. Oswald Young, Summer, Rt,
A Box 61.



Quail
2. pr.

ton, Cochran.
-j, BEDS (RHODE ISLAND)
15 R. I, Red hens and 2 roos-

for lot. Exc. for syrup, seed corn,
anything can use. H. F. Vines,
Columbus, 500 10th St.

10 S. C. R. I. Red Pullets, Oc-
tober 1937 hatch, 75c ea. FOB.
W, L, Winn, Fitzgerald,

a 3 R. I. Red Yr. old cockerels,

$1.25 ea.; Red hens, 18c lb.; also
cantaloupe, yellow squash and
Marglobe tomato seed, 1l5c per
1-2 cup or 25 cupful. Mrs, Ber-
tha Johnson, Faceville,

REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRES.

4 pure Hubbard New Hamp-
shire Reds. 1 large cockerel and
3 laying pullets, $4.50 money or-
der. Mrs. Nellie Grubbs, Dem-
orest.

, 150 N. H. Red 5 wks. old pul-
lets, 75c ea. Bloodtested, No per-
sonal chks. Mrs. J. R. Pilkenton,
Molena,

SUSSEX

Thoroughbred Sussex rooster,
Yr. old, $1.25 or exc, for 2 pul-
lets, either Golden Buff Minor-
cas or Cornish, thoroughbred
stock: want exc. Stewart pecans,
15c Ib. for setting Golden Buff
Minorca eggs. A. J. Grimes,
Glenwood, P, O. Box 44.

Red Speckled Sussex Purebred
AAA grade, 100 baby chicks, day
old, $10.00; Egs 75c per 18; Games
pure breeds, Eggs, $1.00 per 15.
M, O. Mrs, Lizzie Roper, Culber=
son, N. C., Rt, 1, Box 101, (Res-

ident of Ga.) =

_ WYANDOTTES

s pure, non-interbred Tarbox
Str. February-March 1937 hatch
Ss. L. Wyandotte pullets and
eockerel $5.00 FOB. Miss Lyda
Gibbs, Uvalda.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS, ETC, FOR SALE
4 White-Fawn Indian Runner
ducks (year around layers) and
unrelated Grae, $5.00 money or-
Sag oe* . T. OBarr, Lavonia.
Ri

Muscovey drakes, $1.00 ea, or
exc 2 drakes for 3 White Pekin
Ducks, also 2 pr. common Red
pigeons, 50c pr. Mrs. A. B. Bla-
lock, Alto, Rt, 1.

3 Mammoth Toulouse geese
and 3 ganders, $3.00-ea, Eggs,
25c ea. Money order, or come get
them. C. W. Page, Norcross.

.2 toms and hen, $8.00, or $3.00
ea, Cash with order, R. H Vin-
son, Cedartown, Rt. 2.

Ringneck and other doves for
sale. Mrs. W. E. Fealy, Atlanta.
1196 Moreland S, E,

3 Muscovey ducks and 2
pease, $4.00 ea. Mrs. L. B, Lan-
drum, Adairsville. Rt. 3,

M, B. 35 lb, gobbler, $8.00 not

postpaid; 1 pr. bantams, $1.50,
not postpaid. M. B. Bailey, Bu-
chanan, Rt, 2. ;

2 yr. old turkey hen, 1 hen and
rooster, 15 mos. old, almost pure
Bronze. Cheap. Rumning Speckled
peas, $2.00 bu. Mrs, Addie Niv-
ens. Round Oak, C-O Mrs. O.
MeCullough.

EGGS WANTED

Je
. Want 1 setting of White Aus-
tralian guinea eggs. State price
del. A. J, Willoughby, Waco, care
Hillcrest Fruit Farm.

Want some Game eggs, Round-

head. State price. Mrs. Claude
Parker, Pine Log.







EGGS FOR SALE

Purebred R. I. Red and W. L.
hatching eggs, $1.00, 15, postpaid. |
Mrs. R. A. Copeland, Dunwocdy,
RU. f.



eggs, $1.00 per 15. Mrs. Fred

Johnson, Dawson, Rt. 2.

B. R. Parks str. hatching eggs,
85c per 15; $1.50 per 30 del. Car-
tons returned. Mrs. J. S. ania
son, Alma.

Purebred Buff Orpington
Booths Lady-a-Day strani eggs,
7c per 15. J. H. Loyd, Milan,
Box 42

Purebred M. B. turkey eggs,
$2.25 doz.; $15.00 per 100 del.;
poults, 50c ea. Mrs. Neal T.
W*lliams, Buena Vista.

Purebred White Cornish Game

eggs, $1.50 per 15. Mrs. W. H.
Baxley, Hephzibah,

Baa



| Pekin duck eggs.

pen raised Bob White.
quail for sale. Mrs. H. D. Comp-:

Dark Cornish Game hatching |]





































































Friday, April ;
EGGS FOR S;

Large purebred W. R S
eggs, $1.00 per 15, pos
change setting for setting

ing
Mrs,
King, Rt. 2, Box 229, Dalt

New Hampshire eggs
chicks direct from
Mrs, R. J. Fleming, Li
Rt. 2, ;

Parks str. B. R, hat:
$1.00 per 15, cartons re
also same str. cocker,
old, 4% to 5 Ibs., 3 for |
coop returned. Mrs.
Daisy,

Pure Cornish Indian
eggs, $1.00 per 15; 18 a
postpa: d, carton ret;
change for butter at 25
dried apples, 10c lb. d
Annie B. King, Rt, 2,
Quitman.

Schmidt str, Golden ]
norca eggs, $1.00 per
per 30 postpaid, Cartad |
C. R. Bettis, Cumming, |

Purebred B. R. eggs fron
tested stock, 75 per 1

G. Mathis, Valdosta, R.
204.

tot paghbrad R.
Donaldson str. hatchir
$1.25 per 15, postpaid.
F. Walker, Warthen.

Fancy Giant Blac
eggs. L. B. Millians, Ne

Purebred Bacon
game eggs, $6.50 per C
30; $1.10 per 15. Sylves
vey, Soperton, Rt. 2

Purebred S. L. Wyando:
75e per 15; $1.40 per 30. d
tons returned. Mrs, A, *
son, Alma, Ri. 1, 2 |

AAA Donaldson and
str. R, I. Red, $1.00 pe
per 50; $5.00 per 100
Mrs. A. _D. Smith, Do
Re.

Pure Buff Orpington
for 65c; 3 or more setti
also Booths W. L., san
Mrs, W. F. Martin, Nory
Z, ;



Pure Mammoth Bronze
eggs, $2.20 doz, postpaid
A. Milford, Ball Ground,

B, R. Parks str. R. O.1
ing eggs, 85 per 15; cai
turned. Also 2 fine 5% m
roosters, $1.75 ea. Mr,
Clifton, Millen, | Me

Red Quill and Arka
eler cross setting eggs,:
$1.25. Exchange setting f
guano sacks free. from

and holes. Also pump
10c thls. Mfrs, Ruth
White, Stone.

B. R. hatching eggs, 6
postpaid: Mrs. H. S, Yo
mount, Rt. 1.

Thoroughbred R. I.
$1.00 per 15. H. J. Reitz,
lumbus Dr., Decatur,

Speckle guinea eggs, 60
$1.50 per 50 del. Mrs,
gett, Douglasville, Rt. 1.

Purebred Hanson str.
hatching eggs, $1.00 per

15. Mrs. W. G. Copel
woody, Rt. 1. .

White Giant Jim \
hatching eggs, 17 for $1.
J. J. Ferrell, Cairo, Rt.
964 2

Selected ae R.
eges, well packed, $1.00
Mrs. C. G. Wilson, Acwor!

Purebred Dark Corni
eggs, $1.00 per 15.
turned. No personal
Miss Florence Horne, Gr

Pure white Cornish eg
per 15 del. Mr. J,
Adams, Commerce, "Rt

B. R. Thompson str.
tested, $1.25 per 15
at my home, Mrs. Milt
mer, Sylvester, Rt. 3. _

12 duck eggs, 75c. Ww.
ton, Buford, Rt. 2.

Pit game eggs, Texas
and Warhorse crossed,

Mrs. W. I. Mobley. Ludo

Dark Brown Leghorn
eggs, $1.00 per 15..
Jones, Atlanta, Rt. 1, Bo

B. B. Red Game banta
ing eggs, $1.50 per 15;
hens, cock for-sale or
for 1937 hatch W. Lit
milech goats (bred),
2 doe kids, 100 percen
(6% qt. sire), fee $2.00



Allnnbe




eges, Booths str., 60c per | ,
-W. H. Humphries, Mil-

for 15 if called; for, 85

Exchange for _Jarge
crowder , peas,
vet beans or early to-

, z C. i?
Louisville, Rt. 1.

Runner duck eggs, $1.00
few turkey eggs, $2.00
W. J. Jones, Filijay,

Donaldson, Red and
Rock eggs $1.15 per 15,

30, Mrs. Marvin Moore
ountain, Rt. 1.

Island Red, dark Don-
train eggs, $1.25 per 15.
30; baby chicks, del, $9
Mrs. H. G, Brown, Stone

pe
Runner, duck eggs, $1.-
del. J. H. Moore, Stone
a, Ri. 1. :
ng eggs from fine White
hens, pure stock, 60c set-
of 16. Come for them. None
Bs Ida Harrison, Car-

5.

giant black S. Cc. Min-
ggs $1.25 per 16; Ancona
neppard str. blood-tested,
6, postpaid; Mrs. L. D.
ot Vonia, Rt, 1.

Booths B. R. eggs, 75c per
25 per 30, del. 90 per cent
Furnish 10 doz. weekly
ent at 50c doz. fob. Mrs.

Kitchens, Blythe, RFD.
Light Brahma _ eggs,
ed, $1 per 15 postpaid.
Hy selected, packed, L, J
Statham, Rt. 1, Box 195.
Brahma eggs, purebred,
r 15 del. Excellent winter
igo Mammoth white
juck ggs $1 for 13 del.
. E. Haynie, Watkinsville,

. 1, Reds, selected heavy

Mahood strain hatching

5 for $1, 30 for $1.75, well

postpaid, A. F. Ferguson,
ile, Rt. 1.

ampshire Red eggs
for 15, 30 for $1.25, del. all
igh season. Mrs. J. E. Passe,
5 Rt. 2, Box 39.

5 White Plymouth Rock
50c setting if called for:
iting prepaid. Will have
. Summer, Mrs. Nora Hat-

ast Point. 301 Wadiey

ah Runner duck eggs $1
del; Indian Runmer drakes

ected, well packed baiehing
, eggs, stock direct. from
ped. Barron str. $1. per
esse Jackson, Austeli.
rk Cornish game eggs, $1
6 del. Miss Leona a
Rb. I.

White Giant eggs 60c
set ing if sent by mail, 30
called for. Mrs. J. H. Gay,
son le, Rt, 1.
own _ Leghorn, purebred
ing eggs, Tom Barron sir.

r 16 at my home; 65e del.
J. F. McClain, Alpharetta,

re Po selected eggs for set-

ns, $1 per 15 or $1.50 for
Hs. Lueile Sellers, Al-

k Cornish game eggs, $l
Money order only. Crates
we Alfred Gibbs, Rochelle,

hite Giant eges 90c

: aid. Stock direct. from

; * grade, BWD tested.
., Gable, Haralson, :

ks a3 Barred Rock. best

1 eggs $1 per 15 postpaid;

ator lots cheaper, founda-

ock direct-from Porks since

ocks and eockerels for|

S. Mamie Roach plyler,

Black Minorca, also
ine Buff Cochin Bantam
ting eggs, $2.00 set ting;
Barred Rock eggs $1.50

ng Atlanta. O: H. Wright,
ta, Peters Bldg. Walnut.

mmoth White Pekin Auek
5c ; $1.00 per 15; also

k extra large, $2. 00 ea.
FOB. Mrs. A. D. Charping,
Ri. 2.





_EGGS FOR SALE

~ Mammoth Mallard duck: eggs, |.
good stock, $1 per 15. FOB. Mrs.
W. V. McMichael, Brunswick, Rt.
1. Box 66,

aval

Grove.

few settings. Donaldson str.
prize winners at Gwinnet.

fair, 1937; $1 per 15 or $1.75 for
30. Ww. R. Thompson, ae

ville; Rt. 1:

Wyandotte eggs, peebiee R. t.
S. L. 65 per 15, $1.10 per 30 pp.
Speckled Sussex eggs $1 per 15
pp. Mrs. Earl Wilson, Clarkesville.

Eggs for setting from thoreugh-
bred, laying strain, $1.50 per 16.
Willis Goddard, Americus, 801
Elm Avenue.

Indian Runner duck eggs, guar.
fertile, 90c per 15, postpaid.
Dean Brantley, Soperton, Rt. 2.

Pope str. S. C. Black Minorca
hatching, $1.00 per 15; $1.75 i
30. Few fine hens cheap. G,
Wilson, Elberton

R. I. hatching eggs, 60c per 15;
35 doz. in large lots; -also large
Buff Orpington and W. L. baby
chicks, hen hatched, $10.00 per
C. Mrs. R. O. Hodges. St. George.

White Rock hatching eggs,
Fishel str., $1.00 per 15 del, Mrs.
Alma Scott, Concord.

POSITIONS WANTED:





voune. healthy woman wanes
job with good people, doing light
farm work, imecluding field and
tobacco work. Give full particu-
lars, salary paid and ref. in
first letter. Mrs. Eddie A. Saw-
yer, Oglethorpe, Rt. 3.
_ Want job on farm, also exp. in
dairy work. Mother, sister and
self, board and small salary.
Good ref. Clifford Allen, Atlan-

| ta., 273 Washington St., S. W.

Want home on farm with good.
Christian people. Reasonable
salary, board and laundry. No
bad habits except smoking.
Charlie P. Sims, Stone Mtn., Rt.
1, care Mrs. P. Ll. Pittard.

Man with family wants place
on farm where -he can _ raise
something to eat. Exp. farm
work, also milk cows, attend to
stock and poultry, raise vege-
tables, cotton, etc. Not afraid of
work, Force enough for 2 h.
farm, prefer near Atlanta. W. T.
Tyson, Atlanta 553 Washington
St.

i DU yr. old widow with 2 yr: old
child wants good home on farm
in exch. for light farm work.
Come or send RR fare. Mrs. Va-
der Morrow, Hogansville, 46 As-
kew Ave.

Want place raising chickens,
milking cows and other light farm
work for self and daughter, and
some salary. Mrs. Jennie Bryant,
Atlanta, 415 Hood St.

18 yr. old young man wants job
on dairy farm, 5 yrs. exp.; also
drive truck. Cecil Head, Atlanta,
321 Crew St., S. W.

Colored man, married, 8 ehil-
dren, (oldest 15), thoroughly re-
liable and good worker, farmed
all life, wants farm on shares.
Have to hive mule and be fur-
nished. Hudson Waters, Fair-
burn, Rt. 3.

Small family wants job on farm
for wages, 2 plow hands and
woman do light farm work. Want
extra work when not in _ crop.
Curtis Davis, Buford, RFD 2.

Man, age 48, with wife, 18 and
13 yr. old boys, all exp. in farm
work, wants farm. Must be fur-
nished. Henry A. Pope, Atlanta,
122 Richardson St., S. W.

Middleaged woman wants light
farm work, no field work. _ State
salary paid. Mrs. E. L. Johnson,
Nicholls, Rt. 3.

White woman, 28, widow,. with
12 and 9 yr. old boys and 11 yr.
old girl, wants home on farm
with good people, near good
school and church. Well and
able to work. Mrs. Winifred
Lowery, Ashburn, Rt. 2.

27 yr. old, single, Christian
man, high school education, some
farm experience wants place do-
ing general farm chores for elder-
ly couple preferably. Write of-
fer, Jerome Hoff, Ft. Valley,
care Gen. Del.

Want job as farm overseer.
Well exp. 6 in family, 2 boys
work. Salary and home. James
MeDaniel, Atlanta, 529 Paynes
Ave., N. W.

Want home for self and little
boy and small salary in exc. for
light farm work, with reliable
people. Omie Summerville, Col-



lege Park, Rt, 1.

Dark Cornish Indian goose}
eggs. purebred, $1 per 15, post-
paid. J. R. Gardner, Locust.
Holder. an

S. C. Rhode Island Red eggs,

wants: dairy. work with : reliable
people near good school. Middle

nish ref. Good dry hand milk-
ers. Mrs. Rosa Evans, Boling
Broke, Rt. I, ie 6, care J M.

Middieaged, single man. wants
work on farm, with good. family,

| for board and salary. Like some

work with poultry. Do not drink
or curse. U. G. Smith, Meigs.

Want light farm werk with
good people for home for self and
old boy and reasonable salary.
2 yr. old boy and reasonable sal-
ary. 30 yrs. old, good worker.
Mrs. Ruby MeSwain, Shnanon. |

Want -small 1 horse crop by
month, with fairly good house,
hnady to church and high school
near thriving town. Am _ also
good carpenter. T. . Justus,
Tiger,

White man, 30 yrs. old, single,
sober, wants farm work for
wages, Raised on farm, go any-
where. J. V. Regan, Doerwm, RFD
care J. T. Wingate,

Man, 34 yrs. old, married,
(wife only), wants job. Exp. in
farm work, tractor driver, car-
penter, also tobacco, or most any
kind work. D. E. Pike, Osierfield,
Rt. 1, Box 39.

Exp. grist mill operator (with-

mill.. Must beiin good cond., and
in good location. State what
you have. W. H. Roach, a
bus, 1640 2nd Ave,

Middleaged woman wants light
farm work, no field work, for
home and small salary. Mrs. M.
A. Fuller, Atlanta, 15 Richmond
Ave.

Went job on dariy farm, 4
milkers, 20 yrs. exp. Can fur-
nish ref. C, H. Bedford, Egan,

33 yr. old widow wants job do-
ing light farm work. No field
work. Mrs. George Rogers,
Gainesville, care Gen. Del.

Middleaged man with wife and
child. wants work as overseer of
farm, or looking after poultry
farm. Ref. exch. W. F. Walden,
Thomson, Route.

41 yr. old woman, with 4 yr. old
child wants work on farm at
once. Mis. R. M. Byrd, Atlanta,
474 Pryor St.

Want job light farm work, no
field work, at once, 30 yrs old.
Janie Lee Boyd, Rutledge, RFD.
1, cawe Carl Griffis.

Middle aged man wants work
on farm, with board, laundry and
nice home, Like some work with
poultry. Do not drink nor curse.
U. G. Smith, Meigs.

Widow with 7 yr. old daugh-
ter wants place on farm, for

Prefer near Church and school.
Mrs. H, J. Schwering, Rockmart.

Christian widow, wunencum-
bered, age 48, wants job on farm
with good people. Good milker,
gardener, etc. Northwest Ga.
preferred. Mrs. Sarah Dempsey,
Summerville, care Gen, Del.

good worker, good health, can do
all kinds farm work. $8.00 mo.
At once. Mrs. R. M. Byrd, Aus-
tell, Rt. 1, Box 109.

Farm boy, 20, good habits,
wants joo on farm. Can drive
truck and handy with machinery.
Roy Jesse, Folkston, Box 171.

Want job as caretaker. Exp.,
best of ref. J. H. Boynton, Hamp-
ton, Ri. 1.

- Want place with live~- stock
farm in Middle or So. Ga. Exp.
in handling hogs and cattle. Best
of ref. W. B. Freeman, Oakman.

"23 yr. old, strong, healthy young
woman, experienced, desires light
farm work, no field work, for
home and reasonable salary.
Good references, write Miss
Emma McClain, Tallapoosa,
Burlington Rd. De 4248.

23 yr. old, single, wants job on
dairy. Good milker. Start with
$15.00 mo. board and laundry.
Honest, sober, best of ref. H. P.
Bunch, Talking Rock, Rt. 2.

Want 1 horse crop on 50-50
basis. Have to be furnished and
moved. Good land and house, in
Gwinnett county. Reply at once.
Mrs, Mae Knight, Dacula.

Single white man, 34 yrs. of
age, who can drive car wants job
on farm or dairy, $20.00 mo.
board and laundry. Elisha Justi,
Altamaha.

40 yr. old widow with 4 yr. old
child wants light farm work. in
exch. for home and clothes for
self and child. At once. Mrs. Mae
(Byrd, Austell, Rt. 1, Box 109.



Widow, 35, 2 sons, 12 and 8,|

or No. Ga. preferred. Can fur-

out bad habits), wants job for|-
wages or for part of out-put of |.

room, board and $1.00 week.

Want job on farm, 41 yrs. old,.



ED |FARM HELP WANTED

Want: woman to- live with-el-|-

derly couple and do ligh} farm
work, no field work, fo: zoom,
board and small salary. 4~ once.
J. W. Brown, Temple, Rt. 2...

Want at once, good nice girl or
woman to do light farm work in
exchange for good home and
clothes. Mrs. S. T. Taylor, Val-

dosta. Rt. 2, Box: 4.

Want good, reliable, single
man or boy to work on farm for
small wages, board and laundry
Live as one of family. Apply at
once. W. F. Jackson, Ae.
RFD. 1.

Want white, young, single
man, sober and honest, to work
on farm for wages, ($10.00),

| board and laundry for 4 mos. or

longer, J. I. King, Pearson.

Want good plow hand and 2 or
3 hoe hands for this yrs crop.
Can furnish house. Hardy
Rhyne, White.

Want woman, 25 to 40 yrs. old
for light farm work. Good home
and small salary. Mrs. J. W.
Ham, Summit, Rt. 1.

Want 2 h. share cropper and
day labor immediately on 3 M.
acre farm with school, churches
and RR station on farm. J, A.
Cason, Barnesville.

Want neat, clean, healthy white
woman, 25- 40 yrs. old, for light

farm work, milk, ete. $6.00 mo.

board and private room. At once.
Mrs. Make Morris, Ailey.
Want reliable, nice woman,
abont 40 yrs old, for light farm
work, no field work. At once.
Mrs. E. Garraux, Austell, Rt. 1.

Want colored man, not over 50

yrs., reliable for light farm
chores around place. Good pay
to right man. Write at once.
Mrs, Mary
Kenyon St., 8S. E.

Want boy, 14-17 yrs., white
preferred, to work on small farm,
$8.00 mo., board, laundry. Good
ref. required. \Mrs. R. H. Ro-
land, Sylvester, Rt. 4, care Mrs
Vanzant,

Want middieaged,
man, unencumbered, for light
farm work. No field work.
Must be thoroughly reliable. Mrs.
B. F. Smith, Dalton, Rt. 1.

Want unemcumbered white
woman, 45-50 yrs, of age, able
to work, to milk cows and other
light farm work. Small wages
and good home. Mrs. H. G.
Blakely, Savannah, Rt. 3, Mont-
gomery Road.

Want good man for 2 acres
good land, 7 room house, wood,
pasture, on Mail route No. 1,
Stockbridge, 18-20 mi. S. E. At-
Janta, with more land if desired.
J. N. Willingham, Atlanta, 188
Elizabeth St., N. E., Wa, 0329.

Want 2 men in same family,
one in dairy, other help on farm.
Garden, wood, good house fur-
nished, handy to water. No one
need apply with bad habits. C.
W. Price, Cedartown, Rt. 2.

Want white woman to help
with light farm work, no field
work. C. E. Hutto, Savannah,
Rt, 4. ae

Elderly Christian couple want
non-tobaceo using, industrious
young man or woman to live in
home and help with . garden,
milking and other lighi work,
mostly with poultry. Dependable
party only wanted. Jas A. Car-

ter, Valdosta, Rt. 1.

Wili furnish to settled, reliable
couple, no children, rooms in
country home for building other
house, help furnished. Food stuff
grown on place free. Must be
honest, sober, and ref. reg. V. C.
Green, Columbus, 3110 Pierpont.

Can use a good, farmer for
wages, Oe that can run 1 or 2
plows. G,. F. Sutton, Lyons.

Want honest, sober, single,
white man to work on farm,
Must be exp, and do good work.
20-40 yrs, old, $12.00 month, board
and laundry. L. E. MeCleskey,
Alpharetta. Rt, 3

Want a wage hand, $12.00 mo,
and board. E. B Pattillo, Cullo-
den. Rt. 1.

Want unencumbered, rliable,
whit> woman, 18 to 45 yrs., to live
in home and assist with light
farm work, no field work. Write
F. L. Womack,. Hapeville, care
Gen. Del.

Want bright girl (ambitious
and has aspirations to continue
studies) for light farm work, gar-

den., etc., no field work. Salary |

and bright home to right parity.
Answer at once. Mrs, L. D. Wil-
liams, Atlanta, 589 Boulevard,
N. E., Wa 1171.

Want middleaged white woman
to do light farm: work for small
family. Mrs, Alfa Vittem, Sparks.

ey
+

or see H. A

Fobbs, Atlanta, 838.

white wo- |

farm;

\



FARM HELP w TED

want man and Sele. nice, re=
liable. people, _ to tend small te
horse cg 50-50 basis. Write
. Hardy, Dallas, Rt. 1.

~ Want neat, respectable, white
woman, 20 to 55 yrs., for light
farm work, no field work, except
milk one cow. Small wages and
home. Mrs. M. J. Sarles, Ae
Rt. i.
Want nice, clean, white wo-
man, 18 to 30, to live in nice
home and help with light farm
work, no field work, except milk

1 cow, References in first letter.
Mrs. Otto Krause, Felton.., -

Want nice, capable, unenowue :
bered white woman for light

farm work, no field work, nor _

milking. Board and reasonable mo

salary. Mrs, B. F. Smith, Dalton,

Rt. 1.

Want middleaged woman to
live as one of family and do light
farm work, no field work. H. W.
Ray, Nicholls, care H. P. Co. sy

Want colored woman, 40-50
yrs. old, good character, who
needs and would appreciate good _

Christian home to help with
light farm work, no field work.

Small salary. Rev. JE > iz
Leslie. :
Want good ee cous: ie :

country vlace near Cartersville.

Write for particulars and furnish
references. T. J. Lyon, Atlanta, Le
232 Luckie St. :

Want man to do gardening and

flower growing, and other light os
See BAe

work. A. O. Blackmar,
bus. <
Want exp. farm hand 10. ake.
crop, $12.00 to $15.00 mo. Archie
Hayes, Screven, Rt. 2.

Want country raised girl po
live in small family and do hght
farm work, no field work. Good
home and $2.00 to $3.00 . week.
Mrs. C. B. Brown, Screven, Rt. 2.

Want boy, 12 to 14 yrs. old to
work on farm for board and ~
clothes and live in home as one

-| of family. C. WPatersen, Ava-

jon.

Want good, hones colored man
and wife to live-on farm. Good
house furnished. Must be exp. .
truck, poultry, etc. Part wages
and part interest in farm. Con-_
sider more in family, if no small.

children. J. K. Noland, Augusta, ne

1477 Gwinnett St. ce
Want man to go out on my 3
he to furnish stock and
equipment, improve place. Give
lease if necessary to get farm
improved. House on farm. Mrs. _
J. S. Coleman, Atlanta, 641 Crew. y
St., S, W.
Want sober, good morta
hand to work on farm and or- |
chard at once. Board, laundry,

jreasonable salary. Ref. required.

J. C, Daves, Ellijay, Rt. 3,

. Want man with family to work
on farm by day. J. H. Dereiets
Parrott.

Want young white gir] to live
with me and help with light farm:
work, no field work, room, board
and small salary. Mis. Mozell
Childers, Lithonia, Rt. 2. - ens

Want man for farm work, $10-
mo., room and board. Must be
able and willing to work; also

want pr. farm mules. H.S, Wale

ker, Macon, 349 Turpin St.
Want good, strong, healthy,

hard working, Christian, sober,
man who Knows how to plow

truck crops, tend to live stock,

etc. Write or see at once. J.

Frank Conner, Eden.

Want good farm hand to wotlk &
at anything. Must be sober, res
liable, no bad habits, 25-30 yrs.
of age, without family. $12.00 mo,
board, laundry, H. J. Ledbetter, |
Tate. <
Want capable white woman for
light farm work, no field work,
for good ho : equipped with,
modern conveniences, and ra-:

sonable salary. Mrs. J. C. cache S

lor, Ball Ground.

Want reliable, single negro
man to work 15 acres, tend to
Want good farm hand. $10.00
and Board. R. P. Yongema, At-.

lanta, R. F. D. 1, Box 669.

Want god farm hand. $10.00
month and board, and more later.
if good worker. Guy Mallory,
Madison. :

Want an unencumbered col-
ered man, 60 or over, to do light
farm work. Small wage. J. A.
Sartain, Rossville 603 Chicka~
mauga Ave. ,

Want heaithy, jaae: vation:
Christian young woman, 20-35"
yrs. of age, to live in home and
help with light farm work, no
field work, except care for cow _
and garden. Small salary. J. .
Floyd Cook, Rossville, Rt. 1. ss



















































































































ored. woman to help with light
farm work, no field work, for)
board, clothes, and some sper.d-
ing money. Mrs. Ee Reeves,
_ Jasper, Rt. 2. es

Want responsible men for 15
-aeres near Scottdale and 40 near |
Fitzgerald. Shares. (O. Fus-
sell, Brunswick. ;

Want wage hand on farm,



nome, board and laundry. T. A.
Griffin, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.

Want gocd, reliable, industri-
us farm hand, without bad
aabits, who can drive car.. Pay
30 day, board and laundry.
Christian preferred. Consider
man and wife to live in home,
We to help light farm work for
bezd. K, Ww. Liles, Waycross,

Want boy, 18-20 yrs. old to
work on farm, $10.00 mo. and
2 - board. Pay some now and rest:
when crop sold. W. H. Harrell,
_ Thomasville, Rt. 2.

i Want boy, 15-16, who knows
:0w to do good plowing: to begin
pril ist for rest of 1938. $10.00
mo, and board. Write first. A.
M, McClellan, Dixie.
Want good reliable man to milk
_ cows for reasonable salary. J, H.
Reice, Barnesville,

FRUITS FOR SALE

Extra nice sundried. apples,

ree from core and worms, 10c lb.

del in. 12 Jb. lots. Mrs, . L.
anzant, Dial,

Sun. dried applels in. first class

conditicn, 4 Ibs. 60c; 8 Ibs. $1.15,











Nice sundried apples, | 9 Ib. in
whiite bags, 10 Ibs, up to 100. Ibs.
eee W. P. a



Mice dried apples, 15 ee -yel-
ow pop corn, 15 cupful; okra
seed, 25c cuptul; nice butter. Add
dostage. ee Mrs. G. a
Poole, Jasper, Ri , Box 21.

25 Ibs. 1937 June dried apples,

ib; 1937 Hand - Runner
Cornfield tender bean seed, 20c
cupful, no weevils. Jewell Goss,

Nice caindnied nee Davis ap.
ples, free from worms, peel, core,
12%e lb. Sample on ~ request.
Mars, W. E. Rackley, Loving.

_ Nice, sundried apples in 10 1b.
lots, 10c Ib, del.; also B. R. cock-

_ erehs, $1.00 ea. not del. Mrs.
Alma Oliver, aie :
s Nice. - sundried apples, free
from worms, 10 lb. del. Ex-

change for 100 Ibs, a gee sacks,







Mo. 1 Virginia Bunch peanuts.

arts, 12 Ib.
, Edison,

oad imp. white Spanish pea-
mts, $5.00 per C or $90.00 ton,
g ubject to market change. M. O,
W. M. Hooks, Unadilla, Rt. 2.

Genuine Georgia Runner pea-
nuts No. 1 ia 4c lb. fob. Cash
with order. O, M
bridge. Saas

Red Spanish Deaniite, 8c. Ib.
ob, ieee Hays, Rockmart, Rt

MO. W. 8.

Red punch Spanish seed pea-
nets, pure homey drip cane seed,
3e tb., $2.00 bu. fob,; colored
a -putterbean seed. 10 Ib.
postage. e G. Oliver,
arnecvilie, REA 255

abs



ee

ives, 20 lb, Mrs. Marous Lee,
nfston.

| ibs, small seedling pecans,
iD, fob. Cash. No order less
25 ae = $4.00 entire jot,

small lots, Be 1b: ton lots, 436
in FOB. D, E, Thompson, Pine-



- pea
auits, hand shelled, 10c Ib. in 25
tots, Pearl Smoak, Warwick,

SYRUP FOR SALE

Ribbon Catie syrup a beer size
tiles, $1.20 doz. rene
oottle, - "25.0 Sets WT. L, Dash-
er, Lake Park, Rt, Lae

1937 Ga. Came syrup in 10 Ib.





= than 6 buckets, R, L, Bax-

F Pecna and Other Fete,

Want settled, denesdapic ole!

trees,

free from worms, core, peel, 10c}
and |.

nee from holes, Mrs, J. . Moo-
e oul
Pecans &PeamitsForSale

6 lb.; _also Schley pecans, 15 Ih.; |

. Greene, Bain- 3

Stewarts and ee Pecan :

| Apr,

kets, 40c bucket ane ee not

Trees. For Sale

_ Figs, Celestial white, 5. see
or 12 med. $1; artichokes, 1 gal.
40c; 3 gals, $1; Kudzu, Semeson,
treated, 100, $1, 300 $2.75, post-
paid. J: w. "Toole, Macon. Rt. 2.

May cherry trees, 10c ea. $1
doz.. Sage plants, 3 for 25c; pep-
permint plants, 3, 25c; blue plum
garlic plants 15c ea. 2, 25; grape-
vines 10c ea, $1 doz. postpaid.

| Marie Smith, Waco, Rt. 2.

Scuppernong, white, red goose
plums, 12 for $1; sassafras roots,
15c Ib. yellowroot 20c bunch; sage

plants 6, 35c; everbearing straw-

berry plants 35c C, Postpaid. Mrs.
Seabron Huggins, Waco, Rt. 2.
Pomegranite sprouts, rooted, 1
ft. 10c; 3 ft, 25c ea. black wal-
nut 1 ft. 10c; black muscadine,
2, 15c; huckleberry, gooseberry,
red plums, blackhaw, 3 ft, $1
doz, add postage, Miss Ivalene
Connell, 'Toomsporo, Rt. 2,

May cherry, black and white
scuppernong, sage plants 10c ea;
+3 for 25c; Exc. for white feed
sacks. Mrs: J. T. ae Wa-
co, Rt. 2.

Raspberry, red thornless, sage
plants, 35c doz. 2 yr, clearseed

| peach trees 50e doz. all postpaid.

Mrs, W.- iB. Allan, Alto, Rt. 2,

Box 59. .

May cs sprouts, 10c ea.
also Summerours half and half

| cottonseed, $1.60 bu. V. C. Rund-

les, Gainesville, Rt. 7.

Peach trees, all var. well rooted
seedings, 10c ea, Small lots; fob.
Kudzu crowns $1 C, $7.50 M. free
to any who will dig them; also
| want 1 gal. large brown multiply-
ing onions, grow in clusters, J ohn
T, Handley, Shiloh,

- 1 large walnut tree, about 3 ft.
in dia., $20.00 on stump. Glave
Woodruff, Loganville, Rt. 2.

Karly May cherries, 3 ft., 3 for
$1. 00; 1 ft., $1.00 doz.; plueberries,
8 doz. $1. 25: apricots, 4 ft., 4 for
$1.25; Seedling apples, "peach
ed June plums and Grey
Goose plums, $1.25 doz, Rooted,
postpaid. Mrs. E. E.. Been

; Mineral a



BUTTER FOR SALE

- Nice, firm yellow Jersey puliee
from cow T. B. tested, in % Ib.
molds, 4 Ibs., $1.00 postpaid in



Ast and 2nd zones. Mrs. Noah

G. Moon, Bowdon, Rt, 2.

Nice, fresh, firm yellow butter
in 1 lb. brick prints, 35c lb. Daisy
ee Bowdon, Rt. 3, ae

POTATOES FOR SALE

Porto Rica yellow skin seed
potatoes, 75c bu. W. T. Vickery,
College Park, Rt, 2:





d corn. E. G, Acree, a 7,
Atlanta. cH (2298...

FRESH & CURED MEAT
_FOR SALE oe

: Hickory smoked hams,





any

A, Walker, Quitman.

Ola fashion hard wood smoked
Ses county hams, 12 to 25 Ibs.,

a per 100 Ibs. Cash with M.
LL. E. Hutchinson, Quitman.

Miaees smoked, sugar cured

| hams, 2c lb. Cash or M. O. fob.
Oia. 10 Buff Orpingtons, 1 -yr.

old, $1.25 ea, Percheron stud
horse, service fee, $5.00 cash.
Jno Hardy Demorest,

_Nice brown home smoked hams,
28c 1b.; $27.00 per 100 lbs. M, O.
Mrs. R. L, Furtehinsor, ey
Rt. ds Box 184...



Vasstable For Sale



2 Beres green cabbage for sale,
part or all in field. Archie
Knight, | Denton, Rt, 1.

One acre turnips ready Apr.

20th. to @5th, Mrs. W. A. Oribb,
Nicholls,

3 acres turnips, 5 acres cab-
bage to sell in truck load lots.
Mrs. E. A. Lambert, Denton.

_ Ewo acres Charleston Wake-
field cabbage, 1% acres turnip
salad, crisp and. tender, ready
Ist. Reference County
Agent. H. J. Chandler, EMaa RS
ald, Rt, 3, ao

GRAIN AND HAY WANTED

Want 10 tons oat straw June
Ist, at $6.00 ton, within 200 miles



. Ludowici.



Savannah. Notify George | Quar-
sacheesion peice. ;

| chewing

Genuine Porto Rica seed sweet s
potatoes and Hastings Prolific)

size; pure pork link sausage. Be j

. B ULL ET IN :
| [TOBACCO FOR. SALE



Good home cured. suiting and
- pobacco, a Ib: 10 Ibs.
$1.00 ea. postpaid. in . Ga. W. R.
Benton, Alma,

Good, flue cured, home raised,
red and yellow tobacco, 1936 and
1937 crop; smoking, 12 lbs. $1.;

chewing, 11 Ibs., $1.00; 6 Ibs. 50

postpaid. M. B. Swain, Alma,

Good grade, juicy and mellow

tobacco, 12 lbs. for $1 00; 5 Ibs.
50c. Mrs. Christena Harper, Sur-
rency, Rt. 2.
- Dark Red Leaf chewing tobac-
co, 10 Ibs, $1.00; smoking tobac-
co, 14 Ibs, $1.00 postpaid to 3rd
zone, Satis. guar. Mrs, A. B.
Williams, Alma,

Flue cured, whole leaf brown
tobacco, % Ibs. for $1.00 del, in
Ga. Oscar Hamilton, Vidalia, Rt.
L. x

Good flue cured tobacco for

also New Stone ani Marglobe
tomato plants, $1.40: M, del. R.
W. Tomberlin, Surrency. :

Flue cured tobacco, mellow and
juicy, red or yellow leaf, 13 lbs.
$1.00 del.; Gold Dollar tobacco
seed, 35c oz. del, Mrs. J. T.. Troup,
Baxley.



Miscellaneous Wanted |



ARTICHOKES
Want artichokes for planting.
State price per pound. Mrs. S.
a Pearson, Takeipng Rt, 1, Box
BEANS AND PEAS
Want 5 to 10 bu. Hay seed Soy
beans. Quote es and send
gies aee Dr. Ww. F. Bent, Midville,
CORN
Exc, 50 white feed sacks in per-
fect cond., for corn, or mixed
chicken feed; 1 sack for pound.

Burlington Rt. De 4248,

CAVIES

Want some spotted guinea pigs.
Write M. C. Mauldin, Pineview.

Want guinea pigs, all sizes, any
quantity. S. C. re Madi-
son.

GourDs

Want 2 doz. Martin gourds.
Exec, Sugar or Brown crowder
peas; also want hear from per
having ginseng plants or seed. J

J, Norman, Richland, Rt. 1.

HONEY EXTRACTOR
' Want a second-hand. Honey
extractor, good cond., cheap for
7) Be. H. C. Reid, Hogansville,

. HERBS =
Want some -Mayapple, bear
foot and other roots and herbs
and barks. State what you have

and price, J. B. Womack, Greens-
boro,

. PEACH TREES
Want, & few late genuine old
style White English peach trees.
J. C. Adkins, Ft. cele 209 No,
Macon, Ste
a FODDER

Want 1 M. bundles of fodder.
State best price. Mrs. Fe G.
Henry, Stockbridge, Rt. 1.

SHEEP AND GOATS WANTED

Want comon or milk goats in
exchange for Grist Mill, Ford-
son tractor, Hammer Mill, etc.,
E, B. Shoemaker, West Point.

HOGS WANTED

Want 20 Black P. C. pigs, av.
45 lbs., to raise on halves, also
300 or more R. L. Reds or other
heavy breed chicks, raise on hal-
ves to 8 wks. Facilities and best
of care. Ref. Henry: Malone, Law-
ene Rt. 5. -c-o A. M, Ma-
one, - (

FEATHERS WANTED

of turkey, peacock, and goose.
State variety, color, price and
supply. R. D. Ison, Atlanta, 1079
Clifton Rd. N, Be

EGGS WANTED.

Want prices on Bronze turkey
eggs, del., and wt. of turkeys and
fertility. guaranteed. Mrs. J. H.
Ellis Stephens, |

POULTRY WANTED |

Want. 100 to 500 heavy breed
chicks to raise on halves to 8
wks. old; also want 10 to 12 gui-
nea hens amd 1 last yr. cock.
Mrs. J. W. Connell, 527 Main St.
Cedartown. Se

i Exchange 100 Ib. plain, white or
striped sugar sacks for any breed
baby chicks or hens. Ea. pay the
trans, Mrs. J. J. Lassiter, City
Market, Cedartown.
Pheasants:Want 2 Ringneck
pheasant hens.
Ist Ietter, also have for sale Jap-
anese Silkie Hggs, $1.50 per 13.



| Postpaid. , T. Gaines, Buford.

chewing or smoking, 12 Ibs. $1.00; |.

Mrs, L. D, Miller, Atlanta, 2096]

- Want large wing feathers only}

Quote prices in|



ara

Miscellaneous For Sale

Grub roct, 35c Ib. Mayapple
and Yellow root, 25c 1b.;
cherry and yellow poplar bark,
i5c lb. All fresh dug; hoar-
hound, 2 bunches 5c. Exc. for
white feed sacks. Miss Eunice
White, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

-140 white feed sacks, 8c. ea., 20
or more in lot shipped. prepaid
in Ga. Wm, B, Glaze, Dalton.

* Garlic and horseradish, 25c
doz, bulbs; rhubarb or pie plant,
3 bunches, 30c; elecampane.



yellow and sassafras root, 20c ib.;

catnip, yarrow and others, 25
doz. del..in 1 and 2nd zone. Miss
L. M. White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,
Box 35. :

Yellow root, 25 lbs. or more,
25c Ib. Under 25 lbs., 30c lb. C.
M. Culpepper, Columbus, 1016
12th St.

300 Ibs. unwashed wool, more
or less free of burrs, ist. of May
del. Make best offer. W. J. aur
lis,. Waycross, Rt. 1.

500 stalks white sugar cane,
$1.00 per C. E, G. Ravenel, Sa-
vannah, 114 E. MeDoncugh St.

Good, second- hand 2 mule
wagon, wt. about 1100 lbs. See
or write for price. Mrs. Elisha
Kirk, Rockmart, RFD 2.

15 ibs. nice, new goose feathers,
40c lb. Mrs. J. N, Boston, Wash-
inton,

B. Langford, Sr., Maysville. :

Black walnut Meats, nice and
ia of bright color, 90c. lb.
del. M. M. Cochran, Royston.

400 Ibs, pure hog lard in 50 and
100 lb. cans, 12c lb. J. W. Hicks,
Marietta, Ry 23

Almost new 1 hh, wagon at rea-
sonable price. Mrs. Cochran,

}

| Luthersville, Rt. 1.

25 Ibs. new, white, downy
feathers, 50c Ib. del. Sample
free. Mrs, Mary Collins, Cordele,
Rt, 4.

Yellow root, 12c lb.; sassafras
root, 25c Ib. Add postage. Exc.

over 10c lb.,or for onion buttons.
Mis. Sallie Belle Elam, Gaines-

ville, Rt. 6, care Emma Frady.

Yellow and Mayapplle root, 25c
lb.; grub root, 35 1b.; wild cherry
and yellow poplar. bark, 20c_ lb.
Mrs. Iowa Vick, Ellijay, RFD 3.

Colts foot, heart leaf mullein,
Queen of the Meadow, 50c per
shoe-boxfull; horseradish, 10c;
garlic, 25 doz.; spearmint, 25
doz, Exc, for peanuts, tomato,
sweet pepper or egg-plant plants
or eggs for setting. Fred Kown,
White.

Extra good 100 Ib. cap, feed

jsacks, 10c ea., del. Exc. for honey
4 only. Meryl Lee, Red Oak.

100 extra fine large Martin
gourds, uncut, $1.00 doz, del. Ed-
win Collins, Cordele, t

- Senna leaves, dried, 10c pint,

horseradish plants, 20c doz., 3

doz. plants 50c; red hot pepper,
10c pint.
Alto, Rt. 1,

Catnip, garlic, balm, dbl tansy,
spicewood, calamus, | garden
horsemint, sage, 4 for. 25c; pep-~
permint plants, 25c C.; Mayapple
root, 25 Ib.; yellow and rattle
root, 15 Ib. Mary Lou Eaton,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 38,

200 white feed sacks, 100 Jb. cap.
free from holes, 8c and 10c ea.
Mrs. J. C. Lumsden, -Talbotton..
Horseradish, 30c - Th. with 6
plants with ex, pound, Add post-
oe Mrs. T. S. Terrell, Lula, Rt.

Se icin artichokes, white,
$1.00 bu, FOB; also Kudzu root-
ed; $1.00 C, del: A. D. Call, Elli-
jay, Rt. ee nee

- SYRUP FOR SALE

the lot. J. R. Griazle, Rt. 1,
_Too Late To Classify |

EGGS: FOR SALE
W. L. Hatching eggs, 50 per
15, also Thompson B. R. Hatch-

ing eggs, 60c per 15 del. Mrs. J.
W. Ham, Summit, Rt, 1.





eggs, 17 for $1.25 postpaid, Mrs.
Darby Taylor, Lavonia, Rt 1.

Donaldson str., blood tested stock
$1.00 per 16 postpaid. Mrs. W. R.
Fain, Leary.

B. L: hatching eggs, Rusks
AAA Str., $1.00 per 15. Could shin
about 50 per week. Mrs, Lucy



Z

Lee, Jesup, i ee

wild |

_| Brown, Helena,

4 or more bu, black walnuts,.
-|1937 crop, dry in hull, 30c bu. for |
lot, or less lots, 35c bu. FOB. J.|

good value for beef tallow at not}

-{|mi, southwest Lumber.

Mrs. I. A. Woodring,

2 bbis., 60 gal. old syrup (not
unstopped since being made; it]:
was nee: 40c gal. or $40.00 for|

Pure S. C. B. L., blood tested]

Selected Dark R. I. Red eggs, |


















































































Too Late To

POULTRY FOR SAL
Baby Chicks:Hen hate
L.. baby chicks 10c ea, del,
of 25. Exchange 25 for 2,
Rica potato plants. Mrs
De Foor, Toccoa, Rt. 2.
Game:20 purebred Dark
nish Game young hens
roosters, 19387 hatch, $2
Viola. King, Pearson.
Orphingtons:I young
Orphington rooster, $1.75;
hives bees in old stands,
Mrs. M. Brown, Ashburr
Spanish :White faced
Spanish cockerels and egg
for prices. Mrs. Frank Tri
Adairsville, Rt. 1.
TURKEYS, GUINEA
DUCKS, ETC., FOR S.
1 fine young M. B. tom,
hatched, wt. 21 Ibs., $4.00
Holley, Matthews.
Trio purebred Bourbon
turkeys: 2 yr. old tom,
$7.00; 1 yr. old hen, wt
ea., $3.50, fob. Miss M
Rowan, Cartersville.
White Henan Larg
chin. str., L, young hen ni
and Se. $25. 00. lot. ;



Wyandottes:18
dotte pullets, 2 rooste
old, 3% to 4 lbs. R. L,
940 Woodland Ave., S. iE.
Janta, Ma. 1667...

R, I. Reds:2 Donaldson
R, I. Red cocks, $1.00 -
few hens. Purebreds; egg
per 15, Mrs. Emmett Tran
Duluth, Rt. 1.

_ SEED FOR SALE

Winter Heading Collar
10c pkg., 20c oz. postpaid
black walnuts, hulled ar
5c bu. at Newnan. A. B :
Newnan. f

35 vine okra, (growin
seed for 10c (coin or sta ap
3c postage. Mrs. Grace Tk
Rising Fawn, Rt. 3. |

New Tomato seed, Re
New Stone, Baltimore,
Best, for sale, 50 Ibs. del
Ramsey, Quitman.
FRUIT FOR SAL

Fresh sundried apple
Add Postage. Mrs.
Clarkesville, ee

TOBACCO. FOR. gi LE

Good flue cured toba
mold, whole leaf, 10. tbs
postpaid to 3rd zone. J.
Glohon, Surrency, Rt.

VEGETABLES FOR S

1 acre Chas. Wakefiel
ready for market Apri 15
State Road 117. Make best
Widdon L, Allagocd, Lumbe
Rt. 1. Box 111i. ;

250 bu. house cured P R.
potatoes, 30 bu.
seed potatoes.
Louisville, Rt. 1

; Tender cornfield bene
mixed, 35c lb, Prepaid
2nd zene. Mrs. Lee Clair
Roy.

Striped eae Half R
Garden beans, 25c cup;
colored cornfield beans, | 2
red speckled crowder
white, black-eyed 10c
checks. Mrs. Lillie Barre
jay, Rt. 3. i

40 bu. O-Too-Tan beans,
bu. my place. 1937 crc
Livingston, Augusta, RFD
74, :

10 bu. O-Too-Tans,
hand thrashed, $4.00 bu. Ly
Mrs, T. H. Duran, Cu! }
1; Box 56. = . Be

50 bu. mixed peas, $1.7
40 bu. Clays, $2.00 bu;
bu. orange cane seed, $1
Otis Stephens, Jackson,
CORN, SEED CORN F

- Pop corn, 5 Ib.; orange
seed, $1.45 bu; genuine O-
beans, age bu, fob, Che
order, O. N. Brownlee,
Rt. eis
Extra Early Golden Q
Corn, $6.50 cwt., Groh
Hog Sorghum, $3 50 }
Whatileys prolific corn, $-
E. J, Lavender, Sylvest

COTTONSEED FOR SA

Wannamaker Cleveland
seed, imp.,.No. 2, 2nd yr.,
1850 Ibs. per acre;) Coker Z
land Wilt No. 4, $3.00 per 1
fob, Guar, pure. G. W. W:
Eastanollee, At: 1. a

D, P, L. No. 11 - A cotton
ist yr., no black seed, $1.00
fob. Edd F. er Cor

Cleveland, Rt. 5..



75. or 100 bu. Cokers
cotton seed, 5c bu. Ts:
_ Lumpkin, Rt. 1-A. &

| FRESH AND CURED
Cured side meat, and
15e Ib. del. in-Ga., T. B,
TROUieSCeS: