HAMILTON Hace SUPERVISOR MARKETING DIVISION
eres
=
eee MAY 2, 1938.
NUMBER 9
awe al Size of Georgia Crops |
ishde by U. S. Crop Reporting
- April 28, 1938
ANSThe Georgia acreage this year is
5,000 compared to 4,500 acres in 1937.
ear average (1927-36) of 2,990 acres.
d group of early States, including Geor-
ima, Louisiana, Mississippi and South
ve 29,500 acres with 26,400 acres plagt-
and a ten year average of 21,300 acres.
ated production for Georgia and other
es will be released on May 12.
GEGeorgia, one of the second group of
res, has an estimated planting of 4,200
LIVESTOCK
owing is a revised schedule of differentials
grades which will be used by packers until
ice in buying hogs at all points.in Geor-
and Alabama.
100th hogs, 240 Ibs. up, %c under Top.
th hogs, 180-240 Ibs, market top, No. 3
130-150 lbs., = under top, No. 4
110-130 lbs., 1%4c under top. No, 5
2c under ce
OWS- he under smooth hogs of whatever
basis they make. Culls or thin unfinished
inds, priced at varying discounts, under
based on condition, Stags 2%c under top.
docked 20-40 lbs., Stags docked 70 lbs.
nderstand that Georgia packers are paying
the prices quoted below on special lots
Therefore, before selling your hogs we
at you talk to your nearest packer and
or this advantage in price.
ALBANY SOFT HOGS
, Ga., April 29.These prices as fur-
Cudahy Packing Company are on stand-\
logs and subject to change daily.
6.50; heavy smooth hogs, $6.00; No. 2s
E3's% $5. 50; No. 4s $5.00; No. 5 s pigs, $4.50;
$5. 00: Stags, $4.00.
A oultrie Market is the same as Albany.
ATLANTA SOFT HOGS
TA, Ga., April 29-These prices as fur-
by White Provision o. are on standard
Ss and subject to change daily:
good fat Cows, $5.25 @ $5.75;
x $4. 50- $5. 25; canners and cutters.
25 good bulls, $5.25-$5.75; common, $4.75-
good calves, $7.50 @. $8.50; medium, $6.00 @
mon $5.00 down.
; CHICAGO HOGS
GO, April 28.--Top, $8.35; bulk good and
0-240 lbs.; $8.15 @ $8.30; 250-300 Ibs.,
8.155: 310- 350 lbs.. $7.75 @ $8.00; packing
erally steady; bulk, $7.10 @ $7. 35: light-
nm the butcher order $7.50.
acres compared with 3; 100 acres in 1937. The. second
group of early States include Georgia, Alabama,
Mississippi, Virginia and North and South Carolina.
These States have a combined acreage of 21,400 as
against 18,600 last year. Georgias production is _
placed at 21,000 tons, while last years yield was
14,000 tons and the ten-year average (1927-36) was
6,300 tons. The second group of early States are ex-
pected to produce 123,900 tons of cabbage as com-
pared with 97,500 tons in 1937 and the = year ave-
rage (1927- 36) of 84,900 tons.
CUCUMBERSThe Georgia acreage is estimated
at 1800 with 1400 acres planted in 1937. The estimat-
ed yield per acre and total production figures will
be released by the U. S. Crop Bepetyne Board on
May 24.
POTATOESThe Georgia Irish potate: acreage
of 1000 acres as previously reported, is expected to
start moving to market about May 10. The estimat-
ed production for thi year will be contained 3:
report issued May 12.
STRAWBERRIESThe 400 acres of Georgia
strawberries planted this year are expected to yield
32,000 crates, or about ten percent less than the
crop of 36,000 crates_in 1937 from 600 acres. The
total production from the second group. of earky
States including Arkansas, California (Southern),
Georgia, North and South Carolina, Tennessee and
Virginia amounts to 3,513,000 crates compared with
an estimated yield of 2,834,000 crates last year.
TOMATOESGeorgias large acreage in the
second group of early States is placed at 11,000
compared with only 4,500 acres in 1937 and a ten
year average of 1,630 aeres. The estimated produc-
tion for the State will be released on May. 24. The
PRICES OF FRESH VEGETABLES
4
Prices of fresh vegetables prevailing on State
Farmers Market, Atlanta, today, April 29th,
Apples. UisS: No: Die pkeet = sets se 90-$1.00
Apples, Coulis): penal coo ee 60-.65
Beans (Lima) per bushel hamper
Beans (Snap) per bushel hamper
Beets per: OZ ON. ae ee 40
Cabbace: (ilk: per owt, 2.0 00 15
Carrots, pet. doz; Dun a ere 40
Corn, (Green): per doz) tars 2 8 8840
Collards, Det dezespin- == ben 6 eb Ag
Cucumbers. per bu. basket 2... __-$1.25-$1.50
Eggplant, per bu. hamper {.__._.______$1.15-$1.25
Mustard Greens, per doz. oe ee
Onions, (Greens)
Peas, (Greens) per bu. aioe. Se oe oe 81-00
Peppers, per bu. hamper $1.50-$1.60
Potatoes (Irish) No. 1s per. 100 lb. baz __$1.50-$1. 65
Radishes, per doz. bun.
Spinach, per bu. basket
Polya per bu, hamper
Sweet potatoes (bulk) per cwt. -$1.65-$1.75
Pie (Bunched) per doz. bun. .__.__.25-.30
Turnip salad, per bu. hamper
These and other quotations on farm products
are broadcast oe ve day morning at 6:15 E.
ee over W.G. S. :
ace ys ot a
gros = is reported to be making 206d progress and
first pickings are expected from Georgia points the |
latter part of May.
PEACHES AND WATERMELONSNo report on
the production of these crops have been released.
First reports on the peach crop may be received
late in May and for watermelons sometime in June.
THE ATLANTA MARKETReceipts on the At-
lanta market have been made up largely of snap
beans, squash, cabbage and tomatoes. The first
shipments of Georgia snap beans to Atlanta were.
made about April 15th. Quality was very good and
jobbing sales opened at a dollar per bushel. the = u
market has been over supplied with a wide range in
quality of cabbage in heavy offerings and the market
has continued dull and weak with prices at the |
lowest levels in many months. Most large lots have
sold at 25-75e bulk per hundred pounds for both
round and pointed stock. e,
The asparagus season is about over and recent
demand on the local market has been very slo as
prices declined. Occasional sales have been ade
at 75c-$2.00 per crate according to quality and size,
Green onions have been in moderate supply and
have been meeting a steady demand at 25- 30c per
dozen bunches. English peas have been generally of
ordinary tofair quality with best stock selling most
at $1.00 per bushel hamper. Mustard greens, radish- _ -
es and collards have been moving slowly in light
supply. Turnips and greens have been plentiful and
prices have been low. Greens have jobbed at 20-25
occasionally at 30-35 and some sales low as 10c per
bushel. Turnips have averaged around 25-30c per
dozen bunches with a few best lots selling up to
60c per dozen on days of light supply. N earby savoy
spinach has been practically supplying the market -
and sales have been from 50-75c per bushel basket.
Georgia squash was offered about two weeks ago
and since that time the supply has steadily increased.
Prices have dropped to the lowest level in many
months with good quality and. Yellow Crooknecks :
selling at 40-60c per bushel hamper and a few sales 2
in small lots as high as $1.00, poorer offerings have.
moved as low as 25c. Homegrown strawberries have
partly supplied the market for sometime. The quality
of the Georgia berries has been fairly good, but |
prices have been rather low. Twenty four Aner
crates have sold at $1.50-$3.00 per crate with most
sales around $2.00-$2.50 per crate. :
ATLANTA SPOT COTTON
ATLANTA, Ga., April 29-At the close of the
market today Atlanta spot cotton was quoted at
49 points on the New York July future or 9.16
cents per pound for middling 7-8 inch staple. The
average price of middling 7-8 inch cotton on ten
southern markets yesterday. was 8.8lc per pound.
The average price for the past 30 market days was
8.74c per pound, Staple premiums being. paid on
the ten southern | / designated markets yesterday
averaged 42 points for middling 15-16 inch cotton
and 76 points on for middling 1 inch staple.
New York future closed today, July, 3.76. New
Orleans futures closed today, July, 8.89.
| Atlanta | Augusta
ville.
Barnes-
! : '
Bowden Clarkes-| Com- | Claxton Dawson
ville | merce ee
Macou sarders- | Tifton
ville | i
~ 18%~-.19 21
1715 18
at Ad
feavy-Breed
Leghorns _-__---
Si
A4)
15
12
sta
Le
12
08 |=
14
S
ry butter, best tbl._
ald, peas, mixed
Eelomnned by J. J. Brown, Commissiener of Agriculture
Mareh 1, 1917
- Published Semi-Monthiy by
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
- COLUMBUS ROBERTS, Commissioner
Executive Office: State Capitol, Atlanta, Georgia
Office Covington, Ga. ;
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of Markets, 222 State Capitol.
Fatered as second class matter August 1, 1937, at the Post
Office at Covington, Georgia under the Act of June 8, 1930. Ac-
tion 1103, Act of October 8, 1917.
Notices of farm preduce and appurtenances admissable under
postage regulations insented one time on each request and re-
peated only when request is accompanied by new copy of notice.
Limited space will not permit insertions of notice conbai
more than 3@ words including name and address.
Uader Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not
Bssiime any responsibility for any notice appearing in the Bul-
\etin.
Nk Sigua
THE DOUGLAS MARKET
Tomatoes Jook good now. We have quite a few small
tomatoes on the vines and a large crop of blooms. Prospects
are for shipments to begin around May 20 to 25.
Beans are moving in small quantities and at unsatisfac-
tory prices from 60c to 75c per bushel.
ae Squash are coming in and not selling high either. Prices
today running around fifty cents per bushel. Irish potatoes
have run areund $1.00 for number ones today with digging
Fe IS beginning. By the time this letter is published, we shall
be able tc load trucks daily.
Cabbage are heading faster than we can move them and
prices are running around $10.00 per ton on good quality
stock:
= Poiaio and tomato plants are moving and we can take
= orders for same and see that buyers get good quality plants.
= fs Harrell Ww. Long, Manager
THE, MACON MARKET
Present inidici dons point to an earlier peach and water-
melon crop than last year. Peaches will likely be one to two
weeks esilier and melons in the lower counties will com-
thing like 10 days to two weeks earlier than usual.
_- *Phe mevement of Scuth Georgia beans and squash
Loman NEC. last week and we expect to see the Georgia
well supplied with both by the middle or last of
this wees.
The <iopiy of cubbage and turnips hae been far in exeess
ee of ive demand and prices of both have been very unsatisfae-
TN. Raines, Manager~
THE BOSTON GEORGIA MARKET
We hai a isir week at Beston this week. We had about
300 hampers of beans and 100 hampers of squash yesterday
= afiex domorow, with prices advancing. We have had plenty
of Buyers all the time. We are selling beans frem 85c to 95e
per exate.
ROSCOE STEWART, Mgr.
THE VALDOSTA MARKET
- and squvch ihat have been moving on this market
es for the past week are of a good grade. The price that beans
are selling for is not as good as last year at the opening of the
season. The fitst that were offered for sale here brought
$1.25. The present price is reduced some bit from that. The
reason for this is ihat there are still plenty of beans in Flori-
da and beans here are about a month earlier than last season.
In the next two weeks beans and squash will be moving
through this market in truek load lots. :
_-- By the time this letter reaches the Bulletin, farmers in
this section will be digging Irish potatees.
We have sweet potato plants listed in this office for
gale, also, Marglebe tomato planis.
Some tomatoes in this section that have pivesdy been
_veset are blooming, some few have small tomatoes.
to $12. 50 per ton.
: There will be buyers on this market to buy ail farm
- produce that is brought here for sale from one hamper to a
truck load.
Farmers can buy hampers, tomaio erates, or any kind of
2 ess for their produce here on the market,
sige z Paul W. Carter, Manager.
THE THOMASVILLE MARKET
Conditions on the market have improved. Cabbage mov-
_ ang at 25c and 30c per hamper, 30c te 50 per crate, $8.50 to
$10.00 per ton on trucks; Snap beans moving large quantities
at 80c to $1.00: Squash, 40c to 60c; Quality of beans good.
demand good, heavy inquiry. Around the 10th to 16th May
will have Pole and Black Valentine beans on the market. The
conditions of crops are geod and will have geod quality of
- produce this season. The Auction will be announced at a
2 ane daie in the Season.
z M. JOINES, Manager.
- GLENNVILLE AND CLAXTON MARKETS
s The first Squash moved from these markets on April
oO Dt ang by the time this letter is published in the Bulletin
ties of Giant Straightneck or Crookneck varities.
a - Tomstoces, Snap Beans, Irish Potatoes and other early
_wegciable crops will begin to move by May 10th. Onions
Okra, Lima Beans, Cucumbers, Early Corn ete, will begin
to move by May 15th, to 20th.
pio These immediate adjoining sections has a oe
increase in acreage of the various truck crops, and will ex-
ecd three thousand acres of tomatoes, which is mostly Mar-
globe variety, and does not include those that will, come
an from other sections, which may amount to one or two
- thousand additional acres of tomatoes, that will be sold
_ through these markets. The tomato erop as will as other
-erops are looking exceedingly good.
at bite.
wire: or phone,
GEORGIA MARKETBULLETIN:
cepted for mailing at speeial rate of postage for in Sec-
mence to move by the middle of June which will be seme-
- awd about the same to-day, and I think that it will be better
Cabbage are moving = through this market at $10.00 S
: these marieis will be able to supply truck or car lot quani-.
- We have listed for sale about 1 060 bushels of ear corn
Growers or Pues wanting information may wine,
ET BULLETIN 2
HOW TO FIGURE YOUR 1938
- CONSERVATION CROP
PAYMENTS
Payments for soil-building practices under the 1938
AAA. Farm Program will be made up, to a
for each participating farm, -and in most cases these payments
will cover a substantial part.of the cost of the practices,
Frank C. Ward, state administrative officer for the Agricul-
tural Adjustment Administration, said today.
This means, Ward said, that the program offers every
farmer an opportunity to adopt practices that will build up
and conserve the soil, and Setos him pay the cost. The farm-
er reaps the benefits ef more productive land and a better
balanced system of farming that is designed to help him ob-
tain more adequate supplies of food and feed for home use.
The plan of payments for soii-building practices has
been compared with the establishment of a reserve fund for
each farmer participating in the program. This fund is the
amount of money to which his farm is entitled for soil-build-
ing practices and he can earn the entire amount by carrying
out the prescribed practices. The grewing of cover crops,
terracing establishment and improvement of pastures and
stripcropping are among these Sees for roe the farm-
er will be paid.
The maximum amount of aid for scil-building practices
on a farm is calculated from four items, as follows: (1) 70
cents per aere for all cropland in excess of 1% times the
cotton, flue-cured and Burley tobacco acreage allotments,
plus other individual crop acreage allotments and sugancane
for sugar acreage; (2) $1.50 per acre for the average acreage
of commercial vegetables on the farm in 1986 and 1937; (3)
$2.00 per acre for the commercial orchards of the farm Jan-
uary 1, 1938; and (4) 25 cents per acre for fenced non-crop
open pasture land in excess of one-half of the erepland.
The sum of the amounts calculated for the four above
items on any farm is the total amount that will be paid for
approved soil-building practices.
EXAMPLE
Assume a farm has 806 acres of cropland and 64 acres of
noen-crep pasture, with a eotton allotment of 18 acres, a flue-
cured tobacco allotment of 2 acres, 2 acres of commercial
vegetables and 2 acres of commercial orchards. The cropland
qualifying for payment of 70 cents per acre would be that in
excess of 1% times the cotton and flue-cured tobacco allot-
ments, or 5@ acres; and the pasture land qualifying fer pay-
ment of 25 cents per acre would be teat in excess of half of -
the cropland. or 24 acres. The payment for soil-building
practices on this farm would be calculated as follews:
Cropland, S90 5% 10. ee $35.00
Commercial vegetables, 2 x 1.50 - 3.00
Commercial orchards, 2 x 2.00, 4.00
Nen-crop pasture, 24 x .25 - 0. 6.00
In the case of the above farm, $46 would be the maximum
amount the farmer cute earn by carrying out soil-building
practices.
The rate of payment for carrying out soil-building prac-
tices is $1.50 per practice unit. A unit is a yardstick for
| -measuring the farmers performance in connection with the
_ Various practices. Fer instance, the construction of 200 feet
of terrace counts as one unit, and the seeding of an acre of
lespedeza counts as one unit, If a farmer constructs 2,000
feet of terrace, that performance is equivalent to 10 units,
and, at the rate of $1.50 per unit, the payment would be
$15; or, if he seeds five acres of lespedeza, that amount of
performance is equivalent te five units and the payment
would be $7.50.
To earn the maximum payment of $48 in the above ex-
ample, the farmer would have to earry out 32 practice units
($48 divided by $1.50 per unit). In any of the states of the
Southern Region he would have seventeen practices to choose
from in completing his 32 units. Details and specifications |
may be obtained by any farmer from his county agent.
Following is a list of the practices and their wnit values:
Establishment of permanent pasture, one acre equals
two units.
Seeding biennial, perennial or winter legumes, one acre
equais one unit.
Seeding lespedeza, crotalaria, ryegrass,
annual sweetclover, one acre equals one unit.
Manure crops or cover crops, one acre equals one unit
(when such crops are turned under on commercial vegetable
farms, each acre counts as two units), .
Interplanted summer legumes (not havested ), two aeres
equal one unit.
Application of at ieaat two tons per acre of straw, or
equivalent, to commercial vegetables and commercial
orchards, one acre equal one unit.
Planting trees, one acre equals five units. j
Cultivating, protecting and maintaining trees planted be-
tween January 1, 1934, and January 1, 1938, one acre equals
two units.
sesbania or
Contour listing or furrowing non- crop land, four acres
equal one unit.
Contour stripcropping, four acres equal one unit.
Seeding timothy or redtop : or mixture, two acres equal
one unit.
Reseeding pasture, use of each 10 pounds of seed equals
one unit.
Application of 16 percent superphosphate (or equivalent)
to permanent pastures and specified legumes and grasses,
300 pounds equal one unit.
Application ground limestone, 1,500 pounds: equal one
unit.
Application basic slag or rock phosphate to permannt
pastures and specified legumes and grasses, 500 pounds
equal one unit.
; lL Coniour ridging pasture, 750 linear feet equal one unit,
- Terracing, 200, linear feet eave! one unit.
fet
specified amount
| first class often sacrifice
| property.
j but even in bad years with
i ings is expected during
jiate spring and early S
seasonally reduced.
Monday, May
| Farmers Golden
Henor the Lord wi
i substance and with
1 firstfruits of all thine
i crease. Pro. 39.
| He which soweth |
| ly shall reap also spa
| and he which sewet
tifully shall reap also
| tifully. 2 Cor. 96.
+ Upon the first day
| week let every one o
diay by him in store, a
| hath prospered. him.
16.2. :
Ged is not ee
forget your work and
{ of love, which ye
shewed toward his nai
{ that ye have minis
the saints and do min
Heb, 6.10.
FARM BRIEI
Although there is no she
ing line, tebacco grower
divided into two general
those who iry to grow the
bacco and those who try to
best quality tobacco, Thos
for greater preduction by
more acreage than a
Under the marketing quot
0 by tobacco growers and
ered by the Agricultural
ment Administration the
growers are encouraged
quality growers. Weath
tions often affect tobacco
care most farmers can
good tobacco,
A seasonal increase in hog
June, as the market mov
1937 fall pigs gets underway
volume, In view of the pro
inerease in marketings an
tinued weak consumer di
Bureau of Agricultural |
says that some further
hog prices appears probab
Fer the remainder of th
hog marketing year up to
1, 1938, marketings will be
ably larger than a year eg
this increase will be parti
by the smaller storage |
pork and lard. it is expe
prices of hogs during the
year will average consider
er than those of last ear. E
erate price advance may
late summer when suppli
Indications are that i
be numerious throughout
try this year and will do c
damage to crops and vegeta
less controlled by farmers
POTATOES FOR
5 bu. Lookout Mountain,
potatees. Not mailabdle.
Hyde, Cumming, Rt. ca
FOR SALE
Several tons, bright
and Bermuda hay, $10.00 to
ton. C. H. Ogletree, Cray
ville, '
About 7,00C bu. Cokers-
and Full Grain oats for
. Some ready May 15th. F.
houn, Unadilla.
Cured Meats For
6 old time Hickory cu
about 22 lbs. average. ;
Harold Matthews, 10 Lak
Dr., Rt. 2, Atlanta.
Old fashion Brooks
country cured, smoked
wood, 28c lb. M. O. on
~ Hutchinson, Quitman,
Selected Pork Hickory
link sausage, 35c Ib. del i
or more. William hes
man,
Oak smoked, c
hams, 30c lb., wt. 8
$27.50 ewt.; sides. an
20c lb., wt. 8
oe. J. L,
by Hamilton Ralls to the 100th
rsary Meeting of the Richmond.
aty Agricultural Club, Augusta.
the pressure groups representing selfish
such which make it impossible for this
state and nation to-act in the general
for the long view, but pressure groups
and reinforced by political machines.
from those who are intransigent or radical
hey have nothing to lose. It is, therefore,
le class insecurity that free gowernment
uld recognize this: fundamental conclusion
with it as a basis of our study of present-
ronmental. problems. I offer it te you this:
ys a basis for this short diseussion of our
blem in. its relation to the seeurity of our
nation.
all mans fight for security was and is the
western democracy. As these undier-privi-
pressed. men. came to this new country im
_ days seekingthis security they were or
farmers of necessity. It seems well for us to
they and their children of sueceeding gene~
ave found and maintained this security
, why not?
sake of argument, at. least, let us say
middle class producers of agricultural
have neither found nor maintained this
an equal opportunity under the present
system, If this is a fact, then it is the sensi-
for us to go ahead and continue to fight
. situation is corrected.
a governmental. problem because the very
nat people bound themselves: together im
ratie government. was the hope that the
aent would: protect the rights and opportuni-
each and every individual and elass: of its
ip. Its permanent concern should therefore
ose im the middle condition, Free men with
hats im their owm living, whether it be a
a shop, or a job; mem like these alone cam
a free society.
other hand, many people take the opposite
vy say, This is not a problem of govern-
e all have an equal opportunity as it iss
rouble lies in the individual or group itself;
had the right: stuff-in them they would! go
take what belongs to them.
. viewpoint be true, alli criticism of efforts:
been made for a change are well founded
: give you a sample of the arguments being
upport of this view. I quote from Henry
Return to Religion: x
d it has seemed for the past several years
the whole country were suffering, ai radical
y: complex. We have blamed our misfortune
kers,, on Wall, Street, om the Republicans
mocrats, on the delinquincy of foreign
on the capitalistic system, om the rieh;, on
ata over-productionin fact, on every-
pt ourselves and our own! past follies and
ell as, high estate: :
taim plans: for sovial reform: have; in reeen
ed) on: this: psychological wealiness in so: many
he plans I refer to are: those calculated: to
the individual not only against his own
passions and bad! habits, but against the
ies of life generally. Millions of people
to plan their personal or family economy, are
siastic for a planned national: economy:
r as such social reforms become a perma
t of the social structure, they will destroy
people they are interested in saving. The
the individual of the responsibility for
f and his own. deeds. It is the same mechanism
we' see operating in families, where parents:
1e' to assume responsibility for their children
hey should: be independent. What happens to
ld will happen to a nation: of citiwens:
ne of these reforms have been: labeled! as ef-
1 behalf of the forgotten men. Psychologically,
forgotten man is the man who forgets: him-
1d who delegates the responsibility for his
s to. others. =a
thor goes. further in. arguing that the real
2 sayst :
normal person may require temporary as-
_ medically, spiritually or financially.. The
on made many independent people tempo~
elpless. But to: convert such difficulties into
Farm Problem In Its Re
Security of the State and the Nation
and freedom because they have not had and |
fishness which has governed. individuals of |
ned tremendous: followings: because they |
my of this destruction is the process of de-
S a return. to: the principles. of the Christian: .
aneous For Sale|
Miscellaneous: For Sale
a permanent program of dependence by the state
is a crime against the individual and those who must
support him, :
_. The religious doctrines of Christ were concen-
trated on the individwal and not on a social order.
We are rediscovering Jesus as a far more profound
thinker than. the popular leaders of today. For Hiny
the important social order was the Kingdom of God,
to which people were admitted on their individual
merits and not because the Kingdom owed them @
living.
While not indifferent to the natural comforts
of life, Christs great contribution was to make in-
dividuals independent of and superior to any ma-
terial. standard of living and loyal to the laws of
their personal integrity. In this respect, He was the
prototype of the pilgrims who settled New England, |
the pioneers of the covered mi, of the wealthy
Washington at Wally. Forge, LLineolns: educating
himself before a log fire and of the galaxy of men
and women who meke the history of America
something we look back on with a glow.
We can subscribe wholeheartedly to a good portion
of this doctrine because it came to us: with the blood
of our fathers and mothers witose faith was, that
with Gods help, they could take care of themselves
if the government which they had established
would see to it that they had an equal opportunity.
But to use an argument like this against a new
social order, without first proving that a new social
and ecoromic order is not needed, is nothing short
of using the teachings of Christ for propaganda
purposes.
The first change that comes over a man when he
forms: a partnership with the Master is that he wants
ani equal! chance himself and is willing: for everyone
else to: have one but he is at a tremendous disad-
vantage, economically speaking, if he adopts these
principles, while the rest of the folks: with whom. he
has to deal wont do it or his government. wont
make them do it. . 2
Did not. the pilgrims: come over te this country
to establish a new social order? Did not, after 2
while, things become unbalanced: im the New Eng-
land states and their children have to take to the
covered wagons and move out into the wilderness:
seeking: a new social order? =:
Washington at Walley Forge fought for and estab-
lished a new social order, and Abraham Lincoln,
doubtless, before his log fire, brooding over His
own lack of opportunity, carved! out: for presentation:
to: this: nation the facti that it cannot! live half slave
and half free. Abraham Lincolm freed the slaves
by force of arms in the hands: of United States
soldiers and contrary to # ruling of the Supreme
Court that it was unconstitutional. He took time
later io change the Constitutiom to fit the ded..
It is a pretty good idea to look into the motives:
of certain individuals and groups. when they talk
too loud! and long; about the sacredness of the Con-
/ stitution: and the Supreme Court. Nine times out of
ten they are trying te make us think they are
terribly hurt to attract our attention. away from
their nest of eggs. which are hatching elsewhere
under government protection : =
Tn an address to the Editorial Council of the
Religious Press; Henry A. Wailace, Secretary of
Agriculture, said: We are coming into a world
where it is scientifically and mechanically possible
to have a superabundance of the good things of
life, At the present time we have an: agricultural
and industrial plant which with the labor that is |.
lying idle, could easily produce twice what is now
|* being, produced. With the inventions which are
clearly within our grasp during the next ten years;
we could easily produce twice as much; The short-
comings: are in the selfishness of the human heart
which: still: holds. to: the: idea: that there is: a funda-
mental. and essential. shortage: of the goed. things: of
life for which we must: all serambie, and partly in
our inability: to: work owt ani economic system: based!
on. fundamental justice rather than superficial and
legal. justice:
The prophets: of old had: this idea oft social justice
very strongly im their hearts. Look through: Micah
and: read: the Sermon: on: the: Mount once more, to
see how this religious message of social justice;.
andi this vision: of living; with abundance} has come
down through: the ages. oe :
Is our spiritual life today awake to the need
for social justice, and have we souls rich enough
to) endure abundance? I do not know. I think that
is: the challenge of the Church: today. The Church
should be afire with the kKeenness of its. desire to
bring. about social justice.
_Tt is. the job of the government, as I see it. ter
devise and: develop: the: social machinery which will
work out the imp#cations. of the social. message of
the old prophets: and of the Sermon on: the Mount;
but it remains the opportunity of the Church to fit
mens hearts and minds with the spirit and the
meaning, of these great visions, They have meanimg.
today to am amazing degree, if only we will look
\ about us with eyes clear of prejudice and greed.
Abraham Lincoln wrote: I see in the near futuse
a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes:
me to tremble for the safety of my country. Corpo=
rations have been enthroned an era of corruption
in high places will follow, and the money power
of the country will endeavor to prolong, its reign
by working upon the prejudice of the people until
the wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the
republic is destroyed. ees
This prophecy has in part come true.. These corpo
rations are with usi today. They have acquired the
benefits and power of great accumulations of capital
and cooperative skill so that their operations have
talken on a nation wide scope and involve the securi~
ty of millions of people. Certainly the farmers of
the Constitution never foresaw that the clavwses
- protecting a persons right to life, liberty amd
property would be invoked: to protect the privileser
and often to avoid the responsibilities of these iny~
personal and immortal billion-dollar corporations.
We may well consider whether our laws should not
recognize the distinction: ae
The concentration of econoriic power if our
great corporations has deprived the individual of
any chance to bargain with them on an equal foot-
ing. The smalb unorganized. stock holders have ne
real voice at a board of directors meeting. The
laborer who. goes to work. past a line of men apply~
ing for jobs at the same plant feels the weakness
of his: position, The white-collared employee whe
works for a corporation which he knows: has: art
informal agreement with its competitors not to hive
each others meni thinks twice before he asks: for
# raise or resigns lis job, The farmer is: equally
~ Hheligiess; asi one off several million, he sells his
produce at the market to the few corporations
- which buy from hin, andi as a consumer of city
goods he is obliged to buy on 2 take itl or leave it
basis, The consumer who doesnt! like the way in
which he is: treated by some electric light company
can either make the best of it or go back to larmips
This does not mean that the individual is alwaye :
right and the corporation always wrong, but i
does mean! that the individual is no match for the _
corporate enterprise. He has about as much chance
as if he were dealing with ai regiment single-handed.
Capitalism was built upon the principle of free :
and fair competition between free and evenly
matched men, but this has become a farce in the
face of monopolies. No: individual can Hold its ow
against. a billiondollar corporation. :
Farmers and workers: cannot. hold their owm under
the present system without government aidi Im |
fact, the pressure groups with the aid of political
machines built. up with those who have nothing: te
lose have been able to secure preferential treat-
ment by the government at the expense of the
farmer, the workman! and the consumer. :
For example, mosts all. industry in: this: country
operates behind high tariff walls. An import duty
is levied on most: all) manufactured: products coming
into this: country. That is, ins effect, however,. a tax?
or? world trade, because it is a tax on goods comings
in to pay for goods going out. Therefore, those
of our people who! produce for export) rexilly pay
this: tax. Our cotton exports: make up: about fitty
per cent of the nations totalihence; the cotton
farmers of the south actually Have beer paying titty
per cent of this-importi duty to protected individuals
and corporations: of this: country out of the receipts
of an unprotected world price for raw cotton. Oh the
other hand, cotton mills: have bought their cotton:
supplies at world: prices; manufactured: and sold
the finished goods. tothe American consuming, pub-
lie behind the protection of high tariff walls: Surely
some of this: protection money should go: to: the
cotton prodiucer andi to the cotton mill worker. The
cotton farmer hasns' gotton it becatise he has: sold:
his: entire: crop at: the world price and apparently
the milli worlser is. still out- in: the: cold? because
he: is: the poorest paid worker ini America, whereas
his employers: have the most protection: Sabet
This: is: at goverimental problem as: welll ys: all!
others like iti Shall we continue to fight for their
solution? Or shall we turi back to! a) period! of
wandering: in the wilderness: of self-interest?, untill -
@ newer and stronger generation! has growtt' up? tor
succeed us which willl have the faitt) and! courage
to push: on until: equal and! exact justice is: attained!
for all classes of our people?
I, like Caleb: and: Joshua of old). believe that we
can:do:this.job:ourselves. Until our system is changed
to: a free trade basis, I ber that we* continue to
demand: that our government do: whatever is: neces~
sary to attain this end!
Miscellaneous For Sale
Miscellaneous: For Sale
peppermint, spear -
orsemint, balm; hoar-
Mayapple roots, 15 lb:; yel-
low root, 10 Ib:; bear foot, 12
Atichokes,. 4c Ib; thorniess
raspberries, 2: doz. $1.00; garlic,
Yellow root, Mayapple: sassa-|'
fras; poke root, 15' 1bi; red plum
Colts: foot, heartleaf,. queem of
the meadow, garlic, spearininh,
bi. and sng. tansy, colts
doz, bunches; yellow:
ssafras,; poke; blackber-
wild: cherry bark, 25c Ib;
Mrs, Wi M. Holloway,
epm. Rt, 1.
rattle, oke' root, wild
,. 20 Ihb.;
t. dbi, single tansy, yar
therfew; hoarhound), 25c
its; dill seed} 10 spoon+
an
White: Dahionega Rt. 1)
Se doz, whites run-
~ beans; 5 . cupfull
Teague; Lawrenceville.
catnip; |
Ist atid 2nd! zones; Miss}!
doz. bulbs, 5c; catnip, |
Ib; gensing root, 20c Ib. Add post-
age. Elbert. Patterson, Talking:
Rock,
Catnip; elecom-
hoarhound)
payne, garlic bulbs, houseieak, 5c
bunchs: spearmint, 10e@ doz; com~- |
large; long: hot.
frey; 106 bunch; long
pepper plants; 10 doz. Adi) post-
age, Exc. for balm: andi yarrow
plants: Mrs; R. I. Williams,
Cumming.
Rattle root, 25 Ib:; 5 Ibs: $1.00;
lady slipper, 50c lb; Mos: w WN.
Barrett, Lula, Rt. 2:
Yellow root, 12e 16; wild: cher- |
ry and sweet gum Bark, 25 iby;
garlic; 25e doz Mrs: Sallie Belle
Elan. Gaihesville. Rt, 6.
50 C; mint, 50 C; horseradish,
'95 doz.; Exc; 10) lbs, nice dried!
apples: for setting of Australian!
or African: Guinea, white eggs:
Mis; E. Heaton; Mineral Biuff.
Lots of large Martin and Long
andi postage; also seed: of each
kind, 10c large pkg: del! Mrs. A.
Hi Price, Locust. Grove.
Grub? or Star root, Mayapple
root, 40e 1b; 2) lbs, T50;. pepper-
mint plants; 30 GC; catnip: dbl
tansy, garlic,
Eaton, Dahlonega. Rt. 1.
12: bu: blacks walnuts. well dried
and hulled! $1.00i bu. FOB: Ay. M.
Handle: dipper gourdsj. 3 for 25,
Gi for 250: T. Py
Keener, Raiun Gap: Rt 1.
'Falli grapes; crabapple; 15e ea. ;.
blackberry roots; dewberry; 250
lb} Charles Everett Ray: Ellijay)
Rt, 3). Box: 9
Black waihut meats, fresh! and):
clean; 306 Ib: postpaid: Mrs, Tree)
Gollins, Clarkesville. Star Rt
Catnip, peppermint, horse-
mint, hoarhound,
-baim, yarrow, garlic bulbs, 25c
doz. bunches; sage plants, 10c
ea: 3 for 25c. Mrs. Spur Hollo-
way; Dahlonega: Rt.. 1.
Horseradish; 5e bunch; yellow:
root, 20@ Ib);. bearfoot. 36c 1b.;,
loumpkin: seed} 10e cupfuls gar'lie, |:
2 doz: 5c, Mrs). Henry Euler, Bit
Jdijay, Rt. 3, se =
spearming, |
350 for a shoebox. full; horserad+:
igh; 10 bunch, | Exe. for Half
Runner beans; Fred: Kown
| White: :
- 2500' tons stable manure for
sale: Jake Patterson; Jr, Atlane
ta. P? OF Box 1078: j
Herbs. for sale or exc. for peax
nuts or strawberry plants, Jolla
Richardson; Robertstown:
White feed sacks, 100 1h. CayN
free of holes, 8 and 10 ea. Mrs,
J C. Lumsden) Taitetton:
t hy wagon; running: order for
sale: S: G. Yeager, Moreland. Rk
j 1. =
FOR SALE.
: 3 aks tobacco flues for 15 ft.
rH: used 1 season, well cared
_ for, $20. 00; 26 M. tebacco sticks,
mearly new, 1 cent a stick. W.
J. Morgan, Stillmore.
International riding cultivator,
$25.00; also B. C. P. mixed pigs,
6 wks. old April 18th, and Honey
Drip cane seed, Be Ib. A. B.
Gifford, Rising Fawn. Rt. 2.
-2-Walking or Riding cultivator,
$25.00 ea. or exc. for hogs or ear
corn, W. E. Stewart, Swords,
Hillside turner, $10.00 cash. or
exc.for Riding cultivator. Walter
London, Cleveland, Rt. 5,
- Good used binder, reaper, rake,
harrow and cultivator combined;.
*iside turners, also blacksmith
{Ws and other equipment, rea-
Aably priced; also 1% bu. pop
corn, cheap. Mrs. E. Spence, At-
anta. 130 W. Wesley Rd. Ch
Some tobacco sticks, $5.00 M.
B. F. Latham, Haag ie 3200
model CC,
Meqiipped with power take-off, 1
McCormick Deering binder with
10 ft. blade and power take-off.
Both in good shape for $650.00.
Clenton Bell, Warrenton,
John Deere 2 h. wagon, good
nd., sell or exc. for good 1 horse
agon or cattle, Oo. B. Francis,
Alpharetta.
Continental eS Seed shape,
cheap for cash or trade for any-
thing of value. J. W. Fortner,
Thomaston, Rt, 1.
1 power hay baler in perfect
cond,, for sale. S. E. Vandiver,
Deering binder, good shape,
good -apron, $85.00. Take $35.00
worth of hogs and rest cash;
tle Giant cane mill, $35.00, or
beans. Ben F, Keiler, Greenville.
No, 10 DeLaval cream sepa-
r, good cond., $30.00, or exc.
, Sam James, Oakfield.
: International 2h. riding cul-
tivator, fair cond.., with discs,
defenders and sweeps, $12.00 FOB
W. N. Hawkins, Social Circle.
cond, 22 xX 36. Make pest
WwW s. Gibbons, Rome, Rt. 3.
ry. linden, first class running cond.
$800.00; also 30 h. p. Diesel eng.
(cost. $150.00 to put in running
John Deere riding pee
No. 1 cond., with all plows, $25. 00
E. Burns, Cochran. Rt. 4,
eLaval separator, No. 12, for
le. Miss Genie en Au-
gusta, Ri, 3.
Racine thrashing oe Gues
ady to run. Thrash wheat, oats,
peanuts or shelled corn, Cheap.
, . King, Wrens.
Combination planter with all
achments, sev. turning plows
different names, cultivators,
ain and with racketts, 1 and 2
wagon in good cond. Corre-
spondence sdlicited, J, R. Roller,
College Park.
Chattanooga, turn plow No. 72,
ood running shape, $5.00 FOB.
A. J, Pope, Tallapoosa.
~ Combination. cultivator, Ride
or : Walk, adl attachments, and
her equipment for sale. Write.
Whos. H, Withers, Austell. Rt. 1
2 and 1 h. wagons, windmill,
lage feed cutter, corn shelier,
harrow and a cider mill
cas press, gas. eng., 2, 4 and 10
ex pinen. C. A. Ruggles, Atlan~
ue cutter, disc plow,
am. single plows, cotton planter,
guano distributors, Mrs. A. Ss.
olley, Morris Station.
Fairbanks Morse gas. eng., 7%
. used only 8 days. $100.00
k sale, J, C. Stewart Atlanta.
08 Stewart Ave. S. W.
Cletrac tractor with power
ke-off and governor, good
ape, $100.00. Major J. P. Mit-
ell, Rome.
Blacksmith outfit for % cost
ew set. John N. Moore, Ath-
284 Nantahala Ave.
rdson tractor and other
a. good cond., $350.00.
Wiley hoe Axson. Rt. 1, Box
ving. hammer feed mill, No.
16 DeLaval cream. separator, long
em roller mill, complete, 48
DeLoach grist mill, horizontal
type. E. T, Boswell, Jr., Siloam.
A 21 x 33 Case grain thrash
complete with self feeder and
cond.,
3 ee for sale, E, L. Davis, tee
ae
oS
R
35)
a.
Se.
S
Oo
ae
pe
oe
a
oe
Sie
=
re oe I.
L.
Bufor ee
hiteh. E. C, Hixon, Greensbora.
| hogs.
-Lawrenceville, RFD 3.
Clipping cows,
tor, good as new, $75.00, del. in
rade for hogs and seed velvet |.
/ painted, for $75.00 at my place.
little, $22.50, also 14% tons Runner
FOB, or trade for 50 M. P. R.
plow, almost new, $10.00; 2 h.
plete outfit, $40.00. Exe. for peas
p. 12 plow eon and other| Bearden, Palmetto,
.| plete gin outfits at bargain. Also
h. p. Hercules gas. eng. guar. to
able prices. Mrs. T. A. Lauder-
blower, used 3 yrs. in first class
also 1 Case Binder, used
.| immediately. Write or see. Also
:| best. price, del: my barn. Mrs,
FOR SALE.
inery|
- Midget Marvel flour mill, now-
in operation, cheap. H. G, Van-
diviere, Canton,
McCormick 8 ft. binder, Tractor
No. 12 DeLaval separator, also
electric churn, 11 volts and De-
Laval milking machine for sale.
Mrs. C. M. Cheney, Shellman.
A 8% f. John Deere hay rake,
nearly new, used 1 season, $35.00.
or exc. for good milch cow or
R. V. Hunter, Abbeville.
Rt. 2.
2 h. Cultivator with 4 shovei
plows, fairly good cond., $12.50
cash, or exc. for anvil and vice
in good cond. (Can be seen at
B. S. Graigs on highway, 1% mi.
So. Lawrenceville.) W. N. Poole,
Small wheat thresh. Can be run
with 6 h, p. eng., thresh oats,
wheat sorghum and beans, in per-
fect cond. used last season, $65.00
FOB, Alex Barfield, Louisville,
Rta;
Stewart No. 1 ball bearing
hand power clipping machine for ;
horses and mules. }
$6.00. Mis. Relly Reinstein, Sa-
vannah, Rt. 2,
1 Grist mill, 42 in. rocks, good
running order, $80.00. Quincy
Durden, Adrian. Rt. 1.
20. in. Meadows grist mill, 8
H. P., gas. International eng, for
sale. = W. Bryant, Macon Rt. 4.
Standard Walsh garden trac-
Ga.; Farmall No. 12 mower, good
cond., $85.00; Cole planter, $6.00;
1 h. fertilizer distributor, $3. 00.
R. M. Vocke, Valdosta. Rt. 1.
Grain separator, New Racine,
hand feed, windstack, good cond.
$200.00. J. J. Sessa eee Mar-
tin. Rt. 2.
MecCormick-Deering cultivator
and planting attachment for F.
20 tractor, good shape and newly
S. H. Woodall, Calhoun. Rt, 3.
Some Fordson tractor parts at
about 1-3 of original cost. G. G,
Ridgway, Royston,
1 horse cultivator, used very
| Peanut hay, $10.00 per ton, Ed
Preston, Pelham.
tntarnational Harvester Riding
cultivator, good shape, $50.00
potato plants or 80 bu. good corn,
G, E, Duffey, Palmetto. Rt.-1..
2 horse Oliver No. 13 turn
Chattanooga cane mill and 10
ft. copper pan, skimmers, com-
and O-Too-Tan beans, G; C.
Edmondson, Temple. Rt. 1.
International riding cultivator,
good cond., with full set of disc..|
$25.00, also 5 tons good, bright,
sound Pea hay, $16.00 ton. JG,
Beall, Louisville,
motor, other by hand, thresh
peas, syrup seed, $12.00 and $9.00
respectively. Swap for corn. Mrs.
Fannie A. Owens, Larenceville.
Rt. 1,
Regular Farmall tractor, newly
overhauled, good cond., $300.00
cash, also light stump puller or
skidder. Wray Smith, Sparta.
One 15-30 tractor, 1-8 ft., I. H.
C. binder, 2-60 saw winship gins,
Munger cleaner, 2 box press, fan
and flues, cheap, J. T. _Gaissert,
Albany. Rt. 1,
12 and 15 h. p, steam engines,
One needs some repairs, $50.00
and $25.00 respectively. Clyde
Two 3-70 second- hand. com-
hydraulic belt pump for cotton
press. T, V. Phillips, Royston.
1-2 h, p. Briggs and Stratton
gag eng., good running cond., 3
run, $20.00 ea. FOB. N. N. Lester,
Hiram. RFD 2.
Advance-Rumely grain thrash-
er and belts in good cond., $200.00
also good Fordson parts reason-
able. W. E. hae Martin, Rt.
2,
2h. wagon, 2 horse turning
plow and other items, at reason-
milk, Mt. Airy.
1-42 in set mill rocks, good
cond., complete, also 1 Bull Dog
Mac ker, motor. Make best offers.
LVen Moore, Suwanee. ~
. Fordson tractor in running
shape, $125.00. J. P. Anderson,
Atlanta, 423 Atlanta Ave. S. E.
Ma 4246.)
Second- Hand Hackney
WANTED
Want good used hay mower
want 100 bu. good corn. State
Howard, Stephens.
| Whippoorwill peas. Also for sale,
| outfit in good location. Earl J.
for Dairy purposes, Major. Knight,
-Decatur, 316 East Lake Drive.
mill for 30 in. upright mill, and
pay cash difference. E, Callas,
7 BROODERS. FOR SALE 7
2 pea thrashers, one Biiied by |-
hover, 400 cap.
and finishing battery broiler out-
poe White, College Park. Rt.
hola nde ee a De agi.
Want 1 good a Bnsilage
cutter of popular mate, WwW.
Want joo hand hay rake,
International preferred. Exe. hay
for same. C. H. Ogletree, Craw-
fordville.
Want trade 2 gilts, 1 boar hog,
boar and sow, for Riding Culti-
vyator and cotton, corn and bean}
planter, in good cond., not over
50 miles. R. E, Hyde, ener
ville: Rt. 2,
Want Windmill, 30-40. ft., in. or
near Brooks or Thomas County,
also want a Garden tractor and
tools in good cond. Describe
fully, state lowest cash prices.
R. A. Caldwell, Facevilie.
Want some special parts for a
Farmall tractor. Write. W. J. Car-
ruth, Farmington.
Want corn cleaner and sepa-
rator, big enough to take care
of 2 sets of rocks, Ey . Nor-
ton, Wrens.
Want I horse wagon. State price
and cond, J, F. Chandler, Con- t
yers.
Want used Stricker: Case, Hart-
Parr or Farmall. Give descrip-
tion and cash price. E, K. Over-
street, Sylvania.
Want blower (mall one will
do) for Blacksmith shop. State
make, cond, and price. L. D.
Goodman, Morrow,
Want good McCormick Deer-
ing 7 or 8 ft. tractor binder.
R. D. Tatum, Palmetto.
Want 100 ft. & or 9 in. seed
conveyor auger for cotton gin.
H. N, Ramsey, Springfield,
Exe, Jumbo 2 h. ripper, used
very little for Perfection ripper
in good shape, or will exc. for
an Oliver turn plow, No. 10, A-1
shape, $8.50, FOB. W. E, Garrett,
Bowdon,
Want lease or pay good Gin
ho Ret,
Beavers, Marietta.
Want smal horizontal tube
boiler for dairy purposes. Major
co: Decatur, 316 East Lake
. De 4347.. :
5 Sent radiator and some paris
for a 10-20 I. H. C. tractor. J, P.
Alexander, Louisville. : ;
Want Martin ditcher, 5 ft.
blade, or complete ditcher, State
cond. and lowest price. Joel E,
Stembridge, Ella Gap.
Want small horizontal bor
Want to trade 36 in. old style
Gainesville, 360 Oak St... -
- INCUBATORS AND
Automatic Blue Flaine oli
brooder, practically new, 32 in.
7.50 postnaid.
Jesse Hamby, Greenville. Rt. 3
Electrie inc., 50 cap., used Enter
good cond., $3 08 and 50 chick
cap. electric battery brooder free.
Carl Crider, Crawford, Box 102,
Complete 100 per week starting |.
fit, also Ardnt 12 hen laying bat-
tery. In good cond., reasonably
priced. E. J. Williams, Rocky
Ford. gs =
Littl Brown Hen ine., good
cond, (used 3 times only), $3.50
plus postage. Exc. for 75 Reds or
Barred Rock chicks. Lamar ae
cher, Jackson. Rt. 5.
Super Hatcher inc., 520 egg
cap., good cond. Cused 2 seasons),
$20.00 at my place. No check. J.
N. Dell, Nicholls. Rt. 3.
ee City inc., $8.50 postpaid,
or exc. for 100 piddies, any breed.
Ac Pet: Holloway, Cophtown.
Buckeye Blue Flame eae
good as new, used once, 500 cap.
Value $15.00. Exc. for Beef type
yearlings, female preferred. State
breed and age. Mirs. C. A. Black,
The Rock. Rt. 1. ;
Mammoth 800 egg cap. Inc.
cheap for cash, or swap for hogs
or calves; also have eggs for
sale, 2 cases weekly, 25c doz. FOB.
S. D. Harrison, Kathleen.
._ Miller Inc., 600 cap., turnimg
trays, $15.00; 150 cap. Super
Hatcher, turning trays, $8.00, J.
S. Maddox, Hampton. RFD 2.
Incubators and Brooders
Wanted
Want old make, 400 egg size
Queen Inec., inside measure 30 in.
X 51% in. State cond., cap., and
best cash price. David "M. Moore,
Eastanollee,
Want Incubator, oil or electric.
Must be bargain. E. R. Smith,
postpaid.
_ SEED FOR SALE
60 lbs. Texas Ribbon Cane
seed, 7c lb. Le. F. McCoy, Tai-
botton, Rt. 4,
Salsify or vegetable oyster, 10
pkt.; 15 oz; dill, parsnips, and
carrot seed, 10c pkt. Postpaid.
-R. H. Long, Culverton,
Farly Market Queen watermel-
on seed, ripens in 60 days, 10%ec
small pkt.; 75c per half pt. del.
Luther Norris, Hafrison,
Old time Indian and White
Indian peach seed, plant.in May,
33c C seed del. Reed Fowler, Roy,
RFD.
- Colossal tomato (wt. over 4
Ibs.) White Beauty, no acid, 150
seed, 25c-del. J. F. Champion,
Roy.
25 lbs. Stone Mountain water-
melon seed, 1936 crop, 50c Ib.
del. W. R. Chasteen, Locust
Grove,
Pure Stone Mountain water-
melon seed, hand picked and
dried in shade, -30e Ib.; 10 Ibs.
$2.50 del. Carl Benson, Dallas;
Rt 3
Senna seed and leaves, 12 pt.;
dill-and vine okra seed, 10c pkg.;
also nice yellow bees wax, 25c lb.
Fae Johnson, Alto.
Dill and muskmelon seed, 10c
pkg. Mrs. A. L. Dodd, Alpharet-
ta, Re. 1.
Fine peach seed, 13c M; Mam-
moth pumpkin seed, 25c for 50;
banana squash, 18 for 25c. Will
Smith, Diamond.
Vigorvine tomato seed, 25 per
200 seed. 100 vine peach seed
with each order in ae Will C.
Smith, Roy.
White tender hull corn field
bean seed, cut-shorts and others,
25c cupful postpaid. Mrs. W. W.
Anderson, Cartecay. Z
Calif. multiplying beer seed,
10 per start. Add 3c postage.
peas Sallie Floyd, Rockmart, Rt.
200 bu. 90-Day running velvet
beans, $1.00 bu. 200 bu. shelled
corn, 80c fob. Scott meeey: Davis-
boro.
Calif. multiplying beer seed,
10e start; 3 starts, 25c. Add 3c
postage. Kathleen Nolen, Rock- | -
mart, Rt. 2,
Plum peaches, 1
tin gourd seed, 5c; tbls. Florida
sweet potato seed, 1937 crop, 5c
doz. not postpaid. Exchange for
100 lb. white feed sacks. B. L.
NS
McAdams, Bremen, Rt. 2.
Calif. multiplying beer seed,
10c start; 3 starts, 25c. Add 3c
postage. Mrs. JF, Daniel, Rock-
mart, Rt. 2.
_ Ruby King pepper, gi 50 _th.;
Marglobe, wilt-r-sistant tomato,
$1.10 Ib.; New Stone, 75c lb.; cab-
bage, 85c lb.; okra, 35 Ib. Ba:
Woodliff, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Bushel Dipper and Martin
gourd seed, vine okra, mole bean,
10c pkg.; 3 for 25. Cash or ex-
change for smoking tobacco.
Jimmy Bramblett, Ellijay. Rt. 2.
Pure selected Stone Mountain
watermeion seed, treated, 50c lb.
del. B. R. Andrews, Haddock.
Prolific okra seed, bears until
frost, 10c per 2 thls.; 50c lb.;
Speckle crowder peas, 15c Ib.
Mrs. W. L. Daniel,
Dawson.
Gourd seed, grow to be 9 to
12 in. in dia.; artichokes, 15 lb.
not prepaid. Frances McAdams, |
Bremen, Rt. 2. Box 55.
White tender hull corn field
bean seed, 25c cupful; 5 cupsful,
20c cupful. Carrie Anderson,
Cartecay. ee
Hastings super-prolifie seed,
nubbed and hand shelled, ist yr.
from Hastings, fob. Geo.
Jackson, Fayetteville, Rt. 2.
Stone Mountain watermelon
seed, small lots, 20c lb.; 100 Ibs.
or more, 15 Ib.; cream crowder
peas, $2. "5 bu. Add postage. No
SS W. A. Moore, Haddock,
Brown streak Half Runner
bean seed, 25c cupful; 2 for 45e;
Kentucky Wonder, 15c cupful.
Cash. No stamps. Add postage.
~ R. Ashworth, ae Ri.
White cornfield, Big half,
White Runner and butterbean
seed, 20c cupful. Postpaid. Carl
Goss, Jasper, Rt. 2.
Sweet pimento pepper, ail
seed, old fashion muskmelon
seed, 10c thls. 3 for 25; large
yellow pumpkin seed, 15 cupful
or 2 for 25c del. Mrs. W. D. Ral-
ston, Ella, Gap.
50 lb. Dixie Belle melon seed,
hand selected, 30c Ib. Add post-
age. A. L, Brady, Rupert.
Large Mammoth sunflower
seed, 25c gt.; 75 gal. del., Mrs.
Cc. T. Hunt, Flowery Branch, Rt.
Be
corn, 4% Ib. fob. J. iE
slip shuck corn, 80c bu
yr. old; Mar-|
fob. Mrs. Jeff Marchman
Wot
SEED WANT
Want % Ib. of ea. runni
of bean seed, known
Horse and Doc ee!
200 lb. good slip Shuck
Ibs. to bu.; 80c bu. fob. E
ny, Enigma.
Red, white, orange p
corn, 15c qt. prepaid.
Bantam chickens. Paul
Hilltonia,.
Whatleys prolific
pk.; half: bu.; $1.75; $3.2
G. Whatley, Helena,
700 bu. corn in ear, T5c
my barn. Mrs. C. C. Atk
Broxton.
Bu yellow Golden Den
$1.60 fob. Marlboro and
prolific seed corn, $1.5
change. A. J. Pope, - Talla]
200 bu. nice corn in
Make offer. (Paved road
from town.) We HH: Bore
fin.
Certified Jarvis Golden
lific seed corn, $2.00 bu. fo
pk. del. R, C. Stembridge
Gap.
Pure Piedmont, ee e
corn and Marrets. Dor
ear seed corn, $1.00 pk
staple cotton: seed, 42%
bu.; $3.25 ewt. del. H.
mond, Rt. 1; Box B es
boro,
-Mosbys seed corn, ewe:
ear, prolific, long uniforr
white cob, $2.50 bu.; 75 pl
L. , Kimsey, Cornelia.
Golden Queen pop cor!
and sound, 5 lbs. 50 d
Barfield, Louisville, Rt
200 Ibs. clean, sound
Queen and 300 Ibs. ~wh
Dawson.
50 or 75 buy. 2nd yr.
W. E. Cahmbley, Miln
Pure Mexican June see
white and blue mixed,
and shelled, $1.00 pk. de
ish seed peanuts, 8 Ib.;
fob.; Honey drop cane
Ib; del.: $2.00 bu. fob. C.
ver, Barnesville, Rt. 2.
25 bu. Whatleys prolific
corn, nubbed and reclea
2%4 bu. bags, $1.50 bu. fob
10 bu, Mexican June corn,
bu. Cash with order.
Tharpe, Fort Valley.
50 Ibs. white shelled po
10 lbs. Dynamite pop
Plains.
Hand shelled, yellow pop
10c cupful or 3 cupsful, 25
dry apples, 10c lb. or 3 rs
Add postage. Mrs. Ambers
Bowdon, Rt. 2. oe :
Hastings prolific seed cor
lected ears, nubbed and s
50c pk.; $1.60 bu. Satis. -
G.. Lewis, Cornelia.
South American Gi
Corn, 5 Ib. fob. L.
Mineral Bluff. ;
COTTON SEED for
we iat and Half cotton see
, $3.00 bu. S. P. Reed
a bu. Cokers No.
land Big Boli wie
lst yr., $3.00 cwt. F.
Marshallville. :
1,000 bu. Stoneville |
cotton seed, ist yr., 75 bu
John Wilkinson, Jr., 0
ville. . es
300 bu. Cokers Clevew:
5, Ist yr., long. staple, k
at. gin, $1.00 bu. in 100
J. W. Richardson, Lithia Sp
Ries.
40 bu. Stoneville No. 2
seed, Ist yr., $1.00 bu. Ca:
| BE. McBrayer, Temple,
bu.; 90-Day speckle velvet |
$1.00 bu. Exchange for see
nuts, soy beans or pea
Duggan, Chester. :
75 bu. pure imp. Big oll
resistant cotton seed, $1.0
fob. Jewel Benson, EY. Ty.
Imp. Piedmont ped
Cleveland Big Boll No. 1
D, P. L. Exchange for
40 tons Stondvale No.
ton seed ist yr., $1.00 bu. i
$55.00 ton loaded in your
here. J, Bill Touchstone
Pure, sound and clean
100 cotton seed, 1 1-16 i
$1.00 bu. B. F. Fagan,
Stoneville No. 2 cot
ers Big Boll wilt-resistant | :
ton seed, $1.00 bu., fob.; 90c|
y home; white Half Runner |
1 order. B. A. ee
49, eee
ae SALE
ure Whips, New Eras, and
ad pea, $2.00 bu.; Brabs, $2.50
fob Lawrenceville. Clyde ee
h, Loganville.
-Too-Tan beans, fend picked
recleaned, $3.00 bu, fob. Joe
can, Vienna.
1d Ripper ee not med
sound, $2.00 bu. No person-
hecks. J. T. Perry, Hull, Be
2 u. aro peas, $2.00 bu.;
(00 bu. Brabs, $2.25 bu. in 2%
urlap bags. W. L. Reais
bu. O-Too-Tan beans, pure,
_ trashed and recleaned.
) bu. fob. Otis L. Carter,
od and sound Running
Kle peas, $2.00 bu. fob. Cash
order. FM. Meculouen.
a1 bu New Breas
kle peas, $2.00 bu.;: Brown
vders, $4.00 bu.; Brown eyed
crowders, $3.00 bu.; also
at, Iron, Brabs, Unknown
Dp. G. Johnson, The Rock,
. Whips, two hor varie-
good for hay, $2.25 bu.
Sims, Ellabelle.
bu. choice, clean, shelled,
ing velvet beans, $1.50 bu.
. S. Shingler, Ashburn.
u. Iron peas, $2.00 bu.;
Brab peas, $2.25; 50 bu.
beans, $1.00 bu.; 10 bu.
beans, $1.75 bu. in 2% bu.
Clarence E. Sasser, Bon-
5 paced Brab peas, $2.25
50 be good Mixed peas, $2
0) Taylor, Marshallville.
nd Brab_ peas, $3.00 bu.;
kle peas, $2.75 bu.; sugar
ders, 8c lb. Mrs. Ww. W. Lang,
pu. 90-Day velvet beans,
. 90c for lot. T. E. Jen-
Wrightsville. . ee
pu. cream crowder peas, $7.00
1b. also 5 bu. Whips, $10.00;
okra. seed, 25c Ib. Add post-
es J. A. Puckett, Buford,
or Boites bahs for sale.
best offer. Bobby Raytord,
Swainsboro.
d 90-Day running: velvet |:
n 214 bu. bags. 85 bu.
E. Fulford, Wrightsville.
red bunch butterbeans,
d clean, no weevils, 20c
2 Ibs. 35c; 3 lbs, 20c post-
Ga. Stamps accepted.
moW 3H: Evans, Plowery
ch, Rt. es
ushels mixed peas, $1. 75
C. Courson, Devereux.
oS, $2.15 bu.; Red Rippers,
New Eras, $1.90; Irons,
sound, $1.75 bu.; Brown-
crowders, $1.85; mixed, 6
file, $1.65. Robert F. Hill,
le.
u. good, sound Brab peas
4% bu. bags, $2.15 fob. El-
E. C. Hill, Ellaville.
ab peas, $2.00 bu.; Mung
Golden Queen pop corn,
postpaid. V. C.. Ray,
amaugh, Rt. 2.
ashion speckle. bunch but-
. R. Smith, Buford, Rt. 1.
. No. 1 Tron peas, in 2%
ap bags, $2.00 bu.. fob.
e on request. R. F. Scar-
Clay mixed peas; 25 bu.
or Whips, $1.75 bu.; 50
Stoneville cotton seed, 60c
1D, C: W. Coleman, Deve-
00-Tan pean, $4.00 bu;
ey and Brown Sugar
10c ib. Charles
, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1,
Bi: No, 1 recleaned Iron|
2.25 bu. E. J. Lavender, Rt.
ster.
yu. Sugar Crowder peas, $2.00
y place. P. B. Stephens,
prings.
ine O-Too- Tan beans for
1937 crop. Robin Adair,
Mountain, Rt. 1, Box 160.
oo-Tan beans, 1937 crop,
bu. Joe Morgan, Vienna.
bu, genuine O-Too-Tan
$2.50 bu. 1937 crop, few
ones, W. P. Couch, Lu-
cotton seed, ist yr.
and |
5
~ in. staple, $2.00 bu.
obk, Canon, Rt. 2.
Nichols, Rt. 2.
Baxley,
Abani 20 Sea 'Blonevilie No. a
cotton seed, nearly pure, roll
| dropped at gin, 90c bu. Sonar
"| Mosley, Rockmart, Rt. 1. eae
5 Gallways cotton, $2.50 bu.;
last year, 75c bu., 10 days earlier
thaw other long staple cotton.
: Mrs. Marie Holland, Dalton, Rt:
2:
1,000 bu. Cokers Farm Relief
No. 4 cotton seed, 75c bu. in 100
Ib. bags. Sam Sommer,
kinsvile.
BEANS AND PEAS
WANTED
Haw-
mixed peas. State best price del.
Suwanee. LVen Moore, Suwanee.
Want 50 to 100 bu. mixed peas!
for hay priced reasonable. Send
sample with quotation. J, C, Cob
lier, Barnesville.
Want several bu. eariy
Speckled bunch _ peas. - H.
James, Oakfield.
Exe. Bur clover seed for peas]
to sow for hay, any amount. J.
Py Gaines, Cavere 202 3
Want 1% bu. Mung beans. State:
price at once. C. H. Coleman,
Ball Ground. Rt. 2.
PLANTS FOR SALE
Buist Monarch tomato plants, |
now ready, in small quantities,
25. for 10c. Add postage, J. P.
Morgan, Rt. 2. Senoia.
100,000 pimento pepper plants
ready, $1.35 M at my home. L.
A. Atkinson. Jackson, -Rt: 4.
P. R. Red Skin, govt idep.
plants, $1.25 M; treated. Mar-
globe plants, $1 25 M; also Ruby
King pepper, $1.75 M del, Now},
weeny: Mrs. Ruby Butler, Baxley.
bade
. and Red Skin PR. plants
gov't insp., $1.00 M; Marglobe
plants, 75 M; 2 M up, 65c del.
Moss packed. Woodrow Teneey |
Screven, Rt. 2.
P. R. Plants, Red an Yellow
Skin, $1.50 M del. Royce Wal-
drip, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Pure Red Skin P. R. plants,
gov't insp. $1.00 M; Marglobe
plants, 50c 500; 75c M; good
sound Spanish peanuts, 5c Ih.
Leon Goff, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.
-P. R. Red and Yellow plants, =
$1.00 M; Marglobe and Balti-
more plants, 75 M; Copenha-|
gen cabbage, 75c M. Moss packed
full count. L, L. Stokes, Fitz-
gerald.
Red Skin P. R. plants, _insp.
and treated for 19 years, now
ready, $1.24 M del. P. P. Mussel
white, Arabi, Rt. 1,
Gov't insp. and treated PR:
plants, $1.25 M; Bermuda on-
ions, 300, 35c, tomato. plants, 30c
M. Moss packed. Postpaid in Ga.
G. W. Owen; Hawkinsville.
Pink: and Red Skin P. R.
plants, gov't insp. and treated,
now ready, $1.00 M del. R. R.
Smith, Screven.
Certified. - Pink Skin P. R./
plants, gov't insp. .and treated,
$1.00 M; Ruby King pepper, 25c
C; $1.00, 500; gets D. D. Deen,
Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 115. .
Govt insp, P. R. plants, $1.00
M del. Prompt shipment. L.
C. Lightsey, Surrency, Rt. 2.-
Genuine Red Skin P. R. plants,
~gov't insp. and treated, $1.25 M
del. L. I. Haire, Baxley, Rt, 2.
P. R. and Early Triumph
plants, $1.35 M del. in Ga.; ex-
change 2 M for bu. Brab peas.
Ba. pay charges. J. H. Thomas,
Rt. 2.
Genuine Red Skin P. R. plants,
-| gov't insp. and treated $1.25 M
del. John H. Lee, Baxley, Rt. 2.
Certified Pink and Yellow Skin
P. R. plants, $1.25 M del. in Ga.
C. H. Reddick, Sylvania, Rt. 2.
Red Skin P. R. plants, gov't
insp., $1.00 M del; Marglobe
plants, 90c M del. Dood Hol-
Jand, Surrency, Rt. 2.
Treated Red and Pink P. R.,
White Triumphs, $1.25 M; Break
O-Day, Marglobe, New Stone
plants, 90 M; egg pene and
pepper 25 C; $2.00 M J. L.
Sellers, Graham.
Imp. P, R. plants, May and
June, $1.00 M fob. W. G. Hart-
ley, Alamo.
Gold Dollar and P. R. Yellow
Skin plants, $1.35 M del. M. E.
Miley, Rt. 2, Statesboro. :
Tobacco plants, May ist, $1.00
M. B. B. Haynes, Vidalia.
P. R. and Gidfrey early plants,
$1.20 M del.; 90c fob; Marglobe
plants, 75c del 40c fob.
with order. L. L. Groover, Bax-
ley, Rt. 4.
Gov't insp. and treated Pink
Skin P. R. and Nancy Hall
plants, $1.25 M. Ship in Ga.
Wo checks. MM. D. Williams,
2 : :
Money | 2.
_ Marglobe, G. Baltimore plants,|
B0e. 200; 500 90c; $1.25 M, del.
Moss: wrapped. No stamps. Ns
H. Smith, Eldorendo.
Red and Yellow Skin PR
| plants, gov't insp. and treated,
$1.00 M del. in Ga. Cash. with
order. C. C. Payne, Tifton, Rt. 1
Early Flat Dutch cabbage and
| Bull Nose sweet pepper plants,
15c ; $1.00 M, now ready. Add
postage. John Henry Prix, Cum-
ming, Rt. 2.
Gov't. insp, P. R. Plants: $1.25
M del. in Ga. Miriam Coleman,
Baxley, Rt. 2.
Early Flat Dutch cabbage, Bull
nose sweet pepper and Earliana,
|New Stone, Baltimore Matchless
Want 25 bu, Whippoorwill or:
tomato plants, 15 C; $1.00 M.
Add. tee Waldo Frix, Cum-
ming, Rt.
Pon, oe now ready, $1.25
M fob, Cash with order. J. D.
Whitfield, Ty Ty, Rt. 2.
Goyt insp. P. R. plants, $1.00
M del.; New Stone, Marglobe
plants, 75 del in M lots. Now
ready, J. M. Tomberlin, Surren-
cy, Rt. 2.
Insp. treated Red and Pink
Skin P. R. Plants, $1.00 M;
White yams and white triumphs,
$1.25 M; Negro Killers, 25c C;
$2.00 M; Marglobe and Break-/
O-Day plants, $1.00 M. Dewey
Crosby, Graham.
Imp. Red Skin P. R. Biahis,
insp. and dipped, $1.25 M del.
Ready. G. W. Aspinwall, Odum,
~ Pure Red Skin P. R. plants,
$1.25 M prepaid. Frank McCall,
Baxley.
P. R. plants, insp. and treated,
$1.00 M. Not prepaid, Quincey
| Brantley, sOnEae Rt. 23;
Millions gov't insp,. and treat-
ed, P. R. plants, now ready, $1.25
WM fob.; exchange for hens, seed
peas or baby chicks one month
old; can ship 50 M ea. wk. L.
E. Byrd, Bristol.
Marglobe and G, B. plants,
now ready, moss packed, 50e. M
fob. D. D. Miles, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Pure Red Skin P. R. plants, ;
$1.25 M prepaid or exchange for
hay peas. Frank Harris, Baxley.
Genuine Pink Skin Pook.
plants, 5c M fob; Marglobe
plants; 75 M fob. Cash with
order. E, L. Steedley, Baxley,
P. R. plants, $1.00 M; Mar-|
esti plants, 90 M; collards, 15
. Cc. L. Steedley, Baxley, Rt, 4.
Red Skin P. R. plants, gov't
insp., $1.25: M del. C. #B. EEN
Screven. 206:
Certified New atone planis,
$1.15 M; $1.00 M del. in 5 M
lots. Moss packed. Satis. guar.
.Emory Byers,. Rochelle.
Pink and Red Skin and Boon
potato plants, govt insp., $1.50
M, Add postage. J. L. Strayaorn,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Ponderosa, Brimmer and
Beefstake tomato plants, 25c C;
75 500; $1.35 M del. K. Rowan,
PdT.; Winterville.
- Red Skin P. R. plants, ear
insp.. and treated, $100 M del.;
tomato plants, bc M del. OW, A.
Pearce, Surrency, Rt 2.
P. R. and Boon plants, $1.00 M;
Vineless, $1.25 M del Wot:
Crow, Gainesville.
Gov't insp. . P. R. plants, $1.25
M del, J. D, Dumas, Quitman, Rt.
1.
Gov t. insp. . Early Red P. R.
| plants, $1.25 M del. H. L. Orvin,
Baxley, Rt. 3.
Wakefield and Flat Dutch cab-
bage plants, 75c M; New Stone,
Marglobe tomato plants, $1.00 M
del. to 3rd zone. eels May ist.
Large. orders cheaper. C. W. Pat-
terson, Avalon. :
Pink Skin P. R. plants, insp.
and treated, ready now, $1.00 M;
Marglobe plants, 60c M; 2 M up
50c M. del. Moss packed, W. Dz
Lightsey, Screven.
Certified P. R. Plants, 75c M;
White Bermuda onions, 75c; cab-.
bage, 60c; sweet or hot pepper,
25c C; $2.00 M; Marglobe plants,
75 M; also want to buy. 100 bu.
hay peas. W. W. Williams, Quite
man.
Scarlet Dawn, earliest of Mar-
globe plants, 20 C; $1.75 M del.;
gov't insp. P. R. plants, $1.75 M
or exchange for seed peas, I. H.
Anderson, Alma, Rt. 4. |
Red and Pink skin govt insp.
P. R. and Boone potato plants,
90c M. Strawberries, $2.00 M
del. E, B. Wetherford. Gaines-
ville, Rt. 2.
Good strong Pink skin P. R.
plants, now ready, $1.25 del. Full
count. W. J. OQuinn, Jr., Odum,
Rt. 2, Box 165,
Certified and insp. P. R.
lants, now ready, $1.65 M_ pre-
paid; $1.40 M exp.; 10 M, $12.50.
Major Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Marglobe, New Stone, G. Bal-
timore tomato plants, $1.00 M.
Full count. Moss packed. Prompt
shipment. J, G. Mullis, Baxley, ;
Ri. a
del,
Stone, Rt..
Gov't seen {PR plants, $1.25
p R. blante $1.56 50 M: sarin oo
and Baltimore, 60c, 500; $1.00
M; Ruby Ring, California. Won-
Black Beauty eee
$1.25 MR?
der. pepper,
plants, 65c, 500;
Chanclor, Pitts.
P. R. and Nancy Hall plants.
$1.25 M; $6.00 5 M; Baltimore,
Bony Best and. Marelobe toma-
toes, $1.15 M; 70c, 500. James
Willoughby, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Certified P: R. plants, quality
and count guar. 90c M; Marglobe
plants, 50c M. Mrs. -A. oe Wil-
jiams, Alma. :
Marglobe plants, ready to ship,
65 M; 2 M up, 60c; 25c, 100
del. W. R. Lightsey, Screven.
Strong, healthy Marglobe and
G. B. tomatoes, 55 M fob; 75c
M del. Ready. Elliott Nobles,
Baxley, Rt. 4.
Red Skin P. R. plants, $1.50 M
del. Ready Apr. 15. T. Tv. oe
Hazlehurst, Rt. 3
Bermuda grass eee 25c C
postpaid; also want 10 to 25 pure
game hens, prefer Cornish. Mar-
tin Hartlive, Menlo.
Insp. and treated, pink an
red skin potato plants, 90c M
del. H. Lightsey, Screven.
Gov't insp. P. R. plants, $1.25
M; Mareglobe and Baltimore to- |.
mato plants, $1.00 M; onions, 75c
M; Ruby King and hot pepper
| plants, $1.75 M. Full count.
Prompt | shipment. W. F. Miles.
Baxley.
P. R. plants, insp. and treated,
now ready, $1.25 M. J. B. seo
Alma, Rt. 4.
Lady T. strawberry plants, 25
C; $2.00 M; earliest Klondike, |.
BNE eO 2 to 4 lbs. best yellow
| table butter, fresh each wk. Jer-
sey cow T. B. tested, 30c lb. del.
J: 8. Crowe, Cumming, Rt.
Mrs.
i :
- Pink and red skin P. R. and
Nancy Hall potatoes, $1.25 M or
65c, 500; leading var. tomato
plants, $1.00 M; cabbage, 50c M
egy, shipment.
4, Baxley.
M fob. P.
P. R. plants, $1.35 M fob; 500,
$1.00; $2.00 M _ prepaid. Satis.
guar. J. M. Sims, Mystic.
J. Crosby, Bristol, Rt.
25,000 to 35,000 P. R. plants,
$1.40 M del. Cash or M. O.
M. Herrington, Baxley, Rt. 3.
Fobacco plants, $1.00 M. Mrs.
W.
#B. A. Lambert, Denton.
_ Marglobe tomato plants, 20c C;
85e M; Cabbage plants, 30c, 300;
85 M; Boon potato plants, 90c.
M;
plants, 25, 50. aA. Crow, Rt. 2.
$1.40. M;. Vigorvine tomato
Gainesville. A
Certified Marelobe tomatoes,
well rooted and packed, now
| ready, $1, 25 M del. Lewis E. Gib-
son, Waycross; Rt. 1.
Certified P. R. pink red, and
white skin plants, $1.15 M; $10.-
50, 10 M; pepper, $1.10 M; Mar-
| globe tomatoes,.
$1.00 M; Cov-
ington Toole cotton seed, 95%
pure, 75 bu. N. W. Daniel, Ty Ty.
Kudzu crowns, ready to grow,
| mossed packed, $6.00 M. aoe
Walker, Toccoa, Rt. 3.
Marglobe tomatoes, ready in
May, 200, 35c; $1.25 M del.; also
cabbage seed, extra early, round,
$1.75 Ib.; 5 Ibs., $6.50.
Open grown super Marglobe,
wilt-resistant tomatoes, 20c C;
Royal King Sweet peppers and
Block Beauty eggplants, 2 doz.,
25; 40c C; certified P. R. plants,
$1. 5 M. Add postage. Mis.
J. B. Paul, Leesburg.
Crystal Wax Bermuda onion
plants, 65 M del. M. O. pre-
ferred. Prompt shipment. N. F.
Taylor, Hawkinsville.
White Jerusalem artichokes,
$1.00 bu.; rooted Kudzu, $1.00 C;
Everbearing strawberry plants,
500, $1.00 del.; 12 red a plants
free with each order. A. D. Call,
Ellijay, Rt. 2. :
Gov't insp, P. R. plants, $1.00
M del.; 5 M, $4.50 exp. col.; Mar-
globe Gulf State plants, 75 M
del.; 5 M, $3.00 exp. col. Moss
packed. Guar. H. C. Rowe, Ocil-
id. Re
Marglobe,
plants, 75 M del.; 5 M $3.00 exp.
col.; leading var. cabbage plants,
same price. Prompt shipment.
Full count. Mrs. Floyd Powell,
Ocilla.
P: R: plants,. gov't insp., $1.50
M del. or $1.25 fob; also Mar-
globe, New Stone plants, $1.00 M
fob; $1.25 del.. No checks. Gra-
dy Cauley, Alma, Rt: 4.
Garden horsemint, pepper-
mint, 25 for 25; horse radish,
pie plant, sage, 3 for 25c; $ for
50; garlic, houseleak, dbl. tan-
zie, 6 bunches, 25c. Add postage
on small orders, Mrs. Sarah
Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
Gov't insp. P. R. plants, $1.00
M del.; G. Baltimore, New Stone
_ tomatoes, 50c, 5 M; 5c M del.
28. CO. Rowe, Fitzgerald, Rt, 2,
Elis |
New Stone tomato
Storie ean $1 00 M;
per, $1.25 M del. Wild
Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 45.
PSR and Godfrey Early yp
$1.50 M; Marglobe plants, |
del. Prompt shipment.
Sheffild, Baxley
Genuine
gov't insp., $1. 25 M del.
Prompt: shipment. A. bes
Baxley, Rt.
. Nice, . cee Marciche
Egan tomato plant
; 80c M jin 5 M lots or.
Dictonia. Moss packed. D
Thornton, Screven, ot
174.
Marglobe and New Stone to-
mato plants, 10 C, 75 M iS
pure P. R. Plants, $1. 25 M; $10.
10 M. Moss packed. A. sf
dox, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2.
Pure P. R. plants, $1. 25
New Stone plants, 10c C;
B. A. Maddox, Fitzgerald.
Pink and Red skin P. R. |
Nancy Hall potato plants
M; leading varieties tom
$1.10 M; 5 M, $5.00; Copenhagen
Flat Dutch cabbage, 35c, 500; 50
M, Add postage. Ellis Stans Ba
ley, Rt. 4.
Break O'Day Will bosiseare ;
New Stone tomato plants, 20 |
fob. Mrs. J. L. te s Iva
Rt. 1. 3
State insp. Red Skin Pp. a
Early Triumph plants, $1.35 M
now ready. T. J. Dixon, Jr., Br
count. = ptonpk: shipment.
Tyre, Screven.
don, Rochelle, Rt. 2.
Gov't insp. and ine ee
son, Del in Ga Ce 4, Lt Di
Insp. Red or Pink Skin
to plants, $1.10'M, guar.
Prompt shipment, Paul Lig
Baxley.
Pure Yellow - Skin P. R.
insp. and dipped, $1 25, M. 4
a C. w don, Tifton, Rt
Plants $1.00 M. del. Prompt ship.
ment. A. Z. Jackson, Baxley,
4.
: Barly Triumph plants, : $
M; $1.25 M in 5,000 lots
Toole, Macon, Ry 2
6,000 tobacco plants,
1. W. F. Valentine, Gor On
Thousands Mareglobe toma-
toes, egg plants, Bell and
-pepper, Iceberg lettuce, beets
| earros and cabbage, 25e C de
No orders less than $1.00. Mrs.
V. Franklin, Regester.
- Cert Marglobe, G. Baltimor
plants, 90c M; 5 M or more, 76
M del. Moss packed, ready. M
Opal L. Deal, Baxley, Rt. 4
New Stone, Marglobe plants
$1.00 M; 75 M in 5 M lots del
Moss packed. J. Gy. Mu,
ley, Rt. 4.
Skin P. R. plants, $1.00 M 5M
or more, 90c M del. Prompt shij
ment. D. C. Nail, Baxley, R
Imp. Pink Skin P. R. plants
Insp., treated, $1.10 M; Ruby
King sweet pepper, $1. 00 M. Mos
ae Prompt shipment. R:
B. Tyre, Baxley, Rt, 1.
Now Stone tomato plants We
C; 50c 500; 90c M del. Obie
Crow, Lula, Rt. 1. :
~ $1.50 M del.
Lise rs Alma.
Vigorvine plants, 50 Ci
change 300 plants for 1,000 yel-
low skin potato plants del.
want collard, cabbage and
mato seed. R. C. MOOI Rooks
mart.
PP. R. Plants. state insp.
treated. $1.25 M_ del.
prices on 10 M lots. B. F. Mal-
lard, Millhaven.
Imp. and insp. P. R. and N: Te
cy Hall potato plants, $1.25 I
A. R. Jones, Pelham. :
State insp. P. R. and Nan
Hall plants, $1.25 M. C. R. R
mond, Pelham.
Govt insp. and treated Ye y
Skin P. R. ee sgh $1.25 M del.
in Ga. M. O. W. R. Hulto,
rency, Rt. 2. seek
Govt insp: P. R. plants,
ready, $1.10 M; $1.00 M. in 2 M
lots. del. Prompt shipment. W.
G. Murray, Odum, Rt. 2, Box 158
in Ga.
insp., now ready, $1.20 M- del.
Will exchange. W. J. O Quinn,
Jr., Odum, Rt. 2, Box 165. ae
: Cabbage and tomato plants,
20c C; 400, 50c; $1.00 M del.
Prompt shipment. Tee Ms
Gainesville, BS
, LANTS FOR SALE
P. R. plants, red
cokes skin, $1.25 M; Early
umpk potato plants, $1. 50 M
Guar. good. Prompt ship-
J. P, Beek, Rt. 3, Baxley.
ralif. wonder wilt pepper
lants and hot pepper plants,
ee 50. soe Bes-
Gaddis imap. P. R. plants, eave
. and treated, $1.25 M post-
d. Del. May 20th. -Geo, R.
, Kathleen,
Horse radish plants, 20c doz.;
every doz. several nice dill
is free; garlic bulbs, lbde
-ealamus plants, 15e doz.
W. A, Johnson, Alto, Rt. 1.
Gov't insp. P. R. plants, $1.00
at bed or $1.25 shipped. Cai
wish several M weekly. J, L.
ts, $1.10 M; 4M
00; Gaalby's Early, $1.25 M;
A, $4.50; Nigger Killers, $1.50,
io 4 M. QO. K. Herrin, Win-
lanis, $1.59 M fob. Prompt ship-
en. W. R. Batten, Winokur.
lobe Ginaeon 300, 40e: de M;
rorvine, 15c doz, C, Ww. Smith,
Gainesville.
5 M and 10 M lots, $1.40 M
col, Prompt shipment. E. C.
rip. Flewery Branch Rt. 1.
obe, New Stone plants,
25 M del, or $1.00 feb. Cash,
order. E. S. Cauley, Ra. 4,
t ingp. P.. R. planis, now
eady, $1.50: M del; White Bunch
utter beans, 4 lbs., 50e del. No
reve less than 4 lbs. Kenneth
nem good plants, $1. 10 M;
ato plants, 75 M del. in Ga.
. Prompt, del. G. C. QQuina,
ence, Re, 2.
d and yellow skin P. R.
ats, gov't insp. and treated.
M del. ta 3rd zone; New
es Red Rock to-
j ee M del. Full
e wW.G enue Surrency,
i Skin P. R. plants, $1.75
and Baltimore to-
, * $1.50 M; Ruby King
t pepper plants, $1.50 M fob.
Beckworth, Baxley, Rt. 3
a true to name, moss
, 65e M; 2M up 60c M;
> del, L. D. Lightsey, Scre-
tif. Wonder. or Ruby King
pepper plants, $1.00 M dei.;
tomato plants, 60 x
J,
ache: wihaitn: certified Brim-
Beef Steak Red, Stone, |
Red,
ts, $1.00 M; Ruby King pep-
500; $2.00; $1.50 M. No orders:
than. 508 plants. Postpaid
4. Cash with order. Mrs.
ne and Bony Best tomato
lants, 80c Mi; 45 500: prepaid.
pt shipment, Mrs. Roscoe
- Abbeville.
Gov't insp: and treated Pink
Yellow: Skin P. R. plants,
ready, 85 M; 2 M up, 80e
ts, $1.25 M; Ruby King pep
$1. 7 M del. Now
Ma ne New Stone, Balti-
ore and Break-O-Day tomato)
ts, 75e Mi; 500; 50c. Moss,
kedi Full count. J, P. Mul-
axley, Rt. 4.
He insp, P. R. and wae
ants, $1.25 M; $5.00; 5. M;
-G. Baltimore, Pritch-
blants, 500, 50;
The M; 5 M,
Sy $1.00 MM; Niggar Killer |
1. Lightsey, Surrency, Rt. 2.
"| $1.50 M; tomato plants, $1.00 M;
Ruby King pepper,
Moers Crosby, Baxley.
-berry plants, 15c C; exchange for
mato plants, 85 M. Guar. Past-
pimiento, plants, Marglobe toma-
$1.40 M del;
Stone and Baltimore, 75 lb. del,
Deaiiniore, June Pink, New|
dei, Leland Lightsey, Scre-|
R Red Skin plants, gov't}
treated Marglobe tomato)
y plants, $1.50 doz.. postpaid. gov't
| plants, now ready, 60e, 500;
MA RKE y BUL L Ez THI x
a PLANTS FOR SALE.
Millions Maxglobe, G. Balti-
more pants, 65c, 5 M; P. R.
plants, $1.25: white bermuda
onions, 7c M. Leroy Boatrighi, |
Coffee.
Gov't insp. Red Skin P. R.
plants, $1.25 M del. Prompt ship-~
ment. A. R. Orvin, Baxley, Rt. 3.)
Pure Red Skin P. R. plants,
$1.25 M; 5 M up, $.10 M, now
ready. W. J. Carter, Coffee.
Govt insp. Red and Pink Skin
P. R. Plants, $1.50 M; old fash-
ion Boones, $1.75 M del. Shipped
in ventilated boxes. Clyde Ma-
this, Flowery Branck, Rt. 1.
Gov't insp, pure Red Skin P.
R. Plants, 500, 85c; $1.50 M; Old
fashion Boone potato plants, 500,
$1.10; $1.90 M del Guar. good
count. Prompt shipment, Dewey
Mathis, Flowery Branch, Rit. 1.
Early Dakota tomato and Hol-
land cabbage plants, 200, 25c;
Dixie White perennial clover,
. 00 M; Kudzu, Seweson. treat-
, ol 00: C; $1.75, 300; $7.00 M
~ z W. Toole, Macon,
Rt. 2.
Gov't insp. P. R. Red Skin
plants, now ready, 90e M del,
Prompt shipment. Satis. guar. L.
Marglobe and Stone Break-O-
Day tomate plants, 80e M; P. R.
plants, $1.00 M; 20 M, 95c M;
yellow and white onions, 50c M.
Ovie Crow, Gainesville.
Yellow Skin potato plants,
$1.25; cab-
bage and onions, 60c; heading
collard plants, 75c prepaid. Guar.
full count. G. L. Steedley, Baxley.
P. RB. Plants, $1350 M; Mar-
globe plants, $1.00 M; 65, 500:
del. Moss packed. Now ready.
Barly Imp. Klondike straw-
Black Eyed peas. Add postage.
Rosie Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Marglobe and New Stone ta-
paid. Moss packed. Mrs. Katie
Mullis, Odum, Rt. 2.
Govt insp. imp. early Red
Skin P. R. plants, $1.25 M del.
Full count. Prompt shipment. W.
#H. Orvin, Sr., Baxley, Rt. 3,
P. R. Plants, $1.00 M in 5 M
lets or $1.15 M; also. Marglobe
tomato plants, Tic M. No checks.
R. E, Tomberlin, Surrency.
Pure P. R. plants, $1.25 M fob.
A, J. Whiddon, Tifton, Rt, 3.
Marglobe, Break-O-Day, Bal-
timore, New Stone tomate
plants, moss packed, now ready,
| 40e, 500; 70c M. J. O. Senleee,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 3. :
Imp. Red and Yellow Skin P.
R. plants, $1.00 M; Mawrglohe. |
Greater Baltimore, New Stone
plants, 75 M del. Prompt ship-
ment. B. OG. Varndore,
Greve,
PP R plants, gov't insp. and
treated, $1.00 M fob. Greer Cro-
mez, Tifton, Rt. 3.
Egg plants, large bell pepper,
to and imp. or heart oyster
plants. M. E. Carroll, Roswell
(McMahens Farm).
Pure Red Skin P. R. spins
$1.25, 10 M cal.;
Marglobe seed, $1.15 lb.; New
W. O. Waldrip, Flowery Branch.
Gov't insp. Red Skin P. R.
plants, $1.00 M; Marglobe plants,
[ae W. iH. Orvin, Jr., Baxley,
3.
P: R. plants, $1.10 M; Boon,
$1.35 M; Marglobe plants, 59c,
| 300. Larger lots cheaper by exp.
| A. Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Cert. P. R, plants, $1.28, M del.
L. C. Tyre, Surreney, Rt, 2.
Gov't insm P. R. plants, $1.25
M del.; different var. tomato
plants, = del. in M lots; Now
ready. J. M. Tomberlin, Surren-
cy, Rt. 2,
plants, $1.25 M; T0c, 200; Mar-
globe, G. Baltimore amd Bonny
Best tomatoes, $1.00 M; 200; 65c;
leading: var, cabbage, 50e M del.
W..H. Morris, Baxley, Rt. 4
New Acme thornless young-
berry and new Boysenborry
insp. H. A. Neal, Ashland,
-Insp, P R. plants, 65, 500:
$1.00: Mi mailed; $4.50 5. M; $850
10 M, exp.; large lots, T5c M.
Cash with order. Exchange for
peas or sorghum: cane seed. John
C: Crow, Gainesville, Rt 1.
Brimmer tomatoes, 64e, 500;
$1.00 M. Will. inelude few yel-
lows. with, Is 10 orders. Ethel
Sullivan, Marietta, Re. 2:
Cabbage, tomate and collard
$1.00
| MM. prepaid; 60 M col, Frances;
Williams, Gainesville; Rt, 1.
Gevt insp, and treated: POR
.| plants, $1.50 Mi del.; Stone to-
| matoes;, THe, 500; $1.50: M. 2,500)
hee May 10) G. EB, Wealdrip,
Pine |
Nancy Hali, red and pink skin |
PLANTS FOR. SALE
PLANTS WANTED
| $1.50 M dei, Melvin Deal, Bax-
ley, Rt. 4 :
Genuine Red Skin P.R. plants,
govt insp. and treated, $1.25 M;
Marglobe and New Stone plants,
Te M del. im 3rd zone. Not.
mixed. Milton Arnoid, Surrency.
Millions Marglobe, Greater
Baltimore and Rutger tomato
plants, $1.08 M; fob or exp. oO.
F. Baker, Sycamore, Rt. 1.
P. R. and Godifrey early
a $1.25 M; Marglobe plants,
$1.00 M; Ruby King pepper and
California. hot pepper Se. $1.50
j+M. del. J. S. Griffis, Waycross,
Rt 1, \
Marelobe, Stone and Bailti-
more plants, 70e M; Red and Yel-
low Skin P. R. plants, $1.00 M.
EB. H. Beeehans, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Marglobe plants, 70c, 500; $1.20
M; Copenhagen, B. J. plants, 40c
500; Se M del. J, A. Hopkis,
Baxley, R. 2,
Gov't insp. genuine FP. R.
plants, treated, $1.25 M del. No
personal checks, J. A. Dykes,
Baxley, Re, 2. 3
Genuine Govt insp. P. R.
plaints, $1.00 M; up to 5,000, 906
M; Margilobe oe G& B, plants,
Te M del. or 500 M fob. ae
W. E. Nobles, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box
ae
Sk ae plants, $1.50 M; > M
se
Park-
lots, $1.40 M del, Jno, A,
er, Rochelle, Re, 2,
Klondike strawberry plants,
20e C; 8Ge 500; $1.50 Mi. Gade:
Crowe, Cumming, R. 1.
Klondike strawberry plants,
2e C; Se, 500; $1.50 M, Mis.
Effie Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Pink and Purple Skin P. R.
plants, $1.00 M; New Stone, Mar-
globe plants, Te; flue cured
and chewing tebaceo;
12 ibs., $1.00 del. R. W. Tomber-
lin, Surrency, Re. 2.
Improved P. R. plants, $i M.
New Stone, Marglobe: plants, 75
del. im M.
guaranteed. @ B.
Surrency Rt. 2.
G. W. cabbage and Stone and
Marglobe plants, now ready, 25
C; Sc 500; $1.25 M prepaid.
Any amount col, The M. Satis.
guar. Mareus Williams, Gaines-
ville, Ra. 1.
Certified P. BR. potato plants
for sale. Mo, 12 Fire Station, 1166
DeKalb Ave, M. EL, Atlanta.
Certified Red Skin FP. R.
Tomberlin,
Gordon, Warwick,
Certified: Baltimore:
plants, 90 M; 15 in & M lots;
Ruby King pepper, P. R. plants,
PLANTS WANTED
"Want best cash: price on 100 Me
Red and Yellow Skin P. RB. po-
tate first class plants at the
bed, on or neat May ist, near
Baxley. Linton G. Ray, Coving-
ton,
Ist at best cash price. Willie Da-
vidson, Alta, Rt. 1,
Exe. 11 lbs, nice sundried ap-
ples, free fronmy peel, ete., for 1M M
P. R. potato plants, Red Skin,
well rooted. Ea. pay postage.
Write first. Mis, Clifford Meers;
Dial.
Exc. Summerours Half and
Half cotton: seed (rolled cleaned)
for sweet potate plants, John A,
Kell, Shannon,
| Exe. dried apples for P, R. pe-
tata plants; 10 lbs. for 1 M plants
Ea, pay postage. Homer G. Cline,
Canten, Re, 1.
tia dewberry plants for. qweat
potaiea, and tomate plants. Mrs.
Lillie Mae Latham, Felton,
for rhubarb: plants andi for sage
plants, at once. Mrs, W. E. All-
good, Thomson, 57 Clairy St.
for 1.M pink skin P. R. potato
plants, Ba, pre-pay postage: Mrs,
J. H. Schell, Carroliton, Rt. 4,
Exc. reg. P C. boar pigs for
}potato plants to be shipped at
ance: Adso, have BP. C., all ages,
bred and open sows, fall gilts
(some of world: champions. blood
in this herd) Joe R. Murtin,
Carrollton. Rt,. 3.
Exe. 5 lbs. nice brick mold: bub-
ter in 1 shipment for 1 M Gov.
insp. P. R. or other early var.,
potato: plants: Ea. dek Write
first. Mrs. L, A. Sanders, Ash-
land,
Exe. good. value for strawber-
ry plants. Mrs. Elizabeth Barnett,
Calhoun.
Want few M: P. BR. potato)
plants or any pure Bunch. potato
by May 15th, Let me hear at
nae J, O; Campbell; Dallas, Rt.
plants, at 75e M. del, J. L. Mer-
cer, Atlanta. 1252 Sally. Sb, S:
. and treated Pink)
lots. Satisfaction |
plants, $1.35 M del, in Ga. GC. Je}
Want 10 M. PB. R. plants by May)
Exe. tomato plants. at 20 C.|
Exc. & lbs; niee sundried apples
Want few M imp P. RB. potato
Exe. collard plants for tomato
_ Ea. pay postage. Mrs, S.
Langham, Warrenton.
eae 1 M pure Bunch P. R.
potato slips or plants. Quote del.
price. J. R. Brewer, Charling, Rt.
i,
Want few M- Pumpkin Yam po-
tato: plants. Write what you have
and price. Virgil B. Gilbert,
Woodbury, Rt. 2.
Pecan and Other Fruit
Trees for Sale
Old fashioned September Red
Indian and White English sweet
peaches and Blue Damson plums,
15c ea.: 6 for 25c; garlic plants,
& for 38c. G. W. Cogburn, Alpha-
retta. Rt. 1.
Pomegranate, well rooted, 1
ft., 10c; 2 ft., loc ea: Huckleber-
ry, gooseberry, plum and per-
simmon, black haw, museadine,
3 ft. $1.00 doz.; strawberry
plants, 15e C. Plus postage. Miss
Ivaline Connell, Tommy: Re.
2.
Peach trees, all lead. var., bud-
ded to order for Fall del. "$35.00:
M. $4.00 GC. Terms, % cash with)
order, bal. on delivery. Mrs. E.
B. Travis, Riverdale.
Pecans & Peanuts For Sale
Seedling pecans, 6c lb, Stew-
arts, 12%4c Ib, for lot. Belle Tim-
merman, Bronwood, Box 83.
No, 1 Georgia grewn Runner
peanuts, 4c Ib. fob, C. C. Gid-
dens, Jr., Adel.
No, 1 Spanish peanuts, smadb
lots, 4%e Ib; tom lots, 4 lm;
shelled, 74%c lb. fob. Not less
than 100 lbs, shipped. D. E.
Thompson. Pinehurst.
4,000 No, t Spanish seed pea-
nuis, 5e lb.; 250 bu. ear corn,
$1.00 ewt. R, S. Anderson, Haw-
kinsville.
Several hundred pounds seed-
ling pecans for sale. D. A. Mc-
Pherson, Cuthbert.
About 1,800 lbs. Stewarts, Suc-
eess and Money Makers. for sale.
J, A. Gaskins, Willacooechee.
Sound imp. White Spanish
peanuts, $5.00 cwt. or $90.00; ton.
We personal checks. Ww. M.
Hooks, Unadilla. Rt. 2.
Red Spanish peanuts, 8 lb.
Add postage. Glenn Hays, pling
mart, Rt. 3.
75 lbs. small seedling peeans, 6c.
lb.; $4.00: lot; no order less, tham
25 lbs, Ethel L. Chapman, Cram-
fordville:
PEANUTS WANTED
Swap 20 bu. Petty Toole cot-
ton seed for 20 bu, small Span-
ish peanuts, also have 30 bu.
pure Brabham peas, clean, ready
sacked, $2.00 bu. at. my house.
T, J. Anderson, Cusseta.
TOBACCO FOR SALE
Dark Brown, whole leaf. flue
cured tobaces; T lbs:, $1.00) del.
im Ga. Oscar Hamilton, Vida liai, |
Rt. i.
Good. flue cured, 1937 crop)
whole leaf tobacco; 10c Ibi, $1.06,
postpaid; to. 3rd zone. Exchange
for dried apples or baby chicks;
J. G@ McGlohon, Surrenecy; Rb.
I;
Barn rum smoking and chew-
ing tobacco, 10) lhs,,. $1.00) del: in:
10 lb lots Exchange for any
kind seed: peas: or Scarlet Dawn
tomato plants, 20c . Mrs. Gus-
sie Anderson, Alma, R&, &
Good mellow Red Leaf chew-
ing tobacco; 12 lbs., $1.00; smok-
ing, 12 lbs., T5c; Marglobe- and
Stone plants, T5e M_ postpaid,
Leroy Lightsey, Rt. 2, Sereven.
Good home cured. smoking and
chewing, tobacco, 10c Ib. ea.; 10
Tbs., $1.00 postpaid in Ga. Ww: re
Benton, Aima.
Leaf chewing tobacco, 12. lbs.,
$1.00 del. Satis. guar. Clenon. Al-
dridge, Surrency, Rt. 2.
Good flue cured, home raised,
long leaf, red and yellow. chew-
ing tobacco, 11 Ibs., $1.00; No, 1,
10c lb.; No, 2, 8c 1b.; smoking
tobacco, 12 Ibs. $1.00; 6 Ibs. ea.
50 Postpaid. M. B: Swain, Rock-
ingham,
SYRUP FOR SALE
Pure Sugar Cane syrup; 6 No:
10 cans; $3:00; 12 No: 5 cans,
$3.25; 38 gal: barrels, 40 gal.
also: smoked: hams, 25e lb; sides
and shoulder, 20c Ib: Malvin
Collins; Whigham,
2 bbis., 60 gal: old: syrup: (not
unstopped: since being made
was. fine), @e gal: or $40.00: for
the lot. J. R. Grizzle, Canton,
Rt. b
100: gal. Pe O: J. syrup, 40e gad.;
Georgia Cane syrup; 30 gal, foks
Jas, Harvey: a, Glen-
weed, Rte tk
pails, 9c 1b. in 20 Jb, lots; Strained
tracted honey prices. om 7
John A. Crummey, Box 11, J <
Moon, Bowdon. :
6 to 8 Ibs. good, firm. yellow
butter, 30c lb, del. in 2nd and
it}
Monday. May 2, 1 138
Honey Bees and Bee
Supplies For Sale
Tupelo, Poplar, Gallberry hon=
ey, strained or chunk comb, Ne,
10 pails del. in Ga., $1.30 te sed
gone; 10c extra; 5 lbs., 75c in 3
zone, Satis, guar. Devoe Sm i,
Adrian, Rt. 3. a
45 bee hives, now ready to rab,
$1.00 at my home. Mrs. J. R.
Seruges, Bartow. as
This year honey, strained or im
comb, 10 lb. cans, $1.10 can del,
in Ga. W. R. Hobbs, Milan.
New 1938 comb honey in 70 Ib,
cans, 8c lb.; strained, in 80 fi,
cans, 8 Ib, fob. No checks, =
W.. Salter, Ludowici,
Exchange 10 Ibs. honey for
dried apples, 70 lb. lard can, $7.
John T. Holland, Sparks, Rt, ft.
15 hives, 8 frames, $3.00 ea. a8
my home. H. H. Parrish, Pawo.
10 lbs, bees wax, 20e le, Add
postage. Gennia Brown, Balk
Ground. Rt. 1.
New bright comb honey im 1
lb. buckets, $1.25 lb: postpaid im
lst and 2nd zones. ON
$1.50 lb. Cash with order. C.
Browing, Dublin, Rt, 3.
New 1938 extracted honey im
1@ Ib, pails, case of 4, $400;
chunk honey, case of four, $4.50;
1937 extracted honey, case of
$3.00, fob. W. G. Chambliess,
Dawson. 5
No. 1 pure white Gallberry
tracted honey in 10 lb. pails,
Add postage. Jiny Pye, Odunw.
Fresh 1938 honey im 10
honey, in 10 lb. pails, 10c Ib. Not
pers. Cash with order. RB.
A, Cravey, Milan, Rt. 1, Box I%
Hees in 8 frame. hives wit
supers, $5.00 ea.; young swarms,
$1.00 ea. Exchange for reg, Ji
sey calves. Mrs. Vam Harris,
le.
No. It White Comb honey, Ie
lb. del. in Ga.; $1.25 in 50 to 60
lb. cans, 1t2c del; 10e Ib. fob.
O. or cash. D. Nw Snvth, Rt. |
Toomsboro. i
15,000 lbs. clean white strained
and chunk honey, 8 in 50 2
100. lw, lots; 10 lb. for less f
Cash with order. No _ chec
Send plenty postage. John L,
Bennett, Serevenm, Rt. 2; Box
Best strained honey, in 5
pails, 70c Im 10 lb. pails, oh
Th Del. J. H. Reeee, Milan.
Chunk honey in 50' lb: cans, de
lb; strained honey in 5 and
; lb. cams, 10e lm; chuck honey in
1 qt. jars, 30c; 2. gts. 60c; section
honey, 4%x4%, loc. Postpaid i
1st and 2nd zones; A. C. Colsom,
M. D:, Hinesville:
New extracted honey, 6-&
pails. to: case, $3:00; 6-10; Ib:
fob, $5.50; 10 lb. pails, $1.25;
10 lb: pails, $2.40: postpaid: <
insured. Several 50 gal. bbls,
sup.
Honey Bees cai Bee
Want & lvs. beeswax andi
lbs, rosin. State price. & Mi i
Omaha.
Want. second-hand. honey; |
tractor, State yc H. GC. Re
Hogansville. Rt.
FRUITS FOR SALE
Sun dried apples, 10c ib. Ada
postage: Mis. Ed) Earle, Clarkes.
ville. ;
Nice, bright, sundried apples
free from: core or worms, Tc |
Add postage: Ollie Meers, Dial
5 lbs. bright sundried ane
exchange for 508 cael
plants, Ea, pay postage: L Oe
tit, Pike:
Sundried apples, in first clase
condition, 4 lbs., 606; 8 Ibs, $2 1t.
prepaidi Mirs. J. M: Hall) o-
houn, Rt 1.
Nice sundried apples, 9e |
del. in Ga. to 3rd zone im white
-bags. W. BP Davenpert, Dial,
Nice sundried apples, free
from worms and core, 9c Ib. del,
Mrs: D. L. Vanzant, Dial.
BUTTER FOR SALE
Nice fresh. yellow butter from,
Jersey cow, T. B. tested; 3 Tbs.,
We ea. week. Will pay
to Ist and 2nd zones. Mrs. *
3rd zones; 35c del: im 3rd) and
4th zones. Guar. fresh: and f
Exchange for potato plants.
C: L. Willis, Talking Rock, Rt\
Nice. firm yellow butter in:
lb molds. Can: sue SS or & Is.
em wk. 4 lbs., $1.00; C. J. Hopper,
Ranger. =
Can furnish 2 lbs. fresh Je
butter, 300 lb. ea: wk. Co p
tested: irs R. A Sin
a Re + ay
ORSES AND. mutes |
FOR SALE
Good smooth-mouth 1 M I.
eee J. . Duncan, Nor-
- Plenty eat broke work rien
and mares for sale. Thos. E.
Oden, Blackshear, :
Good farm mule, wt. about
850 Ibs., $60.00 or trade for 5 gal.
Guernsey cow, corn or for pigs.
Jas, B. Barteh, Augusta, 5 mi.
Milledgeville, Rd.
Gentle Shetland pony, $35.00 or
trade for baby chicks, cow, pigs
or Gov. insp. P. R. Potato plants.
. F. Brown, Smyrna.
Bay horse, good shape, about
M. lbs., gentle, work anywhere,
125 cash. C. A. Campbell, ey
$30.00. J. D.
Cowart, Morgan.
Saddle and work horse, works
db], and single, 950 Ibs. wt. 9
rs. jd. Sell or exc. for cattle.
J Whatley, Fayetteville. (10
Goud sora mule, gentle, work
wnywhere, _ cheap. See, N. M.
Moreland, Holly Springs (City
imits on Canton- Marietta High- |
Large, strong tenure mule, $40
cash at my place. Exc. for good,
fvesh in milch cow. C. T. Thomp-
son, Darien, Greenwood. Planta-
2 yr. old mare colt (unbroke),
for sale or trade fer good work
dnule; also have 40 gal. sorghunt
yrup, some in cans, bottles and
jugs, 50c gal. H. B. Collins, Fair-
mam.
8 yr, old horkc. 980 ibs., and a
100 Ib. 3 yr. old mare, both well
broke, work either anywhere, $175
for both; young cow; freshen in
"Black Spanish Jack at
oat for service, every day ex-
Veal.
908 YW. mare mule,
sount, geod plow mule, $75.00:
also ef vr. old, small to age,
ersey, oo J.-D,
Wc a Pee with bolt
2 are Se anaes Lp
i Gray mule, some ae, good |
eyes and legs, works: good any-
where, $50.00 cash. R.:E. Hyde,
Dougiasville, Rt. 2.
: HORSES AND Mv!
WANTED
Want Shetland or othex nice,
- perfectly ES pony. State par-
tieulars. A H. Pope, Flovifa.
fe
ie Guernsey cv.
. Turner, Atlanta, :
Reg. Polled Hereford bull cal-
wes and reg. Polled Hereford Herd
pull Apply. E. T. Boswell, Jr.,
-Sileam:
Fine Jersey heifer Ist calif
month old, for sal. Anne G. Rob-
-ertson, Palmetto. (On Roosevelt
Highway, 1 mi. No. Palmetto).
Jersey buil, over 500 lbs., gentle
and fine, for sale. J. O. Dunean,
Noreross. Rt. 1. (Near Glover's
School) _
17 milch cows,. freshen last of
April, first of May. Grade Jersey
and Guernsey with 1 reg. Guern-
sey, All well bred, fat and worth
the price asked. A. K. Chamles,
Sparta.
Few beef cattle at market price.
he A; New, Brunswick.
1 fresh milchn cow, 3 1-2 to 4
gal. day, also 1 large male year-
ding for beef. See. J. H. Ledbetter
_ Barnesville. Rt. 2.
Yoke or work steers, $75. Gold-
en McClure, Cartecay.
Guernseys, high bred, reg. heif-
ers. 2 mos. to 16 mos. old, reason-
.ably priced. H. S. Fowler, Hosch-
ton.
5 gal, Jersey cow, freshen May
Ist with 3rd calf, by reg. Jersey
bull. $65.00 at barn. Chas. If.
Nevill, Pulaski,
6 mos. old Guernsey bull calf,
~Gue to reg., $25 cash at my barn.
Ollie Grantham, Vienna.
1 yr. old bull, 15-16 pure Here-
ord, for sale. S, L. Thornton,
eweyrose.
2 nice milch cows, for ait, also
nice hay at 50c per 100 lbs-
hay. =. M. oe: Buchanan.
| Bargeron,
-champions) ,
cee male calf, 10 mos. old,
of Coronation and Oakwood
breeding, owt of high producing
individuals of both lines, $25.00
or $30.00 reg. K. D, Sanders, Hat
onton.
Some young cattle and. sheep
of the very best breeding for
sale. Inspection invited at all
times. C. H. Blalock, Rabun Gap,
Rabuncroft Farm,
Reg. Herefords of Domino and
Axtell breeding: 17 cows, 4 heif-
| ers, 2 herd bulls and 20 winter
calves. For information write.
W. B. Green, Jr., Canton. Chero-
kee Farm.
Some splendid Guernsey es
sub, to reg., 5 to 17 mos. old, from
best blood lines. Geo. M. Wicker,
Americus. Albany Rd.
2 Shorthorn bulls, 12 and 15
mos, old, both purebred, 1 with
reg. papers. Dark red, Woodford
breeding. A. W. Neely, Waynes-
5 full blooded Black Angus bull
yearlings, raised on my farm, for
sale. Also want buy 15 bu. Red
Ripper peas. State price. R. S.
AnGerson, Hawkinsville,
CATTLE WANTED
Want 25 #yearling calves,
Guernsey and Holstein to keep
12 months for half the gain.
Ideal pasture and personal at-
tention. See or write. E. M. Lee,
Omaha.
Want heifer to freshen in stay
or June, not over 10 miles Dal-
las. State best price. Claud S.
FenneH, Dallas. Rt. 2.
Want several calves old enough
to eat, to raise on halves to Nov.
ist. Excellent pasture. Want reg.
Angus bull and heifer at reason-
able price; have for sale 2 fresh
mileh goats (with or without
kids), fine milk str. reasonable.
Donald West, Cassville.
Want 4 or 5 fresh milch cows,
within 20 mi. Atlanta for cash.
H. F. Seay, Ellenwood, Rt. 2.
HOGS FOR SALE
Let of S. P. C., reg. and sub.
to reg., 2 sows, 400 lbs. a., SOW,
due farrow May 29th, 1 gilt, 13
pigs, 6 wks. old May 10th; male,
also Hagpshire arid Duroc-P. C.
crossed sow. Sell separate or in
group. Dr. J, W. Thomason, East
Point, Box 204.
Big bone Black Essex, service
male, 150 lbs., $25.00; weaned
pigs, $10.00 ea. "$18.00 pr , $26.00
trie. With application oe regis-
tration and prs. No akin. W. J.
Sardis, Box 146. \
3, PC. pigs from dams of
forlds best breeding, sired by
Terrific J+. (half brother to
Fury and Joellenboth world
dbl. treated,
$10.00 ea. at 8-10 wks. old. L.
Washington, Jackson, Rt. 1.
S. P. C., few gilts and almost
ready for service boar, cholera
immune and reg. See H. M.
Woodward, Waycross. Rosedate
Farm.
2 reg. S. P. C. gilts, 14 wks. olc,
from World Champion stock, 50-
50, white and black, $12.50 <2.
FOB, V. Wensel Garner (4-H
cam member) Sandersville. Rt.
Sev. . Spring farrowed, reg.
Hampshire males out of some
of the breeds best sows, Part
sired by The Umpire, 1937 Nati
Champion boar. The others oy
Silver Streak, 1934 Champion. 8.
C. Roebling, Savannah. Isle of
Hope, Modena, Plantation.
17 ped. O. I. C. pigs, $8.00 ea.
Papers given. ~Edgar Moore,
Whigham, Rt. 2, Box 179.
8 wks. old S. P. C., male pigs,
reg. buyers name, $7. 50 - Jun-
ior Colwell, Jackson. Rt.
Big Bone Black P. = pigs,
| both sex, wt. 65-70 lbs. Reg. buy-
er's name; P. C., Hampshire
Grade 6 wks. old pigs. Write for
FOB prices. M. T. Bryson.
Greensboro.
94 males and 8 gilts, S. P. C.
pigs, treated and reg., buyer's
name, 3 mos. old, 50 2 olg
bone type, $10.00 ea. FOB. G. W.
Burney, Guyton.
Reg, large type Black P. C.
pigs, from quality stock, $10.00
ea. Watson Salter, Pitts.
Few grade Hampshire boar
-and gilt pigs sired by Our Model
(one of greatest sons of Peter
Pan) and out of sow sired by
Whirlwinds Blue Boy. Reason-
able for quick sale. Mrs. H. .
Benjamin, Waynesville.
5 P. C. gilts, 10 wks. old, reg.,
8.00 ea. here. J. G. Nash, Wash-
ington. Rt. 1.
3 S. P. C. 3 mos. old males,
reg., $2500 or $10.00 ea.;. also Lh
draft horse type stallion, 10 mos.
old, about 500 Ibs. in geod shape.
well built, Thomas Daniel, Car
OSE Nae:
sired by Iowa King,
5 purebred big bone Guinea 8] _
wks. old pigs, ent, to reg., agg
7: T. Wilbanks, Commerce,
Genuine big bone Guineas.
purebred, selected for quality
meat and fast gains; fine young
sow bred to purebred boar, $30.00:
choice pigs, $8.00 ea. FOB. Frank
T. Mindler, Griffin, Rt. GC, ~~
6 purebred big bone P. C. pigs
from Champion boar and sow,
sub. to reg.; or ped. 10 wks. old,
Sows, $10.00; boars, $8.00 ea. It
reg. add $1.50 ea. Ready soon. A.
F. Scott, Jr., Jesup.
Reg. S. P. C. male, 22 mos. old,
brother
te 1934 Nat] Champion. Sell
reasonable. Guar. best service.
Pigs, reg. and sired by above
male for sale, James argues
Jr., Ailey. -
2 yr. old O. I. C. sow, wi.
around 200 los. or more, reg.,
$25.00. Jackie Barnett, Lithia
Springs. Ra. 1. :
Durec pigs, sired by Dixie
Wavemaster, out of Supenba
Gilt $15.00 ea, reg. W. W. Cul-
breth, Bainbridge, RFD 2.
8 thoroughbred S. P. C. pigs
from champion blood lines, 3
males, 5 gilts, 7 wks. old April
28th, $10.00 ea. reg. and treated.
Billie Cawthorn, Jackson. Rt. 1.
Booking orders, May 15th del.
thoroughbred S. P. C. pigs, $5.00
ea. or $6.50 ea. with papers. Very
best blood lines. C. T, Snead,
Milledgeville. Rt. 4.
Purebred Black P. C. pigs,
Champion biood lines, 9 wks.
old, $12.50 ea. with papers. Mack
J. Bowen, Quitman.
Big Bone Black P. C. gilts bred
to reg. boar and reg. buyer's
name. Unless best breeding stock
wanted, dont write. C. J. May,
Washington.
Reg. P. C. male, wi. about 250
Ibs., 18 mos. old, perfect cond.
John W. Davis, Stilson, Rt. 2.
Big type P. C. pigs, sows and
gilts, reg., for sale. S. H. Stipe,
Carrollton.
Reg. Duroc from Winning
Show Herd, 125-150 lbs. 6 mos.
old boars, ready for service, and
150 Ibs., 7 mos. old bred gilt,
$25.00 each; 8 wks. old pigs, $10.
ea. Henry yp Lumsden, T'albot-
ton.
Big Bone Black African Gui-
nea gilts, already bred, $17.50 to
$27.50 ea. FOB; 1 good work
mule, 850-900 lbs. 8 yrs. old,
$85.00; good work or brood mare,
5 yrs. old, $150.00 at my barn. F.
P. Prather, Monroe, Rt. 1.
Reg. S. P. C. 11 mes. old boar,
ready for service, heavy blocky
type, $25.00; 5 mos. old boars
and gilts, reg., $15.00 ea; 8 wks.
old pigs, $10.00 ea.; Farm Relief
cotton seed, 75c bu. T. R. Dug-| 4
gan, Warthen.
Reg. S. P. C. pigs for sale, 3
J.) unrelated herd boars in service
now. ne and sons of
Champions, L . Isler, Morgan.
HOGS WANTED
Want 1 O. I. C. boar pig, pure
bred. State what you have and
He. Bowman, Buford. Ri.
Want 2S. Pp. C. reg. bred gilts.
State age, ped. number in let-
ter and price. E, K. Overstreei,
Sylvania. 2
Want little bone Black Guinea
4-6 mos. old gilt, full stock and
real Short-legged and Head, and
guar. satisfactory. J. C. Har-
groves, Marlow.
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
Toggenburg-Nubian 2 yr. old
milk goat, Ist kidding, due fresn-
en August 30th, $10.00 Apply. R.
L. Henry, Kennesaw.
Fine speciman, 3-4 Saanan and
1-4 Toggenburg, 6 wks. old Billiy.
Sell or exc. for one of good, new
blood, good speciman. Jas. A.
Carter, Valdosta, Rt. 1.
Large Toggenburg doe, fresh
with 3rd kidding. Good stock., ex-
cellent milker. Priced very reas-
onable constistent with ' quality;
also young doe, open, cheap. John
Hynds, Atlanta. 93 Warren Si.,
N. E. De 5140.
5 purebred Hampshire Ram
lambs, December: drop. wt. now
65 to 80 Ibs. Choice for breeders
$10 fob here; want a small very
gentle pony. P. S. Knox, Thom
son.
40 to 75 goats, mostly nannies,
large size, also nice 14 mos. old
colt for sale or trade for Black
Angus or White Face yearlings.
Larkin Bowen, Blakely.
4 good Angora billy goats, 3
good ram sheep and fat butcher
sheep and goats at reasonable
aS W. P. Demprey, Cave.
A
-50c, 15, at my home.
shipped; $5.00, 100 or Jarge lots. |-
SHEEP AND GOATS |
FOR SALE
2 nice Toggenburg does, bred
freshen in July and August. Sell
or exc. for hogs. Ray McKoy,
Newnan.
Pair weaned kids, doe, Nubian,
buck, Toggenburg-Nubian, $16;
Toggenburg buck service, $1.0
also pair Fantail pigeons, $2.00.
Last house on No. Hightower
Road. J. Joiey, Atlanta, Rt. 7.
Reg. Tog. milk goat, milking
about 4 wks. about gai. day. $10 or
$15 for her and her 2 kids. J. P.
Higginbotham, Bogart, Rt. 1.
3 Nubian and Toggenburg milk
goats (goed milkers) and billy
(no akin), $50 for lot, fob. C. .
Lord, Macon. Rt. 4. |
2 yr. old Toggenburg- Nubian
-doe from fine stock, not bred,
$12.50. A. C. Burke, Decatur.
10 Nubian milk goats, 3 fresh, 1
to freshen jn 2 mos., 1 doe not
bred, 1 fine Nubian buck and 4
kids, $50.00: cash for lot. M.
Roose, Louisville.
SHEEP AND GOATS
WANTED
Want 10 to 15 goats, Kids pre-
ferred, within 50 mi, Rome, Lewis
Lindsey, Rome. Rt, 2.
Want milk goats and hens. Exc.
good value. H. M. Taylor, Atlan-
ta, 1940 Holiman St.
Will trade good value for a
bunch of common goats or milk
goats. E. B. Shoemaker, West
Point.
RABBITS FOR SALE
2 prs. white N. Z. rabbits,
wks old, $1.25 pr.; White N. Z.
doe, 12 mos. old and 1 buck, i
mos. old, $250 pr. fob. Claude
McClure, Jr., Gainesville. Rt. 2.
5 White New Zealand, 6 wks.
old rabbits, $2.75 for lot, or $1.25 |
pr; 3 mixed bucks, 10 mos. Old,
$3.25, or $1.25 ea.; also Bantam
rooster and 3 hens, $1.75. =_
Lee Garner, Tennille.
RABBITS WANTED
Want 2 does and 1 buck rab-
bit. State breed and best price
del. R. E. Owen, La Grange. Rt. 5.
EGGS FOR SALE
Ancona Sheppard sir., 3-A
grade eggs, $1.00, 17, giant black
minorca eggs, $1:60, 16. Post-
paid. Mrs. L
Risk
Blue Speckle guinea eggs, T5c
setting, Exchange for P. R.
eae J. N. Carson, Griffin, Rt.
Pure English: Barron W. L.
AAA 20-300 quality and pure
Huggard N. H. Reds, $1.00, 15;
$1.90, 30 del, in Ga. Mrs. Nellie
Grubbs, Demorest,
White African guinea eggs.
$1.00, 15. Mrs. A. W. Arnold, Rt.
3, Newnan.
Thoroughbred R. I. Red eggs
for hatching, $1.00 15. H. J. Reitz,
304 Columbia Dr., Decatur. De
0855.
Purebred R. I. Red, hatching
eges, 50c, 15. L. A. Chamblee,
Hartwell.
Pure Dark Cornish eggs, 75c,
15 at my yard. J. W. Grant, Ca-
taula. :
Pure Golden and Silver Se-
bright bantam eggs, 10c_ ea.,
packed in light weight baskets.
Guar. Add postage. Carlie Kemp,
325 Maple Ave., Marietta.
Quail or Pheasant eggs for
hatching, also wild duck and
turkey eggs. Harold Street, At-
lanta P.O. Box 433.
White guinea eggs, 75c, 15;
Speckle zuinea eggs, 50c, 15. J.
R. Harber, Hapeville.
Jersey White Giant caps.
$1.00 if
Genie Hammond, Augusta, Rt. 3.
Se.ected, well packed hatch-
ing eggs, direct from Roselaws
ped. S.C. W. L. Barron str., $1.09
15. Mrs. Jesse Jackson. Austel!.
Rt2:
Exchange 15 Ancona hatching
eges for 20 White Australian >r
White African guinea hatching
eges. Ea. pay postage. Mrs. Wal-
ter Baughn. Talking Rock. Rt. 1.
Purebred R. C. light Brahma
eggs, $1.00 per 15 postpaid. Care-
fully selected and packed. Or
ders filled promptly. L.. J, Brown
Statan, Rt. 1. Box 195.
Few settings Dark Cornish
eggs, 5c per 15. J. W. Grant,
Cataula.
Fresh fertile Big English Bar-
ron W. L., AAA, 250-300 quality
and pure Hubbdard N. H. eggs,
$1.00 per 15; $1.90 per 30. M. O
lee Mrs. Nellie Brubbs.
D. Ellioti, Lavonia,
EGGS FOR SAL
Purebred M. B. turk
doz. del.; poults, Jun,
Mrs. Neal Willams, B
Pure white cornish gam
$1.25 per 15 del. J. O.
Adams, Commerce, Rt. 4.
Pure and fancy Wild
Duck eggs, $1.50 per 15
H. Clement, 128 Adams St.
tur,
Schmidt. sir. Golden 5
norca eges, $1.00, 15; $1.75,
Postpaid cartons to be ret
Cc. R. Bettis, Cumming, R
Dark cornish game eggs,
16 postpaid. M. Q. only, C
returned. Mrs. Alfred Gib!
chelle, Rt. 1.
Indian Runner duck | es
sale. Exchange 3 doz.
turkey eggs. Mrs. C. A
Mildred Pi., Atlanta.
Purebred Beeftype M
Bronze turkey eggs, $3.00, 15
Ann Hiscock, Rt. 5, Box
Quitman. A
M. B. Turkey eggs, $2.2!
20c per egg in less than
Postpaid. Exchange for .
Cartons returned. Mrs. PR
Colquitt, Rt. 1. :
Selected W.
gad ge FS oe
ome oo R. Ww N
Buford, Rt, 2.
Jersey White, Giant eges
15 at my piace: 85c if maile
so tomato plants, white
peas, peanuts and velvet.
.-| Mrs. H. B. Melton, Griffin.
Thompson Imperial B
ist pen, 90c, 15; $1.50, 30
pen; 756, 15> -S1. 25, 30 del
tons returned. Mrs, J. EB.
am, Bainbridge, Rt. 2.
Purebred AAA Booths
Cc. S. L. Wyandotte settin
from 1 yr. old hens, $1
$1.50, 30 del. Cash with
Mrs. Lucile Sellen, Alma.
Purebred Dark Cornish In
Game eggs, $1.00, 15. Cri tes.
turned. No. personal
Florence Horne, Grevetow
Genuine Buff Cochin ban
hatching eggs, $1.50, 1
Black Minorca eggs, $2.
AAA B, R. eggs, $1.50;
hatch cockerels and pullets 4
ea. O. H. Wright, Peters Bldg
Atlanta, Wa 7858 or He 06: =
Pheasant and. fancy Bo:
| quail and Duck eggs for.
eges and baby chicks, "hate
mu 25, May 2, a ea. Mrs Ww
poults. Z. J, Lee, Red O
Large type Dark Cornish |
eggs, $1.00, 15 prepaid; cock
ready for service, $2. 0 fob. c
Sikes, Sylvester. _
POULTRY FOR SALE
" ANCONAS SS
Want 10 ancona hens a
| rooster not over 2 yrs. old, -sta
price fob your station. Mrs
E. Waldrop, Roswell, Rt.
AUSTRA-WHITES |
Pullets from Australorp-W
Leghorn cross. Lots of 10 or
at 6 wks. old. 75c ea.; 6
purebred Australorp pullets
ea.; ceckerels, 75c ea. You
postage. E. R. Smith, De
311 Superior Ave., De 9076
BABY CHICKS
_ Want any breed baby chic
Mixed breeds accepted, Exchar
value. Mrs. W. A. Lewis, Toom:
boro. :
Want not less than 200
breed baby chicks to rais
halves to 8 wks. old. Party
pay trans. charges. Luna
Donald, Lawrenceville, Rt.
Want 200 Black Giant, day 0
chicks to raise on halves, Pa
pay trans. charges. 8 yrs. |
perience poultry raising. My
Frank Sewell, Abbeville, Be
Care Jim Miller.
Want 300 baby chicks te rai
on halves to 8 wks. old, ar
breed, B. R. preferred. S. Ss.
der. Mayfield.
Want 100 baby chicks to rai
on halves to 10 wks, eld. Mrs.
P. Faylor. 62 pany St.) ee
son.
Want 200 baby chicks w
on halves to 2 mos. cold Mrs.
Mae Haden. Loganville, Rt. >
Want to raise chickens o
halves. Will call for chicks an
furnish feed Mrs. W. H. Holmes,
Stockbridge. Rt. 2 :
Want 200 baby chicks to raise
on halves. Buff Orpingtons: p
ferred Party pay trans. charge
Mrs. Cora Messex, Munnerlyn,
Rt. 1. me
Want to exchange Red ang
Yellow Skin P. R. plants for ist.
baby chicks. Nedra Anderso.
| Baxiey, Rt 4 - - : :
JULTRY FOR SALE
POULTRY FOR SALE
ant. 50 to 500 good breed baby
is to raise on halves to 3
. old. Will furnish feed. Mrs,
as J. Walter, Roswell, Rt.
BANTAMS AND BRAHMAS
| pr. show type Japahese Silk-
.00; 1 pr. Golden Sebright
715 or $3. 75 trio; also Japanese
ilkie and Rose Comb blue legged
iden Sebright eggs, $1.50 doz.
ee Gaines, Buford,
small type mixed game ban-
4 wks. old, $3.00 lot fob.
. Southern, Roy. are
. Red Game and Jap ban-
and setting eggs; also Tog
eS doe cheap. H. M. Beu-
. 6, Atlanta.
ure R. I. Red bantam hens
roosters, $10.00 lot; 1 Mid-
C. Black rooster, one Buff
rooster, $1.00 ea. D. T.
gs, P.O. Box 84, Ameri-
g white Bantam roosters,
crowing, 50c ea. FOB. No
ts. Jack Culpepper, Quit-.
n. Wildwood Farm,
type bantams. Special
- on Buff Cochins, Dark
ish bantams. Best quality and
W. K. Herndon, Augusta.
Adrian St.
XED AND OTHER ROCKS
pure White P. R. hens and
roester, 1 yr. old, $10.00 lot.
prepaid. Mrs. L. W. Seago,
rst. =
ine B. R. toosters, Parks str.|
-ea.; blood tested eggs, 85
5 cartons returned. _Mrs.
: illen. ne
thoroughbred AAA B.. ' R:
rs, 6 wks. old, $1.00 ea.; 1
B. R. rooster, 1 yr. old. $1. 50.
ae Campbell, Hortense.
ee 150 purebred B. R. 10
cee frier size, 60c ea. at my)
6 Big Type W. L. hens, Apr.
1937 hatch, Quinn str., no culls,
$1.00 ea. fob. Not ship less than
50. Mrs. Grady Chapman, Butler,
Ril.
10 dark brown show type leg-
horn hens, 1 yr. old, $1.00 ea. or
$9.00 lot. M. G. Waller, 143 Em-
erson Ave,, Decatur.
Selected Big Type Eng. Bar-
ron str, W. L. tockerels, 50c and
75c ea. fob. Mrs. Lester DeFoor,
Toccoa, Rt. 2.
4 wks. old W. L. pullets, $30.00
per C. Several hundred. ea. week.
G. B. Dasher, Valdosta, Box 65.
2 Everlay str. W. L. 1 yr. old
cockerels, $1.00 ea.; also 1 large
White Pekin hen, 10 mos. old,
$1.00 ea. Not prepaid. Mrs. D. H.}
Thomas, Milner,
50 Seidels Class A, large type
W. L. 5-6% lb, 1 yr. old the
lith April, properly vaccinated,
laying 75 per cent, 90c ea.; 200
AAA Golden Buff Orp, pullets,
9 wks. old, 70c ea. Mrs. A. C.
Freeman, Flovilla.
MINORCAS
* Cockerels and pullets of White.
Black and Buff Minorcas and
Barred Rocks, 10 wks. old, 60c
ea. Mrs. M. oe Peterson, Vidalia.
2 fine purebred Kirchers
Golden Buff Minorea yr. old
roosters, $1.56 ea. or exc, for 2
yr. old pure bred Buff Orping-
ton roosters, Mrs. Lula Mahaf-
fey, Carrollton. Rt. 1.
4 Black Minorca pullets, $1.50
ea.; also Buff Minorca stock and
eggs. J. W. Stephenson, Collece
Park.
PIGEONS
1 Choice pr. White Fantail
pigeons, $2.00; also 1 white hen
and 1 black saddle hen, ready to
i; mate, $1.00 ea. Tom Arnau, Sa-
yannah, 221 East 49th St.
10 pr. White Kings, all work-
2 50c per pair. 386 Ponce de
Leon Ave., Main 9613.
Thoroughbred White Kings
and Carneaux pigeons, working,
$1.00 pr..or trade for insp. P. R.
potato plants. Chas. Johnson,
j.| Smyrna.
a Rock and ee aes
Red 3 wks. old chicks, 18
ks. old pullets, 45 ea,
or ghbred. aD
R. Feb. <a March
ockerels, 2-2'%% Ibs. |
irect from Booths AAA
yy, $1.00 ea. M. O, only; al-
me pullets for sale. Claud
avis, Sugar Valley, Rt. 1.
te Rock Fischel str, pul-
and cockerels, March 2nd
_pullets, 80c ea.; cockerels,
ea, Give free 1 cockerel with
-pullets. Can furnish un-
wy
Dark: Cornish. game hens,
ea. M. O. Mrs. JB, Sewell.
purebred Allen Roundhead
ng hens, 80c ea.; purebred
Jen -Roundhead stag, $1.00.
rville, Rt. 1
Dark Cornish, 6 hens. and 5 : : :
in heavy egg production, sell or
trade for young pigs; also 44 full]
ster, 2 yrs. old, $7.00 FOB.
or 100 baby chicks. Mrs.
iggins, Buena Vista.
ted Quill hens, $2.00 ea.; 1
% Red Quill and % Joe
an, $1.50; stag, same cross,
oe Redman hen, $2.00.
dead game, from winning
Sees Durham, -Biluff-
a \ -Buichers and Trish
-Game roosters, $3.00 ea.;
1938 hatch, $1.50 ea.; Eggs,
per: 15. se Se Decker,
rick.
Nant to. inane 2 yr. old
es Quill and Round Head game
S or one same breed and
younger; also want to buy
cekle bunch coffee peas.
ample and price W: #H.z
Duluth. |
GIANTS
rebred White Jersey Giant
and rooster, $5.00 FOB.
R. B. Davis, Haraison.
LAMONAS :
urebred Lamona roostrs,
d, direct from Osborn, $1.00
- Lamona-Leghorn hybrid
itching eggs, 35c per 15 FOB.
F. Hiscock, Quitman, Rt, Ms
ee {
: LEGHORNS
urebred W. 1. cockerels, 75} 2.
all 2a cere he
fine, cockerels,
g. str., Mar, 4 hatch. Write
oa 'W. G. Williams, Jr.,
Pigeons,
P. Martin, |
reasonable price. ' Mrs.
White Runner ducks;
| ducks,
Rowinvs {
| eggs,
350 pr. extra fine White King
$250.00 for lot. W. F.
Wakins, Millen. 408 = Masonic
St. ;
PIGEONS
Want all kinds pigeons. State
kind and price. Eugene Eason,
1019 W. Broad. St., Savannah,
Want mated, working Car-
neaux. pigeons. State price. R. C.
McCollum, Albany.
PEAFOWLS po
Want blue peacock. Mrs. H.
C. Russell, Waverly. . e
Want 1 pea. fowl hen. or
best price. E. A. Vinson, Corde
REDS. (NEW HAMPSHIRE )
50 New Hampshire Red pul-
lets, 8 wks old, 75c ea, Exp col-
lect. M. O. with order. Mrs. E.
K.. Usher, Sylvania, :
150 Hubbard str. New Hamp-
shire pullets, March 25th hatch,
Tse ea.; /200 hatched April 8th,
75c ea. at 6-8 wks. old. Mrs. D,
S. Allen. Williamson, Rt. :
REDS (RHODE ISLAND)
24 Donaldson Red pullets, now
blooded New Hampshire Reds,
10 wks. old, ay. over 2 lbs. 75c
ea. .E- C. Davison, Norcross.
23 R. Reds, 18 pullets, 10
mos, old, laying, 4 cockerels and
1 rooster, $25.00 for lot. includ-
ing a cock. Mrs. oe Thomp-
son, Darien.
10 R. GC. buncbned a I. Red
hens, now laying, $10.00 with
nice rooster free. Mrs. A, B.
Crow, Flowery Branch. Rt. 2.
Cocks, cockerels, Donaldson's
Reds, $2. 50 ea.; also white Jap-
anese Silkies, $5.00 trio; want 2
White Pekin ducks, grown at
Cis:
Miers, Stone Min. Rt. 1,
5 thoroughbred S,. C, R. I; Red
hens (really red and good lay-
ers), $6.00 FOB. Mrs. R. B.
Mooney, Adairsville.
TURKEYS, | -GUINEAS, GEESE,
ETC. FOR SALE |
Want best prices on Indian
also eggs
from same. William Z, Rackley,
Loving. | 2
6 large White Pekin ducks, 1
yr. old; 3 ducks and 3 drakes,
$5.00 lot. fob or exchange for
good corn. A. D. Call, Ellijay, Rt.
Paper white white Muscovy
$3.00 ea.; eggs, 75c per
15. Mr. Edwin Chenley,
Ground, Rt. 3, Box 44.
Black and white
ducks, $1.00 ea.; drakes, $1.50 ea.;
Fletcher, Mouitrie.
1 big Bronze Tom N arragansett
| str., $5.00 fob.; few settings eggs,
$3. 50 doz.; aso - sob eo
and small salary.
mo. a
Wrens, Rt. 2, Box 80.
Ball
Muscov y
$1.00 per 15. James C,|
POULTRY FOR SALE
FARM HELP WANTED
1 thoroughbred Mammoti| .
Bronze turkey tom, 1 yr. old Se
rs.
breeding purposes, $6.25.
Alonzo Wooten, Monticello.
Nice White Pekin ducks, $1.90
ea.; 23 for $20.00, Otto A. Stock,
Waycross, Rt. 2, Box 19.
ea. Mrs. E. H. Powell, Milan.
Bird), 1 yr. old, $1.50 ea. not
prepaid; want to. buy cheap a
good lively pony trained for light
plowing. State all qualifications
and lowest cash price. E. M.
Stephenson, Summerville, Rt. 2.
WYANDOTTES |
Purebred R. C. S. L. Wyan-
dotte hens, 1 yr. old, $1.00 ea.;
eggs, $1.10 per 30; Narragansett
turkey eggs, $2.00 doz. postpaid.
Mrs. Earl Wilson, Clarkesville.
3 purebred, white, R. C. Wyan-
dotte roosters, AAA grade, 6 mos.
old, for breeding purposes, $1.25
ea. Mrs. E. H. Powel, Milan.
Want 100 to 200 W. L. pullets
or young hens. No culls. Cheap
for cash. Prefer them near Ma-
con. C, J, Yates, Dames Ferry.
Want to contract pullets from
3,000 Big type English W. L. to
be delivered when 10 to 12 wks.
old. Mar. and April hatch. Chas.
T. McMillan, Gainesville, Rt. 8.
Want 50 white or B. L. hens, 1
yr. old, no culls, 65 ea. del. at
LaGrange. Mrs. R. H. Leverett,
Rt. 5, LaGrange.
FEATHERS WANTED
Want 25 lbs. new goose or duck
feathers at reasonable price. Mrs.
C. D. Shaw, Calhoun. Rt. 1.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want small family, 1 or 2 plow
hands. Year round job. House,
garden and potato patches fur-
nished. Good wages for eg00d
workers, W. M. Long, Ball Bround
Rt. 5.
Want woman for eork fsck
work. Room, board and salary.
Eugene Harris, Stone Mtn.
Want reliable, country raised,
unencumbered woman, 20-40 yrs.
for. light farm work, no field
work. Small salary. Carl Perry,
Monroe. it <s=
Want honest, sober man, mar-
ried or single, white or colores,
to work on farm, $10.00 mo. or
50c day and board. Will pay more
if board self. Theron Foster,
Shellman, :
Want reliable family who can|
{furnish mule and everything to
es 98 acre farm, for 5 yrs, 3
Elberton in forks -of Beaver
Dati Creeks. Send postage for in-
formation, Mrs. Lula Hays, At-
lanta. 81 Atlanta Ave. S. E.
Want reliable party able to
furnish self and -with all
equipment necessary for 15 acres
good land west of Atlanta on
Bankhead Highway. 4 springs
on place. Call Wa. 1171. Mrs.
L. D. Williams, Atlanta,
Want honest, christian girl or
woman for light farm work,
milking, etc, No field work. Board
and home with elderly couple
Mrs. Robert
B. Miller, Acworth. i
Want good plow hand. $15.00
and board. . R. Wade,
Want woman, 38-50 yrs.,
healthy, good character, to live
as one of family and help with
light farm work. Mrs. J..L. Lal-
zak, Brooklet. Rt. 1. :
Want middleaged couple at
once ag caretaker. Nice furnished
home to live in. Good farm.
Good proposition to right par-
ties. J. W. Bone, Atlanta. Ponce
de Leon Apts. Ma 2645. :
Want nice white woman, 40-
60 yrs. for light farm work. J.
W.- McGee. Griffin. 931 W.
Broad St. i
Want woman, 18-40 yrs.
for light farm work. Good home.
Ref. exch. Mrs. Panes Dillard,
~Dillar. Ga.
Want colored woman, with or
without family, to do light farm
| work, no field work. Write or
see Mrs. Louis Smisson, Ft. Val-
ley
Want neat, clean, country
raised woman for light farm
work. No field work. Home, board
and clothes. W. Ae Abercrombie,
Austell. Rt. 2.
Want at once, young or mid-
dleaged woman to help on a
small farm, doing light farm
work. $6.00 mo. and board. Claud
Prescott, Folkston. Rt. 2, Box 96.
Want at once.
white healthy woman to live in
home and do light farm work
for small salary. Mrs. A. C. Stan-
a College. Park. Rt. 2: Box
Want wii. Or colred. settled,
single woman for light farm work,
d- work. Cee and i small :
eS dre
Marlow. .
trious woman to live with elderly
salary for both. R. E. Strange,
no field work. Good home and
| Savannah, Rt. 3,
old;
middleaged
Rt. 3
Want neat, healthy girl or
woman to do light farm work,
no field work. Give ref. R. M.
Stanley, Vidalia.
|
Want woman, 40-50 yrs. old to!
do light farm work, no field work,
live in home with old couple and
$2.00 week. Mrs. C. M. Fountain,
Pitts: Rt 1.
A year round job for family
man, college trained in Poultry
raising, with good references as
to character and ability, and
must have had exp. in this work.
1500 chickens to start with. H.
Peskin, Winder. P. O. Box 433.
Want woman for light farm
work, no field work, Live as one
of family and reasonable salary.
G. W. Williams, Columbus. Rt.
1, Williams Dairy.
~Want man and wife, colored, to
live on country place, everything
furnished, 4 room ceiled house,
cow and get all vegetable out
of garden, and $20.00 month. Man
to look after garden, flowers,
etc., and woman to do extra work
at times. Henry B. Kennedy, At-
lanta. 715 Peachtree St..
_ Want middleaged woman, un-
encumbered, to live in home with
elderly couple and do light farm
work, no field work. Must be able
milk. $8.00 month, J, L. King, At-
lanta. 1608 Olympian Circle, S.
W., Ra, 6486.
Want encumbered colored wo-
man, 18-40 yrs. for light farm}
work, no field work. Must be
honest, clean willing worker and
good ref. Good home with every-
thing furnished and $2.00 tc
$3.00 week. L. R, Hogan, Atlanta.
223 Walton St., N. W.
Want woman, 25-40 yrs., for
light farm work, no field work
nor milking, for hor and small
Salary. J. F. Etris, Roswell,
Want middieaged white woman
for light farm work, no field
work. Home and reasonable sal-
ary. Mrs. C. M. Slack, Leslie.
Want woman, 35-40 yrs., good
character, to do light farm work,
no field work, Mrs. C. C. Helmey.
Want good, clean, healthy wo-
man, good character to live with
old couple and do light farm
work, Reasonable salary. Mrs. W.
J. Orr, Cumming. Rt. 5
Want singie, elderly, christian
man of good, sober habits to
raise flowers, take care of yard,
raise Game chickens, etc. Private
room and small salary. R. H.
Fenn, Brunswick. '
Want neat, respectable, indus-
couple and help with garden.
milk, poultry and other light
farm work, no field work. Mrs.
Mary J. Carter, Valdosta. Rt. 1."
Want reliable man for gen. farm
Owens, Lawrenceville. Rt. Tie
Middleaged woman wants job
doing light farm work, no fielc
work, $2.50 week and home wit!
good, small family. Miss An
Roberts, Pitts. Rt. 1. Care Mrs
Cc, M. Fountain.
20 yr. old young. woman wan
light farm work, no field w
Have small baby. Mrs. Elizabe
Deason, Atlanta. 951 Mercer A:
Want job on farm or dai
farm. Must have house. Wife a:
3 children. Apply on Saturdays
after 5:00 oclock on week days.
Charles Mooney, Atlanta. 20
Ridge Ave., S. W. =.
Man, 48 yrs. of age with wi
and boy, 17 yrs. old wants
operating Grist Mill on |
and percentage, or consider
seeing good farm. James
Lanier, Graymont. Rt. 1.
Middleaged, unencum
widow, white, wants job on far
with good Christian, old coup
doing light farm work, Appl
Mrs. B. F. Morris, Atlanta. 59
Kelly St. S. E. Care Mrs.
Taylor.
17 yr. old girl wants Tob doin
light farm work, $3.00 week, S
bus fare or come after me. Mi
Gladys Meadows, Buford. Rt.
Care John Richardson.
Good farm overseer, 39 yrs. ol
wants to live with good 2 hor
man, share in crop as_memb
of family year round, not just
to stock, etc. eae
Arnold, Atlanta. Care Gen. Del.
_ Man, wife and 6 children wa:
a 2 horse farm on 50-50 basi
or will accept farm work f
salary. Have to be moved. J.
Brown, Lumber City. ee
Want few acres near town
with small house for garden truck
and poultry raising. Have
stock and-tools, With good
G, P. Thomas, Meigs, Rt. 2.
Young, colored woman, strone
healthy, reliable desires :
farm work, no field work.
Rt. 5, Care of E. L. Braddy,
oe eaera man. with |
man. Exp. in
work. Need.
Have to be ?
on short nao
Macon, Rt, 73
Woman
farm wotlk,
and garden. A ssonable wage:
and boar. Have 3 children larg
enough fe hoe hands. Mrs..
Pass, cs gee 187 Simpson |
work. Location Northeast Ga. also| W-
want unencoumbered middle-
aged woman for gen. light farm
work. Board and reasonable
Rabun Gap. Care Whitmire Place.
Want settled, clean, healthy,
| unencumbeted Christian white
woman for light farm work, no
field work. W. C, Kutz, Ellen-
wood. Rt. 2; Box 93 B. .
Want good woman for light
farm work in exch, for board
and live as one of family. Mrs.
W. R. Pruett, Felton. Rt. 2._
Want healthy, unencumbered
white woman of good character,
40 to 48 yrs, of age to live in
home and do light farm work,
small salary. Mrs. H. G, Blakely,
Montgomery
Road.
Want by June Ist a_ strong,
healthy, young, country raised
woman for light farm work, no
field work. Prefer high school
eraduate. Board and small Salary.
Mrs. J, C. Stripling, Atlanta. 70
Third Sto oN We oe,
Want reliable man for a 20 A.
Apple orchard in Habersham
County, Write or apply for full
particulars. Mrs. Frank R. Holly,
Atlanta, 1492 Ponce de Leon Ave.
HON, Ei.
Want a partner -n shares to
dairy. Ea. go 50-50 in cows, feed,
etc. I furnish pasture and. barn
also want honest, sober, middle-
aged farm hand, $12.00 to $15.00
mo. board and -washing. H. F.
Seay, Ellenwood. Rt: 2.
Want single man, not. under
25 years. honest, willing worker,
agreeable, exp. in farming. $12.50
mo., board and laundry. W. J.
Fiveash, Hahira. Rt. 1,
Want boy, 12 to 15 yrs. to live
with family and do farm work
for board, clothes and little
spending money. J. A. Turman,
Elberton. RED 2.
Want wage hand at once, exp.
in farming. $11.00 mo, board and
oe Kec, ao eoulinua
Want z once, man or oman,
honest: ise: healthy, reliable, 35-)
"Ss. old to d
old, ta
drive track, sober, wants job for
wees. Cc. M. dee Monre
Wig , 39 yrs, old and
wan ht farm work, no field
wor reliable, nice peoy
<change for home
Farms hand, 34. yr.
Rt.
lanta, Care of ten. ~ Del
34 yr. old, single, Writes 12
exp. truck and car driver wal
job on farm or dairy. $20
board and ery Elisha ae
Altamaha,.
Want job on dairy farm, 5 yrs
exp. with reg. cattle. Good r
Married. James McCart, Porte
dale.
Want job canning on ha
fruit, vegetables; also have M
apple roots and other herbs
sale. Mrs. France Allen, Rober
town. Widow, 24 yrs., old
small baby wants job with go
people doing light farm wo
no field work. for home (ive
one of family) and some sala
Mrs. Clyde Gillmour, Atlant
724, Ponders Ave.
Middleaged coupleno childre
want at once place on farm,
No, Ga.,'on halves or for wag
and small salary. Farmed
life. 31 yrs. old, no bad ha
E. B.. Fields, Atlanta. 72
Peachtree Pl. Apt. 3, Wa 24
farm or dairy for board, laund
and small salary, Ardell Hen
Brookhaven.
Want job on farm near Reid
ville. No field work. 20 yr
able to work for home fo:
and 2 small boys, and sety
Lorene Toole, Kingsland.
Mother and 2 daughters: Ww:
work on farm, no field
for home and reasonable sal
Mrs. G. Reese, Atlanta. 879 C
don St. S. W., Ra 0336.
. 44 yr, old mother an
old daughter want work
rk | no field work, for ho
-onable salary. Mrs, Ge
\inson, Maco
6 Birch