Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1940 December 16

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CULTURE {
1ISSIONER||

MONDAY, DECEMER ne 1940.

- UL A ] 1p
ae \\\)
ALTON. COGDELL, DIRECTOR. STATE BUREAU OF MARKET: = ;

i

Campaign Pledges. Are Fulfilled.

r now the time of my depart.
re is at hand.

ave. fought a good fight; I have

ished my course; I have kept
e faith. Second Timothy 6:7.

t the close of 1940, my term of four:

s Commissioner of Agriculture of
ia will end and I desire to give a
eport of my administration.

ring the campaign of 1936 I made

te promises to the people of Georgia
some of the things | would do as Com-

mer. As far as possible, . nave car--

t these pledges.

onfronted with a debt ofsmore ahaa

00 when I took office, it required

conomy and much cutting of cor- .

9 pay this off in full within two

departments have operated in an ef- |
t manner during these four years, the.

e of Georgia getting the full benefit

protection offered them in the way

egulatory laws. \ -

health -of the people. ton

has

di 2d by the work of the Food and Drug ~

ent which has been alert to see
mly pure foods are manufactured,
d served in the state. The interests

ix. poultrymen and farmers, as well as
wives, have been protected through

. enforcement of the egg grading laws...

ICES, OF FRESH VEGETABLES

shr oms, 1-Ib. cartons 7% -30c +
rd Greens, bu. hampers 60-75c
es, Ga. Bliss Triumphs, 100 Ib. sks. Bhs 15
p Salad, bu. Pe ee

ARKET REPORT OF GEORGIA PRODUCE

ges quoted below on the Atlanta Market are py wholesale egg dealers for graded A-1 white and candied eggs. Ungraded eggs are quoted 2c to 3c below Be
Yard run eggs will not be permitted for retail trade under the Georgia egg law. Day-old and day-fresh eggs are offered as such and

se quotations.

oa

ash
4

4
i
x
&
%
4
i
x
4
4
%
K
4
4

LRA RA RARE NA ARIANA BRA RARASA RINDI

f
&
x
4
ae
Ey]
4
ue
x
g |
el
a |

a

Christmas Te

And, fo. the angel of the Lord
came upon them, (the Shepherds),
and the glory of the Lord shone around
about them; and they weresore afraid.
And the angel said unto them:
Fear not: for, behold, I bring you
good tidings of great joy, which shall
be to all people. :
= For-unto you is born this day in
the city of David a Savior, which is
Christ the Lord. |
And this shall be a sign neko you;
ye shall find the babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes, lying in a manger,
And. suddenly there was with the
angel a multitude of the heavenly host
praising God and saying:

Glory to God in the highest, and
on ae Peace, Good-will toward
men? sSi, like 2 9- 14.

The sale of out-of-state storage eggs as
fresh
stopped. eZ

* Drug inspectors have been rigid and

systematic in seeing thatthe drug laws are

enforced and that prescriptions are filled
only by registered pharmacists. At my sug- |

gestion, the Legislature passed a law to
transfer the
Board of Pharmacy, where it properly pe
longs, effective January 1.

' Dairy and livestock produces have

been aided materially by the fficient work a

of the Veterinary Department. Both phases
of farming are definitey on the upgrade.
Sanitary regulations have been carried out
in dairies, packing houses, and other pro-
cessing plants. Live stock diseases are be-
ing kept down. Splendid progress has been

CBgs | are not allowed to be offered for sale at all.

Atlanta | Barnes- |>

is, heavy breed __
SS Leghorn

ane

| Lake
land

7-40
30
30
14
12
-08
12
Aq
14

| Clarkes- Daw- > tae

eggs has been almost entirely

oe

Drug division to the State

4+ $4.00 to $4.75; few good fat

made in the eradiestioe. of Bangs Fe

With its long growing seasons and
portunities for the production of feed :

forage crops and upbuilding: of pastures

Georgia should produce not only all.

butter and milk needed by our people,

enough to sell other states.
Leads in Packing Plants. :

Georgia has more packing plants. than
any other Southern State. These afford lo.

cal markets for our livestock. And, in.
of the fact that more than-one million a

imals are slaughtered annually at. the
plants, the number of ae and hogs a
increasing.

During my aia some chang
were made in the Fertilizer laws, wh

have greatly benefitted the farmers whe

use commercial fertilizer. In addition,
have saved more than $5,000 a year by
having tags printed in Georgia instead
outside the state.

The Mar keting Division has performed
splendid. service in helping farmers
their produce. When I tock office, fo
years ago, I found:all of the state markets

_ (Continued on Page Two)

LIVESTOCK
These prices, quoted by White ' Provision.

Company, are on strictly corn-fed hogs:

-- Hogs: 180 to 240 lbs. $6.00; 150 to 175 lbs
$5.50; 130 to.145 lbs. $5.00 down; 240 to 300 lbs
.$5.75;.300 to 350 lbs. $5.50; good roughs, 180
. 350 lbs $5425; good roughs, 350 to 500 Ibs. $5. 00.
CATTLE: Good fat beef-type steers ale
heifers, $8.00 to $9.00. medium fat, $6.00 to $7.
fat dairy-fed steers and heifers, only good
enough to bring $5.00 to $5.50; common kin
beef-type cows
$5.50 to $6.00; fat dairy cows, $5.00 to: $5.50
medium, $4.50 to $5.00;,common, $4.00 to $4
eanhers mostly $3.00 to $3.75; good heavy b
$5.00 to $5.50; light bulls, $4.00 to $5.00;
calves, $8.00 to $9.00; medium, $6.50 to $7.50;
common, ae 00 to $6. 00; throwouts, $3.50 eS $4. 50.

18

t
#.

Metter Mt. Syl-

Vernon

Quit- Sparta

try Butter, bst. tbl
Peas, mixed

set Potatoes, per cwt.
bage green, per cwt.
bage. white, per cwt.

nseed Meal, 8% _.. 28.00

6.00-7.00
65.00
30.00 |
32.00
34.00

2.00

$15-$18


BULLETIN

Established by J. J. Brown, Commissioner ef
Agriculture, March 1, 1917


























































Published Semi-Monthly by
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
COLUMBUS ROBERTS, Commissioner
STILES A. MARTIN, Editor .
Executive Office: State Sapitel, Atlanta, Georgia
Publishing Office: Covington, Ga. :
Send All Letters to:

The Market Bulletin, State Capitel, Atlanta, Ga.
NOEEY: on FORM 3578Bureau of Markets

222 State Capitol

- Entered as second class matter August 1, 1937, at
e Post Office at Covington, Georgia, under the
Act of June 8, 1930. Accepted for mailing at special
rate, of. postage provided for in ection 1103, Act of
Deiober 8. 1917. :

Notices of farm produce and appurtenances ad=.

missable under postage regulations inserted one
time on each request and repeated only when re-
quest accompanied by new copy of notice.

Limited space will not permit insertion of notices
containing more than 30 words ene name and

Under Legislative Act the Geo ae Market Bul-
tetin does not assume any responsibility for any
tice appearing in the piilemn.

Commissioner Boban Reviews

(Continued from Page One)
ept the one in Atlanta, had ceased op-

ets and set about to improve the cace
Ss and services.

ITbought a 15-acre tract as a new ; site Kor
he Atlanta market, at a cost of $22,750
bought the Macon market site for $30,000
and spent $3,000 improving it. I bought the
Thomasville market site and improved the
cilities at a cost. of about $9,000. Im-

rs

arkets. Pe y

nuary 1, 1941, and through the co-,ner-
on of Governor-elect Eugene Talr Jc,
rk poy has started on the new mar-

as a abating center for ee pro-
uce. It is surrounded by industrial plants
yy Bees iness. houses. ceeaes of a mar-

: Many Trucks Vinde: at. Market.

is gratifying to me to see this work
ed before my term expires..A modern,

y about 200,000 trucks a year, in bringing
.'Georgia produce and:sending it out to
all parts of the country. | :

build similar markets in other cities. If
deral funds can be obtained for this, and
er Georgia markets, our farmers will
xpect their Senators and Congressmen to

ip. get}

unds for such. projects, and they should
e me a work of ae kind within the

The iarocaiory and office of the State
hemist were re-built and re-conditioned
mediately after I took office. This divis-
mn has rendered valuable services to the
ple by analyzing thousands of samples

rticles, to see that they meet legal re-
rements.

r the first ce since it was ee
the Market Bulletin, during my admin-
tration, has been kept out of politics.

ppeared in it. It has been used exclusive-
or the purpose for which it was intend-
serving farmers
on of notices of produce and articles
rmers had for sale or wanted to buy or
<change. All notices received by publica-

goes to nearly, 140,000 subscribers.

Farm Women Recognized.
hroughout my administration, the in-
ts of our farm women have been served
pecial division. A better understand-
the common problems of farm women
ity women has beer Jeveloped. Curb
s and other markets have been es-

Administration ee

vernment funds have been provided

am. After all, Georgia people |
elp to pay the taxes that provi ~ Federal

fertilizer, foods, beverages, and other.

ot one line of political, propaganda has

date were printed. The Market Bulle-

.

iting. We promptly re-opened these mar-_

ovements also were made at other SD

The lease on the Adiante sot expires

e market there will help farmers all
r the state because it will be patronized .

through the public- |

7

MARKE 7 BU LLETIN

tablished to help them sell the products of
their labors.

The prosperity of the Georgia Foe
in my opinion, will be governed largely by
the degree of diversification they practice.
They must have more than one crop to sell.

The farm situation is undergoing grad-
ual changes for the better. Roads are being
built and paved and rural electric lines
are. reaching into every farm community.
In order that the farmers of the state might
be given first-hand information on this Ru-
ral Etectrification program, i put a field
man in the state early in 1937, who went
from house to house explaining its bene-
: fits.

In every division of the Dopesasac

economy has been practiced. No debt. was

contracted until the mohey was in hand to
pay it. In that way, we have operated on
practically a cash basis. The adminis-
trative office has functioned efficiently in
handling all records and accounts and has
been commended in reports of the state
auditor.

The state employees associated with me
have been loyal and conscientious in their
work for the CED RTOMES: ae the people
ot Georgia.

The Department of Agriculture, was cre-
ated in 1874 by and for the farmers. Dur-
ing all these years it has been kept as a
separate agency of the State Government.
It is supported eee by fees, paid main-
ly by farmers, for the service they get.
Our farmers are entitled to their own
department. And, it is to be hoped that it

will be continued as an independent de--

_ partment.

As I come to the close of my Adminis-
tration as Commissioner of Agriculture, I
extend thanks to the people of the state
for their co-operation during my term and
in the. words of Holy Writ, I feel that I
have fought a good fight.. I have kept the
faith.

COLUMBUS ROBERTS,
oe Commissioner, ==

Dec. 1 Cotton cere for Georgia |

. Georgias cotton -bYop ar 1940 will
amount to 1,020,000 bales , (500 pounds
gross weight), according to all information
available on December 1 to the Crop Re-

porting Board of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture, at Athens. In 1939 final pro-_
~ duction was 915,000 bales and in 1938 the

crop amounted to 852,000 bales.

The yield of lint cotton per acre is plac-
ed at 251 pounds compared with 227
pounds last year and 203 m-1938... This
years yield is the highest on record with

the exception of 1914 aa ee Harvested

acreage is placed at 1,946,000 or 2.3 per
cent less than the 1,992,000 acreage in cul-

tivation July 1. This difference is the aban-_
-donment from natural causes plus the acre-

age plowed up in order to comply with the
crop control program of the Agricultural
Adjustment Administration.

Unfavorable weather conditions during
the spring and early summer caused the

cotton crop to make a very unsatisfactory

start. Poor stands were secured in south-

ern Georgia, and much planting over was
necessary due to excess rain and below nor-
mal temperatures. Germination was fur-

ther delayed by a dry cool May. June was

generally a favorable cotton month, even
though the crop continued from two to
three weeks late. The crop suffered from
lack of cultivation and increased boll wee-

- vil activity as rains fell daily during the
first half of July. Starting about the mid- |

dle of July the season was favorable in
_most sections, with the exception of the
east-central portion of the.
suffered some damage from the hurricane
that hit in August and the extreme north-

ern counties where the continued drought |

through September and October reduced

the size of the bolls much below normal.

z ago. =

Weather was favorable for harvesting and

the crop was saved in excellent shape
throughout the state.

Bureau of Census ginnings prior to Dec-

ember 1 in Georgia were 957,000 bales

compared with 901,000 bale to the same
date in. 1939. United Stats ginnings to De-
cember 1 were 10,870,000 running bales
compared se! 11, 110, 000 bales a year

mated at 154,217,000 pounds of

.88) average. The increase over. las'

age harvested but also the yield p

_ trification Administration has allc

Whorter, show that on Octob

| REA promotion, said the new funds

jon promoting rural line extensi

-rwenty per cent of the Georgia fai

ed the use of quotas on the 1941
Agricultural
announces.

provisions of the Agricultural Ad

state which.
-a marketing quota


















































































MACON, Ga., Dec. 7:Averag
acre yields of 58 bushels on lowland
bushels on upland this year has
title of county corn kings for tw
farmers, Thomas OReilly and J. C. J
according to an announcement tod:
I. Bruce, Bibb county agent. OReill
duced 289 bushels of corn on five
win the lowland section of the f
corn contest, while Jordan grew 31
els on his five acres of upland so
winners will receive prizes of $40

Increased Lespedeza Acr
The 1940\lespedeza seed crop ;

run seed, the Agricultural Mark
vice reports. This compares. with
000 pounds in 1939, with 205.
pounds for the peak year of 19388. an
57,982,400 pounds for the 10-year

attributed chiefly to a larger acr
all producing States except India
nois, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
States drought reduced not only <

Georgias 1940 production is est
3,655,000 pounds compared with 2,
pounds harvested in 1939.

Big R.E.A. Program in G
ATLANTA,

Dec. 14.The Rural

Georgia the sum of $3,153,000 in
five months, bringing to a total
148,845 the amount spent or be
to take electricity to 73,000 fa
rural merchants in the state.
-Figures just made available
Public Service Commissioner Ma

seven REA financed electric syste
operating 15,716 miles of lines Ww
999 actual constimers.

J. W. Sikes, field representativ
Public Service Commission in ch 1

ted will increase the number of sy
operation from 37 to 43, and wil
power Jines by more than 2,000 m
potential consumers by more than

Mr. McWhorter, who is in char
Public Service Commission s sp

the REA, said that the lines alrea
through REA finances as) serving

lies:,

Cotton Vote Announc

- Washir cton, Dec. 9. Antoine
snettacial cNarns from the Satu a.
cember 7, cotton marketing quota
endum. indicate that farmers hav

pen ae ni

Virtually ane returns fr
the 19 cotton-producing states,
total of 844,856 votes cast. Of thi
783,054, or 92.7 percent, voted ix
marketing quotas, while 61,802, o
cent, opposed quotas. An estimat d
to 75,000 votes remain to be report

The referendum was held ace

Act of 1938. The Act provides
supplies of cotton are more than ev
cent above normal, as defined in th
must be proc
Quotas are put into effect, how
if approved by two-thirds of th
voting in the referendum. All farr
produced cotton in. 1940 were 1
vote. s

Mo Actne ooo. on cotton 1,
in effect for the past three year
farmers voting in a referendum o1
ber 9, 1939, approved quotas. o}
crop by D1. 2 percent.

The incomplete vote in Georgi
644 for and 9,049 votes against th
86.8 per cent voting fav able
Boke incomplete, i ,

Parity Deadline Approack
THENS, Ga., Dec. 12Thomas He Breddiove
administrative officer for the AAA, said the

late for farmers signing applications for 1940

ayments is December 31. = oe
se who do not sign the applications by the
y of the year will stand a chance to lose the
nts due them, he added.

More Cash Crops Urged

sorgia farmers should produce additional cash}.

put should not give up cotton as long as its pro-
igs profitable, is the advice of Director H. P.
y of the Georgia Experiment Station.
a paper prepared for delivery on the State
of Regents radio program, Forward Geor-
r WSB, Dr. Stuckey stated that one of the
ves of the Georgia Experiment Station is to
igher yielding varieties of crops to replace
1ot especially adapted to Georgia. For instance,
ation recently developed and made available
rgia farmers the new Sanford wheat which pro-
barrel of flour to the acre more than varieties
general re in the state; the Terruf oat devel-
y the station produces approximately seven
oer acre more than varieties in general use;

xi soybean equals and surpasses the best com-
] varieties in both hay and grain; the Chero-
eet corn outyields all northern varieties yet
nd a new cabbage-collard withstands winter
tures and grows two leaves where the old
em variety grows only one. oe :
ne station began an intensive peanut production
program in 1931. Last year, a new selection
1uts developed by the station was delivered to
peanut growers for testing. One test pro-
s much as 2500 pounds of peanuts per acre.
savy-yielding, new varieties of peanuts serve to
ment grazing when pastures fail. Peanuts may
vested and fednuts, vine and allto dairy
beef cattle, and sheep, with good results. -
For the farmer interested in grape production,
tation has developed twelve new varieties of
ne grapes, each of which has some superior
ty not possessed by the older varieties. One of
w grapes the Hunt, produced more. than four
e-half tons of grapes on one acre of good land.
ar, some of the processing plants paid as much
0 to $60 per ton. :

Watch Your Eggs

Dr. E. P. Long, State Food Inspector, states that
bgg Inspectors employed in his department, will
nue their duties all through December, especial-
Long says, in seeing that storage eggs are not
-as fresh eggs. : a
Tousewives, and especially Christmas shoppers
rned by Dr. Long to see that the Eggs they buy
eled fresh are really fresh and not cold stor-

A Announces 1941 Rates of Payment |

Rates of payment and national acreage goals for
941 agricultural conservation program have
announced by the Agricultural Adjustment Ad-
tration. The principal change, as part of a con-

policy to

pee more emphasis on soil conserv-
, makes ava

lable a greater share of funds to

ers who carry out approved soil-building prac-|,

nder the agricultural conservation program, a
ilding allowance is set up for each farm on the
such factors as the farms cropland, non-crop
asture land, and commercial orchards, accord-
. R. Breedlove, state administrator of the AAA
Na...
41\ rates for computing the farm soil-building
nees in Georgia are 70 cents per acre on crop-
n excess of the sum of special crop acreage al-
snts other than commercial vegetables and $1.35
e on commercial orchards.
Rates of payment in 1941, which are based on
rmal yield of the 1941 acreage allotments are
cents per pound on cotton, 8 cents per bushel on
, $2.25 per ton on peanuts, 2.3 cents per bushel
amercial potatoes* 8 cents per pound on flue-
and burley tobeeco, 1. cent per pound on Geor-
Florida Type 62 tobacco, and $1.30 per acre on
ymmercial vegetables. ;
_ As in previous years, the rates of payment are
et to revision upward or downward by.10 per
as an adjustment for participation when final
ents are made, Mr. Breedlove pointed out.
the 1940 season average price falls below par-
he conservation payments for wheat, cotton, and

| heart sick; but w .
Sire cometh, it is a tree of |
life. A scorner seeketh wis- }
dom and findeth it not; but
knowledge is easy unto him
that understandeth. He that.
despiseth his neighbour sin-
neth; but he that hath mercy
Ipon the poor, happy is he.
Proverbs.

LOOKS PRETTY DARK

In surveying farm adjust-
ments to meet war impacts, the
agricultural map of the nation
has many dark spots showing

pendent upon export marke,
and some light spots where
products will benefit by in-
creased demand for domestic-
ally consumed dairy and poul-
try products, meats, wool, and
fruits and vegetables, Sherman
E. Johnson, head of farm man-
agement in the Bureau of Ag-
ricultural Economies, said re-
cently. The outlook for two ma-
jor cropscotton and wheat
will. be dark regardless of the
outcome of the war, Johnson
said. Adjustments in some of
the areas producing these com-
modities seem highly desirable.
He mentioned as leading al-
ternatives either more jobs for
farm workers, planting food
and feed crops for home use or
preducing domestically con-
sumed products. S

SECOND-HAND

Farmall tractor F-12, 2 disc
bottom plow with 24 inch
dises., 20 disc harrow, cotton or
corn planter, tractear attachment,
fertilizer dist., cultivator, tractor
attachment, complete set culti-
vators, all A-1 shape, $650.00
for all See Jas. Clark III, Sea
Island. Z

1 set blacksmith tools, con-
sisting 1 blower 1 anvil, tongs,
hammers, $20.00 here. Lester
Massey, Danielsville. Rt. 3.

Water power grist*mill, good
cond, on Newnan-Frankin
Highway, about 5 1-2 mi. West
Newnan. Reasonable. Geo. N.
Bryan, Newnan. Rt. 1. ;

13 h. p. tractor, good cond.,
and other equipment. 8 mi. East
Canton on No. 20 Highway. W.
E. Collett, Canton. Rt. I.

2h. wagon with cotton body,
in good shape. Sell or swap for
good 1 h. wagon. Homer Allison,
Bairdstown. :

Good Facdson tractor -and
cutaway harrows, $100.00. See.
2 1-2 mi. below Duluth on new
Buford-Atlanta Highway. Jack
Garner, Duluth. Rt. 1.

2-2 h. wagons, one with steel
wheels, $20.00; other, old hick-
ory, $15.00; both fair con 3
Gantt guano distributors and 2
cotton planters, good shape for
$10.00. Exe. for cows or year-
ling. W. P. Couch, Luthersville.

Steamer for dairy, also 10-ten
gal. and 1-5 gal. can with tubes.
H. C. Waldrep, Forsyth. Rt. 1.

24 in. American cacn mill,
good cond. Sell or trade; also a
600 egg cap. Queen inc., good
hatching order. $25.00 cash. R.
A. Moon, Marietta. Rt. 3, (on
Roswell Rd. near 5 Points.)

International (med. size) feed
mill, 3 sereens, 1 Star, 6 cylin-
der mote, both in good ghape.
Used motor to run mill. Reason-
able. E. C. Miller, Midland.

3-2 h. reversible dise plow.
$5.00, $10.00, $15.00 respective-
ly; 3h. p. eng., farm use, 2 dise
Oliver tractor. plow . $45.00; 8
dise tractor plow, $25.00; Letz
feed mill, No. 80, $45.00; 2 h.
wagon, $45.00. S. R. Spires, Lin-
colnton.

Geist mill, 16 h. p. electric
motor, corn sheller, floor scales,
complete and in operation. Fred
Gore, Austell Rt. 1.

Some farm tools 2 h. wagon
and 2 mules for sale. Mrs. N, B.
Wilson, Luthersville.

1 good 1 1-2h. p. Fairbanks
gas. eng., in farm work, for
sale, cheap. Mrs. W. H, Thomp-
son, Dry Branch.

_ Rice mill (cost $300.00): 24
in. Meadows grist mill (cost
$140.00); hammer feed mill
(cost $190.00). - Al practicaly
new. Selling out. $140.00 for the
3, or $60.00 for either one. A.
T. Hart, Thomasville. RFD 2.

Williams grist mill, 20 ia.
rocks, good cond., for sale or

eco will be supplemented by parity payments
1 a separate appropriation from the soil conserv-
1ppropriation, the state AAA official added.

trade. J. H. Kilgor
Star Rt. at oo

> eS el

de- i

|| Webster,

up where crops are partly de-

MACHINERY FOR SALE

1 $75.00. Write.

ae
J. C, Collier; Barnesville.

1-5 spring tooth, 1-7 -spring
tooth
Harrow, 1 chain drive cotton
planter, 2 weeders. Mrs. Nellie

Macon. Bloomfield
Road. a E

Used pecan q-acking machine,

electric. G. E. Buchanan, Amer-

TeuS

reck. 1 corn sheller, 10 h. p.
engine, A-1 cond. reasonable for
cash. S. F. Williams, Toccoa.
Rei7 td.

not used much, $70.00; 80 gal.
churn with motor, $45.00; IH.
C. endgate seeder, 1939 model,
$19.00. C. M. Brennan, Colum-
bus. : e

Good 2h. and 1 h. wagon,
Reasonable. Also guano distri-

Pherson, Villa Rica.

1 Oliver dbl. disc side plow
(extra front axle for tractor),
for Facdson tractor, practically
new, $25.00 or exc. for milch
cow, corn or cotton seed. T. L.
Hammond Gainesville. Rt. 4.

Williamson horse drawn
stump puller, good as new, $450
outfit used only few days. $175.
H. Hi Williamson, Albany.

1-% h. p. gas eng., good cond.,
used in farm work, $15.00. J. H.
Harbin, Atlanta, RFD Box 458,
(Childress Dr., S, W.). 3

2-14 in. dia..Cane Mill rollers
for sale or trade for corn, hay,
beans ce shuck;.also 1 h. p. hay
press I. H. C., for sale or trade.
D. M. Kirkland, Summertown.

3 roller Ky. iron Case, $15.00;
3h. p. gas. and ker. combination
eng. and other equipment, for
gale here. Albert B. McKoy,
Newnan. Sc

20 in. Meadows corn mill, 2
hole sheller, good running shope,
$100.00. G. M. Williams; Con-
yers, Rt. 3.

ME i

Sharpless seperator,
good cond., $10.00. F. F. Wad-
dell. Smithville. Rt. 2k:

~ 2 horse disc harrow, . good
working order, 1 Kiristem
stump pullers with necessary
attachment, for sale. W. M.
Shattuck, Blackshear. Rt. 2.

Home-made tractor, 2 sets of
plows, hacrows, $150.00; 1 Ox
well trained, plow. or anything,
Oscar Adams,
Cleveland. Eos

Combination Chattanooga 2
h. plow No. 7;-72, all parts

practically new for sale; want

a 400 cap. Super Hatcher inc.
ear Macon, cheap. Robert M.
all, Reynolds. =

Guano distributor, 2 h. turn-
er, 1 middle buster and some
other equipment, at
prices. See. Albert McKerley,
Duluth. Rt. 1.

Large feed mill, 30 h. p. unit

or, first class running cond.
Cheap. Good location. W. C.
Long, Screven.

A 2 horse wagon, good cond.,
also 1 h. wagon. Cheap for
eash. Frank C. Pruiett, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1, Box 67. r

Corn Mill, 24 in. rock, per-
fect shape, complete, sheller,
motor ete. $100.00. J. W. In-
gram, Commerce, Rt. 4.

I h. walking cultivator.
Bought in 1939 and _ cost
$33.50; used one howr only,
$20.00 cash, or $28.00 in trade,
for corn, peas, beans, hogs,
young cow or i h. wagon;
Horace Colbert, Reynolds. Rt.
3, Box: LES.

48 ft. steel tower and cypress
tank for windmill, reasonably
priced. John G. Owen_ Waverly
Hall.

A 20x28 Case thresh wind
stacker. Sell or exe. for peas or
anything can use. B, C. Malcom,
Good Hope.

2 practically new wagons,
$35.00 ea. See to appreciate.
oe Uram, East Point, Box

Blacksmith tools, good outfit.
Write or come see. Paul Turner,
Dawson. :

Slightly used new Racine
threshing machine, 1 Fordson
tractor, peanut picker, good
shape, 1 practically new John
|Dere- binder, 1 good 2 disc

~Wagoon, Bostwick.

plow. If interested. write, GC. H.

Pe tel
Re

10 ton used wagon scales com- |
in good cond., $100.00.

cultivator; 1 little Joe)

Meadows corn mill, 22 in. |

6 disc Case Wheatland plow,

butor. Come see. Mrs. J. C. Mc-|

No. 4,

right |

motor, 1 grits mill and seperat-} a
- Extra large Lady YT. strav

Complete blacksmith _
Come see or write. O. E.
er, Dawson. ad

I Economy 6 h. p. gas.
for farm use, $30.00 at
home. Oxford Denham, M
Sot Whterae 7% a ee

- SECOND-HAND _

harrow for tractor,

shape and cheap.
tractor and put-fit. J:
Chandler, Conyers. Rt. 3. ~

Want B model Allis Chalmer:
tractor and equipment. Like
exc. mule and mare and pa
difference; also have syrup milk
and pan and riding cultivato
far sale. O. I. Shipley, Auburn.
Rt be ee

Swap 6 nannies and 1
goat (milk strain), for late m
el garden tractor. E. M. Rob-
erts, Atlanta, Rt. Dy Box 31

Exe. 1 Duroc gilt. bred to S
P. C., for a harrow. D. M. Kirk-
land, Summerctown. Sa

Want 3 h. turn plow in good
shape. Pay cash if cheap
exc. a good farm /bell in part

ay. Write what you have to
offer. P. J. Watson, Nunez. Rt
1 Bose. \ te eee

Want .small Hammer {|
mill, also corn mill. Quote 1
est price. Joe M. Hadden, A

Want a Hammer mill in g
cond. Mrs. J. C. Porter, Clarke
ville. Rt.<3. rey ON es

Want Cole dbl. hopper, cor
and peanut planter, in good

| cond., cheap for cash. I. 0.

Spence, Pelham.

Want good, second-ha
row farm tractor. Trade
pair mules and pay differ
State make, model and price
Troy Miller, Calhoun. Rt. 2,

Want good second-hand ay
press. Robt. H. Taylor, Millhav-
en.sRis t Box Ge

Want wind mill, 10 ft. sta
40-50 ft. Write, Also want Fa
belle A. J. Carr,* Milledgeville ;

Want second-hand power
cane mill. Golden or Chattanoo-
ga preferred. C. C. Boyd, Jones=
boro. Rt. 1, or 106 Harris St.,
Bast Point ==. a

Want good dairy boiler - also
reasonable for cash. Jas. A. Gor=-
don, Jr., Athens. tale oe

Want 100 second-hand sta
chions and stalls. W. W. Live.
Atlanta, Rt 2. Ve 10084 =

Want a pretty good, us 1
Oliver plow reasonably cheap;
have a good size farm bell
$4.00 FOB my. station. J.
Burns, Colquitt, Rt. 5.

=

wi

PLANTS FOR SALE

-

berry plants, 25 C; $2.00.
Klondike, 20c C; $1.50 M. Well
rooted, yonng plants Del. Mrs.
J. S. Crowe; Cumming, Rt. 1. ~
Frostyyoof cabbage, C. W.,
Early Jersey Wakefield, 50
M;: 5 M lots, $2.00 prompt ship-
ment. Mrs. A. B. Williams
Alma. @4
Jewell strawberry plan
$2.25 M; $1.25,-500; Lady T.,
Klondike, Everbearing plants,
$1.25 M; 75c, 500. Prepaid.
Mrs. R. F. Maltbie, Robinson.

Lady T. strawberry plan cE
30c C; 500, $1.15; $2.00 M. Nell-_
ie Freeland, Flowery Branch,
Rit gers

Klondike strawberry plants
$2.00 M. Prompt shipment.
Blondie Reynolds, Gainesville
Riso = ok ees

Large, early Everbearing
strawberry plants, $1.00 M del.
exchange for cried peaches,
apples, feed sacks, honey. Mrs.
ee Baggett, Douglasville, Rt

Cultivated bunch blackberr
and raspberry plants, $3.00 C
more than 500, $2.00 C. -W. |
Kelley, Conley. x2

Mastodon strawberry $2.00
M; Klondike, $1.50 M del
pens Crowe, Gainesville, Rt

Missionary, Mastodon, $2.00 :
M; Klondike, $1.50 M. Postpaid,

_ Rex Crow, Gainesville, Rt.


- Klondike strawberry, $1.25
M; Klondike, slightly mixed
with another var. (just as
large), $1.10 M- Add postage.

el Sullivan, Marietta. Rt. 2.

Klondike strawberry plants,
strong, healthy, new yellow
roots, 20c C postpaid. Mrs. M.
H. Walker Grantville.

Boysenberries, $1.00 doz.;

$1.85, 24: $2.75, 50; $5.50 C;

ungbecries, 75c doz.; $1.35;

24% $3.00 C. No order less than

$1.00. Mrs. George Haskell, Rt.
con.

Everbearing strawberry
lants, $1.50 M; 500, 85c del.
No chks. Mrs. O. C. Cantrell,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Well rooted Lucretia dew-
plants, 50c C. Postpaid.
pt shipment. Frank Ben-

_ Coffee.

Collard, Ga. Blue Stem, 10c C.

: lots of 500 or 75c M. Mrs. |

. Thaxton, Hiram, Rt. 1.

Missionary and Klondike
strawberry plants, 500, 85c;
0M. del. Mrs. Leila Phillips *

Collard, frost-proof 20c C,
ce per 4 C, 85c M, del., or $3

C, collect, or exc. for pe-
ns. Lee Crow, Gainesville,

- ever-bearing,

Kudzu crowns, No. 1, packed
care
re shrubbery. Yonge Walk-
Toccoa, Rt. 3. :
wberry, Klondike, $1.50
stodon, $3 M. Faustine
Ids Gainesville, Rt. 2.

sllard, thousands, Ga.,; and
ings, 50c M in 5M _ lots,
M lots, 45c M; Klondike
berry, $1.50. M. Ovie
inesville. ee

deher plants; Crys-
ermuda onion plants

Vv bbage, true to name
for anything valuable;
e white sacks for large
k . Mrs. Arbie

Bowdon, Rt. 3.

onion plants, $1.00

in 5M a: more lots.
rted seed. No COD

ar, strawberry plants,
Q0c: $1.65 M. del. Calvin
it, Gainesville, Rt. 7.

dike strawberry plants,
M.. Emmett Crowe

ie Rig
dike strawberry plants,
M. Mastodon, $3.00 M.
- Blondine Reynolds,
D2
str $1.50
todon planis, $2.00 M.
Iavis Crowe, Gainesville,

strawberry plants, |

00; $2.00 M. postpaid.
eee Flowery

y, Mastodon

eC, C, $1.40 M?
ostage, prompt shipment,
ooted plants. Mrs. Effie

ry, Lady T and Mis-

2 M, postpaid in Ist
zones; 2 gals. white
garden bean seed for
exc. for dried apples,
cupful. Mrs. A, GC.

$1.50, all postpaid. J. W.
Macon, Rt. 2, Burton
wherry, early bearing,
ra large 25c C, 90c per 5
0 M, prompt shipment.
Duran, Cumming, Rt..1.

large, fresh, extra

erry, Klondike, 25c
per 5 C, $1.50 M; Lady
$1.15 per 5 C, $2-M.
ready. Royce Wal-
yery Branch, Rt. 1.

Klondike, 25c
3 0 M, prompt

p

$6 M, 75c C. also;
| plants, 20e C;

|ment. Satis.

{Ist yr.,

PLANTS FOR SALE

~ever-bearing,
for 2
Paul

Strawberry,
20e C, postpaid. or exe.
white feed sacks. Mrs.
Grindle, Cleveland, Rt. 2.

Cabbage, E. J. and C. Wake-
field, 60c per 5 C, 5e M;
sweet white Bermuda onion
plants, 50c per 5 CG [pee NGsk
I. Stokes, Fitzgerald, Rie:

_ Strawberry, imp. large Klion-
dike, strong, well rooted, loc
C, add postage. Rosie Crowe,
Cumming, Rt. 1.

Dewberry, imp. Luccetia, duis
dorado ~ blackberry heavily
rooted, 2 yr. field grown, $15
per 2 M. Mrs. Cc. M. Robinson,
Greenville. Z

Strawberry, giant New Gem
everbearing, picked an average
of over 100 gts. per wk. from
May to mid-November hard.
freeze, 90c C, postpaid, $1.50
per 250, $2.75 per 5 C, $5 M,
exp. C. A. Dobbs, Gainesville.

Strawberry ever-bearing
30c C, $1 per 5 C, $2 M; Klon-
dike, 25c C, 85c per 5 C, $1.50.
M, postpaid, prompt shipment.
Mrs. Ada Waldrip, Flowery |

XS

_|Branch, Rt. 1.

-Red Gold Sugar Savor straw-
beuwcy plants, Red Thornless
raspberry, everbearing -black-
befry; asparagus crowns 50c
doz; Early Premier strawberry
plants, $3.50 M. Mrs. We E:
Allan, Alto, Rt. 2.

Klondike strawberry plants,
25c C; 500, 85c; $1.50 M. Post-
paid. Prompt shipment. Clyde
Waldrip, Flowery Branch, Rt.
fee ;

plants for 2 sacks. Plants post-
paid. Callie Grindle, Dahlon-
ega. Rt. 1. :

Klondike strawberry plants,
25c C; 500, 80c; $1.50 M; Lady

T: 30c C; 500, $1.15; $2.00 M.}

Cc. F. Waldrip, Gainesville, Rt.
Be eee
Good,
plants, $1.25 M; 500, 75c. Moss
packed. Prompt shipment. La-

fate Watson, Odum. yas

Frostproof. cabbage plants,
all varieties, 85c M; Crystal
Wax, Yellow Bermuda onions,
90c M postpaid. Prompt ship-
guar. Herold

Smith, Baxley.

Kudzu crowns, well rooted

$5 M. C
Rt, 2s :

Strawberry, Klondike, 20c C,
75e per5 C, $1.35 M; hoar-

. N. Summers, Tifton,

hound, $1-doz; 1940 dried ap-}|

ples, 15c lb. prompt shipment,
add postage. Miss Grace Crowe,
Cumming. Rt. 1.

_ Strawberry Mastodon, 30c
C, $1.25 per 5 C, $2.25 M; Lady
T strawberry plants, 25c C, $1
per 5 .C,~$1.75. M. Mrs. - Hi. Ti/

Whitmire, Gainesville, Rt. 1. |

EK. J. Wakefield cabbage
plants, $1.10 M. FOB. Mrs. J.
iL, Altman, Alma. 407 12th St:

Strong, healthy -Lady
Thompson strawberry plants,
20c C. $1.50 M. Postage extra.
R. J. Miller, Augusta, Rt. 2,
Box a27 6: Bes

Klondike Strawberry plants,

.20 C. $1.50 M. Add postage.

Mrs. Dessie J. Pruitt, Dahlone-
ga. Rt. I, Box 67.

Klondike strawberry plants,
25 C;.500, 85c;-$1.50 postpaid.
Prompt shipment. Ulysses
Reed, Gainesville. Rt. 2. =

ES J. and Chas. W. cabbage
plants, 500 50c; 85c M. Del;

110 M., $6.00 collect. Klondike

strawberry, 500, 90c; $1.50 M,
del. W. O. Waldrip, Flowery
Branch. ees

Early bearing var., straw-
berry plants, has champion
size berries of uniform growth,
extra heavy croppers: 25c C:
500, 90c; $1.75. M. Gladys Du-
ran, Cummings. Rt by

Mastodon strawberry Ea
$2.00 M. at Nashville. Exe. for

Cuban Queen watermelon seed !
J. H, Anderson, |

at 50c Ib.
Nashville,

ae

CORN FOR SALE.

Limited quantity Hastings
snew yellow prolific seed corn,
; 75e pk.> $2.50 bu.;
-wWhite prolific, $2.00 bu.; also
pure D. P. L. 11-A cotton seed,
$1.00 bu. Exchange fo O-Too-

Tans and peas. H. H. Alexan-

Nes

Fine everbearing strawberry |
exchange 100].

strong strawberry |

|. Peanut hay and feed for sale

sready by Dec. 15, 22 .1-2 Ib.

CORN FOR SALE

300 bu. corn, 85 bu.; $250.-
00 lot at barn. R. L. Sumner,

Finleyson.

Yellow pop corn, 4c on cob;
5c, shelled in 50 Ib. lots fob.
P. C. Pace, Rt. 1, Box 425;
Jakin. :

Extra large South American
pop corn shelled, cleaned, 5c
lb. fob. No orders less than
50 lbs. Tom Fields, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 1.

Extra large South American
pop corn, shelled, cleaned, 4c
Ib. No orders less than 50 lbs.
fob. Tom Fields,. Gainesville,
Rt,

Yellow prolific seed corn,
$1.00 pk. Add postage. N. J.
Hale, Buena Vista.

BEANS AND PEAS FOR
SALE

s

Garden bean seed, striped
half runner, big, white half
runner and a big buff color gar-
d 1 bean (very fine bean), 20c
cupful; 1-2 bu. lady peas, Tel.
No stamps wanted. Mrs. Colleen
Pendley, Jasper. Rt. 2.

Nice, white shuck beans or
leatherkritches, 30c lb; sev.
lbs. white. tender cornfield
bean seed, 15c lb; 4 or 5 doz.
black Concord grape vines,
bearing size, 10c ea. Add post-
age to all. Nellie Fain, Ellijay.

White Sugar Crowder peas,
10 Ibs., $1.00 del. Mrs. SP;
Reed, Varnall, tas:

Willets Wonder English pea
seed, frostproof, 25 lb. Add
postage. 10 lbs., more, del. Al-
so dried apples; pears, peach-
es, 2 lbs., 25c del. S. D. Guille-
beau, Linconton, Rt. 2.

50 bu. mixed peas, sound,
bright, $1.50 bu. fob. S. M.
Dyer, Thomson.

* Good, tender, brown, half
runner bean seed, 2 cups. 25c;
30c lb. Add postage. Mrs. L.
-R. Rashworth. Rt. 1, -Logan-
ville, :

60 lbs. Lady peas, 7c lb. not
postpaid; 10c lb. on postpaid
ordegs. Cash or M. QO. Thos.
A. Hughes, Buford.

=

GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE

Good peanut hay for sale at
factory price. Truck or Ccar-
load lots. J. E. Leger, Co. Ag-
ent, Blakely._ :

10 1-2 tons No. 1 peanut hay,
$7.00 ton. Mrs. L. L. Roberts,
Ft. Gaines. see
GPhuine blue stem wheat,
free from weevil damage,
$1.25 bu.; country cured, hick-

Riley. C. Couch, Turin.

5 or 6 tons bright runner
peanut hay, $10.00 ton at my
ot N. T. Maples, Doerun,

ee os

200 bales bright oat straw,
$8.00 ton; 125 bales runner
peanut hay, $10.00 ton fob
-here. J. W. Lang, Omega.

Genuine blue stem
wheat, free from weevil dam-
age, $1.25 bu.; country cured
hickory smoked sausage, -30c
tb. Prompt. Riley C. Couch,
2rd See ane :

Appler, Fulghum, Fulgrain
seed oats, 60c bu.; May Blue-
stem seed wheat, $1.25 bu.;
Abruzzi seed rye, $1.50 bu. fob.
J..F, Lowe, Ft. Valley.

10 tons peavine hay, No, 1,
baled for sale. Fob my farm 17
mi. so. of Quitman. Mrs. L.
W. Watson, 1274 Oakdale Rd.,
Atlanta. 3

fu

in large quantities. Can be
shipped. L. O. Perry, Asabi.

FRESH AND CURED
MEATS FOR SALE .

Country cured ham, oak
wood smoked, guar. sound,

fob. C. B. Hurst, Meigs, Rt. 2:

Link sausage; hardwood
smoked, 25c ib.; hams 25ce Ib.,
money back guar.; Hastings
100 bu. oats, 65c bu.; cabbage,

110 can, No. 1 grade, $1.50; No-

ory smoked sausage, 30c Ib. |}

seed |.

fearly garden white blooming

Fin

TOBACCO FOR SALE

Smoking; chewing tobacco,
10 lbs., $1.50 postpaid. Mrs.
Christine Wilson, Rt. es
Clarkesville.

Good Ga. tobacco fer chew-
ing and smoking. 10 Ibs., $1.00;
5 lbs., $5.00 postpaid. M. B.
Swain, Alma... :

FRUIT AND BUTTER
FOR SALE

50 Ib. clean, sundried apples,
free of core, peel, 12 {=221b.;
$5.50 lot del to 2nd zone; few
Ibs. tender stiped and white
Half Runner bean seed, 25 Ib.
del, Mrs. Hattie Jenkins,
Cleveland, Rt. 4. =

Yates apples, 75c bu. basket
fob Ellijay. M. L. Pettit, Ke:

Z30r 4 nice country butter !
each week, 30c lb. postpaid.
Mrs. H. V. Bivens, Hiram, Rt.
2 :

Good-sundried apples 12c Ib.
del. Essie Kimsey, Cornelia.

Nice Jersey butter, 30c Ib. in
4 lb. lots; pure white velvet
okra seed, 15c lb.; exchange
for 12 white feed sacks, 100 lb.
size. Mrs. B. L. Thornton,
Bowdon, Rt._1.

7 or 8 Ibs. nice fresh butter
each week, 25c lb.; 4 or more
lbs. del. Mrs. Myrl Williams,
Waco, Rt. 2.

500 bu. yates apples, truck
loads, 50c bu. D. A. Henderson,
Box 143, Cornelia.

Nice, sundried apples, free
of core, peel, worms 12 1-2c
lb. del, Henry F. Weaver, Ma-
rion. $ :

HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES: FOR SALE

New crop pure Gallberry
honey, -10 lb. pails, comb or
extracted, 90c ea.; $5.00, case
of 6 pails. Send shipping chgs.
Jim Pye, Odum. e

Bright Gallberry strained
honey, in new containers, one
60 lb. can $5.75; six 5 lb. pails,
$3.55. Exp. pd. in Ga. Quality
guar. Prompt shipment. H. L.
Hallman, P. O. Box 25, Na-
hunta.

20 Ibs. bees wax, $3.00 fob.
Alex Barfield, Louisville.

extracted honey, No..

f

Pure

2, $1.25 postpaid. Write for
quantity prices. Floyd Ander-
son, Hilton.

6-10 lb. pails, No. 2 extract-
ed to case, $4.50; 6-5 Ib. pails,
$2.50 fob; 110 lb. pail, $1.10;
2-10 tb. pail, $2.00 postpaid;
several large 50 gal: barrels,
ice on request. John A,
Crummey,. P. O. Box 117, Jes-
up. oe

White Tupelo gum honey,
1-10 Ib. pail $1.50; 1-5 lb. pail,
75c. B. E. Sheppard, 1222 Hen-
ry St., Savannah. :

SEED FOR SALE

bunch gerden pea seed, freeze
proof, $12.00 lot postpaid.
Stamps not accepted. Mrs. T.
T. Holloway, Cobbtown, Rt. 1.

1940 clean cattail millet
seed, $5.00 cwt. fob. Cash or
M. O. T. J. Byrd, Broxton.

a :
Nice, clean, 1940 crop okra
seed 10c cupful; 25c qt. Not
postpaid. Mrs. S. T. Taylor,
Quitman, Rt. 1.

Serica for sale. Price to be
established with country seed
cooperative. Hoke OKelley,
Rt. 2, Loganville. ~

Old fashion cornfield pump-
kin seed, 15c cupful; deer ton-
gue tobacco seed. 25c tbls.;

peas, 15c cupful; black walnut
meats, clean, 3 lbs., $1.00. Rea-
thel Stover, Pisgah.

Nice white multiplying on-
jons, for fall planting, 35c gal.
Add postage. Oma Fields, Rt.
1; Gainesville.

2 lbs. Va. bright leaf tobac-
co seed . $2.00. B. LL. Davis.
Nicholls, Rt. 2.

Mammoth green pod okra
seed, 25c lb.; May strawberry |

| Plants, 500, 75c. Add postage. |

215C2 10.3

db.; seedlings, 10c

40 lbs. Worlds Champion |

Johnnie

; Sale,

onion plants, 75c M. W. W
3, Quitman. ;

Baltimore, Stone
Favorite, Matchless,
tomato seed, $1.10 1
globe, $1.15 lb.; white
10, 15c. W. R. Stephen
lonega. Rt. 1. =

Climbing tomato, gr
ft. high, wilt resistant,
enough for average
500 seed 25c; 5. pkts,,.
W. M. Thornton, Jesup

. Red, multiplying oni
dy and will not seed or
en, 40c gal. postpaid.
P. Rush, Adairsville, R

Multiplying: nest on
gal. ruekey figs, scup)
vine crabapple, hac!
limbertwig apples,
black haws, 10 ea. $
A. T. Patterson, Waco.

Eng. pea seed, old fi

1 frost-proof, heavy be:

lb. plus postage. Mrs
Brannen, Hazelhurst

White Burly tobacco.
tbls, J. W. Mills, Toccoa.

All var,, Georgia Sug ,

Aor seed, 3 ft. and u

Booking orders. for Sp
Special delivered
prices. Write. Joe Wil

Cushaw seed, 10c t

| hot pepper; 10c tbls.

cherry, 25c qt. All p
Orders as much as 30c-
Josephine Raley, Mite!

PEANUTS AND PE:
FOR SALE

Stuart pecans, $4.0
seedlings, $9.00
stamp for sample. As
bantam roosters, $1.00

No, 1 Va. bunch
4c-lb= = Stuart; Ven
Delmos pecans, 12c I
Tings, --6e* =-1b.= sais
Duroc Jersey sow,
old, $25.00; 6 sho
and 6. P=. GC. -erosse
old, $5.00 ea. at bar
Norton, Edison. :

Stuart pecans, ni
12 1-2 J
Howard Hayes, ~
Rite

Pecan halves, 40c I
pieces, 35c lb. Mrs. E.
Yatesville. .

Paper shell peca
Exchange for acid dr
es. Mrs. Edd Upchur

peanuts, free of |
matured, $2.50 bu. V:
Jan, Rt. 2 Alto; :

About 35 Ibs.
15c tb.; 40 Ibs. Se
and small, 8c lb
Ward, Benevoence.

All var. budded p

Wonder Eng. peas, 25:

small lets; 10 Ib. lot

fob. S. D. -Gillebea

a, BE
Large size,

Q , Clean, shell
in halves, mostly Sx
lb.; broken pieces, 35:
white crowder peas,
Norman, R
lei. ee
85 lbs. Schley
lb.; Stuart pecans

$30.00; 15 lb.; good

100. Ibs., i

P. = 1 a eae

2 or 600 pounds p
W. A. Sargen

306 5th Ave.

Large papershell p
crop, 13e Ib. or 12

Ib. lots. All FO
for sample. Mr

Mershon, Rt. 1, Box

EGGS FOR

Ss. C. R. I. Red egg
B. W. D. tested flocks, a

4 ae z

i Chale ieggs
Write for prices. Mr;
Sessions, Soperton.
aie ee hat

Mrs. J, N. Adamson, Lula. 'R


day cotton seed, ist yr.,
bu.; $4.00 ewt. fob. BoD
Jefferson, Rts:

} 50 bu. pure 11-A D. P.

tton seed, ist yE kept
e at gin, 75c bu... 2 W:
wn, Bremen...

DP s. ica botton
aS yc., kept pure at gin,

= large red valencia

ts, washed free from pop
trash, $8.00 cwt. H. W.
mond, Greensboro, Rt. I,

/ Stoneville 2-B cotton
ist yr., recleaned, graded.
. EFeown, Hartwell.

cer cotton seed, str. 3,
ure at gin; Coker seed,

I, wilt resistant, str. 3,

ae W. T. Alen, Daniels-
ao

-day cotton nee produces
than bale to acre, $4.00
fob. E, D. Webb, Jeffer-

bu. Summa-our hi-bred
re Half cotton | seed, list

kept pure at gin, $1. 00 bu.
.. R. Reeves, Dearing.

y prolific long lint cot-
ikes over bale to acre,
ewt. fob. Bill B.. Webb,
son, ne B32 3

-eotton seed, 45 per|.

Ga 1 1-2 to 3 bales acre,
) bu.; $4.00 cwt. fob. Bill
Webb, Jefferson Rt. 3.

P.. Le No. 11-A cotton

$1.00 bu.; $3.00 cwt. Ex-.-

for pr. good: pigs. P.

ew. i, Lavonia.
000 lbs. Cokers 100 str. 3;
Ths Oe 200 str. 1, ist

Richardson, se Rana

tlon teed: Ist yr., in 100
yags, $3. 00 C. W. O. -Hud-
pS GEIIOn.

-Stoneville cotton

Ast ae $1.25 bu. Cash or

nge | for any kind farm

ct. L. Williams, 19 North
=) Statesboro.

Por cotton seed, $2. 25
xchange for anything of
H. P. Malcom, Social

nes 90 day prolific cot- |

ed, pure, 40 per cent lint,
ES staple, large 5 lock bolls,
CWT, freight paid. No,

we a Davis, Milledge-

Ri Oe

D&PL iA cottonseed;
re Fl. 00 bu; mixed grass
bean hay, will exe. for a 2
turning plow that can be
ed by F 12 tractor. Can be

ni. No. Rome at Bells|;

a. s: Davis, Rome, Rt. 2.

-bred Half and Half cot-
ed, ist yr. Summerour.
ame at gin, $1.00 bu. FOB

ion, AR Reeves, Dear-

bu. ee Cook cottonseed,
from breeder and high

tests $1.00 bu. FOB. Exc.

cows or yearlings of equal
del. my farm. Milton
t Dlakely:

ATOES FOR SALE

. P: R. sweet potatoes,

offer; also 10 bu. Coker |:

tton seed, 75c bu. Sta-
ylor Alma, Sie

| bu. No. 1 Buck potatoes,
bu. my farm; 5 tons No.
ight peavine hay,
my farm. O. B. Brown, Ft.
Y, Rt. 2. =

INCUBATORS AND
ROODERS FOR SALE

d burning keooder stove,
eap., $10.00. Exe. for bunch

ning velvet beans. Mrs.
ius Helms, Buena Vista.

ir ishing battery, practically
7, reasonably priced. J. E.
adel Atlanta, 814 Lee St.,

sveral hundred good wire
wies for laying hens (must
oved in sections by_ truck;
ot sell without party see-
t) also lot of feeding
hs. Mrs. George Haskell,
Rt. 4 *phone 1955 W.

ound inc., 160 cap. good as
, $8.00 del. Mrs. W. H.
wphries, Milledgeville. Rt. 2.

'brooder plant,
broilers per week $200.00; 1}

$15.00 |

Incubators: 120 cap., Buckeye.

$10.00; 45electric, $35.00. Both
perfect cond, Exc. for good
milch cow, Jersey or Guernsey,
and calf,or for purebred hogs;
also have a-2000 eggs cap.
Buckeye, same as new, $650.00.
Morris Sanders, Nashville.

- 250 cap. Super Hatcher Inc.,
good cond., $8.00 cash or teade
for heifer yearling. H. Towns,

Towns, Ga.

450 egg cap., oil pause ne.
cost $46.00. Used twice only, al-
most like new sell for $12.50.
Mrs. Geos, Rabun, Brunswick.
523 Wolf St. ;

Praivie State inc., 100 egg
ceap., $10.00. J. A. Middlebrooks,
Jenkinsburg.

A 500 cap. ker. brooder, used
only = year. Cost $12.00; sell,
$6.00. Mrs. W. R. apes Lees-
burg. RFD: 1.

1 Blue Flame oil brooder,

1000 chicks cap. used 1 time on-|-

ly, $8.00 at home: Wont ship.
B. Ham, Cobbtown.

1 oil burning brooder, first
class cond., 300 chick cap. $7.00
cash, plus postage. Feeders, wa-
ter caps, instructions included.
Jim Clinton, Tunnel Hill.

1 electric brooder, used one
time only. Sell or swap for farm
produce of almost any kind. H.
E. Smith, Augusta. Rt. 3.

2000 cap. hot water battery
reoduces 200

light running 2 h. wagon, re-
built, $20.00. Dick Scott,
Adairsville, Rt. 2. -

1000 egg electric inc.. for
sale for less than 1-3 of or-
iginal cost. Perfect cond. G. L.
Stripling Macon. Rt. 3.

ws

PECAN AND OTHER

FRUIT TREES FOR SALE

Brown Turkey . fig, yellow,
June plum, red, bronze scupper-

'nong, black James muscadine,

hazlenut, all 10c ea. $1.00 ) doz,
6 or more prepaid. Cash. Roy

M. League Waco. Rt. 24

Pecan, 3-4 ft. trees, true to
name, Stewart, Schleys, Frot-
scher, Money- Maker, Success,
Curtis, as fine as grow, 90c ea.
10 for $8.50. Money order. E.
Campbell, Odum.

Black walnut sprouts, large
mountain variety, 16 to 20 in.,
75e doz.; 50, $2.00 del.; tripple

and running tomato seed, J5e-C +

seed. Reed F. Fowler, Roy.

Budded pecan trees, all lead-
ing vecieties. Write for prices.
Cc. C. Lowe, Byron. :

Crabapple, black haw, red
haw, huckleberry, gooseberry,
3 ft. high $1.00 doz. plus post-
aoe Mrs.-Ivalene Watson, Rt.

2, Toomsboro.

Black, red haw, eos
persimmon, _shucklebepries.
gooseberries, 3 ft. high, $1.00
doz, Add postage. Mrs. M. C.
Connell, Rt. 2, Toomsboro.

Leading var. apple and peach
trees, 1 2 -yrs. old, 10 to 15c
ea; grape vines, 2 yrs. old, 10c

tea. Postpaid... W. a, Alexander,
Cleveland.

Peach trees, gue to name,
leading var., grape vines, $1.00
doz; $5.00 C; $45.00 M; plum
apricot, apple trees, 8c tree
higher; Keiffer pears, 3-5 {t.,
$2.50 doz: $15.00 C. Mrs, E. B.
Travis Riverdale.

All leading var. peach trees,
guar, true to name, $32.50 M;
$4.00 C; 80c doz. R. A. Travis,
Riverdale.

Yellow or bronze Sept. scup-
pernong vines, well rooted, $1
doz; Himalaya blackberries, $1
Cc Postpaid. C. Es Smith, Bras-

f.

elton. F

Brown seuppermnong vines, 4
to 20 ft., free of diseases. Write
for prices. Pomegranite bushes,
8 ft., cut down to 6 ft., 50c ea.
a cS Coggins Covington.

~ State insp.. Stuart pecan
trees, 2-7 ft. 40c to $1.00 ea.,
Schleys, 2-10 ft., 40c to $1.25
ea. fob. M. M. Newsome, San-
dersville.

Black walnut seedlings, $1.00.

doz. Mrs. Annie Patillo, La-

Grange, Rt. 4, Box 79. .

Scuppernong, muscadine
vines, brown fig blue Damson
plum, apple sprouts, dif. var.,
10e ea. $1.00 . doz; Kudzu
crowns, 75e C. $5.00, M. Inez
Patterson, Waco, Rt. 2.

muscadine,
scuppernong, black walnut
crabapple, $1.00 doz; del; well
rooted Kudzu crowns, 15 Cc
$5.00 M. del. Marcelle Patter-
son, Waco, Rt. 2.

Eeown Turkey fig bushes,
old fashioned horse apple trees,

10c ea. $1.00 doz. Kudzu crowns
50c C. Well rooted. Ruby Pat-
terson, Waco. Rt. 2, Box 86.

Strong, healthy purple fig
trees, 2-5 ft. also the large figs,
2-4 ft. Strong, well. rooted
white seuppernongs, 3 yr. vines
all pruned and ready for plant-
ing, 25c ea. at my place. Mrs.
Maude M. Holland, Reidsville.

Genuine Pineapple pear trees
3 yrs. old, large bushy tops,

around 8 ft. high, $15.00 :doz.

Del. by express; 4 to 8 ft., $5
to $8 doz. Del. Cash with order.
W. C. James, Manor.

Black cherries, large sweet
2 ft. or more, good roots, $1.00
doz; 2 apple trees with ea. or-
der. All postpaid. Prompt ship-
aoe Pauline Horsley, Waco,

2

Thornless Youngbacry, Ros--
erberry, Sodus (red) and Black
Beauty raspberry, either or as-
sorted, 10 for $1.00 postpaid. .
Finest new bunch and scuppar-
nong grapes. All state insp.
Write. H. A. Neal, Ashland.

Stuart, Schley Moneymaker,
Success, Moore pecan trees, 50c
75c ea; Standard var apple
trees, 6 to 8 ft, 20, $5003 37
Scuppernong, Thomas, Flow-
ers, James Ce apevines, 50c ea.)
eae - James eaten, Aus-
_te

Leading var. apple, peach
pear trees, cheap for cash or
exchange. T. M. Webb, Ellijay.

White 50c
doz; figs,
Hackworth
apple sprouts, tame blackber-
ries, black walnut sprouts, blue
damson plum sprouts, $1.00

scuppernongs,
seedless peaches,

/dez. Mrs. W. E>; Abererombie,

Bowdon, Rt. 2.

asparagus a@owns, 50c
premier early strawber=
ries, 40c C; $3.50. M; . garlic
bulbs, sage plants, 30C = doz.
Mrs. John B. Nix, Alto, Rt. 2.

State insp., best var. pecan
gees, Stuarts, sizes from 2 ft,
to 7 tt., 40c to. $1.00 ea.; Schleys

ries,
doz;

{2 ft. to 10 ft., 40c to 5 25. a. |

fob. M. M. Newsome Sanders-
Ville.

Concord, grapes,
black, white scuppernongs,
black muscadines, blue. damson
red, yellow goose plums, 10c
ea.; 1, 2 yr. old black walnut
trees, 25 ea.; several bu. sound
dry, black walnuts, 50c bu. Ex-
change for peanuts, Bote Ar-
tyce Entrekin, Rt. 2, Waco. ~

Gov't insp., eae var. ap-
ple, peach trees, 10, 20 ea.;
cherries, pears, plums, apri-
cots, figs, 25e ea 2 a grape
vines, 10c ea;:; $7 50 C; paper
shell pecan trees, 3, 4-4t.,1d;
young berry plants, 10 ea.5
$7.50 C del. Lee Head, Cornel-
ja.

ee red and sweet,
imp. blackberries, large white
grapes Ludie and Concard
grapes. Each, $1.00 doz. C. M.
Dwight, Atlanta, 1035. Capitol
Ave., S. W., Ma 3671.

Brown turkey figs, white,
black scuppernongs, musca-
dines, May and Richmond cher-
ries, blue Damson and Red
Goose and Jap apricot plums,
Hackworth, Limbertwig, Horse
apples, 10c ea; $1.00 doz. Del.
Bertha Patterson, Waco, Rite,

White scuppernong, black
muscadines, wild grape, dew-
berry and blackberry, rooted
vines, $1.00 doz. del; Red hall,
sugar berry, brown sugar fig,
Jap. apricot, blue Damson plum
rusty peel winter pear, $1.00
doz. Kudzu crowns, $6.00 M.
es . Olivia Patterson, Waco,

Red_arid June plums, Concord
gape, . bronze -scuppernong,
ee muscadine, 10c ea. $1. 60
doz. P. P. Early bearing straw-
berry (berries extra large and
sweet), 35c C; small kind, 10c
Cc; garlic bulbs, large, 25c doz.
All postpaid. Grady Brown,

Waco. Rt. 2.

Yellow and red June. plums,

gine Damson Sad | fap aprinot
plum, brown fig,

white, black scuppernong vines |

-crabapple,

few-black cherries, 1 1-2

and Limbertwig | -

Raspberries .white blackber- |

| barn. Cash on del.

black and white scuppernongs,
crabapple; Jap. plums, 10c ea. |
$1.00 - doz; strawberry plants,

ARE 2

40c = Seabron HORE Ie, Waco.

Old fashioned peach trees,
red May cherries, red thorn-
less raspberries, 2 yr. old as-
paragis crowns, large, ever-
bearing plackbeury. 50c doz;
also hand Be SS eg
Spanish peanuts, free 0 pS,
$9.50 bu. Mrs. W. B. Allan, A

tO. ie ee

Crabapple, bronze scupper-

pernongs, muscadines, poplar, |

Maple trees, yellow and. red
red June plums, 10e ea, $1.00

doz, P. P. Cliff Want Waco.

REG:
- Bronze and black Setpoee
nongs, mhuscadines, yellow and
red June plums, Rose plums,
Hackworth apples,
10c ea. $1.00 doz. postpaid. Jo-
sie Huggins, Waco. Rt. 2.

SYRUP FOR SALE

300 aioe al _cans sugar
cane syrup, 60c per gal; also
110. bu. old N. C. Runner pea-
nuts for seed, $1.00 bu. All FOB
Tom Harrison, siro Rte ds

Pure Ga. cane syrup in new

cypress barrels, 36 gal. bbl.;
$15.00; 2 bbls, or more, $14. 50
bbl. fob Guyton. Hi. R. Zip-
perer, Marlow,

CORN AND SEED CORN/

FOR SALE

Hastings corn for seed, white,
old time, prolific 50c pk., $2. 00:
bu. shelled. You pay ponies
ft. $1.00 doz; 2 apple sprouts
with ea. order. Postpaid. Cash

acm. 0. Pauline Horsley, Waco.

=

Rt. 2.

MISCELLANEOUS
"WANTED

BEANS

Want some good. sound vel-
vet beans, both bunch and. run-
ning, for feed for own stock of

White Face cattle. Quote price.

M. Aiken, Newborn.
Want to buy 150 to 300 bu.

A.

Clemson soy beans or Mammoth Ri.

yellow beans. Se eae sample and
price del. or fob your station.
Pood: Johnson, Buford, Rt. 1.

CORN:

Want about 40 bu. corn; 2
tons peanut hay, del. to my
Make offer.

Mes. 1. 3. Lacey, Box 529, Al-
bany.

Want 100 bu. dry, sound
shelled corn, in 2% bu. sacks, |
del. Quote price. a M. Cook,
Monroe.

COTTON SEED:

Want 30 bu. Black eotton
seed, must be pure, low bush
variety. Make best offer. A. J.
Kent, Rt. 2, Midville.

TLAY; :
Want several tons good hay, |

any kind, not over 50 mi. from

here. W. "D. Elliott, East Eli-

jay.
- Want to buy hay. State price |
on 4 or 5 ton lots del. my home.

J. E. Hutcheson, Clarkesdale.

}
INCLISATORS BROODERS
ETC. WANTED =

Want incubator, 500 cap., , also
2 brooders; 1000 chick cap. each;
af$o want poultry, pigeon and
rabbit feeders and other eguip-
ment, Jas. K. Rice, Douglasville.

Want buy used electric incu-

batter with 2-to 4 M. egg caps

Dr. N. B. Jones. Cordele,

Want electric inc., 1250-1500
egg cap. Give price and details.
5S. -B.. Mellen, = 213 Ivy
St. NE,

ONIONS:

~ Want 2 gal. large red multi-

plying enions. State price pre-
paid. Edith Whatley, Rt. 1, Fay-
etteville.

PLANTS:

Want at. once, Partridge Ber-
ry slips with large berries on.
State price per bunch of 25 or
50 del, postpaid, in first class,
un-wilted cond. berries on in-
stead of loose. L. M. Otter, At-
lanta, 516 Langhorn St., S. W.

Want to buy several hundred
theusand cabbage plants. Quote
prices and varieties. T. E, Rob-

| erts, ronaldo vile.

Want 10 to 20 M ea
cabbage plants; also wa
one to grow eely ton
pepper plants. Pre
near coast. Ref. exc
N. Sharp, Commerce.

SHUCKS:
Want several - tons

shucks, State price, -
Gooch, Eatonton,

TOBACCO: =. 22a,
Want good, strong, ole
eured, home made

Send sample and- C
Sallie Floyd, Rockmart,

Ee

ed tobacco. Send samp e,:
del. as W. Siaiots

MISCELLANEO
FOR SALE

Horse radish, 25 Ib.
for planting with each po
plus postage; comfre Oe
bunch, 3 bunches, 25cc,
postage. Mrs. Peet
Doula; Rta 2e.

~5 or 10 bu. black
50c bu. plus postage; w
meats, 35c lb; 1000 oe
J. seed cane 75c per hun
Act quick. Horace oe :
nolds, Rt. 3, Box 113.

72: 10S good goose fen
$15.00 lot. Mrs. R. H. Me
lan, Brookfield.

Hulled black walnut
write - for prics; 4
meats, 40c Ib. Mrs. V
Humphries, Milledgevi
oi ;

hundred, for sale.
prices. Mrs, pa Be
Thomasbor. Se

Nice. hulled walm

\ bu: postpaid. Mrs.

Carteay.

5 Ibs. mixed chi |
ers, free of. wing
feathers, Hoses
Mrs. J. W. Altman.

Large Shalnutlihestes
weer 3--ibs., a4 00 ae

Nice. clean, S
walnuts, 40c Ib. Mie
Thomas, Lewner. toe

Dry walnuts $1.00 a
90c bu. at my home o
ped col. Mazie Mae Elli
cial Circle, Rt. 2, Box Th

New crop black
meats, nice, Ce 40c lb
paid to 2nd zone;

AAA pure B. R.
hatch. Cheap for ack s
L. Finley, Lithonia, -

25 lbs. new white 3
feathers, 50c lb.; Se O
Mrs. Mary Collins, ; :
Rt. 4. : pes

Yellow root Wc Ib.
postage. Virgie Elam, Rt
Clermont. Care: Emma Fr

Black walnut mea
clean, free from hulls, >
$1.00 postpaid. Mrs..C. S.
lins, Cleveland, Rt. 5 :

Yellow root cherry
l5c lb.; blood root. 40
$1.00 doz. large
grub root, 40c ib. W. G.
olds, Morganton,

Black walnut meats,
from: hull, shell, 4 pts.
horse radish, 25 Ib.; gar
doz.; 25. aes: W. is Joh
Alto. :

eral Guernsey bull - eae
sale, Exchange for hay

May Rose Guernsey bt
reg. in buyers name, fcr
Exchange for oats, velvet bea
or hay. ai2:b. Bryan, Grayson.

1- real good Jersey cow, *
to freshen; 1 reg. Black P
China sow, ready breed; or
swap for good meat hogs. Hig
nice black Poland Sues Ss
Brooks Greene, Gray. -

Young ox, broke, owt. 1000
lbs. works. plow, team or. wag:

Pr. match ees work any=
where, single or double, wt.
2,800 lbs., 6 yrs. old, for sale. J,
W. Ingregn, Talbotte =


MARKET BULLETIN.

HOGS FOR SALE

mos. old purebred bull,

prize winning stock, $25

ith papers. Exchange for two

os. old heifers; 1 Silver S-

ht rooster, $1.50 ea. Mrs. S.
fones, Lula Rt. 2.

sey cow, freshen. May 2
ng 1% gal. milk, $35.00
1. B. L. Jenkins, Rt. 2, Stone
intain.

Springing Jersey heifers
ale. Carey Spruill, Dun-

ringer cows, 1 Jersey heif-
not bred, $32.50; 1 milch
now giving 1% gal. rich

3 gal. when fresh), due
hen in March, $32.50;

, 15 tons at once, 7T5c
Must sell. G. Pickett, Col-
Park, Rt. 1. (Fairburn.

and Wellcomeall Road).:

.g. Aberdeen Angus bulls,

nd 2 yrs. old, thrifty, good

g, priced to sell. John
~Reck Springs.

xcellent Jersey heifer, good
e due to freshen in Feb-
_ Will lease or rent to good
mear by. Charges vary
ble. Must transport both
eed well, care for calf
urn both in good cond.,
pact of May, 1941. See
ec, 20th through 26th at

_ Frank Cain, Buford, Rt.
mi. East Buford, near Zion
oarnsey male calves; sub, to
best of blood lines, 4 to
s. old; also feeder shoats,
to 100 lbs., exc. for hay
.. seed peanuts and beans.

Wicker, Americus. .

| milch cow, due -to

hen Dec. 26th. Grady Orr,
iverdale.

fresh, also 5 springers,

about 60 days, $40.00

lot for $35.00 ea. 7 mi.

of Atlanta, 7 mi. So. De-

H, F, Seay, Ellenw6od,

wn colored purebred Jer-
ws, heifer and her moth-
mother ped. heifer, reg.)
ea. Exc. fcr value. Eras-
inner, Bowdon, Rt. 3.

erdeen-Angus eattle, yr.
yulls, ready for light ser-
C. H. Blalock, Rabun Gap.
munerott Warm. <0 es
sey cow. not reg., but pure
solid color, fresh, 3rd
ood milker, $60.00; reg.

uernseys, 2 beautiful heifers,
nd 9 mos. old respectively,

ebred big bone Blue
nea pigs, $7.00 ea., $12.00
o 2 sows, already bred.

nm Weldon, Woodbury,
Tae Zo

2 P. C. male, 16. mos:
prize winner at State fair.
ap or fade for other hogs.

Beaty/ Waycross Rt. 4.

to 12 pigs, 75 to 100 lbs.,

ea. at my place or $5.25

d, FOB Meigs. Cash with

or COD; also 1 P. C. boar,
. T. Kidder, Meigs.

pigs, Hampshire and White
ossed, 12 and 14 weeks old,
ea., FOB; red_nest onions,
pk., also white, multiplying
lots, 40c gal. Add postage.
Martin, Gainesville Rt. 1.

red Berkshire pigs, rea-
r del. now, for sale. C. B.
-Hazelhurst.

irebred Duroc Jersey pigs,
. old, sub. to reg., $7.50
OB. Grady Smith, Jr. Jes-

rebred Hampshire sows,
. Hampshire _boar, Peter
breeding. Wm. Pickrell,

or 12 shoats, wt. 30-45

ssor Sale at Farm. No

nts. nor checks. M. T./ f

5--Ibs:, good cond.,
with extra

uglas Freeman,

big bone Blue
2 males 1 gilt,
lbs, ea. Mother a
an ea N. A

$8.00
Manchester, RFD

shipping

Cross breed and pure blood
pigs, 10 wks. old, fat, $5.00 ea;
gilts and moles, around 100 lbs.
$10.00 ea; sows and gilts, bred.
$15.00 ea. Essex, Duroc, big
bone. black and S. P: C. M.

-|Sanders, Nashville.

Reg. Black Barkshire _ pigs,

*l ready for del. now, for sale. W.
-| A, Shumans, Hazelhurst.

S. P. C. pigs, male and fe-
male also gilts. ready to breed
and already bred. World Cham-
pion blood lines. Prices reason-
able. Come and look over my
herd or write for prices. E. K.
Overstreet, Sylvania. -

i 16 mos. old S. P. C. boar, ent.

to reg., for sale. Wm. T. Lang-
ley, Palmetto. Rt. 1. =

3 S. P. C, male pigs, 1 female,
10 wks. old, reg. in buyers
name, $6.00; or $5.50 not reg.,
at barn. Mrs. Iris Wilkinson
Cochran, Sandersville, Rt. 3.

Purebred black Essex brood

sow $20.00; exchange for fat}.

hog, ready to kill, at market
price at my barn; 9 pigs, Essex
and O. I. C. crossed, $7.00 pr.;
$4.00 for one 6 wks. old Dec.
15. Will not ship. R. G. Hawk-
ins,: Haul Rt. 27,

_ Pure Big Bone African guin-

ea_ pigs, 6 wks. old, treated,
$6.00 fob, H. C. Brewer, Daniel-
ville, Rt. 1. ee

Purebred O. I. C. pigs. for
sale. Prices reasonable. C. H.
Strickland, Lithia Springs.

Bred sows $15.00 to $20.00

ea.; Duroc and Spotted China.

reg. males, 300 to 400 lbs. ea.,
$20.00 ea.; open gilts, cross
bred 6 mos., $10.00 ea. Morris
Sanders, Nashville. i

Purebred broke nose Berk-
shire pigs for sale. L. C. Hall,
350 Flat Shoals Ave., S. E., At-

janta. Re

S. P. C. pigs, bred gilts, ser-
vice boars, all from Champion
blood; also early prolific King
cotton seed picked out before
rain. Prices reasonable. F. N.
Bunn, Midville. ~<

Big Bone Black. African guin-
ea, gilt; 10. mos. old, $22.50;
gilts, 6 and 7 mos. old, $12.50
ea.; pigs, 8 wks. old, $8.00 or

'$15.00 pr. Crated and del. to

exp. office. M. O. F. P.
Rt. 1, Monroe.

Black Essex,
$8.00 ea; 65-75 lb. pigs, $11.00
ea; 100 lbs. $14.00 ea., with ap-
plication for reg., and cholera
treated. Pairs no-kin. W. J.
Bargeron, Sardis.

Prather,

and buyer pay extra (50c ea.)
for the ones he wants reg. All
have been dbl. treated. Far-
rowed September 19th. All
prices .FOB. Ishmael Cabe,
Carnesville, Rt. 2. ;

in fine shape. Reasonable or

-;exec. for equal value in White

Face or Black Angus heifers.
Also a $28.25 value to trade for
Jersey heifer. Jasper S. Thomp-
son, Loganville, Rt. 1. .

HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE

1 horse mule, 1 mare mule,
age 13 yrs., wt. 1,100. to 1,200
Ibs., sound, in excellent con-
dition. Can be seen at my farm
5 mi. west Acworth. G. C. Wil-
son, Rt. 2, Fairmount.

Ga. raised bay mare, 4 yrs.
old, wt. 1,450 lbs., works oar
also 1 yr..old Jersey male, from
reg. stock, . without papers,
$35.00. C. E. Morrison, Armuch-
ee, Rt. 2. /

2 good mules, middle aged,
werk any place, for sale or
ne for ees or cattle at mar-
et price. Mrs. Francis Rob :
Rt.: 2, Decatur, ote a

Shetland pony, ge 1d
trained to cart and addie
$35.00 cash at my place. W. I,
Carmichael, Madison,

1 mare mule, 950 Ibs $55.0
Exchange fc cow Homer 1 i
lison, Bairdstown.. oe

cl five gaited mare 1

Saited mare 8 yrs. oe
or woman or child, work to
wagon or plow, $80.00 ea. fob

my place. B, C
Marietta, T. Custer, Rt. 2,

oe As eld black mare, 950 Ibs.,

)0; also want Sh
hetland
a A. S. Rosendorff; Savan-

1 small Texas ae
pony, 9
old, good plow pony. ia
t sd

for! 50 common
&gers, b nS W. A.

wt.

weaned pigs,

10 O. I. C. pigs, $50.00 for lot

5 S. P. C. pigs, 14 mos. old,

HORSES AND MULES
- FOR SALE

1 pr. mares, 4 yrs. old, with

fine horse colt each. 5 and 3)

mos. old; mares broke and gen-
tle, sound, no scars ce blemish-
es, 1,200 lbs. each, $400.00 lot
at barn. Roy S. Silk, Menlo.

2 mules, wt. 1100 ibs. ea. Sell

single or double. 2% mi. So. Red |.

Oak, on Buffington Rd. H. C.
Stallings, College Park, Rt. 2.

Farm brood mare, 7 yrs. old,
, 1000 or 1100 Ibs.
and healthy, $100.00 cash. No
chks. W. R. Thompson, Law-
renceville, Rt. 1..

3 good pr. of mules, 4 to 7
yrs. old, wt. 900 to 1500 Ibs.,
well broke, work well, for sale
at my barn, 10 mi. due west
Cornelia. R. F. D. Saville Cor-
nelia. Rt..1. s So

1 good mule, about 800 lbs.
wt. around 12 yrs. old, $50.00: or.
trade for cows, yearlings or
corn. Mrs. H. B. Ford, Lavonia.
ata \s
Black
cond. work anywhere, wt.
850-900 lbs., $40.00 or exc. for
2 or 2% gal. milch cow or year-
lings, or corn at market price.
Malcolm H. Davis, Thomaston,
Rt. 3 (Roland).

Good Percheron filly, about
7 mos. old, wt. 600 lbs (mother
wt. about 1300 Ibs.) broke to
ride or drive. Bill Perdue, Bow-
don, Bt 1, Cat -Lyus): =

Black and White Shetland

Cc

/pony, 4 yrs. old gelding, gentle,

to saddle and cart $35.00 cash
my farm. W. L. Carmichael,
Madison. d :

At Stud, large, black Per-~
cheron stallion, reg. as Elite H,
has health certificate and is a
prize animal. Fee, $8.00 and
$10.00. R. L. Putnam, Cohutta.

2 black mares, 42 to 14 yrs.
old, wt: about 900 lbs. ea., good
qualities, $65.00 ea. J, N. Will-

ingham, Atlanta 188 Elizabeth

St., N. E., Wa 0329.

A good blind mule, old but
sound, a good stepper, to plow
and wagon, Reasonable cash or

exc. for value. Answer all in-

quiries, Would also sell for cash
as good as new 1 h. wagon with

mule. J. S. West, Cuthbert.

1 old farm mare mule, wt.
about 1200 Ibs., when fat, $35
at my barn. W. B. Parker, Con-
yers. *

Dapple iron gray horse 5 yrs.
old, wt. 1100 lbs., saddle type,
gentle. work anywhere, also a
bay horse, 3% yrs. old, about

| 1000 lbs., worked this year. E..

S. Hicks, Yatesville. \

1 dark mare mule, good cond.
work anywhere; good walking
gait, isnt lazy, $65.00 cash.
Fred L. Morgan Guyton.

2 mare mules, 1 around 14
yrs. old, about 900 Ilbs., other
5 yrs. old, about 1000 or 1100
lbs. Both hard workers, do any
kind of work. Reasonable cash
price for quick sale. Come see.
On Daisy and Glennville public
road. .P. O. address, Ira N.
Smith, Claxton, RFD 2. oe

RABBITS AND CAVIES
FOR SALE

8 virgin does, 3 mos. old; 33
young rabbits, all New Zealand
Whites. Henry McGee, Atlanta,
49 Warren St., S. E.

SHEEP AND GOATS ~
FOR SALE

2 milk goats: 2 does, fresh
soon, 1:buck. $15.00 lot or trade
H. M. Adams, Douglasville. a

Few fine Natural Hornless
Toggenburg bucks, 6 wks. to 3
mos. old, $2.00 to $5.00; also
2 Black African guinea gilts,
3 mos. old, $8:00 ea. John L.
Page, E. Church St., Monroe.

1 graded Southdown ram, 2
yrs. old, $5.00 fob. Geo. D. Bar-
field, Louisville. ene

Purebred, ped. reg.
horniess Toggenburgs. Quality
breeding for milk production,
with heavy milk lines up to
15% lbs. Booking: orders for
choice 1941 ped. doe and buck
kids, outstanding. purebred
Toggenburg buck, at stud, fee,
$5.00. John Hynds, 93, Warren

st., N. E., Atlanta.

At stud, reg. purebred Tog-
genburg buck, G-Man Joes
Confucius, T-3032 from 15%
milk stock, fee, $5.00 for pure-
breds; $3.00 for grades; i reg.
Toggenburg doe, 2 buck kids, 1
grade doe kid for sale. Reason-

able. Warren Rollins, 349 Mur-
soy

hth ee

Hill Ave. N. E., Atlanta.

sound |

mare mule, sound, fair

bian sire, N-2397

> Want good. fresh cow,

and

SHEEP AND GOATS |
FOR SALE

8 Nubian A-1 milk does,
Grandsire, reg., $75.00 goat;
Grand Dam, 6 qt. milker. 3 are
fresh others freshen soon, $15

ea. Mrs. N. M. Smith, Arnolds-
ville. \

2 good does, freshen late win-
ter, $15.00 ea; young doe, Tog-
Nubian buck, nearly 2 yrs. old,
from heavy milking str., $10.00;
9 mos. old Tog buck, $6.00; full
blood, 8 mos. old Saanan buck
from reg. sire and fine dam,
$4.00. Service fee, $1.00. Board
10e day. J. Jolley, Hightower
Rd., Rt. 7, Atlanta.

2 yr. Toggenburg nannie goat
freshen last of Jan. or Feb.; 1
Toggenburg. buck, 22 mos. old,
$50.00 both. Exchange for 50
bu. corn. Bring corn,. get goats.
Walter Cox, Hogansville, Rt. 2,
Box 19.

5 mos. old buck, half Tog-
genburg, half Saanan for sale.
Cheap. Come get him. H. A.
Nuckalls, Clarkston. ~

1 bred, white, butt-headed
goat and a 7 mos. old, white,
butt-headed female kid, for
sale. Mrs. A. L. Barnes, Griffin,
Bie. 4

At Stud, reg. purebred Nu-
A, G. S.,
53807 A. M. G. R. A. Hornless

i black with light trim. LaCres-

centa-Mile High breeding. The
best in the South. Fee $5.00 for
purebreds; $3.00 for grades. No.
shipping. F, E. Grubbs, Dem-
orest.

5 milk goats, 1 freshen Dec.
28th; 2 in January and 2 Febru-
ary. Heavy milkers. Cheap. H.
A. Evans, Atlanta, 369 Augus-
ta Ave, S. BE.

2 yr. old: doe, Saanan and
Foggenburg, bred to reg. buck;

freshen in March, $20.00; also

10 Donaldson purebred Red 6
mos. old pullets and 1 extra
fine cockerel, reasonable pric-
es. Dan Lanier, Atlanta. 92
Warren St. N. E.

4

LIVESTOCK WANTED

CATTLE WANTED:

Want Jersey cow, not over 5
yrs. old, perfect cond., no bad

habits, easy to milk, not less 3]

gal. milk, 1 to 1% lbs. butter
daily at reasonable price. Des-
eribe fully and price. S.
Pettit, Ellijay.
or
one that will freshen within 30
day Buy or trade good value.
Write or see, Ralph Moore,
Athens, Rt. 4: . -
Want. any number reg. or

grade Guernsey heifer calves to+ ROCKS;

raise on percentage basis to 6.
mos. old. Ref. exchanged. Miss
S. M. Bryan, Grayson.

HORSES AND MULES) -

WANTED: :

Want good mare with foal,
work good. Exchange 1 good

milch cow, calf, 3 mos. old.}.

Give note for balance. Mrs. C.
L. Smith, Rt. 4, Baxley.

Want to work or pay cash in
exchange for a mule to plow
few wuck patches next sum-
mer. If interested, write. Also
want a few bu. pop corn. L. J. |

{| Vollrath, Austell, Rt. 1.

Swap 900 lb. 12 yr. old mule,
for good, 1000 ib. work horse
or mare, or for 1000 or 1100
lb. mule; also want buy 60 Ib.
ean honey (or about that much)
a fat cow for sale or swap for
cow with young calf. W. M.
Fortner, Meansville, Rt. 1.

HOGS WANTED:

Want 1 little bone black
guinea male pig, 6 to 10 wks.
old, purebred. W. A. Jones,
McDonough. Rt. 3...

Want hogs and pigs.
price. W. C. McMillan,
North Ave., Hapeville,

State
124

POULTRY WANTED

ANCONAS:

Want some Ancona hens, Will
exc. heavy hens, pound for
pound, I pay express; have 5
Buff Rocks, 4 or 5 large. mix.
August hatched pullets. J. C.
Cochrane, Sycamore.

BABY CHICKS WANTED:

Want 200 or 300 day old
chicks to raise on halves to 8
wks. old. You furnish chicks
and feed. Prefer Cornish or

B. R. Mrs, R. D., Morgan, Rt. | $1
2, Dawson, phe eae

ef ieee.

| drake for

ea.: 4 fine 1 yr. old bucks, $10 drake. Ea. pay exp. chg

|for what you have. H.

| ta.

TURKEYS, GUINEAS,
DUCKS, GEESE, ETC: .

Will exchange young
1940 hatch.

shipments and to adjust va
at 25c lb. Few for sale, s:
price fob. E, W. Jewett, R
LaRoche Ave., Savannah.

Want 3 green head Mall
drakes. J. W. Adams, St
bridge Rt. 1. ge

Want 6 or 8 large, yo
geese or ducks from p
living in Dooly Co. vici
Philip Singer, Unadilla.

eat

Want about 3 turkeys
raise from on halves far 1
Mrs. T. E. Grayson, Al
Le

Exchange value for 3 tui
hens, 1 tom (Bronze te
red). Mrs. Clayton Dou
Aima, Rid

POULTRY FOR S

BANTAMS AND BRAHM
-5 bantam hens, ro
$1.75 ea.; 15 heavy breed
ed hens, $10.00 del.; 14
pigeons, $2.50 lot del.
Prather, Rt. 3,/ Lithonia.

6 Sebright bantam |
pullets; 2 cockerels, $5.0
fob. Maneal Gowder, R
Royston. Ae ees

Purebred Golden Se
bantam cockerels Mar. h
$1.00 ea. Mrs. J. B. Carmi
Rt. 8; Box 505, Atlanta

20 different varieties
mental bantams, all br

40th St., Savannah,

Beautiful Black
Cream Crested banta
@-el, grown, ready for
$2.00 ea. C. T. Gaines, Buf

2 nice young banta
/rooster, 1940. hatch, $1.
Exchange for 2 guinea |
reoster.-: Mrs. Pat.
Bloomingdale. ne

Several nice Mar. hatcl
ver Sebright bantam coc
pullets. Mates to. priz
ners. Reasonable price
M. Hunt, Rt. 1, Decat

4-39 B. Cochin hens
cock; 1-40 pullet; 1-40
erel. Sell or trade

F.| breed; also 4 Apr. 1

Cornish cockerels. Exc

cypher, Red Oak. Ca

Mixed and game bai
for sale: D. T. Jennin
Box 84, Americus. |
BARRED AND OTHE

4 pure B. R. pullets
erel) Apr. hatch, :
'$6.50 not prepaid. Betty
Daisy, Rt. 1. ae

1 fine purebred B. R
er, Apr. hatch, $2.00; $
yard. Mrs. G. H. E
Donough, Rt. 1.

15 heavy breed B. R
few others, 15 mos. old,
3 White giant cockerels,

vold, AAA grade, 95c &

J. M. Murphy, Winde:
Extra large White
rooster, 2 hens, $3.50
chks.- Mrs: W. Al
Grantville, Rt. 2, Box 4
45 Bo RS Apr hore
lets, $1.00 ea. Cash or M
chks. Lee Norris, Newb
4 purebted B. R. co
Apr. hatch, $1.50 ea.
10 youne - hens, +
ing, $1.00 ea.; $15.0
Robert Daniel, Demo:
Blood tested B. eo
and Parmenter str., per

1 ers) ped, chicks 126)

eggs, $1.25 setting. Mr
Monday, Rt. 4, Box 24

11, P.:R. pullets, A:

5 mixed hens, 65c e
tam hens .1 rooster, $2
Lockard Bell, 264 Al
St., Atlanta.

3 B. R. pullets an
erel, $1.00 ea.; $3.50 1
White Giant pullets, $
1.25 .a.; 3. Black Spi
ready to lay; 3 Brahma
ea.; trade for young ca
cow. Mrs. C. K. Phi
Newnan.

We aS
Fishel str.,
1 _cockerel.

cockerels,
$1.00 ea.; 1

$1


f AA cream mating B. R.
yosters, Feb. hatch, for sale.
s. J. J. Oliver, Commerce,

O clay; 75 ea.; 20 K. Er
ullets, almost ready to

y, Donaldson str.,; 60c ea. fob. |

HH. J. MeCorvey, Pavo.-
May hatched Parks Rock
kerels, special pen. mating
ady for service 6 to 8 lbs.,
We ea; 5.3, $5.00 Fe. Ww.
ench, Rt. 1, Folkston.
Choice Partridge Rock roost-
$1.00 and $1.25 ea. also
en Wyandotte - roosters,
ea. At- my home. Ernest
liams, Monroe, Rt. 1.
Pure Parks foundation stock
- officialiy state blood-
| and culled, April cock-
els, $2.25 ea. 3 for $6.00 not
repaid. Best selected hatching
Mamie Roach Plyler,

Apr. hatch, for sale. J. E.

ight, Bradley.

Dark Cornish pullets, 1:

<erel, $5.75 lot; Dark Corn-
-cockerels, Ay. hatch. Fob.
aes L. Brown, Helena.
large type Cornish cock-
s, $1.00 ea. fob. No chks.

. V. Askew. Davisboro,

Be purebred Dark Cornish
lets, Mar. hatch,- $1.00 ea.
Cash with order, or M. O.

-veral. nice purebred Dark

ish roosters, $1.00 ea. fob. |

F. R. Smith, Statesboro,

Mar. hatch Dark Cornish
ster, $1.00; 2 yr. old, $1.50;
urkey toms, $2.75 ea. Cora
Patterson Ty Ty, Rt. 3, Box

large type Dark Cornish
is, now laying, 1 rooster,

00 lot; 10 pullets, now lay-
1g, 1 rooster, $11.00 lot. Mrs.

. Donaldson. Rt. 2, Sum-

purebred Dark Indian
nish hens, $1.25 ea.; 1 and
y. old cockerels, $2.00 ea.
_ J. R.. Gardner, Locust
ove.
5 large type Dark Cornish

rels, spr. hatch, $2.00 ea.;

pullets $5.00 fob; eggs, $1.20,

prepaid. Exchange for any-
ing of use. C. O. Sikes, Syl-
ester. -
Jant purebred White Corn-
rooster, 5 pullets, not over
old. State price. Nat
bell, Rockmart, Rt. 1.
nt 3 large type Dark
ish: cockeels, with long
llow legs. State price for 3.
) culls. Percy Harper. Moul-
Rt. do;
or 3 purebred Dark Cornish
ng hatch .cockerels,
ock, $2.00 ea. E. H. Lipford,
ericus, 803 Felder St.

White doves, $2.00 pr.; Ring-
doves, $1.00 pr. A. R. An-
"ews, 1519 Central Ave. Au-

Ss:
e trios Shelton Round-
ads, $5.00; pure Gregory Tas-
1940 trics, $5.00; others. All
) free range. P. B. Stewart,
ton, Ht. 1:
Cornish pullets, just before
1940 hatch, $1.50 ea. or
De. for lot. Also large sow
ith 6 pigs, $15.00 cash; 8
oats, $20.00, or Exc. for good
ilch
ng. Quitman; Rt. 2, Box 56.
ders Bacon Warhorse pit
me cocks $3.00; hens, stags,
.00;. pullets, $1.50; Grist
* cock, 5 hens, $12.00;
nn Gray cock, 5 hens, $12.00;
gs, $2.00 ea. Tom Weaver,
2, Canon.
games Dom and Round-
G-ossed, 1 to 2 yrs. old,
ea. cod. J. B. Lawrence,
kesville, Rt. 3.
Roundhead rooster, 1 Tas-
Arkansas .Travler roost-
8 mos. old, $2.50 ea.; $6.00
Luther Wade, Silver

mebred Grist Gradys;

cocks, hens, pullets for sale.

Charlie Camp. 193 Pond. St.,
yecoa.

15 Red Bird Brown Red '

ossed game cocks, ready for
, $2.50 ea.; $22.50 lot; Red
rd pit game, 2. yrs. old,
5.00; 10 other Brown Red
$1.50 ea. W. H. Louder-
amount, Rt. 2.

| POULTRY I

fine.

cow. Wont ship. A. B. |

pit,

OF

J

GAMES:

4 fine Roundhead end
Shawlneck Grossed pullets,
May hatched; 1 cock, same
breed, $6.00 lot; exchange for
purebred Black Minorcas. W.
J. Atkins, Jr., Cedartown Rt.
1. Care: M. W. Lee.

Nice Arkansas Travler roost-
er, 9 mos. old, $1.50 ea.; 4
Blue roosters, $1.50 ea; 2,
ro2.10;. 4, $5.00. Z. E. Dunlap.
Chauncey.

19398 hatch game roosters,
$3.00 ea.; 1940 hatch, $1.50 ea.; |
hens, $2.00; -pullets $1.50;
speckled 1940 guineas, $1.00

1 game hen, rooster, Mar.
1938 hatch $7.00 lot; 3 young
1940 hatch roosters, $6:00 lot;
6 pullets, $1.00 ea.; $5.00 lot.
S. O. McCarvey, 901 South
Central, Tifton. ,

Pit game stags, 1940 hateh,
half Falcon. half Mt. Eagle,

| $2.50 ea.; hens to trade for

game cocks; 1 pr. homer pig-
eons, 1 pr. Tumblers, $1.50 pr.
Exchange for B. B. Red game
bantam hens. Carl Griffin, 87
Oak St., Gainesville.

Genuine, old Robeson str.
Shawl Neck games, old trio,
$25.00; young, $15.00.-Clarence
Webb, Smyrna. RFD 1.

REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRES):

7 N. H. cockerets, bloodtest-
ed, $1.00 ea. FOB. John Hosea,
Poecoa, Rt. 3. :

GIANTS: =

3 fine purebred Jersey
White Giant cockerels, 8 mos.
old, $1.00 ea. fob. Mrs, Ruth
Coursey, Rt. 2, Baxley. .

J. B. Giant chickens for sale;
also pomegranate bushes, pe-
cans for. sale. Mrs. Mattie
Simpson, Waverly Hall.

Jersey Giant, B. O. chickens,
6-8 wks. old for sale. Mrs. J.
A, Cason, Barnesville.

LEGHORNS:

60 pure AAA Eng. W. L.
hens, 1 yr. old, through molt-
ing, layjng, 75c pr. at my
home; 80c~crated.and del. fob.
Mrs. J. G. Curry, Stockton.

1 nice B. L. rooster, 8 mos.

,;old, Everlay st., $1.25. Hoke

Wilson, Martin, Rt. 2. ne

50 W. L. hens, AAA grade,
75e ea. Sewell Mercier, Law
renceville, Rt. 3. :

- Seidel Leghorn cockerels, 8
mos. old, $2.00 ea. A. C. Free-
man, Flovilla, Rt. 1. :

-- 100 W. L. hens, Lindstrom
str., culled, finished molting,
beginning to lay. 75ce at my
home. Mrs. L. S. Me/sthur,
Curryvitles ss =

} thoroughbred B. L. roost-
er 50c ea. Also one female
I -suinea pigs; -$i50;, 4 pr.
common pigeons, well mated,
$2.00 lot. Billy Overby, Colum-
bus, Rt . :

25 single comb wy L. hens,
1939 hatch, 75c ea. Mrs. C. L.
Whatley, Cuthbert Rt. 4,

60 W. L. hens, 18 mes. old,
75c fob. Exchange for good.
young milch cow. F. G. Jinks,
242 Dauphine St., East Point.

Nice B. &. roosters, ready
for mating, $1.00 ea. R. C.
Crossman, Ashburn.

65 W. L. hens, now laying,
Eng. str. $1.00 ea. at my home.
Rev. J. R. Smith, Rt. 2, Man-
assas.

29 AAA W..L. cockerels, Mar.
hatch, $1.25 ea. Mrs. W. W.
Lewis, Jr. Quitman, Rt. 3.

3-2 yr. old AAA Hanson str,
W. L. cocks, $1.00 ea. You pay
shipping charges, ret. coop. M.
O. Mes. J. C. Richland, Sparta,
Rt. 2, Box 157-A.

160 Apr. hatch W. L. pullets,
wormed, vaccinated, $1.00 ea.

1

75c ea. lot fob. J. E. Clowdis,
Lyery, Rt. 2. :

58. AAA +1939 . W.- 5 15
White Minorca pullets, 2 cock-
erels, 75c ea.; 60 White Jer-
sey Giant, White Wyandotte.
White P. R. Mar. pullets; 10
iR. I. Red, N. H. Reds, $1.25
ea.; 3 White Wyandotte cock-
erels 1 Jersey Giant cockerel.
Mrs. McCain, 522 Novcth Main
St.,-College Park. s

550 W. L. hens, pullets, AAA
grade, 1 yr., 8 mos., 5 mos. old,

for prices or come. H. V. Swin-
son, Lyons. Z

6 or nice, large W. L.
cockerels, %#om ped. stock,

ea. S. M. Seaborn, Brunswick. !

| del.

lot; 125 Apr. 1939 W. L. hens, |

treated against disease. Write,

ee ee

_| MINORCAS:

10 purebred Minorca pullets,
1 tockerel, Mar. hatch, culled,
$10.00 lot. Mrs. J, R. Lanier,
Graymont, Ruel <

Single comb Black Minorca
pullets, Apr. May hatch, some
laying, $1.25 ea. G. W. Wilson,
Elberton. \ :

MISCELLANEOUS |
CHICKENS: 4 4

- 6 fine mixed breed hens,
just beginning to lay, $5.00
FOB; : Mrs; Ty : MeNeley,
Turnerville. ;

ORPINGTONS:

Buff Orp. March hatch, ped.
stock, Lady-A-Day' str., $2.00
ea.: 18 mos. old cocks, $1.50
ea. FOB. Mrs. J. C. Ward, Per-
ry. = ;

6 purebred Buff Orp. 5 mos.
old pullets,: $5.00. Ronie John-
son, Shellman, Rt. 1. aN

PIGEONS:

5 to 10 pr. White King pig-
eons, good producers, large
squabs $1.00 pr. W. S. McDan-
iel, Atlanta, 4308 Club Drive.

19 purebred White.King pig-

! eons, 25 ea. Mrs. Wm. F. Pen-

tecost, Lawrenceville.
18 blue and mixed fantail
pigeons, some mated and
working, 50c pr.;
Exp. col. Dorothy Taylor, Alto,
Rt. 1. Gare: J. C. Woodall.

16 pygmy poulten, 16 White
Fantail pigeons for sale. Good

healthy. birds. Mak eoffer, Pat
| McGee Cumming.

~ Fantail pigeons, white and
mixed, $1.50 pr. Harry Taylor,
1940 Hallman St. N. E., Atlan-
ta, De 3254. :

QUAIL:

Quail, $3.00 pr. in 3 or more
prs.; $4.00 in single pr. Ken-
neth Vann, 1309 Grove Ave.,
Waycross.
REDS (RHODE ISLAND):

Dark Red cocks, cockerels,
ready for mating, blood test-
ed, $2.00 -ea.; hens, pullets,
$1.50 ea. eggs, $1.50, 15.
Chicks for Feb. del. $3.50, 25
postpaid. Mrs. Don Dolandson,
Decatur. De 2405. - :

90: SiC. Rk Red putlets,-1
rooster, Apr. hatch, $15.00 lot
G. L. Rutherford, Sum-
mecville, Rt. 3. 2

2 fine Dark R: I. Red roost-
ers, 19 mos. old, Mayhood str.,
$3.00 ea.; large Stuart pecans,

83. Bronwood.. .
REDS (PARMENTERS):

3 large Parmenter Red cock-
a@els,
Mrs. J. W. Browning, Jackson.
SUSSEX:

April hatch Speckled Sussex
cockerels, $1.25 ea; same age
pullets, laying, $1.00 ea.

pullets, $1.00 ea; scallion onion
buttons, large, white ones, 50c
gal. Mrs. C. R. Sorrels, Monroe.
Reel. we

TURKEYS, GUINEAS,
GEESE, DUCKS, ETC:
Mammoth Bronze turkey
toms, 25 lbs., $6.00 ea.; hens,
12 lIbs., $3.50 ea. Mrs. L. W.
Seago Pinehurst. /

Thoroughbred. Giant Bronze
turkey toms, 7 mos. old, out of
eggs costing $30.00 doz., fine
breeders, $12.00 ea. L. J. Ellis,
Cumming.

50 purebred Wild Mallard.
50 Muscovey ducks, 3 .quack-
less type, $1:00 ea. W. L. Car-
mical, Rt. 8, Box 505, Atlanta.

4 geese 38 ganders, 75c ea.;
2 big Bronze turkey toms,
$3.00 ea. Not postpaid. C. B.
Wilbur, Acworth, Rt. 1. .

27; White Pekin. hens, 1
dnake, 1 Black Muscovey
ceake, grown, 75c ea.; $3.00 lot
fob. Mrs. L. B.- Choses, Kings-
land. 5 .

Pure blood tested Narragan-
sett turkey toms, wt. 25 Ilbs.,
$7.50; hens, 12 to 15 lbs. $5.00.
Mrs. Beatrice - McCorkle,
Dearing, Rt. 1; Box 30,

Several M. B. turkeys, grow
very large, toms, $6.00 and
$7.00 ea.; hens $4.00 ea. Mrs.
W. E. Green, Powersville.

150 pure M. B. turkeys, ex-
cellent Eeeeding stock, Apr.
1940 hatch; toms, 15-25 Ibs.;
hens, 10-13 Ibs., 25 lb. fob,
Lester McCrary. Molena.

Ped. Big bone Bronze, 6 mos.
old turkeys, 2 toms, 25 lbs. ea.,
$6.00 ea; 3 females 15 lbs. ea.,
$5.00 ea. FOB. J. W. Bedell,
Atlanta, 3851 Peachtree Rd.

Ellis and Bird Bros. str. M. B:

Ib. at my home, 4 mi. S. E.

$2.50 ea. S, C.. Elder, Rt. 2;
| Culloden, <s

Barnesville

Barnes ">. Mrs. Arthur Owen,

|kled guineas.

$8.00 lot.:

~

15c Ib. Belle Timmerman, Box :
{who can drive a tractor. See me

Feb. hatch, $1.00 ea.

also-
Butter-Cup cockerels, $1.50 ea;

turkeys, 10 to 18 or 20 lbs., 25c-

TURKEYS, GUINEAS,
GEESE, DUCKS, ETC.:.

Purelved White Holland
turkeys for breeding for sale.
Mrs. Arthur G. Smith, Sharon.

4 Black, White Muscovey
dueks, $1.00 ea.; $3.50 lot; 2
Mallard drakes $1.00 ea.; La-
dy Egg-A-Day B. O. cocks,
$1.00. and $2.00 ea.; 10 Booths
AAA June hatch B. O. pullets,
ducks. Roberta McCollum,
Grantville.

1 pe. White. guineas; 7 spec-
$1.00 ea.; $4.50
lot. J. H. Roquemore; Ameri-
cus; Rt. 2. s

\3 White Pekin ducks, 4
drakes, May 1940 hatch, 75c
my yard. Mrs. J. C. MgPher-
Sone Villa Rica, Rick

1 Mallard drake (slightly
cripple); pr. White Pekin
ducks, $3.00 lot; Exchange.
Ralph Pruitt, Lavonia. Rt. 2.

20 fat, young geese, $1.00 ea.;
Exchange for dry fruit or any-
thing of use. Mrs. W. F. Hyers.
Mershon, ies:

Want to exchange 4 drakes
for green headed ducks. Pay
expe -one away. . Mrs.< H5. fF:
Scarboro, Stilmore, Rt. 1. 3

WYANDOTTES:

cockerels, Apr. hatch, $1.50 ea.

| Exp. not paid. Mrs. Kate A.

Mullings,
214.

10 purebred Apr. hatch S. L.
Wyandotte pullets, $10.00 lot;
10-18 mos. old Wyandotte
hens, $10.00 lot fob.; exchange
2 purebred roosters for 2 same
age and breed, 1-18 mos. old; 1
Apr. hatch. Mrs. Tom Kelly,
Rabun Gap, Rt. 1. ~ :

Bartow Rt. 1, Box

S. L. Wyandotte hens, 4 lb.,
$1.00; 5 Ib., $1.25; game cocks,
Roundhead Spangler crossed,

| $1.50 ea. Mrs. E, B. McLeroy,

Eatonton, Rt. 1.

Xe

FARM HELP WANTED

Want woman colored prefer-
red, for light farm work, no
field work, at once. Write first
Mrs. H. H. Puryear, Florence.

Want 2 h. croppers on 3rds
and 4ths or standing rent, also

son, Locust Grove.
- Want young man, 17 or 20 yrs.
old, for dairy farm work. One

at once. Lloyd G. Huggen, At-

Want good farmers for 1 or
2 horse farm and a 1 horse farm
on shares, and tend twpentine.
Both farms: on clayed highway.
School bus and 2 mail routes.
Plenty wood. Mrs. Miriam Dum-
lay, Stillmore, Rt. 2.

Want good reliable family for
80 acre farm, 30 A. in cultiva-
tion for standing rent. Good 5
R. house, out-bldgs. Owner de-

Julia, Garrett, Canton. Rt. 1.
Want nice, refined ,middle-
aged woman to live in family of
6-and help with gen. light farm
work. $1.50 week. No field work.
Write at once. Mrs. W. A.
Fletcher, Tifton. Rt. 2.

Want unencumbered, settled,
white woman for light farm
Comfortable

couple. room,

board and reasonable salary.

Mrs. G. E. Rafe, Kathleen.

Want 1 white and 1 colyed
family for gen. farm work for
wages also some help for light
farm work. S. L. Calfee, Bruns-
wick. = -

Want good farmers and wage
jhands: to cultivate 6 h. farm.
'Must be good, dependable woark-
oa T. K.. Moore. Canton. Rt,

{

Want colored couple for farm.
Woman for wages, man to farm
on halves. Must.be reliable. Live
in yard. Good proposition for

tell Rt,

Want white woman, 45-50 for
light fam work, no field work
no field work for home in fam-
ily of 3 (no small children) and
$4.00 month. Jack Kennedy, At-
lanta Rt. 4. Box 1349. West-
mont Rd. :

: Want man to operate dairy V..
ee Decatur, P: O. Box

Want share cropper,
mule, 50 acre farm. B. E. Bliteh,
Homerville. =

Want good wage hand, 21 to
35 yrs. of age for farm work.
Must know how to drive truck
and tractor. Ref. reg. No drunk-
ard nor loafer need apply. See
or write. A. N. Adams, Elber-

2

75c ea. Exchange for B. O. and |

38 AAA White Wyandotte !

Purebred super grade R. C.|-.

a 1h. man. Plenty good river ,
bottoms for corn. J. A. Ander- |

Janta, 267 Whitehall St. S. W.;

sires to board with tenant. Mrs. .

work, no field work, for elderly |

right couple. H. V. Branan, Aus- |

for 27

and knows how to farm
as one of family and
acres cotton for pay. V
on the halves. All worth
er. J..S. Holeomb, M
RFD 2. ne

~. Want good man and

children, to operate
1941 C. Holcomb, Ca
Duncan Mill.

Want country man or
for light farm work. Mi
how to drive car and il]
sober, nice and reliable. Ree
able wages. Mrs. Rix
Grovetown. eee

Want unencumbered,
white woman 40-6(

Mattie Fortner, Gaine
4,

Want at once, nice wh
man for light farm work
in home \with man and
and small salary. Mrs
Ellington, Fairburn. Rt

Want man, reliable, ab
ish own stock, fer good
|New house, water, etc.,
school, 3 mi. Waco. Stana:
rent basis preferred. I, Y
Bremen.

Want girl or middleag
man (orphan preferred.
light farm work, fo.
board and clothes. 1
milk. Mrs. M. E. Davi
eross: Rt. 1. 2s

Want farm hand to hel
ish gathering crop and t
wood. Sober, honest genil
Farm wages. Come at on
Shipps store, near Bs
School. J. O. Campbell, Da

R. house, barn, pastu1
Paved road. L. G. Brantle
thonia. oe
Want 2 families (one col
to farm on 50-50 basis.
colored woman 0 girl
light farm work. Mrs.
Smith, Rt. 4. Baxley.
Want white, middle age
man.to do light farm wo
field work. Live in hom
family of three. Must be

Want boy between 1
yes old, to do light farm
no field work. Live
Board, clothes. Prfer o
boy. Mrs. Delma Gilley,
town, Rt. 3. Spates

man and wife, no childr
dairy werk. Can finish
milk 50-50 on hogs, chic
$8.00. Also want man and
to work on farm, $1.00 day
ular time. Home furnished,
Vandegriff, Rt. 2, Decatur
Want nice, clean white gir.
woman, honest, depend
willing worker to do lig
work, no field work, for fan
of five. Mrs, A. L. Ledbet
Rt. 2, Austell. et io
Want to hear feom party
terested in stock raisir
shares. Have pasture to
care of 40 to 50 hogs, 20
cows. Party must furnish
and stock. Come see 0
Hutcheson Rt. 1, Kite.
Want to rent good 2 or
farm, 50-50 basis, good
good allotment. E. J. Scale
2, Bowden. eee

Want elderly man to do |
fam work, no field work. F
repair farm yard building

W. Powers, Eden. -
Want middle aged cou

work small farm, man t
farm, woman to do light far
work, no. field work. Ro
-boad, monthly salary. B.
Custer Rt. 2, Marietta.
Want clean, healthy,
cumbered, Christian wo:
go 50-50 in poultry business.
other light farm work.
Haynes, Buford. . =
Want good, honest.

man, 35 or 40, with no bad h

its. to.7 deli oe

Boaw-d, laund

ary. Mrs. Alice 10n, Li

burn, Rt. 1. ;
Want colored man ww

children, for farm work,

do part time work,

woman to do light farm w

$12.00 mo. Must be strong, ni

dependable. Room, water. li

heat furnished free, Mrs. J

Sartain, Rossville, a

_ Want nice, clean, good Chi
tian woman, with fair ode
tion, _between 25-45 yrs.
for light farm wack, no fie
work. References. G. S. Co
Rt. 7, Box 228-B, Atlanta,


nt slightly crippled. white

to do light work on farm.

well educated and phy-

ally able to drive car. H. E.
Rt. 3, Augusta. 5

ant man with family to cul-
fe with tractor and do other
ork on 6 H. farm. Good

t woman, Christian char-
ealthy, fac light farm
ao. field work. Small

salary, comfortable

t good farmer for about
ares, 7 R. house (pump
water in house), electric
mi. Forest Park at Rock
rossing. Standing rent. J.
yant, Forest Park. Rt. 1.

at a_single (one who has
da husband) woman
moral character for a

Georgia
nt good man for 1 horse
on 3rds and 4ths. Good

use, 8 stable barn out-
Reasonable land, plenty
nd water. 30 A. cultiva-
ear Clermont. school and
Must be able furnish

. B. fF. Osborne,. Cler-

ae ee :

reliable, unencumbered
woman, 20-45, for light
york, no field work, in

home (modern conven- |-

Catoosa Co., $12.00
ood home. Mrs. Fan-
e, Rock Spring. Rt. 1.

reliable woman for

work. no field work,

lome with elderly couple.
ible to take hold and

ings. Want one who
e Mrs. J. LG. Hew-

asville, 203 Bennett St.

good farmer for good
out 40 A., half. in culti-

Third basis. John D.
es, Jr., Atlanta, 401
PN) ie :

roved, 4h. farm, 1

own, market, school, |

tenant houses, fine
Electricity, For 6
rs. Beulah Cham

id board. Trahsportation

required. Mrs: Clif-.

ray, Dalton. 408 No.

St. 4
man or boy to help on
ji salary, board and
ust be sober and hon-

. Mauldin Dahlonega.

ood men for 1-2 h. or
erops with 16 A. cot-

tment, for standing rent.
R. house, good water,

e with running wa-

ly, unencumbered
for gen. light farm
rden, ete. $10.00 mo.
etc. Must be clean,

clean, no bad hab-

artain. Rossville. 603
mauga Ave. ae
2 horse share cropper.
ge, allotments in cot-

ts, and tobacco and

nd wanted for other

s Hassie Davis, Stil- |

at good, honest, sober man
1 horse farm on 50-50

Must furnish own stock

d and be able run self.
fertilizer furnished. Good
Near good school and
42. L. Strauge, Coliege-

white woman, 16 to
ed, welt and heatthy, to
Gf family and do

ful Chinese man, -

Brand, :
farm. Standing rent. 4-R. house,

FARM HELP WANTED

Want young colored family to
work on farm for wages straight
time. Good houses. water and

wood. Must come recommended.
Dr. J=H. Douglas. Albany.

Want an intelligent, respect-
preferably
middleaged, for farm work.
Reasonable wage and room with
board. R. C. Tappan, White
Plains,

Want 2 dairymen of experi-
ence, who know how to pro-
duce A Grade milk and take

care of the cows: I herd of 25; ,

other 50 cows. Give ref. and
state exp. and wages wanted.
L. O. Benton Sr.,. Monticello.

Want young girl or single wo-
man or boy not over 17, to work
for me. Light farm work, about
1 1-2 mi. town. Write ro come
see at once. Mrs. Sam Postelle,
Morganton. y

Want good, honest, sober man
with sufficient force to handle
a good 2 horse far- mon 50-50
basis. Good 5 R. house good
water, consolidated school, near
ehurch and highway, 30 mi. W.
Savannah. Good stock and good
brood sows to work and raise
from. M. D. Mock, Lanie.

Want exp. farmer for 2h.

good well water big barn; near

| church and school bus line. Mrs.

Julia Scales Waco. Rt. 2, (at C.
C. Pattersons). =

Want good man for good
farm. 30 A. good river bot-
toms, good uplands, 138 A. al-
lotment. On school bus line.
electricity, good out-bldgs.,
house. On 8rds and- 4ths or
standing rent. 9 mi: S.. W.

Gainesville. See at once. H. W.

Summerour, Gainesville. Rt. 1.

Want man and wife no

children, Christian people (no'

drunkard nor WPA worker).
who knows how to farm, to
live in part of house and help
farm, fine bottom land, 8 mi.

| Atlanta. Do good part by right

man. L, P. Mulkey, Atlanta,
Rt. 3, Box 539 (just off No.
42 Highway). ene

Want reliable. couple, no

children, to live in modern)

country home; man to work on
farm, wife light farm work,
no field wack. Room and rea-:

{sonable salary. John B. Taylor,
| Ball Ground. Es

Want settled girl of good

\.| character, for light farm work,
20. Hape _/no field work.
vicity, good well, 2

$2.50 week.
at C Shurley, Thom-
aston, 130 Ave cG 3 =: g

Want refined,

Mrs. Richard

farm work, no field work, for
room, board and $10.00 mo.
State age and full particulars

about self. Mrs. G. C. Harrell,

Whigham Rt eb

- Want geod man, 20-35, no bad.

habits, know how to plow and
good_to stock, for farm work.
$10.00 to $12.00 mo. board and
washing, according to work.
John L. Bennett, Screven, Rt

Want a settled. strong, mid-
dleaged, unencumbered woman
for light farm work, no field
work. Small salary and board.
Mrs. B. W. Gibson, Atlanta,
1045 North Ave. N. E.. Wa 6356.

Want colored family to go on|

my farm, 2 h. farm, good house,

1990 A. in cotton. Can hire man

to do extra work if one in the

family needs extra work. Good |.

water. B. McH. Cline, Atlanta,
402 Grand Theatre Bldg. :

-Want good farm hand, either
straight wages or part crop.and

part wages, or share cropper. 3 f

mi, S. W. Irwinton, Wilkinson
Co. Good land 3 R. house, and

good mules. Write or see. I. P.

Hoover. Imwinton. Rt. 1.
Want boy 16-18, to do any

kind farm work. Pay whatever:

is worth. Lester Massey, Dan-
ielsville. Rt. 3. = 5
Want unencumbered white
woman, not over 35, for light
farm work, no field work. 2 in
family. Mrs. J. B. Roberts, Daw-
son, oe ea
Want exp. farmer to take 1
or 2 h. crop on 50-50 basis. Bot-
toms and upland; on school bus
and mail route. Also day work
in orchards. and cutting wood.
See. Mrs. S'S. Stover, Douglas-
Ville Rt. 4.:..
Want exp, Miller (man and
wife, no children), to operate

| water power mill and work gar-

fen for 1941. Clarence Hol-
Canon. Cfo Duncans
Mill. ?

-Want man with family for fT

crop for 3rds and 4ths;.
Ou near church ant

healthy wo-|
| man to live in home with mid-
dleaged couple and do light

FARM HELP WANTED

on 50-50 basis and part by the
day, or would hire man by the
month: on & hat could drive a
truck and tractor and do re-
pairing, et Have 2 houses,
good community. Plenty wood,
water, 15 A. bottoms. H. L.
Sherwood, McDonough. Rt. 3.

Want good man for large 2
H. farm, on brier creek in Jef-
ferson Co. Good. rich land, 6 R.
house, pasture, barn, plenty
wood and water (splendid hunt-
ing, fishing and . huckleberry
grounds). For 1000 lb. lint cot-
ton rent. See or writeat once.
J.-L. Adams.Dearing. -Rt -1.
Box 24.

Want well exp. wage hand,
18-40 ~ $15.00 mo. and board.
White man preferred, clean, so-
ber, honest, single, healthy, who
doesnt mind work. No others
need apply. Start about first of
January. Give full particulars
about self in first letter, or see.
Theo Banks, Summit.

POSITIONS WANTED

Want work looking after cat-
tle, hogs and chickens, or for
wages with patch, on farm. Ref.
if desired. John Ronena, Moul-
trie Rt. 5.

f
21 yr. old young man wants
on either Dairy or Truck farm.
near large city. Raised in coun-
try. Dont mind work. Do not
use tobacco nor drink. F.. E.
Johns, Jr., Swainsboro. Rt. ee

Man and wife, 12 yr. old boy,
would like to get with old cou-
ple on farm as caretaker and

ber. Minister of Gospel. Can
drive car. Cecil Holton, Swains-
boro, Rt. 1.

Want job on farm to build and
repair bidgs.,/in connection wtih
other farm work. References. J.
H. Hoofner, Dacula. Ate

-Man and wife want job on
farm, gen. farming for wages,
day or month, Life time exp.
Prefer Walton Co., near Monroe.

Day, Monroe, Rt. 2. .

ple for home and salary. Mrs.
Amanda Turner, Atlanta 127
MerritisAve,cNe Bee.

Want place on farm, small
acreage, 4-5 R. house, electric
lights, near Atlanta; Poultry
raising and gardening, etc, A.

ton St., S. W.

Want light farm work, no
field work om milking, $2.50 to
$3.50 week room and board.
Ref. exch. Come after. 1 mi.
highway. South Georgians need
not apply. Miss Myrtle Wehunt,

Dahlonega, Rt. 3.

er wants job on fa7m. Can cul-

tivate with tractor and- other.

work. 39 yrs. old. State salary,
ete. first letter. O. C. Foskey,

| Quitman, Rt. 2.
2 BOX 31: fat

- Man with large famiiy wants
large 2 H. crop on 50-50 basis
or as share cropper-on halves.
Plenty help. (No one within
draft age.) Must have house,
near school, church. No bad
habits. James F. Oliver, Cairo.

White girl, 21 yrs. old, 2
no field work, can milk, -$2.50

wk. Go anywhere. Irene Jones,
Clarkesville; Rt. 1.

Girl, 18 yrs, high

school

Lgraduate, wants job on farm no

field work. Neat and refined.
Lucille Jacobs, Rt. 3, LaGrange.

Young, single man wants job
on dairy farm. Experience. Can
drive truck, tractor. Posey Hill
Jacobs, Rt. 3, LaGrange.

Middle aged, refined woman,
desires light farm work, no field
work, with elderly woman. Mrs.
R. T. Thomas, 850 Courtland
Ave., Macon. : a

with refiable man have boys 16
and 18 yrs. old. Must be nea
ehurch, school, good house. Ref.

fexchanged, WH. Oliver, Cairo.
Young married man wants |

job on farm looking after stock.
chickens. Can plow. Must be
moved. State salary in. first
letter. Samie Carter, Talking
Roce ste a. = :

- Man, with plenty of help,
wants 3 H. farm on shares; also,
want 3 or 4 good brood sows: to
raise on shares. Consider dairy
<eows. Will furnish labor, half
Mog -teed, half fertilizer. Dave
L. Whitehead. Perry Rt. 1.

--Man wants job on 2 H, farm

Want help to work 4 h: crop.

business manager. Honest, so-|

Reasonable wages. At once. J pF

2 Want light farm work, no.
field work, with reliable peo-.

M. Steen, Atlanta.529 Washing- |

Exp. tractor and truck driv-|

children, wants light farm work, |

Man wants 2 H. share crop

2 POSITIONS WANTED

Want 1 H. crop on _ halves
with reliable man. S. T. Taylor,
Quitman, Rt. 1.

Young man, 24 yrs. old, heal-
thy with no bad habits, wants
job on farm for 1941. Prefer
North Ga. Jesse Cucksee, Cran-
dall. to

White man wants job on farm
with old couple can drive car,
truek, do anything on farm,
$15.00 moe Board, laundry. J. W.
Heaton. Haralson.

Young widow wants job on
farm, no field work. Can do any
kind work. Mrs. Mae Allen, 487
Central Ave., Atlanta.

Single man wants share crop
for 1941. C. R. Holloway, Edi-
son.

-Man wants job on 2 H. farm,
50-50 basis. Able to finance self,
Prefer party to have 1 or 2
good plow mules. Pay rent on
same or can furnish stock. Must
have good land, school, church.
J. G. Daniel. Morgan. 3 :

Woman wants lght farm
-work in home with old people,
no field work $2.50 to $3.00
wk. Prefer place not over 5 mi.
from bus line. Mrs. Lillian
Harper, 133 Butler St., Camilla.

Man, with wife and 3 child-
ren, wants job on poultry or
/stock farm. or place overseeing
small farm. Must be near school,
bus line. Hubert Swafford,
Glenwood. Rt. 1. :

Good, fonest, sober white
man wants job on farm on halv-
es, or wages. Have dairy exper-
ienee. 3 in family. Ref. if de-
sired. Buren Spearman, Rt. 2,
Hahira. Care: J. W. Spearman.

Man wanis joo as uvu'seer of
farm. Can keep up any kind
farm machinery. References it
required. B. M. Hudgins, Fin-
leyson, Rt. 1. :

Couple with year old baby,
wants 1 H. erop on halves for
1941. Anywhere in Ga. Must be
moved and furnished... W. N.
Hall, Rt. 1. Hazlehurst. :

Unencumbezed, refined, white
woman wants light farm work,
no field work for home and rea-

ple. Mrs. Della Rawls, Atlanta,
729 Washington St.

3 boys; 16, 17, 18, want job
on farm, experienced in dairy

Hudgins, 267 Whitehall-St. S.
W. Atlanta. Wa 6251. _

Man and wite want to get in
touch with party in poultry bus-

shares, or 50-50 basis. W. Hum-
phrey, Rt- 1, Box 54, Sparta.

Single boy, 25 yrs. old, want-
ed job on farm. Can = dive

ley, Egan.

Man wanis job on small farm,

do not drink, can run-grist mill
$15.00 mo. Board. Ref.
have transpu tation. George W.
Walter, Fcomsboro.
_ Single boy, 19 yrs. old, wants
job on farm. Can drive truck,
car. No plowing. James Sheriff,
Egan. :

light fm work, no field work,
for reasonable salary. Joyce Mae
Jones, Rt. 2. Box 70, Wadley.

Man with wife and child
wants job as caretaker of farm,
well exp., have experience as
carpenter painter, $25.00 mo.
house, wood. A. L. Warren, 201
Mary St.. Dublin. 3

Man wanis job looking after
poultry or stock farm, or would
operate small dairy. Honest, re-:
liable, good ref. P. C. Reid, Mt.
Zion.

Want 1 h..farm tor 1941 on
shares. Have be furnished for
the year with groceries, mule,
plow tcols and feed. Plenty
force to make crop, willing
workers. Ready to move now.
=e J. M. Maniey. Moreland.
Rte. :

and corn mill and gen. repairs.
S. B. Jones, Ca-rolton. 81 West
Ave. Boe 2 :
Want 1 farm 4 oro Rf.
house, close to Atlanta (handy
to cac line). Standing rent, T-
C. Justus. Chamblee. Rt. 1.
Want light farm work, no
filed work, with old couple pre-
ferred. Country woman.. Reli-
able. Respectable. Home and
salary. Mrs. W. J. Haire, Powder
Springs: Rt. 2. : :
Young woman wants light
farm work, no field work for
small salary and board. with
good people. Mrs. Ruby Marcus,
Clarkesville. ;
45 yr. old woman wants light
farm work, Oe

sonable salary with reliable peo-
and general farm work. L. E.|
iness, or one mule crop. Salary, -

perienced

truck, tractor, car. Vincent Wor- ;

Must}

Well raised country giri wants |

Want job in Blacksmith shop

wants job on farm. Can
penter and most all k
work. Ref. furnished. T
Beasley Swainsboro, Rt.
B. L. Beasley. See

Want job overseeing |
1941. Life time exp., best o:
J. M. Clark, Alamo. Rt.

White man, wife, 3 sons
11 and 8 yrs. of age, war
farm with good man. Must
furnished. Prefer with
miles. Nash Spikes, Reids
Star Rt. $

Middleaged man
family, wants job as overset
large farm, or consider off
make and gather 1 h. far
50-50 basis. Sober, honest,
time exp., in tobacco and
farming, also stock and m
ing labor. Best of ref. J.
als, Covington. Cfo Gen

Single man wants job
for 1941. C. R. Holow
son, eS :

47 yr. cld man wan
farm looking after stock a
othe: light work. Ref.
and smali wages. Hines W.
son, Douglas. Rt. 1. Cfo |
Meeks. ce

2 girls white, want place
gether light farm wo
good people. Healthy. $3.5
per week and board.
Arthur Kirkland, Mette

Nice, country gir
wants light farm work, |
work, for reasonable sa
Noloise Hudson, Wadle.
Box 102. : oe

Settica, Christian
wants light farm wo
good home and some was
Mrs. Florence Sturm,
boro, Rt. 2. ae

Man-and son alo f
good, 1 h. farm on 50-50
|Good workers no bad

easy to get along wi
tegether. W. IL. Si =
342 50; Pryor sto 2.

Want Lh. farm on 5
9 in family.. Rest car
the day. Prefa> nea
or write, F&M
ton

Want jov as Ove
dive stock farm, 20
Have Certificate from th
Vetarinarian, for using
and vaccines, for
Give ref. Louzo R.
ton. Rt.el, Box 385.

Man wants 1 H. crop f
of crop and extra wages.

|help to run on. Prefer:

/Emmett Wood, Rt. 3,.P.

Man, 4+ yis. old wit
no children, wants \
farm. Can drive car. t
in operati
other mills and machin
L. Martin, Warrenton, 2
Man 52 yes. old, wa:
1 H. farm on 50-50 ba
good pecple. 3 in fam
-18, girl 17. Must be moy
A. Land, Sumner. ~

Woman wanis:job on
no field work, with eld
pie. Board and_ salary.
Swattord, 311 Logan
Atlanta. es
~ W1d0W, 3U yas. cid,un
bered refined, higt
Gaduate, wants job
no field work, Mrs. N,
Wadley. Rt. eo :

Man wat i H. crop,
basis,_2 can plow, 3 to
work by day. Have to be
and furnished. A. R. Wi
Cedartown, Rt.1.

Middle aged boy, n
ents, wants job on farm.
perienced in dairy ar
farm work. No'ca> 4
pentine work, Jim Kuo
lan, Rt. 2. Care: Merli

16 yr old boy wants
farm with good people
reasonable ~ salery
care of stock, poultry
Hodges, Rt. 1, Savannal

~ Want 1 H. crop for 19
50 basis, need 3 R.
family, (boys 28, 16)
work for wages, Do not d
penoks S T. Scott, d

| light farm work, n
for good home a

~ Want light farm
field work, with goo
for good home and $
Come after me. Mi
Francis Eubanks, C
102 North Ava.

66. yr> Gid- ma
grown boys (22 and
a 2h. crop on ha

es