enon UNDER &
TOM ees
AGRICULTURE
on eee
Eder Tells Of The tibet, Meeting In Washingte .
EDITORIALBy Tom Linder
During the first week in December I attended a meeting
he Commissioners of Agriculture in Washington.
The November elections have had a very wholesome in-
nce in Washington, and the Commissioners of Agriculture
n the different states received much more courteous and
ectful treatment at this meeting than they have in the past.
Most significant in the November 3 election was the fact
t each Senator who had supported the interest of the dirt
mers was re-elected.
Those Senators who had been more active in opposition to
armers were defeated. This was true of both Democrats
mepublicans.
ODT Rationing of Gas For Trucks
Mr. Hicks of the ODT, appeared before the Commissioners
id stated that since the office had been moved to Detroit they
ad a great deal of confusion. Mr. Hicks stated that in making
\llocations of gasoline to trucks a great many mistakes had been
ade.
He stated that many of these mistakes were typographical
PECAN AUCTION AT VIDALIA
- Pecans showed a new gain in todays sale at the Georgia Pecan
Auction with seedlings again leading the advance and showing one to
o cents per pound enhancement over last week. Money Makers were
also strong, with other varieties showing about one cent gain: Schleys,
28 to 29c pound; Stuarts, 21-23c; Alleys, Vandemons, Pabst, Wrights,
Success and intermediate grades 20- 21c; Money Makers and Seedlings,
both, 19%4c to 2lc. Sale included 90,000 pounds. The Sale December
15th will close the market auction at Vidalia.
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
December 11, 1942. Atlanta.
Beans (Snap)), per bu. hprs. - $2.00-$2.50
ollards, per doz. bunches 50- .80
Eggplant, per bu. hprs. - < 2.00- 3.00.
ushrooms, per 1 lb. cartons ; - 30-. 35
Mustard Greens : 15-85.
Peppers, per bu. hprs. : ee ee 2.25- 3.00:
oe. 2.25- 3.50
: ; .75- 1.50
urnips (Bunched), per doz. bunches .15- 80
*o Salad, per-bu. hprs. __. ee ee 9 DS
errors. i many instances the typist had simply failed to put
down the proper number of noughts. He said this accounted
for the unreasonably small amount that had been allocated
a great many Cases.
Mr. Hicks stated that anyone could apply to his loc
board and get an emergency rationing of gas sufficient to carr
on his necessary business until December 31. He stated that
the meantime application should be made for rehearing to ger
the proper amount for next year.
Donald Nelson Talks To Commissioners
Honorable Donald Nelson of the War Production Hone
came before the Commissioners and talked with us for some-
thing like an hour and a half. :
= The Commissioners were especially impressed with M
Nelsons native common sense and his grasp of the country
problems.
' Mr. Nelson is one man in Washington who seems broad
enough to see the whole picture. He was able to talk intimately
of the small problems such as ordinary farm implements. It
was easy to see from Mr, Nelsons understanding of small
things, as well as his vision of the great problem of the nation
(Continued on Page Two)
NOTICE
The Georgia Market Bulletin belongs to the fabwsis
of the state. It is paid for entirely by the farmers = does.
not cost any other taxpayer a nickel.
Livestock Sales, Georgia Auction Markets |
se received at this office show following average prices paid =
for No. 1 hogs at the Live Stock Auction Markets named: =
December 11, 1942. PER. CWT.
December 3Valdosta : $ =$12.16
December 7Sylvester - 12.35
December 8Arlington 3 ~ 12.26
December 9DMoultrie : = 12.25
December 9Rome = 14.50 |.
ks TOP FED CATTLE e
December 3Valdosta _
December 7Sylvester
December 8Arlington 10.00- 11.00
December 9Moultrie 10.00- 11.00
December 9Rome - 1400 |
$12.00-$12.50 |
12.00- 13.10
lowing are quotations by wholesale dealers in Atlanta and other cities (FOB. points mene as furnished by the State Bureau of Markets. Prices
ed are for Georgia Grade A eggs only, Grades B and C and Current Receipts (yard run) are quoted by wholesalers from 2c to 5c per dozen below these
December 11, 1942.
gs, faae White, Grade A, Doz.
gs, Medium, Grade A, Doz. _
ggs, Small, Grade A, Doz.
lens, Col., 4% lbs., sw.
ns, Leghorn, Ib.
Atlanta
Always subject to variation.
INDEX
Second Hand Machince: for Sale
Second Hand Machinery Wanted
Incubators and Brooders for Sale
Incubators and Brooders Wanted
Sed for Sale.
Augusta
Corn and Seed Corn for Sale... ss
Cottonseed for Sale aS
Plants. for Sale :
Miscellaneous for Sale. 3-4
Hig NO 9 84 eb els
Miscellaneous Wanted... 4S
Fruit and Butter for Sale :
Id peas,: not xed, bu.
ar Corn (80 !bs. to bu.), bu.
nelled corn, bu.
.64-
SP ee RR RS tee peat y semen fan
1.00- 1.
Grain and Hay for Sale_
Potatoes and Vegetables for Sale
Pecan and Peanuts for Sale
Pecan and Other Fruit Trees
Cattle for Sale
t potatoes, Par 100 Ibs.
age, (Green), Per 100 Ibs. a 5 _. 2.50-
age, (White), Per 100 libs. aS 2.50-
No. 1, Peavine, per ton Se
No, 1, Peanut, per ton.
inish peanuts, No. 1, Ton,
Del. Shelling Plant)
20.00-22.00-
15.00-15.50 }-
Hogs for Sale
Rabbits and Cavies for Sale
Sheep and Goats for Sale
Livestock Wanted
Poultry for Sale
a oe oe
cottonseed (Prime)
ts FOB Shipping Point)
Poultry Wanted
Farm Help Wanted__.. ETB
Positions. Wanted 5 ee =e.
mseed meal, 8 per cent
nseed meal, 7 per cent
nut meal, 45 per cent
ORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
= Address all items for publication and all requests to be put
: on the mailing list and for change of address to STATE BUREAU
OF MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
wn
Noties of farm produce and appurtenances admisBable under
_ postage regulations inserted one time on each reauest and re-
peated only when request is accompanied by new copy of notice
Limited space will not permit insertion of Hotices containing
nore than 30 words including hame and address.
Undr Legislative Act the Gorgia Market Bulletin does not
_ @8Sum afiy responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin.
o Published Weekly at
: ji4- -122 Pae St., Covington, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
- fom Lincer. Commissioner
Exectitive Office. State Capitol,
Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
414-212 Pace St.. Covington, Ga.
Editorial and Executive Offices
State Capitol. Atlanta. Ga.
Notify 61 FORM 3578Bureau o:
Market, 222 State Capitol,
_ Atlanta: Ga.
Entered as second class matter
august 1, 1937, at the Post Office
_ at Covington, Georgia. under Act
of June 6, 1900. Accepted for |
ailing at special rate of postage
provided for in Section 1103, Act
of October 8. edd
Senators Opposed To
Farmers Defeated
(Continued. from.Page One)
: TOM LINDER
as a whole, that hee is on man Who meastires up
to Amerian statesmanship.
Meeting of Senators, Congressmen and Newspaper
: Men With Commissioners
a On Tuesday night the Commissioners had the
honor and pleasure of entertaining about thirty
Congressmen, nine or ten Senators and several news-
papermen.
: The Commissioners went on record waanimduely
in favor of uncontrolled production of all essential
crops for the duration of the war, and nearly all the
Senators and Congressmen present agreed with this
view.
F ood Shortage Coms on a Pace
of Ehe Commissioner of Agriculture of Seuth Da-
ia had a photograph of a very large field of wheat
being burned this summer.
oo Prom information furnished by Commissioners
of Agriculture from various wheat states it is ap-
parent that thousands of acres of wheat have been
burned in 1942 and other thousands have been
plowed back into the land under orders of the
Triple A:
: On aceount of limited penduaon. of meat by
the Triple A through the years past, meat is now | i
80 short in the United States that the President has
asked Congress for power to bring in meat without
restriction from the Argentine. :
At the same time the following Associated Press
dispatch from Boston shows how desperately short
meat is becoming in the United States:
HORSE MEAT FOR SALE
SIGN APPEARS AT A BOSTON MARKET
- BOSTON(AP)Horse meat for sale was
e sign that appeared at a Boston wholesale house
is its answer to the problem of a Sei meat
hortage.
: Hanging in tows upon hooks, the meat ap-
peared much like beef carcasses. The meat was
shipped from a packing house in Topeka, Kansas,
Boston marketmen pointed out that the use of
rse meat for human food has long prevailed in
urope, and Dr. G. Lynde Gately, Boston health com-
ssioner said horse meat as a food is more common)
in the west than here.
Calling attention to the Federal inspection
tamps, Di. Bately said, there issno danger in using
, because it has been carefully inspected. |
- Market men said that the meat, which would
e sold to the retailer at about three- quarters of the
rice of beef, should be cooked as if it were beef. One
vholesaler said that retailers probably would be able
ell steaks at 35 to 50 cents a pound, and roast-
meat at 25 to 50 cents.
Unless we have all-out and uncontrolled produc-
in this country you ean look for similar signs to
pear in all the large cities of the country.
It is, of course, better to have horse meat than
not to have any meat at all, but to limit the farmers|
luction of cattle and news and then have to eat
ar
stop, look and listen,
God has made economic laws whith man cannot
ange, If our lawmakers ang our publie piticiols in
Weahingion would read in ie prophets of old they
might learn something.
Gods judgments pronounced against those who
flout and disobey His laws should cause us to take
heed.
Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth
take heed lest he fall. i
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture.
m ; As 2 Singleton, Hort gO NE Rh
orse meat should cause every sane man and woman | ?-
SECOND HAND _
MACHINERY FOR SALE
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
Simplex Ditcher ard Terrac-
er, nearly new, for Sale. D. Y.
gone Atlanta, 919 Marietta
St.
_ Deering binder, running or-
der, also Reversible disc. har-
row with 8=18 dise, A-1 cond.,;
for sale. oF exe. harrow for
stalk cutter, sood cond. Se or
write at once. Geo. L. Green.
Jasper.
Used 2 h. turning plows,
1=93 Slat wing; Chat. 1-1465
Syracuse, both need some parts.
Cheap or exe. . H. Year-
wood, Macon.
1 Chattanooga reversible dise
slow, good cond., $25.00 cash,
HOB Jase. Swint, Stilson.
Fordson tractor, 24 disc har-
row plow, pr. mules, sound. wt.
1100-1200 lbs. 2 h. wagon, al-
most all kinds farming tools,
hay and fodder, all for sale.
M. J.Jones, Rydal. Rt 2:
International Corn Shucker
and shller, slightly used, good
running cond., shells 500 bu.
daily, $300.00. R. S. Deen, Al-
ma. :
Fordson tractor, 2 disc., side
plow, 20 disc harrow, 18 in.
dise, International make, al-
most new, all for $175.00 at
my place 1% mi. North Sulphur
Springs Post Office. W.
Campbell, Rising Fawn.
1 Cletrac Crawler tractor,
1937 model for sale; cheap. In
good running shape. J. T. Har-
ris, Thomaston, R. 3.
One 24 in. Grist mill, 1-A
condition (new Runner Rock):
one it-man stump puller, good
condition, for sale. John F.,
Moss, Hazlehurst, Rete
A 200 gal. Friend Sprayer, in
A-1 cond., fof sale. D. C. Stroth-
er, Fort Valley.
_ Closing down big farm, all
farm implements, Oliver aid
Syracuse and 1 and 2-H. plows
all kinds, spring tooth and peg
tooth harrows, farm gar, corn
and cotton planters, blacksmith
tools, etc. Write for complete
lst. J 6 Coller, Barnesville.
Good 10 Oliver turn plow,
good shape except handles,
$10:00 cash. Trade for a Cole
Plaiiter in good shape. J. A.
Sott, Norcross, Rt. 1.
Allis Chalmers B model
tractor on rubber, mower, culti-
vator, planter, excellent cond..
for gale, Call Ra 7474 or write
piss Anne G. Fields, Hampton,
eee
1 Oliver No. 13 turn plow,
good as new, $10.00; 1 all iron
pce plow, 5 ft. long 4 ft.,
h with 4 ft. wing, good cond.,
"00. 3 harrow discs, 16 in.,
tor $1, 00. All FOB my barh,
cannot ship. Miss Mary G.
Lewis; Cornelia.
20 h. p. ngine and boiler,
used in farm work, in reason-
ably Ps running eond., for
sale. H. P. Bohanan, Conyers.
1 modl L. John Deere tractor
on rubber, and complete equip-
ment, for sale. E. H. Jams,
Axson.
1 light John Deering 2-H.
wagon With springs and __bed,
$25.00 at my place, 3 mi. West
Austell. H. S. Rakestraw,
Powder Springs.
Lummus gin outfit, excellent
cond., 3-70 saw gin stands, air
plast, friction press, for sale
cheap. R. S. Norton, Dawson.
A 10-20 Be P. John Deere
iron wheel tractor and 1 dbl.
cut harrow, all good _ cond.,
$325.00 FOB Madras. J. F.
Cook, Newnan. Rt. 2.
Deere miodel B tractor, just |
about new, plowed only 75
acres, cut 100, for sale. J. E.
Goines, Dalton, 740 Thornton
Ave.
A 2 disc tractor plow, cloth
pulley for old style Fordson
tractor, also 30 h., 3 plow Ker.
tractor, 1 self- feed, all steel
hay paler for sale. W. McCall,
Varnell.
Blacksmith_toels, Landeaster
blowers, anvil, viee, press drill,
and bits, all for $25: 00 FOB my
farm. T. O. Powell, ca
ville. Rt. 3.
Clark euttaway 2-h. ee
$25.00; Chattanooga No. 64,
turn plow 2-H. $12.00: Planet,
Jr., cultivator, $7.50. FOB here.
Heavy 2-H. wagon, spring
seat, gravel bed, all complete,
$75. 00 cash. W. L. Jarrell, Eton.
1 dbl. disc tractor harrow,
Intrnational, needs slight re-
pairs, $50.00 or trade for grain.
Other equipment. Mrs. Allen
Chappell, Milner, Rt. K.
i Taternational Mower, for
sale cheap. Miss Rabun Head,
Macon. In Care of Macon Hos-
pital.
1 Blee. 10 gal. Elgin churn,
almost new and will do the
work, $24.75, FOB. W. T..Mc-
Broom, Barnesville.
A 1-H. wheat drill, 3 row,
$10.00. Jesse Morrison, eS
vill. Rt. 2.
Farmall. tractor, size M.,
practically new, harrow and
subsoiler, 1 corn mill, 1 heavy
duty 3-H. wagon, can tse with
tractor, 2 mowing machines,
for sale. See. A. . Benson,
Marietta.
Farmall F-12 tractor, never
used Seo ss much, for sale. See
lor write. B. Bedingfield, M.
133 Wrightevilie.
Star pea huller and small
engine, good cond. $50.00.
Clyde T. Hannah, Loganville.
One Ww. Cc. Allis-Chalmers
Tractor, 1940 model; and one
Allis- Chalmers Combine. Both
on good rubber and 1940 models
Allis-Chalmers tractor oh per-
fect rubber, and 5 dise John
Deere Tiller. J. B. Prather,
Good Hope.
One McCormick Deering
Hammer mill, No. 1-A, with
22% ft., by 6 in. belt, new pul-
ley, $75. 00, FOB. J: WwW. Richard-
son, Lithia Springs.
4 late model Ford tractor
with rubber tires, 1 Ferguson
plow arid harrow; 15% ft. sc-
tion drag harrow, condition A-
1, $1150.00. J. L. Ship, Atlanta,
11402 Belmont Ave., Phone RA.
6020.
Late Model Moline R. trac-
tor on rubber with plows and
harrows: in A-1 condition. Also
14 fine farm mare, if interested,
come see: Dont write: Cash
sale only. W. A. McKinley, Li-
thonia, R. 3.
2-H. Oliver Walking cultiva-
tor in Ist class shape. $35.00;
One Cole distributor as good as
new, $7.00. T. L. Powell, Syl-
vester.
One Avery. peanut Weeder,
ist class condition, used only
4 days $20.00 del. A. J. Kent,
Midville, R. 2.
Deere Model; B-Tractor, side
delivery rake, hay loader, Mc-
Cormick power press (bale a
minute) cultipacker; 2. box rol-
ler. All almost new. W._S. Mc-
a Dalton, Phone a
SECOND-HAND
Exc. corn for a sood second-
hand 1 horse wagon. Bring
wagon and get corn. Write fir st,
Busk McCrea, Alma, Rt, 1.
Want a No..10 hammer mill;
Also one 2-16 in. bottom plow.
I. H. C. or John Deere. Must
be in fine cond. Cash. Dowse,
B. Smith, Ludowici.
Want a Cole Cotton Dropper
with or without Fertilizer at-
tachment. Y:. A. Olive, Wood-
land.
Want 1 pr. rear steel wheels
for F=20 Farmall tractor, Write.
Silas N. Lawrence, Summer-
ville; Rt. 4:
Want one dbl. section spring
tooth harrow. Called either Or-
chard or Bermuda grass har-
row. Must be in perfect shape,
no junk wanted. Prefer about
W. Petts, Newnan.
Want 2 row tractor 1941-42
model on rubber with farming
equipment, Prefer Farmall,
Ferguson or John Deere; Also
two or three roller cane mill;
single wagon, farm tools; cop-
per evaporator and power driv-
n Gan mill. All good cond., pay
cash. C. L. Purvis, Pembroke,
a 16.
Allis Chalmers Combine,
model 40, good running cond.,
$350.00. Finished poker:
John Foy, eer
2-5 ft. Combine; 1, 1941 W. C.
MACHINERY WANTED
fifteen teeth to section. George
MACHINERY
Want to buy a good
wagon, G. L, Echols
Park.
Want to buy a 1 hors
Will pay ash: F. ,
Boesart, Rt. feo
Want pressure cann
condition. Describe
bor a C. L. Holeomb, |]
07 Jefferson Place.
outfit. State
when bought. Gordon
Cobbtewn.
Want to buy good w
road cart. Write or se
Beach, Nes P
460.
Want good t1- H.
Write. H. B. Mays, 500
pia Dr., Decatur. ;
Want to buy good
spring wagon, suitable
delivery of milk.
ster, Sylvania.
silage mill. C. W.
Winder.
Want pressure ean
make, to hold 12 qt. jar
Ans. all letters rec. Al
electric sausage grinde
at once. N. CG. Wie Ys
R. 4. Box 156.
Want to buy < :
State size and price a
tion. L. W. Coehran, Se
2:
Want Garden a
equipments. State m
condition. Best cash pric
want small plug mul
Hart, College Park,
157. {
Want 1 good 2-H. ridir
tivator. C. H. Pierce, Ste
R. 1. Box 60.
Want to bty 1 Int
Cultivator with dis
parts. Must be in goo
for cash. A. R.
insburg.
Want Belt. nahiee D
row Allis-Chalmers
Complete with the take
G. Bryans, Newborn.
Wart John Deere la
B. tractor on rubber.
tivator and planting -
cash. . R. Saye, Rutl
Want one 30 or 40 H.
er to be used Oh my
M. Miller, Cornelia.
~ Want a Horse dra i
spreader ii good conditi
R. Reeves, Clarkesville
Want a Cole Fertilize
butor, No. 26. New o
Must be in excellent on
Pay cash. J. B. Mask, Bro
Want large size Sug:
der in good condition 1
G. W. Pirkle, Sycamore
Grice, Glennville.
Want 2 disc plow )
Ferguson tractor. Stat
C. Tractor.
Cumming.
Want a late model
good rubber with
and ofe row cultivat
Atlanta, for oie Ww
Roswell.
Want to buy good
W.
| Model Tractor. State be
-|in ist letter. A. D. Bek
lanta, R. 4, Box 665
Want tractor dew
packer. No junk wante
Shahon, Ringgold, R. 2
Will trade one farm
McCormick Deering tr
chard type and 1 8 di
plow. Can he converter
5 disc, for a 20 horse oO
He Price Mares =
Want to buy sor
wagon, a mowing m
a hay rake. Give age
seription. All must be
condition. D. L. Denni
con, 485 Vista Circle.
Want planters a ad f
=
H John Deer tractor,
condition. Also have
Goobee Steel bean ,
one 1-H. spring work
tor, and Old style Lilliste
nut picker, good runnin;
dition, for sale E. Tho
Jr; Cataula.
tors, fans, warming
looks like new,
Starter, interme
batteries
other equi
Ath
ot P. 'P. Mrs.
eDonough, Rt. 3.
der. | (Kerosene) in A-1
250 chick cap... $10.-
- B. Stevens, More-
leetric
Good
Automatic
eondition.
8.
ears. Roebuck, used, oil
oe chick cap., good
1, $5.00; One Sears
ed, Economy King,
eam Separator, table
ood condition, $15.00.
Miss Floy Hemphill,
gZ Cap. Newtown Dbl.
ene heated Incuba-
hatching, either chicks
Vv acre Sell cheap.
:0 , Braselton, Rt.
500 Cap. electric brood-
cash. | Good condition,
heat control. Mrs. Orrie
kman.
pay cash for poultry
feeders. J. C. Al-
ssville, Rt. 2.
oO buy new or used coal
ooder stoves. W. J.
1B poaee ae wood
or what have you. P.
asper, Rt, 1.
Electric Battery brood-
s, also battery fin-
In asn. state
ee Bar-
chic
Eiovtrie
ndition. Around 200
at once. H.C. Foster,
, Wesley Chapel Rd..
e DE, 1208.
Seed used Broiler plant
r 200 per week output.
y or
ully. R. A. Caldwell,
\c., around 250
90d. cond., cheap for
Duncan, Royston,
Jate model all electric
tor, a few hundred cap.
ple. Write description
in 1st letter. B. T. Black-
Augusta, 1521 Heath St.
SEED FOR SALE
peas and shite: hull
25c arge cupful; 5 cup-
; Pumpkin seed, i0c
ynful; Banana. pump-
0 seed, 10c, add post-
elyn Davis, Ellijay, Rt.
ery clean, Kobe Les-
eed, combined in dry
as free as possible
seeds, for a limited
lb. in even wt., 100
Git 7 or 8 tons.
low pumpkin seed,
_ yard long peas, 25c
Lady and bean
o.; Speckle crowders,
e price. Mrs.
ainesville, Rt. 6.
all watermelon seed,
_ Postpaid for quick
espress Bentley, Jr.,
TO.
oth Russian Sunflower
0 ea.; Chufas seed,
al.; Okra "seed, $1.25 gal.
Wirs. L. D. Elliott,
Rik,
fashioned salad English
20c eupful; 2, 35c, not
Add postage. Mrs. C.
son, Bowdon, Rt. 3.
ean Lespedeza seed.
e run, nice clean seed.
i ship less 200 lbs. FOB
. L. M. Thomas, Ros-
ib
20c cupful: 2 cups,
dd postage. Mrs. C. W.
Bodwon. Rt. 3.
ib collard seed and 100
ret okra seed for sale,
for special price. John
od, Marietta, R. 3, Box
uick sale, few hundred
Crotalaria Spectabilis,
od, new crop. seed.
icked, shelled and _clean-
te for prices. W. J.
_ {queen watermelon,
| Runner,
incubator in
oil operated.
: eottonseed, $1.50 bu.
Mae |
_ SEED FOR ALE
sna FO
Seed deans collards (heads
like cabbage,) 10c tbls; Curley
mustard, same price. Cuban
50c - now;
75c after Xmas. Cash with
order, add postage. Mrs. T. L.
McGraw, Irwinton.
Dill seed, (sow soon for foli-
age to make dill pickles), 12
teaspoonful, Postpaid. Mrs. R
A. Caldwell, Boston.
7 var. tomato, about 300 seed,
25c: Gold, Orange Winsall,
rich meat, Oxheart, running
tomato, Ponderosa, Collesal the
largest. tomato grown. W. H.
Hagan, Morrow.
Colored bunch butterbeans,
seed, 2 lbs. beeswax, for sale or
exc. for well rooted pear trees.
Write first and make offer.
Mrs. Ernest Crosby, Baxley, R.
8:
See, 5 Ibs. Stone Mtn. water-
melon, $3.75 M. lot: 25c cupful;
Old fashioned Muskmelon, 35c
-cupful; limited amt. yellow
meat watermelon, 15 thlisp.;
vine okra, 18, 20c. Mammoth
sunflower, 2 cupfuls, 35; Ga.
collard, 10 thisp. No stamps.
Mrs. Tda Mae Sullivan, Whites-
burg, R, 2.
Blue Ridge Mtn. climbing
tomato, (grows to 15 ft., wt. up
to 2 Ibs.) long bearing, 200 seed
25c. Colossal, largest tomato
that grows, up to 4-lbs., yellow
pear, 50 seed ea. free with ea.
order. W. C. Smith, Pike.
Japanese buck wheat for
seed, good for chicken seed and
honey bees. and grinding into
flour, 10 lbs., .50c, Fontpaid:
John Crowe, Philomath.
BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
80 bu. mixed field peas, $2.50
bu. J. S. Collier, Barnesville.
Good old fashioned Half-
striped, garden seed
beans, slightly mixed, tender
and heavy bearers, 15c pint.
You pay posiane or 20c pint
postpaid. J . D. Dyer, Cumming,
Rt.
5 ee Red hull peas, $3. 00 bu.,
FOB.: Also 17 Big Bone black
Guinea pigs, 8 wks. old, $7.50
to truck enly. Mrs. Will
Howell, Mitchell, Rt.
: Speckled half runner garden
beans, 25c teacupful; Mung
beans, 20c ib.,in 5 lb. lots or
more. Postpaid. Money order.
No stamps. Mrs. B. L. Brown,
Ball Ground, RY 4:
CORN AND SEED
CORN FOR SALE
ew Re
Hastings yellow prolific seed
corn, grown in isolated field, 4
mi. from any other corn, $1. 00
peck, FOB. E. L. Fowler, ae
herton, Rt. 2:
COTTONSEED
FOR SALE
(
Coxs Choice cottonseed, a
Suceessive selection from
Cokers. No. 100, $5.25 per 100
Ibs., FOB.; or $5. 00 per 100 lbs.
at barn in purchasers bags. W.
F. Cox, Roswell. =
Pure Stoneville 2-B., and YF.
Strickland, Alvaton. ae
Pure Cokers 100 cottonseed,
ginned on my private gin, 1000
to 1500 bu. for sale, $1.25 bu.;
$4.00 CWT. J. B. Elder, Grif-
fin, 607 So. Hill St..
Pure, high-germinating, Ist,
Coker: 100 strain 5 planting
seed. Made 2 bales per acre
this yr. $5.00 per CWT. FOB.
T, P. Wootten, Elberton.
PLANTS FOR SALE
Klondike strawberry plants,
$2.00 M. Postpaid. Mrs. P. B.
Reynolds, Gainesville, R. 2.
Kiondike strawberry plants,
$3.00 M. Postpaid. Good, youn
plants, weil rooted. Promp
shipment. Mrs. Oma Chumbler,
Gainesville, R. 2.
50 M. Everbearing straw-
berry plants, 25, $1.00; del. in
lots of 400. Exc. for 2 feed
sacks per 100 plants. Mrs. B.
|. Thornton, Bowdon, R. 1.
Cabbage - plants, open field
grown, Chas. W. and Early
Jersey, 500, 65c: $1.00 M. Full
count, large tough plants. W.
W. Coffey, Fitzgerald.
Frost proof early Jersey and
Chas. W. cabbage plants, $1.00
M.; 500, 60c: 200, 30c. Plants
now ready, prompt shipment,
Full count paar. ernon Grif-
fin, Baxley, R. 4.. .
| M.:
-Bermuda onions,
All del. postpaid. Prompt ship- |
muda onion plants,
Klondike ee Meiaees.
25e C.: $1.25, 500; $2.00 M.;
Mastodon strawberry plants,
3he C.; $2.00; 500; $3.50. M.
Well rooted young plants. Old
25e ea.; 6, $1.00, Prompt ship-
ment. Miss Grace Crowe, Cum-
ming, R. 1.
Klondike strawberry plants,
25e C.; $1.25, 500; $2.00 M_;
Mastodon - strawberry plants,
35c C.; $2.00, 500; $3.50 M.
Well rooted, young plants, full
count, prompt shipment. Mrs.
Effie Crowe, Cumming, R. 1.
Klondike strawberry plants,
$1.75 M.: $1.00, 500; Mastedon,
$2.00 M.; $1.15, 500: Nice,
young, well rooted plants. Mrs.
Guy Crowe, Cumming.
Early bearing strawberry
plants, heavy croppers, 25 C.;
500, $1.00. Full count. Lizzi
Duran, Cumming, R. 1, Box 56.
Extra large strawberries;
Mastodon, $2.50 M.: 500, $1. 25:
Klondikes, $1.75 M.: $1. 00, 500,
well rooted plants. Emma
Crowe, Cumming, R. 1.
Cabage and onion plants, ex-
tra early Jersey and Chas.
cabbage, 500, 60c; $1.00 M.;
White Bermuda onion plants,
Write for prices on larger lots.
I, L. Stokes, Fitzgerald. |
. Good strong frost proof ear-
ly Jersey and Chas. Wakefield
cabbage plants, $1.00 M.; 500,
60c: 200, 30c. Prompt shipment
full count, guar. Now ready.
Ina Griffin, Baxley, R. 4.
Early Imp. Klondike straw-
berry plants, 15c C.: Musca-
dine vines, 15c; Yellow squash
seed, 25c teacupful: Barly okra
seed, 10 tablespoonful. Add
postage. Rosie Crow, Cumming,
Collard plants, 90c M. del:
M. collect: Open field meee
strong | and healthy. E. B.
Weatherford, Gainesville, R. 2:
Extra large firm meat, deli-
cious flavor Lady Thompson
strawberry, 35c C.; $1.50, 500;
Imp. Klondike large, Nery
sweet acid flavor. 30ce C., del.
Young, well rooted plants. Exc.
for pecans. Mrs. J. S. Crowe,
Cumming, R. 1.
Large fresh
and Chas. W., 500, 65c;
White. "Bermuda
plants, 500, 75c;
del. Post aid, Sat.
Stokes, itzgerald.
Frost proof Chas. W. and
Collard plants, good size and
roots, guar, satis., $1.00 M. to
50c M. Del. Open | field grown.
B. R. Woodliff, Flowery Branch
extra early J.
onion
guar. F, F.
R. al:
Mastodon strawberry plants,
$2.00 M., FOB. Set now for
early berries. J. H. Anderson,
Nashville. j
Chas. W., Early Jersey cab-
bage plants, $1.00 M.; 60c, 500;
80e, 200; All del., full count,
prompt shipment. Miss Mary
M. Crosby, Baxley, Rt. 4. -
Frost proof, Chas. W., Early
Jersey, J. W. cabbage plants,
$1.00 M.; 500, 60c; 200, 30c;
Everbearing strawberry plants,
$2.00 M.; 500. $1.25. All del.
promptly. J. P. Mullis, Baxley,
at 4.
Chas. W., Mavis Jersey,
Jersey Wakefield cabbage
plants, $1.00 M.; 500, 60c; 200,
80c; Everbearing strawberry
plants, $2.00 M.: 500, $1.25; 35c
Cc. Ali del., full count, prompt
shipment. Mrs. Ima Miles,
Baxley, Rt. 4.
Thousands of Iceberg lettuce,
1 beets, collards, Wakefield, cab-
bage, Endive, Rutabaga, par-
snips, kale, parsley, bermuda
and nest onions, 35e C. del.
Straight or mixed. Mrs. H. V.
Franklin, Register.
Gooseberry bushes, $1.00 doz.:
Sage plants, 20c ea.; Well root-.
ed comfort. 1 bush, good roots,
20c; Garden horsemint, cat-
nip, 6, 25c: Herse apple, June
apples, good roots, old fashion-
ed peach trees, 20c. Mrs. Hu-
bert Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
Lady Thompson strawberry
plants, 200, 35c; Old fashioned
half-runner, white and colored
and white tender hull Cornfield
seeq beans, 25c cup. Mrs. J.
M. Hall, Calhoun, Rt. 1.
Cabbage plants: large fresh
extra early J. and Chas W.,
500, 65c; $1.00 M.; Cabbage,
heading collards and white
same price.
ment. Satis, guar. F. F. Stokes,
Fitzgerald,
Collard plants, $1.50 M. Cash
with: order. . W. Holcomb,
Adel.
Chas. W., Copenhagen Mar-
ket cabbage and a collard
plants, 20c C.: $1.25 M.: Ber- |
$1. 25 M,
W. RL Wise, Wadley.
fashioned blue Damson plums, |.
| plants, 25e C.:
500, 65c: $1.25 M. Postpaid.
$1.00 |
$1.25 M. All.
Fang dried, $1.00 bu. J. R. Pet-
Klondike strawberry plants,
380c;.- 500, ~ $1.00) Postwaid.
prompt shipment. Royce Wal-
drip, Flowery Branch, Rt.
Frost proof Chas. W. -
bage and Ga. collard plants,
open field grown, large strong
roots, 00. M. del. Satis.
guar. R. Woodliff, Flowery
Branch, Pat is
Chas. W. cabbage plants of
Long Island seed, 500, 60c: 10
M., $9.00 col.; Klondike straw-
berry plants, 500, $1.00; $1.75
M. del. Prempt shipment. W.
Q. Waldrip, Flowery Branch,
Bt. 1.
Dutch, Wakefield and Copen-
hagen cabbage plants. $1.50 M.
Postpaid; 85c M., exp. col.:
White el Bermuda onions
plants, $1.90 M.; Collards, $1.-
00 Ma i. B. Legg, Rebecca.
Early bearing strawberry
plants, extra large, heavy crop-
per, 50c C.: $2.00, 500. Mattie
uran, Cumming, Rica.
Ga. and Heading collard
75c M.: Ever-
bearing strawberry plants, 35c
oo $2.75 M. All mailed.
A. Crow. Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Wiendike strawberry plants,
30c Cs: $1.00): S00! BERG. MM.
Postpaid. Mrs, Ara Waldrip, |
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Early Imp. Wendie straw-
berry plants, collard plants,
1b@ Cy ep: ; Muscadine vines,
15c ea.: yellow squash seed, 25
teacupful: early okra seed, 10c
tablespoonful. Add postage.
Rosie Crowe. Cumming, Rt. 1.
Large rooted Kudzu Semesan
treated, Lucretia Dewberry,
McDonald earliest blackberry,
$1.75 C.: $7.50,.500; Himalaya
blackberry, 25 C.;_ Washing-
ton Asparagus, Celestial fig
cuttings, $1.75 - Garefully
packed. Postpaid. J. W. Toole.
| Macon, 33 Burton Ave.
Hardy Eldorado blackberry
and Lucretia dewberry plants,
2 yrs. fielg grown, $1.00 C.: 2
M., $15.00. Mrs, C. M. Rob-
inson, Greenville.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
1 Ib. shade dried sage, $1.00;
or 1 cupful, 25e. Pulverized
sage. You pay postage. Min-
nie Adams, Pavo, Rt. 1.
Peppermint, horsemint, dbl.
tansy, all 25e doz.: sweet gum,
3, 25c. Blue huckleberries,
gooseberries, 40c doz. Mrs.
yola Hollaway. Dahlonega, Rt.
Yellow, rattle, red sassafras
roots, 25c Jb.: @ lbs., $1.00;
Spice wood, root or bark, 35c
lb. Heart leaves, 50e lb.; Cat-
nip, horehound, peppermint,
plants, 25 doz, Mrs. G. C.
Hester, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
About 100 Ibs. good used
goose feathers in is class
condition. M.S. Snelgrove,
Ideal.
New crop walnut meats, 35c
pint: 3 pints, $1.00; Hot pepper,
35e gal.; Also Lady Slipper
(yellow), $1.00 doz.; pink, $1.50
doz. Postpaid. Mrs. Walter A.
Johnson, Alto. Rt. 1.
Yellow root, 10c lb.: ae
of the meadow root, rattleweed
root, yellow dock, 20c Ib::
Sweet gum bark and mullen,
15 Ib.; Wild cherry bark, 10c
ea.; Add postage. Mrs. Myrtle
Jackson, Talking Rock.
Truckload large _ shocked
eane, good for feed mill or
dairy feed. Very low price.
L. H. Ouzts, Elberton, Rt. 3.
' 10 bu. this yrs. black walnuts,
free of hull, $1.00 bu. You pay
frt chgs. Mrs. Ivy Harris,
Sandersville, Rt. 1.
New crop black walnut
meats, 45e Ib. FOB.; 50c Ib.
Postpaid. No chks. aec. Mrs.
H. F. Reece, Jasper, Box 13.
10 bu. hulled drieq blaek
walnuts, $1.00 bu.: lot of 10 bu.
lots, $8.00: Schley pecans. 15
lb. in lots of 10 lb. Mrs. BR. I.
Allgood, Oxford.
Nice black walnut meats, as
free from hulls as possible, 50c
lb.. nice rooted sage, 2 bunch-
es, 25e: 6; 50c; 12, $1.15, Pre-
paid. Lady T. strawberry
plants, 30c C.: $2.50 M. White
Iceberg blackberry, 8, 50c. Mrs.
Willis Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt.
Red hot pepper,
gal. er 15 gals. Plus postage.
Ship same day order rec. Mrs.
Leacie Wood, Martin, Rt. 1.
Pure pulverized homegrown
sage, 25c cupful. Joe M.
Burkhead, Union City.
Large black walnuts, hulled
Zac. Paktf
500 pt.; 3 pts.,
Rock.
|50e ea.;
tigrew, Carrollton, Rt
1 Ib. dry sage. oe 00
sage limbs, $1.00 doz.;
bulbs, 25ce doz.: $1. 50 C.:
leaf castor beans, sesd. 5
doz.::50e . Add postage.
2 ug Gunter, Lawrencevill
Walnut meat, 50c pt.: ck
ory nut meats, 60c pt. Also
have 6 Ibs. beeswax, 50c Ib
All postpaid. Send M. O.
stamps or chks. Herbert a
fern, Mitchell, Box 8.
White artichokes for pickl gs
and seed for hog feed, 5c
No orders for less than 20 Ib
Will not pay postage. Wr
for price on 100 lb: lots.
Mason, Decatur. Rt. 1.
Catnip, hoarhound, pepp:
mint, balm, 25 doz. Mrs. Mar
tha White. Dahlonega, Rt.iz
Box 37. :
1 gallon good sound. R
seed, $1.50 for lot: or 15 up
ful Postpaid. Grady
en, Bowdon Jct.
New crop bl ack waln
meats, 50c aqt.. Postpaid.
chks. Miss Carolyn Dune
Marble Hill, Star Route.
Nice black walnut meat,
$1.00 P. P.
yrs. crop. ill ace. stamps fo
small orders. Mrs. G. B. P
terson, Blairsville, R. 4.
= All kinds herbs and barks,
30c Ib:: 5 Ibs., 81.00: Wane
/meats, 50c qt.; Good old fash-
ioned cured chewing tobace
20 twists, $1.00. Include post
age. RoC: Stover, Pisgah. 4
Asparagus crowns, horse
radish crowns, 10c a.; Als
Privet for jhedges, 4-6 in. , Ie
6-12 in., 2%c ea. 12-18 ins
ea. Large size, 5c. ea. FOB. Ul
Wilson, Villa Rica.
Shade dried sage, pulveri
85c pt. Postpaid. 10 lbs. s
dried apples, free of peelings
and core, 20c lb. Add postage.
1 stand of bees and frame at
best offer. Wm. Middl
Buford, R: 2.
New crop plack: walnu s,
hulled, 30 Ibs., $1.00; not hull-
ed, 85e: ostage pd. in
zone. Seedling pecans, 17c
2 purebre:
Turke
es Redfern
aue
Also want to. buy
White Holland
Write price. ag
Mitchell, Box 8.
Hot red pepper,
Giant garlic 2 doz., 25c: Lady
peas, this yr. crop, 106 1b. :
Bearing size Mt. huckleberry
plants, 50c doz.; igelacuberty,
Dewberry plants, 40 doz. Wel
rooted. Add postage. Stamps
acc. Tamar | Teem, Talking:
gal
Red, green bell pepper,
gal. Add postage, unless
take 2 bu. Mrs.
Statham, Box 2.
Good used goose feathers
et ot Flanigan, Lawren
ville.
20 white, 100 Ib. feed sack:
unwashed, 12%c ea. Postt
Joe M. Christian, Dewey Ro
Garden sage, 20c clump;
35; Also gardenias, 25 an
Trailing juDIDer,
ea.: 2, 0c: Tiger lilies, single
and dbl. 20c ea.- 2, 35. Siber=
ian iris, calamus, 20c clump, 2,
3bG: Mrs. Toc Brannan, 1
Donough, 72.
Have 4 or 5 Ibs. nice ohade
dried sage, $1.00 lb. Postpaid.
30c qt., well packed. Mrs. W
ce Silvey, Washington, He
West, Box 317. s
Black wainut meats o bright
color,-3 Ibs.5 = $400; ip
Cochran, Ralston.
Walnut meats, 50 ip, ew
erop; Sage plants, well rooted
$1.20 doz. For cash or M. a
John B. Grindle, Dahlensga, RI
1, Box 58.
2
plus 3c postage; j
runners tender beans, 25c t
cupful. Plus postage. |
North Ga. grown. Mrs. J.
York, Clayton, Rt. 1.
Walnuts, 50c Ib. Postage ae
as much as 2 lbs. or more.
Paper shell pecans in hull, 20
Ib. Add postage. Mrs. Ww.
Humphries, Milledgeville, R. 2.
New crop black walnuts, 40c
bu. in hull. You pay posses
Charles Oglesby, ummit,
600 wild Ginsing seed, oe
and ripe, $1.00 per hundred,
Postpaid. $5.00 for the lot, Carl
Taylor, Tiger.
nice size, red hot.
pepper, 15c yd. strin. or 50e
gal. Add _ postage. iso pr,
young spring hatched Butter=
cup chickens. Kee A Day Lay<
ers, $3.00. Mrs. C. R , Beene:
Monroe, BR. 2,
Shade dried Sage,
25e pint. Mrs. EL.
Currents,
: Gordon, Rt, 3
PAGE FOUR :
_ MARKET
BULLETIN,
MISCELLANEOUS |
7 FOR SALE =
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
GRAIN AND HAY |
FOR SALE
1942 sage, picked full moon
$n Aug. and shade cured, 65c
~% \b.; $1.00 Ib. del. Mrs. Nan-
than Weatherly, Ball Ground,
R. 4.
High grade organic Peat
-humes~ pulverized, shredded,
granulated, etc., in most any
kind and size ot shipment.
Prompt shipment. Write. Chas.
A. Stone, Sylvania, Rt. 3.
Sassafras, yellow elecampone
root, 25c Ib.: Catnip, -pepper-
mint, spearmint, yarrow, balm,
_ featherfew, mullin, 25e doz.
bunches, del. in 1st and 2nd
_ zone. Red Gold and Jewel
_ strawberry plants, 40c C. Miss
LL. M. White; Dahlonega, Rt. 1,
Box 35.
10 or 15. bu. black walnuts,
$1.00 bu.; Exc. for pecans, pea-
nuts or printed feed sacks. Also
mulberry and crepe myrtle
trees, 25c ea.; Black walnut
trees, 15c ea.; Niagara and Con-
cord grapes, blue Damson
plums, 10c ea. Guar. Mrs.
Artyce Entrekin, Waco, Rt. 2.
About 10 bu. black walnuts
_ in hull, will sack and ship lot,
$2.00. As Js Willoughby, Waco.
_ About 25 lbs. unwashed wool
in good condition, sheared from
Hampshire sheep. 60c lb. No
-chks. Dale Rogers, (Resident
of Union Co., Ga., but P. O: ad-
dress across the line), Warne,
Nc Gx bls
70 Ibs. Japan walnuts,
Jb. W.M. Hooks, Unadilla, Rt.
Hot pepper, 40c gal.: % gal.,
25e; Horseradish root, 35c lb.:
Green pod okra seed, 20c pint.
Mrs. I. A. Woodring. Alto, Rt.
e
olow root, red sassafras,
queen of the meadow, wil
cherry bark, 25c lb.: 5 lbs.. $1.-
00; Catnip, balm, sage, 6, 50c;
Garlic bulbs, abi. tansy, pep-
permint, 25, 25c. Exe.
white sacks. es M. L. Baton,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1
= Calif. blackeyed peas, 10c. lb.
del. No less than $1.00 orders.
No ehks. Black walnut meats,
= Tb.; 3 Ibs., $1.00 del. Mrs.
& as Morrison, Gainesville, R.
os A
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
GRAIN AND HAY
CORRECTION: Wanted 100
tons peanut. Reply to Howard
Walker, Oconee, Rt. 1.
__ Want 5 tons good peanut hay.
Quote price del. J. B. Adkins.
Ft Valley, 209 N. Macon St.
Want prices on 20 tons ae
and 200 bu. yellow corn, del. to
arm in Lizella. C. C. King,
acon, 212 Berkley Dr.
POTATO SEED WANTED:
Want 2 bu. West Indies or |
Tarry Yam potato seed. A.
J. Connell, Nashville.
BEESWAX WANTED:
Want to buy some beeswax.
Will pay 20c lb. J. R. N. Har-
per, Hapeville, 3729 South Ful-
ton Ave.
CURED MEAT WANTED:
Want several country cured
= . sides and. shoulders.
State method of curing: and
srices of each kind and ap-
roximate wts. Milton Bryant,
Blakely.
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES WANTED:
Want 1 Schley pecan tree, 2.
rape vines, 18 dwarf box-
woods. give price and when can
el. Mrs. John Lovorn, Car-
ollton, 179 Maple St.
SEED WANTED:
- Want to exc. red nest onions
for white chicken corn seed
and Texas cane seed; Also
want 1- H. wagon. Write. Cc. E.
Zipperer, Liake Park.
Want: 2 or 3. gal-- Sceallion
Shellot buttons, (multiplying);
Also same amt. of Scallion
fult. onions. Richard Terry,
olumbus, Macon Rd.
Want 1 gal, of goose neck
e seed. Give best price. A.
Pope, Thomasville, RFD 4.
Ss. GE WANTED:
10c |
for |
BEANS AND PEAS
WANTED:
Want to buy 800 or 1000 lbs
velvet beans. - Send best prics
Be a J. F. James, Macon,
i055 :
CORN WANTED:
Want 200 bu. corn, will pay
$1.00 bu. Cash. del. Mrs. J.
M. Deen. Axson.
Want best price on 100 bu.
White milling corn in ear
within 100 mi. Lula. Also want
good, fresh in, Jersey milch
cow. Give all particulars in
Ist letter. Frank Miller, Lula.
HAY WANTED:
Want best price on 5 to 10
tons peanut hay and 200 to 300
bu. corn, del. to my farm. Rk.
L. Mckie, Augusta, Rt. 3.
RDIED FRUIT
WANTED:
, Want to hear from parties
having dried. fruit for sale.
State price in Ist letter. Must
be free from worms and bright
peaches and apples or both.
Mrs. Susie Fulghum, Douglas-
ville, Rt. 1- :
SYRUP WANTED:
Will pay up to $1.50 gal.
For few gal. real good bright |
sorghum, del. here. Send -sam-
ples to. C. H. Williams, Fitz-
gerald, 811 W. Pine St.
BEANS AND PEAS
WANTED:
Want old fashioned salad
English peas. Mrs. J. H. Olliff,
Summitt.
Want at once 25 bu. Lady
peas. Must be clean, pure stock.
E. Thompson, Jr. Cataula.
Want whippowill peas, brabs,
qd|or red rippers. Any amt. State
price del.
Commerce, R. 4.
Will exchange nice white
feed sacks for nice black eye
Frank Standridge,
or lady finger or mush peas. Oo.
Ss. Duggan, Chester.
SEED WANTED:
Want to hear from party
with Thyme seed and quince
trees for sale. A. D. Beckett,
Atlanta, RFD 4, Box 665.
GRAIN AND HAY
WANTED:
Want 25> pu. whee for hog
feed. Quote price del. W. H.
Holt, Fayetteville, Ret.
CORN WANTED:
Want to buy up to 300 bu.
shelled or ear corn, quote best
cash price del., also FOB. your
barn. Also want peas and velvet
beans. Paul D. Anthony, Buena
Vista. | 5
CORN WANTED:
Want 200 bu: corn Will pay
cash del. to our farm. Mrs. J.
M. Deen, Axson.
Want to buy 50 bu. corn, at
$1.25 bu. del. at my farm at
once. Mrs. Bee Mims, Springv-
ale.
BEANS. AND PEAS
WANTED:
Want Brabham, Iron and
Clay peas, 5-100 bu. lots; also
Laredo, O-too-ten Soy beans
and Korean lLespedeza: with
gar. test. A. C. Ware, Hogans- |
ville. Rt. 3.
DRIED APPLES WANTED:
Wanted dried apples. State
what you have and price per |
lb. Mrs. A. P. Greene, Albany,
205 Fourth Ave.
}and thick, $1.00 gal.
Victor grain seed oats, grown
from Cokers ped. seed. Ist yr.
seed, $1.00 bu. FOB. oO. K.
David, Marshallville.
Choice baled meadow hay,
$20.00 ton at my barn here.
Miss Laura Lee Satterfield,
Hartwell.
POTATOES AND
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
About 100 bu. sweet potatoes
for sale, 75c bu. at farm, 4 mi.
So. Dublin, Telfair Road. J. R
Russell. Rt. 3, Dublin.
]_ truckload fine heading
collards for sale, % mi. from
Dacula. Come get them. Mrs.
D. He Smith, Dacula- Rito 1:
Several hundred bu. red P.
R. potatoes for sale. F. B.
Jackson, Wrightsville.
About 100 doz. bunches fine,
large collards. Trucker make
offer. Also 8 tons baled oat
straw, $10.00 ton. J. W. Lang,
Omega.
HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
New 8 frame hives, glass ob-
servation and supers, ready for
inserting bees, $5.00 ea. FOB.
'T. A. Manley, Atlanta, 166 Flora
Ave. NEE:
No 1 table honey, comb or
ext., 10 lbs. del by mail, $1.75;
5 Ibs., 90c: Express, 4-10 Ib. del.
$6.00: 6-5 Ib., $4.00: 13c lb. FOB
my. station in 100 lb. lots,
either 5 or 10 Ib. Size. Curd
Walker, Norristown.
SYRUP FOR SALE
_ Pure cane syrup 12, 5 Ib. cans
to case, $6.00: 12, 32 oz. bottles,
$3.00 can: 24, 1 Ib. bottles,
$2.00: 36
All FOB. Malvin Collins, Whig-
ham.
$00 gal. No. 1 Ga. cane syrup
in No. 5: and No. 10 buckets.
Make best offer del. here at my
farm 2 mi. Moody Field (Bar-
retts). Walter M. Todd, Val-
dosta, R. 4.
400 gal. thick syrup cane for
sale. Make best offer for lot.
Joe M. Brown, McRae, Star
Route.
140 gal. Sorghum syrup, 85c
gal. J. F. Crow, Newnan, R. 2.
Pure No. 1, A grade new Ga.
cane syrup in No. 5 and 10 Ib.
cans and 36-37 gal. new barrel,
$1.00 gal., FOB. H. L. Zipperer,
Marlow.
125 gal. P. O. J. syrup, $1.00
gal. at my place. Good clear
syrup in gal cans. F. G. L. Pitt-
man, Bastman, -R. 2. Box 150.
25; gal. new Syrup, $1.00 gal.
Come
Rae:
et it. Mrs. Cindy Powell,
ite.
Limited amt. A-1 syrup in|.
|new bbis., 36-37 gal.
$25.00 bbl.
per bbl.,
FOB. Cash with
order. No samples. W. S. Lane,
Cairo, R. 2.
60 gal.
syrup in gal. glass jars, $1.00
gal.: Also 10 bu. sweet potatoes,
75c bu. John Fay, Oakman. -
About 400 gal. new syrup in
full--1- gal. -bottles.. -will- del
within 100 miles at $1.00 gal.
Dr. J. H. Douglas, Albany,
Pure Ga, cane syrup in new
36 gal. bbls.. $36.00 bbl. 2 or
more. bbls., $35.00 bbl. FOB.,
Guyton. H. R. Zipperer, Mar-
| low.
100 gal. Ga. cane syrup, good
R= Ww.
Burman, Eastman.
Have extra quality Sorghuns:
syrup, $1.00 gal. R. E. Branch,
Bishop.
FRUIT AND BUTTER
FOR SALE
Would like to hear from
someone who wants about
pound good fresh country but-
ter ea. week. 40c Ib. You pay
postage. Mrs.
White Stone.
10 Ibs. dried apples, free of
core and peelings, 20c Ilb.;
Shade. dried sage, 35c pint:
Postage pd. in ist and 2nd zone
Ruth Fricks.
|on both, Also i hive bees with
super and good frames at best
- Wm. oy Buford,
PEANUTS AND PECANS
FOR SALE
i
4000 lb paper shell pecans,
22 lb., Stewarts, Moneymakers.
Also pr. young horses for sale,
poh O. H. Bradbury, Bo-
gart.
Large red peanuts, 2-4 in
hull, washed and dry, fine for
seed, or roasting, $3.25 bu. P.
B. Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
1500 lbs. Spanish peanuts:
300 Ibs. imp. Spanish, bright,
nicely thrashed: not all sacked,
7e and 8c lb.; Also 20 bu. sweet
potatoes, $2. 00 per huniieed. Tbs.
All at my farm, 6 mi. Ro-
berta on Hwy. 39. EH. S. erie is
Lizella, R. 1, Box 196,
' $1.25 doz.;
in,
-vines, 10c ea.: $1.00 doz.:
$1.00 doz.
gal. bbls., $28.00 bbl.
Apple, |
-Muscadine vines, 10c ea.;
excellent sorghum |
|} rooted. J.
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
~ PECAN AND OT)
FRUIT TREES FOR
Sects,
Peach trees, from seed plant-
ed from old fashioned trees a-
bout 10 kinds. Large Native
black muscadine vines; Lim-
bertwig and Horse apple 2 yrs.
old, good roots, 12 trees, $1.00
del, Mrs. Boyd Baggett, Doug-
lasville, R. 1.
Black muscadine
hazelnut bushes, red maple, old
fashioned red and yellow plums
brown turkey figs, all 10c ea.;
$1.00 doz. Also white flags, 15
ea.: $1.50 doz. Add _ postage.
Miss Hazel Patterson, Waco, R.
2, Box 86.
Pomgranite bushes, 4-6 ft.,
50c; Brown figs, 4 ft. 50c;
Scuppernong vines, 3 yrs. old,
bore this: yr 15-20: ft.; $2-00-
Black arbor musScadines, 10-15
ft., $1.50 ea. J. L. Coggin, Cov-
ington.
Pecan trees, Gov. Insn., bud-
ded, guar. true to name. Varie-
ties; Stewart, Schley, Money-
maker. Ea. 2-3 ft., 50c; 3-4 ft.,
55c: 4-5 ft., 65c. Calvin Har-
man, Stovall.
Mastodon
strawberry plants, 20c C. Post-
paid. Nannie Gregg,
Springs.
State Insp. true to name.
leading var. peach trees: Also
grape vines, $55.00 M.: $6.00 fo
Black Walnut trees,
$2.40 doz.:
apricots, $1. 50 doz. Mrs. Ee B.
Travis, Riverdale.
Black muscadine vines,
hazelnut bushes, red and yellow
plums, brown turkey figs, tame
blackberry vines, all 10c ca.:
$1.00 doz. Add -.postage. Miss
Hazel Patterson, Waco, R. 2,
Box 86.
Hazelnut bushes, muscadine
Scup-
pernongs, 10c ea.;
Add postage. No stamps. Mrs.
ge W. Bradley Jr., Bowdon,
tes ;
Gov. Insp. leading var. apple,
2-3 yrs. old, 20c ea.; Peach; 2
yrs. old, 15 ea.;.1 and 2 yr.
old, pear and cherry, 25c and
40c ea.; Paper shell pecans, 3-
4 ft., 75c.. Lee Head, Cornelia.
' Scuppernong grape
home collection; 1 ea.,
Stucky, Dulcet, Scott,
and male, $1. 50, Postpaid. 2
home collections, $2505. Fok
Scott, Concord.
Hobson Chestnut trees, 2 yrs.
old, 4-7 ft. $1.25 ea. (Some
bearing in Nursery now) from
25 yr. old tree, which has dia-
meter spread of 50 ft. and have
collected 120 Ibs. nuts this yr.
James Hobson, Jasper.
vines,
Hunt,
True to name, leading var.
peach, pear,
trees, grape vines, 12% ea.:
Figs, 30c ea.; Pecans, 75c for
3 ft. size up. T. M. Weeb, Elli-
JAY
Heavily rooted young Sat-
suma orange trees, No. 1, 65c
ea.: 10 trees, $6.00; No. 2, 55c;
10 trees, $5. 00 del, P. paid mail.
No less than 3 trees shipped.
"| A. S. Johnson, Pelham.
Hazelnut bushes, 10c_ ea.;
$1.00 doz; Scuppernong and
c
doz. Add postage. No stamps.
Mrs. Geo. W. Bradley, Bowdon,
Need
I Scuppernong vines,
6-10 ft., 2 yrs. old, $1.00 ea.:
10.-15 'ft., $2.00 ea. Older
stock, $2.50 ea.: Large, black,
sweet muscadine vines,
ft., $1.50; Pomgranite bushes,
6 ft., (bore this yr.) 50c; Brown
fig bushes, 4-6 ft., 50c. All well
L. Coggin, Covington.
Stuckeys New Muscadine
(scuppernong type) grapes, fin-
est bunch grapes, Thorniess
Youngberry and Boysenberry
plants. All Gov. Insp. Write. H.
A. Neal. Ashland.
Hazelnut bushes, muscadine
vines, 10c ea.; $1.00 doz. Add
postage. No stamps. Mrs. G. W.
Bradley, Bowdon, R. 2..
Bronze
35 rooted fig trees, 10c ea.,|'
FOB. Mrs. F. Combs, Washing-
ton; R= 2;
Apple, peach, pear,
trees, grape vines, at reason-
able prices. State insp. for oe
protection. Write for list. T. M.
Webb, Hilijay.
All leading var. a and
peach trees: peach trees, 2-3 ft.
10c ea.; : Apple trees, 3-4 ft., 15c
en; paper shell pecans, 3-4 ft;
(oc ea.; pear and cherry, 3-4
ft., 25c ea.; grape vines, 2 yr.
Concord, Niagara, Lutie, 10c
ea. W. H. Alexander, Cleveland.
Sweet Purple Figs, 3-4 ft.,
25c ea.: early, heavy bearing
bunch grapes, and most delici-
ous scuppernongs (cross of
white and bronze), 6-10 ft., 35c
ea. Pruned and ready for plant-
Mrs. Maude
vines,,
Everbearing
-Powder
ea.
$10.00 C.; Plum and =
Yuga |.
cherry |
10-15
cherry |,
we ad :
. Stuckeys .
r (Scuppernong type)
vines, bunch. grapes,
Youngberry and Boyse
fruit trees, etc. Insp.
shipment. Write. H. .
Ashland.
Brown scuppernong v
pyrs. old, 10e ea., $1.00 di
yrs. old, 15 ea.; $1.50 de
00] Brown fig bush
ea.; $1. 00 doz.; large
muscadine. well rooted,
ae doz. W. A. Moon
TED
Raiston apple trees,
goose berry, May che:
ter grape, fox grape, all
Few rhubarb, 10 ea.: Wi
same for 10 nice, well
plants. Mrs. ES
Pisgah.
new Muse
Grapevines: 2 yrs. C
10c; Caco and. Carma
games, Thomas; 4
Bronze Scuppernongs, ~
50c -ea.: Apple, pear,
cherry Quince. figs,
50c ea., Evp. Col.. -&
Stock June budded Pea
leading var. Add postag
James Cureto
Crabapple trees. 2-5
Include postage. -
for feed sacks. = A
Jesup, Rt. 1.
State Insp. true t
leading var. peach Mees
vine, $55.00 M.; $6.00 C,
doz.: Black walnut, $
$10.00 C.: Plum and
$1.50 doz. Mrs. E. B. T
Riverdale. oe
Thrifty heavily roote
Satsuma orange trees, 65
10 trees, $6.00; No. 2, 55
10 trees, $5. 00: All del.
post. No less than 3 tree
ed. Send P. O. noe 0
check. No. C. O. D-
son, Pelham.
Pecan trees, Gov. ns)
ded, guar. true to name:
eties: Stewart, Schler
Moneymaker. Ea. 2-3
3-4 ft., 55: 4-5 ft., 65;.
75, FOB. Write. for pri
larger lots. Calvin
Stovall. i
CATTLE FOR
Cram Jersey 3% gal
and calf, $75.00; heifer
Guernsey, freshen Jan.
$75.00; 5 mo. Jersey.
00: Crossed Black E
mos. old, $35.00. A
and_ tested. Deen Bo
Alma, Rt. 4. (ik ieee
8 reg. Jersey 1
elass herd bulls.
Also some dairy equipm
D. J: Daniel. Hogai
Reg. Guernsey bu
mos. old, beautifully ma
excellent type, he
ficial A. R. record).
tion in detail on requ
Agnew, Cloudland.
1 white bull. milk type.
horn. Reg.. wt. 1100 Ib
breeder. Very gentle.
at. my: barn: bs
Morrow.
1 Jersey cow, 6 yrs.
bull calf ( grade Angus),
ae
00 for bdth: 1 Reg. A
Angus cow and bull cal
. Registration pape
calf and cow, $200.00; }
bred Aberdeen-Angus bt
yr. old. without papers, $1
J. D. Humphries, County)
Douglas.
Reg. dbl.
Hereford bull,
lines, -drk. red. peice
$200.00 FOB farm; Sell to
vent imbreeding. Pape
nished. U. R. Ge
162 Milner St. ~~
1 fine, 4 yrs. old, Jer
(butter record of 2 Ib
$75.00; Also 8 Berry |
3 male yearlings fo!
once. 4-6 mos. old
fine. Also 7 shoats, a
wks. old, $11.00 ea.: $
lot. Rev. I.
|; Bowdon, Rt. 2.
Few promising J
Polled - Hereford bull:
Asbury, McDonough
1 orange Jersey b
old, wt. about 700 Ik
ready for service,
CATTLE FOR SALE
suns: Guernsey mileh eow,
oat reshen with 2nd calf ist:
.. giving 1 gal. milk per
now, fat in good condition.
$60.00 if taken now. Boyd Bag-
ett. Douglasville, Rt. 1.
Good young Jersey cow, fresh.
ealf. Rent for $20.00 until
- 15, 1943, calf to be kept
-returned with cow. Must
eliable. Payable when cow
- cash price FOB;
. 5 Mi. E. Buford, near
n Hill aa Frank Cain.
ae ences cow with a
No. 1 milker. $100.00.
Offer limited for 10 days. come
for at barn. Sudie C. Johnson.
ton, 622 Spring St.
Reg. Polled Hereford bull, 3
old, Also 4 grade Hereford
heifers, bred to reg. bull. U. R.
. Griffin, 162 Milner St.
1 Se mully head Jersey
ch cow and male calf. Cow
ut 7 yrs. old, calf, 11 days
Cow giving 3 gal. day.
5 good grade Jersey heifers,
heavy springers. $55.00 to
00. F. R. Kennedy, Stone
Rt. 2, Lawrenceville Hwy.
i No. Tucker.
ine Jersey milch. cow to
eshen Dec. 7 and 1 small
for sale. 7 mi. S. College
9% mi. W. Riverdale.
Bing. Rage Rt. 1.
FOR SALE
One mare mule, approxi-
ately 12 yrs. old, will work
where, for sale. :
White Plains, Rt. ie
mare mules, 2200 dbs.
2 yrs. old, also ae
on, used 5 yrs., pieas for
Shoe he 1. Upchurch, Locust
ve.
ne 6 yrs.
where, bred to good Jack,
Or sale or swap for good mule,
ay difference. _D. LL. Shahon,
ggold, Rt. 2.
elling Out: Registered
andard bred trotter, 4 yrs.
a -A-1 jog cart for sale.
OKelley, Gainesville,
3 N. Bradford St.
cc mare horse colt, 2 yrs. old,
wt. 700. Ibs.:
Ss . old, wt. 700 lbs.
ed. from work
Alex B. Tappan,
Colts
: good farm horse, works |
ect any way, 8 yrs. old,
oe Wes Wet Union
ood work mule, wt. about
350 Ibs. now,. (would weigh
e if fat) color black, $25. 00 |
for quick sale. Mrs. R.
on, College Park, Rt. 4;
good mare mule, wt. 900
~ $40. 00: Exc. for 1 good
ie hee Cc. bred gilt or 40
WwW. L. hens, not over. 2,
. old and laying. O.
J. Datlas, Rt.<3.
Pr. black mare mules, wt.
it 2100 lIbs., sound, good
work mules,
pode Dunlap. Chipley.
req mare mule, 1150. Tbs..,
yrs. old, good and sound,
25.00; Exc. for 125 bu. corn.
j sel. anywhere, within 150
Mule can be seen at my
FE. D. Johnson, Alamo,
pr. small mules, black
rse mule, mare mule. Sell
one or the pr.; 1 small bull
Sell or exc. for shoat.
so 1 black goat (billy), $3.00.
B. Young, Norcross, Rie
Saddle horse, 12 yrs. old.
ild can handle, $75.00. Cash
rade hogs and Cows; Also
ave a grand new Il- H. wagon.
Sell separately. Ben
lle Park, 1200
oe Phone CA
r sale.
Saracen.
gee Ave.
So hcnally fine 6 yr. old
mare mule, fast, sound,
300 Ibs., $225.00. L. P. Single-
Fort Valley, Rt. 3.
und, small, 8 yr. old mule
sale or exc. for turkeys, all
xr part. Chas. E. Oden, Black-
p
ear, care Oden Farms.
od, 1000 lb. work mule,
1 00 or swap for good work
orse that works anywhere and
gen e. Also 1000 bundles, this
fodder, 4 hand ties to
le, 3c bundle; Also 15
- new Ribbon cane syrup in
uckets for sale.
. Meansville. Rt. Le
horse colts
dle horse.
old mare, work | Leath, LaFayette.
1 mule horse colt,
stock and}.
come se them. |
Ww. M. Fort:
"HORSES AND. MULES | F
FOR SALE
BITS |
FOR SALE
1 horse mule, wt. about: 800.
lbs.. about 12 yrs. old, sound
and clean, work | anywhere,
$40.00. Homer A. Hawkins,
Roswell, Rt. 1.
1 fine saddle horse for sale
or trade for young mule, wt.
around 1000 lbs.; Also 1 sow
-and 9 pigs, big bone blk. Guin-
ea, $40.00; 1 young Jersey
milch cow, will freshen about
Xmas, $75.00. Ali at my farm.
Po Bo Morris; fhomson. Rt. 2.
2 fine work mares, 12-6 yrs.
old: Also 7 mo. old horse colt.
$250.00: Also 3 O.- EF C2 hogs
from reg. stock, total wt.
around 290 tbs. $40.00.
my barn 5 mi. No. Marietta on
the McAfee Ra. C. Annebert.
Marietta.
1 brood mare, 1200 Ibs., $75.-
00:- a Smith, Monticello.
Work team of good mules
and steel wheel wagon, good
cond., $250.00; Also 2 saddle
horses: gelding. $100.00: 1 good
brood mare, gentle, $150.00.
|-Climnt-S: Nobles, Cochran, Rt. 4,
1 Box 130:
1 reg. Tennessee Walking
stallion. 7 yrs. old, 1 reg.. Ken-
Pekar mammoth Jack, very
large. Both reasonably priced.
M. Gunn, Warrenton, |
6 good work mules and 5
for sale, priced
reasonably. See them at my
farm on Hwy. 41, No. Jones-
boro. G. L. Echols, Forest Park.
No. 1. farm horse, 8 yrs. old,
wt. 1000 to 1100 Ibs., work
anywhere, $125.00. Clint W.
West, Union City. :
Have mule for sale, cheap for
cash. Mrs. Josephine England,
Macon, Sordes Church Road,
Rt. 3. Phone, County Operator
393W1.
Combination work and sad-
about 9 yrs. old,
Or trade for garden
at my place, Austin
near Glennwood. Call
O. R. Muse,
$85.00.
tractor,
Drive,
nights, DE 3193.
Decatur, Rt. 2.
Good horse eolt, coming 2
yrs. old, large, sound, gentile,
very sensible, forsale. = D._ A.
(7. mi. No.
LaFayette.)
2 mules, wt. about 800 lbs...
12-14 yrs. old; Also 1 pony
mare, 12 yrs. old, 800 Ibs., $125.-
00 for the 3. Or trade for cows,
calves. hogs, chickens, corn. hay
or anything can use. H. M. C.
Walker, Ellenwood, Rt. 1.
HOGS FOR SALE
3 O. 1; C. Brood: Sows to far-
row about Jan. Ist, 43 and 22.
Poland China pigs, about 10-12
wks. old, $5.00 and $6.00 ea.
Sows, $30.00 ea. M. T. Morrow,
Newborn.
a: fea male, tea big bone blue
Guinea male, ready for service.
$20.00: - Cannot wee Cobb A.
Lee, Waycross, Rte
50 choice pigs; a.
not reg. but.
Gross = 5. FCs,
fine sire and dame, Spotted
China Essex, $10.00 ea. Reg.
S. P. C. pigs, $15.00. ea. Boars
nearly ready for service, $30.-
00 ea. Cross. bred Spotted Du-
roc boar, -$25.00. . Reg. black
China sow bred, $65.00. Mor-
ris Sanders, Nashville.
Pigs from Champion blood-
lines, imp. Spotted Poland China.
reg. in buyers name. Ready
for sale. Reasonable. Ben F.
Wilcox, Hazlehurst, HE 2S?
8 purebred Spotted Poland
China pigs, $12.00 ea.; $11.00 at
jot. 8 wks. old. See or write.
Wm. C. Stover, Sycamore.
Young purebred Hampshire
male hogs, reg. in buyers name,
ready for service, $20.00 ea.
FOB. I. M. Flowers, Ludowici,
Rt22:
Purebred Poland China sow,
2 yrs. old, in excellent con-
dition, pred to reg. P. C. boar,
$35. 00: 1 purebred P. C. pig, 3
wks. old, $8.00. George H. Ben-
nett, Madison, Rt. 4.
9 nice Reg. O. I. C. gilts from
stock straight from Silver, 3
mos. old, wt. about 100 lbs. ea.,
$20.00 ea. FOB. Lowell Man-
ley, Danielsville, Rt. 3.
3 black Poland China boar
pigs, 1 gilt, 4 mos. old. $20.00
ea. with papers to reg. Harold
Hyers, Hazlehurst, Rt. 3.
Spotted Poland China pigs,
reg. in buyers name, (Middle of
Road type) for sale. Z. P. In-
gram, Pelham.
12 pigs, 6 wks. old, big
bone P. C, and O. I. $6.50
to $7.00. ea.
male mules, 12-14 yrs. old, wt.
800 Ibs., and 1 smali pony mare,
poe Ibs. for cash or trade.- HL
M. C. ie Ellenwood, Rt. i.
All at}
milk now.
Come ae Also a
South fame, fee,
Hynds, Atlanta, 88 Warren St.
1 purebred N. Z. White buck,
about 9 mos. old, in good shape,
$1.00. "Send Money order. :
Lamar Brantley, Wrightsville,
Ete 2x
2 does, 1 buck, New Zealand
Whites: does bred, $4.00 for lot.
S. L. Webster, Atlanta, 1072
Sheth Place, S. E. Phone MA.
- 8 Guinea pigs, for sale: small
ones, 75c ea.; large ones, $1.00
ea. Mrs. Mittie Shropshire,
Round Oak, R. 1, Box 78.
10 rabbits, 7 wks.
SU eee $5.00, FOB.: $1.00
; Also 1 Mch. 1942 hatched
BL ye rooster, $1.35 crated,
FOB. E. C. Ward, Geneva.
1 big gray doe, wt. about g--
10 lbs., $2.00; About 2 yrs. old,
fat- Write: 1.56, Vine ITs
Stockton.
2 grown White pinkeyed rab-
bits, $2.00; Exe. for anything
can use. Add postage. Mrs.
Ben Holden, Ralston. :
N. Z. White Does, & wks.
old, $1.00 ea. I. D. Reese, Mad-
json, Rt. te
2 Chinchilla puke. 6 to
old, $3.00 ea.; 8 white Nex
Zealands, 8 wks. oid, $1.50 oe
10 fine, grown Bantam this yr
hatch Bantam cocks, for sale.
Mrs. Julia Varnedoe, Atlanta.
130 So. Candler Rr.
SHEEP AND GOATS.
FOR SALE:
old, var. |
1 Reg. Saanan Buck, natural-
ly hornless, snow white, 10
mos. old, from 7% qt. mother,
$30.00 cash. W. C. Fleming,
Blackshear.
- 60 sheep, 39 ewes, bred and 1
Reg. Hampshire ram. Priced
right for quick sale. Will start
lambing in Jan. Joe Means,
Appling, Rt. 1. ;
At. Stud: Purebred Nubian
buck of attractive appearance
and breeding. Reg. in the Am-
erican Goat Society. Earl S.
Redwine, Madras.
At Stud: Reg. Saanan Buck
and a very fine Toggenburg
buck. Both from heavy milk,
Stock Reg., $5.00: Grades, $3.00.
Z. R. McElroy, Atlanta, 205
Norwood Ave., N. E.
18 mos.
from 4 qt. doe, $10.00; Exc. for
large Duroc, Berkshire or Po-
dand China | pig at farm, in
Griffin. Rt. C. Also 18 mos. old
Nubian doe, atically hornless,
from 4 qt. doe, $20.00. J. C.
Eppinger, Atlania, 556 Shannen
Dr., S. W.
3 good milk goats, giving
2 Toggenburgs, 1
Nubian. Sell cheap. ec ay.
Jenkins, Atlanta, 2012 Meador
_Ave., Lakewood Heights. Phone
MA. 8788.
Saknan- Nubian pilly. foe
1 yr. old, $5.00: Doe to freshen
2nd kidding late winter, $25:
00; Young doe, freshen Jan.
15th. Ist kidding, $17.50. Do
not write, come. Mrs. J. Jolley,
Atlanta, Rt. 7. Cuast house on
N. Hightower Rd.) _
At Stud: Reg. Saanan brick
and fine Tog. Buck. Both from
heavy milk. Stock Reg., $5.00;
Grades, $3.00. Z. R. McElroy,
| Atlanta, 205 Norwood Ave., N
E. Phone DE. 3710.
_ Purebred, ped.,
hornless Toggenburgs, exclus-
ively. Few choice mature
dams and young doelings, bred
and of high producing stock.
Also Buck service by Sir
Roderick, fee, $5.00. John
oe Atlanta, 93 Warren St.,
N. E. s
1 purebred Toggenburg buck,
in good condition, $10.00. <A.
L. Leach, Atlanta, 1715 West-
wood Ave., Phone RA. 6318.
At Stud: Purebred Nubian
buck, of splendid breeding and
attractive appearance, reg. in
the American Goat- Society,
Earl S. Redwine, Madras.
At stud: reg. purebred Tog:
eee buck, G. Man Joes
Confucius T- 3032. Best 0
breeding. Milk lines, up to 15
jbs., 14 oz. daily. Fee, pure:
breds, $5.00; grades, $3.06.
Warren Rollins, Atlanta, 349
Murray Hill Ave., N. E. Phone
DE. 6912.
- Few choice, purebred and
reg., Toggenburg doelings and
mature dams, bred and open,
Hornless and of extra high pro-
ducing stock, also buck Ser-
vice by Sir Roderick, of
$5.00. John
reg., and
. E. De 5140.
old Nubian buck |
2 Nubian goats, giving some
milk, $10.00 ea.; Also Tog. Buck
for sale or trade for Sebright
bantams. Tom Hollis, Doug-
-lasville.
Entire stock, purebred, regis-
tered Toggenburgs (famous for
high milk producing qualities).
including Sir Roderick, most
outstanding Toggenburg in
South. All does bred to freshen
in Spring. Sell individually or
together. John ee Atlanta.
93 Warren St., N. E. De 5140.
LIVESTOCK WANTED
CATTLE WANTED:
Want Guernsey bull calf, rep.
Reg. Guernsey bull for sale, 3
yrs. old, wt. 900 ibs., $100. 00.
AR: Roberson, Temple.
_ Want Reg. Poll Hereford
Bull, thoroughbred, 8 mos. up.
State what you have and price.
C. W. Summerour, Winder.
Want Reg. ee heifer,
wt. about 200 lbs., also Reg.
Holstein heifer, wt. about 200
Ibs., both thoroughbred. George
M. Taylor, Alma, Rt. 1, Box 36.
Want good cond., milch cow,
gentle every way, 3-5 gal.,
daily, also want 25 AAA Brown
Leghorn hens, no culls, 1 yr.
old. All to be del. my place
about 1 mi. Brunswick-Jesup
Hwy. Mrs. A. T. Lee, Jesup,
Rt. 1, Box 40.
HORSES AND MULES
WANTED:
Want pr. good mules or
horses. around 1200 Ibs. ea. to
work double or single, not over
5 yrs. old. Also want 1 and 2-H.
wagon in good repair, together
with farm machinery and 300
bu. of slip shuck corn. Mrs. E.
Ellis, Atlanta, 35 Linden Ave.
N. E.
Want to buy 1 mare mule
that is gentle and in good. con-
dition. Prefer to buy out ot
Houston or any adjoining Co.
Geo, P. Hunt, Kathleen.
Want 1 single Shetland pony,
gentle and without mean hab-
its, suitable for childs pet.
Want in time for Christmas.
J. M. Godwin, Washington, Rt.
2.
Will swap shetland pony and
several ducks and geese and
other values, for real good
sound young saddle horse.
Boe Ester, 1770 Mt. Paran
a W., Atlanta, Phone
7432.
Want to trade value for mule
or horse colt, 12-20 mos. old.
Dont mind it being thin. O.S.
Duggan, Chester.
horse and spring wagon. State
size, age and cash price. Write.
Lester L. Puckett, Atlanta, 608
Central Ave. :
Trade 2 boar and 1 sow
(hogs) wt. total 750 Ibs., for
a mule. Willing to pay some
difference. Zack Roberts, Fair-
burn, Rt. 2.
HOGS WANTED:
Want young thoroughbred
Poland China brood sow. Must
be reg. Bred or ready to breed.
A. A. Arrington, Stone Mtn.
Want 1 reg. O. I. C. boar
from 9 mos. to 12 mos. old. J.
T. Mathews, Roberta.
Want a thoroughbred male,
P. C, pig; Also want a tom
T. L. Pow-
<
B,
and 2 turkey hens.
ell, Sylvester, Rt. 4.
Want 6 reg. O. I. C. or Big
1 male, age 6 wks. or older;
Also want 25 or more B. L.
hens or pole. State age and
Buce- G. T. Durham, Jr., Dallas,
Want 1 reg. S. P. C. male pig,
thrifty, blocky type: Will pay
30c lb. up to 100 lbs. Del. Must
be good stock pig with papers.
G. L. Folds, Finleyson. (2% Mi.
W. Finleyson.)
wt. from 30-50 Ibs., subj. to
reg.: Also have few bu. black
walnuts, $1.00 bu. E, L. Burke,
| Rhine, R. 1.
Want 1 young thoroughbred
Poland China brood sow. Must
be reg. Bred or ready to breed.
f | Write what you have. R. A. Ar-
rington, Stone Mountain.
Want one Reg. black Big"
Bone African Guinea male pig,
not over 6-8 mos. old. R.
Johnston, Hazelhurst, R. 1.
Want 1 Black Essex male
pig, wt. 60-75 Ibs. with papers.
G. C. Chapman, Ideal.
RABBITS AND CAVIES
WANTED:
Want 2 Chinchillas, buck ena:
doe. State price. Harold Wile
\Jiams, Lafayette, Rt. 4.
Give age and price; Also have!
Want to buy small ee
Bone African Guinea gilts, and |
Want 1 Berkshire male pig, |
[| Pullets, $2.75.
Want Lr, each oe sn
and Checker giant 1
Must be good stoc
sonable price. Early
Valdosta, R. 2, Box 60.
Want young pr. cav
or write. Gus Tilman
bOrG:-Ria-3
SHEEP AND GOATS
WANTED: _-
Want to exchange 2
ducks and 1 drake for
mon goats, 1 female
billy, about 10 mos. oid,
my home 1% mi. ;
Drew Rd: Write wh
will pay small diff
Mayhue, Cumming, R.
POULTRY ce
BANTAMS AND BA BY
CHICKS:
2 bantam hens. | oS Pp
$3.00. No. chks. M. O.
Mrs. D. S. Danner, Was
ton, R..3. :
game chickens for
trade. John T., Bates,
R. 9,@Box 363.
9 mixed bantams for sal
roosters and 7 hens. Hi
cellent layers
$1.00. ea.; $8.50 for
ship C. O. 1 Hoyt.
}Eastanolle, R. 1.
rooster, 50c ea. Mrs.
Clackum, Marietta, R.
1 purebred Golden S br
rooster, $1.50. FOB. Sen
Malcolm McMillan, Bat
O. Box 135.
Combs,
Golden . Sebright,
Jap. Bantams, $7.50
E. 40th St.
Chicks fi champio 4
100 grade A. Leghorns,
Heavy breeds (R. I. Red
$10.40 C. prepaid. Many bi
Send order or write f
| Harry Futch, Rochelle.
BARRED, WHITE AND
OTHER ROCKS:
2 extra fine March
cockerels, wt. 9-10 Ibs.,
Rock; _ other,
ren St. N. E., De 514
3 fine White Rock cocke
7 mos. old, $1.25 ea., and ex
chgs. Miss Eva. ee
copee.
500-600 AAA Barred FR
pullets, 3 mos. old, 75c ea. F
al . MeMillan, Ga
Se
About 15 extra lar
Feb. hatch W: R. co
From AAA stock. $2
. O. gets as many
want. R..M. Sparks, S er
3 B. R. pullets, 7 mos.
Rt.
2 Ww. R. nullets Ap Rh
about grown, $1.25 ea.;
$15.00; 1 White Rock TO
thrown in for good mea
H. F. Seay, Ellenwood, R
6 Park Strain B. R. co.
els, ready for service, $1.5
1 cockerel, same preed,
old, $2.00. Mrs. E. J. McConne
Demorest.
115 BB. RR. pullets, a ou
mos. old, about 20 perce
ginning to lay, $1.50 ea
here. D. J. Johnson, Clerms
CORNISH, GAMES AND
GIANTS:
CORRECTION: 6 AAR
Type Dark Cornish roosters,
mos. old, $1.50. ea., or
lot. Martha Womack,
Ri 2;
7 hens, 1 rooster Darl
nish game bantams, no}
ing, about 7 mos. old, $10
lot: or $1.25 ea. FOB.
or cash. Coops ret.
Daniel, Ty Ty.
Several pure White Cc rit
cockerels, prize oe block
type, $3.00 ea.: $8. 00, F
H. F. Morgan, Mace R26.
4 Doniniques ea 4 R,
Red pullets and 4 B. R. hen
$1.00 ea.; $10.00 for ioe
Cox, Atlanta, 757. He
Ave., N. W. Phone HB. 1349.
1 Mch. hatched Cornish cock
erel $3.00: Mch~ hatched Whit
Giant cockerel . a 00; 2 Cornis
7 Os _ Sikes,
vester. . :
Pit Games, Sid Trav er
cocks, Stags, and. pullets, $2.
to $5. 00 ea. ee trade.
Bing, Riverdale, R eee
Pit game cocks, 21
ready for the pit,
win or die,
$3.00 ea. E. L. Pa:
ing Rock, Rt.
POULTRY FOR SALE
POULTRY FOR SALE_
POULTRY WANTED
ZS AND GIANTS:
niders pure Bacon War-
ea.; hens,
dy stags and pullets, $2.00.
om Weaver, Canon. Rt. 2.
Ave few nice stags, Newell
- and Shawlneck crosses,
hens, $1.50. Ga. 7 PF:
1e, Smyrna.
iO hens. and 1 rooster, 14
s. old, Red game and bant-
rossed, $5.50 for lot. No
acc. Winfred Jones,
atsworth, R. 3.
ORNS:
0 AAAA grade W. L. pul-
- 50 AAAA grade B. R.,
ut ready to lay; About 300
A grade Leghorn pullets,
rks. old. Prefer selling lot to
arty. Come see them,
air price. Mrs. J. R. Had--
Avera, R. 1.
10 R. O. P. Sired Super |
ade, large type W. L. cock-
June hatch, for sale rea-
>. Ida E. Hinkle, Atlanta,
eKalb St., S. E. :
P W. L. breeding cock-
oe contest record hens.
laying W. lL. hens and
sale. Fred Byers,
Box 222.
grade nice B. L. pul-
ow laying, $48.00, for lot.
cp. J. H. Mallett, Chats-
.
lays Brothers AA B. L.
ets, Apr. 20th hatch, began
ng. Sept. Also 1 cockerel,
age, 4 hens, 18 mos. old,
for the 11, FOB. C. L.
atley, Cuthbert, R. 4.
AAAA Grade, W. L. pul-
ch. 1942 hatch, $1.25 ea.
j . J. Bene-
0, W. L. a6 ee ae.
laying for quick sale. 8.
Bass, Chipley. :
) W. L.+ pullets, 1 rooster
) hatched, $10.00 for lot,
Also S. C. R. I. Red pul-
nd 1 rooster, Spg. hatch-
10.00, FOB. Mrs. Bill
Jasper, Rt. 2, Box 84.
JA W. L. roosters, 1 yr.
aid, $2.00 ea.; 2, AAA W. L.
oosters, 5 mos. old, $1.50 ea.
Davis, Ellijay, Rt. 2, Box
[INORCAS AND
HLLANEOUS:
iperior Gold Band mat-
ite Minorca pullets,
tched, $55.00 for = lot:
oops or come for them.
hks. Many now laying.
rs. W. L. Duncan, Lyons, R.
Box 273.
AAA grade, April hatch
Minorca cockerels, $1.25
Buff Minorca, same age
rrade 0. R. P. Lowe,
inorca cocks, 2, 8 mos.
8 mos. old, $5.00, FOB.
a.wson, Gainesville, R, 7.
AAA, 1941 hatch Buff
roosters from Accredited
Si7o ea.: 2 for $8.25;
pril 1942 hatch, same
and quality, $1.50 ea.
ollect; want to buy tur-
med. size for brood stock.
. Hendrix, Statesboro,
purebred Buff Orpingtons
is, Apr. hatch, very
ock, $1.25 ea.; Not pre-
ipped on Sat. Mrs. W..
~ |villa, R. 1.
Claxton, Rt. 2.
COCKS, ASANTE,
White King pigeons,
t birds, now producing, |
Also want 100 type
ns. W. J. Porter, Sun-
pigeons, now working,
obbie Branch, Chula.
> Silver Kings, Red Car-
igeons, large and work-
or sale, cheap. Fine stock.
: Burall, Savannah, Rt.
FAS
English Mallard
ake and 2 hens, all
OB. J. H. Barr,
$s Mammoth White
oice trio, drake and
(aying) $5.00. lL. L.
Atlanta, 1040 Mani-
$3.00.
yi
pair. Kenneth
, 1309 : Grove
large white Pekin
drakes and 1 hen, also
Phone DE. 9033.
PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, ETC.
4 pr. White kings, 75c pr.:
Some common pigeons, 25c pr.
Shipped FOB. Also would like
to buy Cavies at 50c ea. Both
male and female. John Miller, |
Lakeland.
Peafowls; Blues, pr. breeders,
$35.00; 2 yr. old cocks, $15.00
ea.- Pair of 1942 hatch, $25.00;
Whites: pr. breeders, $40.00:
Pr. 2 yr. old, $35.00; Pr. of 1942
hatch, $30.00. All FOB. Thos.
A. Hughes, Buford, Rt. 3.
Pigeons: mixed White Kings
and Red Carneaux, many all
white, 40c ea. Mrs. Fred L.
White, Buckhead. Rt. 1.
6 blue peafowls: 2 pair and 2
extra hens, the peacocks old en-
ough for breeders: hens, 2 yrs.
old and older, $30.00 Pr.; $15.00 | ~
ea. FOB. T. A. Hughes, Buford
Rod:
3 Ringneck Phesant hens,
Apr. hatch, $5.00. Exp. not
aid. Miss Martha Blanton,
TICfin, Roa.
Ringneck phesants, quail,
White King pigeons, Golden
Sebright bantams. L. F. Still,
Atlanta, 130 Boulevard, N. E.
Choice White King pigeons,
well mated, banded and work-
ing, all about 1-2 yrs. old, $2.50
pr. Exc. for hens. C. H. Overby,
Columbus, 3609-14th Ave. :
REDS (RHODE ISLAND,
|}NEW HAMPSHIRE): :
10 purebred, real nice R. I.
Red pullets, now laying and 1
yr. old rooster. $15.00 for lot.
ee: Clifford Smith, Baxley, R.
400 N.. H. red pullets, pollo-
rum tested, Apr. hatched, lay-
ing good. $1.75 ea.; Also 30 B.
R. cockerels, $1.65 ea. at my
BiB ce. H. H. Faulkner, Lula, R.
Purebred S. C. R. I. Red hens
pullets and cockerels, Both the
AA . Str.; Also 1 extra nice
last yr. cock. All reasonably
priced. Come get them. Cant
ship. Mrs. R. B. Mooney, Ad-
| airsville.
Fine S. C. R. I. Red cock-
erels, ready for Service, $1.50
ea.; Buff Cochins Bantams
cockerels, $1.00 ea.: Also Tend-
er green hulls black pole beans,
also 6 wks. bunch beans, tender
hulls, 20c cupful. Mrs. Lowell
Long, Bremen. R. 1...
6 N. H. pullets, 1 rooster,
$6.00: Also 5 Blue Game hens,
good layers, 1 rooster, $6.00;
1 turkey tom, young and fine
bird, Bronze, $4.00. Mrs. T. L.
Coleman, Milan, R. 2. : ;
AAA R. I. Reds; 15 pullets
Mch. hatched and_ cockerel,
Mch hatched, vaccinated and
wormed, wt. 4 or 4% iIbs.,
$20.00; Also one Seidel cock-
erel, Mch: hatched, vaccinated,
class A., $3.50. Mrs. A. C. Free-
man, Flovilla, Rd.
50 or 60 R. I. Red pullets 4
mos. old (direct from Donald-
sons), $1.00 ea.: rooster free
| with 25 pullets. B. L. Lynn,
Waycross, 501 Hamilton Ave.
Ped. Pen, mated cockerels,
direct stock, very dark R. IL.
Reds, $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00
ea. Frt. paid to your station,
Borday T. Blackstone, Augusta,
1521 Heath St.
10 nice large R. I. Red hens,
$12.00. P. O. money order. Mrs.
Pearl Smoak, Warwick.
15 R. I. Red pullets, and 1
cockerel, all, Mch. hatch, Vac.
|cinated and wormed, wt 3% or
4 lbs., $20.00 for lot. Also 1
large type Seidel cockerel, class
A, vaccinated, Mch. hatched,
$3.75. Mrs. A. C. Freeman, Flo-
30 extra large young Donald-
|son Reds, some laying, (others
ready to start laying). Sell
part or all. Mrs. Mamie Lanier,
Atlanta, 92 Warren,St. N. E.
R. I. Red hens for sale.
Write. Mrs. S. C. Waddell Bre-
men, R. 2. ,
400 N. H. Reds, Apr. hatched,
good breeding hens, Pullorum
tested; Also 33 B. R. cockerels,
$1.75 ea. at my place. Herbert
H. Faulkner, Lula, . 1. c=
80 R. I. Red hens and 5 roost-
ers, Spring hatch, some now
laying, $1.25 ea. Will not ship.
Mrs. Will H. Smith, Warm
Springs.
24 N. H. Red pullets, 6% mos.
old, wt. about 4% lbs. ea for
sale; Also want to buy some
Mushreom spawn..C. L. Hughie,
Sharpsburg, R. 1. oe
U. S. R. O. P. Rhode Island
Red males, $3.75 ea. FOB. J.)
L. Whitten, Decatur, R. 2,
Mch. hatched, dark velvety
ig-| Donaldson Red cockerels, $2.00
each, E 50. me Mrs.
one Mtn, R.
1 kin ducks, $1.50 for
| Prefer selling altogether,
| REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRES
AND RHODE ISLANDS):
1, 2 yr. old Parmenter Red
cockerel, purebred, bloodtested,
$2.00. Mrs. Odis Duggan, Chest-
er.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS,
GEESE, ETC.: :
i White guinea rooster, 3
guinea hens, part white and
gray, $2.50 for 4. No chks. Also
Althea cuttings, dbl. in pink
and red: Single in lavender,
white with red center, red.
Prices on dbl. 25c doz.; single,
20, 30c. Postpaid. F. E. Grubbs,
Demorest. :
6 Muscovy ducks, 2 drakes
and 4 hens, 4 this yr.s hatch
and 2 last. yrs., $5.00 for lot.
Lee A. B. Taylor, Thomson
Ri: :
Pure Bronze big type tur-
keys, 1942 hatch, toms, $7.00;
hens, $5.00 ea. Mrs. R. L.
Greene, Cuthbert, Rt. 1.
2 hens and tom, pure, big
bone Bronze, $15.00 for the 3,
or tom and 1 hen, $11.00. FOB
Woodville. H. G. Bryan, Philo-
math.
Trio grown pure White Pe-
trios 2
drake, 2 ducks, FOB. Mrs. L.
K. Fryer, Talbotton.
17 Turkeys, type, black
slightly crossbred with bronze, |
healthy, young, fat, wt. 8-16
lbs., 45c lb. at my place,
u
would divide flock. Mrs. Cecil
G. Studstill, Eastman, R. 1.
100 percent broad _ breast
bronze turkeys, Wagon Wheel
Str., May hatch, 20-30 lb. toms,
15-18 lb. hens; Also purebred
Bourbon Reds, Apr. hatch, 20-
28 lbs. toms; 14-16 lb. hens, 35c
ea. at my farm; 40c if shipped.
No crates ret. Lester McCrary,
Molena. :
Broad breast bronze turkeys,
will weigh from 12-30 lbs., 35
lb. Toms, $9.00 ea.; Hens, $7.00.
Miss Clara Fleming, Bronwood,
R. 1, Box 72.
Nice Turkeys; 3 gobblers, 8
hens for sale, at my home. Mrs.
Lucy Connell, Concord, R. ee
7 head of geese, $1.00 ea. at
my farm. Mrs. J. T. Whitaker,
Brooklet, R. 1.
Several Muscovy ducks for
sale; drakes, $1.00 ea.; hens,
75c ea. Exp. col. Mrs. H. D.
Burt, Americus, R. 2, Box 136.
1 white Guinea rooster and
3 hens, half white, half gray,
$2.50. No chks. F. E. Grubbs,
Demorest, R. 1.
8 White African guinea
roosters, Aug. 1941 hatch, $1.25
ea. FOB. Mrs. Hardy Rhyne,
White. oe
WYANDOTTES:
6 fine large White Wyandot-
tes hens, all laying and 1 roost-
er, $1.50 ea. Mrs. C. H. Farrar,
Jenkinsburg.
12 Silver laced Wyandotte,
Apr. hatched, pullets and 1
cockerel, $1.25 ea.; Will trade
for 1 ton peavine hay, must be
baled, del. G. Dorsey Smith, De-
catur, 444 Candler Rd. Phone
DE. 1325.
, 820 Silver Lace Wyandotte
pullets, just beginning to
Very fine, $1.50 ea. Forrest F.
Attaway, Atlanta, 319 Luckie
Few ped., R. C. S. L. Wyan-
dotte cockerels, April. ay
hatch, wt. 4-5 lbs. $2.00 ea. M.
O. preferred. Purchaser pay.
express. Mrs. A. K. McLeary,
FMatenton. Rt. 1...
POULTRY WANTED
AUSTRALORPS WANTED:
Want 20 or 25 Black Austra-
lorp pullets. E. B. Kennickell, |
Savannah, 302 West 38th St.
BANTAMS WANTED:
Want Cochin bantams and
eommon breed at reasonable
price. Mrs. A. V. MHarrison,
Brunswick, 2910 Norwich St.
Want 12 Bantam hens, any
kind: will pay $4.00, Prepaid.
Want at once. Chas, F. Fulg-
hum, Douglasville, R. 1.
Want few young bantam
hens.or pullets for cash. No ex-
pensive stock. H. P. Malcom,
Social Circle.
BARRED, WHITH AND
OTHER ROCKS WANTED:
Want 15 or 20 Barred Rocks
er White Minorecas, 1942 Mch.
or Apr. hatched: Write. W. A.
Lanier, Calhoun, R. 1.
Want. 17 B. R. AAA sir.
roosters, March, April hatch,
Mrs. .,
Teh oa
DOMES WANTED:
| Wan
B. Dunean, Royston,
f
Reds; KR. -O. KP.
Write what you have and price.,
AA: oA
LEGHORNS:
Want 10 head of 4 or 5A str.
S: C. White Leghorn cockerels,
ready for service by Jan. Ist.
W. C. Douglas, Alma, Rt. 1.
Want 25-50 AAAA . W. L.,
pullets, no culls. Stat price.
Wm. D. Bowers, Atlanta, Rt.
5, Box 599-A, Be 2271 J.
Want 50-75 W. L. Pullets, 2-
4 mos. old; Quote strain and
best price. Dec. 15th del. L. T.
Palmer, Copeland Rd., R. 1,
Dunwoody.
Want to exc. 100 Ib.
white salt sacks for W. L. or
White Rock pullets, laying. W.
P. Hester, Atlanta, 367 Atlanta
Ave., S. W.
POLISH WANTED:
Want 6 hens, 1 rooster (one
pen) purebred; White Crested
Black Polish Mech. or Apr.
hatched. Now laying or ready
to lay. Priced reasonable. Mrs.
A. J. Lovelady, Ball Ground.
PIGEONS:
Want some fancy pigeons.
State kind and price. Leonard
Park Blalock, Pine View. Box
ie
REDS (RHODE ISLAND AND
NEW HAMPSHIRES):
Want 10 N. H. Red pullets
and rooster, Mch. hatched, not
over yr. old, pay $8.00 to be
shipped to me from not over
100 mi. from my place. Mrs.
C. S. Moss, Talking Rock, R. 1.
Want R. I. Reds, Rocks,
Wyandottes, Orpingtons, hens
and pulilets. Also want colored
ducks, laying age, 1 drake.
Paul H. Roham, Watkinsville,
Ke
5 purebred N. H. Red roost-
ers, 6 mos. old, wt. 8 lbs. ea.,
$2.50, FOB. Geo. A. Kelly,
Holly Springs.
Want 6 R. I. (Parmenter)
roosters. Must
be bloodtested with leg band
and wind band, U. 8. Approv.
At once. Mrs. C. GO. Prescott,
Perkins. :
REDS: Want 20 N. H. Red
1941 or early 1942 hatch hens, |
nice stock, as near uniform
color as-possible. D. W. Boone,
Newnan.
TURKEYS; GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS ETC., WANTED:
Want about 6 goslings, old
enough to graze. State age and
price. aul Simmons, College
Park, Rt. 2, Box 398.
Want young turkey hens, 3
or 4 mos. old, or some light wt.
hens. State best cash price and
full details in first letter. Bar-
tow Hall, Hoschton, Rt. 1.
25 ,speckled guineas, mostly
hens, 50c ea.
coops; Also Mastodon straw-
berry plants, nice young plants,
well packed, $2.50 M. del. P. O.
McClung, Temple, Rt. 2.
and 6 ducks, young, large, $10.-
00 for lot. Herbert S. Whit-
worth, Lavonia. Rt. 1. :
Want to by some turkeys.
State best price, picked up or
del. Mrs. Robert Earnest, East
Point. :
Want to buy 1 White Guinea
| rooster. Buck MeCrea, Alma.
Want 6-10 Mammoth Pekin
ducks, 2 drakes, unrelated, not
over 18 mos. old, del. C. H.
Yearwood, Macon, R. 6, Box
142.
Want to hear from someone
that has a young Beurbon Red,
this yrs. Tom for breeding. At
once. G. W. Thornton, Buch-
anan, R. 1. :
WHITE ROCKS:
Want to buy 100 W. R. pul-
lets, Apr. and May hatch. Also
Elec. brooder, 100 per week
cap. State what you have and
price. G. W. Johnson, Atlanta,
8051 Howell Mill Rd., N. W.
WYANDOTTES:
White Wyandottes,
hens, $12.50 for let, 7 BD :
Red pullets, wt. 2% to 3. lbs.
ea.. 75c ea.; 2 White Wyandotte
roosters, $2.00 for the 2: 7 B. R.
hens, $8.40 for lot.. All pure-
bred and all FOB. Mrs. Mol-
lie McPherson, Rabun Gap, Rt.
i. :
young
FARM HELP WANTED
Want man for a large 1-H.
crop on 50-50 basis and some
day work. Good place for right
man. H. L. Sherwood, McDono-
ugh. Rt. 3.
* Want good, experienced far-
mer with plenty help for a
3 horse farm, 6-R. house, plenty
fruit trees, located 6 mi. Spar-
or~8-500 Ib. bales cotton.
Mirs. B.S ohnson,
cap. |
Buyer furnish
A
Sparta,
high grade cattle and ho
(also have Tractor),
livestock, hay, corn,
peanuts on shares. Good oppor
tunity for good man with no
much capitol. BE. T. Nott
ham, Thomaston.
Want unencumbered, capab
woman for farm work. Advis
age, wt. Salary expected a
give ref, in first letter, S. |
Calfee. Brunswick. ee
Want good man white o
colored for a large 1 horse o
small 2-H. farm, on Hwy. 54,
between Morrow and Jonesbort
water in yard, wood and pa
ture, 4-R. house, on Mail an
School Bus Route, near
churches. On halves and can
give good man some help. J. |
Lee, Morrow. >
Want share cropper for 3-H.
and 4-H. crops. Good land, o1
Mail Route and School 1
route. See me. Inquire at Stock
bridge, or McDonough for di
rections to get my place (not
far from conerete Rt. No. 42.
A. H. Neeson, Stockbridge, F
2, Cotton Indian River P
tation.
Want farm. labor, share ere
pers and wage hands for 194
I. C. Collier, Barnesville.
Want small white family
6-A. cotton, good home (elec
tricity), water, wood, on pave
road," 138 mi. Atlanta. Prefe
exp. with poultry. Bill |
Calley, Atlanta, 1546 Westws
-Ave., S. W. phone Ra.
5002
Wa. 4446. LE
25-45 yrs. old, to live in
with elderly couple, to do
eral farm and orchard w
drive truck etc. $20.00
good home, room and bo
G. Oliver, Barnesville. Rt. 2.
Want middieaged, unencum<
bered woman to tend to chic.
ens and garden and other
work. Moderate salary
good home with -mother |
daughter. Mrs. C. A. Castellc
Macon, 422 Johnson Ave Z
Want good, kind, unencu
bered woman, 45-55 yrs. old
do farm work for reasona
salary and room and pb
with elderly couple. Mrs.
garet Collins, Albany. Rt. 2.
Want man, 50-60 yrs.
with wife, to work on pou
farm and brood 5000 or
chicks. Prefer farmer
some exp., in poultry; also
to do farm work and drive
>
or 2-H. farm, prefer man
own stock. Ottis Moody,
Pee:
vant man and wife of
Wills Dein ducks 1 aoe OOo ee
ly sober, for crop on 590
basis. Live in home with cou
6 A., cotton and 6 A. corn, g
jand. Good ehance. At once.
-F. Etris, Roswell, Rt. 1
Want farmer for small 15
farm, 3-R. house, barn, pa:
ete. Rent for services only
C. Kitchens, Atlanta, 1121 Zi
me: Drive, N. FB. un
yvyant colored man or wor
(21 yrs. old or older),
farm work. Room, boar
$5.00 week. Send referent
Mrs. George M. Smith, Colle
Park 220 Lyle St.
Want family, 3 plow :
or more hoe hands for
ing. 4-R. house, wood, pas
2 A. for garden (more if |
ed) potatoes, all free. Sc
bus and Mail by door. Writs
jsee. W. W. McPherson, V
Ri
yYant 1-H. farmer on 60
basis. 4-R. house, garden patcl
es, all cotten can work ,
12 acres. Will furnish st
to workers. Consider w:
with boys large enough
farm. J. R. Marks, Carroll
Rt. 1, Near Hickory Levell:
an, clean and good dispo
to feed chickens, milk cow
do the usual farm work
home with family of 2,
$3.00 to $5.00 week. Dr. ]
Bagley, Austell, Rt. 1, B
Want honest, sober, w
worker, for 1 or 2-H. far
50-50 or on 3rds and 4ths
Good tobacco and cotton ;
ment. Mrs. Clayton Dou
Alma, Rt. 1. :
Want ist class Dairy
with one or 2 boys able to
milk. Must be expert
and give reference from :
employers. J. L. Porter,
tur; Re. 1. oe
Want man with v
several thousand
other poultry
been raised on far
Clough, Blacksh
t % gen. repairing. truck
ving and other farm work.
Mays, Decatur, 500 Col-
ae man and wife to work
e through winter and take
arm on halves in the spring.
Good land, good house,
d tools. 3 mi. Decatur, just
ff Lawrenceville Road. J. A.
dergriff, Decatur, Rt. 2.
Wanted colored, middleaged,
intry raised woman for farm
<. Live with family of 4
20.00 mo. Write. Mrs. J.
Oeltmann, Ringgold. Rt. 1.
ant industrious farmer to
ze a big 2-horse crop on 50-
asis. River bottoms and
iplands: on school bus and mail
e. Come see. S. 8. Storer,
ouglasville, Rt. 4.
Want healthy couple, white
e ae for small farm near
Atlan Furnished quarters
a aoee salary to right Pade
~ to work. Write
msey, Dunwoody.
ant exp. farmer with small
lily on 50-50 basis 6n 2-H.
rm 5-R. house, electricity,
od barn; on school bus route.
K. Callahan, Wrens.
Want small white family
cotton, good house, elec e
water and wood, or one
with chickens. On paved
13 mi. Atlanta, Fulton
ll McCalley, Atlanta, 1546
Nestwood Ave., S. W. Phone
WA. 4446 or RA. 5002.
ant farmer for 2-H. farm
halves. On school bus and
il route. John D. Hobby,
hburn, R.
Want exp. dairyman. Furnish
e and satisfactory pay. W.
Thouse, Waynesboro.
Want good farmer to cult.
inuts, tobacco, corn, cane
potatoes on 50-50 basis.
oe or see. Mrs. C. H. Coner,
Want help to
dzu and other
work with
soil building
Also want
ytton, food and feed erops. Y.
Anderson, Williamson.
ant Healthy, industrious,
iddleaged, white woman of
character to live on farm
d assist as one of family in
den work, poultry, milking
other farm work. $3.00 wk.
. D. Fussell, Rhine.
t a 1-H. farmer to make
yp on shares. I furn. stock,
ve cotton, peanut and tobac-
allotment. Must furnish self.
WwW. Hickox, Glenwood, R. 1:
Want man without family to
rm. Salary, room and board,
every 2 wks. and % As
acco. Let me, hear from a
dman at onee. J. H. Ste-
it a 2-H. farmer on 50-
oa is. House, fuel, water and
= furn, Mailman and
bus by door. Must be so-
reliable and good farmer
team or tractor and
s. Mrs. May Burdick, Al-
_R. 1. Box 663.
t good man for a 2 horse
1 2 mules can tend),
sis. Mostly all upland
good pasture, 4-R. house,
wood and water. See if
rested. T. E. Lee, Austell,
Ph ecod 4 farmer with force
gh for 2-He. or 2; 1-H
on halves. 4-R. house,
water, pasture, stock,
n land (average
cotton allotment.
man familiar A ae
_farming. Good house
ch arch. Good oe L. W.
P, O; Box,
tao or parties to haul
elt"? or 3 tons of turnips
alves. As fine turnips
W. <A. Dorsey,
Rt (45. mi, + Off
esville and Clevelarid
yay, 20 mi, Gainesville,
Mossy Creek Church.)
own.
ville,
fant healthy, unincumbered
te woman to live as one of
ly and do farm work, $5.00
and board. J. W. Bal-
r, Abba.
Jant single man or man and
: ae children, to live in
1e familv with aged
ple ond eultivate 1 h. crop
shares. f.-E. Carter, Pavo,
ant white, middleaged
le, no @hildren, or unin-
ered middleaged man to
h. feed. crop of work for
es on farm, also raise hogs
hickens on halves. No
ton. See, if interested. H.
arrell, Eastman, 306 Pine
the Linzy House).
stock }
Georgia Department of Agriculture,
necessary and helpful thing to bring home to the
forceful and thoughtful manner in which you have
IN
FOR, BULLET IN EDITORIALS
UNITED STATES SENATE
Committee on Finance
- December! 3, 1942.
Mr. Tom Linder,
Commissioner of Agriculture,
Atlanta, Georgia.
My Dear Mr. Linder:
I have before me a copy of the Georgia Market
Bulletin of Nov. 25, 1942, which I find of great in-
terest and enjoyment. I am especially impressed
by two features of the Bulletinthe fact that it is
financed by the farmers of your. state, and the further
fact that the type of information contained in the}
Bulletin is timely, useful and significantnot only to
the Farmers, but to all who may have an opportunity
to read it.
Of outstanding significance to me were the two
editorials appearing under your nameeditorials
devoted to a discussion of the food value of cotton,
and the government crop control program. It is a
farmer the very important position which he occupies
and will continue to occupy in the war and post war
eras. It is essential that the farmer, like all others
in this vast war of production, should produce to
the utmost of his capacity. This he must do if we
are to gain the victory, and sustain that victory when |
Food is and will continue to be|
peace has come.
a most vital factor in the successful prosecution of
the war, and in the humane reconstruction of the
world when the armed clashes are at an end.
Therefore, may I congratulate you upon the
presented these issues to the farmers of your state?
Ss
-
Very truly yours,
(Signed) JAMES J. DAVIS.
REGARDING INCREASED RATES
GRANTED. ON FERTILIZERS _
= December 10, 1942.
Mr. W. R. Alexander ;
Industrial Traffic Manager
South Atlantic Traffic Bureau
P. O. Box 1188
Savannah, Georgia
Dear Mr. Alexander:
I am in receipt of a copy of your letter to Mr. W
R. MeDonald, Chairman of the Georgia Public Serv-
ice Commission, for which I thank you.
- Since I believe it will help the situation, I am
giving the whole matter publicity in the Market
Bulletin next week. ;
With all good wishes, I am
Sincerely yours,
TOM LINDER,
Ses of Agriculture.
SOUTH ATLANTIC TRAFFIC BUREAU _
P. O. Box 1188
Savannah, Georgia,
November 20, 1942.
Ex Parte 148 Increased Rates on Fertilizer
Hon. Tom Linder, Secretary,
Department of Agriculture
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Siri
On April Ist, 1942, an increase of six percent in
freight rates on fertilizers was granted to the rail-
roads on the plea that ay were faced with finan-
cial difficulties.
Of course these increased freight charges were
passed on to the farmers so that they have been the
parties actually bearing this increased transportation
burden on such an essential article vitally needed on
every farm. And now they are faced with another
three percent increase in the cost of their fertilizer
by the addition of a war tax of three percent on
freight charges to be paid on shipments of fertilizer.
However, the financial condition of most of the
railroads show a vast improvement over last fall and
winter and many of them will be paying a consider-
able excess profits tax. This is certainly indicative
that the emergency on which the plea for increased
freight rates was based no longer confronts the rail- |
roads and the farmers should not be the ones to pay
these excess profits taxes through the payment of,
increased freight charges.
At a recent meeting of the State Utilities Com-
missioners, the matter of removing the six per cent
increases on freight rates was discussed. And since
the farmers of Georgia will soon start their pur-
chases of fertilizer, it would appear that now is the
time for the Georgia Public Service Commission to
Represe U.
| este of the State as a hole. perhaps your );
is the one that should initiate this step. For hi
son we are addressing you at this time and
this suggestion as a help to the farmers thr
the State. a :
With kind regards, we are a
Yours very - truly,
SOUTH ATLANTIC TRAFFIC BURE
__W. R. ALEXANDER
November 23, 19
Georgia Public GePice Commission,
State Capitol |
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Commissioners: :
I am in receipt of letter from Mr. W. R.
ander, South Atlantic Traffic Bureau, Sa
Georgia, which is so pertinent to the farm sit
at this time that I am ealling it to your atte
immediately.
Attached herewith is copy of Mr. Alexa
letter which is self explanatory. a
The farmers of the State will greatly ap re
any action that you can take in the premises. _
_ I wish to call your attention to the fact tha
are very close to the fertilizer season, especie
South Georgia. oe
With kindest regards, lam
Sincerely yours
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of. Agricu ure
W.R. ALEXANDER
Industrial Traffic Manager
P. O. Box 1188
Savannah, Geotula
December 8, 1942.
| Subject: Emergency rate increases1942-F ti
Hon. W. R. McDonald, Chairman,
Georgia Public Service Commission,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Sir: |
Referring again to my letter of November
1942 addressed to Hon. Tom Linder, Secre
the Department of Agriculture and Mr. Linders
ter of November 23rd addressed to you in connec-
tion with the increased freight rates on shipment
fertilizer throughout the State of Georgia.
As indicated in the Commissions Docker
6462-A, the carriers petitioned the Commission
an increase in freight rates to permit them to m
an emergency arising from certain increased co
through the granting of an increase in wag Ss
railroad employees by the railroad Labor Boar
purpose of the increases was not to obtain inc
revenues but only to obtain sufficient revenue
the improved operating costs. It now appears hc
ever that through increased operating conditions
well as an increase in the transportation ~
modities in general, the rail carriers have incre
their financial position and in accordance with
{lease from the Interstate Commerce Commission ie
terday, the carriers will have an increase of appre
imately one billion dollars in their net operat
income for the year 1942.
I am now in receipt of petitions from the
retary of Agriculture of the United States and
| Mr. Leon Henderson, Price Administrator, acti:
his own behalf and on behalf of: James E. Byr
Director of Economic Stabilization of the Uni
States, requesting the Interstate Commerce Comm
sion to re-open and re-consider the matter of ine
ed railway rates, fares and charges, 1942, Ex
No. 148. Both petitions urge the iment
sideration of these matters in order that the incre
be eliminated at once due to the fact that the e1
gency supporting the carriers original petition
passed and that at present the basis for their req
for increased rates and fares and charges is no lo
tenable. These petitions likewise point out the
cided improvement in the financial structure of
carriers and also the enormous sum of money th
are saving as a result of price stabilization.
Let me again point out the fact that the
ment of fertilizer within the State is now under w
particularly in the Southern portion of the State :
if relief is granted, the Agricultural industry thro g1
the removal of increased rates permitted to bee
effective on April, Ist, 1942, it should be do
once in order to rlieve industry as a whole and not
that portion of the industry that moves its tonna
during the last part of the shipping season each yea
Therefore, Iagain respctfully suggest that the Ts
ter be given immediate consideration to the end tha
an appropriate order, if granted, be made effectiy
not later than December 31st, 1942, if the indus
located in the Southern part of the State. is a be
by this action of the Commission. ae
Yours very $ruly, tee os
Gigned) W W. R. ALEXAN f
FARM HELP WANTED
Want good reliable farmers
for 3 adjoining farms: 1-2 H..
and 2-1 H.. with stock and tools
_ furnished. _ Located about 6
mi. Cumming. Mrs. S, H. Al-
len, Decatur, 417 Clairmont
Want man for small farm, 13
mi. Atlanta. Good house, lights,
water. One who can drive trc-
tor and truck. Work for sal-
ary or ee Ref. exc. Come
see. . G. Carithers, 17 Hous-
ton st Atlanta or Tucker, Ga.
: Want farm hand, sober, hon-
est and willing worker. who
knows how to plow, prefer. man
with tobacco experience but
not essential. $30.00 mo. room
ind board (plenty to eat. good.
clean bed) and if satisfactory
will give an additional $10.00
on first August. Ref. exc. J.
. Burnette, Howell.
Want man (or sma!! family)
-as tractor operator for cultiva-
tion for farm on 50-50 basis or
wages. J. E. Golden. Jakin.
Want good man for good
farm, 100 A.. fenced, water.
good 4R. house: school bus, ice
delivery. near churches, 10 mi.
Columbus. See or write. Mrs,
J. W. Jenkins, Columbus, 1001
Oakview Ave.
Want single, white man. so-
ber draft exempt, or small
erop or wages.
Could begin chicken raising.
Ed D. Gunby, Culverton.
Want 1 h. share cropper for
1943. white or colored. Good
land, tools and stock, also good
house and water. p'enty wood
and pasture. John C. Norris,
Newborn. Rt. f.
Want 1 or 2 farmers, white
er colored; who can furnish
self and work 1 to 4h. crop in
1943 for the Tax on place. Good
dand, 2 Sebes good pasture
ang fruit. S. S. Elder. May-
ield. Rt.. 2.
Want good reliable farmers
fer 2.h. or 2-1 horse farms, on
good road near Smyrna. 2
houses, lights, barn, out-blidgs.,
lJarge pasture with running
water. Standing rent. Miss
Florence Meele, Rt. 7, Box 346,
*phones Be 1384.M or Wa. 5310,
Ext. ae LO.
POSITIONS WANTED
E an with wife and one child
wants 1-H. crop on 50-50 basis
with good honest man who can
furnish to make crop and a
good milech cow. Have to be
moved. Leon A. Coulter, Butler,
ee
Young man, Phristical, high
school Eiaauats, single (U. S.
Army rejected because of
under-weight), wants job as
oultryman, care of stock and
odd jobs on farm, for small
salary, laundry - and board, in
orthwest Ga. only. Boyd
Jones, Rossville. Rt-1.
- Want 2-H. crop on halves.
Several in family (2 grown
Pas). Need some help to run
; aw Hand, Newnan, Rt.
Sa ie old man wants job on
farm. Cant do hard work.
ome, washing and smal)
ages. So. Ga. At once. Write
or see. Taft Parker, Conyers.
Bt
32 = old man with wife and
6 children wants 2-H. crop on
halves, with good stock. man;
and to be worked with Culti-
vator: also good milch cow fur-
nished and hogs on_ halves.
dave to be moved .and furnish-
Want ich as. encne on
farm. Can drive tractor, do car-
penter work, dairy work - or
anything on farm. W. T. Hays,
ugusta. 1473 Sunset Ave..
Jant farm on shares, place
for stock and poultry. Take
best of care of p Slee Write
see. A. O. Bea Waycross,.
P. O. Box 460.
- Want place to look after
stock and chickens and _ other
farm work. Am good, honest
_ with wife and boy. J. M.
Harrison, Loganville. Rt. 1. -
Jant 2-H. farm. Married. 7
children (4 large enough to
Man and wife with small
ld, wants job overseeing
pouitry or stock farm or -a
small crop on 50-50 basis. Must
have house. Have had plenty
, can furn. ref. if desired.
Lofty, Dalton. x
Want 2-H.
: farm for 1943 on.
halves. Must be financed and
an ee and furnish work rest
this year and until crop be-
family., white or colored, share-
Day work.:
the matter up immediately with the County Agent, |
County War Board, or the County Farm Transporta- :
received certificates which allow them sufficient gas-
if the farmer will go to his War Price and Rationing
Board and obtain the gasoline ailowed on his certifi-
|February 1, 1943.
certificate to his County Agent and point out the
Port this fact directly to his se War Price and Ra-
Farmed all my life and well
FARMERS MAY APPLY FOR.
ADDITIONAL GASOLINE RATION
- EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
OFFICE OF DEFENSE TRANSPORTATION
DIVISION OF MOTOR TRANSPORT
1225 Candler Building :
Atlanta, Georgia.
Region 3
December a; 1942
Hon. Tom Linder
Commissioner of Agriculture
State Capitol
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Linder:
We want to thank you for the information you
gave to the farmers of the State through the Decem-
ber 2 issue of your Market Bulletin, a copy of which
we have just received in this office.
We have considerable additional information re-
garding farmers Certificates of War Necessity which
I am sure will be very interesting to the farmers of
the State, and for this reason we would appreciate
your publicizing these facts.
The Office of Defense Transportation does not
intend and will not curtail any essential mileage of
trucks to be driven by any farmer in connection with
their farm work, and when we speak of farmer, we
mean general farmer, truck farmer, dairyman, stock
raiser, etc. As long as tires, spare parts and gasoline.
are available, the ODT will do everything in its power
to assist the farmer in getting these items to carry on
his necessary truck operation. We do, of course, re-
quest and urge farmers, as well as everyone else, to
take advantage of every opportunity to save tires,
gasoline and trucks as the tires made available dur-
ing this year will be at least half of what was con-
sumed in 1941.
Any farmer who is dissatisfied with the amount
of mileage and gasoline allowed on his Certificate of
War Necessity for his truck or trucks should take
tion Committee, and if the County Agent is convinced
that the farmer should have been granted more mile-
age and gasoline on his certificate in order to carry
on his essential work, a recommendation will be made
to the ODT district manager serving the county in
which the farmer lives, that a revision of the certifi-
cate be made. We have issued instructions to our
district managers to accept all recommendations from;
County Agents, County War Boards, or County Farm
Transportation Committees, and that amended certifi-
cates be issued in accordance with the wishes of these
Agents, unless these recommendations contain obvious
errors, in which case our district manager will im-
mediately get in touch with the Agent and straighter
the matter out.
In view of the large number of errors that have
been made, we would like to urge the farmers who
oline and mileage to operate a limited time, to delay
in filing any appeals with their county agents until
those whose certificates contain obvious errors have
been taken care of . We would like to point out that
cate and operate on this allowance, it will not in any
way effect his right to appeal, or change his status i in-
a8 as getting the certificate corrected at a later
ate
If in any case the farmer has ee a certifi-
cate which does not allow enough gasoline to operate
the mileage allowed on the certificate, or which con-
tains other obvious errors on the face of the certifi-
cate, he should go to the War Price and Rationing
Board, present his certificate and ask for a Tem-
porary Transport Ration. This ration will be grant-
ed by the Office of Price Administration Board, giv-
ing the farmer sufficient gasoline to operate until
Then the farmer should take his
errors which were made. The Agent will then take
the matter up with our district manager.
Any farmer who has applied for but has not yet
received his Certificate of War Necessity should re-
POSITIONS WANTED
POSITIONS WANTED
Exp. farm overseer, age 35,
Class No. 3, desires to make
change for 1943; included with
job overseeing would like to
cultivate 3-H. crop on 50-50
basis. Can operate and keep. up
any farm machinery. Can move
Dec. 15th. Roy J. Moon, Coch-
Ton, Bes, Box 76.
Want smail farm near At-
lanta, on bus or near car line.
Min dl-yrs. old, with wife, 2
children, wants job as caretaker
of chicken or stock farm, to
start Jan. 15, 1943. Well exp.
in general farming and stock
raising. W. E. Bene For-
svth, R. 4.
Married man, 56 yrs. old
wants job on dairy farm, just
to milk cows and work around
buildings. Am disabled for hard
farm work. Geo. W. Wadnaban,
noxious weed seeds per pound.
-noxious weed seeds per pound.
THE FOLLOWING WEED SEEDS ARE NOXI
request.
SPECIAL NOTICE AUCTION ie
Saturday, December 19, 1942, two miles Noi
of Tifton on the Waterloo Road. All farm equ
ment for 16 Horse farm including stock-mares ay
colts, several head of nice cattle, wagon, tractoi
cultivators, single stocks, gear, plow tools, and lot
new plow tools never been used.
H. C. CARMICHAE
Route No. 2,
Tifton, Georgia. -
tioning Board and obtain a Temporary Transp
Ration, which will give him sufficient gasoline to
erate until he can obtain his certificate.
We appreciate the fact that all of our farme
are doing a splendid job of increasing their crop
making their products available for the war ef
and we do not in any way want to hinder or handic
the fine work they are doing. We believe t
through the County War Boards or County Ager
we will be able to help them in their transport
problems rather than hindering them.
We appreciate the cooperation you are gi
this office and the farmers of the State, and any
of conservation of truck mileage that you may
gest will be appreciated also. If at any time we
furnish you with information concerning ODT ac
ties, we will be glad to do so. ;
Yours very truly,
(Signed) JOHN C. CALRY,
SEED SEGULATIONS
The following is Regulation No. 7, aS amend
December 1, 1942 limits on noxious weed seed.
: Ruling No. 7, regulating the seed to be sol
Georgia has been amended so as to give additi n
protection to farmers in the purchase of seed.
The ruling as to the sale of seed by one f
to another has not been changed.
REGULATION NO. 7
As Amended December Ist, 1942
LIMITS ON NOXIOUS WEED SEEDS
1. It is unlawful for any Dealer, State A
or Federal Agency to donate, sell, offer or expos
sale in this State any seed containing Primary
ious weed seeds at the rate of over 100 per pou
pure seed. It is unlawful for any Dealer, Sta
Agency or Federal Agency to donate, sell, offer
expose for sale in this State any seed conta
secondary noxious weed seeds at the rate of :
200 per pound of pure seed, such noxious weed:
defined by the Commissioner of Agriculture.
QUALITY STANDARDS ON LESPEDEZA
SEED ONLY
Effective Until July 1st, 1943.
2. All seed labels, tags, and invoices must
stamped or marked to show the quality of Lesp
seed.
3. FIRST QUALITY LESPEDEZA SEED
have a minimum of not less than 99% Pure see
a maximum of not more than one-half of one p
weed seed contents with a germination of not
than 75% and not less than 15% hard-seed, and sha
not contain more than 100 Primary noxious ~
seeds per pound, and no more than 200 Second.
SECONDARY Q UALITY LESPED
SEED: Must have a minimum of not less than 9
Pure seed and a maximum of not more than 2Y
weed seed contents, with a germination of not
than 60% and not less than 20%, hard-seed
not containing more than 200 Primary noxious
seeds per pound, and no more than 400 Secon
5. This amends and sup plants re
fective to July 1, 1942. All previous exemption
lowed on Ungraded Lespedeza seed are hereby
voked and such seed is illegal for sale in the
or transported into the State of Georgia.
IN THE STATE OF GEORGIA
Primary Noxious Secondary Noxiou:
_ Weed Seeds _ Weed Seed:
. Dodder . Plantains
Johnson Grass . Cheat. or Chess
Wild Onion . Coffee Wee
- Nut Grass . Darnel =
Corn Cockle
Wild Mustard
Bitter Weed
Rough Pigweed
Sand Spur.
Bermuda Grass
Quack Grass_
Canada Thistle
Bindweed
be
aa of our booklet The Georgia S. d
and Rules and Regulations, will gladly be $s
ex). C. A. Wilkes, Ae Rt.
ae Atlanta,
Box 253
i boro
Royston, In Care Oscar Sear :
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agricult