Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1943 March 17

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5EPARTMENT Of
_TOM LINDER

) AGRICULTURE

COMMISSIONER

_WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1943.







The House of Representatives of the Georgia Legislature

dopted a resolution directed to the Secretary of ASC

to the Senators and Congressmen from Georgia.

The resolution urges the removal of all restrictions on pro-
ion of farm products and asks for other reliet for farmers
too much control.

The resolution as adopted is as follows:

= RESOLUTION

Whereas, it now appears that the production of
adequate agricultural crops is one of the greatest
problems now facing the country and one on which
the security of the Nation may depend, and

Whereas, the farmers of this State should, in our
opinion, be freed of all restrictions at this time so that
each farmer in Georgia may produce the greatest har-

st that it is possible for him to produce under his in-

estock Sales, Georgia Auction Markets
Reports received at this office show following average prices paid
o. 1 hogs at the Livestock Auction Markets named:

s March 12, 1943

March 4 Augusta
March 4 Valdosta :





dividual circumstances as to soil, climate, farm equip-

ment, labor, fertilizer, etc., thereiore
BE IT RESOLVED THAT WE GO ON RECORD ;

AS FAVORING: .

(1) The removal of all restrictions on produc:
tion of essential war crops.

(2) That we now revise our dctnition a thie i
words, Crop surpluses and during the war emergency _
consider same to mean essential stock piles which will
rapidly disappear as soon as the international bri-

gands, Hitler and Hirohito, are driven from control of

their respective countries, and ships are available to

carry essential food and clothing to a starving and a

naked world.

(3) That we favor the eantinuanee of soil- |
building practices wherever the work does not hinder
the size of present food crops. Pee

(4) That the rationing of gasoline and other =

motor fuel for farm operations in tractors and trucks be
confined to OPA so that it will not be necessary for |
the farmer to obtain permission from more than one

agency to get the fuel needed, thus saving duplication Z

of effort. _

(5) That the rationing of farm machinery and
equipment be transferred to the regular OPA ration-
ing board.

(6) That each farmer be permitted to plant
an unlimited amount of any crop without interference

from any board or bureau or representatives of the G .
same, so that his production will be limited only by his

ability to get labor and acts beyond his control.

(7) We submit that the farmers of this State
are 100 per cent patriotic and will produce to the limit _
of their ability if permitted and encouraged to do so.

(8) Be it further resolved that copies of this
resolution be transmitted to the Secretary of Agricul-

ture, Honorable Claude R. Wickard, and to the Senators
and Conese from Georgia. :











Following are quotations by wholesale dealers. in Atlobts and other cities (FOB) points mentioned) as furnished by the State Bureau of Markets. Prices
quoted are for Georgia Grade A eggs only. Grades B and C and Current Receipts (yard run) are quoted by wholesalers from 2c to 5 per dozen below |

tees: Prices Quoted are as of Friday, March 12, 1943. Always subject to Variation.

Atlanta | INDEX

| ee
_ Eggs, Large, White, Grade A, Doz. - .36
Second Hand Machinery for Sale

_ Eggs, Medium Grade A Doz. | = .33
ane. . Aes fe eae = Second Hand Machinery Wanted
A ns, Le shorn, Ib. oo ad Seed for Sale
: Bieccists eb. =e a : Beans and Peas for Sale. Ss3-4 |
rs, 93-95 Beans and Peas Wanted. ae
On. 28 Plants for: Sale: 2 =a A
15 18 Livestock for:Sale = = = 4
"$5 Te : Livestock Wanted_.....__.__ 2S Ae es
'30- 32 Corn for Sale a oe ee
: a eae Miscellaneous for Sale
ountry butter, best table, Ib. 3 Sone ate one =
ae peas, mixed bu. ottonsee oS er ee
eld peas, not mixed, bu. = -
Ear Corn (80 Ibs. to bu.) bu. Sugar for Home Canning





























Sh u War Boards Ready to License
tases oe : Meat Handlers and Farmers
bu. eee : Pastures Permanent and

Sweet potatoes, Per 100 lbs. eset Ey: Georgia
Cabbage (Green), Per 100 lbs. oe eae 3
Cabbage (White), Per 100 lbs. mprovements Ge Made

Hay, No. 1, Peavine, per ton :
_ Hay No. 1 Peanut, per ton NOTICE
_ Spanish peanuts No. 1 Ton, The Georgia Market Bulletin be- t
(Del. Shelling Plant) longs to the farmers of the state. I | |
is paid for entirely by the farmers

Cottonseed (Prime )
(ots FOB Shipping Point)

and does not cost any other taxpayer

~@ nickel,











28.00-30.00
20.00-21.00















Cottonseed meal, 8 per cent)
ttonseed meal, 7 per cent
ut | meal, 45 per cent.
























































































































ps

_ GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN

59 Address all items for publicatiqn and all requests to be put
Be on the mailing list and for change of*taddress to STATE BUREAU
* OF MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.





Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable
under postage regulations inserted one time on each request and
repeated only when request is accompanied by new copy of
notice.

= Limited space will not permit insertion of notices containing
more than 30 words including name and address.

Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not.
assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin. ;
Published Weekly at
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
fom Linder, Commissioner,
-- Executive Office, State Capitol
: Atlanta, Ga.

Sek

a Publication Office
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
Editorial and Executive Offices

State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.

Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of
Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
Entered
August

as second class matter
1, 1937, at the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia, under Act

of June 6, 1900. Accepted for
mailing at special rate of postage
provided for in Section 1103, Act
of October 8, 1917.

Sugar For Home Canning

- Honorable Tom Linder,
~ Commissioner of Agriculture, |
State Capitol,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Mr. Linder:

his is in reply to your letter of February 19
A concerning sugar for the home canning of fruit.
We have discussed the home canning problem
with officials of the Office of Price Administration.
They have informed us that they hope to announce
the 1943 home canning program in the near future.
You will be glad to know that they have instructed
their Atlanta and Dallas regional offices to advise
state and county war price and rationing boards
throughout the South that in the event any fruit 1s
- ready for canning before the program is announced,
sugar is to be made available for home canning on
the same basis as in 1942. a





Sincerely yours,
Paul H. Appleby,
Under Secretary.







Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
ae March 12, 1943 Atlanta
Cabbage, bulk, per CWT -_-....------------ $5.00 | $5.50
- Cabbage plants, per 1000 plants, ..---------- 1.75 2.00

Collards, per doz. bunches ------ Se kD 90
|: Mustard Greens, per bu. hprs. ------..------ 2.00 2.25
| Onions (Green), per dozen bunches --------- 60 .80
| Sweet Botatoes, bulk, per bu. --._------------- $25. 2:50
| Turnips (Bunched), per d0zZ. 3 = 80 = 1.25
| Turnip Salad, per bu. hprs. ._________ 1.50 2.25







ce SECOND HAND SECOND HAND |
MACHINERY FOR SALE| MACHINERY FOR SALE





im

- Model B Allis Chalmers trac- |
tor, 2 disc tiller, 20 disc dbl. sec.
harrow and 1 cultivator on rube
per with good tires, for sale.
Gary Harrell, Rhine. Rt. 1.

1 Economy King separator,
good as new (used about 10
-mos.), $40.00. A. W. Mann, |
Greensboro, Rt. 2 (2% mi.
Union Point on Union Point and
Bethany Road.)

Farmall F-30 tractor with
rubbey wheat thrash, 1 mule
nd farming tools all first class
ond., for sale. G. M. Compton,
Comer.

Planters and Distributors for
Farmall Model B tractor in
perfect condition, used only one
season for sale. W. F. Robert-
son, LaGrange, Rt. 1.

One 20-32 Belle City Thresh-
er self feeder wind stacker
roller, bearings in good condi-
tion. Bargain. One good Ford-
see Tractor. J. T. Hays, Hart-
well. |

One Racine Thresher with 24
in. Cylinder, 36 in. separator,
with wind stacker; No drive
belt but all other belts extra
good. Machine needs some re-
pair, but will thresh as it is.
Will trade for horse or good.
milch cow. Archie Housch,
Summerville.

Fordson tractor parts, pulley;
Also Athens Dbl. Disc _ side
plow. Gober Murphy, Jasper,
Rt. 2, (9 mi. W. Jasper near
Jerusakem >Church.)

A. 22x36 Case Threshing ma-
chine with self feeder, wind
stacker and measure complete,
in good mechanical condition,
less natural wear, cheap; A 15-
80 McCormick Deering tractor,
fairly good condition. Located
10 mi. N. E. Barnesville, Lamar
Co. A. H. Chappell, Milner.

One sealer for tin cans in per-
fect condition for sale. Seals
1, 2 and 3 lb. cans. Used to seal
about 500 cans. $8.00. Also want
pressure cooker in good condi-
tion. State make, size, cond.,
price in ist letter. Mrs. Lint
Lipscomb, White. ;

1 compost distributor, used
1 season (iron wheels). Write
for further information and

20 in. Meadows corn mill and
whole sheller, *good_ shape,
$100.00 or trade for anything
can use. James Dobbs, Coving-
ton, Rt. 2.
Cotton planter, Armors Fa-
-vorite, also a No. 72 Chatta-
nooga Turn Plow, both good
cond., for sale or trade for sec-
ond hand 2 hole Cole planter in
first class cond. M. B. Jacobs,
Hortense. Rt. 1.

1 horse wagon, good cond.,
t brakes, $35.00. V. E. Pal-:
mer, Rex, Box 16.

1 each, Mowing machine, cut-
taway harrow, stalk cutter, 1
disc 2-H. plow, and other farm
tools. Geo. J. Garrett, Midland.

One 22 Caterpillar tractor in
A-1 condition, $1100.00 cash;
One 6 Disc John Deere Tiller
on Rubber, A-1 condition, $200
cash. L. L. Britts, Thomaston.

Have a Fordson Tractor for



MARKET B





sale. Claude A. Smith, Stock-






3 \

price. T. R. Pate, Avera. Rt. 2.



bridge, Rt. 2.

ae










COMMISSIONS

ULLETIN.

OFFERED MEN

OF HIGH QUALIFICATIONS

The Atlanta office of Officer Procurement de-
sires applications of men between the ages of 35 and

55 for special assignments.

These men must have experience in civil govern-
ment and able to accept posts as civil administrators
of occupied countries. They must be acquainted with

agriculture, financial and civil affairs and must have

all the qalifications of diplomacy, tolerance and
patience which will make them able administrators.
It is desirable they have some knowledge of

foreign countries and acquainted with foreign lan-
They are to also have some knowledge of

guages.

school systems and able to go into countries which
have been persecuted and down-trodden and bring
order out of chaos in helping these natives become

self-sustaining.

They must be equipped physically and mentally
to have broad administrative powers in dealing with
civil and social affairs which will be prevalent in oc-

cupied territories.

They will be commissioned as office1s under the

| Military Government Division School of Civil Affairs.

The applications of citizens of Georgia and Florida
will be received by the Atlanta Officer Procurement
District, 740 Citizens and Southern National Bank

Building, Atlanta, Ga.

This article is carried as a service to the war ef-
fort and the Department of Agriculture has no juris-
diction over these commissions so please apply direct
to the address above and not to the Department of
Agriculture as we have no further information on the

| subject.



SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE

SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE



1- Case tractor, small size,
good tires, also a 6 ft. Case
combine, both used 2 seasons,
good repair; 10 disc tractor
harrow: 6 ft. McCormick Reap-
er and Binder, tractor or mule
drawn. O. L. Singletary, Jef-
ferson.

A 4 disc Tiller tractor plow,

A-1 cond., for sale, or exc. for

1 good mule. Fred B. Anthony,
Center. ;

One 2-H. John Deere Riding
Cultivator, needs few minor
repairs; Has good disc and
seratcher attachment, $20.00 or
exchange for a good calf or two
good pigs here at my place. W.
D. Wilbanks, Ramhurst. .

Have a Planter and Cultiva-
tor for John Deere tractor for
sale. Like new, only used

'| three days. J. K. Langley, Pal-

metto, Rt. 1.~

One set wagon scales for
farm use. 6x12 Platform,
weighs up to 4000. One large
hammer mill. Cheap. R. D.
Howser, Dawsonville. ;

One B. F. Avery Riding 2-
Row cotton and corn planter
and fertilizer Distributor, Dis-
tance: 3-4 ft., few new repairs
in good condition. C. Oldag,
Pidcock.

1-H. walking cultivator, near-
ly new, for sale, also want good
late model tractor, cultivators
and planters, harrow and tiller
for cash. J. H. Leverett, Par-
rott, Rt 1.

Farmall tractor on good rub-
ber, perfect cond., $400.00; also,
Corn Mill to go with it if want-
ed. Alex Barfield, Louisville,
Re.

Cole cotton planter (plants
corn, cotton and peas), 1 guano
distributor, Joe. Harrows and
other farm implements, in
good cond., cheap for eash. J.
A. Spear, Stillmore. ;

Planting and cultivating
equipment, power lift, row
markers for F-20 Farmall trac-
tor, $250.00; 1-H Buxton;
Girard. . oe pes

. Want Case 5 or 6 ft., light
Harrow for case Tractor, prac-
tically new. Must be in good
shape. Could use some other
make. Write. State price and
condition, in Ist letter. R. R.
Richards, Whitesburg, Rt. 1.

Want a good mower Mc-
Cormick No. 6 or later model
or John Deere. Also want a 50
or 60 Tooth Drag Harrow and
a good Ledbetter, Dbl. Hopper,
Corn planter or Cole planter
with dbl. Hopper. J. F. Well-
born, Rock Springs.

Want 6 ft., dbl. disc tractor
harrow, mower attachment for
Oliver Row Crop tractor, 6
disc tiller or heavy horse
drawn mowing machine, Near
Augusta.
Augusta, Rt. 2.









30 flat rock grist mill, good
cond., reasonable price; also
Silage cutter, cap., 20 tons a
day, small engine or tractor,
will pull same, in good cond.,
$20.00. All located 3 mi. Dub-
lin-Macon Hwy. Doyle Cc.
Knight, Dublin.

J
Cotton planter, good cond.,!

$20.00 or exc., prepaid express.
Seay with order. Mrs. Herman
atright, Alma. Rt. 4.

-Fairbanks-Morse engine, 7
H. P., with pulley, running
order. Sell or exc. for 1-H. wag-
on in first class cond. E. May-
nard, Newton.

2-2 row mule power Cotton
Dusters, practically new, $65.-
- ea. John R. Hall, Jr., Moul-
rie.

1 walking cultivator; 1 mule
drawn in ist class cond., prefer
John Deere model but consider
a Olen Waldron, Douglas,

Case Threshing machine,
$200.00. W. C. McRae, Ft.
Gaines.

1 No. 10 Vulcan 2-H. slide
plow, good cond., $15.00. G. M.
Williams, Covington, Rt. 2. In

care of James Dobbs.

Case thrash, 20x28, with
wheat and peanut attachments,
used very little; also Champion
Binder, good cond., for sale. W.
= H. Barham, McDonough, Rt.

R. C. tractor, A-1 cond., on
rubber with starter and lights,
also 4 disc tiller Wheatland
plow, on rubber. 18 mi. So.
Dublin on Rt. 15. R. T. Gilder,
Glenwood. Rt. 2.

eo : Wednesday, March

| Columbus, 16 Dillingham S'

eans etc. S. M. Gunter,

rocks, complete 42 ine



Xe



















































1 : 5 ae
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR



Fordson tractor pulley
good shape, $5.00. Sam
son, Chickamauga.

1 Gustofson cotton
treater, used 1 season, goo
new, motor and everything:
treat 50 to 60 bu. per hour.
Stapleton, Wrens. fae

Practically new No. 20 I.
C. corn shucker and
cap., 35 to 50 bu. per hou
cond., for sale. Guy B
Gainesville (Cleveland Roa

A 36 in. top runner corn.
cheap for cash. J. W. McL
Whitesburg. cee

10-H. P. upright Dairy
er, need some repairs, b
bargain for $50.00. Come ge
Fred Colwell, Blue Ridge.

A 2-H. No. 10 Moline
Wing turn plow, $10.00; 1
long wing terracing plow
ditching and terracing, $2
G. C. Edmondson, Temple.

1 Mower and Rake, need
repairs, for sale cheap or
for Spanish seed peanuts
& P. L. cotton seed. Berry
Moon, Shiloh, Rt. 1, Box 1

A 2-H. wagon for sale
trade for a 1-H. wagon. |
Barrett, Norcorss, Rt. 1.

1 small Allis Chalmers
bine, used part of one s
extra good cond., $600.00
M. D. Fortner, Wadley. |

CORRECTION: 1-H. w.
in good cond., for sale.
N. McWaters, Franklin, St
Rt. 5

Fordson tractor, $75.00; 1.
plow, $35.00 or both for $9%
all first class cond.; also
disc tractor harrows and 1
all parts necessary for re
ing Fordsons. R. A. Cunni
ham, Marietta. Rt. 4. (Po
Springs Rd.)

5 tooth garden cultiva
used very little, for sale.
inquiries answered. KE.
Oglesby, Atlanta, 44 Bass
S. W., Ma. 0385. i

F-20 mower used 1 yr., $65.
also other second hand. f
equipment. C. M. Bren





SES

1 set of good, used flues ;

16 ft. tobacco barn, $10.00. C:
at my farm. R. F. Coody, I

man, Rt. 2. oe

Farmall tractor on good
ber, plow and harrow for s
all in perfect cond., for sale.
R. Saye, Rutledge.

Used Cuttaway harrow,
sale. Mrs. J. R. Stone, Atla
Rt. 1, Box 419. (Stone Rd.)

1 newly painted 1-H. wa
good cond., $30.00. Dont wr
come and see. Fred Pier
East Point, 1017 Was
Rd. CA. 3660.

No. 2 Sharpless cream
rator, $20.00; 10. gal.
churn, $6.00; 3, 10 gal,





renceville. Rt. 1.



- SECOND-HANI
MACHINERY WAN



Want a 4 or 4% ft. case
ternational or John Dee
bine, not over 2 yrs., i
working order. S. E. Bo
Jr., itzgerald, Rt. 4, B

Want a 2nd nana Over:
waterwheel, 18, 20, or
in diameter. One set

bigger for corn mill.

B.
Harris, Gibson.. ioe





tion.

necessary.

HOLD.

all such type notices on
lished.



James. B. Bartch, |

-MEDIATELY.

FARM LAND ISSUE MARCH 2
Our Special Farm Land Supplement will
published March 24th: Farms for Sale, For Ren
Wanting to Rent and Buy, and In Exchange For
notices MUST REACH THE BUREAU OF MA
KETS not later than FRIDAY, March 20th.
notices received after this date (March 20t
will necessarily have to be omitted from public
SPACE IS VERY LIMITED, therefore, a
notices for this Land Issue must not exceed fif
(50) words, including name and address. Nh
tices will be cut to meet the requirement

POSITIVELY-NO REAL ESTATE nor REA
ESTATE AGENT'S nor CITY PROPERTY, F
ING STATIONS, STORE HOUSES, OTHE
BUSINESS PROPERTY, nor OUT-OF-THE
PROPERTY notices will be published... neithe
will MORE THAN ONE NOTICE OF FIFTY (50)
WORDS BE CARRIED FOR-ANY ONE HOU

If you have submitted a Land Notice within
the past few months, do not send in another, a!
hand will be duly pub
SEND IN YOUR


















mas

ugh

FARM NOTICE











OND HAND
ERY WANTED

_ SECOND HAND

MACHINERY WANTED a



t large garden tractor
uipment. Gene Golden,.
a, Rt. 9, Phone MA. 7939,

Nant 7 gt. pressure canner in

condition. Priced reason-

Let me hear at once. Mrs.
Reeves, Jackson, Rt. 4.

ant to buy Case grain
. with stacker in good
cheap. SOA: Watch,

nt good used 7 qt. or larg- |

e canner. State price,

t letter. Mrs. M. F. Mc-
x, Sr. Hawkinsville.

2-H. walking cultivator

one small garden trac-
good condition. Walter
Newnan, P. O. Box 434.
a pressure canner or
or 5 qt. size low pressure
Bob Yates, Cornelia.

high or low pressure

type milk cooker and

t 28 inch and complete

brackets, troughs and

ik tank. Will pay cash. To be

j on Dairy. C R. Hix, Chats-
roe. . Box 24.

set dbl. section cutting
ows for Model A. Farmall
ter. Prefer used. Will pay
Foemon Stanley, Pisgah.

actor with plowing machin-
Lamar Harris, Monroe, Rt.

ant medium size tractor in :
od cond. Write orice and
W. A. Hart, Gibson. Rt. 1.

nt for cash a 1 horse wag-

good cond., near States-

Mrs. Florence Sturm,
atesboro, Rt. 2.

Jant 2 wheels for Thomas

Moore, |:



grain drill, sold by _B.
o: J. B. Shuiey, La-

a. Spring tooth attach- |
t for a Model B Allis Chal- |
cultivator, preferably with |
ound standard. R. T. Good- |
Chickamauga. |

-a second hand tractor

fant an 85 bbl. Wheat mill.
Haygood, Athens.

3-5 H. P.. Garden trac-
in A-1 condition. Shaw or
other god make. H. H.

t dairy equipment. Ad-
rice, condition and where

e seen. Reply.

P. O. Box 589, Columbus.

Vant garden tractor in A-1

nd. with equipment. Describe

ull. I Teem, Atlanta, 261 W.
ve,, Rt. 8.

Exch. an Allis Chalmers, W. |

tor, good condition, rub-

ger tires, for orchard type trac-

tor of similar power. C. A. Riv-
airburn.

Want a pressure cooker. Ad-
-price, etc. Mrs. W. G.
mith, Union Point.

Want one late model tractor
Harrow in good shape. Write
description and price. E. W.
Dorough, Temple, Rt. 1.

Want to buy for cash good
sed Mowing machine. J. D.
ire, Young Harris, Rt. Te

Want a large size Hammer
Mill. Prefer loose hammers. O.
NW. Haygood, Athens, Clayton

Wan

Want a large farm bell, wt.
150 Ibs., in No. 1 condition. No-
tify at once what you have and

>, Jessie Chambers, Uvalda.

Want one Walking cultivator
ior 2 mules. J. Morgan,

; Mansfield. ;
Want one row tractor tiller,
ows 3 or 4 disc Cultivator
and Dbl. disc Cuttaway harrow
re with it. Also Internation-
Cultivator, plows and disc te
with it. All for cash. No
i Cc. W. DeLoach, Grove-

Want 2 used Disc Ferguson |

slows for late model Ford trac-
tor. Also corn cultivator in good
r. Will pay cash. Lamar

Macon, 583 Boulevard. -

ant senien tractor in A-1

idition for cash. Want_espe-

Want a good road cart, cheap
for cash. William Harris, Gib-
son. i

Want a large Bush and Bag
harrow. Prefer one
used or 6 ft. dbl. Section har-

row. Norman. Stegall, Thomas-

willc, Rt. 3.

Want to buy Column 1 Farm-
all Model B tractor. Leonard C.
Brown, Bainbridge.

Want Lilliston weeder for
Ford tractor or will take Lillis-

ton Tractor with wheels. Want |.
vone that folds on ea. end. J. T./

Tunis, Elko.

Want Allis Chalmers B trac-
tor, 1 row on rubber or Farm-
all A. on rubber with cultiva-

tors, plows, etc. In good con-
dition. For cash. M. H. Bryant, |

Jasper, Rt. 2.

Want to buy good Hammer
Mill. No. junk. Pay cash. Rex
Henry, Cassandra.

Want small dise plow or til-|

ler for Farmall A tractor. Pre-
fer plow with 3 discs. Can use
2 or 4 disc. BE. BE, Shaffer, Col-

umbus, 1175 Ada Ave.

Want pressure canner in good
condition at reasonable price.
7 qt .preferred but consider
other sizes. Mrs. O. E. Zipperer,
Valdosta, Rt. 2, Box 112.

Want 2-H. cultivator. State
fully in 1st letter. Thos. Thomp-
son, Cordele.

Want 1-H. wagon. Must be
in good condition. Also want
50 or 100 cap. electric Incuba-
tor. State condition and_ best
prices. N. O. Newnan, Atlanta,
P. O. Box 1357:

Want a pressure canner in
good condition that holds 4%
zal. jars. Mrs. Nancy Cochran,
Madison, Rt. 2. |

Want good used weeder at

once. State price and condition.
W. W. Evans, Helena.

Want pressure canner, 7 qt.
cap., preferred, in good condi-
tion. Write what you have and
orice. Mrs. W. G. Smith, Union
Point.

Want a small dbl. section

harrow for Allis Chalmers B

tractor. Must be in fair condi-
tion and priced reasonably. W.
A. Bell, Lizella, Rt. 2.

Want a small engine power
syrup mill to use with 3-H. P.
engine in good condition. Would
consider one larger. Write what
you have, price, etc. Reuben
Johnson, Greenville, Rt. 3.

Want to buy one complete
ein outfit. Must be in good
shape with four, seventy saw
gins, without the power. S. E.

)| Vandiver, Lavonia.

Want 2-H. wagon in good
condition shipped subject to ex-
amination. Will pay transporta-
tion both ways if not bought.
R. C. McCollum, Albany.

Want a Walking: Cultivator.
State price, description, etc., in
first letter. John Pharr, Winder,
Ri. 2:

Want used Fordson tractor
with dbl. Sec. harrow, side
plows, pulley. Pay cash. L. D.
Harris, Monroe, Rt. 2.

Want one set used qbl. sec-
tion harrows for model A Far-
mall tractor. Will pay cash. J.
Cc. Stanley, Pisgah. :

Want Extension Rims
John. Deere Model A _ tractor
and plows for same. J. F. Hut-
cheson, Temple, Rt. 2.

Want 1, 3, or 4 disc plow for
traetor; Also 2 bu. of Unknown
peas. W. P. Couch, Luthersville.



SEED FOR SALE



Large dark yellow pumpkin
seed, 20c cupful; Little bean

| peas, 10c lb.; Cane seed, Honey

Drip, 7c lb. Sage plants, 20c
ea, Well rooted. Mrs. Mae
Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.

Sericea lespedeza, dodder
free, no noxious weeds, germi-
nation 98 per cent, 30c Ib.
eee A. Smith, Stockbridge,

Tobacco seed, 1% pints good
clean seed, raised last yr., 10c
tablespoonful seed; large yel-
low leaf tobacco, fine for smok-
ing or chewing. J. L. Spake,
Bremen, Rt. 1, Box 38.

Marglobe tomato seed, $1.25
lb.; New Stone, 75c lb. del. W.
O. Waldrip, Flowery Branch.

7 var. tomato seed, about 300
seed, 25c: Gold, orange Winsall,
rich meat (Pondorosa) Ox
heart running tomato, collosal
largest tomato grown. W. H.
Hagan, Morrow.

Several tons, Kobe lespedeza.
10c lb., FOB. Mrs. F. L. Roya



anet Jr B-1,. G. .C.|-

Unadilla,

slightly |

| Ib.

pean

for

Early long green. okra seed,

frost, 15c cupful; Blackeye
crowder peas, bears heavy, 10c
cupful. ,Not prepaid. Mrs. J.
M. Harmon, Sugar Valley, Rt. 1.

Lespedeza seed; Kobe, 10c
lb. Korean, 8c lb. Sericea,. 5c
All combined cleaned. L.
C. Allen, Hoschton.

Tender corn field. bean seed,
White half runner bean seed,
25c large cupful: Plus postage.
Hay Richard Densmore, Jasper,
ets



Tender old fashioned bean
seed, white half runners, large
and small striped cornfield
beans, all tender large cup, 25c
Ab., plus postage. No stamps.
Mrs. G. R. Poole, Jasper, Rt. 2.

Dill seed, hand gathered and
cleaned, 12c teaspoonful, post-
paid. Mrs. R. A. Caldwell,
Boston, Rt. 2

Okra seed, 10c cup; Cucum-
ber, yellow squash, mustard,
Bushel Gourd, dipper gourd
seed, 30c cup ea. Mrs: John
Weaver, Buchanan, Rt. 1.

1% gal. okra seed, 20c pt.;
35c qt.: Brown crowder peas,
10c lb.; Red May cherries, 6,
5Qe- All prepaid. Mrs. Lizzie
Casey, Bowdon, Rt. 2. -

Wonderful (new) edible Soy-
seed, bean beetles or
weevils wont devour. Very
delicious. 50c Ib. Plus post-
age. No order less than 1 Ib.
filled. Mrs. Clara Prince,
Demorest, Rt. 1, Box 14.

_ Spineless green pod okra seed,
30c qt.: 4 qts., $1.00; Dry hot
pepper, 35c gal.; Hot pepper
seed, 25c cupful. Mrs. L. A.
Woodring, Alto.

CORRECTION: Melon seed,
"5c lb.: Also one doz, seed

egg. and long slim gourd seed
which will grow 3-4 ft. long),
25c. Stamps acc. Mrs. J. W.
League, Suwanee, Rt. 1.

Wilt resistant Marglobe,
blight proof tomato seed, cer-
tified, $1.50 Ib.; New Stone, 85c
lb. B. R. Woodliff, Flowery
Branch, Rt. 1.

Big new green cane, No.
29-116, $15.00 per 1000 stalks;
Also Stoneville B-2 cottonseed,
$1.50 bu. W. W. Williams, Quit-
man.

Fresh Baltimore tomato seed,
$1.50 db. del. J..-L. Green,
Coolidge.

Pure Stone Mtn. watermelon
seed, 75c lb.; Banana mushmel-
on seed, 25c teacup; Purple
hull table peas, 20c qt.; Mus-
cadine vines, 20c ea.; Early
Klondike. strawberry plants,

Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.

5 Ibs. Green Rind Stone Min.
watermelon seed, 75c lb. Post-
paid. Mrs. T, E. Morris, Glen-
wood, Rt. 1.

Dixie Queen or Cuban
Queen watermelon seed, pure
and gathered from choice mel-_
ons, 75c Ib. H. L. Wilchar, But-
ler.

- Mammoth Russian sunflower
seed, 20c lb. Add postage. Mrs.
P. Tarver, Bartow, Rt. 1.

Pure Hawksberry melon seed,
$1.00 lb.; or exchange for any
full stock male pigs, 8 wks. old;
or exc. 5 lbs. for hornless buck
kid. Starling Yawn, Vienna,
Rt. 2, Box 113:

Recleaned lespedeza Kobe,
1ic lb.; Korean, 8c lb.: Crota-
laria early Spectabilis, 10 1b.;
All FOB. Roger S. Rawls,
Williamson.

200 lbs. Gen. Cuban Queen
melon seed, hand saved, screen
dried, Semisan treated, saved
from sel. melon, $1.00 Ib. FOB.
W. O. Birdsong, Gordon.

Imp. Jumbo Triumph largest
watermelon grown, wt. up to
150 lbs., for home or market.
Trial Pkg. seed, 25c. W. M.
Thornton, Jesup.

100 lbs. Crotalaria for sale;
Also want to buy 50 bu. corn
within 20 mi. Tucker or Sfone
Mtn. Also want 30 or 40 bu.
Field peas. W. L. Cousins, De-
eatur, Rt 2.

/ Moon and Stars watermelon
seed, red meat and fine flavor,
some grow very large, wilt re-
sistant vines. No white hearts.
0z.;;7 20c3 44 Ib. The: = Ih,
$1.50: $3.00 lb. Postpaid. J. D.
Whitfield, Tifton, 316 So. Cen-
tral Ave.

4500 lbs. Korean Lespedeza,
7T%e lb. Combine run, FOB.
Only in 500 lb. lots or more. C.
D. Wood, Bowdon.

Dbl. recleaned Korean Les-
pedeza seed, 8%c lb.: $8.00 per
100 ibs. Ross E. Clement,



Corneli2

starts bearing 12 in. high, until

each of 5 kinds gourds (Big
Bu., long handle, Martin nest-.

20c . Adq postage. . Rosie.





*

Colored seed butterbeans, 25c

Ib.; Okra seed, 25c large cup;

Mammoth Russian sunflower
seed. $1.00 gal. Postpaid. Mrs.
Darby Taylor, Lavonia, Rt. 1.

Combine run sericea les-
pedeza seed, 50 lbs. lots, lic
lb.: searified, 19c b.; Also
want fresh dairy cows, and

| pulley for H IHC tractor. C. |

M. Brennan,
Dillingham St. :

Ga, collard seed, 35c Ib.; old
time yellow pumpkin, 50 seed
20c; Vigorvine tomato, 200 seed,
25e- New Era peas, 10c lb. All
mailed. L. A. Crow, Gaines-
ville Ri. 2.

Okra seed, % gal., 75c; Cuban

Columbus, 16

Queen watermelon, 25c cupful;

Mammoth Russian sunflower
seed, $1.00 gal., postage paid.
Mrs. L. D. Elliott, Lavonia, Rt.
16

Half Runner bean seed, 60c.

pint; 35c cupful; garden gar-
lic, 25c doz.: hot pepper seed,
10c spoonful. Mrs. C. B. Rob-

| inson, Bowdon, Rt. 2.

Bushel gourd seed from
gourds measuring 5 ft., 2 in.,

also regular Martin gourd seed, }

25 for 10c and stamped en-
velope. Dewey Gulledge, Ab-
beville, Rt. 1, Box 70.

6000 Ibs.
Spectabilis seed, $9.00 per 100
lbs:; 2 ns, 100: Ib. = lots;
Logansville, Rt. 2.. C. H. Brand,
Chatsworth.

Limited amt, of watermeion
seed, which grows as large as
Stn. Mtn., as good but the rind
is white, 25c cupful:; Vine okra,
18 seed, 15c: Mammoth Sun-
flower seed, 20c cupful;: Ga.
collard, 10c pkt. No stamps.
Mrs. Ida Mae Sullivan, Whites_
burg, R. 2.

100 Ibs, Okra seed, $1.00 lb.

Postpaid. W. V. Brannen, Una-

dilla.

9000 lbs. Crotalaria seed. 6c

Ib., FOB.
hurst.

Red Peanut or Six Weeks
Bunch beans and little white
Half Runners, also Snap pea
beans, bears -until frost. 15c
teacupful. Adq@ postage. Miss
ea Jackson, Talking Rock,

Digrag gourd seed, 25, 10c:
Martin gourd seed, 30. 10c;
Postpaid. Also bear grass root,
25c lb. Not P. P. Mrs. Ben
McBryant, Fitzgerald. R. 1.

Selected seed: Rice, 20c lb.
$1.00 order or more postpaid.
No chks. Cash or money or-
der. Herbert Clark, Mt. Vern-
on: Rte 3:

-Edible Soybeans; Brown
striped half runner garden
beans, all 20c cup. Add 5c post-
ae oo Presnell, Gainesville,

3 bu. Hastings Syrup cane
seed for sale. Also fine white
seed corn, Ist yr. from Hast-
ings, $1.00 pk. nubbed and
shelled. E. P. Powell,
Pare eto

Hastings new imp. Perkins
Okra seed, 60c pt.; $1.00 qt.;
Also pure Stone Mtn. watermel-
on seed, same price. Postpaid.

E. C. West, Pine-

Cash or M. O. Delpher Frost,

Ellenwood, Rt. 2.

Squash pepper seed, 10c tea-
spoonful; 2, 15c;-~ White half
runner bean seed, 30ce teacup-
ful; Banana Mushmelon seed,
10c tablespoonful; 2, 15c. Mrs.
J. A. Wilson, Martin.

Tender striped half runner
garden bean seed, 30c pt., plus
postage. War saving stamps ac-
cepted. Memphis Timms, Au-
burn; Rt. 1.

1942 white tender half runner
bean seeds, weevil free, 25c
cup; 2, cups, 45c. Postpaid.
Coin .or M. O. Mrs. A. F. OKel-
ley, Maysville, Rt. 1.

Tomato seed: Marglobe and
Breakoday, $1.25 Ib.; 5. Ibs.,
$6.00; Baltimore and _ Stone,
$1.00 lb.; 5 Ibs., $4.50 del. Post-
paid. F F. Stokes, Fitzgerald.

Moon and-Stars watermelon
seed, red meat and fine flavor.
Some grow very large, no white
hearts, wilt resistant vines, 10
oz., 20c; % Ib., T5e % Ib., $1.50;
$3.00 Ib. Postpaid, no stamps.
J. D. Whitfield, Tifton, 316
South Central Ave.

Imp. Rockyford canteloupe
seed, pure, 75c lb. del. Bruce
Andrews, Haddock.

Cuban Queen and Hawks-

berry watermelon seed, 60c Ib.

T. J. Jimmerson, Unadilla.

Collard seed, 35c ib.: 4 Ibs.,
$1.00; 25 lbs., $5.50; $22.00, 100
lb. Alton Ponder, Whigham.

Colored bunch butterbean
seed, 25c Ib. Plus postage. Mrs.
coy Roberts, Carroliton, Rt.

325 lbs. seed, Kobe Lespedeza
80c lb. EH. Li. Upchurch, Locust
Grove.

Ybs., $1.25. All del.

early Crotalaria |

FOB |

del.; one extra

College | |





1942 crop Hastings Ne
Perkins Okra seed, % lb.
40c Ib.: 5 lbs., $1.75; Has
new imp. Rocky Ford C
lope seed, 15c oz.; % Ib., 35;
Hastings imp. Henderson
Bunch butterbeans, 30c Ib.: 5
C. Leon
Smith, LaGrange, Rt. 1.0

- Pure honey drip cane seed,
$2.50 bu.; 7c Ib. in small 1 2
my station. Machine threshed
without rain, ripe and sou
Horace Darnell, Winston.

CORRECTION: Pure honey
drip cane seed, machine thresh-
ed without rain, $2.25 bu.; 6e
Ib. in small lots. No.orders
der 10 lbs., ripe and sound,
FOB my station. Samuel
Douglasville, Rt. 3.

About 1 ton late Specta
Crotalaria seed, 1942
clean seed. Large type,
grew 5 ft. high, 8c Ib. Idus
Rowe Jr., Williamson, Rt. 1._

1942 crop White Runnin
butterbeans, 25c 1b., del.; 20
lb. not del.; Also 2 Ibs. beeswax,
57c del.; Also will hatch and
raise M. B. Broadbreasted
turkey eggs to 8 wks. old f
half or buy eggs at reasonab
price. 24 eggs from big stock,
bronze. Mrs. J. E. Sikes, Coch:
ran. ;

Mixed hot pepper seed, 10c
tablespoonful, Sugar pumpkin |
seed, cook nearly like yams,
10c spoonful: Also 1942 black
walnut meats, hand picked, 7
qt. All P. P. Also want 194
White Leghorn rooster. Mrs. R.
Scoggins, Sandersville, Rt. 2

Cuban Queen
Ball melon seed, 50c lb. Po
paid. W. V. Brannen, Unadil:

~ Sericea lespedeza, scarif.
and recleaned, 25c lb. F
Sam Goodson, Chickamauga.

1 pt. white rice peas; % cu
rocky food canteloupe seed;
spoonful Early June tomato
seed; 1 spoonful hot pepper, all
for 35c del., % cup good red
and yellow watermelon seed,
mixed free with ea. order. Mrs.
M. S. Kelley, Colbert, Rt. 2. .

25 Ibs. pure Lipsey water-
melon seed, 75c Ib.; Hastings
Rocky Ford Canteloupe seed,
50c 1b. No stamps wanted. Mrs.
J. F. Bennett, Cumming, Rt. 4,
400 Ibs. Ga. collard seed, 256
lb. Frank Greene, Manchest

Jumbo Pumpkin seed, 10c 0Z.,
large Jumbo
pumpkin $1.50. FOB. Packed
for shipment. Herman Ward,
Junction City. : .
Recleaned Korean lespedeza

seed, $4.00 CWT. C.
Suwanee, Rt. 2.



BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE

\

Large coffee beans, 50c ib
or exc. for White Sugar Crov
der peas. Good condition. Nor-
man Griffin, Pitts, R225

Large white half runner bean
seed, 25c cup. No stamps. Mrs
D. S. Poole,-Jasper, Re 22. |

10 bu. unknown peas, $2.30
Bu. Mrs. W. A. Hammond.
Grantville. ' eee

150 bu. No. 1 90-day running
velvet beans, $1.50 bu., FOB.
J. F. McRill, Dawson. a

About 25 bu. dry speckled

peas for sale, also want to rai

peas, whichever kind want
on contract. L. E, Stribling,
Molena, Rt. 1.

75 lbs. new kind colored run-_
ning .' butterbeans, sweeter,
more. prolific, <5 1bs..-- $4.25-
Postpaid to 2nd zone. Ne-
smaller orders ace. Mrs. J. M.
Jones, Grayson. =

Peas, clay mixed, $3.00 bu.
FOB. J. M, Hayes, Thomson,

150 bu. No. 1 runner 90-day
velvet beans in 2 bu. bags, $3.00
bu., FOB. No chks. J. J. Hol-
loway, Elaville. a

40 or 50 bu. New Era peas,
$2.75 bu. Good hay pea, sound
and bright. N. G. Barnett,
Sharon. j ree

Several pounds early ,White
corn field bean seed, 25c Ib
plus postage. No order less
than a lb.; No chks. Mrs. Nel-
lie Fain, Ellijay, R. 1. ee
White tender hull cut short
cornfield bean seed, 25c cup=_
ful. Postpaid. Mrs. Loy Fos
ter, Emma. 3

Imp. Lorado beans, $5.00 bu.,
FOB, Gainesville. Gus Sosebee,
Cleveland, R. 1. :

8-10 bu. Brab peas, $3.50;
Good corn at $1.50 at my barn,
R. A, Cunningham, Marietta,
R. 4, Powder Springs Rd.



MARKET BULLETIN.



BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE

BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE



Around 50 bu. yellow Crow-

- ger peas, pure and sound, $3.00

bu. for entire lot at my barn:

or 6c lb. for 25 lb. lots at my

barn. No orders less. P. O.

money order. O. M. Moore,
- Buena Vista

Few bu. Ga. raised Lima
Coutter) beans for seed, 5 Ibs.,
$1.60; 25c lb. del. Brooks
Pingston, Canon.

200 bu., 90 day running vel-
_yet beans, picked early, thrash-
ed clean, even wt. bags, $2.50
for lot; $2.65 less than 100 bu.
1 prices at barn: Also 20 bu.
mixed peas, $3.00: 10 bu. iron
as, $3.50. G, Lucius Wil-
jams, Oglethorpe. ;

40 bu. O-too-tan beans. re-
cleaned, $5.00 bu., FOB. J. M.
Leverett, Luthersville.

_ White running butterbeans,
25c large cupful; Also early
white lightning okra seed, sam-
ple price, P. P. Mrs. Arrie
Ray, Buena Vista. R. 4.

15 lbs. Soybeans, easy cook-
ed, and Roukerson, 30c lb. Exc.
for a or print feeq sacks.
Mrs. R. F. Pace, Temple, R. ie

Speckled Crowder peas. 10
Yb. del. Wo stamps ace. B. W.
Biddy, Acworth. R. 1.

/ 3 bu. Red hull peas, $3.00 bu..
FOB. Or exchange. Striped half
runner bean seeds, 20c large
teacup, FOB: Also forked leaf
butterbean (running) seed,
same. price. Mrs. Will Howell,
Mitchell, Refi.

recleaned 1942 crop
Fiayseed - soybeans in even wt.
242 bu. bags, $2:'5 bu.: Good
late crotalaria seed, $7. 50 CWT
; About 300 lbs. Henderson
bush lima beans. Make best of-
fer. O. M. Ware, Marshallville.

Littie white mush peas. Also
Red speckled crowder peas, 10c
Yb. in 5 1b. lots or more. Add
postage. Exc. for white feed
sacks, 100 Ib. cap. Mrs. W. I.
Lingerfelt, Dahlonega, Rt. 5.

bu. Talman peas, little
mixed, $3.00 bu. at my farm; or
$3.25 shipped: 3 bu. Purple hull |
eckle peas, $3. 50 bu.: Also 800
Ss. velvet beans in hull, $2.25
per 100 lbs.; Wont ship unless
sacks furn. No chks. or samples.
mi. E. Roberta. K. S. Lind-
ey, Lizella, Ri AS x 26

60 Ibs. Mung beans, 12%4c Ib.;
6.00 for lot, FOB. Harvey C.
Jordan, Buena Vista, Rt.

300 Ibs. tan, sound sugar
crowder peas, for seed, 10c Ih.:
Also Everbearing strawberry
Pom 500, $1.00 del. BT.

ornton, Bowdon, Rt. fe

Crowder peas and field peas
x sale, cheap at my place.
m. Middleton, Buford, Rt. 2.

dible Soy beans, 20 cupful;
White half runner beans, big
kind, tender, 25c cup; Also 4
KA Re I. roosters, Carter
Champion chicks, 1 yr. old,
3.00 ea.; or $2.00 ea. at my
lace. Mrs. E. L. Robinson,
alking: Rock, Rt. 2.

Yid fashioned half runner

aoe beans, white, tender hull

ornfield beans, 25e cup: Mush
ee 2 cvs, 25: Only a few

uu s of cornfield beans. Mrs.

_ Hall, Calhoun, Rt.
avy bearing black pote

beans, 25c teacupful; Black pea

bears till frost, good table
, Same price. Mrs. W.
obbs, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.

5 bu. New Era & Dea, slightly
xed, ee 50 bu. L. A. coated,

good sound wnixed
as; 6 bu. Biloxi beans, sound
nd clean, $2.50 bu., FOB Ry.
ation. J. L. Rustin, Mauk.

60 bu. New crop Hayseed
Ss i machine recleaned,

erbearing Ge running |

terbeans, all sound, 25 Ib.,
Florence Shurling,

_ B. Wonder punch penne:
a'style tender cornfield beans

Wodc_ pt.: Also Garlic 20c doz.;

seradish, 200 good bunches,
5c ea. Old fash. Oct. peach
as 2c. Dollie Eller, Titus.

cid English peas, grow 7
_longbearing, 40c tb. and
tage. Also Mammoth pum-

seed from 90 Ib. - oe

25 seed, 15c del. G.

Cheatham, Pike.

Extra fine brown streaked
half runner bean seed, 20c cup,
d 5c postage; Exc. a cups for
rinted feed: sacks, 100 Jb.
.; Must be same color, rip-|

pened Mrs. | L. _R.



ling Roc.

20 bu. red rippers peas, clean
and good, $5.50 bu. for lot. Fred
Hood, Cleveland, Rt. 4.

90 bu. No. 1 recleaned seed
velvet beans, $2.50 bu. at my
farm, 3 mi. Sandersville. You
furnish sacks: $2.75 bu. ship-
ped, 2% bu. pags. CC. H -Cooke,
Sandersville.

100 bu. 90-day ued velvet
beans, picked without any rain,
$2.25 bu.; also 10 tons velvet
beans in hull, sound and No. 1,
$40.00 ton. All FOB. B. A. Gar-
ner, Alvaton.

CORRECTION: Edible
beans, good in roasting
stage, or as dry beans, very
prolific (bean beetles and
weevils do not bother in this
section), 40c lb. 3 Ibs., $1.00.
Del. in Ga. No chks. Cash or
money order. Olin Ericrett,
Maysville, Rt. 2..

White, half runner seed
beans, large kind, 20c cupful.
Add postage. Mrs. Roxie Turn-
er, Ball Ground. Rt. 4.

soy
ear



PEAS AND BEANS
WANTED



Want 15 or 20 bu. field peas.
F. C. Cromer, Atlanta, ATCA
lenta Ave., S. BE. -

Exc. tender hull peas, ee
white half runner bean seed, lb.
for lb., (or sell 50c Ib.); Also
Dwarf okra seed for. white
bunch beans, Ib. for Ib.; peas
and okra seed for print feed
sacks, free from holes. Mrs.
Oma Cronan, Dahlonega, Rt. 3.

Want 15 or 20 bu. 90 day
running velvet beans for cash.
S. _B. Duncan, Royston, Rt. 1.

Want white rice peas. for
planting. State quantity you
have and price; Also want old
fashioned herbs. Mrs. E. P.
Cranford, Newnan, Greenville
St. Extension.

Will exchange nice flowering

| size azaleas, ligustrum for vel-

klon-
John
Box

vet. beans, sage plants,
dike strawberry plants.
peste Thomasville,
82

Want % bu. bunch velvet
beans, for planting. State price.
Hood "Hudson, Cataula.

Want to buy 200 bu. clean

Brabham peas on good strong

|or dbl. bags for prompt ship-

ment. Send sample and quotes. |
H. B. Ballard, Tifton, In care of
Crescent Farins.

Want mung beans and Blue
Lupine seed. Hubert Chambers,
Ball Ground, Rt. 4.

Want 4 or 5 bu: 90 day
speckle velvet bean seed. Will
as cash. Quinton Paulk, Wray,

t225 ~

Want % bu. clean, sound vel-

vet bean seed. Also want
sprouts. Mrs. Harris. Robertson,
Talbotton, RFD.



oe FOR SALE ?



Red skin Porto Rico potato.
plants, $2.00 M. del.; booking
orders for April 20th del.; also.
Marglobe tomato plants, "$1. 50
M. del. Clyde Harper, purreney:
Rt. 2. Box 89.

-Margilobe tomato bea 00 M.:
Pepper, Pimento, $1.25 M.;
Calif. Wonder, $1.50;. Hot. pep-

Vv. per, $1.75 M. Ege-plants, 25C.

C. Del. in April, Moss packed.
J. P. Mullis; Baxley, Rt. 45 7

~ Red Skin P: R., potato plants.
from vine cuttings, Govt. insp.

and treated seed. Booking ord-

ers now. $2.25 M. prepaid. ee
W. Boatright, Coffee.

Everbearing strawhbe rry
plants,.25c C. Exc. for white
feed sacks: 100 plants for 2
sacks, or 200 for 3 printed
sacks. Ea. pay postage.
a premium berry plant with
every 500 strawberry plants.
Miss Hazel Anderson, Murray:
ville. Rt i.

Booking orders for Red and
Pink Skin P. R., potato
$1.75 M. A. A. Jones, Pe ham.

Nice rooted sage plants, 2,
25e; 50c 5; $1.00 doz.; 50, $3.75;
$7.00 C. Green pod kind okra
seed, 15c, 25c and 50c pack-
ages. V. Keith, Alvaton.

Red skin P. R. and Bunch
Nancy Halls: Book your order
early at $1. 15 Nee Re Hee
mond, Pelham. ~ SS

Imp. P. BR. potato plants..
ready, Ist of Apr., $1.95 M.: 5
M. lots; $1.85 M. Full count,
R. J. Boatright. Mershon.

2 vr. old bearing size Mtn.
Huckleberry, 0c doz.; Giant
garlic, 20c doz.: Yellow, red.
plums. 4, 25e: Black walnuts,
for planting, 10e doz.

postage. Tamar lee Talk-

- order of 500. Del.

Give |.

lants,

Add |.

PLANTS FOR SALE

CATTLE FOR SALE



25 new delicious strawberry
plants, $1: 25 Lucretia dew-
berry plants $1.00... Postpaid.
Mrs. F. E.: Butcher... Rossville,
Risk

Kudzu free, all.you want if
you come and. get them. Miss
Genia Hays, Austell.

Cert, P. R. and Copper Skin
potato plants, ready in Apr.,
count and quality guar. $1.65
M.: lots 10 M., $15.00. Terms

A. B. Williams, Alma.

Kudzu crowns, $5.00 M.:
Crowns rooted, $8.00 C.: $15.00
M. M. O. with order. Joe C.
Styles, Tallapoosa.

Klondike strawberry plants.
$2.00 M.: 6 Red Golds with ea.
Mrs. Pear]
Pinson, Ellijay. Rt. 2.

Early J. and Chas. W. frost
proof cabbage plants, 300, 50c:
500, 85c; $1.25 M. del. Tomato
plants, Apr. del., oat 50 M. R.
Chanclor, Pitts.

Klondike strawberries, 20c C.-
Garlic 15c doz.: Catnip punches,
10 ea.; 4 sage plants, 30c; %
gal. sage, 30c; Yellow cactus
burrs, 5 ea. All postpaid. Mrs.
W. H. Allen, Lithonia, Rt. 3.

Kiondike strawberry plants,
$1.00, 500: $1.75 M.: Lady T.
$1. 50, 500; $2.00 M. Libson Al-
len, Gainesville, Rte 2:

Klondike strawberry plants,
25e C.: $1.40, 500: $2.00 M.: Big
peach plums, -BOc ea.: 3, $1.00;
Old fashioned Bluc Damson
plum, 30c ea.: 6, $1.00; Hore-
hound, 25c doz. Miss Grace
Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1. _

Texas Wonderberry (Biack-:
berry) large berries and lots of
them. Time to plant now. 24
nice plants, postpaid, $1.00;
Extra size, 36 plants, $2.00.
Prompt shipment. Satis. guar.
se M. Rockel, Thomasville, Rt.

"Klondike strawberry plants,
25 C.: $1.40, 500; $2.00 M.: Big
peach plum, 50c ea.; 3, $1.00;
Old fashioned Blue Damson
plum, 30c ea.: 6, $1.00: Hore-
hound, 25c doz. Mrs. A. D.
Jones, Cumming, Re:

Sage plants, $1.35; Jewel and
Gibson . Strawberries, for sale.
Ance Grindle Dahlonega, Rt 4;
Box 58.

Klondike strawberry plants,
25c C.: $2.00 M. Prompt. ship-
ment. Mrs. ee Flow-
ery Branch, Rt.

Chas. and ao J., Wakefield
cabbage; white and yellow Ber-
muda onions, $2.50 M.: Yellow
and white, red onion sets, 40c
qt.; $1.25 gal. All kinds. crowd-
er peas, 15c Ib. del. Ovie Crow,
Gainesville.

Rutgers tomato plants, now

| ready, $3.00 M. Write for prices

on bigger, lots. J. C. Hinson,
Pelham. |

Lady T. strawberry plants,
30c C.; $2.50 M.;
berg blackberry, 6, 50c: Pepper-
mint, garden horsemint, dbl.

25 doz.; Black walnut meat,

pines Fett,

Plant Giant New Gem real
everbearing strawberry plants |
this spring, pick strawberries
this year, July until December.
100 plants, $1.15; 200, $2.15;
300, $3.00: 500, "$4. 50 prepaid.
GA: Dobbs, Gainesville, Box
os

Blakemore sttayiceey
25c C.3 tansy, 25c cee
cherry trees, 15 ea.; >. 25e;
Old fashioned sweet apple
trees, 20c ea.; Send postage.

a ants,

nga, Rt. 1, Box Die

Imp., Insp. and. cert. P. EB.
me by wire or letter as to day
of shipment and price. H. V.

Hall, Ocilla.

Thousands. cartota: leebure
lettuce, Rutabaga, Kale, Ber-
muda onions, Parsley, Endive.
Beets, Parsnips, 35c C.; $3.00 M.

Docs
Mrs. H.

pers, Eggplants. 2 doz.,
60c C.; $5.00 M. del.
V. Franklin, Register.

Mastodon strawberry plants,
$1.25. 500: $2.50 M.: Nice young
well rooted. Prompt shipment.
Mrs. Fannie Darracoctt, Cum-
MINS eI

Lucretia Dewbe sYiy, $1:007 C3
$7.50 M.; Large rooted Kudzu
semesan treated, $2.00 C.: Ce-
-lestial Fig cuttings, Himalaya |
| blackberry, 25. $1.00: $3.00 C..
Postpaid. Exe. some. for pure
Saanen Goat. J. W. Toole,
Macon, 33 Burton Ave.

CATTLE FOR SALE



-

2 fresh heavy milkers at my



sale. L. C.

eash in for booking orders. Mrs.-

/one with 8rd. calf.

White Ice- |

tansy, white and red yarrow, |

50c Ib. Mrs. Willis Grindle, Dah- eR

May

Mrs. Luther . Turner, Dahlo-

potato plants. Get in touch with Ee

Booking orders Tomatoes. Pep-_

-|dJand. Rt. 1.

2 nice Jersey heavy springers
for sale. H. C. Waldrep, For-
sytho te:

A 10 mos. old, Guernsey bull,
large, for sale, $75.00. Mrs. T.
R. Jett, Decatur, R. 2. (On
Montreal Rd., near Clarkston).

Extra good, young Jersey
milch eow with 2nd calf, fresh-
ened in Dec., $125.00, FOB
without calf. On proper feed
should give around 4 gals. day.
Easy to milk, gentle, good but-
ter cow. Frank Cain, Buford.
Be2:

Two. 16 mos. old. Reg. Here-
ford bulls for sale. W. G. Neis-
Jer, Reynolds, care Neisler Es-
tate.

One full stock Jersey bul
wt. about 550 Ibs., about 18
mos. old, entitled to reg. $75.00
at barn. A. B. Norris, Wrights-
ville, R. 1.

Two, fresh in milch eows for
sale. One with Ist calf and
H: C->Bar-
rett, Noreross, New Buford

Hwy. R. 1.

110 bu. 90 day running
Speckled velvet beans, $2.75
bu. at my barn. Eo E:-Smith,
Wadley.

1 nice Hereford heifer, due
to freshen soon, $55.00; 16 mos.
old Hereford male, $40.00; very
fine Jersey-Hereford male, 9
mos. old, $35.00; Fine Guern-
sey- -Hereford male (sire reg.,
Guernsey) 7 mos. old, $25.00.

*! Mrs. J. W. Jenkins, Columbus,

1001 Oakview Ave.



HOGS FOR SALE



A. 9 mos. old, O. I. C. Boar,
wt. 225 lbs.. $40.00, entitled to
reg. Or wil] trade for Brood
sow, same breed or Poland Chi-
na. Bring sow and get boar.
3 mi. S: Summerville _on: Lyer-
ly paved Rd. Roy T. Baker,
Summerville,

Extra fine O. I. . pigs, ready.
to wean March 20, at reason-
able price. Lewis a Jones,
Fayetteville, tes 3%

2 young bred PC sows.
750-175 Ibs. ea. 1 to farrow
Mech. . 15th, other Apr. Ist.
$40.00 for poth. Also 1 male
and 1 gilt O. I. C., 4 mos. old,
$10.00 ea. at my farm. Berry
M. Moon, Shiloh, R. 1, Box 125.:

=~? pboar. shoats, O. I. C..and
Guinea, $16.00, FOB. Will not
ship: Also want to buy a good
mule, must be for cash. R. E.
Hyde, Douglasville, R. 2.

One 2-3 Duroc Jersey 200-
225 lb. gilt, bred with a pure-
bred Duroc male, bring Digs
April 14th. $35.00 cash. J.
McLeod, Valdosta, R. 3, Box 37,

2 little bone. black African
Guinea pigs, 14 wks. old. $12.06
ea. Life treated or Cholera,
Also 4 mules, ages from 8-11
mos. old, $75. 00 to $200. 00. O.
i, Sinquefield, Harrison,

* 8 nice 10 wks. old Guinea

pigs, $5.00 ea. Will not ship.
Sell to trucks only. Good breed,
serubs. Frank Redfern,
Mitchell, Rv 3. 2% miles from
Mitchell, : s

1 Duroc and Blk. Essex sow
pig. 9 mos. old, ready to breed.
about 100 Ibs. wt.. $20.00; 1
Barrow, same litter, about 85
TOS $4500; Also 3 pigs, 12
wks. old, $24.00. at my farm.
Cant ship. Cash 6 mi. E.
Roberts, on Hwy- 22, K.-S.
Lindsey, Lizella, R. 1, Bx, 196.

- 5. Big Bone Black . African
Guinea pigs, 8 wks.

ped. $15.00 ac FOB? 3H.
Brewer, Danielsville.
Spotted Poland China pigs,
3 males and 1 gilt (out of lit-
ter of 9) $12.50 ea, without
papers; or $13.25 reg. in buy-
ers name. 8 wks. old. March
9th, wt. 35-40 lbs: ea. 50c
extra for treating if pigs ship-
ped. R.C. Sewell, Jr., Puifski.

Reg. Spotted Poland China
boars, 5 mos. old, $35.00 ea. at:
farm. Mrs. . Richard Tift, Al-
bany, The Oaks, Newton Road.

1 Reg. blocky type spotted |
Poland China male hog. wt.
about 125 lbs., for sale. Mrs.
A. T. Russ, Nicholls. Re22;

5 males, 1 gilt. blocky type,
Duroe Jersey pigs, farrowed
Hee: e 143 1942: Wt. approx. 40
lbs., reg. in buyers name,
SPH: 00. Shipped exp. col. Clifton
Wurst; Ochlochnee, R. 2.

10 African big bone Guinea
pigs, also 10 pigs, half O. I,
C., and half big bone Guinea,
$7.50 ea., also old time running
Clay peas, $3.00 bu.; sev. bu.
Texas Blue Ribbon cane seed,
$3.00 bu. L. C. Glaze, Cleve-

. Cc:

9 black and auhite Poland
Glin: pigs, 2% mos. old, $6.00



barn, also 2 heavy springers for.
il e .JJr., Plains.

ea. =) my ae J. E, Pilcher,

=e

also 2 Saanen males

old; 2}

males, 3 gilts, treated and ship- ase ride,



SHEEP AND GOAT.
FOR SALE



Nubian | does,
around April Ist. Must se
once. Acc. any reasonab
fers. A. S. Horner, Dunwo
Call Ch. 6060, Atlanta.

At Stud Purebred

ance and _ breeding.
the American Goat a4
Ear] S. Redwine, Madras.

Fresh milk goat, 2nd kidd
giving 2. aqts., $15.00: Yo
doe to freshen, $10.00.
fine buck, $3.00 for quick
Come and see. J. E. M
Hightower. Rd.. N. W., -k
ta (3rd house on Hol
Rd).

French Alpine billy goa
yrs. old, naturally hornles:
200. Ibs., pure milk stock
sale or trade for anythins
use. Make offer. 2
ham, Rockmart, R. 2:

Dry milk goat, half. Nu
half Toggenburg, When ;
gives 2 qts. daily. $8.0
trade for pigs. Mrs. Ge
Malcolm, Atlanta, 191
dale Ave., N. E. Phone

One

almost thorough

Nubian doe, gave 3. ats.

freshening. Sacrifice for |
Mrs. J. C. Brumbelore, Atl
ta. 2921 Lookout Pl. Pho
7214, =

One large fine black
Ram, 12 mos. old (big
wool), $20.00; or exc. for
lambs, 5 mos, old, of
| breeding. Also want ge
ram lamb in exc. for one 3
old for a breeder. Mrs.
Ryan, Tallapoosa.

Saanen milk goat and
male goat, 1 yr. old, for
or exchange for shoat or |
Leghern hens. Mrs.
Portwood, Forest Park,
CA. 1483. ea

2 Soar milk gone
ant
Guernsey heifer (cow) 11 n
old, and 20 large, fat h
any reasonable price.

out. D. A. Bagley, Austel
eis Box 2. Phone 3201.



HORSES AND MUL!
FOR SALE

2 mules: We 1000 lbs. e
sale. S. T. Spruill, Dun N

Black with white s
colt, 6 mos. old, good bloc
make 00d saddle horse,
at my farm; Also 1,000
yr old, Bay mare, in fo
large jack, $150.00. R. I.
ey. Valdosta. R24 =

One half Spanish and
Mammoth Jack about 1:
old, wt. about 950 Ibs
black with white pours
show some good colts.

E. A. Hollis, Reynolds

One _ five- -gaited Ke
mare, 6 yrs. old: one
see Walker mare, 5.

with eq uipment.

FOB. Fred A. Long,
Roswell. Phone +3531.

Sek plug mule, works g
where, $15. 00. M. B. Bo
Sylvania, Re 2.0 ey

_ 10 yr. old mule, no b
wt. around 1200 Ibs., ve 0
A. Smith, Gainesville J

3 yr. old horse, aoe
to lead with halter, $7
at my place. Exc. fo

-pbred heifer or a mul

Wilbanks, Ramhurst. :

5 yr. old mare, br ke
bring colt in
$150. 00. Lewis eee ee
Rt... :

St

par ea



CATTLE WANTED: |

in Aug. and Sept. |
age, wt., date to fresh
price. Charles Combury
tell, R22.

- Want to buy a co
Around Smyrna or M
reasonable. Pay $25.0
bal. monthly. TW.
a Atlanta, 208 Powell

Want a oct work Ox.

wick, Rt. 1, Blythe

HOGS WANTED:

~ Want one pair of male
shire pigs, 6-8 wks. old,
dius of 10 mi. of Lula
price and what you fk
Ist letter. H, A. Garns
Want 2 fen :
reg. in pee nam
ed, must be good.
by, Atlanta, 44.
Phone MA. 038:







nt etait nose Big Bone
ssex male pig. from 2-4
old. _ Registered. Chas. L.

Ul

3BITS| AND CAVIES

NTED::

ant several. young rabbits
= lf-grown Cavies. State
d breed in first letter. J.
ey, Griffin, Rt. DP:

;. White bred does, 1
red ners all matured

also Tenn. Walking
Also want. purebred

Ast yr., kept pure.



: Cokers 100 Str. 3 cottonseed,

in bags, FOB shipping point.
$4.00 CWT bulk at Bostwick.
Cash.H. ; Eckles, Bostwick.

Nice lot: of D&PL_ cotton-
seed, Ist yr., sound, clean, 40
per. cent lint, $1.35 bu. Grady
Adams, Social Circle,

Cokers 200 cottonseed, $1.50
bu., FOB. Mrs. L. A. Holmes,
Ranger.

* Cokers 4-1 cottonseed, kept

pure at gin, $1.25 bu.. FOB,

. Strange, Cobbtown. R22

D & P L cottonseed (1150 Ibs.
make 500 lb. bale), 1-32 in.
staple, $4.50 CWT. L. D. Har-
ris, sateen Re 2:



, white ang buff Cochin |:
ms. R. G. Henderson, Au-
-84713th St.

swap nice fat Boar
Must be good worker

oe to handle. Write
_ Waycross. R38;





; eer one-eared type,
. yellow seed corn, 60c pk.:
00 bu. H. L. Fry, Rabun
-eare Rabun Gap- Naicoo-

astings yellow prolific seed
grown in isolated field.

.d, nubbed and shelled or
$1.00 pk, FOB. Also

te half runner bean seed,
ery tender, known as the ice
n, 25c cupful. E. L. Fow-

Re j



%

COTTONSEED FOR



-Stoneville 2-B cotton-

2d. ist yr.. privately ginned
nd recleaned, $1.40 bu.; Sta-
le 1 1-16 in., made 619 Ibs.
a acre. Riley G-Couch,

cottonseed,
ceessive | ee from Co-
rs No. 100. Long staple, ear-
ly and prolific, $5.25 per CWT.

50 bar D&PL ieee. act
fermination 89 per cent,

ed and treated jn sks. 100

5.00 for Sk.. FOB. F. T.
Brinson, Waynesboro.

neville 2-B, ist yr., kept
yure at one var. gin. Reclean-
ed ang Ceresan treated. 100 lb,
ags, $6.00 CWT, FOB, Jones-
boro or College Park. M. O. or
Cashiers chk. with order. Royst
Ray, Fayetteville, Ri. 3.

neewall 2D st yr,
var. ginned, culled, cleaned,
graded and Ceresan treated,
pure aa perfect. $6.00. een)
FOB. J. H. Beasley, Lavonia. :

ae 100 cottonseed. Str.
st yr. kept pure at gin,
staple pulls, 1 1-16 in., $5.00
per CWT. Germination 90 per
cent; (made 21 bales on 17
acres last year). Also some
ecia seed, free from dodder,
arified, 16c lb; W. T. Allen,
Janielsville, Reak

Stonewall No. 2-B. cotton-
seed, ceresan treated, 98 per
cent germination, $1.75 bu.;
D&PL, recleaned and Ceresan
100 bu. lots: R. L. Marchman,

: Ft. Valley.
; Rhynes Cook and Rhynes
- wilt-resistant Strain of Stone-
ville cottonseed for sale by
de C27. Rhyne. Ameri-

one

Scie oe -Cokers souonsckdt de-
linted and treated. wilt resist-
ant, $4.50 for lot or exchange.
FOE Mrs, Will Howell, Mitch-

le

Coker 100 Str. 5, pure, sound

tonseed, staple 1 1-32 in.,

.00 CWT, FOB: Reqd Ripper
and brown eye. table peas, ea.

lightly mixed with the other,

sli
very prolific, long pods, $3.00
1, FOB. N. E. Reid, Hart-'

ut rain, 42 per cent lint. $5.50
: hens | 10 or ee nice, ak Hs



16 del;

| setting. Exc. 60 eggs

EGGS FOR SALE

ee |
AAAA Be OR.
from best layers the world has
ever known, now laying, full
production, $1.50 per 15. Post-
age extra. M. O. only, no
chks. Now - booking orders.

Pierce Davis, Marietta, R. 2.

Big Toulouse goose eggs,
(avg. 4 0z. or more ea, egg),
sel. good eggs, 5 eggs, $1.75,
del; Also pure big. bone, broad
breasted, Mammoth Bronze
turkey eggs. $4.00 doz. del.;
Little type bantam eggs, $75
per doz. Carefully packed and
prompt shipment. Mrs. Boyd
Baggett, Douglasville. Hie tye

Hatching eggs from pure Tait
Claiborne Games, $2.50 per 15
by parcel post. These are from
Simon pure _ Claibornes.
game. Breeding stock over 2
yrs. old.. T: S. Visscher. De-
catur, 711 Church St.

Fine Brown 2 yr. old scup-
pernong vines, 25c ea., $2.50
doz.; Figs, Blue Turkey, 25 and
35c ea., with 8c extra postage:
Celestial, 25c and 30c ea., 8c
extra for postage.
ett COM -Dwight. Atlanta,
1035 Capitol Ave., S. W.

B. L. eggs, 75c per 15. Guar.
fresh. Prompt del. Mrs. S. R.
Harden, Surrency.

Mammoth Bronze Turkey
ges, 35c ea. Hens all large and
eggs are now ready for hatch-
ing. Mrs. Olin W. Patterson,
Lumpkin.

AAA grade Blue Andalusian
errs, $2.00 setting. Mrs. W. L..
Treadway, Adairsville.

Purebred B. L. eggs, $1.25 per
setting, bloodtested. Everlay
strain. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson,
Lavonia.

Everlay B. L. eggs from
bloodtested hens, $1.00 per 15;
$6.00 C. postpaid. Mrs. H. A.



} Wilson, Martin, Rt. 2.

Eggs from fine B. R. (Some
Parks Str.), $1.50 per 16, pre-
paid. All good. Ben Crawley,
Rociak Circles:

Purebred Buff Orp., eggs,
$1.00 per 15 postpaid. Crates
ret. Miss Ronie Johnson, ete
man, Rt. 1.

Purebred N. H. Red (stock
from Hubbard) eggs, $1.50 per
15. "No chks. Mrs. N. Overby,
euidersrile, 315 South Harris
S !

Dark Cornish eggs, $1.00 per
also 1 purebred Pape
str. cockerel, $1.25, or exc.. for

16 purebred "Pape str. Minorca.
eggs del. Miss Leona Simpson, |

Culverton, Rt. 1.

- AAA, W. 1. eggs for setting.
Flock pullorum tested. certifi-
cate on them., 75c per 15, come
and get them. No shipment,
except if party furnishes crates,
pay shipping chgs. J. A. For-
tenberry, Adairsville. R. 3.

Booking orders for Mammoth
Broad breasted Bronze turkey
eggs, $3.25 doz.; Postpaid. Apr.
del. You ret. carton. Mrs. L. W.
Seago, Pinehurst.

Fancy Blacktail Jap. Bantam
eges, $1.25 per 15 del. H. A.
Stahl, Moultrie.

Purebred single comb, B. L.

eges,75e per 15: Robert High- |

land, Lavonia, Rt. 3k:

Purebred AA W. . eges
from fine parents, $1.25 per
for 24
broadbreastead bronze turkey
eges, fresh for hatching. Mrs.
Ethel Jones, Lula, Rt. 2.

Giant .S. C. Black Minorca
setting eggs, from small pen
of sel. breeders. 28 to 32 ozs.
to the doz. $2.00 per 15. L. B.
Millians, Newman.

Jersey White Giant eggs, sel.
from large flock, $1.50 setting.
Also slightly mixed table peas,
tan sugar crowders and _ red
speckled crowders, 10c lb.; Lady
peas, 15c lb. No Jess than 50c
orders acc. Moline M. Landrum,

: | Adairsville, Rt. 3 :

--1$1.00 per 15.
$4.25 CWT |

seth eggs

dead |

All 2% to

.Curd Walker,

:
ay
oe



~ Purebred Partridge rock eggs
No chks. ee
Ethel Lee Smith, Martin. Wt...

Porebeed dark Gornicy game

eggs: Hens wt. 5-7 lbs. roosters,

9-11 Ibs., $1.00 per 15, Postpaid.
Cartons to be ret. Mrs. Fred
Johnson, Dawson, R. 2, Box
152.

I am booking orders for quail
eggs, 10c ea. Also Bantam
hens, 75c ea. Mrs. T. W. All-
good, Atlanta, 1169 Arlington
Ave; S Wo RA 7266. =.

range flock, $1.50 per 15. Quo-
tations on larger lots are re-
quested. Prompt shipment by
parcel post. Moline M. Lan-

drum. Adairsville.

Purebred hatching ets eons

large heavy laying N. H.: Al-

so Parks Strain B. R. "eggs, 85c
per 15: $1.50 per 30. Postpaid.
William Jesse, Gainesville. R. 4.

AAAA B. L. eggs. $1.00 per
15: Domesticated Mallard Duck
eggs, $1.00 per 15: Also booking
orders for Bronze Turkey eggs
and Silver and Golden Pheas-
ant eggs. Mrs. Helen R. Street,
Atlanta, 849 Vedado Way. N. Ee

Velvet pure N. H. Red eggs,
75e per 16 del.. Mrs..C.-G -Cal-

lahan, Blackshear, R. 2.

Sel. setting eggs from pure-
bred Reds. bred from unrelated
Donaldsons males, $1.00 per 15
del. Mrs. C. Lynch, Rome, R.
i

eggs, $1.25 per.15 eggs: Box to
_be ret. Also will exc. for pect:,
velvet beans, soybeans, sor-
ghum seed. & C. Edmundson,
Temple, _

Thompson. Ringlet Rocks,
hatching eggs from bloodtested
hens, $1.00. per 15. Maybell
Wilson, Martin, R. 2.



INCUBATORS AND
BROODERS FOR SALE



2 Buckeye hot water Inc., one
is 300 cap., $10.00; other, 250
cap., $20.00. W. Ww. Parrish,
Carrollton, Rie;

A 5 unit elec., starting bat-
tery for baby chicks and 2
finishing units, $60.00. Wryley
Dunnaway, Decatur, DE. 8082.

Incubator, 2000 egg cap., runs
by Ker., or hot water, for sale,
we L. Cousins, Sr, Decat: SLY kee

D.

A 400 egg cap. Super Hatcher
Inc., in perfect cond., ker. and
hot water. heated. Reasonably
priced. Mrs. . Otis.
Statesboro, Rt. tT

1000 egg cap., Inc., 4 in 1,
oil burner, also 2- H. section
drag harrow, other poultry and

for farm products. H. E. Den-
ham, Atlanta, 845 York Ave.,
Ss. W., Ra. 7717. 2

100 chick cap., alec: brooder,
6.95: also 100 chick
brooder with heat control, $9.65.

|S. M. Stout, Warm Springs.

500 chick size pot type oil
-burning brooder in good cond-
ition, $10.00. bert Hendrix,
Summerville, Rt 4.



INCUBATORS AND
BROODERS WANTED



er, 100 chick size, elec. heated;
also have.for sale, 1
Brown Hen incubator.
Deane, Waycross, 411 Albany
Ave.

Want an inc., 100 to 200 cap.,
at bargain. Electric preferred.
State full particulars first let-
ter. H. A. Colley, Tifton, Rt. 2.

Want small size oil and elec.
~brooders. Quote best cash price
del. L. H. Wynn, Woodland.

Want coal burning brooders.
State price, age, make and cap.,
must be in good. cond. Mrs. Fred
Shivers, Cuthbert.

Want battery brooders and
feeder equipment for broiler

| plant, also finishing batteries.

Fred Barber, Atlanta, 2511 For-
est Way, N. E.



HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE

~

~ One, 30 gat bbl. of poplar

}and gum honey, 12c lb. FOB.

my station (not candied); Also
want beeswax del. to me at 40c
Ib., dark wax, 30c to 35c Ib.
Norristown.

New & frame hives, glass ob-
servation and supers. ready to
insert bees, $5.00 ea. J. A. Manr

ley, SUAS: ane Flora Ave., N.



eS . . wanes

_ Jersey White Giant eggs Seon :

Aristocrat B. R. hatching '

Groover, |

400 aL pure a cane. yi ee
GOURDS WANTED:

90c gal. here. |
hor

in 5 Ib. cans,
Will not ship.
Lenox, Rt. 1.

600 gal. pure Ga. cane syrup,
6-10 Ih. eans to case, $5.50.
Exec. for seed hay noes velvet
beans or a hay. J. B. Mills,
Hazlehurst.

Pure | A Grade Ga.
syrup in new bbls.
Come =o live 7 mi.
Marlow.
low.

125 gal. P. O. J. cane syrup
in % gal. cans, $1.00 gal. cash.
G. Ben Wilson, Rebecca.

Two new 1942 bbls. of P. O.

Cate
for sale.
East of
Se ree Mar-

J. cane syrup, $25.00 bbl., FOB.
Bessie
oo Whigham, Rt. 2, Box.

shipping point. Mrs.

About 250 gal. pure Ga. cane
syrup; all the old time red and

_| Ribbon cane syrup, $1.00 gal.

in gal. cans.
ton, Rt. 1.

4 or 500- gal. A-1 Ga. cane
syrup, 90c gal. at my farm. Do

J. G. Hively, Guy-

not order by rail: Also several

thousand stalks of seed cane of

different var., consisting of

large grey cane, $2.00 per 100

oS To be del. -at my farm.
. J. Walker, Milan.



FRESH AND CURED
oe FOR ee



Homecured meat, Norge hams
40c Ib.: Shoulders and middling,
35c Ib. Add postage; Also 1 P.
C. male, ent. to reg. without

papers, $45. 00; 1 sow already
bred, $45.00; $85. 00 for the two.

eee Js Garner, Felton, Rt.



FRUIT AND BUTTER
FOR SALE :



' Good, nice, techs butter,
can furnish 2 Ibs., week, 50c
Ib. postpaid. Mrs. of T. Thax-
ton, Franklin, RES si

GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE





2 tons Peanut bee $10.00 ton
at barn on C. J. Browns place,
1 mi. South Abba, 9 mi. West
Fitzgerald. - J. Hubbard, Fitz-
gerald, Rt. :

500, 4m. ree bundle sadder
$2.50 per 100 bundles at barn.
1-4 mi. So. Madras. Olin B.
Moore, Newnan, Rt. 2. t



MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED



farm tools, for sale or trade}

elec. :

er : 2,
Want 1 single section brood- |

Little:



CANE WANTED:
Want to hear from parties
with ribbon.cane and P. O. J.

for apie: Bio. ests College
Re: :

CHUFAS WANTED:

Want chufas. State price and

| how many. ony D. Newton,

Millen. |

CORN WANTED: :
Want 5 bu. sound, Whatleys

pres seed corn. Quote prices.
. A. Gaskins, Willacoochee.

Want 100 bu. corn at best
price. O. M. Smith, Decatur, Rt.
Phone Clarkston 4134.

Want to get in touch with
someone who has Mulberry pro-
lific seed corn. for sale. Must
be reasonable. W. M. Whited,

Thomson, Rtas

EGGS WANTED:

Want to buy purebred B. R.
hatching eggs.
tails regarding your flock. Mrs.
J. W. Neal, Rossville, Rt. 1.

Want to exc: homemade to-
bacco and mixed gourd seed
for purebred Turkey and chick-
en eggs at market price. Write
what you have. Robert L. Cart-
er, Lawrenceville.

CURED MEAT WANTED:

Would like to have country
ham, will pay 35c Jlb.- Mrs.
James E. Fargson, Atlanta, Rt.
7, Box. 302

SACKS WANTED:

Want to hear from parties
who have print feed sacks: will
give 15c ea. Write.. Mrs. Davis
McAdams, Buchanan, Rt. 2,
Box 77.

POTATOES WANTED:

Want to hear from someone
who has white flesh seed sweet
potatoes for sale. Early Tri-
umph or any good var. of white
es Walter Dobson, Calhoun,
Rtii-2:

APPLES WANTED:

Want old fashioned cheese
apples. Write sending prices.
Mrs: E. M. Clark, Ai iier, P. O.
poe * : =

Harris, :

| best price.
-Auburn, Rt, 1.

age pd.;

Write full de-|



[Rt 2



~ Want about 1 doz.
gourds, about 1% to 2 ga.
State price ang how sh
Mrs. T. N. Allen, Rom
FODDER WANTED: |

Want to buy 1200. bund
fodder from someon
Canton. E, B, Gaddis._
Rt 4255
GINSENG WANTED:

Want Ginseng,
prices at once. Mrs. L. _
vis, Columbus. 7
FEATHERS WANTED: ~

Want 8 or 10 lbs. of
duck or goose feathers. Q
Mrs. A.-R. C

Want to hear from par
having new or practicalh
geese or duck feathers that
perfectly sanitary; Wi

equa] value for 5 or 6. Tbs.:

pay postage on what t
Rt 3 ee Corrells,
I.

GOURDS WANTED:

Want a yard long hand
gourd and eanteen gourd. Als
others. Mrs. T. K.
Folkston.

BEANS AND PEAS
WANTED: oe,

Want 4% bu. White M h
seed. Quote price first lette
F. Zittrow, Clyo.

Want to buy 100 Ibs. Sug:
Crowder peas. Ramsey Shi
ley, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.

Want 1 bu. purple 1
peas. F.C. Taylor, Jet erso
ville, Rt. 1.

Want at once some
velvet beans. State price. Als
want Chufas, Henderson un
butterbeans, white Ligh nis
or White velvet. ORF.

crower peas to ate must |
true to name, at 12c jh., -
;-Or exc. 2 ]bs..-ce
putterbean seed for 4 Ib Pp
Send ae Nets

Want to buy 10-20 lbs. di
apples. State what you h

duality and kind of app

Corron SEED WANT
Want few bu. of genui

and half cotton seed. Adv 4

once. Mrs. Bessie Teuton, Dous

las); Rt.- 3:

FRUIT WANTED: ; :

Exchange White Chicken |
sacks for nice dried apple
blackeyed peas. Sacks, 126
O. S. Duggan, Chester.

PLANTS WANTED
Would like to exchang

50 plants of any var.
Ea. pay. postage. Mrs,
Walker, McRae, Rt. A,

BEANS AND PEAS
WANTED:

Want 5: bu. pure Brabha:
peas. Quote lowest cash pri
B. F. Fagan, Martin.

WALNUT AND PECAN
MEATS* WANTED:
Want to buy plack |
pecan and peanut meats 10
est price. A. B. Fokes
Grange, 204 Broad St.

GRASS WANTED: |

Want 10 Ibs., of Carpet ra,
for hog pastures. Write pri
at once. Mrs. N. T. Meas
Doerun, Rt. 2.

GRAIN AND HAY WA: TED:
Want loose or baled
grade Legume ey

.| Adams; Prana

CH. 1087...

ROOTS AND. HERBS
WANTED: =

. Want 6 oz. or more of Gin-
seng. Mrs. H. S. Cordell, Rock:
Springs. :

Want prickly ash Ceo
root, Burdock. Mary OM

Chattahoochee.

CORN WANTED: _
Want to buy 50 bu. e

within 25 mi. Tucker.

Pierce, Decatur, Rt. 2.

FRESH AND CURED
MEATS WANTED:

Want 2 closely tri
country hams, wt. 15 to 20 7B.
D. W. Boone, Newnan.

CHUFAS WANTED: .

Want to buy 2 bu. Chufas and
2 bu. Artichokes. Write, quo
best prices. W. M. Hicks, At-
Janta, 116 Whitehall St., S. Ww.

PECANS WANTED:

Want 5 Ibs. good paper hell
pecans: Also print feed sacks.
Write me what you have
give del. prices. Miss M

Rhodes, Baldwin, Box 1

CORN WANTED:

Want to hear
nee pure Tenn. Red
corn. E. B. Kittle, Tall poosa,



MISCELLANEOUS
"WANTED



i Beans AND PEAS
WANTED:

Want to buy 2 or 3 bu. bunch
velvet beans. Mrs. Ruth Chap-
man, Butler.

~ Want 10 or 12 bu. good field

eas, prefer the Unknown or
Rew Era, Give best price. C. W.
Maxey, Summerville.

Want to buy 40 Ibs. haby
ima butter beans. Cyrus Peter-
son, Hilton, Rt. 1.

. Want some bunch: velvet

ans to replant skips in corn.

Also want to exch. some nice

seedling pecans for dried ap-
Je A. Kimberly, Empire.

Want. 1 bu. old fashioned
Bunch speckled field peas.
Write. J. M. Hertz, Scotland.

_ Want 2 settings of purebred
Grist Grady Game eggs. Tom
Smith, Meigs.

_ Exe. 50 small flour and feed
sacks for seting of B. R. eggs.
ee R. C. Ingram, Covington,

wt

_ Want a few fowl eggs from
or more year old fowls. State
. Also pigeons for sale, 35c

head, Rot:
LANTS WANTED:
ant 100. tomato plants by
> 45th of. March: small,
e ng plants will be all right.
ri

ite at once. W. R. Leverett,
olumbus, Rt. 1.

Want 5000 P. R. red skin po-
plants. Gov. insp. to be
lel. April 15. W. D. Reynolds,
avannah, 2005. Meldon St.

BEE SUPPLIES WANTED:
ant 5 or 10 bee gums, pat-
ives with brooder and
, with frames. State cash
e, FOB. shipping point.
L. J. Walker, Rt. A, Box

DRIED FRUIT WANTED:
Want to exc. white feed
cks, washed but all printing

removed, for dried apples,

pe: ches or apricots. 2 sks. for
ib. fruit. Send fruit, will

: ot aie ooke Sloan, Pel-

nt dried apples and peach-
ny quantity. State price
amt. s. Agnes Ham-
mond, Summerville. :

TREES WANTED:
Want one-half dozen Raisin
ach trees. Mrs. F. B. Murphy,
shallville. :

Want sprouts, well rooted, of
earing or Evverbearing Mul-
cry _trees. Answer at once.
irs. E. Thomason, Hast
nt, 1218 North Main St.

eid. time on potatoes:
i ABE: ne _ Gor-

st price, F
hite Giant young pullets and
hens, now laying. Fred Barber,

\

nt % bu. Pratts Prolific
8. C, Yeager, Moreland,

; -

(iD WANTED: :

ant Benne Seed, small
i i Ww. B. Wise,

\

\ eet 10 lbs. Honey oes Sor-
am seed; Also 10 M. ee

t old fash. white ice bean
if only enough to get seed
for next oo Mrs. John

it wk or halt- bo of.

a, seed. pa oe H. R.
ell, Baxley,

peafowl eggs.

Pp when ready;
1so- want 20 purebred Bour-
01 ed Turkey eggs, quote
ice del. All mail ans. Herbert
dfern, ee P. O. Box



: ISCELI SALE

Z

lack walnuts ia hull,
. J. N. Carson, Grif-

e clean Sheep wool, $1.00
a eH OSIARE. Bunyon
Dia

le k walnut meats, 35c pint:

S, $i. 00; Also. yellow
7S slipper, ;
s sli er, Alt doz. Mrs.

-6 lbs.,



MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE



Sassafras roots, wild cherry
bark, maple bark, 20c lb.; pep-
permint, catnip, horehound,
houseleak, 25c doz. plants: Also
Snowdrift. bulbs,-15c doz.; Exe.
for Garden seed or anything can
use. Mrs. G. C. Hester, Dah-
leonega, Rt. 1.

Rattle, yellow, sassafras
roots, 25c lb.: Spicewood, roct
or bark, 50c Ib.; Wild cherry
bark, 25c lb.; Catnip, hore-
hound, pepvermint, 25 doz.:
Garlic bulbs, 40c. doz: Mrs.
Martha White, Dahlonega, Rt.
1, Box 37.

Yellow root, insagiead ele-
campane roots, 25c 1b.; Red gold
and Jewell strawberry plants,
4Qc C.; Mastodons, 35c.: Catnip,
peppermint, tansy, garden
horsemint, 25c doz. del. in Ist
and 2nd zone. Miss L. M. White,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 35.

Bu. gourds, grow to 36 in.
in circumference: Also long
crook neck Martin gourds for
sale or exchange. Also for sale
or exchange in part unlimited
supply 97 per cent organic Peat
Humus, free from noxious de-
feets. Pulverized and shredded.
Chas. A. Stone, Sylvania, Rt. 3.

Black Walnuts, large size,
1942 erop, hulled, clean, . $1.00
bu. Prompt shipment. Mrs. J.
M. Marshall, Talbotton, Rt. 1,
Box 61.

Barks and herbs: Sweet gum
bark, 25c lb.: Yellow root, 15c
lb.: Catnip, 40c bunch; Rats-
bone, 40e lb.; Wild cherry bark,
10c lb. Add postage. Mrs.. Myr-
tice Barnes, Roswell, Rt. 2.

~ White Clover seed and Dallas
grass seed or seed corn Hybrid
or yellow; Also peanut seed or
cream crowder peas for sale.
Make best offer first letter.
a Hermon Boatright, Alma,
Rt. 4,

100-200 Black Walnut trees,
1 ft. high; Also Spanish seed
peanuts, imp. var.; Pure red
Skin P. R. sweet potatoes. Mar-
ket price. Wont ship. Mrs.
Julia Bryant, Lithonia, Rt. 1,
Box 118.

Peppermint, spearmint, 50c
doz:; Garlic, $1.00 doz.: Rhu-
barb plants, 75e doz. Exc. for
white feed sacks. Mrs. Mattie
McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.

Coltsfoot, bearfoot, Queen
of the meadow, yellow dock,
Burdock, all roots, 20c lb.; Wild
cherry bark, dogwood bark,
15c lb. Add postage. Wayne
Cochran, Pisgah. \

White feed sacks, 100 Ib. cap.,
washed but not bleached, 10c
ea. Add postage. M. O. with
order. Mrs. S. K. Hogue, Hape-
ville. Phone CA. 4907.

Wild cherry bark, 3 lbs., 60c;
Wild plum bark, 4 Ibs., $1. 00;
Poplar and sweet gum bark,
$1.00. Postpaid and in-
sured. Edith Whatley, Fayette-
ville, Rt. 1, Bex: 104,

White Giant Capon and
Bronze turkey feathers, dry
picked, free of wing and tail,
Ib. del. Barbara Lee, Red

ak. ay

All kind herbs; horehound,
yellow root for sale. Write what
you have, will pay postage. Mrs,
alas Barnes, Alpharetta,

Jerusalum artichokes, white
and purple, 7%c Ib.; over 50
Ibs., 5 Ib. Order at once. Also
Whipp crowder and yard long
snap. peas, 25c pt.: Stringless
black seed, Cornfield bean 40c
pt. Add postage. c. W.
Noreross.

Dry sage, 40c pt.; Sage
plants, 8, 50c; $1.75 doz.: Goose-
berries, is 50c; $1.50 doz. All
del. in Ga. Dollie: Blackwell,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Garlic bulbs, 25c doz. H. F.
Seay, Ellenwood, Rt. 2.

Garlic bulbs, 25c doz.; Sassa-
fras, wild cherry: bark, queen of
the meadow, all 20c Ib.: 6 wks.
red valentine beans, 15 cupful;
Mrs. Viola Hollaway, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.

Red sassafras, wild cherry:
bark, queen of the meadow, 25c
Ib.; horseradish (garden goose-
berry), $1.00 doz.; blueberry
plants, 75e doz.; garlic bulbs.,
tansy, peppermint, 15c doz.: - Ky.
Wonder beans, 25c cupful. M.
L. Eaton, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Bearfoot, colts foot, sassa-
fras, May apple, queen of the
meadow, birdock, yellowdock
witchazle, sweet gum, wild
ere all 30c Ib. 5 Ibs., $1.00;
Mrs. R. C. Stover, Pisgah,

ee Se Ib.; 4e. Ib. in
100 Ib. and up lots, FOB. No
order less than 50 Ibs. M. O.
whe order. E. F. Mason, More-
an

Rhubarb, 15c bunch; horse-
radish, 10 bunch. Exe. for

1.00 doz.; Pink -printed feed sacks: as many as

3 alike: 1 Fos for 1 sack. Add
postage. F H. Wright, Ellijay.

Page.

lay or young hens.



MISCELLANEGUS |
FOR SALE



45 or 50 bu. Black Walnuts,
dry but in hull or ee hulled,
35 bu. for lot, FOB. J. B. Lang-
ford, Maysville.

4 or 5 truckloads of cow feed
at a reasonable price at my
home. Also several bushels of
Black walnuts; 50c bu. at my
home in bulk. Albert McKoy,
Newnan, Rt. 1.

Catnip, Elecampane, house,
10c bu.; Spearmint, garlic, lav-
ender, dbl. tansy, yellow root,
Rhubarb, peppermint, for sale.
Postpaid if 50c order or more.
Mrs. L. C. Williams, Cumming,
Rt. 4. ;

POULTRY FOR SALE



ANDALUSIANS AND
AND AUSTRALORPES:

Buff Australorp Baby chicks,
100, $10.00. Less than 100 lots,
add Ie per chick. Also want
2 or 3 lbs. of old fashioned
Collard seed, the kind that
grows 2-3 feet tall. J. QO. Fus-
sell, Dawson,

AAA Blue Andalusians; 1
rooster and 4 hens, 11 mos. old,
3 col., true to breed, blue, black
and white, $10.00. Mrs. John-
ie E. Holland, Collins,

BANTAMS AND
BABY CHICKS:

2 young Sept. hatched yellow
Bantam roosters. 50ce ea. W.
G. Dobbins, Marietta, Box 207.

Black Cochin Bantams, $3.00
pr.; or swap for pair of grown
rabbits. Pit games, $7.50 trios.
or swap for rabbits or ducks.
H. Clayton Garret, Gainesville,
Box 56.

Show quality bantams:; 1 pr.
Modern Rex Pyle, $8.00; Trio of
Dark Cornish, $10.00: Ped. Rac-
ing homer pigeons, $2.50 pr.;:
with pedigree, $3.00 pr. Exc.
lpr. for. pr. ducks... W. KK:
Herndon, Augusta, 1109 Adrian
St

Furebred White face black
Spanish baby chicks, 25, $3.50;
in 100 lots, $12.50; Setting eggs,
$1.50 per setting.
Treadaway, Adairsville, R. 1.

1 golden Sebright Bantam
rooster, 2 yrs. old, for sale or
exc. for 1 of same breed. Mrs.
Frank Parks, Ellijay. R. 3.

Cochin bantams, 1942 hatch-
ed cockerels, $1.00 ea. Mrs,
Lowell Long, Bremen.
BARRED, WHITE AND
OTHER ROCKS:

18 young White Hock hens
and one rooster, $20.00, FOB or
exc. for B. R. or Reds or both,
same amt. Mrs. Minnie Mal-
phus, Tusculum.

1000 young R. O. P. B. R.
pullets, $1.00 ea, FOB my
home Fred A. Long, Roswell,
Box 3531.

Want 50 Partridge Rock ba-
by chicks. - State price and
when can furnish: Mrs. Henry
Noles, Hawkinsville.

Want several 2 yr. old hens:
Barred Rock, R. I. Reds, and
large strain White Leghorn.
Virgil S. Gibson, Atlanta. 1431
Metropolitan Ave. S. E.

2 RB R.. eockerels,
combs, $2.00 for Ist one:
$3.50 for 2;
three. Mrs. J. C. Young; La
Fayette.

15 head fine laying hens, 1
yr. old, B. R: and RR: I. Red
crossed, avg. 6 lbs. ea., 25c Ib.
M. O. Can ship at once. Mrs.
R. M. Smith, Demorest. :
BUTTERCUPS:/

One pair purebred Butter-

or

cups, laying, $3.00 pr. Also set-

ting eggs, same breed, $1.25 per

'15; Eggs fresh bal. of spring

and summer. Mrs. C. R. Sor-
rells, Monroe, R. 1.
CORNISH:

10 purebred Dark Cornish
hens, 1 rooster, $14.00 for lot.
P. OG. money order: No chks.
Mrs. Charlie Peacock, East-
man.

11 tb. Dark Cornish 18 mos.
old rooster, $8.00; Hens to
match, $3.00 ea.; 15 setting
eggs, $1.25; 30. $3.25. Prepaid
C. O. Sikes, Sylvester.

Want to buy 2 Cornish roos-
ters, ready for service. Pay
Se Write what you have

_ W. Vickery, McRae R. 2.

Want 15 young Brown Leg-
horn pullets, just beginning to
. Will pay
$1.00 ea. You pay express, FOB.
Mrs. A. B. Blackstock, Doug-
lasville.

GAMES AND GIANTS:

5 Red Bird Games: 4 hens
and 1 rooster, Apr. hatched,
$7.50. for the lot, crated; but
not prepaid. Mrs. F. KE. ace
a ee Hm +

om

Mrs. Frank |

| grade, $5.00, FOB. Jas. T. Law-

single
or $4.50 for the

+ ed, $1.00 ea.:



) Whigham, RFD.

Wednesday, March YT, 1

POULTRY FOR SALE

POULTRY FOR SAI



One dark blue game cock,
dead game, $3.00; One black
Round head cock, $3.00: Both
are Ist class game cocks. Carl
Griffin, Gainesville, 718 Oak

St.

Pitt Game cocks, )
Guaranteed to win or die.
L.. Patterson, Talking Rock.

Pure white Pyle traveler
cocks, $5.00: hens, $2.50; Other
pit Games, $1.50 up. H. W.
Adams, Douglasville.

$3.00 ea.,
Bi

2 game roosters, Allen Round
Head and Red Quill crossed,
$3.00 ea.: 2 stags, same stock,
$1.50 ea. James C. Bennett,
Duluth, Box 161.

pit Game cocks and
reasonable. Write for
prices. Would exc. for other
fowls. Mrs. M. M. Morgan,
Greensboro.

LEGHORNS:

20 B. L. hens, 1942 hatched,
laying good and 2 roosters of
same age and stock, $20.00 for
lot, FOB, Baxley, C L. Mills,
Surrency.

10 fine purebred B. L. pul-
lets and one rooster, heavy
layers, $14.00 for lot. Joe S.
Pelot, Statesboro, R. 2.

Sacrifice 320 English W. L.
pullets, AAA grade, 8 mos. old,
culled and in full production,
U. S. Appr, and Pullorum test-
ed. Clyde Wright, Ft. Valley,
Dope Hill.

10 AAA Everlay StrB. E.
roosters, Apr. Hatch. $1.00 ea.;
FOB. Claud W. Johnson, R. 2

. 30 English W. L., 18 mos. oid
hens, $1.25 ea.; $35.00: for lot,
FOB. Now laying, 90 per cent.
M. O. only. Mrs. J W. Waters,
Baxley, R 4.

Six White English type Leg-
horn roosters, part of them:
wing banded, $2.50 ea.; Five
N. H. Red roosters, $2.00 ea.:
All R. O. P. and bloodtested |
this spring. All above roosters
1 yr old this March. Mrs, G.
L. Brown, Riverdale, R. 1.}
MINORCAS: :

75 Buff Minoreas parched
hens, just started laying, $1.25
ea.; Exc. for good milch cow.
Write what you have. Mrs. G.
B. Peacock, Baxley, R. 2. .

- Four young. Kirchers Golden
Buff Minorcas' cocks, AAA

Fine
stags,

son, Murrayville, R. 1.
ORPINGTONS:

5 Buff Orpington pullets,
now laying, $2.00 ea. at my
home. Mrs.. H, M. Fletcher,
Jackson, 516 East Third St.

PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, ETC.:

20 varieties pigeons including }
Eng, Carriers, Hyineh Zahoers,
$1.50 to $10.00 pr. Also 1 pr.
Indian Blue Peafowls, $30.00;
1 pr. Green Javas, $50.00. Exc.
for Jersey or Guernsey cow or
aie C. C. Hudson, Glenn-
ville

Fancy Pheasants, modern
game bantams and pigeons for
sale. M. L. Arnan, Savannah,
416 W. Broad St.

1 pe, large Plymouth Rock
White ing pigeons, good
squabbers' mated, bonded and
now on; Squabs, $2.25. State
your exp. office. R. Lamar
Brantley, Wrightsville, Rud.

Racing Homer pigeons, this
years hatch. Best blood line.
Guar. satis. $2.00 ea.: $3.50 pr.
R. C. MeCollum. Albany,

White: Peafowis, Dre da
$35.00 pair: 2 yrs. old, $30. 00:
1 yr. old, $25.90: Blue breed-
ers, $30. 00 DE:: also some Biue
peacocks, 1, 2: and 3 yrs old.
some whites: Same ages. Thos,
A. Hughes, Buford, Rt. 3.

400 or 500 nice pigeons for
sale or will trade for peas, soy-.
beans or corn. M. G. Pound,
Sparta .

REDS: (NEW HAMPSHIRE
AND RHODE ISLAND)

100 AAA grade N H. Red,
wks. old, broiler chicks, pales
3-4 pullets. Big husky chicks.
70c ea., if taken at once Un-
prepaid. EE Be Lowery, Rast-
man, R. 1.

15 N. H. Red pullets, 10 wks.
old, big healthy, pullorum test-
2-We de Hens.

Apr., 1942 hatch, AAA grade,
now laying. $1.25 ea.. FOB.
a Ge: Smith, Bowman. AR.

" Speckled Sussex roosters, 2
yrs old, $2.00. Mrs. W. V. Sil-
vers, Ellijay, R. 3, Bx. 88,

15 N. H. Red Mch. 1942
hatched pullets. $25.00. FOR.





No chks. Mrs. M. O. Maxwell,

hatch, wing banded, R. O.
Eggs from sel. N.

wing banded males, $1.25 per.
15: $3.50 per 50; $6.75 per :
del. Satis. guar. S. R. Scar-
borough, Hawkinsville,
Merritt St.

4R. I. Red hens: 4 B. R. hens:
4 W. L. hens (12 in all),
Jaying, healthy, 1 yr. old, $1
for lot. M, O.. ship at o
Bernice Smith, Demorest.

Nine dark R. I. Red roosters,
wt. about 8 lbs., $1.00 ea. Wi
ship. Mrs. W. A. Gunn, kas
mites Reo 2.

40 laying hens, Rhode tte 2
and New Hampshires, $2. 00 ea;
also 10-20 doz, day old eggs
weekly, 50c doz. my place ye
*round. . M.-Van Leer A
lanta, Rt. 4. Phone Am. 1464.

4 pure Parmenter Red, alse
2 purebred Parks Str. B. R.
roosters, all last April hatea,
from high laying strain, $2.00
ea.: Send money order. Mrs.
Ben Brown, Eastman, Rt. 1

TURKEYS, GUINEAS.
GEESE, ETC.:

Black Muscovey ducks,
pr. E. Maynard, Newton.

4 Bronze Turkey eae
11-12 lbs., $3.50 ea. Also.b
ing orders for Turkey Ss,
$2.50 doz. Mrs. John Bae
Lumpkin.

Big White Pekin | Gucke
drake and 6 ducks, now laying,
$9.00 for lot. Herbert S. bs =
worth, Lavonia.

3 bronze mixed turkey hen
2 yrs. old, soon be laying,
approx., 12 Ibs. ea.,
One bronze Tom, wt. appl
20 Ibs.,. $6.00. Will sell sep-=
arately at 30c Ib. J. S. Rob
ison, Jackson.

4 white Pekin ducks cand :
drake, 1 yr. old, $4.75 for lot.
ak Otis Mashburn, Cumm g,

1 eoccnuheka amm
Bronze turkey tom, wt. 26
$9.00 at my home. W. H. Ni
Alpharetta, R. 3.

10 Guinea hens and 2
ters, $1.00 ea.
hens and roosters, 50c
Boyd Williamson, Comme

Domesticated -wilg Malla
ducks (female), now lay
$2.00 ea.; Male ducks, $1.00.
Do, Carmical. Mantas
Ridge Ave.. Rt. 237,

Mammoth Bronze "
hens and toms, 40c jb.
Curtis, Decatur, Candler R
Rt: 1, Phone DE. 0796. |

10 large, young white Indi:
Runner ducks; 6 ducks, begi
ning to lay; 4 drakes. $1. 25:
$11.00 for lot. Mrs. J. F. Mi
er, Cleveland, Rt. 2.

Want purebred White Afr
can Guinea rooster, reasol
able price. Write before sen
ing. R. L. Currie, Uvalda.

Want 5 or 6 pure White
nea hens and best prices. J
Stellings, Augusta, Rt. 4, Bx

wy ANDOTTES:

Purebred R. :S, L. Wya
dottes, May hatched, Cock
$1.50 ea.; Eggs, 75c per 15
cia Harris, Lula

1 pair Columbian Wyant
tes, 1942 hatched. $2.50 er
light and put in exp. o
Mrs. Leroy White, Temple



_ POULTRY WANTE



| BANTAMS AND BABY

CHICKS WANTED: |
Want one Golden Sebr.
Bantam hen. aoe pay _

price. At once: LL. De J 0
son, Hiawassee,

Want Golden or Silver S
bright or Black Rose Con

| bantams; Also Pigeons, r

onable or will trade
chickens. H. M. Adams, D
glasville. cog

Want 10 common _banta
hens, state price and age. Pe
Ivey, Atlanta. 12 Jorda
S. E., Lakewood Hts.

Want any amt. baby chick
raise to 10-12 wks. Party fur
ish chicks and feed, I fu
brooder and all equipmen
get 33 per cent of chicks.
breed preferred. Mrs. Cla

| Douglas, Alma, Re

Want thoroughbred Co nis
game bantam hens, not ovel
yrs. old. Warren I.. Weed
gerald,

Want to buy one gam
tam rooster and 2 g
tam hens. C. J. Yates, S

mons ied, RFD. Box







MEAT HANDLERS AND FARMERS

one following article corre by eiuiek of the Food
Distribution Administration)

Permits. and complete instructions for eae
ing farmers, butchers, and slaughters for the sale of
eat are expected to be in- the hands of county war

boards this week or early next week, according to T..

alter Hughes, state supervisor of the Food Distri-
on Administration.

Under new FDA regulations, everyone who
ughters livestock after March 31 for the purpose

f selling meat must register and secure a permit.

A fair share of meat for everyone will be as-
d as soon as the orders of Secretary Wickard are
rating smoothly, Mr. Hughes believes.
The government is relying on the cooperation
ef farmers, livestock dealers, slaughterers, butchers
nd housewives to stamp out the black market in
at. The Government has no intention of policing
very farmer and butcher to see that he is playing
ecording to the rules. If everybody Seep
everyone will get his share.

The meat orders are elastic and make provision
for adjusting local situations. No particular hardship
is involved. The orders were carefully worked out
with one purpose in mind: To guarantee the civilian

opulation and the armed forces a fair share of good,
sanitary meat. Every requirement of the orders is
essential if the government is to protect our meat
ee,

A digest of the three meat orders follows: :

_ Everyone, including farmers, butchers, and
slaughterers who kill livestock after March 31 for the
purpose of selling the meat (not for home consumpt-

on) must register and secure a permit from his county
Department of Agriculture War Board office or an
FDA office, if there is one in his county.

Every piece of meat sold after April 1 must be
stamped with the permit number of the slaughterer.
Every dealer in livestock must also register and
secure a permit from his War Board or FDA office.
farmer who raises or feeds livestock, keeping them
more than 30 days, is not considered a dealer,
wever, and need not register, but must keep records
all purchases and sales of livestock for FDA in-

In registering, every farm slaughterer (anyone
engaged primarily in agricultural production as a
resident operator of a farm, who did not deliver more

n 10,000 pounds of live weight meat for sale in|

1941) must declare the amount he slaughtered for
sale by separate quarters of the year 1941. The
farm slaughterer will then be given his quota for fu-
e three-month periods, equal to the amount he de-

ivered for sale in the corresponding quarters of
1941. Home consumed meat is exempt.

The butcher (anyone who did not slaughter
nore than 300,000 pounds of live weight meat in
1941, other than a farm slaughterer) must declare
he amounts he slaughtered by months in 1941. For
each month after April 1 his quota for slaughtering
will be the same as for the corresponding month in
1941.
Local slaughterers (those who slaughtered more
than 300,000 pounds of meat in 1941 and who are
not registered with OPA as. slaughterers) are lim-
ited in their April slaughtering to 80 percent of the
amount by live weight slaughtered or.meat produced
in April of 1941, in addition to any meat sold to gov-
ernment agencies this year. Quotas for each suc-
ceeding month will be announced by the Director of
DA and will be based on the corresponding month
of 1941 production.

Slaughterers in establishments having Federal
-inspction (in the main, large packers) will receive
communications direct from the Administrator, and
will have quotas set separately according to local
conditions. In this way, consideration can be given
to local needs in cities where unusual conditions pre-

vail, as contrasted with previous OPA regulations
- which set flat quotas without regard to varying needs.
The registration and license for both: the farm
slaughterer and butcher are mandatory before any
meat can be sold. Anyone who violates the provis-
jons of the new orders may be prohibited from selling
meat in the future, as well as be subject to criminal
prosecution under the Federal laws.
In determining quotas for future months or fu-
ture quarters, the farmer and butcher may choose
between slaughtering the same gross live weight they
slaughtered in the corresponding period in 1941, or
the same number of each type of livestock. Any far-
mer who does not declare the amount he slaughtered
for sale in 1941 when he registers for the permit, or
who slaughtered none for sale that year, is limited
to slaughtering not more than 300 pounds of meat
for sale in any calendar year, or not more than three
head of livestock, only one of which may be cattle,
unless he secures another quota by special action of
his War Board or FDA office.
in ers. at the War Board office, each

Ss

| spoilage and waste.

| in m Ina
|purple ink on every cut of meat oa The pu iE
will be-asked not to buy meat of any kind after. Ape

1 which does not carry a permit number. Each far-
mer and butcher and dealer will also receive instruc-
tions as to forms and records, which are required to
be kept for two vents, on sale of both livestock and
meat.

Every slaughterer of meat, both large and small,
must also present evidence before the War Board or
FDA office that he has adequate facilities for con-
serving and preserving edible and principal inedible
parts of the carcass.
order for proper skinning and dressing of animals,
for rendering of fat or tallow, and storage and other
equipment for retaining by-products to insure against
Before a permit will be given,
the farmer or butcher must also present evidence
that he operates under sanitary conditions, but com-
pliance with Federal, state, county, or city sanitary
provisions is sufficient.

Local War Boards will probably be given au-
thority to make adjustments in slaughter quotas to
correct unusual hardships.
Distribution may also adjust quotas in areas where in-
sufficient -meat is available to meet ration require-
ments if there is an excess supply of livestock in
area.

All quotas at by the Food Administrator for fu-
ture months or quarters will be reduced if it is found
that previous quotas under OPA were exceeded, These
OPA quotas were based on the same amount of
slaughtering in the first three months of this year
and the last three months of 1942 as was done in the
corresponding quarters of 1941, for all slaughterers

This means equipment in good}

The Director of Food

that



of less than 500,000 pounds in any quarter of 1941.
Phough drastic, the new regulations will be
enforced with justice and discrimination, said Col.
James H. Palmer, southern-born regional FDA ad-
ministrator in charge of this part of the country.
Permits will not be difficult to secure; adjustments
to prevent undue hardship can be secured from coun-
ty War Board members who know conditions best;

normal slaughtering can continue.

tions must be obeyed.

But the regula-

Meat is as important on the food fiont as bombs

on the battle front.

and the fighting men of our Allies must be met.

The needs of our fighting men

We

are pledged to Victory and a lack of food supplies

shall not stand in our way.



POULTRY WANTED

=

Cochin rooster. Fred Ayash,
Atlanta, 687 Delmar Ave. Phone
MA. 8149.

Want to raise baby chicks on
shares, partly furnish chicks
and feed? I furnish work,
brooder and fuel. for 40 per
cent, rgised to 8 or 10 wks. old.
Can take care of 200. Sage
Guy Powell, Lumber City. R
1. 5Box: 11d:

LEGHORNS WANTED:

Want Leghorn pullet chicks
or heavy breed male chicks to
raise on shares to 8 wks. old.
Lorenzo C. Williams. Nashville.

Want 15 laying pullets. pref-
erably W. L.; Give age and
price; Also want 1 Chinchilla
Buck rabbit of service age. A.
H. Marquardt, Hapeville.

Want 6 W. L. pullets; Also 3
White Rock pullets and 1 W. R.
Rooster. None later than April-
May, 1942, hatch. State price.
Mrs. L. K. Kersey, Graymont.

MISCELLANEOUS
CHICKENS WANTED:

Want to exchange corn for
15 or 20 hens and 1 rooster.
R. A. Land, Bonaire.

Have a value would ex-
change for some hens that are
laying. Mrs. Wm. L. Jackson,
Atlanta, R. 3.



POSITIONS WANTED



Married, white man wants to
farm on halves, or for wages.
7 in family, all able to work.
Experienced. Geo. B. Dumon,
Atlanta, 338 Pryor St.

Want 1-H. crop on 50-50
basis. Have to be moved and
furnished. Northwest Ga, pre-
ferred. Can move any time. M.
Brown, Dawsonville.

Want job on farm at once.
Exp. flowers and garden and
other light work. Am single,
white and can give ref. Want
board, laundry and reasonable
wages. Dont mind working;
want long time job. /.. L. Clark,
Royston. Rt. 1.

Want job as Overseer. 35
yrs. exp., farming and stock
raising. Can start immediate-
ly. H. B. Gaillard, Dublin.
706 Washington St.

Want one purebred Partridge |



POSITIONS WANTED

~ Want jobs on farm for 21
yr. old grandson (he has been
turned down for Army, 4-F rat-
ing, blind in one eye) and self;
raising chickens, tending to
stock, etc., where can make liv-
ing. Mrs. a1 . Logan, Savannah
431 Barnard St.

Want i.h. crop on 50-30 ba-
sis. Good land and house. Pre-
fer Marietta or Canton section.
Honorable discharge from Ar-
my: 38 yrs. limit. Self and
wife. Gus W. Fuller, Wood-
stock, Rts:

Mie 32 yrs. old, wife and
2 sons want job as farm over-
seer. Can furnish some labor.
Lifetime exp. Can drive truck
and tractor. Draft exempt. John
E. Meadows, Ludowici. Rt. 2.

White man, 36 yrs. old, wants
farm job. House, wood and
patches. $30.00 mo. straight
time. Can drive truck or trac-
tor. 3 in family. Have to be
moved. L. B. Hendon, Atlanta,
800 Griffin St. N. W.

Single man (handicapped,
having to use walking stick)
wants job on farm. Can drive
truck and little mechanic exp.,
also look after stock, etc., W. I.
Cruce, Hoschton.

te 2 H. farm on 50-50 =
sis. 2 plow hands. 2 hoe hand
Truck and tractor driver. 6 -
family, youngest 12. J.. W.
Reese, Moreland, Rt. 1. }



FARM HELP WANTED



Want good white man and
wife for dairy work..Good 3
R. house. milk and butter furn-
derson. Write or see H. M. An-
derson, Decatur, Vandegriff Ri.
Chto) e

Want 1 H. or 2 H. farmer on
50-50 basis. Good land and
stock, comfortable 3 R house,
plenty wood. Can furnish sup-
plies to make crop. 7 mi. So.
Winder in Jones District. Mrs.
Herschel Smith, Winder, Rt. 2.

Want smart, honest, healthy
woman for work at small dairy.
$20.00 mo., board and lod@ing.
Give ref. W. H: Ivey, Milledge-
ville, Rt. 1. Box 8.

Want white man to farm for
board and wages or on 50-50
basis. Can use man and wife
or mother and son. 6 mi. Col-
lege Park. Rt. 1.





Want at once, stout w
colored or white, to d

work, also help with chick

garden and milk cow.
home for right party. Mrs
Portwood, Forest Park,
Tel. 1483.

Want at once, reliable
encumbered woman fo:
work. $21.00 mo. f
home. State age. N
White, Rock Spring, |

Want exp.. sober, wil
worker, Dairyman. ood
and good house furnished. R)
Jennings, Macon, P. O.

891, phone 1596. |

Want couple for 1 h. f.
good house, elec. lights, r
ning water, fuel; weekly sa
and: part crop. J. > )
head, Decatur, Box 387.

Want middle aged. eee

| bered white woman for i

work. $16.00 mo., and boa
eg ref. with letter. 4 in ami:

farm: like 4 or 5 in fam 3
work. 3 R. house, wood. wa
and patches furnished
Near town. Ie. ei
more.

Want nice, settled woman. t
live in family and help wit
garden and farm work.
week, room and board.
mail answered. . Mr. W.
Harrelson, Helena, RE A:

Want woman to help wit
smal] truck and chicken c

$20.00 mo., room and board

G. Archebelle, Macon, R

Want wage hand for 1943 t
work on farm. White or col
ored. Will pay good wage
Board free. Mrs. J. T. Ra:
jington, Rt. 2. Box. 79.

Want farmer for n or 2
farm for standing rent. Mt
furnish self. Good 4 R.

3 mi. Social Circle. Good 1
cotton quota. Convenien
schools. White or colored.
R. L. Paine, Oxford.

Want 1 or 2 h. man with.
to farm on halves. Must
honest and not drink. S.
Spruill, Chamblee, Rt. he

Want good white or
man and wife to work good |
horse crop. 7.3 cotton allot
ment; other in hay, corn, peas,
ete. Have unuseq new,
house, painted and ceiled.
halves or 3rds and 4ths.
furnish self. Frank ca
ford, Rt. 2. ,

Want man, white or colorec

wages paid, board and | in,
dry, or if married, furnis
house, wood and truck be
Plenty work now. T. L..
low, Demorest, Rt. 1.

Want 2 families for fru
vegetable farm 25 mi. At

Gollece Park Hwy. OO. Ee Nor
ton, Fairburn.

Want a good -turpet
worker for 1943. Work on s
crop for wages. Come and
Es Hermon Boatright, =

4. :

Want two white or colo
men to work on dairy f
Good place to live and |
wages for right ones. Ste
Spahos, Warm Springs Re
Columbus, Box 412. as

Want someone with goo
equipment to cultivate 20
good land, on Halves, Willin
to use or not use fertilizer. M
Josie Simmons, Cleveland.

Want man for 1-H. crop_
halves. House, wood, wate
pasture and patches free, nea
High school bus line, chure
and store. 7 mi. West Gaines-
ville. J. C. Sanders, BS re
ville. Rt. 7.

Want good man for 2-H. fab
on shares. Can furnish stock
and supplies. Sober, industriou
farmer only. Fred L. Whit
Buckhead.

Want caretaker for farn
Colored preferred. % mi. cit
limits. Abe Cohen, Savann
120 West Broad St.

Want young woman to help
with chickens and garden fa
work, etc. Live as one of famil:
Mrs. James Peeples, Sayan
POBox: Sb:

Want white woman, healthy
reliable to help with farm wo
Located near Warm Springs.
Good pay for right party. See
or write, giving ref., for inf
mation. Edw. Cate, _ Wann
Spings, Rt. 1. :

Want middle aged ae to
live in house with -elderly
man and help work on farm.
Plenty day work to be done.
Must be honest, good workers
and not drunkards. P c
couple without children Mr.
W. F, Lord, Eastman, Rt. 6.





s

-aere should be sown.

PAGE GE

MARKET BULLETIN



Pastures, Permanent and Temporary For Ga.









By ores H. Kine. Sirccior Ccsteln Coastal
Plain Experiment Station, Tifton, Ga.
The foundation of a successful livestock industry
Ss grazing. More and better grazing coupled with a
longer grazing period is desirable during the present

shortage of labor and feed.

.As the result of experiments carried on over a
long period of years by Mr. J. L. Stephens, Agron-
omist of the Bureau of Plant Industry in cooperation
with the Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station,
the following recommendations can be made:

For a lowland permanent pasture in South Geor-
gia broadcast the following mixture in March:

10 pounds Carpet grass
8 pounds Dallis grass
12 pounds Lespedeza |
5 pounds White Dutch clover.
The seed bed should be well prepared and the

seed should be packed into the soil with a log roller

or a cultipacker.

Fertilizers make splendid returns on these low-
land pastures. Ten years grazing experiments con-
ducted at the Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Sta-
tion on the above mixtures have shown an average
gain in liveweight beef from 82 pounds without fer-
tilizer to 320 pounds with a 6-12-6 fertilizer applied
at the rate of 600 pounds every third year. On those
pastures that were not fertilized, slightly less than
one animal per acre could be carried where on the
fertilized pastures from two to three animals per
acre were furnished grazing a little over seven

~ months a year.

If the South Georgia a wishes to have an
upland permanent pasture, he will find Bermuda grass
and lespedeza desirable for his pasture mixture. It is

better to plant Bermuda grass from runners, spacing |

these about 2 1-2 feet each way. Where a solid pas-
ture is wanted, 25 to 30 pounds of lespedeza seed per
Upland pastures, too, respond
to fertilizers. Here the gain has ranged from an
average of 100 pounds liveweight beef per acre on
unfertilized pastures to 140 pounds liveweight beef
per acre on pastures receiving a complete fertilizer
every third year. It is also of interest to the farmer
that the new strains of Bermuda grass not only give

more grazing than common Bermuda but also pro-

vide a good hay crop.
On upland pastures of Bermuda grass there is

| _the possibility of growing a rotation of crops includ-

crops.
sible by proper fertilization, good grazing manage-







ine Bermuda grass, pais and Croialevia spectabilis

where plenty of land is available. Many inquiries
are received at the Exepriment Station relative to
whether or not crotalaria is poisonous to livestock.
Crotalaria spectabilis is poisonous to livestock but cat-
tle will not eat it from choice. When grazing crotalaria
fields it is advisable to observe two precautions :(1)
Cattle should be removed from Bermuda-crotalaria
fields during June. Young crotalaria seedlings mixed
with Bermuda grass are accidentally eaten at this time.
After June the crotalaria can be grazed under and
around. (2) Grass is usually dry and tough during
October and November so that cattle may become
hungry and be forced to eat crotalaria seed which
are maturing. A few seed do not appear to be harm-
ful but cattle should be carefully watched and it is
better to remove them as a precaution.

Kudzu, cattail millet,.or lespedeza are best sum-
mer temporary pastures. \

For winter temporary pasture, oats a hairy
vetch mixed at the rate of 4 bushels of oats and 30
pounds of hairy vetch per acre and planted in early
October have given best gains. Abruzzi rye is also
good for winter grazing. The Experiment Station
has been grazing the above crops this year since Feb-
ruary 1. This extends the seasonal poe period
two months.

The inability to obtain certain ae and
grass seed during the war is necessitating some tem-
porary modification of pasture recommendations.
Phosphate and potash can be used in connection with
legumes and very satisfactory results obtained. Tem-
porary grazing crops have responded very favorably
to applications of 300 pounds superphosphate and
100 pounds muriate of potash per acre.

Common and Kobe lespedeza are both widely
used for grazing in South Georgia. The common va-
riety is recommended in a permanent pasture where
reseeding is desired. For a temporary pasture where

reseeding is not iniportant, the Kobe variety is to be

preferred because it produces more growth. These

lespedezas are subject to nematode damage and

should not be. planted in a crop rotation which in-
cludes truck crops, melons, tobacco, cotton, etc., in
the sandy Coastal Plains soils.

The Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station
has on hand mimeographed sheets giving in detail
the methods of establishing various pastures. These
|'may be had by writing to the Station at Tifton, Ga.

Recommends Pasture Improvements Be Made

The food situation in Georgia and the United
States is growing more acute every day, and Georgia
farmers have a gigantic task for 1943 and 1944, re-
ports C. C. Murray, associate professor of agronomy
at the University of Georgia College of Agriculture.

In an article prepared for the Georgia Market

Bulletin, Murray said that meat, milk and butter,

and poultry and eggs are the food items of which
there will be serious shortages. The first considera-
tion in expanding the production of these foods is an
abundant supply of economical home-grown feed.

Every available acre on our farms should be
seeded to crops that will furnish as much feed for
livestock as possible, he recommended. -Our corn
acreage will remain about the same-or will be in-

ereased slightly. We must make the maximum use
of such forage crops as lespedeza, cowpeas and soy-

beans because they require less man labor per unit
of food produced than corn and other crops, These
erops should be seeded on all small grain, land and
other areas which are not needed for other summer
Pastures should be made as productive as pos-

ment, and, if necessary, reseeding. Now is the time
to make pasture improvements before the rush of

.. Spring work begins.

Korean, Kobe, and Tennessee 76 are good varieties
of lespedeza, and should be seeded at 30 to 40 pounds
of seed per acre during March 1-15. If seeded on

-poor soils which have not been fertilized, 200 to 400



pounds of superphosphate per acre is highly benefi-
cial; if seeded on small grain which was fertilized
in the fall, no fertilizer is necessary. The seed
should be free of dodder because this weed will
lower the yield of hay materially. Lespedeza will

produce from 1 to 2 tons of excellent hay per acre,
and will produce more units = feed per acre than
corn.

Cowpeas, grown for livestock feed ce human
food, will yield about as much hay on good soil as
lespedeza although the seedbed preparation increases
the cost. Iron, New Era, Victor, and Bradham are
the recommended varieties. If cowpeas follow an
unfertilized crop, 200 to 400 pounds of superphos-
phate per acre should be applied.

Soybeans are also widely grown for hay, and
give better yields when planted on a well prepared
seedbed. If 200 to 400 pounds of superphosphate
per acre are applied at planting and the crop is cul-
tivated two or three times during the growing season,
good results may be expected. The most widely
grown hay-producing varieties are Laredo, Otootan,
Clemson, and Hayseed. Seed should be inoculated
before planting.

T believe Georgia farmers will accept the chal-
lenge which confronts us relative to increasing food
production, Murray stated. Every extra pound
of food that we produce will hasten the completion
of the war and save thousands of American lives.



| and $20.00 mo.



FARM HELP WANTED



Want share croppers for 2

h. and a 1 hh. crops on 50-50

basis. Good land, mules, wood,
pasture: mail and school bus
line. Elec., etc. Good cotton

allotment and all land can cule

tivate. ,2 mules. 4 mi. Stock-
bridge, .A. H, Neeson, Stock=
bridge, Cotton Indian River
Plantation,

Want white man to farm for

board and wages or on 50-50 -

basis. Can use man and wife
or mother and son. 6 mi. Col~-
lege Park. L. F. Bing, River-<
dale, Rt. 1.

Wednesday, March 17, _ :





Want woman to do farm

work. 4> mi. Atlanta. 9
house in Conley section. Lights
and water furnished.

9518.

t Wages.
Mrs, W. T. Mathis, Conley, Ma.

Want family at once to plow

and other farm work. Also
some hoe help. 4:R. house,
wood, pasture, garden. other

patches free.
bus by door.
son, Villa Rica.

Mail and school
W. H. McPher-

Want good, honest, healthy
woman for farm work: no
milking. Prefer middle aged,
Room, board and salary. Write
he Cc. F. Johnson, Fairburn,

Want middle aged woman for

farm work and help with chick=

ens, etc. $3.00 or $4.00 week,
Good home. Write or come
prepared to work, at once. Mrs.
Ruby Collins, Milledgeville, Rt.
2, Box 106.

Want elderly colored man,
single or married, to work 5 1-2
days each week on livestock

and gen, farm, yard, eac: Pay

weekly. Patches if desired,

Good place to stay. L. E. Phil~.

lips, Colquitt, (5 mi. S. E.)

Want 1 farm hand to work

for wages ($1.00 day) and
board, or more money if board
self; also want party to work
4000 turpentine cups on halves,

Furnish houses to live in. Quit.

man. Byrd, Broxton, Rt. 2.

Want good, colored farmer
to work 1 or 2 h. crop on
shares. Good 3 R. house and
barn, .good cotton allotment.
good mule to work. Located
3-4 mi. Lemon School (color-=
ed). See at once. J. M. Mc-
Etheney, McDonough, Rt. 3,
Box 12.

Want farmer on halves. te
furnish self. Raise cotton,
corn, syrup cane, sweet pota-
toes, peanuts. 18 mi. Atlanta
on Lawrenceville Rd. J. T.
Herndon, Atlanta, 431 Clifton
Rad Ne.

Want able bodied farm hand,

white, not over 60 yrs. old, no |
laundry ~

bad habits... Board.
EA Nix, Se

pharetta, RFD 3.

Want man and wife to help

work a crop. Furnish house,
wood, pasture and pay reason=
able salary. Come at once.

Oda Reece. Alpharetta,.Rt. 3.

Want wage hand for 1 h,.
farm, good house. Would rent
50-50 basis.
Eithonia= =RAS 3
Road).

Want 1 h. cropper to tend
12 acres cotton, 16 A. bottom

(Evans Mill

land corn, 50-50 basis. House,
garden, firewood. milch cow,
also extra day wages. See S.

S. Storer, Douglasville, Rt. 4

Want family to work 1 or 2
h. crop: plenty cotton allotment
up to 20 acres, and plenty land
for other crops. Good 7 R,

house, good red land and pas=
Furnish stock and tools

amount for
Lo

ture.
and _ reasonable
furnishing if needed.

Shipley, Auburn, Rt. Le -

W.#H. McWilliams,

aa