DEPARTMENT of (
TOM LINDER:
WEDN ESDAY, MARCH 24, 1943.
43 Georgia Legislatui
i 6: 00 Patek on the evening of woes 43, 1943 the
a Legislature adjourned its regular session of 1943 sine
his Legislature made an enviable record with regard to
culture.
es mong the acts of the Legislature which will benefit agri-
re in Georgia was an act appropriating fifteen thousand
to. the Department of Agriculture for the establishment
yoratory to diagnose diseases of animals and poultry,
In a great many cases it is impossible for the veterinarian
e positive of the identity of diseases in animals without the
f a laboratory to do analytical diagnostic work.
resolution was passed authorizing the Commissioner of.
ture to. cooperate with Orla authorities during the
s recommendation was submitted to the Governor by the
a ittee on Agriculture. of the House of er that
e resolution was adopted by the Legislature urging the :
vestock Sales, rs Auction Markets :
Reports received at this office show following average prices paid
iD: 1 hogs at the Livestock Auction Markets named:
MARCH 19, 1943 ; PER CWT.
lareh 11Amevicus = $ -$14.31
liRome ~ 15.20
March de Valdosta a - 14.09
arch 12Cordele-
rch 15Sylvester __.
arch 16Arlington
March 16Nashville _
ie Noulirie co oe
larch 17Vidalia
TOP FED CATTLE
beck: Si Arner icus $12.00-$15.80
arch tiRome 2-2 12.50- 15.10
March 11Valdosta -- : 12.00- 14.30
rch 12Cordele 12.00- 14.50
March 15Sylvester % = 12.00- 15.00
March 16Arlington _.. 13.75-- 14.50
March 16Nashville _.. = 12.50- 15.50
ea 7 Niguiitie ee es Sep
ie ae - 15.50
puilding of a oie at Havichuret:
An act was passed establishing an Agricultural Indust
Council for the purpose of planning. for the future of. agricultt
and industry in the state. a
An act was passed controlling the sale of horse meat i in th
state.
An act was passed making the Commissioner. of Agricul-
tures term of office run concurrent with other State House of-
ficials. This means the next election for Commissioner of - i:
culture will be in 1946 instead of 1944. : ae
There were, of course, some good bills that heula have
passed that did not get through. The reason these bills did_
get through was because some of the members were so busy
with other matters that they did not get the full im portane of
these bills to agriculture. :
One bill in particular passed the House of Representati es
overwhelmingly but was killed in the Senate. This was a bi
that would have provided a Georgia label for Georgia farmer
products, I believe that the next Legislature will provide
Georgia farmers to have a Georgia label on their products. _
There were a number of bills that would have been e}
injurious to agriculture that were killed or allowed to die w
out action. Among them was a bill that would have mad.
legal to sell anything in Georgia for food that had been
proved by the United States Food Distribution Bureau.
The United States Food Distribution Bureau permits th
importation into this country of frozen carcasses of beef from
South America. The passage of this bill would have meant t at
we could not stop the sale of South American beef in Georgia
Every time a cargo of South American beef is landed in this
(Continued on pads oy
F resh Fruits and Bho
MARCH 19, 1943
Cabbage, bulk, per CWT
Cabbage plants, per 1000 plants
Collards, per doz. bunches
Mustard Greens, per bu. hprs,
Onins (Green,) per doz. bunches
Sweet Potatoes, per bu. _.
Turnips (Bunched,) per doz. bunches
Turnip Salad, per bu. hprs. :
Atlanta
[ARKET REPORT OF GEORGIA PRODUCTS
F llowing are quotations by wholesale dealers in Atlanta 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 5c per dozen below
Prices Quoted are as of Friday, March 19, 1943.
hese prices >
gs, Large, White, Grade x Doz.
Atlanta
ggs, Medium Grade A Doz,
Eggs Small Grade A Doz.
_ Hens, Col., 4 1-2 lbs.
_ Hens, Leghorn, Ib.
Boosters, ib.
_ Stags, Ib.
Friers, lb.
Ducks, Ib.
Geese, lb.
Turkeys, Ip
Capons, lb.
Country butter, best table, lb.
Field peas, mixed bu.
Always subject to Variation. _ :
INDEX
Farm Land for Sale
Farm Land. for Rent
Wanted to Buy or Exchange For -
Farm Land
Peanuts and Pecans for. Sale
Tobacco for Sale
Pecan and Other Fruit Trees for Se 7
Id peas, not mixed, bu.
ARTICLES
Urge Planting Sweet Fontes this
r Corn (80 Ibs. to bu.) bu.
ear se = ee
Shelled corn, bu.
Oklahoma Legislature Also Urges
Sweet. potatoes, Per 100 lbs.
Removal of Crop Restrictions __ Ds
GC Cabbage (Green), Per 100 lbs.
Cabbage (White), Per 100 lbs.
Hay, No. 1, Peavine, per ton
ay No. 1 Peanut, per ton
(Del. Shelling Plant)
27.00-28.00
NOTICE
The Georgia Market Builetin be- 4
longs to the farmers of the state. It
Cottonseed (Prime )
lots FOB Shipping Point)
is paid for entirely by the farmers
and does not cost any- other taxpayer
tonseed meal, 8 per cent)
tonseed meal, 7 per cent
a nickel,
nut meal, 45 per cent
PAGETWO
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN |
Address all items for publication and all requests to be put
on the mailing list and for change of address to STATE BUREAU
. OF MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances adimissable
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
assum any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin.
: Publishd Weekly at
- 414-322 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
- By Depariment of Agriculture
Tom Linder, Commissioner,
Executive Office, State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
_ 114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
Editorial and Executive Offices
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
_ Notivy ch FORM 3578Bureau of
Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
Entered as second class matter
August 1, 1937, at the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia, under Act
ef June 6, 1900. Accepted for
mailing at special rate of postage
provided for in Section 1103, Act
1943 GEORGIA
e EGISLATURE
s (Continued from page 1)
country we are running the risk of becoming in-
fested with hoof and mouth disease and it should not
be sold in cattle growing sections.
If it is necessary to bring this beef in on account
of shortage of meat it should be used in New York,
- Boston, and other great centers of population, where
they do not grow attle.
The United States Bureau of Animal Industry
refused to permit this beef to come into the United
States and, for that reason, the Secretary of Agricul-
ture moved the inspection of imported meat out of
the Bureau of Animal Industry and gave it to the
~ Burau of Food Distribution. This bill was killed in
the Senate by an overwhelming vote.
Another bad bill was one which on
purported to provide for the enrichment of wheat
flour sold in the state. Actually, this bill made it a
-eriminal offense punishable with a one hundred dol-
Jar fine and thirty days in jail, to sell a sack of pure
_ wheat flour in Georgia or to sell bread made from
pure wheat flour.
: This bill would have made it incumbent upon
the Commissioner of Agriculture to adopt whatever
rules and regulations were made by any bureau in
chemicals to flour before it could be Mle a4 to be
sold in the state.
i. Te the credit of the Legislature, this bill was not
passed.
. The House of Representatives adaueed a strong
resolution addressed to the United States Secretary
of Acriculture and to our Senators and Representa-
tives urging that restrictions on crops be removed
and that the farmers be permitted to make every
effort to produce food me the nation in this great
World War.
The Senate adopted a strong resolution for the
same purpose, that is, urging the immediate removal
of erop restrictions.
A bill was passed to protect pecan growers
against their crops being stolen and sold to dealers.
= We want to commend the 1943 Legislature for
its courage. wisdom and perseverance in dealing with
farm problems.
Srocs and Speaker of the House. Honorable Roy
Harris, made most able presiding officers and are to
; be commended for their efficient and rapid dispatch
F business coming before the bodies.
President Pro Tem of the Senate,
David Atkinson, and Speaker Pro Tem of the House,
onorable Fred Hand, very ably assisted their chiefs.
Tem Hand during the enforced absence of Speaker
arris on account of illness that made it possible for
oe of Representatives to complete its work
ime
This Legislature had many outstanding members.
Space will not permit mentioning them. It was es-
pecially encouraging to note the interest and intel-
ligent effort of many young men in this session. The
activity and interest of these young men in the Legis-
ture bodes well for the future of the state and we
oe ree with confidence to the future.
TOM LINDER,
eS Commissioner of se
Washington in requiring the addition of different |
The President of the Senate, Bai oribic Frank
Honorable.
its. face}.
It was due to the untiring energy of Speaker Pro}.
i
fa
MARKET BULLETIN
Oklahoma Legislature Also Urge
Removal Crop Control Restrictic
In the Market Bulletin of March
3, I earried copy of a telegram that 1
had sent Secretary Wickard asking
that the limitation be taken off of
planting cotton and other staple
crops. |
In answer to that telegram I am
in receipt of a letter from Mr. I. W.
Duggan, Director, Southern Division,
~~ U. . Department of Agriculture,
Agricultural Adjustment Administra-
tion, Washington, D. C., as follows:
March 12, 1943
Mr. Tom Linder:
Commissioner of Agriculture,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Mr. Linder:
This acknowledges your tele-
gram of February 23 to the Sec-
retary in reference to lifting mar-
keting quotas for cotton for 1943.
There is enclosed a copy of the
Departments release to the press
on March 6 which permits farm-
ers to exceed their 1943 cotton
acreage allotments by ten per-
cent. It was announced, hew-
ever, that marketing quotas for
1943 will be retained. Farmers
may plant ten percent in excess
of their farm allotments for cot-
ton without loss of agricultural
conservation program payments
or without incurring cotton mar-
keting quota penalties. Also,
they will not forfeit loan priv-
ileges by planting ten percent in
excess of the farm allotments.
In previous years farmers have
on the average underplanted al-
Jotments by ten to fifteen percent. |
A large part of underplanting on
some farms resulted from farm-
ers making sure that they had
complied with their farm allot-
ments. Sufficient labor and crop-
land will be available on some
farms, especially small ones, to
plant full cotton allotments and
the acreage goals established for
other crops for 1943.. The pro-
vision allowing 1943 allotments
to be exceeded by ten percent will
permit these producers to plant
_eloser to their farm allotments
without the usual risk of over-
planting. On other farms cotton
allotments will not be fully plant-
ed for various reasons among
which are labor shortage and in-
creased planting of other crops.
The permitted increase in cot-
ton planting will contribute to our
supply of vegetable oils and pro-
tein feeds for 1943, particularly
in areas not adapted to the pro-
duction of other oil crons.
Yours very truly,
(Signed) I. W. DUGGAN,
Director,
Southern Division.
I am very glad the Secretary of
Agriculture has seen fit to increase the
quotas on cotton ten percent without
the farmer incurring any liability or
suffering any loss on account of in-
creasing his acreage ten percent.
I wish that Secretary Wickard
would discontinue quotas entirely on
all staple crops so that the farmers
could produce the crops that we need.
Last weeks Market Bulletin ear-
ried copy of resolution adopted by the
Georgia Legislature asking that re-
FARM LAND FOR SALE|FARM LAND FOR SALE|FARM LAND FOR
_lady who has a five horse farm on
acres of land. She has two fam
- aeres hut has been refused.
Wednesday, ares a ;
strictions on crops be removed,
I am today in receipt of a r
tion passed by the Oklahoma
lature a few days ago along the
line. The entire resolution pass
the Oklahoma Legislature is so lei
that our space does not permit
ing it in full, however, I am qu
three paragraphs that deal pa
ly with cotton as followe:
We also cail to their atte
that with the present consum
ion of cotton in the United State.
and with the prospects of a la
demand from other Countrie
soon as the war is over, tha
present stocks of cotton will
insufficient to meet the dem
We further call to the attent
of the Agricultural Adjustme
on the planting of cotton are
laxed to allow the planting of
larger acreage, Oklahoma will
be able to produce the lives
that it has been producing,
in all probability Oklahoma li
stock will be reduced in the s
percentage as our - protein fe
have been reduced. The Sta
Oklahoma will not only have |
the income from cotton but fro
livestoc!= as well.
Therefore we urge that e
farmer in Oklahoma be allowe
to produce without penalty th
crops which, in his judgment, ca
be produced, taking into con:
eration the type of soil on h
farm, the farming equipment no
by him, the size of his family a
owned the needs of producin
the greatest volume of neces ar
products.
JT am in receipt of a letter fi
to run two plows and the other t
plows must lie out. There are
people in the two families, all of 1
can do some work in the field.
entire allotment of cotton is sev
acres. She is trying to get five r
One cause of iabor shortage
the farm is the fact that those
have labor are not permitted t
as much crops as they could pr
while some have allotments moi
they havea labor to produce. |
A great deal of farm machin
and equipment is now tied up
government in warehouses wher
farmers cannot buy it. If the U.
A. War Boards and the War Pr
tion Board would release all of
farm equipment at once so that
ers who could use it would be
mitted to buy it, we could increase
production in 19458 substantial
The Georgia Legislature, the O
homa Legislature, and other Leg
tures in the farm belt have petitio
Congress and Secretary Wickare
take all restrictions off of farm
A great many Senators and Co
men recognize the urgent ne
this to be done.
Surely it is time to auit ar:
heat doing a thing that is so ob
ly necessary for the salvation
country.
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Azticult
57 A.,.1% mi. Court House.
New house, plumbing, hot and |
cold water, R. E. A. electric
service. Tenant house,
bidgs., garage for thre cars. in|
good condition. Fenced, well | F
watered. W. J. TAGES, Baton |
es Rt. oe es
mi.
house,
Tonega, Rt. 4.
31 A. good farm land,
School on Black Mtn.
of Dahlonega.
out- | log house, one fairly good plank
pasture and otiit-bldgs.
Plenty wood. On mail route.|2 good wells. 7-R. ho
*.50 A. J. F. Satterfield, Dah- | chicken house. A.
% mi.
Rd., 6
Good 4- R.
60 A. farm, 1 mi. 8. W.
gerald, 1 block from New
oak School. 30 A. plo
ready for spring planting
woods pasture, large fish
| Fitzgerald, Rt. 2
hy ina in Apeina Co. :
BE. Baxley. 40 A. improv-
productive land in good
ood. Electricity, mail
ol bus route. Good tit-
land. Bargain. R. S._
irrency.
sand land, lies weil]
le; Se A. ir cult. 3
good wagon, 1 sow, 8
6% tons fert. All farm
t and feed. $3,000.00.
eston, Donalsonville.
rm 8 mi. W. Ellijay.
t. 5-R. house, fruit.
1, water near house,
| timber. Near. school
h. ae A: Bryent,
ee 4 mi. S, Saticiies
s and mail route, elec- |
1 Good location for
2 branches on place.
A. with terms. J. J
eee see
tebe one and 2-H.
h good timbered out
Peon for sale. If
write. Tee W. Her-
ood and Waycross.
land: 87 A. in cuit. and
8-R: house, out-bidgs.
.00. Write for terms. J.
am, Surrency. -
nd on hard surface
4 mi. town, school and
nd Church. 5 A. bottoms,
rt gray and part mulat-
house, 4 stall barn.
y available. $25,000.00.
hinley, Auburn, Rt. 1.
. A. (clear title) land, 1
Ly limits: 22 A. cult., 15
over. Unfinished house,
proder house, 3 laying
s, elec. lights, water, one
tractor and tools, about
ying hens, 500 baby
33,950.00 cash desired.
ith, Bainbridge, Rt.
good farm land, plenty
running water. 4-R.
_out-bldgs. Near good
and on Hwy. C. J. Mar-
. Zion.
river farm, 6 mi. 8.
75 A. best high and
ms in cult., pasture
muda bottoms. Old
wh te tenants, good barn
out-bldgs. Price $2,750.00,
000.00 cash, bal. ar-
BB, Hawkins, Atlanta,
d Rock Building.
good farm land, 11 mi.
Hatonton. Mail dwelling,
6 tenant houses. Also
place. See or write..
H rn, Eatonton.
farm, 5 mi. Elberton.
oa good pastures and
g water. Close to two
Porenes and school. Good
ty. See or write. Hzra
, Miberton, Rt. 3.
ie Hwy. No. 5, 7 mi.
ton, 15 mi. Marietta.
= house, _two_ more, 8
Fienten: school, depot, P. O.
re all in less than 4% mi.
. fine land with old
i in 1859.
houses
Several streams on place
lace for a lake. Located
thorpe Co. about 12 mi.
ne B ee Arnold, Coving-
A. about haif way be-
en Richland and Cusseta. 2
e farm good iand in cult.
modern 6-R. house in ex-
ent cond., 2 tenant houses,
Ke chicken houses and
$3, 000.00. Write. C. A.
rs, Columbus, Macon Rozd.
A. farm, creck bottom.
8-R. houses with lights, 8
1 barn; houses and barn in
od shape. I mi. LaFayette
concret Hwy. Title clear. O.
Sosebee, LaFayette.
80 A. farm: About 75,000 ft.
w timber: 25 A. creek bot-
is, bal. good upland. 2 good
ses, 5 and 6-R. barns, gar-
2 poultry houses and other
out-bidgs. Dr. J. J. Johnston,
fayette, Rt. 3
oO.
543 A. young pine. timber,
tatenville in Echols Co.,
paved Hwy. Trees large en-
for pulp wood, some could
urpentined or used for saw
r. $10.00 A, for quick sale.
aa. Gaddis, Quitman.
1 es land north froin Rich-
in Webster Co.; Grist Mill
inch Cole rock. over-shot
el, good stream and pond.
bottom land, all in 1st
ae 4. Port "road. Running
on both places. L.
oor: Be good
100.00 cash. Also
at a naneett. S.
. good garden pot
or
Seven slighty. elevated, nae
joining un
eveloped lots on
sborne Rd., North Atlanta.
Splendid plot. for victory gard-
ens, sunshine, fruit, and flow-
ers. Near transportation. No
loan. $1,750.00. M. L. Isbell, At-
lanta, 140 Mobile Ave., N. B,
Good little farm of 65 A.; 4-R.
tenant house, barn and out-
bldgs., water from fish pond to
barn and hog lot. All kinds of
fruit and grapes for family use.
Farm tools included. Also 100
A. Mtn., land, no improvements,
electricity and daily mail avail-
able both places. 1/3 cash, bal.
oyer period of 5 years. at
per cent interest. W. B. Ellard,
Mornelia.
ui Ae with 900 et. frontage
on South River, fenced, Large
room and sleeping porch cabin,
barbecue pit, well with pump
and good spring, electricitv.
50 grape
vines, For sale trade on
farm. Mrs. A. J, MeGowan, At-
f See or write. W. C.
lanta, 1179 Atlantic Dr., N. W.
He. 3824-J..
2A. land 5'mi. 8. Chatsworth |
on Hwy. 411. 4-R. house. Grist |
mill and motor for sale. Lest-
er Roberts, Ramhurst, Rt. 1.
520 A. land near Waynesbore
bordering Briar Creek. Good
fishing stream, branch flowing
through place. Well . timbered.
Good farming, fine for live-
stock. Lots of game (quail,
doves, squirrels, etc.) If inter-
ested write. L. E. Hatcher,
Waynesboro, Phone 291.
200 A. farm on river, 5 mi.
Wo. Clarkesville. Good lot saw
mill timber, lots of young trees.
_* 09. West James: Alto, Rt.
202% A. in Boies Co., 19-
6/10 A. allotment; 8 A. tobac-
co allotment, fruits, nuts grap-
es. Pine and hardwood timber,
pastures. New 5-R. dwelling,
4-R. tenant house, newly repair-
ed. Barn, out-bldgs., with new
metal roofs. All under wire
fence. $25.00 A. Terms. Walter
Williams, Garfield, Rt. 1.
40 A. of good land, good
house, barn, 2 chicken houses,
corn house and other out-bldgs.,
17-5/10 A. in cult.; About 12 A.
branch bottoms. Good apple and
peach orchard. Land is land
that never has been cleared.
$1,000.00, part down, rest on
terms to suit purchaser. J. M.
Chester, Canton, Rt. 1.
2 farms; 123 A.; 5-R. house
with water and lights: the other
75 A., 5-R. house. Sell cheap.
5 yr. terms. J. D. Killingsworth,
Meansville,
10 A. farm, approx. 2 mi.
Camp Lawson on Chamblee- |
Tucker paved road. House,
barn, out-bldgs., water, elec-
tricity available. Also 50 A.
near Doraville on paved road
Dekalb Water Works, location
mi. from Plantation Pipe Line.
See. W. V. Bracewell, Doraville.
Phone Chamblee 6376.
116 A. land; 65 A. in cult., 20
A. real good bottom land in
cult.; Good 11-R. house, ceiled
upstairs and down. Large 3-
story barn, crib, other out-
bldgs. Good orchard, over 100
different kind trees. Real good
pasture with wire and water.
Price. $2,500.00, or 70 bales
yrs. or rent for 4 bales per yr.
M, A. Lunsford, Carnpay iis, Rt.
4.
56 A. farm: 40 A, in ceult.,
good allotments, tobacco, eot-
ton. Good land. 6-R. house,
lights, barn and crib. Have 2
share croppers now on same.
Can give possession now, just
take over my contracts. Will
}give some time, $35.00 A., half
down. 6 mi. &. W. Quitman,
Brooks Co. Geo. McPherson,
Quitman, Rt. 5.
140 A. land, 3-R. crop in
cult.; 15 A. cotton ailotment,.
will grow anything. 2 houses,
one 5-R. and one 3-R.; 2 wells
good running water. Several
eyes. All good tillable land.
oe} |
details.
. J. Brown, Canton, B32.
104 A. land inCarroll Co., 6
mi. No. Bowdon on the Bow-
don and Tallapoosa Rd., % mi.
good school, church Masonic
Lodge, store, etc. 4-R. house,
electricity. 30 A. in cult., plenty
timber, wood, 2 good branches.
$1,000.00 W. A. Moon, Waco,
Bi fe:
127 A. good land, 3% mi.
from Warrenton. Plenty wood
and water, good spring and
small fish pond in ~- pasture.
Geod heuses, barns. Close to
Churches, school bus by door.
Come see. W. L. Coxwell, War-
rentoen, Rt. 1.
83 A. land; 15-R. house, re-
modeled and painted, with elec-
tricity; One 3-R. house, 1 large}
barn, 2 good wells water, 14
bearing pecan trees, figs, peach
trees. Come see or write for full
Rae, Rt. 1.
G: 8. _ Williams, Mc- |
lint cotton, 5 pales a yr. for 6.
ecues
Douglasville. 60 A
land. 5-R. house, 4-R. tenant
house, school bus and mail
route, electricity. Plenty tim-
ber and | hardwood. Springs,
branches, pasture, on
rite, At-
lanta, Rt. 5, Box 551 A. Phone
BEL. 2566-W. _
5 A. farm, beautiful Igcation
outside city. Interior house un-
finished, garage, city water and.
lights. Bearing pecan, pear, fig,
plum and tung oil trees, scup-
pernong and Concord grapes,
61 strawberries, blue berries, some
shrubbery. Convenient to school
and Churches. Mrs: L. M.
Cae Valdosta, Rt. 1, Box
32% A. land: 3-R. house, 4
stall, barn, smoke house, good
pasture, good orchard on school |
-bus and mail route. Churches
near. Garden, good oak saw
timber. If interested come and
see on Tanner Mill Road. A. L.
| Karr, Gainesville, Rt. 3.
One-H.farm, for sale or rent,
off
| Dallas Hwy. Mrs. J. L. Dob-| He yr. around, 200 yde. paved
7 mi. Marietta about 1 mi.
pins, Fitzgerald, Rt. 3.
| Hwy., 14% mi.
102 A, fertile rested Terrell
Co. land, good fer peanuts and
cotton in peanut section. Paved
school bus, near
4 Churches. Good location.
Write for prices or come see.
J. H. Leverett, Parrot, RFD.
409 A. level land, 18 mi. No.
Dawson; Running water on
each side of place, nice for trac-
tor farming, in heart of peanut
belt. Also 17 A. with 7-R. house
with R. H. A. light and power.
Good barn and tenant house.
Arthur Smith, Weston.
16% A. land with 783 ft.
frontage on Hwy. No. 12
(known as Covington Hwy.)
and 879 ft. frontage on Phillip
Rd. 1 mi. from Lithonia with
high school and churches, elec-
| tricity and telephone available.
Buses pass to and from At-
lanta. every hour or so. Price,
| Qa. 250. 00. Hugh Jones, Lithonia.
85 A. farm in Ogilethrope Co.
near the old Buffalo Mill place
(known as the Haynes place),
mi. Lexington. Good house,
barn, pasture, electricity, on
mail route, for sale or trade for
Atlanta property. If interested
write, R. S. no Atlanta, 770
Virginia Cir., N. E.
About 98 A. level land; 12-
15 A. tendable, with fruit trees.
5-R. house. out-bldgs. Rest good
timber land. Write or come for
information. H. T. . Jeffords,
Wayeross, Rt. 3,
445 A. land; 120 in cultivation
land well imp. in best tobacco
section. Good for stock or gen-
eral farming, 1 mi. from town,
all fenced, ots -of timber. Good
bidg., lights and running water.
$30. 00 A. R. L. Harris, Lenox,
Rt. A:
190 A. farm, 1 mi. W. Rock
Springs; 2 good houses; good
rich land, close to Church and
school. Good timber and water.
See me before you buy. G. L.
ONeal, LaFayette, Rt. 1.
32% A.; 18-20 A. in cult.; %
mi. Loganville on the Law-
renceville-Loganville Hwy.
House and barn in fair con-
dition, running water, wood,
some saw timber. Near school
bus and churches. Will sell all
or part of it. Zed Braswell, Lo-
ganville, Rt. 2.
134 A.; 1-H. crop in cult.;
good upland: 8 A. branch bot-
toms: 30 A. pasture, 5 Mi. Ta
lapoosa. 3-R. house, large barn,
good well, running
plenty. wood. $1200. See. J. W
Clark, Tallapoosa.
42 A. ineluding one of! the
oldest largest vineyard of its
kind in Ga., all equipment ex-
tra. $3,250. 00, cash or terms.
Write or visit. I. H. Johnson,
Dublin, Rt. 6.
582 A. good land, 10 mi. E.
Elberton; 100 A. in cult.; 2 good
tenant houses with barns and
wells on school bus reute and
near churches. $6.00 per Acre
K. &. Rucker, Elberton, R. 6.
Dandy 200 A. farm, Dixie
Hwy., edge of Quitman; 65 A
cultivation: pine and hardwood,
watered. Good land; 6-R. resid-
ence, lights, water, big barn,
tobacco barn, out-bldgs.; A. T.
Milteer, Quitman.
108 A. farm, fenced: 75 A.
eult.: 15 A. Bermuda pasture,
bal. ._weediant, small fish pond;
1 So. C. of Ga. R. R., be-
noe Cuthbert and Shellman
en good road. 1, 5-R. house, wir-
ed; 1, 4-R. tenant house, out-
bldgs. $3,500.00. C. G. Rigsby,
Cuthbert, Rt. 3.
108 A., 24% mi. New Buford
Hwy.; 250, 000 or 360;000 ft. saw
timber: 25 A. pottoms: 25 A. in
cultivation. No house. On sehonal
bus and mail route. $2,000.00.
Ss Frank Harper, Dacula.
132 x farm, 2 tel 3. wl
. tillable, 14.
A. cotton allotment, 20 A. fresh
ood rd.)
-$600.00. Mrs,
water, |
good land, some timber;
$35.00 per. A.: Also. nice 6-R.
house and 16 A. in pecans,
$4,000.00. Terms can be arrang-
ed. Mrs. R. L. Williams, Boston.
2 small farms, 65 and 35 Ae
4 and 5-R. houses at a bargain.
On School bus.and mail rt.
Terms if desired. J. T. Feely,
Douglasville, Phone No. 3661.
65 A. land; 14 A. open, bal. in
woods, 25, 000 ft. saw timber,
lays well: No bldgs,, 7 mi, S. HB.
Atlanta, 'BY% mi. N. H. Conley.
Blectricity - available, near
church.
leg house) $1100, will take
300.00 cash, bal. easv terms.
"TB. Seay, illenwood, Ri. 22
91 A,, under wire fence; 4-R.
house with bath and electricits:
4-R. tenant house, fish pond,
pecans and peach orchard; %
mi. Church and school. Good
roads and location. Selling out
on account of labor shortage.
Mrs. H. L. Crumley, Pineview.
98 A. good farm land, ideal
location, well and #-ing water
road. House, electricity, wy mi.
school bus, 3 mi. nearest town.
Mrs. N. L. Cooper, Mt. Vernon,
rit..4.
Small farm mle College
Park: 15 or 16 A. land, bermuda
grass pasture, some wood, geod
bottom land, old timey house on
paved rd. School bus and mail
Good loeation. Sacrifice,
Homer Norton,
College Park, 637 S. College 8&t.
50 A.; 25 in cultivation,
some saw timber, good pasture,
3 mi. Cairo. 6-R. house, good
fence, geod out-bldgs., running
water, good brick well. oe
Davis, Cairo, Rt. 1.
24 A., all fenced. with new
fence; not suitable to cultivate,
but good wood, pasture and
lake site, % mi. from Stone
Mtn. car line, 2-R. house, small
barn, no lights, and one plug
Rt.
ed. J. L., Mercer, Atlanta,
Walton St., N. W.
101 A.; @5 in cuit,
timber with running water: 12
| good bearing pecan trees on
R. BE. A. line: One 6-R. house,
good barn and other out- a
On school bus route, clos
Church. J. A. Mims, Bosto s
Calhoun. 75 A. in ecult., bal. in
pasture and woodland, small
creek runs through place, an
ideal stock farm. School bus
and mail route by door,
venient to Church. $5,000.00.
Write or come see. W. S. Wal-
raven, Curryville.
130 A. land in one body, lt
watered on Chinchaswatchee
ereek, fine for cattle, peanuts
and corn. 5 mi. Plains, 7 mi,
Parrott in Sumpter Co. Some
timber. L. OO. Clinkseales,
Plains.
10 mi. Terminal Station, 124
A. good grey land, easily cult.,
plenty timber, good pasture.
5-R. house, bath, elec., furnace;
Also 2-R., 3-R. and 4-R. houses.
School bus by door, near
churehes. $8,500.00. Mrs. Chas.
Johnson, Smyrna.
. 95 A. farm,.10 mi. Masicite.
just off Johnson Ferry Rd.,
Cobb Co., running water, plenty
timber: Also 90 A., 6 mi. HE.
Marietta, just off Hwy. 120;
House and- out-bldgs., nice
streams, plenty wood. Bargain.
L. N. Lassiter, Marietta, Rt. 2,
Phone 1091-J. 2.
890 A. in Bulloch o., 7 mi.
above Blitchton, 1 mi. frontage
on Hwy. 80; 3-H. farm in cult.,
fine location for stock farm. R.
L. Graham, Stilsen.
100 A. and 107 A. tract ad-
joining (will sell one or both)
in Rabun Co,, 3% mi. Clayton
Co. site. Springs, streams,
water falls, good stock, chicken
and vegetable farm. B. TT.
Deckins, Clayton.
8 A.; fine for truck, chicken
or hog fatm. Fruit and nut
trees. Near good school, church-
es, Stores and. transportation. 5
mi. 5 Points in Fulton Co., 170
ft. on paved rd. 7-R. house -ar-
ranged for 2 families, .electri-
city and gas. Fine well of
water. Reasonable for cash.
Mrs. G. Allen, Atlanta,
Greenview Aye., N. E. Phone
Ch. 7188. \
65 A. land; bs A. cleared, 2
mi. Ringgold, % mi. from Hwy.,
near Ellis Springs. 4 houses,
orchard and barn. For sale or
would exc. J. C. Ake, Ring-
gold, Rt. 1.
5 A. plant farm, ocean front,
artesian well, paved road; 5-R.
cottage, all conveniences, School
bus by door. Bearing Satsumas,
kumquats, Jap. Persimmmons,
pears, plums, muscadines, ban-
ana trees, others. $4,000.00
eash. Mrs... Jennie DeLoach,
Townsend, Rt. 1.
148 A. fare 1% mi. ni. Boston: le
house, tenant house and barns, pri
(plenty poles to build |
Concord School
Loeated on public rd.,
mule, $1,000.00. Terms arene ;
rest in
eon- |:
122
Ww. TP. Hammond,
Doane St.,S:
25 A. lot well imp.; aa
house, out-bldgs., good Ww
back porch, (all bldgs.
roof); Cow and hog .
fine cultivable land in C
Co., % mi. Church and 5s
$1,250.00 cash. S. A. Cal
Haralson.
2-H. farm on the foe 1
Adrian Hwy.; Good er wi
electricity, good :
bldgs., good pastu
trees, fruit trees: Sch ou
and mail Rt. by door. Mrs. M
nie Youngblood, Adrian.
( ; About 10 <
in "timber. Best
County fruit growing,
cherry trees, about 400
vines, newly planted, gic
worth of growing ginseng.
bargain $500.00 cash. J. Ge
sley, Blairsville, Rt. 2.
97 A. in cult., Pi pecs re
25 A. timber and pasture, 2
Wayeross. 12-R. house,
tricity, water; 2-R. serv
house, 4-R. tenant house,
tiful shrubbery. School
door. Old age reason for r
$13,000.00, part cash and tin
* . Darling, Waycross
102 A. land; 80 A. ioe
fence, 4 mi. Athens, 4-R. ho
plenty running water and wood
School bus. ke door. $2,500.00.
Also 50 A. land, 8 mi. Jefferse
10 mi. Athens. Fle
water, near school. No
7 00: As. Harcy, Att
790 A. hie. 210 At n4
350 A. fenced. Located a f
@o., 8-mi. N. Hllaville, 1
and C
paved Hwy. Ideal for
farming and stock raisin
ning water. L. F. Easter "
dersonville.
100 A. land: 30 A. in woc
land never been. cleared, 12 n
#. Carrollton, 7 mi. N. Whi
burg. 5-R. house, out
Grape vineyard, 2 secuppe
vines, nice orchard. run
water on east and west of f m,
good well water. C. W. Chale
ham, Whitesburg, Rt. 1. _
3 A. land with 9-R. ho
out-bldgs. Wiil sell at.
able price or exc. for pro)
near Gainesville. Mrs. Lila
cannon, Demorest. :
chardy Seen ue.
ing site, spring, 3/4 mi
4% mi. E. town, suf
standing timber for b
log cabin and out-bldgs. Pr
ed reasonable. Mrs. Orla
Shinn, Ellijay.
300 A. farm in Whitfield Co
7% mi. &. EH. Daiton on goo
road for sale or trade. Large.
house, barn and out-bldgs., one
tenant house and barn. 3 pas
tures with everlasting water
A. apple orchard, good cotto
allotment, school bus and i
by door. Mrs. N. R. Hogan,
ton, Rt. 2.
80 A. land, located 2-mi. N.
Tallapoosa on the Tallap
River, State Rt. 100 to C
town. Weil timbered and wate
ed. Pear orchard and vineya
power and water line through
premises. House and out-bidgs,
Write fer details. H. A. Jam
| Tallapoosa, Rt. 2.
20 A. woodland
Co: 8 mi.
Rossville Rd., for quick sale,
$50.00 cash. Chas. H. Herndon,
Ty Vy, Rt. 4. :
25 A. farm, 12 A. in cult.,
bal. in pasture, large creek
through farm. 12 mi. below At-
lanta, 1 mi. off paved Fayet-
teville Rd.: 4-R. house, tenanted
and cultivated this yr. $1,500,00.
ee, W. B, Luck, College Park,
Ze
63 A. land: 35 A. jeacue
most land makes hale cotton
per. A., 2 mi. N. Douglasville.
o-R, house, 2 brooder houses,
laying house, barn 30x30 pump
in well, good pasture with run-
ning water, electricity. Price,
$2, 900.00. W. H. Ragan, Dous- =
lasville, Rt. 8, Box 13. 5
88 A., 38 mi. Buford; 10 A. :
bottom land, plenty. water,
large lot of wood and saw tim- _
ber. One 3-R. and one 7-R,
houses on 2 public roads, 1 mi,
of high schooi and Church, Fine
for cattle raising. P. M. SAEROEL. 3
Buford.
in Bartow
S. Folsom, % mi.
57 A. farm 6 mi. KE. of Stone ss
Mtn. on Rockbridge Rd.: 26 A,
in cult., plenty bottom land not
cleared. Good vegetable farm.
Good 5-R. house, plenty out-
bldgs., never fail well, big
creek. Come and see.
$3,300.00. W. B. Atkinson, Li-
wom, Bt 2,
"price, ies
_ FARM LAND FOR SALE
MARKET BULLETIN-
FARM LAND FOR SALE
FARM LAND FOR SALE
FARM LAND FOR SALE
Wednesday: March 24,
FARM LAND FOR
1055 A. land (one tract) 400
A. in cult.: Also 166 A., 2-H.
farm in cult., good ljand, good
bidgs., all in Early Co.; Terms
to suit buyers. Henry L. Bry-
an, Hilton.
Ske Ak.
mi. Gainesville on Rt. 7; 12 A.
allotment cotton, 8 A. bottoms,
plenty of cultivation land, good
for orchards or gardens. For
gale or rent. See or write. Geo.
A. Conner, Gainesville, Rt. 7.
40 A. farm in Fulton Co. on
old Alabama Hwy., 3 mi. N. E.
Roswell, for sale. Good lake
pite, 2 branches, 2 springs on
school bus line, $1,200.00. Or
will exc. for smaller place near
Atlanta in Fulton Co. W. D.
Hamrick, Roswell, Rt. i
200 A. on river; 65 A. cleared
wery fertile. New 6-R. house and
6-R. and 1-R. tenant houses.
(Have good tenants). Tobacco
barn and beds. $30.00 A. In-
cludes mules, cows, 50 hogs,
feed, implements for 3-H. farm.
ewis Thompson, Swainsboro,
Bio. .
938 A. land: 75 in cult.; One
-R. house, good barn, plenty
ght od, lots of small tim-
B. G. Clay, Millen,
= eT hs an Cults
asture, bal. in growing timber..
-R. dwelling, electric lights,
running water, plenty tenant
houses and barns. Ne
Louisville, Jefferson Co., ss
S. Paved Hwy. No. 1. $25.00 A.
with Pp. T. Hudson,
One of the best 180 A. with
lenty wood; 80 A. rich bottoms
ew pasture, plenty grass for
ock farm or fine truck farm,
mi. Franklin on good rd. 5-R.
house, not completed; 4-R.
ouse and 2 story barn about 4
rs. old. On mail and school bus
oute. Sell cheap on account of
work. T. J. Bailey, East
, Phone CA. 6356. 2
450 A., 40 A. cult., 8 mi. N:
Waycross on Hwy. 3 good
ises in cluster fronting high-
1 tenant house, out-bldgs.,.
trees, water works, good
eco acreage. Write or come
Mrs. J. D. Peacoek, Alma,
40 A. land 10 miles Terminal
Station. Plenty timber some
pbottom land. Dirt road. Blectri-
ity, school bus by door. Chas.
Brown, Smyrna, Oakdale Rd.
About 3/5 Acre on U.S. Hwy.
4, in Peach Co., 13. mi. S
on
_E. Bowden Homes.
land.
Macon,
21 A. on Jonesboro and Fay-|
tevilie paved Hwy. 4-R. house,
arn, cotton house. 21 mi. of
nta, 3 mi. S. Jonesboro.
).00. L. R. Camp, Jonesboro,
A. farm, 2 mi. of Redan
m Alford Rd. (Near the King
oad): 4-R. house, plenty of
ber and running water.
31,500.00 cash or would give
ms. M. Bowen, Lithonia, Rt:
Good 165 A. farm, more or
ess, in good condition. Large
wooded area, abundance. pas--
ure and water, 2 wells on
lace. Approx. 200,000 ft. saw
imber. 7 mi. Greensboro,
Sreene Co. Can give possession
fan. 1, 1944. H. C. Thurmond,
Greensboro, Rt. 1.
05 A., 2 mi. S. Winston; 12
) land, 31 A. upland in
house, and one
ottom
&: One 6-R:
. house and out-bldgs. On,
ail and school. bus route,
ood Churches in 2 mi. See. W.
). Daniel, Winston.
hree farms in Jefferson Co.,
4i. Louisville on good roads.
d land and reasonably pric-
271 A., No: Louisville off
No. 1; 177 A. and 666 A.
off Waynesboro paved road. |
ty houses and barns. B. H.
ren, Louisville.
2 A. stumped land, 1% A.
ine break pasture, 6 mi. Ogee-
hee Rd.: 1-R. furnished house,
1p water in yard. Good
iting and fishing nearby.
00.00 cash or terms can be
xed. C. B, Danforth, Sav-.
nah, 117 Walburg St., West.
33 A. land, lots of timber on
uces, in Paulding Co. No
ou R. A. Clay, Hiram,
Bee SS \
100 A. in 3 parcels on_ 2.
ads, 4 mi. S. Fayetteville
ar new Hwy. Old 4-R. house
th nietal roof: 20 A. under
plenty wood and saw tim-
sh or terms or trade for
aller farm within 75 mi.
ith Whatley, Fayetteville,
t 70 A. land at Durand
tlanta and Columbus paved
- all wired with hog and
wire. Good 6-R. house, elec-
e barn,. 3 tenant
W. Mitcham,
D. | BI
jn Fork District, 7.
| cated 4 mi.
Ma--
1200 A., 200 A. cult. to grow
most anything; 7-2/10 A. tobac-
co allotment; 25 A. cotton allot-
ment, bal. well timbered, 4 mi.
from nearest R. R. on mail and
school bus route. 6 good houses
and barns. Cheap. See or write.
Cab. Hazelnurst; Rti.
30. A. farm; 7 A. good truck
garden land, branch bottoms,
3/4 "A. strawberries, other
fruits. 6-R. dwelling, out-
42d
oO
| bldgs. Plenty water, wood, most
all fenced. Geo. W. Greer, Ft.
Valley, Rt. 3.
75 A. land, mostly covered
with young timber, good garden
fruit orchard, lots of fertile bot-
tom land, well watered, wire
fence all around; Convenient lo-
cation, % mi. of R. R. sta., store
and grist mill, with mail and
school bus by door. 3-R. tenant
house. $500.00 quick sale. Berry
M. Mon, Shiloh, Rt. 1, Box 125.
100 A. Jand with house and
barn. Good well of water, few
acres in cult., _ remainder in
woodland with running water
through pasture. Could be used
for 2-H. farm. $1,500.00. Mrs.
R. I. Lassetter, Berner.
400 A. good land in Monroe
Co., 2 mi: from paved Hwy.
Lots of young pine timber. Part
under cult. Good house and
barn with almost new tin roof-
ine. Good road and mail route.
$6.00 acre. C. H. Gray, Boling-
broke.
50 A. farm, 3 mi. from Tifton,
about 35 A. in cult., stumped.
$2,000.00. % cash, bal. $300.00
per yr., interest at 6 ver cent.
Immediate possession. Geo.
Baker, Tifton.
120 A. land for sale in Greene
Co. on Appalachee River. Tim-
ber enough to build house and
barn, some bottom land. J. B.
Beckham, Atlanta, 3379 Lake
Valley Rd.
Good 40 A. farm,. well lo-
Carrollton, good
community; 25 A. in cult., rest
in pasture and wood. School bus
route, good chickens. L.
Smith, Carrollton, Rt. 5.
(o 25 A more -or-tess, iS mi.
Stone Mtn., near Hugh Howell
Hwy. on Stone Mtn. and Lil-
burn Rd. 4-R. house, good
springs. $800.00 cash. Mrs.
ae Garner, Stone Mtn.,
Rie 2s AT Se
960 A. on Lookout Mtn. 30
mi, S. Chattanooga, Tenn., on
hard surface roads, N. & W.
and E. & W. Growth of young
timber. 75 A. cleared, bal. tim-
ber: About 700 A. table land,
bal. sloping. Suitable for truck
farming, fruit, etc. Elevation
about 2000 ft. Mrs. J. A. Sar-
tain, Rossville, 603 Chickama-
uga Ave.
51 <A. farm
Church and Billarp School.
House, electricity, school bus
by door, good well water, for
Atlanta, 2440 Belleview Ave.,
N. W. Phone Belmont 2000-R.
23 3/4 A. land; grows any-
thing planted, (called grey
land): About mi. from center of
town, good place for pasture,
pranch running through place.
8-R. house, barn with shelter
on side. Near good high school.
M. E. Trimble, Tallapoosa. -
170 A. farm near Austell.
Good price and terms. Genia
Hays, Austell. eae
of Powder Springs. 8-R. house,
running water, electric lights.
Excellent place for cows and
chickens. E. E. Hudson, Powder
Springs.
50 A. 12 mi, of Atlanta; 10
A. bottom land, plenty running
water, pasture. Good 3-R. house
large barn. Good road. Mrs. T.
J. Coker, College Park, Roose-
velt Hwy. :
100 A., all in woods for sale
or trade for what have you?
Running water, nice. site for
Jake, post and saw timber. Lots
of best building rock in Coun-
ty. Paved Ra., 11 mi. Rome. Sell
oe O. M. Rhinhart, Rome,
Re 553
97 A. land, 3% mi. Dublin
plenty wood on place. $20.00 per
A., half cash, bal. terms. B. H.
Samples, Dublin. ae
77 A. well balanced farm;
barn, garage, electric lights,
good well on porch and barn.
Near school bus line, Church.
$2,000.00. W. O. Chapman, Can-
ton, Rt. 4. .
Good 200 A. farm on Toccoa
River, 3 mi. No. Blue Ridge;
running through place, mostly
pasture, good productive up-
djand. Good spring water. See or
write. W. H. Farmer,
uff, Rt. 1.
neat Foye cast. Hoyt Hightower,
sale or rent. Ernest Holland,
18 A. land, joins town limits.
on Soperton Hwy. 4-R. house, |.
35 A. in cult 12: or. 15 Az bot
tom land, 35 A. timber land:
5-R. house; 2-R. house. 6 stall |
25 A. bottom land, plenty water |.
oak timber, good house, barn,
Mineral | See or write. Mrs. V
.. JPvanklin,
98 3/4 A. land in Glascock
Co.; 75 A. tillable land, good
pasture. Good __ out-bldgs.
$1,200.00. Mrs. Will Howell,
Mitchell, Rt. 1.
28 A. good land, lies well, 5
mi. W. arietta on Marietta
and Dallas Hwy. in 5 mi. of
Bomber plant. Good 5-R. house,
with electric lights, and water
in house. Good pasture and
some woodland. J. I. Matthews,
Marietta, Rt. 1.
70 A. good land, fine situa-
tion, 1 mi. Clarkesville. Modern
home, all conveniences, out-
bldgs. Also splendid farm Na-
coochee Valley, 130 A., 3
dwelling houses, 2 barns, 2
cribs: 40 A: fine pasture, 40 A.
bottoms, plenty woodland, 1 mi.
Sautee P. O. C. B. Willingham,
Clarkesville.
372 A. farm, in good state of
cultivation, some timber, good
pasture. On paved Hwy. No. 19.
Running water yr. round, fenc-
ed and crossfenced, good stock
farm. 7-R. house, tenant hous-
es, good barn, electricity. W. A.
Dougherty, Americus, Rt. 1.
24 A. land, 10% in cult.; 6-R.
house, wired for electricity,
good out-bldgs., plenty of wood.
Ideal. for chicken farm.
$1,000.00 cash. A. D. Weeks,
Ochlocknee, Rt. 1.
120 A. farm, 7 mi. E. Wood-
stock, 27 mi. Atlanta. 2-H. crop
in cultivation, some saw timber,
some orchard, plenty firewood.
Two 4-R. houses, barns and
other out-bldgs., 2 good, wells,
4 branches on place. J. W. Clay-
ton, Woodstock.
Good 30 A. farm, 18 <A. <in
cult., 3 A. in pasture, not in
woodland: 3-R. house, good
barn and out-bldgs. 2 mi. to
school, 1 mi. to Church on good
road, adjacent to big T. V. A
dam, 3 mi. to town.
M. Tee Tulford, Hiawassee.
810 A., 7 mi. Fort Valley near
Flint river, 3 mi. of paved Hwy.
No. 7. 200 A. in cult., bal. pas-
ture land, (ideal cattle farm),
O.| about 20 A. in bearing pecan
trees. Good buildings, electri-
city on place, 7-R. dwelling,
3-R. tenant house, garage and
out-bldgs. Close to good school
and Churches. Lot of timber
and running water. Reasonably
es So oW> Barr; Et: Valley,
BAZ. s
145 A. farm in Elbert Co.
farm, nearly mi. frontage on
paved Calhoun Hwy. 2-story
frame home, bad repair. Easy to
get timber enough to pay for
farm. $19.00 A. No loan. A. B:
C. Wall, Hapeville, 3835 At-
lanta Ave. Phone CA. 9833.
80 A. land, plenty wood, some
saw timber. Good house and
barn, running water. On mail
route, near Church. Cheap for
Fair-
mount eRe
50 A. farm: 26 A. in cultiva-
tion. Good 4-R. house, plenty
out-bldgs. Staton Taylor, Alma,
Rie.
100 A. farm at Hollywood;
25 A. good creek bottom, 25 A.
pasture, 20 A. well lying up-
land, plenty wood. 4-R. house,
barn, good well water, 20 ft:
public rd. and R. E. A. line.
Part down and bal. terms.
John Dooley, Clarkesville.
35 A. land in city limits on
Hwy. Eton. No bldg. on it. All
god land. $2,500.00. W. L. Jar-
reot, Eton.
Small farm for sale or trade.
20 A. cult., 35 A. timber. Run-
ning water. and new 4-R. house.
Churches, schools and R.. R.
near. J. J, Wix, Summerville,
Rt. 3. :
107 A. 21142 mix Conyers: 72:
A. in fine cult. condition; 20 A.
in. pasture. 3 houses, good
branch of water runs .through
place. Nice site for fish pond.
Good settlement, near church.
oe W. Johnson, Conyers, Rt.
Beautiful 13% A. wooded lot
on Riverdale Hwys. Blectricity
and phone available. Title clear.
Mrs. B. A. Wells, Atlanta, 2435
ee Rd. S. W. Call RA.
100 A. land 6 mi. N. La-.
Grange, for sale or rent. Good
improvements. Near Church,
school. (Or give tenant rent for
period of time for extra work.
Write for particulars.) J. M.
Cleveland, Grantville.
431%, A. 3 mi. W. Smyrna, S.
E. of Bell Bomber on Milford
Rd., for sale. Timber, water,
fruits. 5-R. house, large barn,
potato curing house, plenty
out-bldgs. Or will take small
house near Atlanta as part pay.
Se Lewis, Marietta,
_ 46 A. land 1 mi. of Franklin
in Heard Co., between the No.
7 Hwy. and the Ala. Hwy. One
6-R. dwelling, one tenant house.
iola Bevis,
| business
$800.00. See.
| 40 A. land, 1 mi. from Dallas
for sale. Mrs. J.C. Bell, At-
lanta, Rt: 5, Box 426.
13114 A. farm one mi. Dallas,
one quarter mi. to paved Hwy.
25 A. cotton allotment. 2 good
houses, real barn (new 40xS0),
electricity, 3 wells. $30.00 A. W.
H. Crew, Dallas.
100 A. of good farm land. 2
small dwellings, plenty of wood
and water. Quarter of a mi. to
school bus and mail route. Mrs.
L. P. Miller, Junction City.
50 A. good level farm land for
sale. Land smooth enough to be
cult. by machinery. 10-R. two
story dwelling. 3/4 mi. to good
consolidated school, 1% mi.
churches, close enough to good
town to dispose of
and mil k,. ete:
vegetables ;
W. S..- Johnston,
$4,000.00.
Thomaston.
107 A. S. of Tocca for sale or
exchange for property in or
near Atlanta. Good farm. G. J.
Davis, Atlanta, 1276 Morning
side Dr., N. E.
100 A. farm, 1% mi. Douglas-
off pavement. 2 houses; one
barn. Ideal location. See. Miss
Mae McKelvey, Douglasville.
44 A. Jand, 1 mi. from Hwy.
on a good surface rd., 12 mi.
from Atlanta in Fulton Co. 5-R.
house in good condition. G. E.
Sievers, Atlanta, 847 Westmont
Rd., Apt. 1.
196 A., 45 in cult., on Frank:
lin-Newnan Hwy., 6 mi. Frank-
lin and 14 from Newnan. One
5-R. house and one 3-R. house,
good barn. Improvements worth
the price. $1,500.00. J.
Adams, Franklin.
Dairy farm, fully equipped,
for sale or rent. Fine cows, pas-
tures and equipment. $2,000.00
monthly wholesale. S. Tomber-
lin, Atlanta, 303 Palmer Bldg.
93 A. farm, good rich, well
terraced land: 20 A. in a fine
stand of small grains (wheat,
barley and oats) 5 A. in Serica
lespeceza and 5 A. in Kobe les-
pedeza. Good house, fine barn
and out-bldgs. Plenty wood and
water. $2,500.00. Write. Ciaude
H. Jordan, Covington.
43 <A. land, 6 mi, out, 1% mi.
to paved rd: For sale or trade.
Have a 42 ft. fall water power
with irons for overshot water
wheel. BE. Callas, Gainesville.
75 A. land in Fanin Co., about
/134 mi. S. Blue Ridge, near the
Hwy. For full description and
price, write: W. F. Fortney,
Blue Ridge. P. O. Box 243. -
53. A. smooth land; 25 A. in
cult. (Will make a bale cotton
per acre); Fine Bermuda pas-
ture. Now growing wheat and
Austrian peas. House, _
wood, Church and school. Good
roads. Electric power available,
fine thickly settlement. Will
sacrifice. $700.00, cash. A. D.
Giles, Douglasville, Rt..2.
103 A., 3 mi. Douglasville; 36
A. cultivation, bottoms and up-
land, plenty wood and timber,
good springs on both places. 3
houses: one 7-R. concrete; one
3-R. concrete; one 2-R. plank.
Water, lights available, bus by
door. $1,750.00. S. A. Baggett,
Douglasville, Rt. 4. 5
120 A. farm, 10 mi. No.
Cartersville on Hwy. 41. Good
cotton allotment. New _ 6-R.
house, new barn, electric lights,
running water. Good school and
Churches. Part cash, bal. on
time to suit buyer. Write. R. S.
Fain, Cartersville, Rt. 3.
4-A, land, 5 mi. LaFayette on
paved rd. for sale, or will trade
|for another place. 2 good hous-
es. R. L. Powell, McDonough,
Rice ;
63 A. land, 4 mi. Stone Mtn.,
Tucker and Lilburn. Plenty of
wood, fruit and pecan grove.
'4-R. house and hall on mail and
school bus route. Good _ out-
Rt: 2; Box 263:
29 A. land; 5-R. house on
school bus and mail route. Close
to Church, good road. Priced
reasonable. Write or come see.
1G. C. Taylor, Lithonia, Union
Grove Road, Rt. 1.
48 A. land, 28 A. upland, 6
A. in Kudzu, good pasture with
running water: 10 mi. Gaines-
| ville, % mi. from paved Hwy.
1 house and barn under repair,
1 good brooder house, electric
lights, 2 wells water. Good
school and Churches close by.
$1,500.00 cash or terms. N. S.
Tanner, Flowery Branch, Rt. 3.
_ 75 A. land, 45 in cult., bal.
in. wood and pasture, running
water through farm. 25 mi. No.
Ttlanta in Fulton Co, %
mi. of Crabapple (small village
on Roswell and Birmingham
Rd.); 5-R. dwelling; 1 4-R.
house, 2 barns (6 stall, 4 stall),
-on hard surface rd. Mail and
school bus line by house. W. M.
smore, Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
ville, 4% mi. of High school, just.
6-R. house, one 4-R. house and
GC.
fire
bidgs. J. P, Marks, Stone Mtn., |
ing 5
289 A. in Screven Co.;
+00 A, in cult;
stumped, bal. i C
hickory timber. Cotton,
peanuts, beans, potatoes,
table produces well. Two
dwellings-and barns. Pub
power line, school bus b
Plenty good water. $3,
cash or $4,000.00 at $800.
yr. at 5 per cent int.
Bryan, Thomasville, |
St.
77% A. farm on Hw
No. Marietta, about 5
Bomber Plant. 2 Tena
es: one 4-R. house, 0
house. Main dwelling 7-
bottoms. Would sell |
large farm or as 3 sma
iR. T. Black, Marietta,
425 A. farm, 13 mi. N. R
4% mi. of Church, 110 A. i
bal. in timber and pastur
young orchard, creek
through place. One ne
house, and 4-R. house;
barns. Would make goo
farm. E. A. Corbin, Ro
t,
84 A. good land, 5
Fairburn on Firfre an
Mill Road; Good hous
barn, plenty, wood, sch
and mail route by door
tricity available. For qui
$20.00 acre. H. B. Tho
Stonewall. Se
300 A. near Roberta. :
fences, timber, pastur
good farm land, $8.00
or terms. Dr. -W. M
Atlanta, 796 W. Peachtr
88 A., 8 mi. N. E. Co
35 A. cult., plenty oak
timber including saw
6-R. brick bungalow,
lights, water works, go
4-R. tenant house, oth
bldgs. Near school and chi
es. J. W. Jolly, Dublin.
400 A. in Rabun_Co.,
S. Clayton, 1mi, HE. Wi
O., containing some -
bottoms. Probably 50
cult., some young and fe
fruit trees. Good growt!
young timber, plenty of st
and cold springs, 1 water
One house. Sell reasonab
swap for good pasture lan
middle or South Ga. H
Crackin, Baxley. ae
56 A. farm, in heart o
mont Fruit section. L
well watered. Plenty woo
A. bottom land. $800.00
for quick sale. W. A, J
Alto. : a
- 91 A. good land; 65 A. in
Good bidgs., pasture, pel
ent water, convenient to
and Hwy. School bus and
by door, for sale or trad
home with smaH acrea
value basis. Preferably in}
Ga. E. E. Carter, Pavo
148 A. farm land, 5 mi.
joining Le Tourmeau prop
about 3 mi. from steel
houses and barns, seve
chicken houses and oth
bidgs. Will sell all or -
N. Camp, Jr., Toccoa, F
40 A. land in Ben ~
6 mi. W. Fitzgerald; |
cult., 15 in timber. Sma
and out-bldgs. $20.00
bert E. Lee, Fitzger:
625 A. Jand in
Co., located between Lo
Dry Fork Creeks; 300 .
with about 100 in cult
young pine timber, $3.
Also 275 A. land in Wilk
on Huttons Fork, about
open; 50 in Cult., good pas
jJand, $1,500.00. A. M. B
20 A. in cult., 5 A. goo
land in cult., good past
wire in good repair. 3-R
and out-bldgs. Plenty
about 50,000 ft.
saw -
good red land really pr
$700.00 for quick sale.
Brannon, Cumming, R
100 A. extra good lan
Seaboard Air Line Ry., clo
W.S. B. tower, % mi.
creek on place. Electr
in well. 2 fairly good he
Road through farm, soo!
paved: $200.00. A. J. R
son, Decatur, Rt. 2.
148 A. stock farm; 70 4
some timber; small cree
ture joins school groun
fertile land, crops. star
turn over to buyer, no
house, large poultry hous
all metal roofs. $3,000.0
terms, 1/3 down, $500.00
$22.50 per A. on terms.
Brinson, Whigham.
- 105 A. Jand in Jackson
N. W. Athens, E. of Rd. to
ferson. Small house, pa
$900.00 immediate -
D. G. Jackson, Decatur
40 A. farm, Cok
than 1 mi. Powder S
building, electricity
Plenty wood,
creek : branc
utes. Rent
or rent. ~ Pastures,
2 dwellings with barns.
bk Underwood, Mill-
t
: of Honibet
on Mavictts. and .Cum-
Hwy. 100,000 ft. good
mber, ood pasture and
ew 9o-R. house,
icity, plenty good out-
og pasture and chick-
ins. Priced right, come and
e Prance, Marietta, Rt.
farm, 3- mi.
\d road, 1 mi. off paved
Dwelling and large barn,
out-bldgs., electricity;
pasture with water. $4,-
-eash or terms. at 4 per
Lula, $11, 600. 00. Docia
Tula. 2
A. ordinary land, mike
corn, peas,
41 mi. Lovett; 2. mi.
ghway, for sale. Write
Maggie Thornton, or
r Jordan, Wrightsville.
--Jand* 4. bldg. Jots on
head Hwy. 2 mi. Bremen.
ouse, barn, timber. Site
lake.
- (Like marble).
ees Bremen.
me ene timber, iene
5-R. house, and barn.
E. A. lights, water, few ft.
mm house. Some fruit trees,
running water
Shes.
never ee
ae wells
. for farming, tobacco, truck
3 mi. Hahira. For sale
. C. A. SorUpe: Aug-
"| ke see river borkorn farm,
rent to city limits of Aug-
Dbl. track R. R. frontage.
dwelling, large stock
: ant houses. City water
ric lights. Ideal for truck-
: dairying, general farming.
5 minutes of Church,
d market. Eric Ww.
: See, _ Richmond
ae good smooth land in
ee Co., 2 mi, from East-
_ Good. bungalow dwelling.
e hts, 3-R-. ceiled tenant
se, good barn. Pasture with
ings in it. $50.00 worth of
m wire fence around place.
00. J. P. Higginbotham,
Ae land in Rabun Co. 6
N. W. Clayton. 2% mi. No.
un Gap, on good. road. 30
_ cult., 3 A in apple orchard,
_ in pasture, bal. in wood-
On mail and school bus
_ electric line. Eis -: Whit-
163 x 9 mi. S. E. bot es in
ckdale Co., 18 mi. S. Decatur,
or 6 mi.- from pavement. 60
-cult., (good mulatto soil):
. river bottom, 800 ft. riv-
er frontage: 8 and 3-R. houses,
wells and fine springs.
ree rocks or gullies, not
one ft. of swamp. $20.00 A.
ms if desired. W.G. Keith,.
ainesville, Rt. 10.
- and 4 mi:
, bottom land, water,
all house, plenty puildings,
electricity, paved road, school
bus, (high school and Gram-
mar school). Sell _ bargain.
Claud I. :Cobb, Pecotur. Rt. 4,
BY. 0465.
850 A. farm: Schema with
~ ereek, branch, . plenty wood,
some 130 thousand ft. original
pine timber and oak. Creek
bottoms. One large and one
small house, power and school
Good neighbors. Sell
or trade for City property. See.
D. A. Bagley, M. D., Austell.
land, near Brooklyn, Stewart
Co.- Old dwelling in grove, ten-
houses, barns, pasture,
r $3,200.00. Fletcher Pear-
n, Decatur.
300 A.. 10 mi. Atlanta. on a
ft. road. Springs, running
water, lot of good timber. Good
By at $30.00 A. Ethel Merk,
onewall.
100 A. rich farm Jand: 60 or
A. for cultivation. Good
pasture, 3-R, house on public
woad, good parn and well, ten-
ouse. and barn. Conven-
rx school bus, 1% mi. to
st Church, % mi. from
No. 12. (Rented for
fe rage Mrs..|
e
| Jand, good pasture,
mt bale cotton to acre);
Marietta |
potatoes,
that grows on farm.
Unlimited amt.
' small fish pond, farm |
water falls.
Dale.
dition).
/ Come
of Decatur. |
r ich land.
Crawfordville |
25 A. good land: 3 A. bottom
orchard.
I house (ceiled). barn,
chicken house. Mail by door:
2 mi. of town. J. M. Powell,
Villa Rica, Rt. 2, Box 235.
2 adjoining farms, totaling 73
A. One or both, fall delivery.
Improved with good house and.
out-bldgs. Electricity, pasture,
orehard, fine shrubbery and
flowers, Timber land, springs.
On mail Hwy., 15 mi. -N.
Ganev Mrs. R. C. White,
5 Oo.
824 A land 7 mi. No. Talla-
-poosa on good gravel road. 150
A. good creek bottoms, 2 houses,
barn on school bus and mail
route. $10.00 A. W-.- B. Wil-
liams, Tallapoosa, Rt. 2.
925. A. fertile land, % mi.
Hwy., 26 mi. No. Macon, in
Jasper Co. Thousands of cords
pulpwood, growing timber pine,
ash and other trees. Bargain
for investment. Mrs, Mary A.
Russell, Juliette.
30 A. land in Dawson Co., 12
A. have been in Cult., but part
of it needs reclearing. Small
4-R. house, not finished. If in-
terested write or see and make
best offer. E. Howard Tatum,
Blue Ridge. =
= 950-2A- Jand? 10-<mi,- No -wW..
Griffin. 5 mi.-W. Pomona for
Sale or rent. Two 5-R. houses,
other small ones on school bus
and mail route. Wood, water.
Will sell half or all. . Mrs. Fran-
ces Underwood, Atlanta, 1163
Astor Ave., S. W.
carta A. in Cherokee Co. (near
Lathentown): 7 A. cotton, apple
orchard: good metal roof barn,
chicken houses (2600 Cap.):
Good--34-R= house (painted)
joins
Ideal place for
dam and lake site. Geo. Little,
Ball Ground: Rt. 2. -
{00 A. farm under. separate
fence: 15 A. woodland: 85 A.
level tillable land. No stumps.
4-R. house, barn, pump well,
% mi, Church on school and
mail route. 6 mi. Camilla.
Down oe other on terms.
Mrs. J. W. Beck. Camilla, Abeer
Box 215.
60 A. farm land on Dallas-
Acworth Hwy. House, out-
bldgs., good well water and
pasture. Write or come see.
VEE Tupwin,. Dallas Rte:
279 A. land in woods all ex-
cept 10 A. of bottom land.
Branches on two sides. 1 mi.
| from No. 83 paved Hwy. $4.00
Ax Dt -J. AS Brown, shady
Nice corner lot on 2 good
public roads, 4% mi. from paved
rd. in Lamar Co., 2 mi, from
Milner, 7 mi. Griffin. _Con-
sisting of 1-9/20 A. Thickly
settled. Ideal. building lot.
$75.00 cash or terms. Mrs. W.
H. Rucker, Milner.
175 A. farm for sale. 60 A.
bottom Jand. 12 mi. Covington,
4% mi, from Snapping Shoals on
Conyers Rd.
lights, 6 stall barn, other out-
bldgs. (House in good. con-
Will consider exc. for
smaller farm. J. P. Hampton,
Covington, Rt. 5.
100 A. good land in highest
state of cult. Good bldgs. and
woods. Also. 50 A. Jand. 2
good houses, barns, good pas-
ture, terraced. Govt. Speci-
fications. No correspondence.
and see. C. D. Wood,
Bowdon. =
873 AS farm 232ml. rom
Long. County Seat. 61 A. in
cult. 1 main dwelling, 1 ten-
ant house, 2 barns and other
out-bldgs. Young fruit trees
and pine timber. Mail and
school bus and telephone by
door. Yr. round water hole for
livestock. $14.00 per A. D,. H.
Horton, Ludowici.
70 A. woodland, no house, 18
mi. from Atlanta in Douglas
Co. Will sell or trade for In-
come property. Write what
you have that is clear of debt.
Value $1800.00 clear. R. C.
Hudson, Smyrna, Rt. 1. >
160 A., 100 in cult., some saw
timber, pasture with water.
1% mi. Bostwick, Morgan Co.
6-R. and 5-R. house with lights
and water. 9 teacher School,
bus route. Geo. W. Malcom,
Madison, Rt. 4, Box 157.
648 A..in Rockdale Co.: 160
A. timber and lake site. 100 A.
in cult.;, 6-R. house, 2 creeks
through place. Price $12.00 A.,
sash or terros. Near School,
paved road. E. W. Reagin, Li-
thonia; Box 224. Phone 2671.
160 A. farm, 35 A. cleared, 2
houses, out- bidgs., 246 > mi.
North Hinton on No. 53 Hwy.,
Pickens Co. Sell, rent or exc.
for smaller acreage, of good
W. L, Wilson, Talk-
ink. Rock, Rt. 2. a ae
> Atlanta,
7-R. house with |
215 A. stock farm, 3/4 under
wire, pasture, running water,
milk house, 3
tenant houses; 1 mi. Shady
Dale. $12.00 A. 202% A. at
Aikenton, Jasper Co., 3 mi.
Shady Dale, on R. R. Two 4-R.
dwellings, 4 tenant houses,
barns, out-bldgs.. pair- of mules,
farming tools, Fordson tractor,
Harrow, Grist mill, Corn shell-
er. $25.00 A.. including equip-
ment. Mix Methvin, Decatur,
528 South Candler Str
18 A. farm 7 mi. N.
Tanta.
land.
sleeping barn,
We Ate
$3,000.00. W. Johnson,
1% Evelyn Place,
Phone Bel. 1329-J. /
80 A. facie 4-R. house, sev- |
eral nice out-bldgs., plenty
wood, running water in 2 pas-
tures, good well of water at
kitchen door. Good dirt road,
mail by door. close to school,
stores, churches. Good neigh-
borhood, Bargain. F. M. Mc-
Cleskey, Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
25 A. land 4 blocks from
Aly
Court House in Nashville.
fenced. 10 A. hard wood and
pasture, 15 A. in cult.; 5 (20)
fine resident lots ready to sub_
divide, all] included in the 25
A. tract, for sale. J, H. An-
derson, Nashville.
Fine, 100 A. farm, 11 mi. out,
fence, eross fenced: -has. 7-R.
Co bath) home, hot and cold
running water, electricity: Also
nice 4-R. ceiled house,. large
barn. . Several var. fruit and
grapes, several head livestock,
1 mule. $5,000.00... Mrs. J W.
Jenling. Columbus, 1001 Oak-
view Ave
About 145.6 A. land, 2 mi. Ss
Zebulon. If interested write or
see. Mrs. W. D. Howell, Zeb-
ulon.
60 A.
cult.,
8-R house, electric lights, wide
porches, barn, chicken house.
etc. Soil for all crops. Finest
drinking water wells.
Grist mill, R. R., and Hwy..
Church and schools. Bargain
or swap for other property.
in S. W. Ga., half in
Ces IIe Bainbridge, Rte
Box 82. :
101% A, farm; 70 open land.
fine pastures, running water in
3. wells;
ea. 2.g00d springs,
5-R. house, finished; 4-R. ten-
ant hotise ceiled; 40x50 barn,
/ wagon house, grain loft, other
out-bldgs., all with good tops.
2 A. nice orchard, school bus
and mail by door. on good road. |
See W. W. McPherson, ae
Rica Rte tT;
~ 400':A. land, 2600 ne river
front, in Jasper Co. midway be-
tween Jackson and Monticello
for sale.
Also 220 A.. 5 mi. E.
Jackson for rent. R. C. es:
Jackson.
247 A., in Spaidine Co., 5%
Te Griffin on paved road,"
Bus line, and on Rt. A line.
e oe house, 3 tenant houses,
good barn, out- bldgs. all good
some 80-A. open land,
wood, running back to
cond.,
bal.
~ereek: some bottoms. $17.50 A.
part terms. Possession at once. |
Cc. R. Walker, Griffin.
10% A. on paved road. Elec-
tricity, phone, school bus, mail
route. % mi. City limits of
East Point.
for farm of equal value. Also
9 A. on paved road, dandy 5-R.
house, Phone, lights, ete. Dbl.
garage, % mi. of East Poinf.
$3,750.00. H.C. Kidson, College
Park, Rt. 1, Phone CA. 3393.
123% A. in Gordon Co.. N.
Fairmount, near Hwy.. school
bus and mail route by door. 7
A. good bottom land (make 50
bu. corn per acre) good upland,
(make one bale cotton per A.)
13 A. cotton allotment. Good.
5-R. house, and free stone
water springs. Good out-
bidgs., plenty running water
in pasture. $3500.00, half cash,
rest terms. J. M. Evans, Rang-
er.
1 horse farm for sale or rent,
with about 3000 turpentine
cups in connection to work on
50-50 basis: also hogs, goats
and chickens, etc., same basis.
Lee W. Herrin. Millwood.
3 farms: 600 A.. Burke Co.,
plenty water, timber for wood
and young timber. Good roads,
20 mi, Augusta. $4,000.00; 30
A. Franklin Co., well improved
land blidgs.,. on paved Rd.,
lights, water, 1% mi. Lavonia,
$3,500.00; 100 A. Stephens Co.
rolling land, some good soil and
timber, $400.00. H. M. Ford,
Lavonia,
54 A. N. Fulton. 1% mi. W.
Alpharetta: 35 A. in cult.. good
branch bottom pasture, 15 large
bearing pecan trees. Several
thousand ft. saw timber. 5-R.
house, out-blidgs., electricity,
running water in house. On
school bus and mail route,
Telephone. $3,000.00. S. B.
PECERSOn Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
-through them.
other farm.
Old house, good bottom
pot.
-paved Highway.
| Pines,
bal. pines, other timber;.
Near
| bay, 300 ft. pier,
Gemawilis: Midland R. R.
graded school.
, | Gainesville, Rt. 3..
ae
Ami.
$1500.00 or trade
339 SAC on Dior icuse Albany |
=paks
two good pastures with pr anch
Wired. Plenty
Hwy.: 5-R. crop in cult.,
swood: 7-R. residence, 3 tenant
houses, big barn, all good metal
roofs: Other out- bidgs. Fine
community and location.
00 A. Consider trade for an-
Mrs. T. W. Stubbs,
Americus, Rt. 2.
pile, Dee lang. off Hwy. No. 42,
1% mi. from : Conley. 5-K.
ose garage and large barn:
about 30 A. in eult., rest in pas-
ture with running water, pien_
ty wood. -F. A. Hendon, At~
lanta, 1984 A. Lakewood Ave.
S. E. Ma. 0525.
69 A. in South Douglas Co.;
3-R. house, mail and bus route.
Timber. Also 92 A. on South
R. R., 1 mi. E, Tallapoosa De-
crimp metal roof, tenant house
and barn~ with metal roofs.
Mrs. M. B. Irwin, Atlanta, 36
Standish Ave., N. W.
569 A., 100 cleared, fenced
pastures, Artesian water, 3
-good houses, electricity. usual
out-bldgs., all new farm equip-
ment, 2 tractors, Hammer Mill,
etc., 45 head fine Guernsey and
J ersey cows, .reg. bull,
So. Savannah. oe Ce.
Futch, Savannah, Rt. :
1750 A. fine farm ae on
ineluding 690
A. cultivation, 100-A. 6 yr. old
800 A. woodland, 250
A., pecans, 22 yrs. old, pro-
duction 75000 pounds and ip=
creasing. Jay G. Williamson,
Eastman.
6% J on Ske Hwy. 2
rk. City limits. 8-R.- house,
sereened porches, bathroom,
running water. Electricity, 2
wells, 1 large, 2 smal] laying
houses, 3 brooder houses, 2-R.
servant house, 1 feed room.
Some fruit ang pecan trees, 3
stall garage.
E. Paine, Athens, Box, 88.
50-60 A
fenced. 7- -R. hous e}
house,
out-bldgs.
(4-R.
- Good
for hogs,
chickens, trucking, house in ex-
cellent: condition. 600 ft. on
AD bes APs St,
Marys,
aad AS
H. Christian,
Mrs. ae
Se Cousins, Jonesboro.
od A. farm, located in Hall |
S. E. Gainesville on
at
Good laying
plenty
8 mi.
Klondike Station.
janc&, pasture, timber,
running water, 11-R. dwelling,
| 4-R. tenant house with barns.
Good roads. near Churches and
Gate Simpson,
.75 A, farm in high state of
cult.; 14 A. cotton
from Lavonia in Franklin Co.;
2,000 peach trees, bearing. 7-R.
house,
De Re Jordan, Danielsville.
100. A. land and one 50 AS
tract near a good town; Also
400 A. with good saw timber,
around 100,000 ft. or more,
Cheap. A. B. Faver, Griffin,
Box: 418. i :
150 A on Waynesboro and
Augusta Hwy. Lights, school
bus and bus line by door. Good
land, 23 A. cotton; 2-3 R. hous-
es, deep well, running water,
some fence. $2,500.00, part
eash ang terms. H. C Syms,
Augusta, 1620 Walton Way
20 A. good land 10 mi. At-
Janta: 5 A, woods and pasture:
TR, frame house, lights. pump.
branch, dbl garage, metal barn.
Offering till Ape -1bth for
$5,250.00 cash. W. G. Kelley,
Conley.
539 A. in Jefferson Co. near
Hwy. from Louisville with
about 200 A. in cult.,
Creek: Suitable for cattle rais-
ing or tractor farming. 5 hous-
es. Sell or rent for 5 bales
cotton. Also 60 A. in swamp
timber, large acreage in young
pines. Make offer. S. S. Free-
man, Siloam. .
j A. lot: Big 4-R. house in
Loganville. Barn, running wa-
ter, lights available. 3 pecan
trees, 21 yrs. old. | $750.00;
7-5/8 A. near Atlanta: 28 pe-
ean trees: 22 yrs. old, 4 mi:
from house, water and lights
available, $1,000.00. Sell to-
gether or separately. Cash or
seorms. Will exchange, T. W.
Allgood, Atlanta, 169 Arhng-
See S. W. Phone RA.
7266.
50 acres Turpentine timber |
land for sale or exc. for a good
tractor on rubber with plani-
ers and euyultivators, Allis-
Chalmers or Farmall M. prefer-
red. No junk, Mrs. L. J. Walk-
er, McRae, Rt. A, Box 62 as
kind, |
$20.
6-R. ceiled house, 5 V-
county.
lights,
fine
timber, on paved road, 10 mi. |
D.
=2<eparns:
$1,000. 00 cash, bal. tern
School buses. E.
river - front, Be AS
need some repairing) -
Very reason-
land in the Western
part of the County between
Riverdale and Selina.
allotment: Bomber plant.
43 A. in cult.: 7 A. bottom land,
from: Carnesville.'6 mi.
$2,500.00, easy terms.
| near
joins Big /Macon and Atlanta, 4 mi fr
sf AS
plenty anaes x
eee 4 pas
Sie -out- bldgs. - lec
available. 15 minute. c
Bell Aircraft plant.
rent. M. Li PYey, ee
bes
school bus, and Roa
inie..6> R. _cigelings a
$20. 00 A., part cash, term ba
See. W.
RFD.
128% A. near Gillsvil:
Hwy., 60 A. pasture.
11-R. house
barn near high scho
churches. $2400.00
Loan, 3% per cent i
Sell my equity for $800.00. Re
ert M. Conner, Gainesville.
155 Aus 62M Ss Reids:
Tattnall = Go. woodland
house. Good water,
timber. ue Cary L
Manassas. ee
178. A., 3 mi. Fioweee: Br:
Hog Mtn. Rd.: ee R. crop in
3 pastures, 3 stream
house, ne aoe paint sc ee
electricity. 3-R. tenan S
woods. $20.00
Simpson, Atlanta, 265
St., NW.
60 A. land in i Norte Ga.
E, Canton, 1 mi. from H
BO. 150 Mette sa i
plenty wood, 25 A a
of eult.
Good house. bar:
chicken houses, elect:
good pasture, . well.
water. Near church and.
J, T. Blair, Canton, Rt
250 acres Fayette
| tillable; bal. pasture
pasture. .Good 7 a
houses, out- bldgs., y
ton, Good roads, chur nS
and mail facilities. Elec. iav:
able. ze were, 3 sprin
Clear title. -
$4,000.00.
cent interest.
ments, Dalton, Box 25
50 AS 36 in cultivati
ly level, in high stat
tion. Good 14 A. pas
water and some timber, 01
dirty road -rurat i
School bus py do
churches. 6 R. extra
finished dwelling (3
cost around $3,000.0
tenant house, water, ,
kinds of fruit. shrubber
eae seat. Worth Co
6u A ee goodhd
frontage, adjoins
Home at Roswell,
High anc
Some saw timber, Sell
for large lot in So. Fulto
near Orchard Knob. Addre
John T. Stone. Hap sone 8
Virginia Ave., Ca 3812
61 A. farm, on Desiee
McDonough Rd., or Fi
and East Atlanta _ R
house, eropper hous
-out- -bldgs. $35.00 A.
Bishop, Ses so
poe Elec. lights: Goo,
bidgs.. near 4 churches
buses pass daily; 3 schoo
West Ga. College near.
road, $2,750.00. Mary
don, Carrollton, 3 Peacht
33 A., 5-R. house,
pasture, $100.00 A: 69
house, tenant house, barn,
ture, 2 A. orchard and
$125.00 A. Both at Su
school, churches,
Terms, $100.00 down,
monthly payments like rent,
R. Darsey. Atlanta, 305 Centra
Ave., S: W. ;
~ Small place, located be
pavement. 6 R. house,
screened porches, larg
lawn, flagstone walk,
and shrubbery, garage,
lot and shelter for stat
den, chicken run,
a Mrs. Sadie Pierce
S. E. Jefferson on Athens ih
good 2 horse farm cultivate
A. for cotton: - good ~
wood, pasture.
dwelling, metal roof
20x30. Electricity~ availa
bus and mail. Near good t
schools, etc., Desirable h
farm. $2500. 00. =
mond, Atlanta,
Drive, N. E.
Good, fertile, gently
100 A., 2-H. farm. So
ber, running _ strear Boot
Zebulon, Pike ;
Tops
FARM LAND FOR SALE FARM LAND FOR SALE
| FARM LAND FOR SALE. :
oo \EXCHANGE FOR FARM
hhurst, 85 A.. in cultivation, 4
ldgs., 6 R., and 2-3 R. houses
good spring and pasture, 15 to
= parrel stand Turpentine: 4
to 6 A. tobacco land, cotton, all
peanuts and all you want to
ah J. H. Jones, Hazlehurst,
Rt 1.
50 A., on Hogansville-Green-
ville Rd. Ideal place for
Dairy or Poultry farm. Good
Bidg. 5- R. dwelling, barn,
_ @hicken house, etc., Sell or exc.
for place of smaller acreage,
-mear good high school, near At-
lanta on Roosevelt Hwy. F. T.
Meacham, Hogansville. Rt. 1.
82 A., farm suitable for
tock raising, hogs and chick-
ens, (until timber now under
Jease is out), near schoo] and
church, 4 mi. Highway pave-
ment at store half way to
umpkin. Assortment of sandy
lay loams. 4 R. house, tin
roof barn (needs repairs), open
land near house and by branch
bordering. Mrs. Henry Lynch,
Lumpkin,
69% acres farm in Fulton Co.,
7 mi. Atlanta, 3 mi. Roosevelt
way, % mi. to paved read.
R. painted house, small barn.
1] or exc. for tractor and 3
yieces of equipment. Call Riv-
erdale a A. J, Bender, Riv-
. Cochran Field? 300 bear-
ecan trees, 11 A. young
pines: 40 A. good woods,
fertile, open land. besides
6 R. house (ned
ome rzpairs). Reasonable price.
. Bell, Lizella, Rt. 2.
ed, nearly all tenable. On
1 Ave., just North
n Stone Mtn., Rd. paved.
aN : 4
A. farm, near Dixie High-
res extra good crop land.
| A. pasture bordered by}
of fishing water, 100 pbe-
( woodland. 8
ouse, 3 R. tenant house,
trees, 125 A.
Baptist Church, school bus
mail route by door. 130 A.
land, 7 A. bottoms, plen-
See Sheriff. Otis King.
farm and woodland,
E. of Felton; new 4-R.
use, barn, out-bldgs.
uda pasture, 2 everlasting
es and springs. Wood
timber; 20 A. to cult.
clear. Church and
- bus. Sell or consider
- ther property. Mrs.
tubblefield, Felton, Rt. 2.
, farm, half. in crep
al. pasture and timber
W. Atlanta. Sou.
ises, wells of good ljast_
springs and branch-
wamp land. Good com-
5 ill cut up in small
TT. Je Biggers, Bremen.
epen land: 4-R. house
3 good springs, 40,-
saw timber, fine lake
mai] and school bus
$850.00 cash, or trade
smaller place close to
sy E. Hyde, Douglas-
. 50. 55 A. respectively;
ng leaf timber, bot-
d, some saw timber
ee. 6 mi. W. Car-
ash. See, dont write.
land in good com-
R. Good water. % mi.
about 2 mi. of town.
use, needs some repairs.
OA. m eult.; 554... more
n tract. $2,750.00 cash.
debtedness. See. W.
is, Millwood.
ae mi Redan School
school bus and mail.
. houses. Most of
in high state of cult.,
and springs. gootl stock
y location; 15 A. bot-
1,600.0
4 ee A. for quick sale.
line,
eral farm, including
ols, tractor (new) and
Lot of nice sheep,
hogs, Reg. Jersey cat-
- mares; mules, etc.
A. in cultivation; 4
00 Gt.
L it-b] gs.
s of Tallapo
140 A., farm, 12. mi. Macon,
of |
or see. D, E. Bond, Li- |;
mi. East Thomasville.
other out-bldgs. E. E. |
Thomasville, R# 3.
located 31 mi. S. W.
6 mi. of Palmetto, 4.
ater and wood, house. not
oes through land, 4 mi.
men; 1 brick house and
on and near paved road.
Foster, \ Carrollton, .
ear Church, school,
0 Federal loan on.
W. Welborn, De-
ets y equipped Stock.
gaw timber,
Adjoining
osa. W. I.
2945 A., 5 mi. East of Hazle-
igs, out-bldgs., running }
mi. of Covington Hwy. |
| ete.
with permanent pasture.
close to schools. post office and
stores, 3 blocks R. R. Depot,
near Atlanta, Surburbs, in good.
fast growing Community. Sell
reasonable. Consider exchange
for heavy farm mare or mule,
eattle or hogs. Edwin Simp-
son, Atlanta, 695 Paynes Ave.,
N. W.
Several farms, consisting 225
A. with 80, 20 yr. old pecan
trees and 100 A. in pasture:
Also 100 A., 40 A. and 65 A.
respectively for sale. Write, or
see. G. G Ridgeway. Royston.
125 A.: good 5-R. house with
electricity, 3-R. tenant house,
2 good barns. 3-H. crop in cult.,
land lies well. Near 2 Hwys.
2% mi. High school, bus by
door. 15 A. pasture, plenty
timber, apples, pecans, grapes,
Bargain. E. A. Montgom-
ery, Acworth.
1800 A. land, nearly all fenc-
eq and eross fenced, about 60
A. in cult., a part in pasture
grasses, 4 fish ponds, lots of
lake. Adjoings Canoochee Riv-
er. Lots of fish and game and
timber. Good for hogs. cattle,
goat raising, etc. Write. M.
Chason. -Groveland.
167 A. farm in Douglas Co.;
70 A. open; timber, pasture,
pond, creek. spring, well, or-
chard, barn, 7-R. house. Near
school bus, between 2 paved
reads in sight of Villa Rica.
$2500.00 cash. S. F. Walden,
Villa Riea, Rt. 1. .
60 A. farm, good land, good
community, near Church and
school; 5-R, dwelling, tenant
house, out-bldgs.. water in yard
| and pasture. 8 mi. S. Rockmart.
See. J. M. Garner, Rockmart,
Rt: 3.
Over 100 acres in Union Co.
Ga., 80 A., fine upland; fine
elay sub-soil for wheat or to-
25 A. creek bottoms.
Plenty water. Out-bldgs., large
house with 3 chimneys. $6,-
000.00. Possession any time. J.
F. Arrant (Resident of Geor-
gia, but Post Office over line
in Murphy, N.'C.) Rt. 2, Box
132. a :
-Between 7-12 A. land; nice
house, young orchard, small
bacco.
good strawberry patch, garage,
out-bldgs., good water on back
porch. Worth $1500.00, sell or
swap for good small farm. I..
CG. Payton, Trion, Box 187.
- Sacrifice, 192 A, farm: 116 A.
in cult., bal. woods, pasture, 7
mi. Moultrie. Mail and rural
electric line, % mi. Church and
school. 2 dwellings, barn, to-
bacco barn, out-bldgs. 18 A.
eotton allotment, 4 A. tobacco.
10 peanuts. Permanent water.
$30.00 A. Terms, $3,000.00
eash, bal. over period of 10
yrs.
Re 5.
38% A.; 24 A. tillable, T-
1/10 A. cotton allotment, 5 A.
bottoms, permanent pasture,
fire wood. 3-R. house, out-
J. T. Dampier, Moultrie,
bldgs., 2 fine springs, orchard. |
Also 7 yr. old brood mare, 3
yr. old milch cow, wagon, corn,
fodder, -beans, cow feed, sweet
potatoes, cottonseed, few farm
teols. Mail and school bus bv
door. Heard Co. $1,800.00
cash. T. J. Freeman, Roopville,
Rice
100% A.; 6-R. house, 3 out-
bldgs., pasture with running
water, fish pond, saw mill tim-
ber, all kinds fruit trees, good
farm land. Good place for
chickens. Sell cheap. Come and
see. Mandy McCollum, Butler.
101% A.: 20 A. creek bottoms;
2 houses, 2 and 4-R., barn. out-
bldgs., pastures with ,running
water, good well at each house,
springs, fruit trees; School bus
and mail by door, near Church.
Good upland, plenty fire wood.
Good neighborhood. J. M. Hall,
Douglasville. Rt. 4.
25 A. in South Fulton, 4 mi.
from Fairburn. 4-R. house with
lights. Write or call. Mrs.
Willie Pearl Brand, Fairburn,
Rt. 2. Phone DE. 4997.
52 A. 12 mi. BE. Canton... 12.
mi. W. Cumming, land joins
water falls. 29% A. cult... 7 A.
ecotten, small fish pond, small
apple orchard, good barn, 4-R.
house, good roof and painted.
2800 cap. chicken houses. G.
H. Little, Ball Ground, Rt. 2.
280 A. land: 150 in cult., good
dwelling pasture plenty running
water on school bus and mail.
route. Hwy. through center of
place. Price $4,000.00. John B.
Sinquefield,-Bartow, Rt. 2. ~
350 A. land- 100 A. in cult.
5
dwelling with out-bldg; 1
dwelling with no out-bidgs..
3,000 turpentine cups, good
growth young timber on wood-
land. On R. E. A. power line.
Also on_school bus and mail:
route. Price right. W. H O.
d$mith,Nahunta
Nice property on pavement, |
-reute.
some out-bldgs., for sale.
A. Stene, Atlanta, Rt. 7. Box
33m = 2 =<tstss~ssSC Ss Wilks, Jefferson,
128 A. land in Habersham;
126 A. land Franklin Co. and
425 A. in Baldwin Co. for sale}
or trade. A. F. Quickel, Macon,
Rik.
160 A.. 7 mi. W. of Gaines-
ville. well timbered, about 20
A. open for cult. with some
branch bottoms. 2 houses,
(need some repairs), on school
bus and mail route. For sale
or trade for smaller farm in,
desirable location. D. T. Law-
son, Gainesville, Rt. 7, Box 128.
Approx, -240 A... 142 mi,
Topeka Junction, Upson Co.. 6
mi. Barnesville. 2 houses, 3
plows, 30 A. good branch bot-_
toms: also the Old Coffee Mill
sight on Tobler Creek, 100 A..
3 strand bobwire fence, plenty
timber, good land. $3,000.00
with $1000.00 cash; bal. 15 yrs.
5 per cent interest. H. M.
Harp. Ashburn.
5 A. land with 2-R. house
joining City. Chicken house,
city water, electricity available,
fire wood, school bus and mail
Fine for chickens, gar-
den and strawberries. Cheap
for quick sale. No letters ans.
Come see. Chas. Shrum, Fitz-
gerald, McKinley Ave... Bt. 3.
Box 167. *
155 A. land, 4% mi. N. E
Americus on paved road. Good
house and barns, near Church
and schools. Level land, also
good pasture land. $4,500.00
cash. (now rented for 4 bales
cotton.) Douglas Freeman, Sr.., |
Americus, 207 E. Chureh St.
100 A. land; No house but
plenty timber for one, saw mill
nearby. Fine for cattle or hog.
farm. Good pastures, streams |
yr. round. Public road, lights
available, near Church and
school bus by door. Fine com-
munity. Several hundred cords
of wood can be cut. 7 mi. from
Macon Courthouse. Write. P.
Cc, Lord, Macon, Rt. oe
One 5-H. farm: 152 A. on)
hard roaq from Dublin to Vi-
dalia, just below Soperton.
(Buildings cost $6,000.00.) Has
| 2 running springs, just like ar- |
| tisian wells. run all time. never
dry. $6,500.00. Terms.
Cadle, Mt. Vernon. >
Small farm of about 12 A.
land, mostly bottoms. Good
6-R. house, good well, orchard,
Hwy. in front ,railroad in back.
Good Church and school. Good
barn and out-bidgs. gt
Aaron, Minera! Bluff.
One farm: 140 A. Govern-
ment measure, 5 mi. Carters-
ville near Cass Station, Bar-
tow Co. 65 A. in cult. 2 pas-
tures, fenced, one with hog
ire. New house (built last
-yr.) 2 tenant houses, new barn
and out-bldgs. Land lies well,
broad valley with bottoms and
stream running through. Some
timber, $4,000.00, half down and
terms on bal. D. L. West, Lula.
100 A. with many good new
bldgs., 3 mi. S. E. Bremen. 20
A. fenced in good bottoms, sod
ded in grasses and clovers,
carrying 20 cattle. Large
young orchards. L. D. Mc-
Pherson, Bremen, Rt. 1.
Approximately 18 A. good
farm land near Camp Gordon
Gate No. 2. Good spring of
water, stream crosses one corn-
er of land. Reasonable. Apply.
irs, P. H. Blackstone, Augusta,
W. B.
1625-15th St.
Two farms on Franklin-
Hogansville Hwy., in Heard
Co. Ideal for livestock farm-
ing. Terms if interested. H.
Y. Cook, Milledgeville, P. O.
Box 128.
400 A. connected; 4 houses, 2
barns, 2 creeks, 1 large spring.
1% million saw timber in Hast
Arraurchee Valley, Walker Co.
J. H. Shanan, LaFayette, Rt. 2.
2 A. land with house, barn,
other out-bldgs.. with well on
porch: Near school bus route,
church. Sell for cash. No let-
ters ans. Come and. see for
yourself.
Mt. Airy, Rt. 1.
6 A. land: lot of pine woods,
near Buford on Hwy. New
4-R. house, painted, good wa-
ter, out-bldgs. For sale or
trade for house and: lot near
town on Hwy. Miss Eva Haynes, |
| Chicopee.
WANTED TO BUY OR
EXCHANGE FOR FARM
. LAND
Want to buy or rent a small
i h. farm with real. pasture,
partly or entirely fenced, with.
g00q water, house, barn, etc.
Also have nice place, garden.
etc., good water, 5 R. house,
oO.
=
See .
Guss L. Alexander, |
WANTED TO BUY OR
LAND
Want 50 acres or less within
30 mi. Atlanta, accessible to
surfaced road; dwelling unim-
portant but prefer tenant house.
Must have year round No. 1
Spring, part: cleared, balance
woods. Write. C. D. Veeder,
Atlanta, 155 Third St., N. E.
Exchange 100 acres more or
less of cut ever land that is in
sight or adjoins ten commercial
Apple Orchards, for 20 or 30 A.
of smooth land, near a town on
a good road. Describe in first
letter. S. F. Pettit, Ellijay.
Want to buy. good farm in
Whitfield or adjoining county.
Will exc. my 75 A. farm in
Gwinnett Co., 23 mi. Atlanta,
1 mi. Lawrenceville Hwy.. for
same or sell my farm. Write
or see. L. W. Earnest, Law-
renceville, Rt. 2. :
Willi pay cash for small or
med. size farm in: middle or
No. Ga., located on good Hwy.
adjoining, or near town. Must
have 5 or 6 R. house with elec-
tricity and good water, some
good bottom land and good
family orchard. A. W. Har-
rell, Savannah, Wilmington
Island. 3
Want 50 to 100 A. good land,
near Griffin, and prefer it to
be on paved Highway. Also
want a Grist Mill. All te be
reasonable in price. Write. A.
-R. Wood, Griffin.
Want lease with option to
| buy in 3 to 5 yrs., a reasonably :
level farm with running water,
| prefer under 60 mi. from At-
H. A. Ray, Hapeville, |
lanta. 5
399 Waters Rd.
Want 50 to 100 acres, cheap
for all cash. State all details
in first letter. W. C. Lancaster,
| Doraville.
Want improved farm, 15 to 50
scribe and give best price for
oS or terms, H. A. Neal, Ash-
land.
Want open land, within 40
miles Griffin preferred, soil
ysuited to profitably produce
general crops. Will buy, estab-
lish stand of Kudzu on it for
part of land, or on any reason-
able terms. Y. M. Anderson,
Williamson.
Want small farm, 20 to 40
acre near Canton on Canton-
Marietta Highway, with good
house, barn, cow and hog pas-
ture, good water and fire wood,
D. D, Fronebarger, Canton, Rt.
Will exc. for farm near goo,
RR town or equal value in saia
town, 138 A... 8 mi. N..W.
Dahlonega, 10 A. bottoms. 125
A. oak timber, small shoais.
No blidgs. Extra water, as-
bestos. Price your property
when answering. John.
Simmons, Cleveland.
Want buy small house with
some acreage of good land, near
town, or thickly settled com-
munity of real good people.
Must be reasonable. If isnt as
above dont write. G. Brand,
Blakely. :
Want small abandened farm,
for standing rent or purchase
on annual payment basis (be-
gin paying this fall). Prefer
one with orchard. C. A-Grif-
fith, Atlanta, 631 W. Peach-
tree St. .
Want a farm with a water
mill, goog house, on good road,
and near a Church of Christ.
Prefer one suitable for raising
poultry. J. W, Chastain, Em-
erson.
Would trade some land on
Notla T. V..A. Lake for a good
ar O, F. Wellborn, Blairs-
ville.
Want a North Ga. farm on
ereek or river, in exchange for
house and lot in Calhoun, or
other farm in Gordon Co. W.
F, Rowland, Calhoun.
Farm in Jackson County, 4
mi. East of Hoschton, 58 acres,
good, 6 stal] barn, 5 R. andl
R. dwellings, out-bldgs.,
all good cnd., for reasonable
standing rent or will sell. G.
C. Gregory, Hoschton. Rt. 1.
Will rent 30 acres, fine creek
borne land, especially adapted
to egetable production. 3
R. house, inside city limits Am-
ericus. R. S. Broadhurst, Am-
ericus. Box 404. :
running water, 11 A. cotton al-
lotment, 14 A. bottom land, for
thirds and fourths, or standing
rent. Joe C. Styles, Tallapoosa,
Want small or consider large
farm, near city limits of some
00d town in Jackson Co., or 5
or 6 mi, out on g00q road. Give
particulars and best cash price.
x
: Wednesday, M arch 24, 19
acres on main, paved Highway,
jin Northern half of state. De-
| Want to buy 150 or 200
etc., |)
| mostly all farmable land
1-2 H., or 2-1 horse crops, 2 |
| houses, 2 barns, pasture with
WANTED TO BUY
EXCHANGE FOR FARI
LAND iS
650 A. farm. 150 cultivatior
150 pasture: 9 R. house wi
electricity and automatic wat
supply. Barn, 3 good t
houses, sev. extra out-hou
No equipment included.
mediate possession. Nea
ola. Shoals; S: i: Bike
Ellenwood.
Will pay cash for sm
medium size farm, with
good bottom land. some f
and fair. to good buildings. }
Bermuda grass. C. M. Do
Atlanta. Rt. 9, Box 36p.
M. W. Randell. :
Want buy few level or
level acres. close to East Po
part in cultivation and part
pasture, running water, part
rich bottoms: small
dwelling, small barn fairly goo
repair, priced cheap or
onable. F. G. Jinks, East P.
.242 Dauphine St.. Ca 1961.
- Want to buy farm or wooc
land, $100.00 cash, bal. month!
notes. near here: consider
run-down place if priced
Will also buy some s1
equipment, feed. ete. Wa
Beach, Waycross, Rt. 3. E
102. : : S
Want small place, 50:
acres, some wood on same. P
fer to hear from owner
North er Middle Ga. Will ma
cotton payments. J. J.
mons, Alto. Rt. 1:
Will exc. other property
small farm near Augus' /
B. L. Bryson, Augusta, 22
Richmond Ave. R
. Will exc. 72 A.. in Cobb
14 mi. Kennesaw, at Mt. C
Church: High and Grami
school bus at door; conve
to Bomber plant; 30.000 ft. sa
| timber, 5 R. residence, |}
ful shade, etc., for small res
dence in Fuiton Co., valu
$2,000.00 to $2,500.00.
Hopkins, Kennesaw.
Want to buy 50 te 100
good Jand, cheap. Must
4 R. house and barn, pa:
lewater, etc.. for general
ing. Pay half down or
E, Meeks, Lawrenceville.
Box 336.
Want to buy small far
too far from Atlanta, for
onable cash price. L. Z. Du
away, Atlanta, Rt. 5, Box
Want 1 to 20 acres Jand
house, in Colquitt, Brook:
Thomas Co.. State wh
have and cash price. Mrs
Dell. Berlin. Box 37.
Want buy small farm, n
transportation to Atlanta. Sn
down payment, bal. montt
notes. J. A. Barnett, Atlant
Rt. 1. Box 356, Phone AM
must lay well, 5
Southern Ga. Small down pay
ment and liberal terms: R. "
Prater, Atlanta. 2912 Looko
Place, N. . ae
Want to buy 50 or 100 a
land with livable house.
be a bargain for cash. M
Francis Powell, Macon, 1
| Chappell St. : .
Exc. for small farm
Atlanta (no boot), nice
side cottage, electric li
plenty shade, large lot,
surface road, near bus lin
mi. Atlanta. Furnish descrip
ion and lecation. H. E. Lee
East Point, 215 Centre Ave.
Want to buy small pla
good location for small far
with 10 or 20 acres, prefer
Winder, or other good
munity. W. GC. Smith, V
Bellview Ave. 5
Want to buy 40 to 80 acre
fair shape, with fair house
bargain for cash. Prefer Cok
or Fulton. Co., other place
No. Ga. considered. W.
Smith. Jr.. Roswell, Rt. 1.
Want to buy, lease or re
small place. 1 to 50 acres
No. Ga., with or without ho
Jas.-. Shedd, Atlanta, 352 S.
W. Pryor St. ce
Want to buy an Island near
Savannah or Brunswick, no
less than 1000 acres and be
some good timber; pay
price. Need 1 house or
and must have some wat
place. Want for home an
farming purpose. . H. Ed-
wards, Savannah. Boe
Want to buy small farm with
a water power grist mill, in
section to buy corn, Edw. H.
Mitchell, Atlanta, 1134 Lucile
Ave, S. W.,. (eare idhax
ONeal). ae
Want to buy-or rent for ce
small or med. size fa
Houston Co. Must hay
tricity, good water, e
terms, oe
Want to buy sma farm in
ulton or DeKalb Co. Clarence
unaway, Trion, D-62-11th St.
Want to buy small farm with
use, near Atlanta. See, write
one, Ja 5493. A. J. Davis,
ta, 74 W. Peachtree Place,
ant farm with old Colonial
preferably in Piedmont
oastal Plain region. De-
ribe fully as to location. soil,
ce ae ae supply, price
M. C, end Atlanta,
No.
money cutting timber,
G. D. Legg, Crandall, Rt.
15 A. farm for rent: 30-35
eee Good parn and
See, J. S. Hewlitt,
ice farm im No. Ga., 5-R.
house, need some repairs; good
in yard; 2 Churches with-
Mile; also school.
wood and 2 nice Junipers to
.E. Coffey, Young
Good home and farm, 215
acres, on milk and school route.
rent, or sell cheap. us
mbrough, Eatonton. Rt.
acres, very good 4-
on Lake FE farini 7 mi.
near artletts
i . Ideal for chickens, gard-
en,
Dona Burdeshaw, Columbus,
2329 Hamilton Ave.
some farms for rent, 1-H. or
houses comfortable and
Jand good average. On road be-
Macon and Jeffersonville,
blow Macon and 8 mi.
Jeffersonville. Come see
m Prefer renting to colored
3. J: C Soloman, Jefferson-
House and 15 acres land for
rent together or separately, on
Powder Spring Road, 5 mi. Ma-
i an James Garrett, Mariet-
. A.
Small piece of land on Blythe
, no house, also few acres
- Scottdale. Gall Ja. 7739 M.
0. Fussell, Atlanta, 889
wood Ave., N. E.
45 acres land,
near school and church, 3 mi.
ym new Lookout Mtn., High-
vy we ae Powell, Rising
y 400. A. 85 mi. N. E., Dahlonega.
Good land, 3-R. house (neds
ane repairs), good crib, etc.,
Sev. good springs good water;
some branch bottoms, also Up-
lands: on mail route, reach of
= hools and churches.
Jease, rent or sell. Must be able
move and furnish
nt. eeoree Dockery, Alphar-
z etta. Re:
1-H. farm, So. College
5 mi.
Park on Riverdale Rt., close to
churches, school pus route.
Good pasture, plenty water.
Would rent house separately.
. L. Conkle, Riverdale. Rt. 1.
a H. farm, directly on No. 41
(do not leave pavement)
below Hapeville, 2 blocks below
Southern Tourist Camp. Fertile |
und, 5-R. house, tenant house,
zs ood, chicken house, parn,
eribs, other -out-bidgs., fruit,
berries: on bus line to Atlanta,
So. of Atlanta. See owner on
farm. Mrs. Harry Brocklesby,
_ Riverdale.
Some |
5-R. house; ;
Will
self if
Marietta.
dana isles |
%
Peach Orchard tor: rent: 60
|A. young, select Elberta and
| Barly peach trees, in A-1 cond.,
completely worked,
sprayed and harvested last sea-
son. 4 mi. Thomaston on paved
Highway. Railroad siding, close
by orchard. Write, or phone
or see for more particulars. C.
F. Greene, Carrs Station.
2-H. erop, 92 acres of good
| woods, pasture land and water.
out- |
3 houses and numerous
bldgs. Good orchard of peach-
es, pears, apples and grapes.
Located in Fayette Co., near
Fife. Write or see. Mrs. R. M.
Dillard, College Park, Rt. 1.
Small place, house, water in
yard, mail by door; good com-
munity. 5 mi. S. W. of Ideal. I.
N. Harrell, Rupert, Rt. 1.
Small place, good house
garden, stock lot, chicken yard,
| good stock range. Come see. 3
> Calaer Conky for rent.
must furnish stock and
ay 1/3 of crop. Will give |
an good chance to make
mi. town. Mrs. Hermon Boat-
right, Alma. Rt. 4.
For rent to tenant who can
furnish own stock and pay 1/3
and % of crop, land, house, barn
and pasture. Come and see. C.
B. Riehards, Rydal. Rt. 2.
6-H. farm in good communi-
ty, churches, school bus, elec-
tric wire by door; fine for stock
raising. Act quick if interest-
ed. No rent this year right
ee H. N. Ramsey, Spring-
field
281 A. farm, 150 wired pas-
tur, 2 houses, barns; pecans,
fruit trees; oats planted: stream
bordered by creek. For rent to
ao tenant or sell. Mrs. Robert
. Willis, Macon, 422 Ross St.
40 aeres with good house,
barn and pasture, ideal location.
See. Mrs. Rubye Moss, Ashburn.
80 Acre farm, approximately
404 A. under cultivation, 3 m1.
West Hiram. Good pasture,
running water. Standing rent
$150.00 per year. Contact own-
'er, R. Beverly Irwin, Atlanta, |
' 1407 William-Oliver Bldg., Wa
TAL.
100 A. farm, 8 mi right of
Fairburn, for rent or sale. J.
H. McDonald, College Park,
906 West Rugby Ave.
180 acres, mostly woodland,
about 30 A. bottomland on
Chattahoochee River, 5-R.
house. Rent to good, experienc:
ed farmer for $15.00 month.
Hugh Richardson, Atlanta, 160
Peachtree St.
860 A. farm. Ideal for cotton
or stock farm. About 100 A.
cotton allotment. Large hay
Meadow, ten tenant houses, 6-
R. main house with electricity.
L. B. Chambers, Madison.
12 A: cotton allotment, 25 A.
bottom land, enough upland for
2 or 3 h. crop, 6 R. house; on
school bus line: in on mi. of
52 churches, 8 mi. Gainesville.
Lots timber and wood, for rent
on 3rds and 4ths or standing
rent. B. H. Holland, Gaines-
ville, 505 Banks St.
WANT TO RENT FARMS
Want to rent a 1 h. farm,
close to Roswell or Alpharetta,
with lights, wood. water, etc.
Must be good house and chap
rent by the month. R. E. Hyds,
Douglasville, Rt. 2. :
Want to rent a farm of few
acres, 3 R. house, in livable
cond., not over 3 miles from the
Gar bine als aw.
Webb, Atlanta, 209 Powell St..
. E,
Want to rent near Atlanta,
close to Bus or Car Line, with
city. conveniences, about 1 acre
of land (consider more land).
Will lease, or consider purchas-
ing. L. S. Barlow, Homerville,
=O. BOs 92.
pruned,
| Mrs. I
| 1092 Wylie St..
Want a farm in McDuffy
county. Will rent, buy or lease.
Want to plant all crops except |
John Crone, Philo-
cotton.
/ math,
Want small farm near At-
lanta suitable for poultry farm.
R. H. Smith, Atlanta, 628
| Gresham Ave., S. E.
Want to rent small place in
} suburb of Atlanta or Decatur
(prefer DeKalb Co.), near
transportation, with 4 or 5 R.
house and some acreage. Must
be reasonable monthly rent.
F. A. Alford, Atlanta,
S. E. Ma 9823.
PEANUTS AND PECANS
FOR SALE
About 40 or 50 Ibs., pecans,
good size, 1942 erop, 18c Ib..
Also about 2 bu. hulled wal-
nuts, $1.00 bu. All FOB. J. A.
Young, Lo ganville.
40 of 50 bu. machine picked
peanuts, free of pops and sound
but little trashy (mostly little
Spanish but few bu. improved
Spanish), $1.10 bu. for lot, or
= 25 bu.
. Oliver, Commerce, Rt. 3.
40 lbs. small, sound seedling
pecans, 18c lb.; Also 30S. C.
R. I. Red hens, $1.50 ea. at my-
home. Miss Belle Timmerman,
Bronwood, Rt. 1, Box 83.
POTATOES AND VEGE
TABLES FOR SALE |
30 bu. Red skin P. R. sweet
potatoes for bedding, $1.25 bu.}
Will H. Henderson, Pitts, Rt. 2,
care W. A. Barton.
- 20 bu. P. R. Potatoes for seed
or eating, $1.25 bu., FOB.. W.
L. Morgan, Clyo, Rt. 2.
Sweet potatoes, $1.50 bu. at
my home.
yers.
Porto Rica seed sweet pota-
toes, $2.00 bu. plus express.
Money order in advance of
shipment. W. L. McCalley, Jr.,
C. J, Mobley, Con-
Atlanta, 1546 Westwood Ave.,
Ss. W.
TOBACCO FOR SALE
Flue cured TSbRoes. 8 Ibs.,
$1.00. Del 3rd gone. Exc.
same for peanut seeg or cotton
seed. Mrs. Jessie Dy hes. Bax-
ley, Rt, 2.
Good bright tobacco lar
smoking or chewing, 10 Ibs.,
$1.50 del.- Ranville Fossett,
Baxley; Rt. 1.
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Goose plum trees, 3, 36c; 6,
60c; Stamps or cash; Stone
Mtn. Melon . seed, carefully
dried, 70c Ib.; 7 Ibs., $4.60, both
postpaid. KR. P: Steinheimer,
Brooks, Rt. 1. -
Black Muscadine vines,
Brown Turkey figs, Hazelnut
bushes, old fashioned red and
yellow plums, tame blackberry
vines, all 10c ea.; $1.00 doz.
Add postage. Miss Hazel Pat-
terson, Waco, Rt. 2, Box 86.
Stuckeys new (scuppernong |
type) Muscadine grapes. |
Finest bunch crapes, Thornless
Youngberry, thornless Boysen-
berry, Cameron Dwberry, Bra-
inard Blackberry, Asiatic
Chestnuts, Paradise Aspara-
gus. Finest new fruits. State
Insp. H. A. Neal, Ashland.
in smaller lots. John |
BOG: . 5,
vines, $6.00 C.; $55.00 M.:
INSECTS AND. DISEASES |
Inseets and diseases will also be a peek,
lem in summer.
For control of insects there ar
good brands of rotenone and pyrethrum dusts. Th
/are non-poisonous, paralytic insecticides and |
visable to use non-poisonous materials on veg
crops if parts above ground are to be used for 00
These dusts are effective against both chewing
sucking insects, and are not harmful to plants.
phur varying amounts up to 75 percent is often use
in the base and acts as a repellent to many inse
and as a. fungitide A ares some cisonees. itera =
melons.
To control Mexican bean beetle, cabins wo
tomato fruit worm, etc., dust or spray until crops a
being harvested. Arsenicals or other poisons u
this time are dangerous and may leave a residue
er than that allowed on
commercial trade.
such products going
The above materials may be bought at practic
ally all large chemical manufacturing companies
at most seed supply houses. Such materials should
fresh, not carried over, and should be applied lat
the afternoon and early at night, or early in the m
ing, if plants are not covered with heavy dews wt
wash off some dust before it reaches the leaf sur
Obtain materials before insect damage shows up 4
have it ready for use. Smaller amounts of materi
will be needed and much better results obtaine
early control. Good dusting or spraying cone
is essential for good results.
SAVING SEED
A considerable amount of seed is needed fe
home garden.
It is not practical to save seed
all vegetables: grown but many may be saved ar
with care in selection and storage, be better seed hi
many of those purchased. Among those that ma
saved will be asparagus, beans, lima beans, corn, eu
cumber, egg plant, kale, lettuce, cantaloupe, .
ard, okra, pepper, potatoes (Irish and sweet,) rad
spinach, squash, tomatoes, watermelons, and cow .
Further information can be furnished in specia Jea
let. See county or home demonstration agent
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
PECAN AND OTHE!
FRUIT TREES FOR SAL
Scuppernonge vines, rooted
large white variety, 30 ea.; 2,
$1.00. Postpaid. "No
cnks. Isla. Hamilton, Alamo, Rt.
State insp. leading var. apple
and peach trees; apple 2-3 ft.,
10eea.: 3-4 ft., 15c ea.: Peaches,
2-3 ft., 10c ea.: Grape vines, 2
yrs. old, well rooted, 10c ea.
All postpaid. W. H. Alexander,
Cleveland.
State insp. leading var., true
to name peach trees, ; grape
an
doz.; Black Walnut, $2. 40 doz.:
$10.00 C. Plum and Apricot,
$1.50 doz. Mrs. E. B. Travis,
Riverdale.
Currant berries , 10c ea.:;
$7.50: C.; Gooseberry, Huckle-
berry, 5c ea.: Himalaya black-
berry, 25c ea.; May cherry, 15c
ea.: 1, 2, 3 ft. rooted. Postpaid.
If order comes to 50c. Joseph-
ine Raley, Mitchell.
Plum bushes, Hazelnut bush-
s, 10c ea.; $1.00 doz.: Musca-
dine vines, 10c ea.; $1.25 doz.;
Crabapple bushes, 70c ea.; $1.00
doz. Postpaid. .Mildred Bradley,
Bowdon, Rt. 2.
Muscadine vines, Hazelnuts,
Plums, $1.25 doz.: Cherries, 2,
. Mrs. Leona King, Waco,
noe
2 yr. old Niagara and Con.
eord Po vines, 4, $1.00; ,
old, 6, $1.00; Himalaya
wi "75e doz. Postpaid.
Nathan Ga rhea ee
Ground, Rt.
Early : bearing bunch gy;
best of all scuppernongs
between white and bronze) |
tra strong vines, 35c ea.; P
ple figures. Large yellow
| both 25 ea.; 3 bearing trees o
the purple fig, 75 ea.
Maude Granger, Reidsville.
Black walnuts, Hazel
Crabapples, Muscadine,
fashioned red plums, all
rooted, 10c ea.: Mtn huckle
berry sprouts, 40c doz.: Yellow
root, mullin, 25c Ib. Add
age. Ray James, Ellijay, |
Leading var, peach trees. 30
ea.: 6, a. 12. $5.00: Pears
75e ea.; 6. $4.00: Plum, Persi
wees budded pecans, $1.00.
$10.00; Grapefruit, I
Piast $1.50 a.: 6 .
Satsuma, $1.25 ea.: Figs. 6
$3.50. Others. Postpaid W.
J. Pearce, Cairo, Rt. 2.
Seuppernong grape
One home collection: 1
a.: Hunt, Stuckey. Di
Scott, Yuga, and Male, $1. 5 ;
home collections, $2. 50. AL
Postpaid. Z. L. Scott. =
his Yea
Urge Planting of Sweet Potatoes
Se patimuied 1a Inside From Baek Page)
be called upon to do their share; for there is no
question but we can grow more per acre than
other regions with their best carbohydrate crops.
, Jf a large increase in the carbohydrate pro-
duction of this country is required for war pur-
poses, our farmers in the Southeast are in posi-
tion to give this increase more quickly and with
less disruption of the existing farming system;
for we have altogether too much land suitable
for sweet potatoes that has been standing idle,
besides the immense acreage we have been plant-
ing to corn for years, from which we have har-
vested only a fraction of the carbohydrates it
would make if planted to sweet potatoes.
fair chance, replanting the skips if a good stand
is not obtained at first, and waiting until. Octob.
or later to harvest, will make much good feed for
cattle or hogs, while learning how to do it. He
will then be ready to join the procession for Pros
perity Potatoes when it gets under way.
in trying to make our carbohydrates with a crop
better adapted to other regions; while at the same
time we have been growing a crop that agricul-
tural authorities state positively will make more
carbohydrates per acre than that crop which is
ik basis of the agricultural prosperity of the
When. we take full advantage of our chance. to
grow potatoes by the ton and take the lead in car
bohydrate production, we can really put to work
immense acreage on which we have tried so long
to make corn, a crop that is better adapted to
conditions in other regions.
With Prosperity Potatoes we can march P
ee 25 ward to greater agricultural prosperity. ' ee
it's Worth Trying! For extra copies of this leaflet address etek
Every farmer can well afford to try out the cultural Department, Central of Georgia Railway,
new way of planting. It will cost nothing to try Savannah, Ga.
it, for fresh potatoes can always be fed to Bes J. F. Jackson
stock. General Agricultural Agent, Savennan: Ga. |
The ERTAGE, ue does try it, and ae it a Jones Purcell, Agricultural Agent, Athens, Ga.
ee
Eventually there should be a vastly greater
-@emand for the carbohydrates our sweet potatoes
will make than what may be needed for live stock
feed. The manufacture of high grade starch from
sweet potatoes has already been demonstrated at
ouerre), Miss.
; -It may not be long now until it has been
a Proven. that synthetic rubber and alcohol for
notor fuel or industrial uses can be economically
from the carbohydrates in farm crops.
farmers in the Sweet Potato Belt should
We are indebted to W. T. Anderson, Editor
of the Macon Telegraph, for the folder containing
the information printd below. Mr. Anderson
takes a deep and abiding interest in promoting
agriculture in this state. He is firmly convinced
oi the value of raising sweet potatoes and has
advocated this for some time in his splendid
paper. We urge you to read and follow the in-
structions in this folder and we believe you will
oe thereby._TOM LINDER.
Por generations our farmers have been curb-
ing the tendency of our sweet potato to grow big
and heavy, trying to keep it from growing too
big and rough for table use, because a nice bak-
ing size yam is a table delicacy that is hard to
beat.
But all these years, by encouraging it to
make weight, without regard to shape or size, we
might have allowed it do more for us than corn
has for the middle west.
It is time we recognized the possibilities of
aur sweet potato to give us the carbohydrate live
stock feed we can never hope to make with aver-
age yields of fifteen bushels of corn per acre.
- Tt is the carbohydrate content of their im=
mense corn crop that makes the agricultural pros-
parity of the middle west; and we mus st grasp
this epportunity for pr osperity, and compete with
other carbohydrate growing regions.
The varieties of sweet potatoes we now have
allowed to grow as large as they will, make
so much carbohydraies per acre we can lead the
nation in carbohydrate production. Also, Dr. Julian
Miller of the Louisiana Experiment Station has
lready developed varieties that give a much
-_ er percentage of starch or carbohydrates.
: Planting for Weight
It was recently learned that in growing sweet
ke Irish potatoes, and so simplify and cheapen
1 cost of planting. This eaiser and cheaper way
of planting for increased weight per acre was
iccessfully demonstrated in 1942. The method is
plant directly in the furrow, pieces of small
po
Horticulturist Otis Woodard of the Tifton Coastal
Plain Experiment Station.
This method was tested by seventy-four adult
an acre eacn in accordance with Mr. Woodards
ee The Central of Georgia Railway Company
offered cash prizes for the best yields from pota-
toes planted this way in several south Georgia
ties.
The contestants certified reports of their
ields show this way of planting will so cheapen
the cost and increase the weight per acre that we
make of our sweet potato a profitable ton-
age crop, grown for its carbohydrates in com-
petition with other sections, because they cannot
ual our yield of carbohydrates per acre.
igured on an- acre basis the seventy-four
pounds of sweet potatoes, five and one-half tons
- 185 bushels. If the moisture (nearly two-thirds
the total weight) was dried out, the contestants
ould have left at least 3,696 pounds of a meal
at looks like ground corn, analyzes a little high-
in cardponydrates, and is the equivalent of sixty-
bushels of corn for live stock feed, or material
he manufacture of starch, synthetic oe:
industrial alcohol.
Twenty-seven of the seventy- four Batches
elded at a rate of less than four tons per acre;
renty- -two patches made from four to six tons
me acre; and the other twenty-five made from
tons up to as high as fourteen tons to the acre.
ayed ninety-four bushels of potatoes or the equiva-
at of thirty-three bushels of corn per acre. The
tenty-two medium yields averaged 168 bushels
yotatoes or the equal of sixty bushels of corn.
he twenty-five higher, yields made an average of
o. bushels of potatoes or 105 bushels of corn.
The top yield of 28,160 pounds, or more than
et potatoes or 167 bushels of corn; and was
de by Ardell Smith, REDS 5, Dawson, Terrell
ce third ela of 22,072 ieee equaling
by Jack Usry, Jr, RFD 2, Smithville, Lee
ty, Ga: 5
nore than one pound of meal, but the above
es were obtained by dividing the total pounds
resh potatoes by three to get the pounds of
and dividing the result by the fifty-six
nds" in a bushel of corn. Sweet potatoes are
ed. ba Sixty pounds to the bushel.
Different Methods Used.
: The Jocinods followed in growing these po-
yes in the contest patches were those advised
Horticulturist Woodard at Tifton as an easier
cheaper. way to make as much. total weight
sSible rather than as many bushels of table
oes that would pass market grades.
These methods leave off the making of seed
and pulling draws and transplanting, by
g direct in the field like Irish potatoes,
Ss of small or string potatoes early in the sea-
eae Hills to pet a full stand as early as pos-
and then allowing them to grow until Oc-
or November in the southern half of the
n belt. As the potatoes, when dug, are
or hauled in bulk, without grading, the
otatoes by the ton they may be planted much -
atoes or strings, and was recommended by -
mers and Club boys who planted an eighth of
rtest patches made an average yield of 11,090
_ beds.
plants. Others will make several plants. Use the
extra plants for replanting skips, and replant as
The low yielding twenty-seven patches aver-
een tons to the acre, figures 469 bushels of
ushels of potatoes or 137 bushels of corn, was
hree pounds of fresh: potatoes will make a
way of planting was used it would give more total
weight than from draws or vine cuttings, but
fewer potatoes that would grade No. 1 or 2.
Now that we want total weight for its carbo-
hydrates, Mr. Woodard, as a result of two more
series of experiments at Tifton, is ready to advise
farmers how to do it.
Recommendations of Mr. Woodard
1, Variety: Use Porto Rico variety. It is
easier to grow and the seed are available nearly
everywhere. The White Triumph has a higher
starch content, and is a little better if seed are
available; but eventually we shall have still bet-
ter varieties for growing carbohydrates.
a ime to Plant: March 15 to = is prefer-
able in Southern Georgia.
3. Soil Type: Preferably eave soil with
clay subsoil near surface. Light soil with deep
porous subsoil should not be used.
4, Fer'tilizer:
acre of 4-8-8 if obtainable.
5. Applying Fertilizer: Distribute fertilizer
in drill by hand or with distributor, and mix with
soil ten days or two wee before potatoes are to
be planted.
6. Kind of Seed Pieces to Plani: Plant tip
and stem ends of strings or small potatoes.
Pieces should be not more than 2. inches long
and 1-2 to 1 inch in diameter, at the large end.
Small pieces are better than large ones, as
the production of No. 1 potatoes is considerably
more from small than from large seed pieces.
7; Amount of Seed Required: Around five
hundred pounds, or eight bushels per acre.
8. How to Prepare Seed Pieces for Planting:
After the tip and stem ends of seed potatoes. have
been removed they should be treated 8 minutes
in a bichloride of mercury solution. The solution
may be prepared | by dissolving 4 ounces of bi-
chloride in 32 gallons of water. Use wooden bar-
rels for preparing solution.
Since small seed-pieces are preferable, only
the tips of long potatoes should be plantedthe
middle portion being used for stock feed. (It
should be remembered that treated potatoes are
poisonous to livestock.)
Tip and stem ends should not be split as a
high per cent of cut surface on the seed piece
tends to prevent sprouting.
9. Spacing: Rows should be 3% feet wide,
and pieces planted 9 to 12 inches in the drill.
10. Planting: Drop seed pieces by hand in:
fresh furrow and cover immediately. Seed: pieces
should be planted aS soon as possible after they
are cut, and not allowed to dry out.
11. Depth to Plant:
(1 to 2 inches deep.) Cover seed pieces 3 to 4
inches deep, leaving a Slight ridge.
12. Cultivation: A peanut weeder may be
used to control weeds until plants appear above
ground. Three cultivations usually will control
weed growth until the vines cover ground. Beds
should be thrown up to a height of eight inches
as soon as plant growth will permit.
oe Replanting: The opportunity for easy
replanting is a big factor in the success of this
method. A very poo: stand to begin with may
be saved by replanting, and even in an unfavor-
able season a full stand can be had at least as
early as would be possible from. draws grown in
Some seed pieces may fail to produce
early as possible. Do not wait for large plants.
Small plants will do well because they are trans-
planted immediately when they are pulled.
14. Harvesting: Dont begin harvesting be-
fore the latter part of October. The long growing
period is the important factor in making heavy
yields. Every additional months growth after
August will add about a ton of extra yield. .
Sri Seed Potatoes Especially for Seed-Piece
. Planting.
Eventually, as farmers adopt the practice of
the seed-piece planting method, and prove for
themselves the fact that the small pieces really
give the best results as well as the fact that they
cost less than the kind of seed potatoes that have.
to be used in beds, they will gladly accept a fur-
ther suggestion by Mr. Woodard. This is, that be- =
cause strings make the best seed when planting
pieces, it will be found easier to grow a small
patch expressly for the purpose of making strings
than to sort out the strings and cut off the ends
from ordinary seed potatoes. This will also in-
sure the disease free seed that comes from vine
cuttings. After it is too late to hope to make ac-
ceptable table potatoes from vine cuttings it will
not be too late (and a fairly easy job) to planta |
patch of vine. cuttings for making strings and
so make sure of a supply of the best sort of seed
for piece planting. This may be conveniently done
on land that has already grown a crop that was
harvested earlier.
In order to produce the largest number of
small potatoes as strings, for the seed-piece plant
ing method, vines should. be planted four inches:
in the drill and in rows 3% feet wide. The ferti-
lizer application should not exceed 200 to 300
pounds per acre.
Growing Carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates is that part of. farm. crops
which make them so valuable for fattening and
finishing live stock. They are among the most
necessary constituents of food, and have been
shown to be indispensable to the formation of
fats. We can easily grow more pounds of carbo-
hydrates per acre than other regions. The moisture
which makes a perishable crop of our sweet po-
tatoes can now be dried out at a reasonable cost,
leaving a storable, transportable meal that carries
a higher percentage of carbohydrates than corn.
This gives us the carbohydrate feed to put us in
3 the. ode rank as a live stock producing section.
Eight hundred pounds per -
Open shallow furrow _
ing of Sweet Potatoes This Y
~ Auburn, Alabama that when potatoes: are prop:
_ sweet. potato contains more carbohydrates th
_of which, however,
Belt prosperity. Until the demand for the swe
_ growers will receive better prices than can be }
- for it in competition with carbohydrate crops
_ regions for industrial and live ee feed pL
- poses. A
5
~ earbohydrate production when human food.
- quirements have been supplied.
for their farmer friends, copies of specifica
besides carbohydrates for energy, furnishes va
not suitable for human food into earbohydra
make it go to work and realize its full cap
stricken. countries who must be saved> from.
drying, for its carbohydrate content, that |
Wednesday. March 2
Three years feeding tests of this eed at Ex
ment Stations at Auburn, Alabama; Experir
and Tifton, Georgia; will be completed this:
ter (1942-1943) and the results from the first
tests promise the verdict that for feeding
classes of live stock our meal is as good as
Drying with Artificial Heat.
Methods of drying out the moisture in sh
potatoes are being perfected, and it is belie,
that eventually drying plants in the Sweet
tato Belt may be as common as cotton gin
fact, some cotton gin owners are already figur:
on adding equipment for drying not only sw
potatoes, but fruits and vegetables earlier
season.
Air Drying. - :
_ While waiting for the time to come in
new industry of carbohydrate production,
drying plants to process their potatoes may. b
numerous and convenient as cotton gins are:
farmers can practice the new way of p
and learn how to grow potatoes by the ton
cause it is now possible to air dry them at f
and turn them into potato meal that can be
away and fed the year round. It was learned
shredded they will air dry out in the open;
an inexpensive machine was developed at Au
that shreds the potatoes perfectly for air + dry
or for drying by artificial heat.
Many farmers will this year plant a go
acreage for live stock feed and shred their
tatoes in this simple little machine that ca
bought for about $100.00, or built at home for.
siderably less. County Agents, Agricultural
cational Teachers, and Farm Security Adm
tration Supervisors can either supply, or ob
for the construction of this shredder.
ehredssnd Potatoes for Feeding Fresh a
Harvested.
Some farmers. who feed a good man
or hogs are planning to provide themsely
a shredder, and shred their potatoes for 5
fresh as they: are dug during the harvesting
son. Many of them will undoubtedly try t
drying, and eventually will dry most of their
into meal which can be fed the year rouz ae
In the drive for dehydrated foods for
lease shipments it has been found the sweet
tato re-hydrates better than any other vege
retaining all of its palatability and flavor.
Quartermaster Department of the U.S. Arm
contracted for 52,000,000 pounds of dehydr
sweet potatoes as army rations, besides dot
original. requirements for fresh potatoes. I
foretells a vastly greater demand for dehydrz
potatoes for relief and lend-lease shipmen
Although pound for pound the denydrat
the most popular carbohydrate crop, it is mo
valuable as food for human consumption | be aU
of its sugar content. It also contains pectin,
is that part of the apple that keeps the do
away, and is high in vitaminsvitamin A in-
ticular. It is highly digestible, hag the virt
a cereal plus the advantages of the vegetable,
able mineral salts.
The sweet poiato,. thenetons is worth
more for human food than for its carbohydr
it will produce more
acre than the crop | which. is the basis for
potato for human consumption has been supp
; But during the boom, while the sweet po
is leading the procession of vegetables beca
its value as human food, much will be lea
about ways to increase the total weight grown
acre, and methods for turning the surplus w
that will compete with the carbohydrates of oth
Our sweet potato has a dual pocone
we can no longer allow it to keep within
limits as an admirable table delicacy; but
as a producer of what is probably the mos
able crop ingredient that can be grown for
trial uses as well as live stock feed. The cz
hydrate crops. of other regions have made t
prosperous, and as we can. certainly grow a
per acre, we must get in the Samne a
Prosperity Potato.
There is a limit to the cenacly of the. st
achs of not only the Armies of the United St
and its Allies, but those unfortunate people in
vation. 2
Every processing vient coi soles t
hydrate sweet potatoes for human cons
must also provide equipment for shredding
tion of its purchases of potatoes that cannot
made into human food; and be ready to tur
Also, now that we have a way to ai
tatoes - when properly shredded, farm =
adopt the practice of piece planting to m
weight, can air dry into storable, high qua
live stock feed what cannot be sold to better
vantage while prices continue attractive; an
find the piece way of planting makes lots 0
tatoes that will grade No. 2 or better, while mo
of their smoother Jumbos will be salable fo
hydration into food for human consumption
Carbohydrates for Industrial Uses.
Our failure to grow carbohydrates in
tition with other parts of the nation has
been a severe handicap. All because
(Continued: one: on