E-HALF OF THEIR VALUE
On Da eat 9, 1910 cottonseed oil was Da in New York
9.25 cents to 13 cents a pound.
The highest price today, under OPA ceiling is less than the
est price in 1910, 33 years ago. Think of that.
The Government tells us that parity price on farm products
y is 165 per cent of what they were in the base period. If
price of cottonseed oil was 13 cents in 1910, the ceiling
hest price on oil today should be 21.45 cents instead of
14 cents.
If we take the 330 pounds of cottonseed oil in a ton of
mseed, and figure it at 21.46 cents a -pound, we find that
ttonseed oil alone in a ton of cottonseed is worth $70.78,
basis of government parity.
the oil in a ton of cottonseed is worth $70.78, then at the
ent price with meal, hulls and linters, added to the oil, a
f cottonseed is worth $100.08 when processed at the mill,
farmer received $80. per ton there would still be a mar- -
of $20.08 for the mill.
The farmer is played for a sucker on cottonseed by the
_and Commodity Credit Corporation.
In 1910, when these prices were quoted, cottonseed were
e cheaper than they are today it is true, but if you figure the
se in the price of meal and hulls you will see that the
perease in the price of seed since 1910 has been through
(Continued on Page Two)
arm Land Edition September 22
Our Special Farm Land Edition will be published on
ptember 22nd; Farms for Sale, For straight Rent, Want-
o Rent and Buy, and In Exchange For, notices relative
rms and Farm Land, MUST REACH: THE MARKET
ETIN, 222 STATE CAPITOL, a eee nt eee
a Thursda , September 16th, will necessarily nave to
omitted Sera replpe ion. SPACE IS VERY LIMITED.
otices for Land Issue must NOT exceed fifty. (50)
ords, including name and Se ON Da WILL BE CUT
nt IF N
a eve NO. 1 AL ESTATE nor REAL ES? ATE
PERTY, FILLING STAT-
| iS, STORE HOUSES, nor OUT- OF- THE-STATE PROP-
R RTY ti ill b ublished .. . neither will more than
N IOTICE O 10" MORE THAN FIFTY WORDS be.
d for an INDIVIDUAL OR HOUSEHOLD.
If you have submitted a Land Notice within the past
months, do NOT send in ANOTHER. All such type
ces on hand will be published.
IN YOUR FARM LAND NOTICE IMMEDIATELY.
a
vestock Sales, Georgia Auction Markets
Reports received at this office show following average prices paid
No. 1 hogs at the Livestock Auction Markets named:
September 3, 1943 : Per Cwt.
5 (Wednesday)Rome Seve
(Thursday)Ocilla : =. aoe
(Friday)Cordele - 14.
(Friday)Thomasville _. y ao
(Monday)Sylvester ee
(Tuesday )Arlington : ee
(Tuesday )Nashville eee
f (Wednesday)Vidalia - :
TOP FED CATTLE
cust 25 (Wednesday)Rome
(Thursday)Ocilla
ust 27 (Friday)Cordele
fust 27 (Friday) Thomasville
10.00- 12.70
12.00- 13.50
11.00- 12.80
12.25- 12:75
ugust 3] (Tuesday)Arlington 10.00- 12.00
ugust 31 (Tuesday)Nashville
tember 1 (Wednesday) Vidalia
EDITORIALBy Tom Linder
During the Haske period of 1910 to 1914 all cotton in the
United States was handled on Liverpool grades. Since that time,
the United States Government has adopted new grades and
higher standards. ~
What we call STRICT LOW MIDDLING today was. MID-
DLING in 1910.
On July 12, 1910 MIDDLING COTTON i in New Orleans is
14.87 cents a pound.
The Government tells us that the mates price of ae
today is 165 percent of what it was during the base period, |
we multiply 14.87 cents by 165 percent we get 24. 53 cents.
Our STRICT LOW MIDDLING cotton would have to bring
24.53 cents a pound today for a cotton farmer to be on a pari
with the same cotton-on July 12, 1910.
The Government loan is supposed to be 9067 of pari
90%, of 24.53 cents a pound is 22.08 cents a pound, On a bale
of STRICT LOW 7/8-inth staple cotton, the Government should
lend the farmer 22.08 cents, but the loan. value of a STRI
LOW MIDDLING 7/8-inch bale of cotton under -the sched
as put out by Commodity Credit Corporation is only 18.46 cent
a pound instead of 22.08 cents per pound. This is 362 ey
too low and this amounts to $18.10 a bale.
On a basis of July 12, 1910 the farmer today is ae $18 I
~ on each 500-pound bale of STRICT LOW MIDDLING oe
puts into the Government loan.
STRICT GOOD ORDINARY in 1910 was the same colo
that we now call GOOD ORDINARY. On July 12, 1910 STRI
GOOD ORDINARY was 14.06 cents in New Orleans. 165 p
cent of 14.06 cents is 23. 20 cents. On a basis of July 12, 191
23.20 cents per pound would be government parity for GOO
ORDINARY cotton today according to the Government figur
If the farmer were to borrow 90% on GOOD ORDINARY
on this basis, he would get a loan of 20.88 cents a pound. T
Government loan, as promulgated by the Commodity Cre
Corporation, for GOOD_ ORDINARY -7/8-inch staple is 14
~-eents a pound. This means the farmer gets 642 points less th
he should get. He gets $32.10 a bale less than 907. of par
on a bale of GOOD ORDINARY 7/8-inch staple cotton.
What we call GOOD MIDDLING today was MIDDLI
FAIR in 1910. On July 12, 1910 MIDDLING FAIR was quo
in New Orleans at 15.56 cents per pound. 165 percent of 15
cents would be 25.67 cents per pound for what we today call
GOOD MIDDLING cotton. If the farmer gets 90,, loan 0
bale of GOOD MIDDLING he would get 23.10 cents per poun
The Government loan on GOOD MIDDLING 7/8-inc
staple, as promulgated by the Commodity Credit Corporatio
is 20.06 cents, or a difference of 304 points, amelnas
$15.20 on each bale.
DIFFERENT GRADES AND INCREASED
DIFFERENTIALS RUINING FARMERS
For the Farmer to get parity for his cotton is obvious that
talculations for today must be made-on the same grades an
on the same difference between grades that existed during th
base period.
When the Government changed the grades they took
money out of the farmers pocket, and when Commodity Cre
(Continued on Page Two) |
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables :
September 3, 1943 Atlanta
Apples, bulk, per bu. : $1.75-$2.75
Beans (Lima) bulk, per bu. = 300-3275:
Beans (Snap), per bu. hprs. $953 00
Cabbage, bulk, per CWT. = 370 =
Corn (Green, per doz. ears 2-30
Okra, per 8 qt. bkts. .40= 1.00: =
Peas (Field), bulk, per bu. 150-2500
Peppers, per bu. hprs. _ : = 3 13s ae
Squash, per bu. hprs. 2.00- 4.00
Sweet Potatoes, butk, per bu. - : 1.00- 2. 85
Turnip Salad, per bu. hprs. 2 50s 0G
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN}
Address all items for publication and all foes to be put
on the mailing list and for change of address tv STATE BUREAU |
OF MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable |
under postage regulations inserted one time on each request and
repeated only when request is accompanied by new copy of
- notice.
Limited space will not permit insertion of notices containing |
more than 30 words including name and address. |
1
|
Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not
the |
notice appearing ifn
assume any responsibility for any
Bulletin.
Published Weekiy at
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
-.Yom Linder, Commissioner,
Executive Office, State Capitol
& Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
Editorial and Executive Offices
State Capitel, Atlanta, Ga.
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of
- Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
_ Entered as second class -matter
August 1, 1937, at the Post Office
_t Covington, Georgia, under Act
of June 6, 1900. Accepted for
_ wailing at special rate of postage
provided for in Section 1103, Act
of oe 8, 49115
_ CONGRESS IGNORED
(Continued from Page One)
Corporation increased the difference between grades
_ they again took money out of the farmers pocket.
_ This increase in difference between grades was made
in defiance of the Act of Congress October 2, 1942
I am in receipt of a letter from Mr. C..C. Smith,
Director of the Cotton Division, Commodity Credit
- Corporation, in which he says that parity price of
cotton on August 5, 1943 was 20.46 cents a pound.
; According to the Government figures the average.
price of all cotton during the base period was 13.10
gents per pound. If this is correct, 165 percent of
- 18.10 cents, or 21.61 cents a pound, would be parity
. for cotton and not 20.46 cents as stated by Mr. Smith.
Last year when the OPA fixed a ceiling price
on cotton goods and cotton yarns at the mills their
ceiling was based on the preposition that the mills
would pay 21.47 cents per pound at the farm for
MIDDLING 7/8-inch staple cotton. If we allow the
farmer 65c per bale for putting his bale of cotton
to the market, the cost of a bale of 7/8 MIDDLING
cotton to the mill would be 21.61 cents per pound.
This is the identical figure which I have calculated
as being correct Government parity as quoted in the
- foregoing paragraph.;
an Under the Secretary of Agricultures rule parity
would be 21.61 cents instead of 20.46 cents, or a dif-
ference of 115 points, amounting to $5.75 on each
bale.
If we take 90%, of 21.61 cents we have 19.45}
cents per pound. If we add 85 points to convert it
to 15/16-inch staple, then add 80 points to convert it
to net weight, and then add 40 points to convert it
_ from the farm price to the market -price, we find -that
the loan value on 15/16-inch MIDDLING cotton
should be 21.50 cents per pound instead of 20,46
cents as set out by the Commodity Credit Corporation.
L The difference between 20.46 cents and 21.50
_ cents is 104 points, or $5.20 on each bale.
In October, 1942, Congress passed an Act rais-
ing: the loan value: of cotton. from 85%, of parity to
90% of parity. This increase amounted to approx-
imately $5. per bale. This change in base by Commod- |
ity Credit Corporation amounts to $5.20 per bale and
was evidently intended to prevent any increase in
loans. It absolutely . nullifies the Act of Congress in-
_ ereasing loans from 857, to 90%.
When we take into consideration the further
- fact that the spread between 15/16-inch MIDDLING
cotton and 7/8 inch MIDDLING cotton has been in-
creased | from 20 points to 85 points since last year,
we see that a farmers loan value on a bale of MID-
DLING 7/8-inch cotton is $3.25 a bale too low even
under the Commodity Credit Corporations own fig-
ures.
Also, the spread between 15/16-inch MIDDLING
eotton and 7/8-inch GOOD MIDDLING cotton
been increased 65 points, while the spread between
15/16-inch MIDDLING cotton and 7/8-inch GOOD
ORDINARY cotton has been increased 270 points, Or:
$13.50 on each bale.
_ SURELY CONGRESS WILL CORRECT THIS
The act of the Commodity Credit Corporation
in cutting the loan value on cotton, directly in the
face of an Act of Congress to raise the loan value, is
gurely enough to put Congressmen.and. Senators from
the cotton belt on their toes.
MARKET. BULLETIN
has |
Congress will reconvene in a few days. In the
meantime, every effort will be made bys some big)
| 0 tton oe ests, especially those Aontrolkine Hie colton ee
industry of Brazil, to force the cotton market down
by selling the market short in New York and New
Orleans.
UNDER THE CONGRESSIONAL ACT OF
OCTOBER 2, 1942, THE COMMODITY CREDIT
CORPORATION HAS CONTROL OF PRICES
ON ALL BASIC AGRICULTURAL CROPS, NOT
ONLY FOR THIS YEAR BUT FOR TWO YEARS
THEREAFTER. THIS MAKES IT VITALLY *
NECESSARY THAT CONGRESS TAKE ACT-
ION ON THIS DISCRIMINATORY ACT OF THE
COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION IMME-
DIATELY UPON RECONVENING.
Hold your cotton until Congress meets. In the
meantime, write your Congressmen and Senators and
call their attention to this. Cotton should bring from
25c to 30c a pound for this crop, and it will unless
farmers turn loose and sell too soon.
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture.
Cottonseed Now Bringing
One-Half Of Their Value
(Continued from Page One)
the increase in price of meal and hulls, which the
farmer himself buys back.
The oil refineries are buying cottonseed oil to-
day just as cheap as they were in 1910. The farmer
is getting a little more for seed, but paying enough
more for the meal and hulls to make up the differ-
ence. They are making the farmer raise himself by
his boot straps. Under this arrangement, the farmer
would be just as well off to keep the seed and not
have to go to the oil mill at all.
_ GOVERNMENT PARITY TOO LOW
The Government claims that $1.65 today will
LZ.
buy as much for the farmer as $1.00 would in 1910
to 1914. Every practical farmer who is old enough
to remember farming back there in 1910 to 1914,
knows full well that it is impossible to take $1. 65
today and buy the things that you could buy with a
dollar during that base period.
It is well to remember that an employe from -
Proctor & Gamble was employed by Leon Henderson, |
in the Office of Price Administration, where the ceil-
ing on cottonseed oil was made.
Remember that Proctor and Gamble are the!
greatest oil refiners in this country, and probably in
the world.
-Remember it was stated in Washington at the
time; and has never been denied, that this man from
Proctor & Gambles Office received $1. a year from
the Government and received his real salary from
Proctor & Gamble.
Pa
itis well also. to remember that the cotton and.
cottonseed business of Brazil is to a large extent.
controlled by Anderson-Clayton Cotton Company.
Remember that Mr. Clayton was appointed as)
Assistant Secretary of Commerce, in Washington.
Remember that. the production of cotton and
other crops in South America is being fostered, and
to some extent financed, by the United States Govern-
ment.
Remember that the same officials in Washing-
ton who have. economic control over the American
farmer also have economic control, te a large extent,
in these foreign countries.
Remember how desperately Mr. Cordell Hull,
the Secretary of State, has striven to maintain his
trade treaties se that the American farmer shall be
forced to compete with these products from Brazil
and many other lands.
Remember these injustices to the farmers and
business people of America are not accidents. They
are simply a part-of the great over-all plan for cheap.
raw materials with high priced industrial products.
In figuring what it costs people to live in other
lines of industry, the Government figures around 300
percent of the base period of 1910 to 1914. In figur-
ing what it costs the farmer to live they figure 165
percent, practically one-half as much increase as
}those in other industries are getting.
You go to the store today and buy some cot-
ton garments and see if you can get them any cheaper
{than you could when cotton was 35c. and 40c a pound.
You. go to.a store to buy products of cottonseed oil
today and see if you do not pay two to three times
jas much as they cost in 1910, when cottonseed _
was selling as high as it is today.
HOLD YOUR COTTON AND COTTON-
SEED UNTIL CONGRESS MEETS. IN THE
MEANTIME, WRITE YOUR CONGRESSMEN
AND SENATORS ABOUT THE SITUATION.
- TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of sp erig Lue Ge
ee
.
| planting:
Vanlanding am Ho
H.
MACHINERY FOR
Royal all steel horse :
hay press, in good cond.,
at- my farm. W. Hoge
Jr., Moultrie.
8 heavy .duty (8 ft.)
Cover Crop Harrows, 3
Deere 7-26 disc size heavy |
disc tillers, 1.-No. 2 stan
Jay Bee Feed Mill, 24
anese steel hammers, al
cond., and reauire farm tr,
to: handle. O. K.-Davig.
shaliville. <a
3 Allis Chalmers. Con
model 40, $275.00. See at
Brooks Farm, Alphare
model 60, $625.00. Se
Twiges Woods farm, 6 mi.
Alpharetta on pavement:
model 60, reconditioned, $42
See R. A. Pattersons far
mi. West Gainesville. W
owner, S/Sgt. G. C. Bagie
Post Theater No. 1, Camp
pert, Ala.
- ea. Bradicy Turn
$8.12; Gee Whizz Harrow
Planet Junior cultivato
steel Scraper, $5.00; Col
tributor Drill; $12.50. ]
lot for $35.00 FOB Me
Write owner, J. M. Butt
lanta, 291 Peachtree St.
International 1 1-2 t
h. p. water cooled Ga
almost new, for milking
inc or cooler, $75.00. Joe a
Eatonton.
6 dbl. section Cutewe
row with 24 disc; 1 J. D
nut weeder, 2-row cult
with planters and fertilizers
John Deere B tractor for |
also a 6 year old
trade for good plow mule.
E. Miller, Gordon.
1 heavy Studebakr 1 h.
gon, perfect condition, fy
FOB. R. A. Moye, Wr
ville.
1 John Deere 1940 Bt
with starter and lights
plete with plantin e ae
vating plows, $1,500.00
| &. Josey, Jr.; Bartow. a
- A 2h. p. Compressor, per
-cond., used in connection wi
dairy cooler. See C. S. M
Dahlonega. AONE te
1 pra. ically new conver
top buggy, also another bu
with 2\ good driving ho
(gentle, ladies ca nhandle
pale, J. A. Clary, Thoms n
Silage cutter ior tren
stover purr mill, .to grin
for stock feed, "Sell or
dairy milk cooler.
Smoak, Griffin, Rt. D.
1 upright, extra strong >
boiler, 20.00 at my ft
John G. Pierson, Culloden.
' Have 8 disc, 18: to 20 in,
Bush and Bog Harrow, $1.0
J. Ya -Lymn; Washington,
Cutaway Harrow, drag
row, mower and rake, and r
about 15 years old, cheap. Ss
Philips, Atlanta, 1684 Ste
Ave, Soy
J. I. Case trecvor with m
ing machine attachment, j
good 10 disc harrow, e in Br Be
condition for sale.
nett, Cumming, efes
An F-20 Farmall tet
rubber, $400.00; 1 J.
Tiller on rubber, pale
new, $250.60; 1 Bush and
harrow, $100.00. Come see.
Jetters answered. J. H. Dobs
MeRae, c-0. Workmore Fa
1 good 3 roller Syrup
with solid copper, self-ski
ming pan, for sale. See. Dor
write. -T. G. soheree as
metto.
1 Allis-Chalmers 5 tt,
bine, on: rubber, used:3 se
| AI cond. $485.00. Ci Ww.
Augusta, Rt. 1 (Lumpkin
phone Augusta 2-5801.
1 Purity Positive Pasteur
stainless steel, cap. 125
for sale; also 35 goo
Guernsey and Jersey cow
ing total of 110- 115 Relier
milk per day.
Clayton.
1 Letz Feed Mill, good
heap. for cash, also 1 Sta
|}Hulier. Sold together: or
arately at my farm, near.
mer. Write if interested
M. Patterson, Buchanan. ~
Garden tractor, 5 he
turner, cutaway nasean
vator, used very little, $3
also want farming. onli
for V. C. Case Tractor. Kir
ae Byron, Rt. 1, at C
vi le
rubber, with disc plow, do
disc harrow, complete 2
Pas cultivating equi
ment, 000.00. a :
Empire, we a
1 DeLaval sperntor, ;
Sears Junior King separ
and a- cap. elec
|brooder, all in good
COND HAND
NERY FOR SALE
MACHINERY FOR SALE
"SECOND HAND |
" SECOND-HAND
MACHINERY WANTED
NCUBATORS AND
-BROODERS FOR SALE |
ed Benthal Peanut Pick-
ft., for eng. power,
. J. L. Gardner,
, $25.00; 1 used 5 disc
runt grain drill, with fer-
attachment, probably
mil irs, worked
ctorily last time used in
5.00 FOB. J: E. Hall,
Disc tiller 6 disc, in good
so 1 extra heavy duty
harrow. L. F. Nowell;
Ss
al Peanut Picker, 062
. 1 mule power Inter-
ay press, recently re-
, both $350.00.at my
oy H. Castleberry,
new, Sharpless sep-
only used few times, for
J. Paul, Albany, Rt.
pump used in cotton
packing cotton, in No.
$50.00.. W. L. Smith,
od mule stump puller,
ond,, with 200 ft. cable,
_G, L. Smith, Bristol.
rac J-20, in good cond.,
. L._Barker, Thomas-
ne 38-J1.
iples cotton gin saw filer,
turn, good shape except
all crank, also 1 large
im corn sheller, godd
cond, for sale.
Strother, Rt. 4.
factor drawn power
sed part of 1 season.
290.00: wil sell for
zs ) Massey-Harris
machine, good cond.,
OB. W. BE. Betts, Len-
riding cuitivator, 2h,
row, Gee Whizz spring
itivator, middle buster,
bl. hopper planter dis-
: h, turn plow, for
+H. Smith, Fort Valley,
lammer Mill, for sale |
de for small steam eng.,
oiler up to 12 h. p. to be
y farm. Write E.
Atlanta, 650 Soyth
7
t., SW.
st new I. H. C. pickup
er and heavy duty side
rake, for sale, also
buy large size Grain
T. R. @affold, Buck- |
organ County.
- 48 in. Mill for sale
onable price. Can_ be
ere, J. W. Jones, Hilla-
pillar tractor, 30, for
de. Ralph Louder-
power. Sprayer. good
o Clover hay, Ross
s, Cornelia.
gas. eng., does good
20.00 for both at my
1. E. McLean. Milner,
y for Ford Ferguson
ed very little, $39.00.
Roberts, Jr... Barnes-
il and 10,ft. pan,
ond., $20.00. Come see.
Jetferson, C. Bryant.
for grist mill. $65.00
on barn. Francil Moore,
dson tractor, 1 dbl. disc
side plow and 1 single
harrow, all working
0-cash, Horace Kell,
ordson 1927 model trac-
ond., 2 nearly new
$, 1 Oliver and 1 Ath-
ober Murphy, Jasper,
. Jasper, near Jerusa-
Poh Ss fo
ic Churn, $20.00; 1
alec. brooder, 300 cap.,
perfect cond.. $30.00,
tephens, College Park,
Ca 6771.
of tarming tools for
mi. Cooks Crossing
Old National Hwy. J.
ch. College Park, P. O.
-12 Farmall tractor on
complete | cultivating
nt: 1 No. 8 Internation-
low, 17 disc Avery har-
International 6-can
Dairy) cooler, 9-10 gal.
All A-1 cond. T.
1 Separator with mo-
00 FOB my place, 9
mesboro, on No. 25
McDowell, McBean,
Hay Baler, all steel J. B. 1h.
hay baler, mew, for cash. Mrs.
H. P. Schaefer, Manchester,
*Phone 3029
1 single section, 20 disc har-
row for tractor, $50.00 at farm.
Annie M. Brannen, Plains.
Complete elec. equipment. for
small dairy. for sale cheap. Mrs. .
WwW. A. Newsom, Albany, 705
Park Places) :
_ Set of 4 wheels and axles, all
iron, suitable for wagon, dray
er portable machinery, J. F.
Woodall, Woodland.
2 wheel Yarm cart, 1 h. turn-
er, Gee Whizz iron beam plow,
etc.. for sale at my barn. H. B.
| Clark, Rockmart.
John. Deere peanut sjow,.
used 1 season. Cost $65.00; sell
for $40.00. M. L. Shealy, Ogle-
thorpe.
1 ea. Farmall 12 tractor on
steel. 1 dbl. disc harrow, 2 bot-
tom 14 plow, 12 row planter
and fertilizer attachment. 2 row
cultivator. D. Kirkland, Den-
fon, Rt. 1A:
No. 1 good 1 horse wagon and
good size black mare mule,
$125.00; also 1 brand new
Syrup, not out of frame, $20,007
7,000 bundles 4-hand fodder,
$3.00 per hundred. Ben Smith,
Molena, Rt, 1.
| SECOND-HAND
MACHINERY WANTED
Want a machine that will
shuck and shell corn, for right
price. R.H. Yopp, Danville. _
Want 2 wheels, on rubber,
for J. D. tractor model in good
condition. A. E. Davis, Black-
shear.
Want horse drawn Hay Baler.
H. T,. Barnett, Smyra, Rt.
(Conway Stop, Marietta Car
Line, Atlanta phone, Be 1317J )
Want a Peach Tree Duster in
good cond., cheap. J. C. Ad-
kins, Fort Valley.
Want Tractor,
type, not too
Catterpillar
large. Write
| fully what you have and price.
M. L, Crawford, Tiger.
Want 2 h turn. plow, cuta-
wey harrow grain. drill and
other farm tools, also pair mules
and wagon. J. T. Gibson, De-
catur, 1,000 Candler Rd., Rt 1,
Cr 2258.
Want buy late model tractor
on rubber, with or without
plows and harrows. State what
equipment you have, cond., and
price. C. M. Bowden, Atlanta,
17 Piedmont Ave, N. E., Wa
5242,
Want large size Farm _ Bell.
State size and price. W. A.
Malone, Atlanta, 496 Plum St.;
N. W., phone Ma, 5729.
Want about 3 to 1 straight
gear or chain drive to be used
Jon Cane Mill. Write what you
have and price. C. R. Owen-
py, Culberson, ,N. CO. Bt.
(Resident of Georgia P. O. only
in North Carolina)
Want Corn Mill, prefer 20 in.
rocks, in good cond., for eash.
Fred D. Harmon, Gillsville.
cond., and _ price, loaded for
shipping. A. O. Beach, Way-
cross, 707 Burnell St.
Want 1 Grain Drill in good
cond., with 10 disc and fertil-
izer attachments, one that wiil
put out enough grain. W, C
Sewell, Carnesville.
Want mule drawn grain drill
about_5% ft. wide, in good con-
dition., with or without fer-
tilizer attachment. State price
and description. L. H. Dvorak,
Cobb. ;
Want a 42 in. corn mill and
mill belt, in first class cond. No.
power. Giye best price, Jimmie
Garrett, Rockmart, Rf. 1.
Want a 5 disc J. D. Tiller
plow and seeder in good cond.,
at reasonable price, not too far
from Reidsville. M. F. Jordon,
Manassas.
Want small Hammer Mill
that can be operated with 4h.
p engine. Give price, | make,
and good description in first let-
ter. Mahlon Scott; Canon, Rt.
1
Want an electric churn, Mrs.
Josh Cochran, Stonewall.
Want carburetor for McCor-
mick-Deering 10-20 tractor
KC98932, 3 hole type for mount-
ing, also magneto. By Sa
Davis (Farmer (, Donalsonville.
Want 1 h wagon, in good
J. cond., for cash, del, to me. Mrs.
Laura B. Taylor, Waycross, Rt,
1, Box 15.
model B Allis Chalmers trac-
ttor. H. G. Burns, Lilburn.
Want 1 horse wagon. State j.
Want Athens disc plow for |
Want immediately Allis Chal-
mers All-Crop Harvester, 16 in.
blade, good cond., late model,
reasonable for. cash; also* for
sale a completely rebuilt mow-
ing machine, 8-ft. bladc, for
Farmall 20, $115.00 cash FOB.
eee Holderby, Valdosta. Box
; Want Farmall tractor on rub-
er,
fertilizer, and planting equip-
ment, dbl, action harrow, 16 in.
bottom plow, for cash, Oren F,
oe Folkston, P. O. Box
A
Want mechanical Tramper
and belted pump for Cotton
press, also large size Diesel en-
gine, for same, and have sev-.
eral engines and boilers for sale.
Personally owned. EF. G. Ped-
rick, Quitman.
Want a power syrup mill, also |
10-15 h p single phase elec.
motor in good cond., .for same.
Beh, West, Lula.
Good 2 h wagon, $55.00. P.
B. Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
Want buy set of Mill-Rocks,
36 or 40 inch, complete outfit
if price isi right. J. H. Harp,
Blakely, Rt. 1-
8. eylinder turner
Picker with belts complete,
practically new, picked 150 tons,
$525.00 at my farm. D. W.
Winn, Douglasville. Rt. 3.
- Want garden tractor with at-
fachments, at lowest price. B.
Ambrose, Hmory University.
De 6929.
Want 4 disc tiller, preferably
on rubber and Grain Seeder Box
for J. D. model H tractor, also
planters and cultivators, /rea-
sonable for cash. Must be in
good cond. W.
Harlem.
Want a 2h disc harrow. O.
KE. Sturkie, Columbus, P. O.
Box. 1099. _
Want 3 Roller Can Mill in A-1
cond., prefer No. 14 Chatta-
nooga or power mill. Write
what you have and price. EB.
H. Johnson, Folkston.
Want 1 grain drill with fer-
tilizer attachment. reasonable).
R. R. Manry, Goggins.
Want at once 1 copper eva-
porator pan with self skimmer,
also 1 Side Delivery Rake.
State prices of both, size aud
condition in first letter, T. W.
Kemp, Lyons, Rt. 1.
Want 1 Allis Chalmers |
Farmall tractor with equip-
ment, in good cond., for cash,
D. A. Robinson, Lenox. .
Want a garden tractor and
power mower. Alice Walton,
Columbus, Box 905.
Want swap good Riding Cul-
tivator in good condition., for
2 Roller Cane Mill and frame,
Bring mill and get plow. S. iL.
Thornton, Waycross, Rt. 1.
Want a second-hand Stump
Puller. Advise what you have
and price. Dr. L. C. Fisher,
Atlanta, 35 Linden Ave.
Want 1 used ,horse drawn
Cane Mill, either a 2 or 3 Rol-
ler type, in good cond., for
cash. Mrs. Ella V. Yawn,
Chauncey.
Want late model Ford trac-
tor with 2 bottom plows and
harrow. H. A. Puckett, Dun-
woody, Rt. 1. :
Want grain Drill with or
without Fertilizer attachment
in A-1 cond., for cash, also Feed
Ml used to grind roughage. No}
OQ.
junk. C. E. Wilson, Screven.
Want good Cane Mill. prefer
large 2 Roller with pan. Abner
Baker, Norman Park.
Want John\Deere model CC
Field cultivator, 6% ft. new or
second hand, if in good shape.
QO. J; King, Brinson.
Want a good elec. Sheep
clipping Shears, to be used for
shearing my sheep on my farm,
Oren Ellis, Morrow, Rt. 1.
Want 1 each, a 2 h. wagon,
cuttaway harrow, walking cul-
tivator, would consider Riding
cultivator. All must be in A-I
cond.. and prices right. W. M.
Cook, Broxton.
Want new or used med. size
tractor on rubber, with full
equipment, for cash, at once.
T. J. Johnson, Ideal.
Want ensilage cutter, 2 corn
mills, 48 in., 1 feed mill, 1
portable steam eng., 1 turbine
water wheel. A. E. Weems,
Macon, 560 Plumb St.
Want a good. long distant,
large size Cow Bell. J. J. Bond,
Elberton, Rt. 6.
Will pay cash for 1h. Hillside
plow. any make. Write, J. W.
Brooks, Dunwoody, Rt. 7.
Want a power hay baler,
with motor on it. J. L, Todd,
i Baxley. Rt 3. 2
Shas
complete with cultivator,
Peanut :
Pe Franklin,
or |
1 No, 9 Buckeye mammoth
Inc., all elec., cap. 2304 eggs,
$100.00; also 1 No. 34 for
$200.00. J. H. Gillespie, Gab-
bettville, :
1 No. 7 Mammoth Buckeye
Inc,, 10,000 cap., for sale, See
at my home. W. H, Clough,
Blackshear. :
Sears 500 cap.,. Fibreboard
elec. brooder, in original pke.,
never unpacked, 500 watt auto-
matic heat adjustment, $8.00
oe R. A. Caldwell, Boston,
A500" chick can Ker. |
brooder stove, 1 hog self feed-
ed (made to state specifica-
tions), portable range shelters
for chickens or turkeys, poul-
try feeders, etc. See. C. G,
Brown, Palmetto, Rt. 1, 2 mi.
from .Roosevelt Highway.
5-500 cap. McComb elee. floor
brooders, never used, and 38
Shenandoah wood burning
brooders, 500 cap., used once,
for sale. Harry Poole, War-
wick.
A 2600 egg Newton Inc., oil
burner, $100.00 cash at farm.
H. J. Hardin, Culloden,
A 500 chick cap,, elec, brood-
er, finest pre-war material,
good as new, complete with
ventilating fan; $88.50... T.-C.
Williams, Albany, Rt. 3. Box
430 care E. J. Paul.
INCUBATORS AND
BROODERS WANTED
Want a second-hand Incuba-
tor in good shape, with all
equipment, 100 or 150 cap, ker.
purner, at reasonable price.
Also want to hear from party
having a Red Ripper Hay Press.
P,. W. Williams, Metcalf, Rt. 2,
Box 54.
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE -
4
r Royal Blue Iris, and Bronze
color lemon lilies, yellow Nar-
cissus, $1.00 C.: Blue sweet
scented violets 25c doz.; Large
blooming size white. pink
Hydrangea. 30c doz.; Blue and
white striped violets, 25c doz.
ae W. H. Hughey, Fair Mount,
Jonquil bulbs, 15 doz. Add
postage. Rosie Crowe, Cum-
mings. Rt. 1.
6-8 in. boxwood $2.00 doz.,
$6.00 C.; Crepe Myrtle, 2-3 it.,
white, watermelon red, pink,
lavendar, $2.00 doz.: Abelia 1-2
ft., $2.00 doz.- 2 blooming size
Gardenias, $1.00. Mrs. C.
Robinson, Greenville, .
Pink, Almond: Rooted . Dbl.
Geranium: Small Pomegranate;
Xmas vine; Red Amaryllis; Blue
Aug. lilies: Sprengeria Lace;
Boston fern (large clump), 50c
ea. Trumpet daffodil, 25c doz.;
Black lily India, 25c. Mautile
Harrison, Bremen. :
Large Emperor daffodil bulbs.
$1.00 C.: plus postage. Mrs. M.
M. Kelley, Lithonia, Rt. 3.
- Daffodil bulbs, $1.00 C.: del.,
2 varieties, long trumpet deep
yellow, and short cup light yel-
Tow. <All. old- bulbs: A. J:
Stanton, Newborn.
Best quality boxwood, Semp-
erviren, 6-8 in. $6.50 C.: 8-10
in.. $10.50 -C.;: Dwarf 4-6 in.,
$5.00 C.; 6-8 in. $10.00 C.;
Crepe Myrtle. watermelon red,
white and lavendar, 2-3 ft., $2.-
00 doz.:. 50 scarlet verbena,
$1.50: Gardenia, 2-3 ft.. 75c.
Mrs. B. L. Robinson, Greenville.
_ Narcissus, Chinese Sacred
lily, 35-45-60c doz., No. 1 bulbs,
$2.70 C.: No: 2. $2.20 C.; Yellow
cluster April bloomer med.
size bulbs, $2.50 M., F. O. B.
ae Mittie Collins, Smithville.
Blooming size Easter lily
bulbs, 35c doz.; Smaller size
bulbs, $1.40. C.; Double pink
and single white oleander
plants (12 to 15 in.) 25e ea., 2,
40c. Miss Emma Dugger,
Oliver, -
Long and short trumpet daf-
fodils, $4.00 Del. in Ga.: Mix-
ed bulbs, daffodils, jonquils,
butter and eggs, narcissus, $3.50
M. in Ga. Mrs. E. W. Powell,
Elberton, Rt. 3.
Double daffodil, Longer
petals primrose with shorter
petals of orange, 25c doz, (Barri
Narcissi) _Conspicuus large,
broad perianth of soft yeHow,
short cup edged orange-scarlet,
25c doz. Mary L. Wills, Jeffer-
son. ; &
3 yr. old Cape Jasmine in
ea.: Red peonies, 40c ea., add
postage.
M.
pots, $1.00 ea.: 2 yr. old, 75c|-
Unrooted cuttings;
ums, 3 or 4 different Begoni
Lantana, Hydrangeas and ot
ers (10 in all) 30c; Roote
)Hydrangea. Grape and_ oth
Begonias, St. Bernard
Pink Lily, Sprengeria, Lily
Valley, 8, 40c. Mrs, Willi
Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt. 1: |
Iris, 10 labeled, 50. $1.15.
Mixed, 200, $1.65; Wild Oriental
mixed 60c C.; Daffodils,
kinds) 250, $1.20; Cream Na
cissus, $1.10 C.; Beacon,
ireaaas J. M. Hall, Calhoun,
- Beautiful fieldgrown (Se
ferviren) Old Eng. Dwarf E
woods, 6-8 in., $6.00 C., 200,
$11.00, $50.00 M.: 400 Large
Abelias, 50c ea. (Grandiflor
Maude Hamby, Greenville. _
. Roman Pink Hyacinths larg
blooming size bulbs, $1.50 doz
postage paid. 1 Doz. and over
Money orders. No checks ance
stamps accepted. No order
filled for less than 1 doz. W
Tanner, Flippen, Box 65. |
/ Yellow and white Jonquils
Dbl. Butter and Eggs: Yellow
long trumpet daffodil; Yellow
narrow, sissies, $1.00 C.; Single
Blue Hyacinths, 75c doz.; All
colors, China Pink, $1.00 doz
oe McCurley, Hartwell, RB
7
45c.- Plus Postage. Mrs. Jame
Connell, Toomsboro, Rt. 3.0
Yellow asmine: Pink Honey
suckle; Grancy Greybea
Teaolive; Magnolia; ve
Shrubs; Red and white Dog
wood:.] ff.) 10, A ft., Soe i4
35e.5' ft; 45c. Mrs- Dee Cot
son, Toomsboro, Rt.3.
Privet Hedge: Blue violets
50c C.; Goldenglow Orange Dest
Lilies; White daisies; 35c d
Weeping Willows; Yellow
onica; 15 ea., 2, 25c: Sweet
seed, 10c doz., 3 doz., 25c:
abe hrag Spi Exch. for prin
ed sacks. rs. W. D, Ralsto:
Ella Gap. = gs sy
. Tame blue violets: Pr
hedge; 50c C.; Weeping Willo
Yellow Japonica: 15c ea., 2, 2:
Sweet Pea seed, 10c doz. 2
well rooted and del. Marth
Ralston, Ella Gap. =
Long trumpet daffodil
White and Yellow jonquils o bl
Butter and Eggs, $1.00 C.; Blu
single Hyacinths; Yellow Rega
lilies, $1.00 doz. Miss Mattie
MecCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Valley lilies, Strong,
rooted plants, 25c doz., or $2.
M._ Reset now before the 15t
of Sept. Like all other lilies 0
bulbs they hibernate for
winter. G. McKnown, 406 G
Ave., S. E. Atlanta.
Tiger lily bulbs, 2, 25e: fo
glove; purple and white violets:
white and blue daisies: butter.
and eggs plants; 25c doz. Jon-
quil bulbs, 75c C.: red ta
honeysuckle; Mt. -fern: trailin
arbutus, 15c ea., or 2, 25c. Mrs.
G. C. Hester, Dahlonega, Rt.
Yellow jonquils; Butter
Eggs; Long trumpet daffodils:
$1.00 C.; Blue single hyacinths
ee oe Regal lilies,
$1.00 doz. Miss Cecil McCi
Hartwell RED
Nice well rooted Boxwo
6-12 in., 25c ea.: Tube Tose. | 5c.
ea.; Regal lilies, 20c ea.: Candle
lily (red and yellow) $1.00 doz.
Mrs, Mae Turner, Gainesville
Small cabbage palms, 3 fo
$1.00; ;7 for $2.00; Sage ann
camphor shrubs, same pric
Century plants, 50c ea. Ban-
ana plants, $1.00 ea. (Will bear
hananas if protected first yr.)
S. M. Seaborn, Brunswick.
Qver 300 fine Madonna li
bulbs for sale, all bloom nee
year. Large bulbs $2.50 doz,,-
smaller $2.00 doz. Miss |
Simmons, Commerce.
5 doz. tulip bulbs, large var.,
lavendar, yellow, mostly laven.
dar, 5c ea.; Philippine lily bulbs.
blooming size, 10c ea., add post
age. Bula Cox, Canton, Rt. 2.
Lemon lilies $1.25 C; Royal
Blue Iris, Spider lilies, White
daffodil, Jonquils, $1.50 ;
Snowdrops $1.25 C. Exchange >
for white or print sacks. Martha
ees: Bremen, Rt. 2, Box |
Blackberry lily seed oe
plants, Hubert Chamber, Can-_
on. ote
_Fragant yellow cluster Na
cissus $1.00 C; White - bab
breath spirea 25c ea.; White Al
thea, db. bloom (5 ft.) $1.00,
Dollar orders postpaid in Ga.
Evelyn W. Seago, Pinehurst
20 doz. blooming size Hast
lily bulbs $1.00 doz.,
Gainesvi . 5.
Miss Bessie Martin, | once i
FLOWERS AND SEED
=. FOR SALE
i
- FLOWERS AND SEED _
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
2-3 yr. old Cape Jasmine (one
loomed this year) $3.00 ea.;
Small White Hydrangea cut-
ings 3-50c; white hydrangea
ed 25c ea.; Green Wander-
ing Jew cuttings 3-25c. Add
postage, no checks accepted.
oney orders or cash. Mrs. J.
arrells, Sr., Royston, Rt. 1.
hite sweet wisteria; Ever-
green Fan leaf English palms,
-25c ea. Purple spike okum-
podum plant, $1.00 C.. Include
postage. Mrs. O. Q. Fields, 407
~ Madison St., Thomasville.
Charleston Jointed
xrass 100 ft. $1.00 postpaid. T.
L. Mitchell, 111 Thomas St., L.
C- ., Macon.
Bulbs per doz., Narcissus,
pe, Jonquil, 50c; White and
ar Blue Iris 30c; Dbl. Orange
e 25c; Ageraturn blue 35c;
Peonies, pink, 25c ea.; Blue
J Phlox 25c.doz.; Rose Hi-
iscus 25c ea. Mrs. Ruby Lagor,
stelkoRt. 22: Box 271.
i-6"" real. dwarf boxwood
00; 6-8 Transplanted $10.00
; 1C-12" field grown semper-
irens nice bushes $5.00 doz.
30.000. Mrs. -R.- F'.ferrell,
snville, Rt. 3.
2 each Chinquapin Roses, Oak
Tydrangeas, Globe Arborvitae,
oxwoods, Red Hibiscus, Ker-
a, Japonica, Red Trumpet
Honeysuckle, Snowballs, Clem-
tis. Boston Lily, all for $1.50
paid. Moss packed. Mrs. M.
Haton, Dahlonega.
ixed Iris, ten or more col-
25ce doz. $1.25 C; 6 seedling
ntanas cream center with
25c; Lantana cuttings 12-
Star of Bethlehem bulbs
4 large Cactus, Night Bloom-
cereus. 1 with 15 buds will
n 2nd. week in September.
ome small ones and others
ist rooted. Come and_ see
. Mrs. John Cunard, Cov-
ton, Rt. 4.
Well rooted fox grape, Wild
ose plums, Purple lilac, Al-
nea, Sweet Shrubs, Wisteria,
rig rearigated Mums, Large
~ Daffodils, Garlic,
Hibiscus. Exchange for
ns, dried fruit, feed sacks
x value. Nan Kown,
4
pr. blooming Narcissus
ys, large size, 60c C.; Purple
: & Mrs. John Weaver,
uchanan, Rt. 1.
Jonquils: Dbl. Butter and
ss, 15e doz.; Red Verbena, 10c
ch; Birds-of-Paradise seed
: Water lilies, 20c
ch: yard ferns (white clus-
r bloom). Add postage. Miss
rump, Hartwell, Rt. 1..
Snow Drops: Calif. Violets,
ce Emperian Daffodiles;
iS Warciwsus,< $2.00) G.:
nd White Per. Phlox 50,
Altheas, (pink, white
wple), 5 colors azaleas;
hododendrons Laurels; Dog-
ood: $1.00 doz. 5 kinds of
Oe. . Mrs. J. H. Penland,
Tiid Azaleas: Pink, purple, |
theas; Weeping Mary: 40c doz.
fodils: tame sweet violet",
ild iris; Star of Bethlehem,
range day lilies: 45c C. Fall
button pinks, 40c doz.
stage. Mrs. Mollie Hen-
Piqay. sta.
ge white peony bulbs, 20c
hite April narcissus, 50c
low good time to put them.
Add postage. Miss Ethel
fa Whemietia, Rix 2. 2
ine Dwarf Boxwood; 2 for
310.00 ea.; others $2, $3, $4 ea.
looming size butter and egg
Se Loe, 3007. 2 doz, -2he:
ergreen clinging very well!
Bridle Wreath:
us, 15 a.; Pur-
ter iris, blue grape hya-
Poe A0se Or $175 2:
uuran, Cumming, Rt. 1.
olors of old fashion
-. 25c>a .cupit: One
flower
rder. - Mrs. ly. R: Ash-
Dacula, Rt. 1. ae
ymile, $1.00 doz., root-
4 cuttings, $1.00; Red
Hardy pink Phlox,
. 3 doz., $1.00: Mixed
Shasta Daisies, Pur-
oD GOZ.
eppermint plants, 10c
Minnie O. Dodd, Al-
Mrs.
22-500: brie
Alexander, Jefferson, |-
G. | cissus
Two three yr. old Cape Jas-
mine. one bloomed this summer
$3.00 ea... Green wandering
Jew, 25c, 5 pieces rooted: White.
Hydrangea cuttings, nice large
foliage, 25c. cutting. Postage
included. Mrs. J. E. Sarrelis,
Sr.. Royston, Rt. 1.
Anemones, 50, $1.00; Shasta
Daisies, Snowdrops, Calif. Vio-
lets. $1.00 C.; Perennial Phlox,
50, $1.00: Emperor Daffodils,
Poets Narcissus, $2.00 C.: Rhod-
odendrons, Laurels, Cherokee
Roses, Altheas, Lilies all col.
$1.00 doz.: 10 rooted roses, $1.00.
Mrs. Addie Wilson, Morganton.
Dbl. japonicas, 6 yrs. 9ld,
rooted, 60c ea. Honeysuckles,
red and white dogwood, Weep-
ing Mary, hardy hydrangea,
snowballs, 4 for $1.00; lemon
lilies, jonquils, King Alfred
daffodils, hardy phlox,. 35c doz.
Monroe Barnes, Ellijay,
Bt aoa
500 yellow jonquils, 500 yel-
low narcissi, 200 April narcissi,
2900. either jonquil or yellow
narcissi, $1.00 per C. Add
postage. Mrs. E. Fountain, Fort
Valley. ~
Fine gladioli, picardy and
others, long trumpet daffodils,
white, fragrant narcissi, all,
$1.25 C. Exc. for white or print
sacks: also dry sage for sale.
Myrtle Pace. Temple. Rt. 1.
Pink peonies, dormant. roots,
3 to 5 eyes, $1.25 doz. Del. in
October. Mrs. S. W. Sloan, Au-
burn.
Exc. blooming and evergrecn
shrubbery, perennials, pansy,
snapdragons, columbine, blue.
pink, white thrift, blue and
| white iris, for Lilies (no Day).
for fall planting. Mrs. M
Combs, Washington, Rt. 2.
Want hear from party having
dbl. flesh pink and bright col.
altheas. Buy or will exc. targe,
dark red cannas, also pink.
ones. Mrs... Lathia ~Gritfin,
Pitts; Rie 2. ss :
_ Want up to 2 M., fall flower-
ing paper white narcissus. -K.
Rath, Savannah, (4 mi. White
Bluff Road.) Rt. 5.
Purple Ageratum, Rose Per-'
ennial Phlox, Dbl. Yellow Hum-
bert Canna 35e doz; Yellow
Forsyth Rose Weigela, White
Eng. Dogwood, Purple Lilacs,
Rooted 2_ft. 40c ea.; Dbl. white
Spirea large, rooted 50c. Mrs.
Ruth Head, Bremen. s
Pink Spirea, White Abelia,
Purple and White Lilacs, Gol-
den Bell, Forsythia, Bridal
| Wreath, Small Boxwood, Pink
Almond, 6-40c; 20 Var. Iris
25-40c, $1.35-C; Daffodils, But-
ter and Egg, Star Bethlehem, ;
dbl.; Single Hemerocallic Or-
ange, 50c-C. Mrs. Henry Eller,
Ellijay, Rt. 3.
--Dry Garden sage, 40c gal.;
August lilacs 3-25c now begin
to bloom. John B. Grindle, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1, Box 58. ,
Roman Hyacinth
bulbs 3-4 to 2 in. or more in dia-
meter, all blooming size, $4.50-
C or $20.00 lot. Postage extra.
Money Order. Mrs. W. H. Bag-
ley, Cusseta. .
Red Hibiscus 25c, $2.60 doz.;
Narcissus bulbs 75cC, $6.00-M;
Wisteria 25 ea., $2.60 doz.;
Other shrubery. Write. Yonge
Walker, Toccoa, Rt. 3. e:
Rooted, 2 Conch begonias,
geraniums, 1 good size, reguiar
geranium, 2 jade plants, 1 san-
servia, 1 Umbrella plant, 2
kinds moss, 1 justicia, del.
$1.00. Mrs. H. Allen, William-
son. -
Orange Amaryllis, Pink Rain
lilies, rooted Lantana, Red and
Rose Verbena, 10c ea. or $1.00
doz. del.: Cuttings trailing cole-
us. Dbl. Red Geraniums, Pink
or orange Lantana, 5c a.;
Geraniums rooted, 25c ea. $1.00
orders del. Mrs. C. GC, =isynch,
Rome. Rt. 1. 5
Snowflake, Jonquil, Daffo-
dil, Narcissus bulbs, 50c G., $5.-
00 M.: Mixed German Garden
Tris. 20e -d0z:.7 $1.50- Gy--add
postage under $1.00 orders.
Mrs. Carl Kimsey. Hiawassee.
Jonquils, daffodils, Butter-
cups, Paper. White Narcissus,
Ranunculus, $1.00 C.: Dbl. pink
Geranium, other pot plants
eant care for through winter
large in bloom $1.00 ea. post-
paid. Mrs.* W. A. Lewis,
Toomsboro. oo
Jonquils, Daffodils, Hemero-
callis, 50c C.; Purple, lavendar
and white Iris, 25c doz.; purple
lilac, Wisteria, Pink Almond,
Pink Spirea, Neb and Biddie
eactus, Bridal
Hydrangea Boston Ivy, 35c;
Yellow Kerria, 15c: White and
Blue violets, 35 C. Mrs. Doyle
Eller, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Daffodil bulbs. The Emperor,
25 st April blooming nar-
Wreath, Oak].
Orange Day lilies, Leopard
Lilies. Tame sweet violets. Daf-
fodils, Wild Iris, Star of Bethle-
hem, 45e C; Pink Hardy Hibis-
cus. Pink and Purple Altheas,
Azaleas.. Weeping Mary, all
well rooted, 4-25e add postage.
Miss Erma Henderson, Ellijay,
Rts:
Jonquil bulbs, $1.25 per .
Mrs. G. Collins, Cobbtown, Rt.
ae :
St. Bernard lilies and Boston
fern cuttings, 15c; pink Egypt-
ian Lotus, 25c: coleus plants and
Rattail cactus cuttings, 5c ea.;
Scotch Broom seed, 15c cup-
ful: Few water lilies, 50c ea.
Add postage. Mrs. Geo. Nunn,
Crawfordville, Rt. 2.
Star of Bethlehem bulbs, 20c
C.: Grape, white and pink be-
gonias, 15c ea.: dbl. red gerani-
ums cuttings, 15c ea. 3 for
95c: Rainbow Moss, 20c. ea.
Exc. for dried apples or musca-
dine, or pay reasonable cash
price for same. Mrs. Ed Stone,
Adairsville, Rt. 2. eae
Madonna Lily bulbs, $1.50 to
$3.50 doz.: also long Trumpet
doffodils. 45c C. $4.00 M. and
postage. W. A. Sumner, Forest
Park. .
Dwart boxweod, small, rooted
plants, 2 doz., $1.50; $4.00 C.:
perennial verbena, scarlet red,
deep pink, white, dark purple,
3 doz., $1.00; $2.00 C.: pink
Thrift, $1.00 C. Rooted. Del. Ga.
Mrs. E.-A. Smith, Greenville,
Rio.
Tris, 15 labeled var.. postpaid
$1.00: 3 pinks, 3 yellows. 3
blues, 3 dark shades and_Mil-.
dred .Presby,. Indian Chief,
Morning Splendor. Madora
Skelton, Hartwell.
- Fine iris, any 7 labeled, post-
paid for $1.00; Desert Gold, In-
dian Chief, Gudrum, Attye Eu-,
genia, Mary Geddes, Apricot
Glow. Geo. Baker, Depute
Nornblot, Pink -Satin, Blue
Monareh. Mrs. Steve Skelton,
Hartwell. :
Furple Flags, orange lilies,
Trumpet daffodils, $1.00 C.;
pink, ,white peonies, 25c ea.
Rainbow moss, Maidenhair
fern, grape begonia, 15 ea.,
pink hydrangea, 30c ea. A. E.
Hughey, Fairmount, Rt. 1.
Mix. col. Azaleas, dogwood,
60c doz.: white, pink, purple
altheas, dbl. pink almond, 10c
a.: large type Bronze Chrysan-
themums, 10c ea.; smaller type
white, yellow, rust, 75c doz.>
hardy phlox, 3 col. Add post-
age. Mrs. Maudee Farist, El-
Hiay itis 2s :
Pink Thrift, 50c C. postpaid.
Mrs. C. R. Rheney, Harlem, Rt.
be
Paper white narcissus, large
bulbs, 30 for $1.00; 3 yr. rooted
Abelia, $1.50 to $2.00 doz.
Mimosa trees, 25c to 50 ea.
FOB. Mrs. Will Wise, Wadley:
Large Easter lily bulbs, have
from 3 to 16 blooms next spring,
10c ea. 12 for $1.00. Bulah
Belle Brown, Rochelle, Rt. 1.
Madonna lily bulbs, $3.50
doz.: Assorted bulbs, $4.00 C.
Ce -O=b: Plus postage. -D. W.
Nichols, Kingston.
Camellia Japonicas,
Japanese evergreen azaleas, |
Tea-Olives, Banana Shrubs,
Gardenias, Chinese Holly, Vi-
burnums, Red Berry pyra-
cantha, yellow oleanders. Any
2 for $1.25. Mrs. J. A. Griffin,
Cordele. :
Indica,
FLOWERS AND SEED
WANTED
Want dbl. Shasta, Esther
Reed, Phillips Elliott, Mayfoeld
-Giant, Michelmas, and Painted |
Daisies, Korean and Rayonate
or pin poimt Chrysanthemums.
Must be true to name. 100 big
bulbs, paper white narcissus,
1 00-6. = irs B= M,.- Combs,
Washington.
- SEED FOR SALE
800 Ibs., pure Hairy Vetch,
combine run, 10c lb. J. S. Lynn,
Washington, Rt. 1. ;
. Large red multiplying onions,
75c gal. plus postage. Mrs. Geo.
Reynolds, Hartwell, Rt. 3.
300 lbs. Crimson Clover seed,
15e: Jb. FOB. - -Geow Nunn,
Crawfordville, Rt. 2.
Soe
"FLOWERS AND SEED _
pink oxalis, 6 for 25c; white, |.
-+ $1.00 doz.
multiplying onions.
85c gal. No order less than
gal. Postpaid. Mrs. Bernice
Russell Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Seed per cupful: Okra, 10c;
Cucumber and Squash, 40c.
Mrs. John Weaver, Buchanan,
Pete te
New, 1943 Green Glaze col-
lard seed, bug-resistant, $1.50
White
lb. plus postage. No less than.
% lb. sold. No chks. Mrs. C. J.
Meeks, Douglas, Rt. 1.
Early Queen, earliest water-
melon grown, ripens 60 days
from planting: quick cash crop. |
Trial pkg. seed, 25c; Acre bag.
$1.75. P.. Pp. Order now. for
1944 crop. W. M. Thornton,
Jesup. Rt. 2.
Frost-proof Eng. pea seed, 1
teacupful and 1 large table-
spoon ful] of hibiscus, red and
white. all for 30c postpaid, Mrs.
Ion Ashworth, Dacula, Rt. 1.
White nest onions, $1.00 gal.
Add postage. Mrs, J. E. Kemp.
Toomsboro, Rt. 3. :
PLANTS FOR SALE
Eldorado blackberry, 2 -yr.
plants, $1.50 C:. $15.00 M. Mrs.
C..M. Robinson, Greenville.
Marglobe tomato plants, $1.00
M. Add postage.
horn, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Large, early var., strawberry
plants. 75c C. del. Shipped with
mudded roots. Also eggs from)
purebred Reds. $1.10 per setting |
-del.; booking orders for young
roosters, $2.00 ea. Mrs.-C. C
Lynch, Rome, Rt. 1.
Klondike and Everbearing
strawberry, new plants, 35c C.;
$3.00 M.: 5 M., $14.00 mailed.
L. A. Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Everbearing or ~- Klondike
strawberry plants, $1.00 C.
pospard: Malvin Collins, Whig-
am.
Early imp. Klondike straw-
berry plants, 15c C.; Yellow
crookneck squash seed. 75 lb.:
green and red Hot pepper, -35c
qt. Add postage. Rosie Crowe.
Cumming. Rt. 1.
Nice, new Klondike and-Ever-.
bearing strawberry plants, 40c
Cr $300. Me. Mailed, ia. A.
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
All yvar., cabbage, Iceberg let-
tuce, Beets, Carrots, Kale, Ruta-
baga, Collards, white Multiply-
ing onion plants, 50c C.; As-
Paracus. tyr old -30c > doz
Celery later. All del. No less
50e orders accepted. Mrs. H. V.
' Franklin, Register. |
_ Peppermint , plants,
Dbl. tansy, 25 for 25c: catnip. 6
for 25e: horse radish. 12 for
$1.00: garden gooseberry, sage
plants, 12 for $1.25. Mrs. M. I..
. Eaton, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
Nice, well rooted Sage plants,
20c ea.; Condons Mastodon.
everbearing strawberry plants,
40c .; $3.50 M.:. Gooseberry
bushes, $1.00 doz.; garlic bulbs.
Mrs. Hubert Turner,
Gainesville. Rt. 6. - :
Everbearing strawberry
plants, 50c C.; 300 del. ror $1.60.
Exc. for 6 printed chicken feed
sacks. Mrs. B: to Lhornton,
Bowdon, Rt. 1.
Everbearing strawberry and
Imp. Klondike strawberry
plants... 40e. ==$3:50-M dels
collard plants, 25c C., $2.00 M.
Lee Crow. Gainesville, Rt. 2,
Box 143. z
. lady T- Strawberry. plants,
1 30c C., $2.50 M.: Jewel and Red
Gold, 50c C.; Garden Horse-
mint, Peppermint, Tanzy, Yar-
row, 25c doz.; White Iceberg.
Blackberry, 6, 25c: exchange
for white or colored feed sacks,
good condition. reasonable
price. Mrs. Willis Grindle, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1. . :
Extra large Lady Thompson
Strawberry, firm meat, delici-
ous flavor. 35c C. Improved
Klondike, 30c C. del. Mrs, J.
S. Crow, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Spearmint plants, well root-
ed, packed in damp moss, 35c
per doz. P .P. Mrs. T. B. Thom-
as, Thomasboro.
Early imp., Klondike straw-
berry plants, 15c C. also yellow
-erookneck squash seed, 75c Ib.
Add postage. Rosie Crowe.
Cumming, Rt. 1.
_ FRESH FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Old fashioned white multi-
plying onions, Extra nice. 60c
gal. Add postage. Mrs. C.'R.
Smith, Buford, Rt. 1.
White Half Runner garden
beans, 30e per teacupful; Speck-
led Half Runners, same _ price.
P. P. No stamps. G. T. Brown,
Ball Ground. Rt. kh
Apples for sale to truckers,
at Orchard, He Be -nobperis:
Clarkesville, Rt. 3. 3
Fresh scuppernongs and mus-"
eadines, now ready. 55c gal.
Send COD, or send money with
order, |
Tula Cavender, Frolona.
"SEED FOR SALE
J.-L. Stray-t-
bags, $1.25 bu.
B0c Cc]
o-1D54 $112
postage. O. H. Bradbury
Add postage. Miss |
EGGS FOR SA
Thompsens bred to la
eges, U. SS. Pullorum
$00: ner 15: $1.85 for 20s
Also B. R. same str., cockere
seo0 ea. John A. Wilson, Maj
in. ee
Quail eggs, $3.00 per 15.
Ww. A. Pope, Atlanta,
Northview Ave., N. E.. V
Purebred, large type D
Cornish eggs, $1.15 per :
Crate returned. No chk
A. G. Clarke, Rochelle, Rt
GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE.
About 1000 bu. Terutf
oats. 1 yr. from Experi
Station, $1.25 bu. B.F
Griffin, Box 364. :
Sev. hundred. pounds
Crimson Clover for sale. ,
Aiken, Madison,
Clover Hay 1%c lb. Che
per ton. Not baled.
Clement, Cornelia.
Full Gyrain oats,
Victor Grain oats, - ,
Abruzzi rye, $3.50 bu. All
J. F. Lowe, Ft. Valley.
Sanford seed wheat. $2.0(
also seed oats, Hasting
Bu., variety, for sale a
place, on Rt. 54. All clea
H. Voyles, Morrow.
50 bu. Alber seed oa
bu FOB; 50: bias
wheat, $1.50 bu. at barn, 3
out sacks. Fierce J. Ke
Athens, Rt. 2, (Tallahassee
Several M. bu. seed oat,
ssale-at barn in bulk. Co
Fulgrain, Victorgrain and St.
tons: 87-00 -buc- 2 Ke
Marshallville. :
About 1,000 bu. Teruff
oats: 1 yr. trom -Expes
Station, $1.25 bu. B. EF.
Griffin, Box 364. Zs
600 bu. Cokers Full
bright seed oats, packed i:
FOB m
G. D. Moss,
Ro
house.
burg.
15 tons peighit: Rugnse
nut hay, $10.00 ton. G. D.
Edison, "Phone 302. _
Fine Sanford and
Red Hart oats. |
all, also Cokers V
best *of Cokers str.. each, *%
* bu.: Ga. Station seed oats, $
bu. All recleaned. R. D.
Palmetto. gle ees
HONEY BEES AND
"SUPPLIES FOR SA\
34 Ibs. Beeswax. 50e 1b
G. Collins, Cobbtown, Rt.
8 hives Bees, $1.50
at my home, about 5 m
Joe S. Miller, Comer,
27 colonies Bees in 8-
hives, $3.50 ea. at my h
Willie H. Ragan, Hawkinsvi
6th St. i 5
8 or 10 hives of Bees,
cond., some in fram
some old time hives, .
at. Rivertown near Rico.
vester Lail, Palmetto. Rf.
Pure Ga. honey, in glass
Ib., 62
Bogart.
| MISCELLANEOUS
; FOR SALE |
Home -grown sage, sev
lbs., dried in'shade and
for $2.00 del. No stamp
J. Adams; Pavo. ~~
' Goose feathers, _use
good cond:, about 33 lbs., |
plus express. W. H. G
Calhoun. : c
White feed sacks. 100 lb.
12%%c ea. Prepaid in lots o
or more. Mirs2 Ri ee
Hoschton. ;
_ Dunlap S
50c C.; dried. sage. $1
Queen of the Meadow 1
green or dry, 25 Ib.: c
hoarhound, feveriew, |
pane, 5c bunch; horsera
comfrey, sage plants. 10
Add postage. Mrs. Clyde
liams, Cumming. Rt. 4.
Nice shade dried sage, 9
or 3 lbs. to 10 Ib., 80c Ib. -
for prices on 10 lb. lots;
Ibs. nice Beeswax, $2.50 f
All FOB. No chks. J. C
Brown, Toceoa,. Rie | |
- Dry garden Sage, 40c
John B. Grindle, Dahloneg
1. Hox25B 77 3 ee
Pecans: about 100 Ibs
med. size 1943 crop.
kept good sin :
hard shell. -
ar Foot, Colt foot, queen
meadow. yellow root,
ck. yellow dock, red sas-
: nnyroyal, peppermint,
hazel, wild cherry, all
Rattle root in Le
er: 6 Ibs.. ee See
er week. 40c P Qe alt
Nursery stock: Lead. -vat.,
oh trees. Grape vines, $8. 00
ee 00 M.: Plum, Apricot,
3 cents per tree
walnut ee
crs: Nice, new,
feathers, 50e lb. del.
nple-on request. Lot of 25
1.50 del. Mrs. Mary Col-
Cordele, Rt. 4.
washed white feed sacks,
lb. cap.. $1.00 doz.: also 1
of old fashioned onion
or buttons. $1.00. Homer
v eral hundred cotton pick
: Eten
Elberton, Box 724.
ss white nest onions,
iL. del. in Gal. also 100
Burlap bags,
d peanuts). makeoffer.
Robertson, Talbotton.
of sage, well rooted,
punch or 6 bunches for)
25600 ze.
3 bun. 256% also
naquil bulbs, 50c C.
paid. Mrs. Co he Crump,
rh Rit; :
hand picked, shade
$1.25 tb a3eto 10 ips.
; eid, $2.00 ae Fill
garlic bulbs,
Glass jar of 5_ pes
9% lbs., 62c. Plus post-
No chks. |
cans: About 100 lbs. or
E med. size pecans, 1943
pt good since gathered.
t5e lb. Will ship
er collect Ry. Exp.
Imon, ee
tt 1 bu. Jerusalem Arti- |
suitable -for pickling.
. Griffin, Douglas, 401
1B WANTED:
nt to contract with party
ig fruit and vegetables to
some for me. Write. Mrs.
aylor, Rossville,
some Quince. Quince-
and
F H. Spieglitz, Atlanta, 36
Warren St: N: De
ape
t few pounds dried Truit,.
Ss or peaches. State which
ave and give price. Ed
chins, Covington,
BD HAY
D .
100 pu. sed oats, red
proof, also 100. bu. Full
and 30 bu. Ga. grown
ye for my own use. Quote
nd send Sel W. HH.
sh. Blackshear, 2.
int buy 100 . ee
field, for feeding cattle
a this winter. Write |
. Williams. Vidalia...
n - oats and seed rye.
Clough, Blackshear.
| Abruzzi rye and some
ts. Hubert Chambers,
feed oats.
es and no, bu. you
Yan: 25 Hi oe Vee SL
ardson, Palmetto.
nt-quantity seed oats, also
wheat. Make price on ea.
. paeek H. L. Williams,
mt 1 honey Extractor. M,
hitley, Cartersville, Rt. 1.
int about 35 or 40 Ibs.
ax, also few gal. of hon-
wis Palmer, Mt. Vernon.
> 5 (4-50 5. 4-100 lb. cap.
washed lour sacks (with
red pin stripe), for 1%
ll planting nest onions,
r red. Ea. pay postage.
sacks for 75c plus post-
S. i. M. Sullivan,
SEED WANTED: Fe:
white, |
4 multiplying onions,
mended
O. H. Bradbury.
May-pop fruit.
3 Hayes
ye sancCn, Hogans-
Want. 1 pound White Stem
Heading collard seed. State
price, and how soon can ship.
W.N. Gaskins, Willacoochee.
_ Want white multiplying on-
ions, several qts. wanted. Mrs.
ee Blackwell. Monticello.
bean seed, Mrs. ale
Chula.
Want 5 to 10 gal., white mul-
tiplying onion sets at onice..
Give del. price and amount you
have.
nah, Rt.
Want ae crop Black ont
seed, by ounce or 100; also large
sweet and sour cherry seed,
Jap. walnut, red striped Sis
berian crabapple, seedless grape
vines, and Kumson plums.
ee price for Nov. ee
. A. Ward, Thomasville. Rt.
Want 200 Ibs.,
W. Law,
-elean, white:
immediate
'shipment. Quote best price. E.
B. Hill, Americus.
Want some French Shallots.
Addregs. J. H. Anderson, At-
lanta, 921 Highland Terrace.
Nok
Want some Golden Seal roots
or seed: J. T. Ellis, Albany
Rt. 3. Box 446.
Want old fashioned Button
onion sets, (not scallions), to
plant in September. Mrs. H.
B. Clower, Lawrenceville... ht.
3.
Want 1 lb. Chas. W.. cabbage
seed, also % Jb. White _Ber-
muda onion seed: Write. Dillard
Adams, Elberton, 57 Carey: St.
Want some yellow multiply-
ing onions (sometimes called
nest or potato onions), for Sep-
tember planting: alsa 2 0r- 3
strong pie plant or rhubarb
roots. Mrs. J. M. Hall; Coenen.
RG de
Want sev. Aps. Ivey water-
melon seed. Will pay fancy
price if the right thing (have
been told there were some mel-
ons of this type in Baldwin:
Co.) Advise what you have.
E. T. Clements, Tennille.
Aas
ed shallot onion sets.
Rich-
Ross, Brunswick. 1414
mond St.
SACKS WANTED:
Want some _ printed feed
sacks, 3 of a kind. State what
you have. number and price.
Ruth Fricks. Whitestone.
| PEPPERS WANTED:
_ Want 1 bu. Pimiento or Big
Bell peppers. State price. Mrs.
-O. S. Fields, Ps 407
No. Madison St.
aa
POULTRY FOR SALE
BANTAMS:
1 trio. beautiful Red Pyle
Game Bantams, 1942 hatch, Old
English Type. $5.00. W. A.
oy 32 E. Tayior. St., Savan= |
ote
eae game Bantam cocks
BB Reds and Silver Duckwings.
Extra good. My Ist. pen head-
ed this year with first prize
cock. at New York show Jan.
| 1943. Close out at $2.50 ea. M.
i ee 921 E. 49 St. Savan-
Hare
Purebred Golden Sebright
Bantam Cockerels, $150 ea.
F. O. B. money order, Malcolm
' McMillan, Bartow, Bex 135.
Silver Sebpright cock $2.00 or
trade for nice hen same breed.
/Dark Cornish Bantam cock.
$2.00 or trio, $6.00. D. Bass.
692 Kirkwood Ave.,
lanta, Ja. 6947. f
10 or 12 bantam hens: mix- |
ed breed, extra good layers and
satters, 15 mos. old, 50c ea. for
fot. plus express. B. T. Carith-
ers, Nicholson, Rt. 1.
Black Game bantams,. April
hatch, $1.25 ea. for pullets, $1.-
00 ea. cockerels, also 2 pr. big
type White bantams, $2.25 ea.
pair: 1 pr. Chinchilla April 20th
rabbits, $10.00. All FOB. Mrs.
Annie Mullins. Jackson. Rt. 4.
2 setting bantam hens, $1.00
ea., with Quail eggs at 15 ea.;
also 10 wks. old quail and adult
quail for sale. Mrs. T. W. All-
good, Atlanta,- 1169 perlnaton
Ave., S. W., Ra 7266.
25 small type ee Game
Bantams, 3 to 4 wks. old. wt.
less than pound grown, 25c ea.
Mrs. Willie Smith, Rolston.
15. Silkie Jap. bantams, 75c
ea.. $10.00 for lot. Will del.
near Atlanta. Mrs. C. O. Ed-
wards, Stockbridge, Rt. 2.
ea.
Mal-
PO;
bantam cockerels, $1.50
FOB. Money Order.
colm. MeMillan, Barlow.
Box 135. as
Want 1 gal. Half Runner snap |
x. lay Lawton, ose
Want 3 or 4 gal. old fashion-
| mos.
S$. E.- At=5
Purebred Golden - Sebright
Bennett, Duluth.
BARRED AN D OTHER
. | ROCKS:
2,000 or more AAA ered
rock pullets and cockerels, fine
for breeders. Write for price.
ee T. McMillan, Gainesville.
Mrs. J. E. Sarrells, Sr., Royston,
Rt 5 oie.
1,000 full str., AAA Barred
Rock pullets, 12 wks. old. from
best layers, 95c ea. Chas. H.
yoo Flowery Branch, Rt.
B. R. pullets, 3 mos. old. from
good Fis strain. Write for
prices. Chas; 2 7: McMillan,
Gainesville, Rt. 3.
4 White Rock 5 mos. old pul-
lets. $5.00 FOB. Cash or M.
Order. J. E. Massey, Jr., Val-
dosta, 205.W. Park Ave.
10 B. R. 9 wks. old pullets,
$1.00 ea. H. RR. Hodges. De-
eatur, 151 Winona Dr. De 8672.
50 B. R. pullets, 10 wks. old
Sept. 8th. $1.00 ea. M.O. Mrs.
| Emma Berryhill, Cochran, Rt. 2.
20 fine W.-R. pullets, 8 cock-
erels, pure Fischel, from 9-10
lb. -bloodtested hens; pullets,
$1.25 ea.. cockerels, $1.50 ea.
Give 2 unrelated cockerels
with order of 20 pullets.
J. L. Wallace. Bowersville.
18 or 20 W. R. pullets and
cockerel, purebred, from blood-
tested hens, May hatch, $1.25
ed. M:-O. Mts Be B. ord,
Lavonia.
Trio White Rocks,
March-April cockerels, $3.00
ea.: also 10 young hens and
March cockerel, $20.00: rooster,
8% lbs.. 18 mos. old, $7.50;
Eggs, $1.25 per 15. C. O.
Sylvester.
Pure W. R. bloodtested pul-
lets, 3 mos. old, also W. R.
roosters. $2.00 ea. FOB. Sam
- Verner, Lavonia, Vickery
Ss Z :
BRAHMAS:
Few exceptianally good,
young Light Brahma cockerels
and pullets, from show type
birds, for sale. E. H. Sanders,
NE 1176 leorned Dr.
CORNISH, GAMES AND
$4.00; 9
| GIANTS:
- Cornish cockerels, May hatch,
from hens with plood-tested
stock rooster, $1.50 ea., 2 for
$2.50 FOB. Crate not to be
ret: No. -chks. Mrs.
Chatham, Adairsville, Rt. 2.
10 Dark hens, 2 yrs. old,
; rooster, no akin free; young
April and May hatchcockerels,
$1.50 ea. FOB: Mrs. J-
Stone, Adairsville, Rt. a
3 pullets, laying, and 1 cock-
erel, Cornish, wt. 4 to 5 Ilbs.,
$1. 50 ea. for the 4. Reed EF.
Fowler, Roy.
2 purebred Dark Cornish 18
old cocks, $5.00; cocker-
els, $1.00 and $2. 00 ea.; 3 mos.
old purebred Guernsey
well marked, not reg., for sale
or exc. for another of same
breed. H. W. Thurmond, Farm-
ington. HES te
- 6 pullets, Cornish Indian, also
4 cockerels, $1.50 ea; 4 or 5
hens, $2.00 ea.; oe 1 yr. old
rooster, $2.25; also 2 purebred
Aristocrat B. ._R. cockerels,
$1.50 ea. FOB. Mrs. eat Os.
bern, ato
2 fine pit game brood cocks,
2 yrs. old, 1 Blinker, dead game
cock, $2. 00 ea. or exc. for pit
game hens, 2 hens for 1 cock,
Doms or Grays. Carl Griffin,
Gainesville, 718 Oak St.
Sniders purebred Bacon War-
horse cocks, $7.50 ea.; hens,
$3.00; stags and pullets, wt. 2
to 3 Ibs., $1.50 to $2.00 ea.;
other good game cocks, $5. 00.
ea. Tom Weaver, Canon, Rt. 2.
35 Cornish April pullets, soon
be laying also 2 not related
eockerels, $1.75; 30 hens, some
Jaying, $1.50. All purebred.
Lula Giddens, Kirkland.
Purebred, large type Cornish
eockerels, last of March and
April hatch, $1.50 ea. FOB. Mrs.
AG Clarke Rochelle, Rid.
7 little Black Game and Buff
mixed hens and Ancona roost-
ers, 50c ea. or swap the 8 head
for 3 New Zealand Red rabbits,
2 does and buck, all-in service.
Write first. Carl Odom, Ideal
care Sam. Felker, Rt. 1. sey
Mohawk Dark cornish In-
dian Game young roosters,
$2.50. Nonnie Garner, Cedar-
town, Rt. 3.
3 Cornish Cockerels, 5 mos.
old at $2.00 ea. if taken at once.
Cc. J. Kenney, Athens, Rt. 2.
6 Indian Game Cockerels, wt.
2 lbs. ea., $1.00 ea. Mrs. Myrtle
Jackson, Ranger, Rt.. 2.
1 small neck black Game Stag
rooster (crossed) $2. 50. Jos. C.
1 Barred Rock Rooster, $3. 06.
Mrs. |
| mos.
Re le
$2.00 ea., 10 for $20.00 and re
male, |
lets,
5
LEG HORNS:
S. C. Strain, 5 mos. old, Now|
ready to ae $1.50 ea. no culls:
100-8: A. A. A. 3 mos. old,
$1.00 ea. 2 H. Ragan, Douglas-
ville, Rt. 3, Box 13.
10 White Leghorn cockrels,
March hatch from 298-304 egs
hens., $1.50 ea. in lots of 5. i.
H. Flanders, Rockledge. one
3 April hatch, 4 Star Hanson
White Leghorn cockerels All
for $12.50 or $5.00 ea.
appointment to see. J. J. Shafer,
Atlanta, Rt. 3, Box 91.
24 Purebred S. C. White Leg-
horn pullets and cockerels, 10
wks. old, fine laying. strain,
75c ea.- 20 fat hens for best of-
fer; also 2. Hogs wt., 175 lbs.
ready to ee $20. 00 ea. No
ne oe Cousins. Green-
ville
CORRECTION: Seo. CesbuUlt
| Leghorn hens and cock bird,
50 A. A. A. White L. ae
Make |
Reds, March, 1942, | a bc
banded, Uv S RO
April, 1942, hatch 3.
Olle Se Scarbor ah
keisWiNe oe: merritt Se
cockerels, ot 25: to2
1 fine 16 mos. old cx
$2. '00: Eggs, $1.50 per 15. Mr
G3 R. Sorrells, Monroe, Rt. 1
140 N. H. Red pullets nd 1
cockerels, Barch hatch, vac-
-cinated, now laying some. $:
ea. at my farm. Mrs.-
Martin, Flowery Branch. R
Dark red RT Red coc
including Ist and 2nd hens in|,
Atlanta Show. Shipped on ap-
Drove =). A. Boge Atlanta.
442 Atwood St.. S..
Selected Brown Leghorn
roosters, bloodtested, iverlay
strain, $1.00 ea.; also few nice
bred to lay pullets, $1.25 -@a.
Will not ship COD. Mrs. Wood-
row Wilson, Lavonia, Rt. 1..
40 pure Hanson W. Ll. pul-
lets and 2 cockerels, 7 wks.
old, $40.00; also 7 genuine Pape
Mlack Minorca 2 mos. pullets,
$10.00; 1 cockerel and 3 pul-
lets, White Cornish, $10.00. L.
L. Wallace, as 10490 Man-_
igault St. S.
50 W. L., AAAA Yr. old. hens, |
trapnest, best strain, 90c ea.,
plus express charges. Papers
on them if desired. Mrs. Nat
Winters, West Green.
35 big type English W. lL.
pullets, 6 mos. old, $2.00 ea.;
90 W. L. pullets, 314 mos. old,
$1.00 ea. No chks. Mrs, B30.
Thornton, Bowdon, Rt. 1.
ey.
40 AAA W. L., pullets, 38
old, good cond., $35.00
and buyer pay shipping ches.
No chks. Mrs. J. E. MeKown,
Gairo. Rt 2.
About 140 big type W. L.
pullts, 4 mos. old, $1.50 ea.
| FOB. Blanford Watson, Mauk..
RID
10 B. L. pullets rick A: rooster,
bloodtested and Everlay strain,
pullets almost ready to lay,
$15.00. Will not ship. Mrs. W. |
Richey, Lavonia. Rt. 1.
AAA Master mated, Eng.
type W. L., crowing size cock-
erels, U. S. R. O. P. for breed-
ing, a 00 ea. FOB. Hoyt Hel-
ton, Buchamon. Rte 2;
i;
E. | MINORCAS:
Mammoth Black
Papes S.
continuous
Minorca Se
layers matings. Direct stock.
31% mos. old, $2.25 ea. Wallace |-
Wilson, Martin, Rt. 2.
MISCELLANEOUS
CHICKENS:
20 nice fat hens at 25c Jb. at
my home. A. R. Cousins, Green-
ville, Rt. 3.
Have 75 or 100 heavy Spereet
hens for sale or exc. for Beet
Type (Angus or Hereford)
calves. Mrs. G. A. Mallory,
Meansville.
PEAFOWLS,. PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC.:
Pigeons, Show birds, 32 blue
and silver kings, $1.00 ea.: also
few white kings, $1.50 pr. W.
S- Hicks= Conyers:
10 large type W. K. Pigeons.
3 pr. mated, rest female and
males, $10.00. R. H. Lisle, De-
catur, Rt. 1, Flat Shoals Rd.
Ja. 0570W. Se ;
~ Bob White quail. $4.50 pair: |
Pheasants, $5.00: Doves, $1.75:
pigeons, $1.00; Ducks, $1.50 ea.
Bantams, $1.25 pair. Mrs. Helen
Street, Atlanta, Rt. 2, Box>564.
-ORPINGTONS:
30 Buff Orp., pullets, ready
to lay. February hatch, and 2
roosters, $50.00 for the lot. Mrs.
G. -A. Mallory, Meansville.
REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRE
AND RHODE ISLAND):
~ New Hampshire pullets, Bar-
red Rock Pullets and White
Leghorn pullets for sale, all
about 3 mos. old. Silas Mauid-
In, Lavonia, Rt. 2.
25 New Hampshire reds cock-
erels April hatched, AA grade
$1.50 ea. F. O. B. here. Money
order, no checks. Will not
ship and crate at this price.
vile W. S. Harrison. Waynes-
ville,
7 R. I. Red pullets, 1 rooster
Mar. i $10.00 or strates
pullets. $1. 00 ea.. 2 fine 1 yr.
old roosters, $1.75 ea. F. O. B.
Mrs, Jesse Brown, Helena,
White Face Black Spanish
and New Hampshire Red pul-
all ages. Write for
prices. Ww. 2 Siete
oo Adairsville, Rt 4
| rooster, 3 hens. $4.00.
| Heavy laying strain. |
: senate Decatur.~
baby chicks, pullorum
ed, 15c ea; eggs, $1.50
del. Exe. either for hoi
Some yr. old roosters, $
ea. Mrs. Grady Brown, Ss
Mtn. Rt. 1. oe,
15 N. H. Red pullets, 8
pullets
and are AAA, $L.75 ea,
$40.00 for lot. Mrs. C. ae ;
Bowman.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS. GEE
DUCKS, ETC:
4 Ducks, 3 white, one ing
and white, all hens an
jayers, would exchange
dried apples or anything coul
use. Mrs. W. F. Smith, Rt
Ellis Rd., Griffin.
oe
Be
small type, 1 rooster, 2.
$3.00. All fat and Layi
as E.. Lewis, To
Blue Speckle
| 300 ea. Postpaid. S. G. H
Brookton.
ed ee Hutchins, C
611 Floyd St.*
White Pekins. 2 drake
4 hens, $1.50 ea.: small
bantams, 50c ea. Here. I
Cae L. Jordan, Manassas.
POULTRY WANTE
BABY CHICKS:
Want 1 or 200 baby chick
raise to 8 or 10 wks. old. O
party furnish feed. Experi
ed. Have Govyt brooder
ply at once. Mrs. Erne
Rowland. Chester, Rt. 1
BANTAMS WANTED:
Want a trio Buft- oc
Bantams, year old. ee:
Write at once. Mrs. :
Crawford, Newnan. eh
Want Sev. large type :
tam hens laying or will lay
fall. Prefer Brown, Stat
J. K. Hilton, 724 Sweat
Waycross.
CORNISH WANTED:
Write. Mts.:
beville, Rt. Z
LEGHORNS:
Want about 30 to 40 M
or first of April hatch Pp
or Brown Leghorns.
rH. G. Tibbetts, Dalige HE
PIGEONS:
Want a few prs., Re
naux also few pr. Silver King
pigeons, mated and workin;
heaviest preferred. Ray = m
son, Swainsboro, Rt. a 2
GEESE:
_ Want purchase some pure:
pred Geese. Alice Walton, 0
lumbus, Box 905.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GE
DUCKS, ETC., FOR SAL
4 and 5 wks. old, 75c ea.
Collect Mrs. Otis Mash
Cumming, Rt. 5.
Mallard ducks, young,
year. Sell or exe. ter
or Partridge Gam h
lets... Mys. reas
Adrian,
WANTED
CATTLE FOR SALE
HOGS FOR SALE
_ Wednesday, September 8
HOGS: F OR SALE
5 Speckled Guineas, 2 mos.
"a5e ea. Mrs. B. S. Turner,
8847 Colville- Ave.
. C.. purebred Silver Lace
lotte roosters, prize win-
tock, Avrit 1943 hatch,
-ea. Exp. Collect, Mrs.
y, Sandersville, 315
Harris St. : d
CATTLE FOR SALE
s urebred Jersey bull from
reg. stock, 16 mos. old, $75.00
or trade for 50 laying, of best
, White Leghorn hens. Cail
Ma 872, or write EB. L, Myre ls
lanta, 483 Robinson Ave.,
ine, reg. Hereford heifers,
Polled Lamars Anxiety
os. old, wt. about 600 Ibs,
er 14 mos, old, Nona wt.
ut 400. Ibs. Both for $350.
R. Payne, Canton.
egistered Polled type
rd heifers, 15 to 20 mos.
ood, smooth heads. Born
ored in Ga. Been given |
immunity for Bangs and
Leg. $1,500.00 for lot.
A. Price, Albany.
e Face bull, 17 mos. old,
J. H. Smith, Chipley.
sh cow (calf 3 wks. old),
@ at: my. place. P._N.
i pines Rt.) 4,
ree, 8 yr. old cow, cream
wt. about 800 Ibs., 214
cay, also 1 bull, yr. old,
Guernsey. Will sell for
5.00. A. B, Wiley, Ashland.
ald milch cow, freshen
mber 10th, for sale, 4 mi.
ton Min., n Rock
oad. Mrs. H. L. Hard-
soon, $150.00; 1
due to freshen in 10
00; fat, not mean Jer-
$65. 00. All at barn
onsider renting cow
sr. See Frank Cain,
(Near _ Zion
Se milk cow, $75, 00, at
Jace 8 mi. south of Col- |
ark. es, dewel Fryer,
le i
deer red pure White Face,
1 a e bull, 16 mos. old,
Ristea 700 lbs., $150.00 at
farm, 8 mi. Rome on Black
ff Rd. C. S. DuPree, Rome.
2nd Ave. , :
bred, 8 mos. old Jersey
.00 at my farm. near
H. G. Almand, Atlan-
Albemarle Ave,, N. E.
ok Jersey bull, 12 mos,
J. g. Adams, Law-
' 1 yr. olds can
buyers name, $75.00;
want exc. 2 Black Afri- |
Atak boar pigs, 3 mos.
for 2 big bone S. P. C.
: 8 or 10 wks. old.
Daniel, Covington. Rt.
N 605461, wt. "1200 Ibs.,
specimen, entle, easy
$200.00. Clayton
anosvilie: Box 86.
old, purebred, reg.
Jersey heifer, Actor
No. 1375098, pred. to |.
White. Face
mos. Oe a an}
round 75 Ibs. ea, $11.69
B. aaa Flowery
een 20 od 30 beef type
chiefly high grade Here-
hich have been bred to
- and Light type Ree.
rd. ulls, ready for ser-
d3 yr. old Herd
to $750.00 ea., ac-
2a. individuality;
a hetors and 7 open
ali reg., horn type. W.
iy, Decatur, 511 Wesley
: LG? mi. out Cee :
aay all No.
600 Ibs., 10 mos,
od enough to
B. Daile
i
Hitl-
[
3YS-- O10, 3 gal...
12 purebred Polled White
Hace heifers and males, 6 mos.
old, also 25 purebred and grade
young cows. and calves and
springers, bred to extra fine,
rege Polled bull. Mrs. V. 4H.
Lang, Forsyth, Rt. 1,
1 Shorthorn bull, about 2
mos. old. J. G. Blackwell, More
ticello.
Nice Jersey (mot reg.) bull,
cross Blue and Yellow, 18 mos.
old, fine tor breeding. Healthy,
wt. 600 or more lbs., Sell, 10
Ib. at my home. Exe, for any-
thing can use. 5 mi, So. Jas-
per, 3 mi. West Tate Station
Hwy. No. 5. Geo. L. Green, Jas-
per, Rt. 3, z
All my cows and dairy equip-
ment for sale. Thos. F.. Mit-
chell: Richwood.
Young pure bred Guernsey
bull, Longwater sirain. No
better pedigree, $150.00 at Bur-
russ Place paved Hwy., 4 mi.
south of Madison. John Rk.
Hudson, Madison.
1 fine Guernsey bull, full
stock not reg., 2% yrs. old, wet.
900 Le Gentle and fat, $100
here. G. Wright, 203 Tucker
Rd., chawbien
83 purebred, not reg. horned
Hereford bulis, 1 yr. old, $50.00
ea., also excellent quality un-
hulled dbl. sereened crimson
clover seed. Hard type seed,
sample and information free.
S. L. Thornton, Dewyrose, Rt.
oe } :
1 milch cow. halr Jersey,
half Guernsey, 2nd. calf. $100.<
00. P. A. Phillips, Palmetto.
A few head beef cattle for
sale. B. oO. Fussell, Bruns-
wick. c
1 reg, Jersey pull, 25 M08.
old, $100.00. 4 mi. east of Mc-
Donough. J. A. Carter, Mc-
Donough, Rt. 1. '
23 head of pure bred Here-
ford - cattle. Frank Boynton,
Douglasville, Rt. 4.
Reg. Guernsey pull, of best
bloed line, good condition. de-
horned. Selling to keep from
inbreeding. $175.00 here. A.
T. Cowings, Meansville, Rt. 1.
1 two yr. old reg. Guernsey
bull, good individual. A, K,
Chamlee, Sparta.
1 cream col. Jersey cow, 2
$60.00 without
also 1 purebred black,
Berkshire sow, 19 mos, old,
$50.00; 6 fine pigs, Berkshire
and Big Bone Guinea, 8 wks,
old, $7.00 ea. at my home, near
Fairview School. G. A. Skel-
ton, Lavonia, Rt. 1.
50 reg. Jersey cows, of
Raleigh and Fillpail breeding,
W.A. Biggers, care i Bort Hil
Farm, Greenville.
Nice Jersey Heifer, bred
May 10, entitled to reg. Young)
bull ready tor service, Guernsey
and Jersey. Both gentle. Fat,
good condition. $130.00 . or
swap for qa hog and difference,
G. R. Williams, Brookhaven.
Near Candler Rd.
Polled and dehorned Here-
ford Heifers wt. 500-800 lbs.,
for sale. W. M. Story, Albany,
Phone 431.
3 yr. old reg. Guernsey bull,
good condition, $150 cash at
barn. J. BE, King; Cecil.
1 thorough bred Jersey bull,
6 mos. old, wt. 340 ibs. $50.
Hugh D. Neims, % mi, Kibbee,
Vidalia, Rt. 1. 3
Herd of pure bred Jerseys
for sale, about 30, some fresh |
now. Will sell all or part. i.
C. Williams, Douglasville Rt. 1.
Two Aberdeen Angus Bull
calves, about 6 mos. old, pure
but not reg. $65.00 and $75, 00
respectively; Also Clemson
Beardless Barley, pure except
small sprinkling of Vetch seed,
$1.50 bu. Lb. CG Allen. M. DP:
Hoschton.
A cream col. Jersey cow,
freshened July 10th, also some
cow-pen manure, $5.00 ton at
my barn. F. D. Shell, Senoia.
calf:
HOGS FOR SALE
=
<
Reg, OQ. I. C.s, 4 1-2 mos. old
shoatsS, $20.00 ea.; sow and 6
pigs, 7 wks. old, $110. 00; anoth- |
er sow and 9 pigs, 6 wks. old,
$140.00. Reg. papers go with
Re eg _T. Allen, Danie
Hereford hogs, | 3 ale pigs,
3 mos. old, Reg. in purchaser's
name, $25. 00 ea. FOB Forsyth
or at farm? crated for shipment
$2.00 ea. pig extra. J. J. Tur-
ner, Forsyth, Rt. 1,
Purebred Black P. C. shoats,
farrowed May 13th, well grown
and ferny: dbl. treated for
cholera; 3 gilts and male for
$15.00 ea. at farm, crated and |m
shipped for $1.50 ea. extra. K.
'D Sanders, Eatonton. ig
i nice O. I. C. boar, 10 mas,
old, $25.00 if taken at once.
Live 8 mi. No. of Jasper on No.
5 Hwy. E. L. Patterson, Talk-
ing Rock, Rt. 1.
i sow and 10 pigs, 2 wks.
old, $100:00; 1 big cow and bull,
yearling, $100. 00. At my barn
prices. . A. Beall, Irwinton.
4 niece shoats, nearly 3 mos.
old. $10,00 ea.| S. P. Sanders,
Winterville.
1 O. I, C. large sow, a 100 ib.
Hampshive-Essex bred gilt, nice
red. and black male hog ready
for service, $30.00 ea.: also Reg.,
ped., . Toggenburg goats for
trade for milk or common does.
. M. Smith, Arnoldsville.
6 Ga. improved Big Bone
Blue Guinea service males, also
9 bred gilts, same breed, for
sale. Can ship. Cobb Lee.
Waycross, Rt. 2, Box 478.
TO 35C. boar. 8 mos. old,
about 175 lbs., purebred but not
reg., $2750. Swap for. gilt
about same size. Jack Dukes,
Atlanta, 11 Alta Place, N. W.,
*phone Be 1700 M.
Litter of 10 reg. Duroc pigs
(this sow farrowed 4 litters.
twice with 11 and once with 13)
$15.00 ea., 8 wks. old. Ernest
P. Carter, Baxley. (4 mi. N.
E. Baxley).
Young White Face Hereford
boar hog, beautifully marked.
Reg., very best; blood lines,
ready for service, $125.00; _
reg. 1] mos. old. 450. tb. OG. 1. .
boar. Very best blood Togs
papers, $60.00, E. W. Lester,
Decatur, Rt. 2, "phone De 2086.
Fine Black brood sow, 8 pigs,
RD: males, 3 gilts, around. 50 lbs.
$75.00: 1 gilt, 8 mos. old,
isos thin-haired, Esse x-
Hampshire crossed, $25.00; also
10 fine Red hens, 1 rooster,
$1.00 ea. All at yard prices,
Wont ship. Cash, No. chks.
Dan E. Webb. Hortense, care
Cotfee Co. Fishing Club.
Durec and PR. C. crossed, 7
wks. old pigs, $7.00 ea. H. E.
Phillips, Atlanta, 1591 Howell.
> Mill Rd., Be E35 d.
10 pigs, 10 wks. old, Awl}
cond.. $10.00 at my barn. Miller
Ogletree, Forsyth, Rt. 1. -
30 pigs, Hereford and Guinea.
cross, 10 wks. old, wt. about
50 Ibs. ea., fine for breeding,
$15.00 ea. G. D. Jones, War-
then.
4 boar shoats, S. P. ., and
Essex cross, 3 mos. old, wt.
75 Vbs., $12.50 ea. at barn. +
A. Taylor, College Park, Rt.
Cooks Crossing.
10 8 big bone Guinea
and Essex, 1 young brood sow,
big bone and Essex, fine shape,
just bred 3rd time, also 1 O. I.
C male, ready for service. Chas.
A. Snook, Tiger.
9 African big bone. Guinea
pigs, ready now, also, 11 cross
big bone Guinea and O. I. C,,
ready the 20th Sept.. price
reasonable. Cannot ship. L. C.
Glaze, Cleveland, Rt. 1. ~
8 shoat pigs about 60 lb. av-
erage, thrifty. 18c lb. at farm;
1 grown Ram and 2 Ewes.
Southdown breed, $10.00. ea.;
'also. want 5 tons bright, good.
clean baled Peanut hay. del. my
farm 2 mi. West Ft. Valley.
L. P. Singleton, Fort Valley. Rt.
ge
- Reg. Hereford pigs. ~ from.
* Championship blood = lines
(breeding some real marked
pigs this season). Write for
prices. Can ship anywhere.
son St. ;
Extra fine oO. i. pigs; now
ready. ped. papers furnished
tree if desired, $10.00 ea, Clyde
Heaton, Hartwell. Rt. 3.
Durocs, the low-down, blocky
| Cherry. Orion Cherry Kings
pigs, ready to shin. Dbl. treat-
ed, reg., buyers name. J. D.
Ledger, Andersonville.
50 pigs. sP> C.and Duroc
eross, 7 wks. old, for sale at
my place. J. E. Gunby, At-
lanta. 1180 Mt. -Paran. Rd.,
| Ch 3343.
20 purebred big bone Guinea
pigs, 2 mos. old, $8.00 ea.; 3
mos. old, $10.00 ea. Both Black
and Blue type, short-nose, long
bodied, easy to stay fat kind.
Money order. . R.. Wade.
Warrenton,
1 S: P. C. gilt, reg. and bred
to reg. S. P. C., boar $65.00. 1
S. P.-C. Boar 6 mo, .old, wt,
200 lbs. reg., $50.00, all F. O. B..
here at my place. W. D. Wil-
banks, Ramhurst,
1 veg. Duroc boar, 7 mos. old,
| will sell or trade for pigs. B. L.
Custer, Marietta, Rt. 2.
' Pure bred O. I. C. pigs, 6
wis. old, reg., $11.50 ea., not
reg., sis ea, also. light Brah-
ens 1 Id, $2.00 ea.,
| about 1000 Ibs.,~
Otto King, Hartwell, 34 Jack: :
2.0)
ae og MM. | :
4 Spotted, Poland China.
weaned Boar pigs, dbl. tested
for Cholera. $12.50 ea.. reg.
buyers name. . L. M. Isler,
Morgan,
Rez . I. .
wks. to 5 mos.
(Cherokee 1087). or write Dun-
woody, Rt, 1.
1) eS pies: poar, and
sow, straight from, Ferguson,
Tenn., $12.50 ea. F. O. B. papers
in your name, weaned Sept. 8,
1943. See or write Burton
Paul. Carlton.( Shipping point
Berkley).
1 nice S. PC. male shoat wt.
60-75 lb. Ready for service.
Would exchange to prevent in-
breeding for one of same kind.
$18.00 F. O. B. Also, 1, 5-yr.
old pony, gentle and work any-
where, $175.00. Wire:
Kinsey. Lake Park.
stock from 8
(male & female) S. C. Nille.
Savannah, Rt. 3, White Bluff
Rd.
Little bone
treated, $18.50 ea. O. P. Sin-
quefield, Harrison.
7 wks. old black, African
Guinea pigs, stay fat typ, little
bone, $10.00 ea. E. O. bredsoe,
ny
| Carrollton. Rt. 3.
EO: F.-G6. sow ent. to yep.. 4
mos. old, the right type
brood sow, will treat and ship
for ee 00 F. O. B. my station.
W. H. Wood. Martin, Rt. 1.
8 nice 12 wks. old S, Pc
pigs, $8.00 ea. Dont write,
; come see at John P. Horton) 3,
Farm. Mrs. Repel Huddleston, ;
Senoia, Rt.
2 hogs, wt. 175 lbs. ea., ready
tO2 Roe $20.00 ea. at pen.
A, Mae Greenville. Rt. 3.
Boar. 1
Reg. O
No checks. W. R.
Lawrenceville. Rt. 1.
Pigs, crossed Duroc and P. ae
Ey wks. old, $7.00 ea. H, E.
Phillips, Atlanta, 1591 Howell
| Mill Rd., Be 1851 J.
HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE
3 a horse, 9 yrs. dia. wt.
also werk, $90.00; 5 gaited
-horse, 5 yrs. old, work to bug-
gy or wagon, $160.00: also bug-
gy in perfect shape. B. L. Cus-
ter, Marietta. Rt. 2. |
Good work mule, $35.00 or
trade for hogs, yearlings or a
cow. Mrs. Aleey C. Brown,
Falmetto. Rt. 1. Near Rico.
j mare mule, 9 yrs. old, good
cond., wt. 750 to 800 lbs., no
plug, plenty life, at bargain,
ane .00. Luther Staton. Roswell,
Rik
Dark red col.. ane snaped,
sound mare. good plow horse,
or 2% yr. old mare colt. Want
1 on blocky. order. Give some
difference if well. cs Ee Oy
Weeks, Harlem,
Nice mare mule, 9 or to YS.
good qualities, also good strong
+ horse wagon, $140.00 for out-
fit. - Berry M. Moon, Shiloh,
RFD.
1 mare mule, brown, wt. 900
Cc. B. OQuinn, Blackshear, Rt.
1 : C43
2 work. mules and 1 saddle
ht
mare, for sale. Come see. L. M.
Turner, Union Point.
1 mare for sale,: R. H.
Decatur, RFD: 2, Cr. 3549.
1 good straight foot mule, also
nice brood sow, for cash or
trade for anything can use. .
F. Cooper. McDonough, Rt. 3.
1 plug mule, wt. 1100 lbs., if
fat. 11- yrs. old. aiso 1 good,
blind horse. 1100 lb. Cheap or
trade both tor. brood mare or
cows or yearlings,
Ft, Valley, Rt. 1.
2 good mules, some age, but
good workers, $175.00 for pair,
-or $90.00 ea. W. P. Franklin,
Harlem.
1 good work mule, wt. about
1200 lbs., in good condition:
Paee,
calf, calf about 5 mos. old. Can
be seen at old Gadby Place 2
mi. from Cooks Crossing. J. H.
Nurdoch, College Park, Pp, O.
Box 34,
| 1 seven yr. old Black Morgan
Stallion, wt. about 1050
$100.00. a H. Clark, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 3
6 yr. old horse,
crop, wt. 900 lbs.
made one
Gentle hut
plow, saddle, or buggy.
bee. H. B. Clark, R ckmai
A. K. Adams young, gentle, in good conditic
A. |
+lIbs., age 12 yrs.,
Reg. Hampshire pigs for sale | oes
black African |
Guinea gilts 3% mos. old, lite |
<OF |
ing cattle.
yr, old, |
wt. 350 tbs, "$60.00 at my farm. |
Thompson, |
i where, gentle, $180.00; also.
| about 1100 Ibs.,
good rider, :
for sale or exc. for gentle horse
old, wt. 950 lbs., gentle. with
lbs., good cond,, smart, $125.00. |
J. H. Smith,
Also 1 Jersey cow with first | Gel, price for cash.
lbs.
not completely broke. Good for |
$100 oe s
HORSES AND MULES 5
FOR SALE
Cae
1 Jack for sale. 7 yrs. old
wt. 800-900 Ibs... with whi
points. W. R. Russell, Rou
- Oak.
of good farm
Wt. about 1300-1400 lbs. $27
+ eash at my place in Pridgen
Geo. c. Brown, Broxton, Rl
2 or 3 plug mules for
Come and see them.
around $25.00 ea. .3 toge
cheap, J. H. Caldwell, ACL
ta, Rt. 4, Box 235.
A good mare mule, wt.
sell or w
swap for good gentle cade
mare, med, size, and pay dif
ference. R. L. y On PEO
44. Fairburn.
&
wt between 1,000-1100 lbs.
Price Reasonable. A. L. Roy
Baxley. Rt. 2. oe
ie
1 Mare mule around 11
old, wt. 1100 lbs.; 1 mare
5 yrs. old. Work anyone
wt. 1,000. lbs. J. N. Hose, C
lege Park, Rt. rs Box aa2, 2
Fine farm mare, . good
tured, tip-top cond., wt. aro
| 1100 lbs. 8 yrs. old, Unexcelle
for plowing and fine for -h
$150.00 cash at
barn. -A. R. Peavy. McRae
A saddle horse, 4 mare m
2 and 3 yrs. old, $150.00
also 2 mares, 2 yrs. old; 3 br
mares, 5 yrs. old, for sale o
trade at my farm on Dixi
Hwy., 6 mi. No. Jonesboro. |
Ls: Echo's, Forest Park.
4 bay brood mare, work. ar
Jersey bull, 2% yrs. old.
for Tull particulars.
Evans, Washington, Rt.
1 good, stout, farm mule, y
about 13 s
old, $160,00: Mrs. Daisy. Whit
mire, Gainesvile, Rt. 5. Bo
pe
RABBITS AND cAVI ES
FOR SALE
t ae Ore
To prevent inbreeding
pee 1 purebred, healthy, 9
Z. White buck rabbit, 2
ae for another of equal b
ing. Ka. to-shipn. Exe, Co
approval. . Describe lly
D. Reese, Madison, Rt.
Want 3 rabbits, 2 ites
1 buck, also some guinea pi
uate price in letter. L
Carver, Moultrie, 1023-1st
aoe. aN
Want pure N. Z.: White
bits to raise on shares; w:
sev. does and buck. Well ex
have plenty equipment.
ref., ee all feed. Wa
ence: -B. T. Carithers, Ni
son, Rt. ?
2 NU-Z. White inde rab
3% mos. old, $2.25 ea., 7 N z
Whites, 9 wks. old, $2.00 ea.
press ehgs. collect. f
ped. stock. Mrs. Otis M
burn, Cumming, Rt. 5. -
6 White N. Z, rabbits, 3 do
and 3 bucks, 8 wks. old,
ea. Robert P. Counts, Haral
20 rabbits, Whites, Brown
and Grays, from 2 mos. to 2 y
old, erated and shipped, $25.0
FOB. Money order, |
Philmon, Marshallville,
2 fine, ped. Chinchilla bucks
1 grown, $3.50; other 5 mos.
old, $2.50. Papers we e nh,
R. Lamar. Brantley, Wrigk
ville, Rt. So ea s
N. az. Whites. 5 mos. ole
$4.00; bucks, $3.50 ea.:
fectly marked Checker.
does, 5 mas. old. $5.00 eat. me
type bucks, $1. 00 ea: 3 m
old up reg., pucks, for sale, als
Ralph Skinner, Columbus, 35
River Road. -
N. Z. Waite does: 3 are
wks, old, 1 a yr. old, pre 5
eee and pears.
Eivey
Ward, Junetion City, ;
4 N. Z, White does, 2 with
ped. papers. 2 wae $15.00
for the 4, or $4.00
stock, 8 wks. old, of sod
ers, $1.00 ea. John.
: : feats Hare asel
old, 1 Ch SS buck,
at. Ba oa, 4 ld C
ery fine. young. reg. Saanan
kk for sale. C. Lamar Glenn,
faverly Hall. >
: purebred oevenburd bay
oat, 18 mos. old, also 1 roan
yare, about 1000 lb. wt., for
e or trade. V:. L. Millr
anta, 921 Capital View Aves
hone Be 2277 W.
= at Stud. <5 sil oacdi vd
Saanan. Blac 30 1. Ads OF:
eding: 2 buck kids by above
k, 6% and 734 Qt. mothers.
pers. 3 bred milking dogs,
sale. Edwin Simpson, At-
E _ ene Ave, N, W.,
~6B601.
1 Toggenourg buck kid, son
Gen. MacArthur, from
stock of heavy milk strain,
urally hornless, also a 3%
; Os. old buck of good seat.
Elise McArthur, Curry-
- purebred, Reg. Saanan
cks, 5 and 7 mos. old, large,
rong, healiy and gentle,
m very heavy milkers, reas-
nable prices. Miss Eleanor
Holtsinger, Arlington.
Saanan buck at stud, - oe
Royal Kown, reg., in A. G. S.,
No. S-5561; reg.. in A. M. G. R
No. 69583. Fee, $3.00. Mrs.
Isie Trons, Atlanta, 689 North
ve., N. W., Ma 8499.
VESTOCK WANTED
ATTLE WANTED:
Want to buy 1 or 2 reg.,
ernsey- heifer calves,
old. State best
ee, crated to ship. B. Fk.
f Jes Claxton.
th 2nd or 8rd calf, give 4 gal.
or more, and 1% |b., butter per.
day, prefer Jersey. W. D.
; olds, Savannah, 2005 Mel-
a St.
RSE AND MULES
ANTE
Went oS eash, 1 pr. farm
ules, and wagon: also Cut-,
y harrow, Beis plow and:
er farm tools. Gibson,
anta, 1431 Diropcntan Ave.,
Be ton De 4592.
Biant buy good mare at reas-
ble price tor cash, not too;
f-oft* . MM. Moody, Coffee.
Want good, tough. aged mare.
ule. Must be sound, pert,
tle and work anywhere.
. Haney, Ben Hill, Rt. 1.
Want to trade Herefotd,
rk mares or .mules.
ugs wanted. B. F. Harris,
fin, Box 364.
. Want an extra good saddle.
mare or hors, wt. around)
000 Ibs.. and not over 7 yrs.
O Karl D
Rt. 2.
SHEEP AND GOATS
JANTED
Want. 1 milk goat, fresh, pro-
ucing not less than 4 qts., day,
refer genuine Nubian or Al-
e breed, broke for milking |
and gentle. F. H. Mauldin, Sr.,
Sparks, Box 108.
Want a pair of lambs (wean-
ye
O. Box 1417.
Wanted Toggenburg milk]
t fresh in Sept. or
Mrs. ene Reagan,
POSITIONS WANTED
ant small 1. h. farm for 1944
or standing rent, with small;
hod house and out-bldgs., on
near school and_ mail route, |
ith cotton and. tobacco allot-
, in Evans:Co., 3. in family. |.
Colson, Claxton, aARt. 1s
ant job as Caretaker or;
oreman on a stock and hog
rm in Wilcox or adjoining
ounty. 32 yrs. exp., in Tarm-
Can 7 labor. Wife
A. W. Roberson, Tif-
ant fob as overseer of farm. |
1] exp. in-farming. Can
die labor and furnish ref.
engaged in running big- |
Saw Mill outfit in Ga.).
Anderson, Loeust Grove.
Want 1 or. more acres for
anding rent near bus or ar}
e near Atlanta, suitable for
ickens, cow, hog and garden.
Will take care of and clan up
H. B. Clark. Rockmart:
ant good. 1 h. truck farm:
50-50 basis. More than 40.
s. exp., in truck farming,
iil be able to run selt. J. .R.
rewn, Maysville, Rt. 3.
Man, 46 yrs. old, sober, want
help gather crop and do oth-
work. . Some exp.
WwW. Shelton, Atlanta,
SS
4 lights.
{for standing rent, near
. Sanders... Eaton-"
F..M. Langdon, SOURS, N
Oct.,)
Want gical farm for 1944:
with good bldgs., barn and well
improved land, for standing
rent: on school bus route in
Turner Co. Give full particu-
lars as to what you have to
offer first letter. A. J. Adams,
Ashburn, Rt. 2.
Want place, house. wood and
water, to work by the hour and
work garden and patches. Am
69 yrs. old, strong and healthy.
Want close to town. Have been
farming, W. R. Harrell. Yates-
ville Ri uy:
a
2 men want jobs on farm
driving trucks, tractors, ete.
Write at once, stating particu-
he Rook. Cochran, Ellijay.
Rt 2:
Want small farm not too far
from Atlanta; with lights for
standing rent. Jack Dukes, At-
lanta, 11 Alta Place, N. W., Be
1700 M.
Want. job on tarm, Exp: in
dairy work, tractor driving,
etc. . Working now but like to
change, High school education.
Carl E. Williams,/ Augusta, 1119
! Fenwick St.
Man and wife, want job!
picking cotton in Chattooga
County. 59 yrs. old. Henry P.
Strickland, Atlanta, 320 Pulliam
Sti Wie
Want 2 H. crop on 8rds and
4ths, rere in Bartow. or Floyd
Co. O. E. Cowart, Cartersville,
Rt. 3:
Want 2 H. crop for 1944 on
50-50 basis. 6 to work.
furnish self. Must b on Hwy.,
close to town and have electric
M. G. Rut-
ledge, Rt. 1.
-Want good 2 H. erop on 3rds
and 4ths with 4-5 R. house with
lights. Have 2 plow hands, 3
to hoe. Good stock. and. tools.
Milton Pierce, Rockmart, 597
Love St.
Want 40 to 60 acres land, pre-
fer within 40 mi. Atlanta, but
| will take further: want,15 to
8, Gunnin. fa
ing rent. T.
- Morrow.
9 brothers with small, fami-
lies. 3-A, 4-F draft, wish 2, 1-h.
- crops around Atlanta on shares,
For further information, write.
Shy Ave.
Want job operating: tractor er
truck or both on farm, with
milch cow, good garden spot
and house, and fair wages per
dren. J. L. Troup. Fitzgerald,
Rt. 3.
Want small lace for 1944
Mati-
etta. Want good barn and pas-
ture, not over 14 acres. cultiva-
tion: prefer house with lights.
w.S. ial ie Roswell.
FARM HELP want)
Want experienced couple at
once for 10 A. truck farm, lo-
eated East Point. New, mod=
ern, 4 R. tenant house. Elec.,
water, wood, free. Salary,
. $3:00 weekly plus % crop.
Phone. Ja 3421 or. se, , Go
ae. anes 17. Foundry sifu
Want Saale man of eouble
no. children, as caretakers and
workers for modern country
home near Atlanta. Comfort-
\ ) able rooms with lights, water
ae wood and good wages.
None but experienced need
ana In answering. give ref.
| Hugh Richardson. Atlanta, 160
Peachtree St.
~ Want afull time, able bodied
Miller for. well established Corn
Meal Mill. Walter Estes, Rex.
> h: crop for 3rds_
and 4ths. . Fairly good house
with plenty out-bldgs. J. W..
Westmoreland, Cleveland, Rt. 3.
Want Dairy hand, white or}
-eolored: must be exp. milker.
Room, poard and good salary]
to right person. All letters ans.
Write before coming. Geo. T..
White, Savannah, Rt: 3.
Want man and wife, 45-50).
vate Small 2
me and work crop on 50-50
basis. Exch. ref. H. J. Led-
ford, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.
Want reliable man with 1 or
2 sons to work on farm ahd if.
small dairy, located.in N. W.
hGa. Pay man $60.00 mo., and
boys according to what they
ean do. Furnish 4 R. house,
wired. for electricity. wood and
pasture for cow. W. T. White,
Rock Springs, Rt. 1.
Want experienced Dairy help,
for 75 cow retail dairy located
14 mi, So. Macon. 2 Milkers
and 1 milk room man. State
age, salary expected in first let-
ter. -J. Vi si daeniseae Mazon,
as 3.
Can |.
95 A. good bottoms. For stand- ii
W. H. Watson. Columbus, 3230-
-week, Have wife and 3 chil-|
|\-chickens, hogs and
oF a abe and food not includ-/}:
Want large family to culti-].
yrs. of age to live jn house with ||
Want Overcer for 14 mule. >
farm, 9 mi. East of Leesburg.
Well. supplied, easy to culti-
vate. Nice home. Applications
preferable from Cotton, Peanut
and Corn Belt of So. and S. W.
Ga. White for particulars. M.
Siem Daweon, 801 Hast Lee
. Want good farmer for 2, 3 or
4 H. tarm, standing rent or
part of crops. Good, new 4 Rv
house (will wire as soon as can
get fixtures). Located 7 mi.
West Elberton. School bus by
door; 1 mi. Church. Good pas-
ture, = Splendid land... J.B:
Stovall, Elberton, Rt. 5.
Want man, not subject to
draft, to live in home with old
couple to help gather small
crop. Consider trade for 1944.
E. G. Balenger, Tallapoosa.
Want man to clean out a Well
-on farm for farm use. Let me
hear at once,. Mrs. J. B. Ne-
Smith, Forsyth, Rt. 4, Box Ee:
Want 2 families to help sath
er crops and do gen. farm work
and would consider crop for
1944 on 50-50 basis. Houses.
lights and wood furnished. H.
Cc. Rirk, Marietta, Rt. 4.
Want large family to work
on Peach farm, near Ft. Valley.
J. Cc. Adkins, Fort Valley.
Want good truck operator for
farm work. John Deere trac-
tor. Small family preferred.
Write or see me any day after
5:00 P. M. W. P. Franklin,
Harlem.
Want healthy man (past draft
age) and wife, to farm small
crop on halves for 1944. House
per who understands raising
tobacco and gen. crops. Ref.
required. See me at once. Mrs.
Oks Newsome, Moultrie, Rt.
3.
Want reliable, : aladionbed
couple for 20 A. farm, good
sray land, new 4+R house, out-
houses, etc., % mi. from paved
highway, 5 mi. Marietta, on
8rds and 4ths. Mrs. George
Knott, Marietta, 835 Church St.
Want settled, industrious, un=
incumbered white or colored
man to live on farm and take
care of chickens, yard, garden,
cut wood, keep up fences and:
do gen. repair work, understand
raising chickens in brooder.
Good permanent home. room,
-board and $15.00 to $20.00.
month or weekly salary. Thos.
A. Worthen, Newnan. Rt. 2. ~
- Want good farmer for large
2 H. crop. Extra good farming
and, 2 small tenant houses,
parns, pasture, plenty. wood.
and water. 6 mi. N.-E. Ball
Ground. Mrs. H. T. Sabie
Ball Ground, Rt. 1. :
Want reliable, elderly white
man, alone, able to support self,
to live in furnished camp home
on farm. Take care of for use
of same. Room for garden,
cows. Mrs.
Tallulah Harrison, Savannah,
412 W. Anderson St.
Want at once settled, respect-
able, white woman to help with
garden, chickens, te. Good liv-,
ing cond., on farm, 2% mi.
town. Write or see. Mrs. Josie
| Moore, Wadley. Rt. 2.
Want good farmer, white or
colored, for 1 H. farm on 50-50
basis. Good 3 R. house, well
water, plenty wood, pasture and
good mule. Mail route by door.
On Atlanta and Campbellton
Road. W.B. Cochran. College
Park, Rt. 1.
Want. middleaged. white wo-
man to live in country home in
So.- Ga. and assist with light
work on-farm. No milking nor
washing. Must be thoroughly
reliable and trustworthy. Good
home and $5.00 week. Mrs. S.
M. Thompson, Vienna. -
Want farm family with help
to tend farm. 5.7 acres tobacco
and.50 or more A: other crops.
No cotton. If wanted 6.000
Turpentine (3 yr.) faces. M. L.
Anderson, Nahunta.
Want. middleaged man and
wite with one child to farm on
shares, near Gainesville. New
tractor. equipment. See. A.
ao Chamblee, 218 Hardee
Want reliable elderly man or
woman for light work on a
farm, for small salary. Room
and boatd. C. B. Miley, States-
boro, Rt. 2:
Want exp., farmer to take 1.
-and 2 H. crop on 50#50 basis;
Pmail and school bus route. 18
mi. Farmers Market in Atlanta.
Free house, garden and fire-
wood. Extra day work in Fall
and Winter. Must move. seif.
See. Mrs. = S. Storer, Doug-
lasville, Rt.
Want - young woman to
help with poultry and garden;
flowers, etc.. andlive with fam-
ily. Mrs. J. - Peeples, Sie,
LP. . ee 85.
| 1%
tturnished. Must be good crop-
also want 1 h. truck grower, on |
Want. coloned: fanny: with
help to run a dh. farm on
halves. Prefer man who can
Tun 4 tractor:
to milk and do other extra work
Also, man to feed stock for ex-
tra pay. 5 mi. So. Jonesboro,
mi. West Orrs Station on
ee 41. Alex Stephens. Jones-+
oro.
Want -colored farm family.
Man must be able drive tractor.
House, wood Turnished. Year
round job. Good monthly
wages. paid by week. C. W.
Chapman, Lawrenceville, Rt. 3,
*Phone (Atlanta phone) Ja 2148.
Want party to do farm work.
and cut stove wood on 50-50
basis, for farm use. Lester
Massey, D Danielsville, Rt. 3.
Want middleaged woman to
do farm.work. $5.00 week,
room and board. Mrs. W. A.
EPI eOre Gainesville, Rt 7,
Want good man for good 2 H,
farm, either on halves or 3rds
and 4ths. Near town and good
Sen oo hss Rawk Bac
Winder,
Want. man to gather crop and
have a 1 or 2 H. farm for 1944,
located 2% mi. Robins Field,
18 mi. So. Macon. L. S. Hayes,
Bonaire.
Want white woman with
clean habits, good health, to
live as one of the family and
do light work on farm. Good
home (mod. conveniences) and
$5.00 week. Mrs. C. A. Middle~
brooks, Riverdale.
crop on 3rds and 4ths. Good
bottom land for corn, good up-=
land for cotton., Good build-
Want his wife].
Want small family for 1 oe
Want uninecumber di
for farm work.
Strickland, Whitesbu
Want exp. man to
tend modern farm an
Good salary and livin
L Apply in writing only
age, exp., and number
ily, EL. Daugherty
Masonic Home. Macc
Want nice, white fa
Jive in my home on
good 5 R. houses, 2
well water, plenty Oo
all good. Rent 2 H.
y bales cotton standing
mi. Social Circle. , Mrs
Cheek, Social} Circle, R
Want nice white wo
do farm:work. Nice home
good: pay: Contact.
Stevens, Atlanta. 126 T
Driver N: Be Ch. 0378. 2
Want small family of
workers to gather go
crop. Other work/a
1 horse crop on halvs
School bus route.
Answer all mail..
Bogart. :
_. Want white or colored
for gathering 2 H. crop ar
for 1944 on 50-50 basis.
4 R. house, water, wood
schoo] and church,
cow, garden, day labor al
ter: also So take care
ab ee Address. G
g, Rome, 310 Broad St.
ae middleaged.
woman to live on small
mi. Atlanta, and help w
ings.
Rt. 2.
Mrs. Ella Hardy, Bites
readers the possibility of
instead of harm.
cut them for stack poles.
Agricultural Dept.,
Atlanta, Georgia.
| Dear Mr: Linder:
been committing a terribl
their peanuts.
trees. This tree is usually
make cross ties, saw mill
agreed that they had oth
suitable and that it was a
necessity that made them
not using it for stack poles.
Thomasville, Georgia, is so much to the poin
I am reproducing it to call to the attention
preserving pine timbe
a
Of course, I know that in. many instances |
is so thick on the land that it will need thinnin
such cases it does the timber goed to be thin led
In other words, ahora there is not an ~~
number of trees on the land it is a great waste
Thomasville,
August, 13, 1
Hon. Tom Linder, Commr.,
I have read with interest. your editorial of Aug
ust 4th, and your reference to the peanut crop |
South Georgia. Let. me suggest that the peanut pro
ers of South Georgia and southern Alabama.
e waste of the natura
sources of their respective sections in cutting
saplings to make stack poles to be used in stac
It has been the custom of a large ure 8
cut and use the long. leaf pine saplings or.
about four inches in
eter and will last only one season, while if os
it would be jJarge enough to produce turpentine o
timber or pulp wood ane
the same farmer who cuts the pine has availal
other species of timber that would make as good m
terial for stack poles as does the pine. There is
farmer in south Georgia who does not have avail:
to him the scrub oak or black gum or cypress or so
other tree that has no immediate prospect of de
oping into a merchantable
talked to a number of farmers who were cutti
the thousand either long leaf or slash pine and wht
it was called to their attention the scarcity of
timber in Georgia they almost, without except
product. The write
er types. of timber equ
matter of habit more th
use the pine.
I know that your publication is read by most o
the farmers in Georgia and I know that if you
call their attention to it, it will have the Serious
sideration of the majority of your readers.
Thanking you for your. good work in be
the agricultural interest of Georgia, I am _
Ae truly yours,
es GIBSON.
\ddress = TOM LINDER, {ommissioner of Aguciiecs Georgia, at Annual Meeting North Central Aasciation Commissioners,
-retaries and Directors of Agriculture at Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. a
How can the United States best pro-
wre ample food production?
The very fact that such a question is
ked is ample evidence that our economy
out of baiance for if it pertained to any
er commodity, the answer would be
same as it is in the matter of food pro-
tion.
The best waythe only way, in fact
encourage ample production of a com-
odity is to pay a price for that commod-
which will enable the producer to in-
rease his output at a profit.
How can we encourage the farmers
to produce ample supplies? is not the
asic issue; How can we free the farm-
er from being ham-strung by Government-
al agencies long enough so that he can
Beaute is the real problem of food pro-
A wan, with his hands tied henind him,
hrown into a river ; he oe swim
an eras is struggling in the water to
ashore; it is simply a matter of un-
his hands so that he can swim ashore.
oday the American farmer is strug-
in the water; his hands are tied be-
nd him. He starts out to plant a crop,
t our Government threatens dire penal-
es against him if he under-or over-plants
e acreage which the Triple A has allotted
him for various crops. Much of the val-
le time he should spend in his field is
ised in visiting the Triple A office at the
ounty Seat.
The farmer needs these supplies to
- on his operations; his crops are neg- .
cted and we follow him as he endeavors
mply with regulations:
_ FUEL for tractor or truck. He must
it his turn to secure an allotment, then
ite a source of supply.
FARM EQUIPMENT. He must go
the -U. <S. Department of Agriculture
r+ Board at still another location, try
obtain priority enabling him to make
purchase, and, if successful, find a
rchant who has it for sale.
Since large manufacturers of agricul-
tural machinery and equipment now are
celling their contracts with many small
business houses, the farmer must buy di-
t from the manufacturer, giving him
profit that heretofore has gone to the
cal dealer.
After considerable delay, the farmer
makes arrangements to purchase the ma-
Serg direct from the manufacturer, but,
er orders of the Office of Defense
ransportation, the manufacturer cannot
ke delivery to the farmer unless he can
av 75 percent of a load on his return
hat happens? The manufacturer, in
any instances, finds that it is impossible
r him to make delivery to the farmer;
rder is cancelled and the farmers ef-
are for nil. -
: TRANSPORTATION. In a erect
y Cases, farmers of my State are de-
pen ent upon truckers to transport their
oduce to market when it is gathered.
The truckers find themselves hemmed
by so many limitations of OPA, ODT,
SDA and ICC that many of them have
out of business and consequently their
icksS NO longer are available to haul the
armers crops to market.
andicapped on all sides, the farmer
ruggled through the year and pro-
a crop, only to find that the OPA
ced a ceiling on it that- is below the
f production.
Occasionally the
ce a support price under a crop, that
e is so low that it has a demoralizing
ec on prices rather than being a sup-
n many instances theres is no relation-
between the support price and the
g price.
s an illustration, compare these prices.
beans, per bushel hamper, at the
, market this spring :
Support ;
ceiling price on Irish potatoes, an
ential crop, at the farm was: fixed at
per cwt, or $750.00 for a 15-ton
he other hand, cuseinolons, a
The following telegram was received
by me Monday morning, September 6th,
1943. Evidently this meeting, and the sen-
timents expressed by the various Commis-
sioners of Agriculture, had some influence
in this decision.
WASHINGTON, D. C., SEPT. 4, 1943
TOM LINDER,
COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE,
ATLANTA, GA.
THERE WILL BE NO RESTRICTIONS
ON CROP PRODUCTION IN 1944 |
EXCEPT MARKETING QUOTAS ON
BURLEY AND FLUE-CURED TOBACCO.
TOBACCO QUOTAS ARE IN ACCORD-
ANCE WITH CONGRESSIONAL ACTION.
_ GROVER B. HILL,
AGRICULTURAL ADJUST-
MENT AGENCY.
Government does | the river and plowing
non-essential crop, brought as 7 as
- $1,000.00,-$1,100.00 for a 15-ton car.
Some months ago the U. S. Department
of Agriculture called a meeting at the
Biltmore Hotel in Atlanta to discuss the
shortage of protein feeds. I, as well as a
number of others, took it for granted that
such a meeting likewise would be inter-
ested in taking steps to counteract this
shortage by encouraging production of
more protein crops.
After the better part of the day had
been spent. outlining the shortage of pro-
tein feeds and its cause, it was proposed
that farmers be encouraged to grow more
crops carrying protein contents. We were
amazed to find that Government repre-
sentatives present at the meeting were
very much opposed to any increase in
crops; their prime interest was in having
all control officials agree to a reduction
in the protein content of mixed feed.
Often I have seen some shiftless Negro
- farmer who had a mule but no feed; by
some means he would get a sack of corn
and then would try to force the old mule.
corn stalks or whatever |
to eat dry grass,
else Nature provided, to finish out his
rations. In each instance, however, the old
mule finally died from starvation.
This is the Governments present pro-
cedurecutting @own protein and grain
content in feed and then selling the feed
to poultry raisers,
and, like the shiftless Negro farmer, the
Government is expecting some miracle fo =}
produce. chickens and milk after the pro-
tein and grain has been eliminated from
the feed.
Last year the OPA fixed a ceiling price )
on. cotton goods and yarns, based on the
farmer receiving 21.47 cents for cotton.
~ The U. S. Department of Agriculture,
on the other hand, by use of its fake par-
ity on cotton, held down Government loans
to force the farmers cotton on the market
at around $10.00 a bale less than the ceil-
ing price upon which mill products were
based. Further, the U. S. Department of
Agriculture continually threatened the cot-
_ ton market by dumping Government stocks
whenever the price of cotton showed a_
tendency to rise.
-Jt is my opinion that the Shavince of
agricultural products is a direct result of
the Administrations fixed policies:
1. The policy of scarcity and reduced
production.
I do not see how any reasonable man
could expect anything but a shortage of
agricultural crops under a policy of burn-
ing wheat in the field, throwing hogs in
cotton into the
ground.
Personally, I do not Roe that a
shortage of food and other farm products
surprised Washington. To the contrary, I
think it was planned that way. From the
beginning, I think the intention of the pol-
icy of scarcity was to create this very
shortage. But I do not think the Adminis-
tration foresaw the shortage of ships to
bring into the United States foreign farm
products in tremendous quantities.
2. The policy of low prices for farm
products.
This fixed policy of the Administr ation
reasonably would be expected to bring
about the shortage of production.
PS
dairymen and others; |
~The control officials in Washington
not as crazy as their acts would indice
their acts are strictly in line with
fixed policies of the Administration.
' 3. The policy of reciprocal
agreements, so-called.
This is another fixed policy of the
ministration which demonstrates the
termination to liquidate the Ameri
farmer. a
nder these agreements, if contin
the American farmer cannot produc
compete with agricultural products flo
ing this country, produced by peon lal
at twenty to forty cents a day. It is imp
sible to operate a farm in the United Sta
under the American standard of living
| with protected industrial commodities
then compete with foreign crops.
To undertake to force the Am
farmer to produce on a peace-time
with all the world at war and wi
other business on a war footing, wo
undertaken only on a theory of f
the American farmer out of busin
There is but one policy to be folk
to secure the necessary food and elot
for our civilian population and our 1e
forces, to say hothing of our Allies a
people of occupied countries:
TAKE THE SHACKLES ore
FARMERS.
SUPPLY. THE: FARMERS | WIT]
EQUIPMENT, SEED AND FERTL
IN ABUNDANCE,
- PERMIT THE FARMERS TO OBT
A PRICE FOR THEIR PRODUCTS THA
WILL REPRESENT AT LEAST THE C
OF PRODUCTION, AFTER ALLOW
THEM TO COMPETE WITH OTHER 1
DUSTRY IN THE LABOR MARKET. |
We hear a daily chant, Hold th a
against inflation, which would be.
those who sing this chant were not.
|. principal offenders against their own d
trine.
Does any responsible man believe
can spend a hundred billion dollars ir
year on a cost-plus basis without creat
inflation?
-Does any sane man believe that ,
Government can employ one-half of
citizens at the present wage level
creating inflation? <
At a time when most proceso
making more money than at any tim
history, does any man in his right s
believe you can pay subsidies to process
without accelerating inflation?
Does any rational man believe that yo
can reduce prices of commodities withot
reducing wages and still hold the X
against inflation?
Until the present fixed policies of
National Administration are changed,
is impossible to produce adequate
and clothing. Whether that chang
brought about by the Congress this
er whether it will be brought ab
the voters themselves next year, ft do
know.
One thing I ee I do know;
I am convincedthat so long as the
ent. policy of scarcity, the present
present oles of ham-stringing the fa
ers is continued, we may EXPEC to se
growing shortage of food.
We may expect to see a
wheat for a penny,a measure
ley for a penny," and see thou h
the oil and wine.
When a eee is geared tort
food and fibre in peace-times, how |
expect that country to be self-sup) ct
as to food and fibre in war-times.
- How can you get a prisoner in a
goon out into the open air? :
Simply unlock the door.
Open the bars.
Give him the opportunity. ;
And he will walk out all too een
How can we get farm producti
Simply take shackles off the farn
Return to him the freedom which h
guaranteed under the Constitution and.
Declaration of Independence. _
Give him equality before the lav
Give him equality of economy.
Give him an opportunity to sel
country in its time of need.
And he will come through. oe
The farmer will feed and clothe
tJ us.... If we only give him a chan