-EDITORIALBy Tom Linder
Genesis 11:9. Therefore is the name of it
ealledBabel; because the Lord did there confound the
language of all the earth: and from thence did the
Lord seatter them abroad upon the face of all the
earth.
- Between oe and six thousand years ago as men trav-
ed toward the west, they came to the Plain of Shinah,
hey imagined in their foolish hearts that they could build
wer to Heaven and overcome God and His laws.
Man of today is undertaking to build another Tower of
Man in his foolish heart imagines that he ean control
the whole world. Hei imagines that he ean change natures
vs of economics. Hei imagines he can build and maintain
ce with a sword. He imagines that he ean establish
e language throughout the world. He imagines he can
' God at naught and rule the universe.
Man of Today is Confounded in His Thinking
~ The Bible tells us that at the first Tower of Babel, God
nfounded their languages and scattered them abroad. |
Today man is confounded i in his thinking.
Men today do not understand each others thinking
st as they did not understand each others language
ousands of years ago at the first Tower of Babel.
Let us take a few examples to illustrate how man "s
king is confounded today.
Mr. Walter Lippmann is a newspaper cohinned of na-
onal repute. He is supposed to be a straight thinker and
mart man.
Under date of November 24, 1943, Mr. pemann :
rites a column which he calls The A, B, C's of Subsi-
es. In the column Mr. Lippmann exposes a profound
norance of the entire subject of which he writes. No one
uld possibly have done worse in an effort to clarify the
bsidy question than Mr. Lippmann did.
Mr, Lippmann says that the purpose of. subsidy 18 to
ible the high eost producers of commodities to continue
roduce without increasing the prices of that eommodity
he low cost produeer.
iivery farmer knows that subsidy to farmers works
actly the opposite way.
_ The farmer who has the highest production per aere
Livestock Sales, Georgia Auction Markets
Reports received at this office show following average prices paid
lor No. 1 hogs at the Livestock Auction Markets named:
November 26, 1943 Per Cwi,
November 17 (Wednesday)Rome ~~~ ___ -$14.30
18 (Thursday)Valdosta - 12.56
November 22 (Monday)Sylvester ______ ~ 12.60
November 28 (Tuesday)Arlington + ___ - 12.51.
November 23 (Tuesday)Cairo - 12.70
November 24 (Wednesday)Moultrie - 12.50
7 TOP FED CATTLE
November i7 (Wednesday)Rome ee -$13.00
November 18 (Thursday)Valdosta _____-.--aee_-._ 10.00- 13.06
22. (Monday)Sylvester _~2-excumemeeee 10.00- 12.10
November 23 (Tuesday)Arlington mucceeme 10.00- 11.20
vember 23 (Tuesday)Cairo .00- 10.00
Yovember 24 (Wednesday)Moultrie 16.00- 11.00 3
is, of course, the low. cost producer. The farmer whet
the lowest production per acre is the high cost produ e
On the other hand the farmer with the high producti nm
per acre did receive the greatest benefit for soil conser:
tion. He did receive the most money per acre for par y,
payments. He did receive greater benefits per acre in
every way, than the farm mer who had low prada P
acre.
Subsidy To Processors
The records as produced. in Washington Te the
Senate Agriculture Committee proved conclusively that
subsidies paid to processors did not reach the farmer af
all, neither the high eost farmer or the low cost farmer.
More startling still is the unimpeachable Peres
produeed, that the spread between farm prices and i
sumer prices were greater with the supe on they v
without the subsidy. : :
Mr. Lippmann should write on another sith ek un
he learns ee about Agriculture and farm subsidis
_ Subsidy On Sugar
Another noted Georgia columnist, writing for an At
lanta paper from Washington, made the astounding stai
ment that we are hapertne: 4-5 of our a ato t 1a
. country.
Hie stated that it was ood oe for ie Amerie
consuming public to pay the American sugar producer a
subsidy on 1-5 of our sugar in order that we might buy the
other 4-5 of our seas from across the ocean at a lowen
price. ae 7
Think that over i a minute and see just what. thi
noted Georgia columnist actually said. eS
He said in effect, that we can save money be bayine.
sugar produced by lower priced peon oes in Cuba, Puerta
Rico and the islands of the sea.
He said it was good business for us to do that.
ILets see where we would land up if we followed tha t
eolumnist advice. =
We could likewise buy our wheat cheaper xi it a
grown with peon labor at 20 cents a day. S
We could buy our corn, or meat, our fruits and vege-
tables cheaper by patronizing countries where they 1m :
peon labor from 20 to 40 cents a day.
This is not all, however. Under the same line off
reasoning, we could buy our shoes and our hats and cloth
ing. We could buy our machinery and industrial commod=
ities of all kinds by shipping in from countries that did not
have any labor unions. We could buy them cheaper where
(Continued on Page Two)
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
November 26, 1943 Atlanta _ : :
Collards, pr doz. bunches $1.00-$1.75
Mushrooms, 1-lb. cartons - 65 -]
Mustard Greens, bu. hprs. - 1.00
Spinach, bu. bkts. 1.25- 1.50
Sweet Potatoes, bulk, per ae 1.25- 2.25
Turnips (Bunched), per doz. bunches ee -,00- 1,00 |.
PP Salad, hu lorse 8 re aoe a fae
PAGE TWO
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
Address all items for publication and all requests: 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.
Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not
mssume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin.
Published Weekly at
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
Tom Linder, Commissioner,
Executive Office, State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
Editorial and Executive Offices
at State Capitol, 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
at Covington, Georgia, under Act
of June 6 1900. Accepted for
mailing at special rate of postage
_ provided for in Section 1103, Act
of October 8, 1917.
BABEL OF THINKING
Pe (Continued From Page One)
| they are manufactured with 900 cents a day labor
as in Mexico.
7 Of course, we could. On the other hand: if
; jiwe bought ae wheat, our corn and our cotton
and au our agricultural products from other
- eountries because they are cheap, how would
_ the farmer live?
The great boast of our country has been the
- igh standard of living of our people.
The greatest criticism ever hurled at the
American farmer in the past, was that he bought
- too many things that he haa produce on his own
| farm.
2 Suppose everybody i in America should cease
to produce farm products and industrial pro-
ducts. Suppose we all depended on buying pro-
ducts from across the ocean because they were
eheap. How would we pay for them?
We are already far along on the road.
According to figures released by the Depart-
ment of Commerce, in the last 12 months, we im-
ported nearly one- -half billion dollars more than.
iwe exported. These figures do not take in ac-
count the tremendous amount of Lend Lease that
we have contributed to the War Effort.
A large part of this one-half billion dollars
: is for agricultural products which the Ameri-
_ean farmer had been paid a subsidy not to pro-
| duce.
Short-Sighted Policy of Some Leaders
- -News dispatchers tell us that the Mayor of
New York City and the Mayor of Chicago and
heads of the CIO and AFL will appear before the
Senate Committee in support of subsidies.
____ These leaders too, are afflicted with a Babel
of thinking.
John Lewis for instance should know that in
the long-run, American industrial labor will be
forced to compete with foreign industrial labor
just as surely as the American farmer will be
forced to compete with the foreign farmer.
This should be equally clear to the Mayors
of our two greatest cities and the leader of Am-
erican Federation of Labor. |
The fact of the matter is, that in an all-out
world competion, the farmer would survive long-
er than would industry. This is due to the simple
reason that the farmer could always produce
e a psh food for he and his family to eat.
& The industrial worker will always depend
on buying his food out of his pay envelope.
The Mayors of our two greatest cities and
the heads of our two greatest labor organizations
are doing their people a great dis-service in
undertaking to force the payment of subsidies
upon the consumers of our country.
Other Examples Of Confused Thinking
The government is taking a withholding: tax
MARKET BULLETIN
out of every pay envelope, salary check and
every businessmans profit.
Tf the administration sincerely believes that
the people are not able to pay for their food, it
would be very simple to reduce or remove this
withholding tax and leave this money in the
pockets of the earner with which he could buy
food.
The OPA and Subsidies
When the OPA says that prices must go up
unless subsidies are paid, they admit that the
farmer is not receiving a living price for his
products.
If the farmer is receiving a living price, then
why should prices go up?
If the farmer is not receiving a living price:
is receiving.
then OPA should raise the prices that the farmer
The fact of the matter is, that there is very
which consumers pay.
little connection between farm prices and prices:
Today the farmer receives about $90.00 for
-a bale of cotton.
That same bale of cotton in average shirts to
the consumer brings $2,656.00.
Tf the price of cotton -was reduced to 10 cents
a pound, it could not possibly reduce the price of
a shirt more than 8 cents.
On the other hand, if
ihe price of cotton was raised to 30 cents a pound,
it would not increase the price of shirts more
than 10 cents and yet Washington has the brazen
effrontery to talk about. the farmer creating in-
flation.
Washington knows that the only danger of
inflation today i is government spending.
The payment of subsidies increases govern-
ment spending and thereby increases inflation.
The vote in the House of Representatives on
the Subsidy Bill indicates that Congress is com-
ing to" after being held in a long hypnotic Trance
for years.
down and stamped upon.
They that dwell upon the earth have made
merry and sent gifts to each other because. the
prophets of democracy no longer torment them.
The dead body of democracy has lain in the
street of that great city for several years.
_ If life from above should enter into this dead
body of democracy and it should stand on its feet
in Washington, great fear would fall on them
that beheld it.
Lets us cease to follow after vain Gods and
return to the Great I AM who lead us out of
bondage in the old country and brought us to a
land that flows with milk and honey.
turn to the House of our Father and cease to run
after a Golden Calf.
Lets re-
TOM LIN DER;
Commissioner ot Ariculture.
DEPUTY TAX COLLECTORS 10 AID
FARMERS WITH INCOME TAXES
The following information is)
furnished me by Honorable
Marion H. Allen, Collector In-
ternal Revenue, United States
Treasury Department, and I am
reproducing it for the benefit or
farmers so they may know
where they stand with regard
to income and victory taxes:
In general, all. farmers with
gross incomes for 1943 of over
$624.00 are required to file a
Declaration of estimated income
and Victory tax on or before
December 15, 19438, at which
time the entire estimated tax
liability is due and payable.
Otherwise, the law provides for
severe penalties, Farmers who
are single and not living with
husband or wife are required
to file if they have a gross in-
come of over $500.00 In cases
of farmers, gross income from
farming is defined as that in-
come above the cost of labor,
fertilizer and/or other neces-
sary expense incurred in -the
growing and harvesting of the
products produced on the farm.
Farmers must include in their
estimates all income from sales
of farm products, such as cot-
ton, corn, tobacco, peanuts, po-
tatoes, peaches, watermelons,
cattle, hogs, chickens, eggs and
all other products produced on
| the farm, as well as amounts
received from ane U. .
t-| tell, 7; Ambr
ment of Agriculture or others
in the form of parity payments,
rents, ete. All profits from
the sales of farm lands, timber,
firewood, pulpwood, ross- ties,
and turpentine rights constitute
farm income and must be re-
ported.
In order to be of maximum
assistance to taxpayers, the
Collector of Internal Revenue.
has arranged to have represen-
tatives of the Internal Rev-
enue Service at various post of-
fices throughout the state on
specific dates between Decem-
ber 1 and December 15, for the
purpose of assisting taxpayers
with returns.
When requesting assistance
from these representatives who
will be stationed at the various
postoffices, the taxpayer should
bring with him and furnish to
the deputy a complete state-
ment of all transactions for the
year 1943.
There is attached hereto a
list of dates and points of visits
to be made by the various dep-
uties.
The representatives will be at
the Post Offices in the towns on
the dates as shown below: (All
dates are in December).
Alma, 13-15; Adairsville, 9;
Atapaha; 2; Arlington, 10-11:
Athens, 1-15; Acworth, 6; Aus-
OPe) 9; A
amauga,
tfield = 8% Graymont, a Gibs
10; Greensboro, 8- 11: Gai
Every tradition of democracy has been oe Hawkinsville, 9-11; Hepzib
; Ochlocknee, 6; Omega, 9:
| Statesboro, 8-11; Sardis,
| Union Point, 6; Uvalda 3
ling, | :
3-4; Adel, 13-15; Arabi, 6:
bany, 1-15; Attapulgus,
rian, 13; Alpharetta, 4; Aile
Alamo, 4: Abbeville, 3; Arag
7: Augusta, 1-15; Amiens
1-15; Ashburn, 7- 8.
Baxley, 8-11; Barwick,
Brooklet, 6; Bowdon, 63.
Ground, 9; Broxton, 10: B
pridge, 8-11; Byromville
Blakely, 7-9; Bowman, 6:
Ridge, 3; Brunswick, jak
ford, 8-9: Bremen, 2 Bar
Barnesville, 3-4;
Byron, i
Blythe, 9;
wood, 6: Boston, 1; Blairsy
2: Buena Vista, 6- 7: Bucha
4.
Cartersville, 10-11;
13-15; Carrollton, 9-11;
7: Canton, 10-11; Cordeie,
Climax, ay Chamblee, 93
ton, 3-4; Cave Spring, 6; |
ming, 6-7; Canon, 6;
ville, 7; Calhoun, 8; Cai
Calvary, 2 Clarkesville, vi
nelia, 6; Chipley, 1-2;
merce, Sil: Carlton, Ci
2; Colquitt, 6-9;. Camilla,
Chatsworth, 7; Columbus
Covington, 6- 8: Crawfor
ew 10-11; Clayt
Cuthbert, 9-11; ee
Collins, 7; Coolidge, 9;
10; Cleveland,
Crawfordville, 9-17,
Douglas, 13-15; |
Dawsonville, 8; Doug
10-11; Damascus, 6; Dev
2 Dublin, 1-15; Dahlon,
Darien, 6-7; Danielsvill
Dallas, 3-4; Decatur, 9-1
alsonville, 2-4; Dawson, oe
Davisboro, 6; Dalton, 13
Eastman, 11-14: Elberton
11; Ellijay, 9-10; Eatonton
Ellaville, 3-4.
Fitzgerald, 1-15; Folkston
Ft. Gaines, 2-4; Fayettev
3-4; Fairburn, 4; Franklin, |
Forsyth, 1-25. Ft. Valley, 8
Grantville, 1; Guyton, 2; |
ville, 1-15; Gray, 6; Greenv
4; Georgetown, 1-2; (Gri
11: Glennville, 10-11;
wood, 6; Gordon, 6.
Homer, 13; Homerviile
Harlem, 1- 2: Hamilton,
Hartwell, 13- 15; Hampto
Hoschton, 6; Hazlehurst,
Haddock, 7; Hinesville, 1
hira, 8; Hilltonia, 7; Hele
Hiwassee, 1; Hogansv
las 42: Irwinton, eC
Jackson, 9-11; Jonesbor
Jasper, 11; J effersonville
Jesup, 10-i1:; Jefferson, 7
Kingsland, 1; Kite, 2; I
tone ie :
Leary, 8-9; Lithonia,
vonia, 8-9; Lawrencevill.
11; Louisville, 7-11; Lake
1-2; Leesburg, 2-4; Lin
6-7; Ludowici, 8-9; Le
6-7: Leslie, 13; Lumber
Lyons, 7-8; LaGrange, 8
Fayette, 11; Loganville,
nox, 6: Locust Grove, 10:
kin, 8-. ;
Milledgeville, Be eee
1-15; Midville, 8-9; Mette:
Marietta, 9-11; Moultrie, i
McDonough, 9: Monticello,
Millen, 13-15; Marshallv
13-15: Montezuma, 9-11; M:
chester, 3: Mt. Vernon,
ison. 8- 11: Molena, 4; Mila
McRae, 7; Meigs, 8: M
7-9; Mitchell, 14,
Newton, 1- 3: Nashville, 3-
Nahunta, 6; Nichols, 1 117
man Park, il: Newnan, |]
Norcross, 6; Newington, 8.
Ocilla, 3-4; Oglethorpe,
nee, 7; Odum, 3.
Pearson, 9-10; Pembro
Portal, 75 Palmetto, 3; Be
9-11; Pelham, 13-14; Patte
6; Plains, 14; Pavo, 7;
1-2: Poulan, 4: Pinehurst
Quitman, 8- 113
Rentz, J) Ray. City, 9
ville, 2; "Ringgold, 6; Robe
Rhine, 10; Royston, 10-11;
well, 3; Rutledge, 6- -7; Roch
11; Reidsville,
10-11.
Surrency, 7;
vannah, 1-15; Summerville.
Smyrna, 8; Senoia, 2; St. Mou
tains 11% Statenville, ee
field, 3- 4: Stillmore, 6;
boro, 9- 11; Siloam, T:
2-4; Stapleton, 6; Smith
Sale City, 2; Shellman,
Sylvania, 9-11: Soperton,
Sycamore, 63 Social Circle
i; Sandersville, 8- -9; Se
4: Sylvester, 11-15. i
Temple, 7; Trion, 7; Tre
8; Tallapoosa, os Thomsd
Toccoa, 9-11; Talbotton,
Thomasville, 13 15; Tifto
Thomaston, 8-11; Tenn
Toomsboro, 8; Tignall 13
Unadilla, 7: Union: |
Valdosta, te 15; Vidal
Villa Rica, 8; Vienna,
Willacoochee, 8; Winde
Waynesboro, 10-15; Woodt
2: Whitesburg, 1; Whigh
Wadley. 2; Wrens, ace
ville, 3-4; Warm ngs,
Woodbury, 1 Watkinsvi
West Point, hs ayer ni
Warrenton, 6-8
5; W ck,
nnas, $1.00 doz.: Justicia,
( tame blue violets. priv-
lige, 50c C; weeping willow,
cas. 15 ea.; 2. 25c: sweer
seed, 10c doz.; lemon lilies,
doz. ae Martha Ralston,
ngle blue hyacinths, yellow
al ilies, $1.00 doz.; Johnny-
o9-Ups, yellow and white
uils, butter and eggs, yel-
ong trumpet daffodils,
$1.00: Chinese pinks, 75c
ora MeCurley, Hartwell,
Saeliias, Japanese
ellow Japonica, snow-
lilac, almond, altheas, 25c
azaleas, 50c doz.: arbor vitae,
wood, 25c ea.; pink, red,
nnial phiox, iris, 25c doz.
( eee Martha Filer, El-
Mtn laurel, Aoaleas. red and
ite doswood, Ivy, Crabapple,
okee roses, 2-3 ft., rooted,
doz.: trailing
lilies, Boe doz.
arbutus.
Sez for
Hibiscus, purple wisteria,
. Also shrubbery. Write
sg Walker, Toek0a, Rives
zaleas, red and white dog-
ey mtn. laurels, ivy, crab-
e, Cherokee roses, 2-3 ft.,
|, $1.00 doz.; orange day
s, trailing arbutus, 35c doz.
? white sacks. Mrs. W.
vis, Minerall Bluff.
utter and egg bulbs, bloom-
ze, White April narcissus,
C: P. P.. Accept 3c stamps.
chks. Also gladioli bulbs,
doz P2 Pp. Mrs: > Es
ds. McDonough, Rt.
ell rooted boxwood, bas aug
a. plus postage: also dif.
es at my home on Dahlonega
Atlanta Rd., and some sage
ts. 20c ea.. plus postage.
ois Whelchel, Dawson-
, 6 sf08 50:
pers, 12-18 in., arborvitaes.
bunch top kind, _25 ea.,
rooted: mix. col. haray
pink thrift, goldenglow,
aoe Mrs. John Blackwell,
5 yrs:
2 for 54ci fragrant purple
steria, 5 ft., 48c ea.; small.
ea: golden kerria, purple
white spirea, 20c ea.; rock
plant, 20c doz. Fannie
e, Suwanee. :
hite | Eng. dogwood, purple
. erepe myrtle, Bird \ of
\dise, American Beauty
2 for $1.00; pink crepe
tle, $1.00 doz.: sage, 25c
un 8 for $1.00, postpaid.
rs. C, E. Crump, Hartwell. Rt.
7 royal Poilisiara seed,
tspn., also flowering egg-
it seed, 10c doz., plus post-
rs. Eunice | Marshall,
0 pinks, foxglove, trailing
~40e doz; lemon lilies,
louble and single orange
ilies, 6, 40c; red_ tame hon-
ickle vine, New Years vine
. Mrs. G. C. Hester, Dah-
hyacinth, gladioli
20c doz; 2 well rooted
jasmine bushes, 40c; 2
thly: \roses, 30c: winter
s, all cols. 20c doz. Add
e. No checks. Miss Mar-
ite, Temple, Rt. 1.
pe rooted hedges, 1-2 ft, 50,
Mrs. BR. H.. Clark:
esville, Aes
rel, rhododendron, white
dogwoo , sweetshrubs,
pple, 75e doz: azaleas, 50
Zz; snowball, japonica, al-
pink almond, lilac, 25
boxwood, arborvitae, 25c
Add postage. Linda Evans,
Blue hyacinths, single, red
er lilies, 75c doz: yellow
1 lilies, $1.00 doz, jonquils,
sr and eggs, longs: trumpet
fodils, $1.00 C. Also pepper-
nt, 50c doz. Miss-Mattie Mc-
y, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Red spider lily bulbs, 40c
> royal Ponciana seed, Oe
: Nandina, 4-5 in. 60c doz;
od, Weeping Mary, oe
2a, snowball, 50c e:. $1.00;
mon lilies, King Alfred daf-
odils, jonquils, hardy phlox,
doz. Mrs. Monroe Barnes,
lijay, Rt. 3.
Rhododendrons, laurels, red
nd white dogwood, all cols.
erabapple, redbuds,
maple, ivys. well
$1.00 doz. 2-3 ft; mtn.
4, 25c. Mrs. Ethel Chas-
oO panton. Fic te
FOR SALE
dogwood,
lilac, goldenbells,
Magnolia, teaolive, red, white
ambrella _ China,
sweetshrubs, greybeard, crab-
apple, red holly, long straw
pine, redbuds, 1 to 5 ft., 10c to
50c ea. Add postage. Mrs, ye
Colson, Toomsboro. Rt.
Mtn. laurel, rhododendron,
hemlock, $1.00 doz: azaleas,
purpl and yellow iris, spider
lilies, 50e doz: rec and yellow
japonicas, Weigelias, pink al-
mond, dogwood, 20c ea. Mrs. C.
W. Plumley, Piast: Bt:
Double japonica, 6 yrs. old,
50c ea: boxwood, $1.00 ea: dogs-
wood, 4, $1.00: King Alfred
jonquils . =e Easter lilies, 35e
oe res . C. Keener, Ellijay,
~ Butter and Eggs, yellow jon-
cuils, Jong trumpet. daffodils,
$1.00 C: single blue hyacinths,
yellow Regal lilies, $1.00 doz;
yellow perennial larkspur, 50c
doz. Miss cot MecCurley,
Hartwell, Rt. 2 :
Tris, . 10 Teheed: 50, $1.15;
mix, 100, $1.20; oriental mix,
100, $1.15: 3 vars. daffodils,
250 for $1.20: rose evergreen
azaleas, 40c: dahlia clumps, 4
dif. vars. 60e: oriental rose, 2,
Ret Mrs. J. M: Hall, Calhoun,
Red hot poker, 25 clump;
dogwood, 1 yr. old, 25c doz.,
white and purple lilac, babvs
breath, spirea, crepe /Moyrtle,
and others. Mr-. E. J. McCon-
nell, Demorest.
Small palms and king | orange
ea. 7 for $2.00; Century plants,
590c and $1.00: Banana plants,
Giant lilies $1.00 ea. S. M.
Seaborn, Brunswick.
White violets and Myrtle
vine, 35c C: daffodils, Hemero-
callis, 50c C; pink almond, pur-
ple lilac, goldenbell, pink spi-
rea, mock orange, weigeleas,
crepe myrtle. Sell or exc. for
cypress, cedars, junipers, ete.
Joe Self, Young Cane.
24 dif. labeled iris, 5c ea: 30
dif. mix.. not labeled, $1.20 C:
white calla lilies, 15c ea. 7 for
$1.00; 4 yr. old Amaryllis, 5 for
$1.00. Add postage. Mrs. S. M.
Gunter, Lawrenceville. Rt. 1.
Orange Day lilies Star of
Bethlehem, daffodils, cluster
jonguils, wild iris, 65 C: pur-
ple lilac, weeping mary. gold-
enbells, yellov. forsythia, hi-
biscus, 2 for 25c. Add postage.
Exec. for sacks. Mrs. Nancy
7 Ellijay. Rt. 3, Box
Orchid beauty buddleia, yel-
low japonicas, weigelias, red,
pink, white spirea, weeping}
willow, 25c ea. svreet shrub,
red maple, white dogwood,
crabapple, rhododendrons, 75
doz. del. Mrs. Lemma Williams,
Ellijay, Rt. B.
White violets,
sac. C;
50c C:
myrtle vine,
daffodils. Hemerocallis,
pink almond, purple.
spirea, for-
sythia, yellow kerria, pink
crepe myrtle, 8. 40c. Mrs. Doyle
Eller, Ellijav, Res:
Jap burr oak, semi-ever-
green, rapid grower, 1 yr. trees,
1-2 ft.. 75c ea, Mrs. Jas Hobson,
Jasper.
Well rooted Evergreen privet
hedge, 300,. $1.25. Postpaid in
Ga. Mrs. 7 D. Anderson, Blue
Ridge, Box 57.
Red. and white dogwood,
Grancy Greybeard, red holly,
magnolia, -tea-olive, cedars,
short leaf pine, yellow Jasmine,
1 to 5 ft., 10c to 45c ea.: but-
tercups, 15c doz. Add postage.
Exe. for sacks. Mrs. Jas. Con-
nell, Toomsboro.
Yellow jasmine, short | leaf
pine, magnolia, tea-olive, ce-
dars, red holly, red, white dog-
wood,-1 to 5 ft., 10 to 45 ea.:
buttercup bulbs, 15e doz. Add
postage. Exc. for sacks. Mrs.
Dee Colson, Toomsboro.
Daffodil, Star of Bethlehem,
Orange Day lilies, wild iris, Soc
C: wild azaleas, purple and pink
altheas, 50c doz.; yellow jan-
mine, pink, hardy hibiscus, dbl.
pink almonds, bridalwreath. 2
for 25c.: Dwarf boxwood. 50c
ea. Add postage. Mrs. Mollie
Henderson, Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box
49.
Globe Arborvitae, 6 for $1.99;
boxwoods, 2 ft., $2.00; smaller
size, $1.50; Snowdrops. $1.00 C:
Moss roses, 8 for 50c; butter-
fly bush, $1.00, doz.; parma
violets, 50c doz. Queen iris,
75c doz. Mrs. W. M. Garren,
Morganton.
Grape hyacinths, le ea.; small
cedars, 25c ea. Add _ postage.
Mrs. G. C. Taylor, Buchanai,
Rta.
Swiss Giant pansy, Sweet
Williams, new red thrift ana
Hari moss packed, oy doz.;
$3.00 C. postpaid. W. W. Mc-
Ever, Gainesville.
White pines: Mtn. Tautey Mtn.
Ivy, 1 to 3 ft., and others. rrs.
ereee Fowler, Diamond.
-200: yellow jonquil bulbs, 20
April narcissus bulbs, $1.00 C.
Del. 50 butter and ege bulbs,
dc plus postage. Orange glad-
ioli, 25c doz., plus postage. Mrs.
E. Fountain, Fort Valley.
, Camellias, 3 yr., $1.25 ea.: 3
=. $3.50; 6 for $6.00: Indica and
Kurume azaleas, all col., 6Uc
ea.; 10, $5.00; red berried Pyra-
eanthas, 50e ea.; 10 for $4.60.
Labeled. Others. Wyman J.
Pearce, Cairo, Rt. 2.
A Red and variegated japon-
ica, 10 ft., foliage from ground
to top, $100. 00; 20 cherry lau-
rels, 2 yr., 20c ea.; 6 Crabapples,
6 Umbrella Chinas, 25ce ea.
Smaller shrubs. Mrs. B. Brady,
eCairoARt. 1.
Well rooted, rare Camellia
Japonicas, Debutante, Matho-
iana Rubra, etc., $1. 00
Grade A plants, Prof. Sargent,
pink Perfection, Chandlers Ele-
ganct, etc., 50c ea.: Clarkes
semi-dbl. pink, 3~ for $1.00.
Postpaid. Mrs. John . Clark,
Jacksonville.
Rhododendrons, mtn. laurel,
_azaleas, crabapples, red maple.
white dogwood, $1.00 doz.: gol-
denglow, ,evergreen galax, blue
iris, tiger ililies, 35c doz.: snow-
drops, 20c doz. Add _ postage.
Hxc. for sacks. - Mrs; CC. W.
Roper, Mineral Bluff.
Cannas:
pink: Azaleamums, cameo pink.
$1.00 doz.; daffodils, butter and
eggs bulbs, $1.00 -C;. Giant
erimson spider lily bulbs, 35
doz. No stamps. Mrs. M. T.
Tanner, Sandersville.
Yellow thornless rose, 4 ft.,
50c; wisteria vines, 15 ft 750:
B. fig bushes (cut down to 4 ft).
2: for: $1.00: scuppernong vines,
8-10 ft., $1.00: old vines, bore
this yr., 12 to 20 ft.. $2.50 ex.
J. L. Coggins, Covington. :
Dark Blue Siberian iris, 35c
doz, $1.25 C,. Mrs: Newt -&:
Spence, Carrollton, Rt. 5.
Royal blue iris, yellow, dbl.
cannas, $1.50 C:; Lemon Day
lilies, snowdrops, $1.25 C; pur
ple verbena, 30c doz.; purpie
lilac. bitsh; .$1.00 ea.:) wild
honeysuckle, $1.00:C. Exe. tor
ipecans. Martha Womack,
Bremen, Rt. 2, _Box 89.
spirea; bridalwreath, golden-
bells, purple, white lilac, for-
sythia, crepe myrtle, 50 Cy
5 rooted Golden Arborvitaes.
25c-ea. Mrs: Henry Filer, El-
lijay, Rt 3:
_ Orange Amaryllis bulbs,
blooming size. (Plant now for
spring), 25c ea. P. P. Annie
Butter & Eggs, 25 doz.: 80c
Cc; jonquils, 50e C, plooming
size, P: P., if order amounts to
$1.00: if under, add 10c_ for
postage. No checks or stamps.
Josepnine Raby, Mitchell.
Yellow. red, white fall pinks,
jonquils; yellow, blue flags,
ginger lilies, 25c doz.: gladioli,
pink only; water lilies, golden-
glow, 25e doz. No checks. Add
postage on small orders. rs.
Elvia Waters, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
Boxwoods, 5 and 6 yrs. old,
$3.00 ea. Mrs. Henry D. Kelly,
Cumming, Rt. 4.
Pink Cherokee Rose; all cols.
dogwoods, barberry, redbuds,
laurels, rhododendrons,. erab-~
apples, butterfly, azaleas, well
rooted, 4 ft., $1.00 doz.: pink
phlox, Shasta daisies, $1.00 C.
Sadie Wilson, Blue Ridge.
Rhododendrons, mtn. laurels,
white and spruce pines, $1.00
doz.: dogwood, azaleas, iris,
erabapple, 50c doz.; lilacs, 20e
ea. Add postage. Mrs. J. B.
Hensley, Ellijay, Rt. 2.
Mtn. laurels, white and
spruce pines, rhododendron,
$1.00 doz.; dogwood, azaleas,
iris, crabapple, 50c doz.; lilac,
20c ea. Add postage. Mrs. C.
E. Teague, Ellijay, Rte 2.
Red, purple and pink ver-.
bena; purple and white violets,
grass pinks, purple iris, 25c
doz. Mrs. Grady Brown, Stone
Mountain, Rt. 1.
Pink and red crepe myrtle,
| dogwood, red holly, sweet myr-
tle. jasmine, umbrella china,
evergreen oak, 1-5 ft., 10c to
45c ea. Exe. for feed sacks.
Add postage. Mrs. I. J. Pitts,
oomsboro, Rt. 1.
Rhododendron, laurel, arbu-
tus, lencothoea, hemlock, dog-
woods, ilex opaca, white pines,
holly, azaleas, and others. Wet
moss packed. Retail and av-
tractive quantity lot offer.
Gordon Aupeicust, Tallulah
Falls. Se
Caz
City of Portlandg>
postage.
25 dif. Iris, mixed, 40c: pink
der.
Lou Richardson, Hartwell, Rt. |
3:
Pink hydrangea, 50c ea.; shell :
pink peonies, 40c_ ea.j. pink
hardy phlox, purple King iris,
15c doz. Nostamps. Add post-
ape = Mrs. eunIGE Tuck, Ellijay,
Red and valle japonicas,
pink almond, weigelias. Irdian
arrow, spider - lilies, 20c ea.;
rhododendrons. spruce pines,
$1.00 doz.: mix. cols.. azaleas,
iris, 50c doz. Add postage.
Mrs, L. M. Teague, Ellijay. -
Snowdrops, Shasta daisies.
Calif. violets, $1.00 C: perennial
phlox, 50, $1.00; weening wil-
lows, 50c ea.: dogwoods, rhodo-
dendrons, laurels, Cherokee
roses, 4 cols. azaleas, althea,
crabapple, $1.00 doz.; 10 rooted
roses, $1.00. Mrs. Addie wa
son, Morganton.
White oes Beauly
yr. old. rose bushes, 6, $1.25:
$2.00 doz.: pink thrift, $1, 00C;
big bloom rare color rit. 2
doz., $1.00:: dbl. yellow - Kara
japonica, $1.00 doz. Rooted.
Del. in Ga. Mrs. E. A. Smith,
Greenville, Rt. 3.
100 Boxwoods, 4 yrs. old,
about 2 ft. high, field grown,
$1.00 ea. at my home. Mrs.
O. H. Willard, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Yellow jonquil bulbs, 10c
doz.: pink. Surprise lily bulbs,
75 doz.: 8 snowball bushes, 5Ue
ea. Add postage. H. M. Gaza-
way, Dalton, Rt. 1.
Dark-red verbena, brown and
pink gladioli, 30c doz.: pink ver- 5
bena, 25c doz.; green and gold
flat cedars, small. 50c; large. 8@c
ea.; exc. for sacks. Add post-
age. Mrs. Owen A. Roberts,
Suwanee, Rt. 1.
Swiss Giant pansy plants;
blue and pink forget-me-nots,
pink scabiosa, 30c doz.: pink
thrift, 20c doz., $1.00 C: sweel-
shrubs, 2, 25:
sage plants, 25c ea., FOB. Mrs.
F. M. Combs, Washington,
Wild Easter lily bulbs,
doz.:
olive, holly, crepe myrtle, um-
brella. china, dogwood, pine,
others, 3 ft., 20c: 5 ft. 40c, plus
15
Dublin, Rt. 1.
Darwins mixed Calif. tulips,
6, 50c; 80c doz.; pink weivelia,
pink radiance rose, not rooted,
3, 25c; white easter rose, root-
ed, 250: blue grape hyacinths,
35 doz., $2.00 C. Gladys Du-|
ran, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Tuberose bulbs, 35c doz.; 3
doz.. $1.00; 20 labeled iris,
$1.00: 30, not . labeled, $1.00;
Lord of June and Queen of
May and mixed iris, 30c doz.,}
1 delta iris free with $1.00 or-
Mrs. J. G. Robertson, Car-
rollton.
Mtn. Jaurel, white pine, aza-
leas, rhododendron, white dog-
wood, redbuds, poplar, red
maple, crabapple, Cherokee
roses, 3-4 ft., $1.00 doz, rootea.
Add postage. Mrs. B. M. Hol-
land, Morganton.
Snowballs, crepe myrtle, li-
lac, oak geranium, cedars, Bain
of Gilead, yellow thornless
roses, pink peachtree roses, run-
ning roses, English dogwood,
10c ea.; large evergreen busn,
$2.00. Cannot ship. Miss lL.
M. White. Dahlonega, Rt. 5
Box 35.
Dbl. red canna Boe 25e doz.:
pink Oleander, 2 ft., 50c; red,
yellow, pink fall pinks, 2 doz.
25e: pink veebena, 15c doz. Mrs.
V.-E. Bennett, Cordele, Rt. 2.
20 Ixish junipers, 18-30 in.,
$1.25 to $2.00 ea., or $20.00 for
the lot. J. E. Spain, Buford.
- Privet hedge, blue iris, blue
violets, narcissi, butter and
eggs, $1.00 C; lemon lilies, 40c
doz. Add postage. Etta Stem-
bridge, Ellijay.
Pink phlox, purple and white
iris, 15c doz.: purple King iris,
20c doz.; King Alfred daffoduts
30c doz., well rooted. Add
postage. Mrs. Annie Tuck, EI-
yay, Rt 3;
Globe arborvitae, boxwood,
6-12 in., 25c ea.; 6, $1.00; snow-
drops, Calif. violets, $1.00 C;
Emperor daffodils, Poeticus
narcissi, $2.00 C; altheas, pink,
white purple: azaleas, laurels,
dogwoods, rhododendrons, $1.00
doz. Mrs. J. H. Penland, Elli-
Jay.
Jonquil bulbs, 15 doz. Add
postage. Rosie Crowe, Cum-
ming, Rt. 1.
Blood red, blue, pink ver-
bena, pink thrift, well rooted,
50e doz., P. P.; blue, lemon. iris,
40c doz. Mrs, A. G. (orn, De-
eatur, Rt. 2.
Tea-olives, holly, dogwood,
yellow jasmine, . sweetshrub,
pink honeysuckle, 1-3 ft., 15
to 40c. Add postage. Miss Mat-
tie LeGraw, Irwinton, Rt. 1,
Rosemary and
$1.00 C; Magnolia, tea-|
Mrs, T K; Womack,
| white May narcissi,
-Gladioli bulbs, 50 ee lay
ender, $2.50: 150 medium laven
der. $4. 50; 100. large mixed cols
$5.00: 100 medium, $3.0 (
small mix. cols., $2. 00.
Moseley, Menlo.
Evergreens, boxwoods, cre] :
myrtles, watermelon red re
pink; Chinese Magnolias
others. S. T. Humpnrie
eatur, 313 Sth Ave:
40 large bushes pioonge
shrubbery, different kinds:
holly and cedars, all sized an
priced low at ae home. Can
ship. Mrs. L. D eee a=
son.
White narcissi, 60c C; hard
pink phlox, red gladioli e
ke 3 doz., #1 00;. mi
Minnie 0. Cr Dead Alparetta
Double pink, red gerani
cuttings, 25 rooted carnati
plants, 10c ea.; large geranium
$1.00: Bridal Wreath, redber
plants, balsams, bachelor bu
tons, Wandering Jew, 5 pieces,
25c. Mrs. Mary Paris, Atlan=
fa. Rt 3:
Double daffodils, 95c C: 1 re
red and yellow cannas, A0e. doz.
Mrs. J. .W. Strickland, pos en
Rt. 2; Box 66, :
King Alfred Datfodil bulbs,
J. D: Fuller, < Mounty ile
Steels Giant pansies, 4-5.
$1.00; $1. 75
snowdrops, carna
blooms. 50,
calendulas,
tions, foxglove,
daisies, 35 doz.: d
old, $2.00. doz., $10.00: C.
Will Wise, Wadley.
Blue grape hyacinths, 1
500; 500: -$2.005 Mrs. a =
Bobo, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
Bird of Paradise seed, 2
25c: dbl. poppy seed, 10c tblspn.
Add postage. Miss Lena Cramp,
Hartwell, Rise
Giant Iris, blue and wile,
old fashioned gladioli, 25 do;
daffodils, narcissi> $1.00
bronze lemon lilies, win er
blooming royal blue violets,
doz. Postpaid: Mrs. We 4
ee Fairmount, Rt. 1 B
Sweet blue violets,
$1.00:
ede
i
4. ido
red spider lilies 75e d
. L. Silver; Cuthbert, | :
Blue grape Wack bt
45e C; 500; $2.00; jonquitls
Star
Bethlehem, 25c doz. Mrs. Dru
cilla Akins, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Dbl. red geranium cuttings
13c_ea., 2. 25c, not rooted; be
gonias, 15c; ferns, 256 eas
of Bethlehem bulbs. 35_
Jew, 8 pieces for 10c.. Mrs
i: Stone, Adairsville, Rt.
Pink begonia cuttings, 6, 400,
all del. No stamps. Ethe
Wright, Alto, Rt. 1.
Single blue Roman hyacinth
bulbs, blooming size, 90c doz.
old-fashioned cluster yellow
narcissi, 35c doz.: large purple
German iris, 65c doz. M
Della Bridges, Sugar Valley.
. Azaleas, red and white dog
wood, crabapple, Mtn. laurel,
sweetshrubs, pink Cherokee
rose, $1. 00 doz.: pussywillows, |
blue iris, 35c doz.
Mineral. Bluff.
5. ft. boxwood and anaiiee:
sizes; 20 Dwarf boxwood:; w
termelon red and purple cre
myrtle; white dogwood: Xmas
golden rod; write dwarf spirea.
Mrs. J. L. Greeson, Bethlehem,
Large size pink hyacinth |
bulbs, $2.00 doz. No. orders
filled for less than 1 doz. Send
money orders, postpaid. Willie
Tanner, Flippen, Box 65.
Well rooted evergreen hedge.
plants, 1c ea., postpaid; wis-
teria, January Jasmine, He-
merocallis bulbs, 25c ea. Exe.
for farm products, or what have
you. Miss Jane M. Maddox,
Sotne Mountain, Box 297.
Phone 3591. is
Dbl. yellow Japonica, 50 ea.f
King Alfred Jonquils, 35 d9z.j-
Red Dogwood, 12, $1.00; Snow=_
balls, $1.00 ea.; Wild Easter
Lily, 40 doz. All well rooted.
Mrs. Hart Gentry, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Pink and White Altheas, Pink
Weigelia, Red Japonica, $1.50.
doz., delivered. Large, we:
rooted. Mrs. Grace Webb, Eb
lijay.
Hemlocks, Tulip Poplars, |
ver Leaf Maples, White Pines
| Azaleas, Pink Cherokee roses,
a ee ee
Crabapples, aoew
high, $1.00 tata Bid
Violets, $2 op e
Robinson, Min ral
PAGE FOUK
FLOWERS AND SEED
the FOR SALE
(MARKET BULLETIN,
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
~~ Compact boxwood. 6-8 in.,
$6.00 C. Blooming size Gar-
denias, two, $1.00; Field grown,
2-5 ft. crepe myrtle, all colors,
32.00 doz.. 5 Red Cydonica
elaponica, $1, 00. Others. Mrs.
. M. Robinson, Greenville.
- Dbi. Tuberose, Dwarf Leop-
ard grass, Shasta Daisy. Trum-
pet Vine, 10c ea.; Chinkapin
~ Rose, White and Blue Wisteria,
hite dbl. Almonds, Crepe
Myrtle, Spirea, Butterfly Bush,
weet Bay, Tea-olive. 15c ea.
Stamps accepted. Add postage,
Mrs. Wavy Lewis, Toomsboro.
_ Calendula, Stock, Hollyhock,
Snapdragon plants, 25c doz.
Ada postage. Mrs. J. L. Way,
N. Broadway. Albany.
~ Orange Day lilies, purple
flag iris, daffodils, White Nar-
cissus, Blue tame violets, 75c
C: $4.00 M. White Altheas, red
and yellow roses, red Japonicas,
Hop Vine. 65c doz. Add postage.
Mrs, Frank Parks, Ellijay, Rt. 9
hite Pines, Hemlocks, Dae:
wood, Laurels, Ivy, Blackgums,
apple, $1. 00 doz.; Lily, Li-
Snowballs, Japonicas, 20c
All color Azaleas, Horse
Radish, Tame light blue violets,
Oc doz. Add postage. Mrs.
LF. Evans, Talona..
Wild Bush aes asst.
colors, $1.25 doz.: sweetshrubs,
$1.50 doz. P. O. Money order.
Delpher Frost, Ellenwood. Rt.
lac,
ative white dogwood: old
ashioned fruit trees. Mrs. Boyd
Baggett, Douglasville, Rt. 1.
Boxwocd, Ligusirum: Vincor
Minor, Iris, $3.50 C; 2000 seed-
ling cherry laurels, - $5.50; 100
crepe myrtles, $5.00; ivy, $4.50
ralberry, spirea, $1.00 doz.
pearl Seles RE
ae iris, "be c. Mrs. John
Weaver, Buchanan, Rt. 1.
ivid - scarlet - qaonthretix
ulbs, 40c doz.; 3 doz., $1.00;
pink Queen lily (Curcuma), 25
5, $1.00; butterfly lily, 50c
Louisiana iris, delit biue,
Mrs. Mary
Lithonia, Rt. ee
Ss giadioli bulbs, 45c doz,
tage pe i Dp, fb
, Lavonia, Rt. 1.
nee yellow narcissi,
es parle ee 3 tte
ngle _blue Roman hyacinths,
; doz.; ; large purple German
2 old fashioned,
ant yellow narcissi, 35
l ae ugh, $4 St Cc. -
y pert nice 3 ft. gardenias.
. F. Terrell, oe
Jy 00 Cc: Eureka he,
G; President Red,. yellow
ee
, 3 of each, cream, blue,
. Javender, purple, 6
span sh for 50c; hardy phlox,
ums, pink thrift, 25 doz: oak
sat 4 hibiscus, SoG.
dd. Mrs. ae Grin-
oe lilles, ete
ols. Chrysanthemums,
double dahlias, sever-
. 50c doz. Blackberry
ed free with order.
: Mrs. I. A. Woodring,
Old English dwarf boxwoods,
Ligustrums, $1. 00
$3 00 C: spirea, butterfly
h, erepe myrtle, English
1c $1.00 doz. Bianche
00 ruff, Greenville.
good pieces red J ew, 2 red,
ange sultanas, 3 red pink
_ wegonias, all 10c, good siz-
uttings. Add postage. No
r less than 10c. Alma Pres-
Gainesville, Rt. 1.
odendron, laurel, hem-
ck, pink Cherokee roses, red
| yellow azaleas, crabapple,
silver maple, redbud, straw-
bush, dogwoods,
s, tulip poplars., 2 tte $1.00
- Mrs. Bonnie Abercrombie,
ellow : Easter _rose, : - Bue
| box woods,
' trimmed,
/ green - pittisporum,
a.
Add
white |
Mtn. .azaleas, mixed cols.:
white altheas, pink weigelas,
red and yellow japonicas, pur-
ple lilac, well rooted, $1.50 doz.
er Mrs. Thos Webb, Ellifay,
Azaleas, 4, 25c; red dogwood,
5, 25c: blue iris, 25 doz.: red-
buds, 4, 25c; trailing arbutus,
evergreen galax, 30c doz. M. O.
Hattie Dehart, Mineral Bluff,
Dbl. ridalwreath, 10c, 15c,
and.25c ea.; hardy yellow bells,
15e and 25c ea. All yr old, well
rocted sprouts. Add _ postage.
Exc. for other flowers and oz:-
ion sets. Mrs. D. I. Herrin, At-
Janta, Rt: 4, Box 394.-
Bulbs: Large gladioli,
est var, $1.00 doz.: Statue ot
Liberty canna, dbl. flowers,
bloom June until killing frost,
new-
6, $1.00; blooming size Golden-
bells, 8, $1.00. Prepaid. Mrs.
Flora Nicholson, Blairsville.
Mix. azaleas,
white dogwood. Mtn. laurel,
rhododendrons, spruce, long leaf
pines, $1.25 for 13; Wild Roses,
10 for $1.00: pridalwreath. 3 col.
altheas, $1.25 doz.:
red sladioli bulbs, $1.10 doz.
Elsie Heaton, Mineral Bluff.
$i.06 C; Blue, white August
lilies, pink crepe myrtles, root-
ed, 25c ea; Button mums, dif.
cols, 25c doz.; Jap blue Iris, 40c
doz.: altheas, well rooted, white
and lavender. Add _ postage.
ee Gussie Conner, Villa Rica,
Well rooted boxwoods, 20c
ea.: red and yellow candle lil-
ies and purple iris, $1.00 doz.;
purple lilac, white lilies, 20c ea.,
red Arrow Bush, 25c ea. Mrs.
Mae Turner, Gainesville. Rt: 6.
Spireas, hydrangeas, wiege-
Jeas, snowballs, single altheas,:
forsythia, 10c ea.; dbl. altheas,
abelias, 20c ea.:
white Regal lilies, 15c ea.; nar-
cissi bulbs, 50c C. Add postage
under $1.00. Mrs. Carl Kimsey,
Hiawassee.
All col. blooming size ores
5Qc doz.; rhododendrons, Mtn.
laurels, white, spruce pines, 75c
doz.: dogwood, crabapple, sweet
shrubs, 60c doz.; altheas, 10c
a.: blue, purple iris, 25c doz.
Add postage. Mrs. L. F. Ad-
ams, Ellijay, Rt. 2.
All col. azaleas, white dog-
wood, sweetshrub, arrow-wood,
ABCd0Z5 rhododendrons, holly,
weep. willow, pink, white, red
spirea, goldenbells, weigeleas,
japonicas, 20c ea.: boxwood,
rooted, 25c ea. Postpaid. Mrs.
Je Bk Williams, Ellijay, Rt. 2.
Privet hedge, blue violets, 50c
C: goldenglow, orange day lil-
ies, white daisies, mix. color
Iris, 40c doz.; yellow japonicas,
pussy willows, 15c ea., 2 for
25c. Mrs. W. D. Ralston, Ella
Gane 2s :
Abelia, Gladiflora, 4x5 ft., not
$6.00; gardenias,
blooming size, 75e ea.s. pink,
blue, hydrangeas, 2 yr., '25 ea.;
var., dbl.
pink and white oleanders, 75c
Mrs. Jaw. Springvale, PEGs
Pink ibritt, 75 C.: with 50c/
extra for postage; also old time
scallion plants, 40c C, del. 2nd
zone. No stamps or checks.
Mrs. Annie Pattillo, LaGrange,
Rt. 4, Box 79.
Shrubbery. and plants: for
sale cheap. See SS. T. Hum-
phries, Decatur, 313 5th Ave.
- Blue grape hyacinths, 50c C
| bulbs or 500, $2.00; jonquil and
May narcissi pulbs, ea., 2o doz,
Miss rete Akins, Hartwell, AX,
1.
- Pink Thrift, roed: 50. C.
plants. (Plant now for spring
border. Add postage. Mrs. J.
H. Duke, Wrens. rest
- Tube roses, 50c doz. Purple
iris, 15c doz. Add wvostage.
Ethel Sullivan, Marietta, Rt, 2.
Sweet pomegranate, old cut-
tings, well rooted, 25c ea.: also
all yellow, short cup daffodils.
os 00 C bulbs. All del. in Ga.
vase Stanton, Newborn.
Swiss giant Sanay plants, 50c
doz.: Tiger Lily bulbs, $1.00
| doz., 3 col. Iris, $1.50 C;. rooy-
ed Jan. Jasmine, 50c doz. Del
No chks. Mrs. R. Q. Miller, AC-
oo Rt 2.
| berry
sweet shrubs,
Nice, large,
lettuce, ~
M. Del..
$2.95, 500;
|2 yr. field grown,
PLANTS FOR SALE
-/ PLANTS FOR SALE
Imp. Jewel awd Lady _ T.
strawberry plants, 50c C; rooted
Sage, 25c ea.; 3 for 50c; pep-
permint, garden horsemint;
tanzy, 25c doz.: Iceberg black-
berry, garden gooseberry, 6, 50c.
Exe. for sacks. No chks. Mrs.
Willis Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt.
ee : ee
Frost-proof cabbage plants,
40c C; 500, $1.75: $3.00 M. del.:
Collard, $2.00 M.: $1.00, 500:
50G, 200.25 All ready. Del.
Prompt shipment.
M. Crosby, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Hiverbearing strawb erry
plants, 40c . W. L. Wilson,
Sparta.
Nice, well rooted Sage plants,
4 for 50c;-10 for $1.00.
paid to 3d zone. Roots moss
packed. Mrs. A. Horsley, Waco,
Rt. 2, Box 40.
~ Lady T., and Klondike straw-
plants, well rooted,
prompt shipment, 40c_C; 50t
$1.75: $3.00 M. H. W. Summer-
our, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Klondike strawberry plants,
35c C; $1.65, 500; $3.00 M. Well
rooted, young plants: old fash-
ioned Blue Damson plums, 50
ea. Prompt shipment. Miss
: | Grace Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Lemon day lilies, snowdrops; |
Cabbage plants, 40c C:
M. 5 M and up lots, $2. 73 NE,
Del. -Q. L. SUEY Baxley, Rt.
4, Box 54.
Cabbage plants, grown on
new ground, Jersey and Chas.,
500, $1.50; $2.50 M. Immediate
del =Sat.- sua Ab Stokes,
Irwinville. -
Ga. and Heading Collard
plants, 300, 60c; $1.50 M. Del.;
5 M., $6.25; 10 M., $11.00 Exp.
Ca Cabbage, 40c C; $3.09 M.
del. Exc. for pecan trees. C.
W. Smith, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
--Large, fresh, extra early J.
and Chas. W.. cabbage plants,
$1.50, 500; $2.75 M. Del.; $2.50
M.; 5 M., $12. 00 Exp. Col. Now
ready. - Sat. guar. FoF. Stokes.
Fitzgerald.
HE. J., Chas W. cabbage plants,
frost- proof, 500, $1.50; $2.75 M;
postpaid. $2. 50 M. Exp. Col.
Now ready. W. W. McEver,
Gainesville. s
Wakefield cabbage, Iceberg
- Carrots, Kale, white
and red nest onions, Endive,
Wonder Beets, Cabbage Col-
lards, Broccoli, Rutabaga, 50c C;
$4.50 M.; Asparagus, 1 yr. roots,
40c doz. Add postage. Mrs.
H. V. Franklin, Register. :
$3.50
Klondike strawberry plants, |
300, $1.00; 500, $1.65; $3.00 Mi;
Lady T., 45 Cc: 500. $2. 10; $4.00
M. del.
ville, Rt. 2.
Klondike strawberry ants
300, $1.00; 500, $1.60; $3.00 M;:
Lady T., 45c C: 500, $2. 10; $4. 00
Ethel Crow, Gaines-
ville, Riv-2.5 <<
Klondike strawberry oe
500, $1.65; $2.50 M: Mastodon,
shipment. Mrs.
Cumming, Rt. 1.
Klondike strawberry plants,
35c C; $1.75, 500; $2.50 M: Mas-
todon. 40c Cc: $2. 50, 500; $4.00
M. Prompt shipment. Mrs. A.
D. Jones, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Hardy Eldorado blackberry,
pear fruit
next season, nice plants, good
roots, $1.50 C; 2,000 for $25.00.
Prompt service. Mrs. -C.
Robinson, Greenville.
Yellow rasrberry plants, 65c
doz.; Mtn. huckleberry, Wild
blackberry, 45 doz.; Broadleaf
evergreen- plants, 15 in. high.
45c ea, Add postage. -All well
rooted. Nancy Henderson, El-
lijay, Rt. 3, Box 49.
Kudzu crowns, $1. D5 $8. 00 |
M.. ORES Walker, Toccoa, Rt.
of
Youny, garden sae itis
12 to 20 in., well rooted, 6 ior
$1.00. Add "postage. Mrs. Bu-
rell Bennett, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.
Strawberry plants, best
known var., 30c C: $2.50 M,
nate everbearing plants, 35
C: $3.00 M. Prepaid parcel post.
Moline. M. Landrum, Adairs-
ville, Rt. 3;
-Frost-proof cabbage
Quitman.
Heading ~ and Ga. collara
plants, 30c C, $1.25 M; mailed.
Azzie Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
POLLED HEREFORD SALE
A Polled Hereford sale will pe held at El-
pert County Livestock Auction barn, in Elberton,
December 3, at\2:00 P. M., E. W. T., Featuring ||
5 Ee 19-5 yr. oid pred. COWS; 22, open heifers, 5 to
. : SPRR. =
Mrs. Mary}
Post- |.
os
okra seed, 50c
bulbs, 15c doz.
Peggy Crowe, Gaines-
-cond.,
$3.75 M. Prompt |
Guy Crow,
MM."
: Sandersville.
Farmall F-20 tractor, rear on |
| iron tongues,
plants, |
$3.00 M; White Bermunda on-
ion, $2. 00 M. W. W. Williams,
_ use, $20.00.
- John G.~ Pierson,:
Klondike strawberry plants,
40c C: 500, $1.50; $2.50 M; mix.
strawberry plants, 35c C; 500,
$1.40; $2.40 M. Postpaid. Now
ready. Bobby Whitmire, Flow-
ery Branch, Rt. 1.
Klondike strawberry plants,
40e C: 500, $1.50; $2.50 M. post-
paid. Mrs. Ara Waldrip, Flow-
ery Branch, Rt. 1.
Giant Gem everbearing
Strawberry plants,.60c C, $2.50
for 500 or $4.50 M. Bear till
frost===Delk Dy. Pe Hk. Wm.
Smith, Rolston.
300,000 M. Kiondike Mais
berry plants, $2.00 M; 10 M and
up lots, $1.75 M. R. T. Hogan.
Hogansville.
Lucretia dewberry and ever-
bearing strawberries, $1.00 C;
McDonald blackberries and 2
yr. old Washington asparagus,
$2.00 C; Himalaya blackberries.
$3.00 C; Boysenberry, $1.00 per
Postpaid. J. WwW. Toole,
Macon, 33 Burton Ave. 2
. Cabbage plants, 42c C; $3.5t
M: collards, 35c C; $2.00 M;
Klondike strawberry, 50c C;
$4.00 M. All del. Lee Crow,
| Gainesville, Rt. 2, Box 143.
Ga and Heading collard
plants, 25c C.; $1.50 M. Exc.
for anything can. use. aoa
a
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Klondike strawberry plants,
20c C; yellow crookneck -
squash seed, 75c lb.; early green.
Tb.: Jonquil
Add postage.
Rosie Crow, Cumming, Rt. 1. .
Ji Ws cabbage and. Bermuda
onion plants now ready, 200,
80c; 500, $1.85; $3.00 M. No
chks. W. C. Hamby, Valdosta,
Rt. 2, Box 60.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
F-14 arma on rubber,
power lift, all farming equip- |
ment, also J. D. 2 oe plow,
reasonably priced. D.T. Grow,
Colquitt.
Fordson tractor, with Athens
side plow and disc harrow. H.
E. Mealer, Adairsville, RED 2.
Farmall M. tractor on brand
new rubber, Oliver 70 tractor
on extra good rubber, both in
perfect cond., starters, etc.
Dont write.
Sparta.
J. D. mule hay press, J. D.
3 H. sulky plow, steel stalk
cutter, 3 row grain drill, 8 row
grain drill. Priced low. B. H.
Warren, Louisville.
A 7 ft. grain drill, good cond..
with fert., and small seed com-
partment, $150.00. H. F. Price,
Locust Grove.
Fowler SSaivitas:
except bottom wings
worn, $5.00: 1 No. 10 Oliver
plow frog, $1.00. I. E. Davis,
Concord, Rt. 2. g
24 disc dbl. cut tractor har-
row for sale or exc. for 8 disc
eee L: W. Bowers, More-
an :
Good. model B eee on
prtect
| rubber with planters, distribu-{
tors, cultivators, 2 disc plow,
tractor equipped with starter,
light, pneumatic lift. Used only
1. season, $1,000.00. W. F. Rob-
ertcon, LaGrange, Rie.
McCormick Deering hay
baler, all steel on 4 wheels,
A-1 cond., Size of baler 14x18.
Used very little. $160.00 at my
farms Cash: = Mrs. Alma Ben-
son, Louisville.
2 H. Oliver, good a $15.-
00. G. W. Akins, Graymont.
Farmall 20 tractor, good
cond., $1,000.00. Do not answer
unless will pay the above men-
tioned price; =-S:G. Lang, Jr.,
steel, front on rubber, motor
recently overhauled. Cheap.
punper orien paver ete, Rt
2 Int] | Riding cultivators ein
for sale. Car]
Hammer, Pavo, Rt. 1. -
A real good Mower and 10
ft. rake, for sale. J. F. Well-
born, Rock Springs. ae
1 horse Bae A-1 cond., for
sale. F. M ie Milner
(near Light House).
19: HP, gas. eng., suitable
for Cane Mill, $125. 00 at my
place, 4 mi. Pelham. J.
1 med. size dairy boiler in
Cowan, Pelham. (Co. Line Rd.)
-See, dont write.
Culloden,
(4% mi. of Highway.) :
J. D. tractor, tiller, harrow,
}e rake,
cond.. $25.00.
Wray Smith, |
| bodies, $65.00. Mrs. Mary
| row, Crawford, A
6. TOW cotton |
ick A
SECOND ae ND
MACHINERY oe SAI
witesle.
$11.00.
2 cultivator
shape, 30 in.,
Cantrell, Tate.
Allis-Chalmers trees
good rubber. perfect .
D. dbl. sec. harrow, 2
Chalmers 2 disc plow, a
cond., $1,250.00.
Conyers. *Phone
night, 2351.
9 H. wagon, J. Dy corte
planter, distributors,
planter, corn sheller, an
equipment for farm, als
fodder, shucks for sale.
once. W.
ville. Rt. 1.
1 set of pistons and 1
rings, over size .020, for
son tractor. F. T: Ke
Rica. Box. 52.
. all steel ~~ Ha
as cond., $50.00 at m
Eds Garrett. Metasville
_ 2 horse wagon for
F. Dewberry, Acworth, R
Fowler, good as ne
handles and wings and
that goes in front, $10.00
by Tanner,: Gainesville,
Int] F=12, rubber. tires
cond. ), planters, Culti
Fert. attachments, 2 dis
cutting harrow and etc
100.00. H. G.
tersville, Ps.O: Box 14!
140. \
Parts for Oliver. N
dle buster, complete y
wings, already assen
Cheap: J.P. Salmon, Roi
4 . Wee
2 H. Weber wagon
gear, #cod body, $35.0
home. O. Waldrip, 8
Branch. RL. AS
Good 25 H. P. and 20
steam engines, and some
farm machinery (for farr
} pose only) for sale or t
good tractor... E. TL
Arebr:
pases Riding plow it
plows and a 6 ft. disc
Jina :
Screven.
SA
. 2 row Farmall. trac
harrow. planters, and
set of cultivating: -equipm
good cond. for sale.
Cousins, Greenville. Rt
Real good mow
Tor sale at my home
Hames, LaGrange, R
Grist Mill Cannery,
cond. H. M. Bailey,
body, also gate Thee fo
eee
=> EL. farne engine, bux
or ker., with other attac
practically new, used
with farm work. C.
den, Atlanta, 17 Pied
N. E.. Wis S242 ee
Athens Harrow,
used 1 season, good conc
00.. Bill Morris. Do e
Rt. 2. *phone 3036.
Shh
=f blade, $50. 00: a
mowing machine, $60.00
gines, 8 and 7 H. P. f
$60.00 and $50.00: ot er
ment for farming. Mr
Gibson, Te albotton, Rie
Fractor Gi wae d
excellent cond., 2 secti
sale, Julian Furstenbu
Janta, Rt. 1. (Hogan R
Old model Fordson use
spring for harrowing,
E. E. Fokes, Montezur a.
Bali- pearing. Econom
ie Separator, No. 32.
class cond., except nee
- rubber rings for. bowl
W. L. Rabun. _Warrento
tin Imp.
ee ss $130.00.
ber, Jr., Moultrie.
Part A tractor
cultivating, planting
tilizer equipment, 20 di
row, grain drill, breakin
and extra plows. See o
Joe Cox, Davisboro.
{1 Cane Mill and kett
sale. E. D. La walerne
ee Ba: :
Athens discs tille
seeder, eae. 00: dbl. di
row, $90.00.
Sandersville.
Farmall M 5
rubber, used 2 sea
son tractor. in oe
SECOND HAND
| MACHINERY WANTED
2 row - dise grain and fer-
drill 1 type, Cole
used only a days, $25.-
M. Moore, Gray. _
al. elec. chutn, good
$42.50: No. 17 DeLaval
Cream Separator, $75.00;
elec. equipment used on
W. H. Ivey, Miledse-
PRE qT, Box Ba
aw Hay Baler, qietiees
. with-eng. attached; 1
dard type baler, good. cond.
letters answered. J. B.
ather, Good Hope. ,
ge No. 5 Star Pea Huter
th 2 sieves, A-1 cond., for
- or trade for grain and tfer-
zer drill to be used with
*, fF, E. Crittenden, Roys-
Farmall B tractor, used 2
with cultivators, planters,
tributors, etc., on rubber,
andem disc plow, 1 mid-
aker and planter for 1
w A Farmall, 1 Avera 4 disc
er-seeder, 40 in. Combine.
Warthen, Davisboro.
icker also wind mill. both
od cond. See by appoint-
Reasonable for cash.
McMichael, Buena Vista.
e 1422."
Dak Chattanooga Sane No.
.00; stationary Black-
iths hand blower, $20.00.
ond. J. H. Land, Colum-
532-13th Ave.
ood Farmall F-20 tractor
ubber, $400.00. See, dont
ite. oe: Matthews, Tal-
plow and. oe equipment
e with size A or B tractor,
-J2--. Nelson, Yates-
en. sced pianter, hand
1 garden push plow.
x cash value in poultry
country hams. Mrs. E.
ace, Atlanta, 562 West Wes-
d.. Ch 2661.
ing cultivator, good
ng order, $35.00 cash at
= RES Tomberlin,;
0 DeLaval cream sep-
. good cond., works like
for sale. J. V. Jenkins,
ull, Rt. 1..
power spray machines, 200
ank, mule drawn. Ready
Commerce.
w Era Dairy pollen: med.
cc, peor. Eee ae 06 at my
; used tractor,
mall or Allis Chalmers, i
w ultivator and cultivator,
ers, APs Payton. Pal-
1 Cole ae and corn
, with all plates and cog
els to adjust distance with.
Hartley, Cedartown, Rt.
Want discarded or junk Cov-
on planter for. repairs,
and bright peanut hay.
r exc. farm implements.
. W. Jackson. Fayetteville,
j Bush and Bog har-
or tractor, No. 12, also 1
ry and rake. R. B. Collins,
fant mowing.atachment for
1 I, John Deere tractor.
A. Mercer, Jr:, care
ve Point plantation, Savan-
ant eS power aver
> mill and evaporating pan,
mall corn sheller, hand op-
dg. Forrest F. Attaway,
ta, 319 Luckie St.,.N. W.
nt Cultivators, planters,
distributors tor late model
. tractor, for A or B mod-
Ri Hi. vA. Troup, ee ald,
A 4.
ant a hand operated Corn
eller. Write price. W. M.
ymons. Atlanta, 4315 Wieuca
SEE:
Want ror cash: a second hand
bl. Hopper Cole Corn Planter.
5 Parrott. Palmetto, Rt. 1.
Want 1 H. compost distribu-
Quote best prices on 1
1 oy H. wagons and buggies.
D. Lewis, Cairo, Rt. 1.
WwW et any kind tractor on
xx with 2 row planters,
ators, distributors, disc
and dbl. sec. disc harrow,
* : Honeycutt,
McCormick-
ie t no
Claude Cc. Francis, Al-
| small.
-eash price.
A.
- Lavonia.
| wheat, also a Combine.
Want used 1 H. Hillside ee
ing plow, any make. in good
ee Lester Green, / Rabun
ap
Want 1 J; D.; 4 disc iier, also
8 disc bush and bog harrow.
State cond. and price. <A. J:
Swanson, Fairburn.
Want 1 good, second-hand or
new Corn Sheller, large or
Rt. 1..
Want 1 platform scales with
cap..of not less than 300 Ibs.
H.D. Florence, Atlanta, PL Cy:
Box 942.
Want 4 disc iar Tiller
plow. S. L. Thornton, Dewey-
rose, Rt. 1:
Want 2 row cultivating
equipment, listers, planters and
fertilizer attachments,
Chalmers W. C. tractor.
seribe. C.
anan, Rt. 1.
De-
Ee Holcombe, Buch-
.
Want garden. tractor.
McEntire, Appling.
Want tractor plow, 5 or 6
disc on rubber with or without
seeder box, in A-1 cond. State
pools Belcher,
Ford)
Wadley.
Want J. D. or Intl oa!
with all equipment. for planting
-and cultivating. Describe and
price.
ville.
> Want
also 1 H. wagon. Both.to be
good cond. State what you
have and price. - Bartley S.
Freeman, Toomsboro, Rt. 3.
Want gas eng., for farm use,
in A-1 working cend. 214 to
38% H. P. State kind of work
engine used for. Geo. _ Cole,
Tom Taylor, Marshall-
-Niecholls.
State
W.
Want garden tractor.
cond., make and cash price.
oe Ellington, Brunswick.
SWieat power take- Off and
pulley for Allis-Chalmers trac-
tor, model B} new or used. W.
GCG. Bryans. Newborn.
Want to. buy Hay Baler, with:
motor attached. A. P. Haley,
Want. garden drsetor: S NaePs
Smith, LaFayette, Rt. 1.
Want to rent or buy a Peanut
Picker Pick-up, any where.
Guar. return good cond. Sam
B. Hubbard, Atlanta, eg! No.
Ivy Rd. Ch 9658.
Sears Handiman 3% galv.
hand sprayer, used 1 hour, for
spraying trees, vegetation, etc..
$53 ue dele h. Le nals Conyers,
1329'S So. Main St.
Want a Hammer Mill or Feed
Grinder. State what you have,
price, etc. D. K. Maddox, At-
Janta, 1115 Center St., N.
without: gas. eng.
land, Athens, Rt. 2.
Want for cash, late model B.
Allis Chalmers tractor with
plow, harrow and cultivator at-
tachments, in good cond., on
good rubber. J. QO. Glass, For-
syth.
Want Hammer Mill,
or J. B., of med. size. Geo. N
Thomas, Thomasboro.
~ Want grain drill with fer-
tilizer attachment, not less
than 12 disc... horse or tractor
hitch, in good cond. Give
make. cond., price. A. G. Pink-
ston, Ludowici,
Want Bush and Bog harrow,
in good cond., for a Farmall H
tractor. .B: P. Moore, Sr., La-
Grange, Rt. 2.
Want heavy Caterpilla tractor
for stumping. State cond. and
price, H. G. Ballard, Tifton.
Want power Hay Baler, A-1
cond., at a bargain for cash.
Quote pest offer. Dewey
Nelms, Bowman, Rt. 1.
Want Grain Drill ~to--cut
Must
be perfect mechanical cond. Dr.
L. C. Fischer, Atlanta, 35 Lin-
den Ave.
Want to buy good hand Corn
Sheller. O. S. Duggan, Chester.
Want to buy 1 pressure can-
ner. State what you have and
price. Dr. C. C. Harrold, Ma-
con.
Want set of rubber wheels
and rims, with or without tires,
for Case tractor (Roe Crop).
State cond., and price. Tom
Arnold, Lawrenceville.
Want a hand Corn Sheller.
Mrs. Jessie Miller, Cairo, Rt. 2.
Want Combine, preferably
Allis Chalmers, also a 12 to 14
tt. Evaporator. Cc. W. Lowe,
Edison.
Want Cole ae and Cotton
planter, with all. plates and
eogs for spacing. J. G. Hart-
ley, fede Rt. 2
Jack Row-
deste 4
Deak. Bigelow, Dawson, |
also: 2)
'dise plow, all for use on Allis-
Walking Cultivator, i
RFD :
W. |
Want Pea Thresh. with or
-brooder, $5.00.
INCUBATORS A
" BROODERS FOR SALE
aaa ee es
= hve dist 4y oa
ant 8 hde dise type gr | Anderson brooder,
drill and. a 2 dise turner, suit-
able to.use on J. D. model H
tractor. A. J. Yarber, Cham-
blee. 218 Hardee St. ;
Want 2 row tractor with com-
plete ea re and Tiller at-
tachments. R.
| run, Rt. Ds
Want areal Combine ee
Ford tractor in No. 1 shape,}
ready to run. Write best price
for cash. M. C. Bennett, Can-
OD: =F . Box A3h a
Want J. D. Tiller plow for
Je De tractor.C.-in= far pong
John Murphy, Leesburg, Rt.
Box 133.
Want Corn Shick with
power take-off, in good shape.
O. W. Haygood, Athens.
Want garden push plow and
attachments, cheap for cash. P.
G. Bostwick, Blakely, Rt. i:
fs:
- Want late model tractor with
all. -equipment, guar. State
price and cond.; ;.. also want
prices on 2 H. walking culti-
vators, in good cond., no junk.
W. L. Helms, Buena Vista.
Want Wind . Mill with all:
equipment in- good cond., and
cheap for cash. J. R. Lanier,
Graymont, Rt 1.
- Want a late model tractor,
Farmall or Oliver 70, on rub-
ber, also Bush and Bog harrow:
and 5 disc tiller. Tom Rich-
-ardson, Palmetto.
Want good, light, 2 H. wagon.
Give price and cond. Mrs. E. L.
ieee Ringgold.
Want 1 roller to a 2 roller
Cane Mill. 1014 in. high. Aaron
Ogden, Baxley, Rt. 2, -Boxs,
Want 14 or H International
tractor on rubber, with com-
plete cultivating equipment. Ox
J. D.,.or Allis Chalmers. State
best price. W- O. eee
Leslie.
Want an aie Ghaiiers or
Oliver Side plow for Fordson
Tractor. State cond. and price.
-Dr. M. P. Harrison, Atlanta,
1096 East Clifton Road, N Sa De
Want Stalk Cutter on wheels,
in good shape, no junk. Or
would trade a pr. full blood|
Duroc Jersey shoats for sale.
Write W. A. Moore, Haddock.
Want McCormick model M.
Farmall and plow. H. S. Loop-
er, Dalton, P. O. Box 3.
Want Oliver walking cultiva-|
tor Wee = Maddox, Griffin.
Want model A Farmall 1 row
tractor. good cond., on rubber
for cash. Emory P. Smith,
Pembroke.
Want a Buggy with Brewster
Springs ( and not End- Springs).
Give price and location. J. E.
Rosser, Covington, Rt. 4.
INCUBATORS AND
BROODERS FOR SALE
Second hand, 600 egg cap.,
hot water incubator, setting
cond., except lamp, $15. 00 here.
Mrs. _ F. Griffin, Adel, Rio,
Bax 255;
Jamesway Inc., all elec., 2940
eap. forced circulation, good
cond., $225.00 FOB. James M.
Duncan, Bowman. ~~
Brower Turkey-way Brooder,
4 decks, all steel, separate elec.
controlled units. Accommodate
480 chicks to start. Perfect
cond. Frank A. Doughman, At-
lanta, 1082 Geo Ave.
He 2547.
Super. Hatcher Inc., good as
new (bought in 194), 450 egg
cap., 3 trays, oil heated, ther-
mometer and instructions,
$35.00: Blue Flame oil prooder,
500 cap., used 3 times, good
cond., $8.00 FOB. Cash. Mrs.
C..J. Bailey, Dial.
Elec. battery brooder, steel,
const. 5 sec,, 500 cap., also wood
sun-deck, with feed trays and
water troughs, cheap. John
Heizfield, Atlanta, 702 Myrtle
St., N. E. He 0932.
Oil burning incubators, 1400
ecap., good as new, needs clean-
ing, 3 600- and. 3 240-cap.,
$75.00 cash for lot at my place.
Come after: L:-S. Andrews,
Ochlocknee.
Blee. Inc., 1200 cap. and 400
cap., both good as new, also 750
and 450 cap. oil prooders, for
sale. Ewing Taylor, Alma, Rt:
2.
2 elec. brooders, 500 chick
size, good cond., $35.00. Wilson
Carson, Griffin, Rt. C (Zebu-
lon Rd.)
1 Oaks Drum type oil brood-
er, 60 in. canopy, $12.50; 1
Sears 300. chick cap. elec.
Ship exp. col.
. Hooks, Doe~ a
Cc. L. Abbott,
heateds with
M. H. Rigsby, Atlanta. Rt. 4,
Box 236.
i. wend: buriie: i M. cap.
complete,
used 2 seasons, both for $35.00.
R. G. Braselton, Braselton.
Good as new Wisconsin Mes
296 ege cap., $12.00 cash. Mrs.
J. M. Bobo, Hartwell, Rt. 12
Buckeye Inc., 300 eap., ker-
burner, good cond., cheap. Mrs.
ae Verner, Ww atkinsville.
Belle City, Inc., 250 cap., oil
burner, perfect cond., comp.
with thermometer,
trade for young 4 qt. milk geat.
CO: Rte;
Box 190 A. s Bott
Elec prooder, 100 Cap. for
sale or trade for Black Guinea
pig, for country meat or lard,
pig preferred. Brooder in good
cond. Mrs. Emma Echos, Aus-
tell, Rt. 2, (Oakdele Ren just
off Bankhead Hwy. i
ge brooders, 100 chick cap.,
ea., heat controlled, with
ways, $19.95 ea.: 3 fibre elec.
hover-type, $4. Abs Ga5. 2 ker.
sanitary floors,
-$19.95 ea. S. M. SOlhe Warm
Springs. |
A 500 chick a bal burn-
ing brooder, good cond.. for
eae (BES & Hollowe LV, Edison.
INCUBATORS AND
-BROODERS WANTED
Want 100 cap., tos in good
cond., and reasonably priced.
He, Loebig. Decatur, 210 Moe
| gomery St.
Want traps for Sears round
L opening metal nests or complete
pes N. E: Elsas, Aflan-
2 O) Box 1726.
PEANUTS AND PECANS
FOR SALE |
ue 600 Ibs. sound and pure
imp. Red Spanish peanuts, 15c|
lb. shipped Express or Frt. col-
lect for lot or 100 1b. lots. Fine
for eating and seed. W. H.
Wood, Martin, Rt. 1.
25 Ibs. ea. Stuart and Van
Demon pecans, 35c lb., 50 lbs.
large seedlings, 22c Ib. -Post-
age paid on orders for more
than 5 lbs. J. R. Thomas, Sur-
rency, Rt. 2: f
1943 crop Chufas, free of
trash., etc., washed clean. sound,
no culls, $2.00 peck; $8.00 bu.
E. C. Heaton, Hartwell. Rt. 3.
Stuart, Pabst, Success, Van
Demon and Nelson- pecans, 35c
lb.: med. seedlings; 25c Ilb.:
small seedlings, 20c Ib. FOB.
S. D. Guillebeau, Lincolnton.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
Hand picked, _shade dried
sage, $1.25 lb.; 3 Ibs., $1.00 Ib.;
ground, $2.00. Rooted plants.
2, 25c; 5, 50c, $1,.00-doz: Will
fill ZO. '50c and $1.00 orders.
V. Keith, Alvaton.
A lot of 100 Ib. feed sacks,
12%c each. Mark Woodliff,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Walnut meats, brightly col-
ored, large pieces, 85c lb. Also
young rooted boxwood, 8 ins.,
12%c ea. Add postage. M. M.
Cochran, Pisgah. ;
Nice shade cured sage, $1.25
lb. M. O. Mrs. Nathan Wea-
therby, Ball Ground, Rt. 4.
Black Engiish walnut meat,
hulled, $1.00 lb., Exe. for equal
value in feed sacks, etc. -Mrs.
Otis Cowart, Summit, Rt.
Box 27.
*Black walnuts, unhulled $1.00
bu., FOB. Gerald S. Mullis,
Alamo, SE ies
Some black walnuts, unhuit-
ed, $1.25bu. exp. col. Mrs. C.
R. Sorrells, Monroe, Rt. 1.
145 gourds, long, short, flat,
bottle, penguin shaped, 22 yds.
long. None large enough for
birds to build in. 5c ea.; not
postpaid. M. Dedric. McLeoa,
Cuthbert, Rt. 3, Box 112.
Nice print sacks, 1%
os
yd.
length, 30c ea.: white sacks, free
of holes, etc., 20c ea. Unwash-
ed, 10c ea. Mrs. Grady Brown,
Stone Mtn., Rt. 1.
Eggs: Parks B. R. eggs from
hatching, from trap-nest hens
headed by ped. males, all blood-.
tested and banded. Write for
prices on inc. lots, Mrs. M. B.
Scroggs, Alto. :
Grain and Hay: Seed oats,
$1.36 bu.: Abruzzi Rye, $3.50
bu.: Barley, $2.50 bu. FOB. J.
F. Lowe, Fort Valley.
Yellow, Blackberry root, rats-
bane, mullein, ground ivy, wild
cherry bark, 30c 1b.; 4 Ibs.,
$1.00. Add postage. No chks,.
Mrs. EEG WAS. Dablonega,
Rt com
$30. 00 or |:
run- |
See ches root, 5 :
camps: yellow Toot,
zones. Miss el. I in J White a
lorega, Ril. Boxeo,
Pumpkins: A truck J
pumpkins, 1%c pound a
place. Cannot ship. Bod _
er, Cherry Log.
Yellow root, ) 25e- Tb 4 db
$1.00: quen of. the.
20c 1b.; Mrs. ee Al
Dahlonega, Rt.
White feed ae
: FOB. Exc. for apoles, f
dried. Write.
Mics. a RS
Sees Rt. a
ey.
holes, wanted but not AC
25c ea. Mrs. L. maldwit :
mere. 2
Nice. as, here row
Sam oe i
Hix2.
25 lb. ice Ss. M. Smith,
ville, Rt, 1.
-1943 Black Walnut i
fresh, sound, clean, 50c_
giant garlic bulbs, 29C
yr. old blocming = siz
Huckleberries, 50c doz.:_
home-grown tobacco,
Add postage. Mrs.
Teem, Talking Rock.
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
i
APPLES WANTED:
Want exc. j] or
oranges for same amou
cooking apples. _C. E
Fitzgerald, Rt. AS
BEANS, CORN AND HAY
WANTED: -
Want white cornfield sk
beans. white only. State
Pearl E. Hyde, Dalton,
| 600 Wills St.
Want velvet beans, | al
peanut and peavine ha;
truckload lots. State price.
letter. C. D. Gibson,
ville.
Want white shetled. corn
and 10 bu. lots. Del. Atl
Mrs. W. D. Bullock, Atl:
1290 So. Oxford Rds, No:
Exe. Oliver No. 70 tra (
corn.and other cow feed. G
Creel, College Park, 600
Main St. Ga. 9801. 3
BEE SUPPLIES:
1 eight and 1 ten ~
Queen excluders for. ee :
J. Root make preferred.
wire, | no ois Tatas
from weevils, in sacks, at ri E
price, also state best pri 1
fin, 104 Hammock St.
CORN. PEAS, OATS.
SYRUP, ETC. WANTED: =
-. Want 5 bu. field peas, 15)
ear corn. 20 bu. oats, 1 bu
nuts and 1 bu. syrup, eane s
State best prices. Rober ey
Woodstock.
COMPOST WANTED:
Want some real old,
compost, mixed with str
use for fertilizer for
SLOWiINe <P e. Venab.
catur, 21 Maple St.
EGGS WANTED:
|. Want 2 settings
eggs, large type. Buy or wi
exc. 2 Cornish bantam 5 m
old cockerels for sale. -
Macon, 118 Laurel Ave. oe
FRUIT WANTED:
Want 10 lbs. dried apples and
peaches, free of yo Wilk
send M. O. Mrs. W AL tioopen
Lavonia. :
Want this year s dried ap -
and peaches. Write your pric
Mrs. Eunice Parks, Dalton, R,
Want few lbs. dried.
Mrs. Chas. A. Watson, .
Park Rts
Want 10 or more Tbs.
peaches and apples. State pr
and amount you have. T.
Roberts, Decatur, Rt. 2, Box 133
Want 4 or 5 Ibs. dried peache
or apples. Also little Lady pez
Write what you have, gi :
eash price. Ed Sulgnns. a
ington, 3 Hays St. eee
FEATHERS WANTED:
Want 10 or 15 Ibs. new
or duck feathers at reasor
cash price. Also. want 6
Ibs... dried_ apples and 3 lb
peaches, all tree of worms. et
Mrs. Mamie Bin. dairs\
Rt? se
MARKET BULLETI
| Wednesday, December 1, 194
- MISCELLAN EQUS|
WANTED
HONEY AND SYRUP
WANTED: ;
Want 20 gal.. new syrup and
or 15 lbs., new Honey, 1943
rop. Send best price. Ans. all |
H..L.
etters. For own use.
Messer, Woodstock. Rt. 2.
PEAN UTS AND PECANS
Want some pecans and pea-
nvts, eee, a pure Chinchilla doe
rabbit. R. O. Mullins. Jackson.
Box. a1.
PLANTS WANTED:
Want 50,000 frost-proof cab-
bage plants, also 15 tons peanut
aay. Chas. von Walchien. Sa-
an ah, Rt. 5 (Stiles Ave.)
nt Rhubarb or Pie plants
Red Ripper and Crowder
. Runyan, Cedar-
| . 1800 bu. slipped shuck corn
ouetiaund.
pO L Mrs.
ahlonega. Rt. 1.
OG. doz.
G. C.. Hester.
nt nest or multiplier on-
ts. Exec. little, 2-crop pea
b.. for lb. Ea, pay post-
. P. Trowell, Pavo, Rt. 2.
fant sea. hundred pounds.
1943 Serecia Jespedeza.
price and whether scari-
first letter. B. F. Har-
fin. Box 364.
price and amount at
Mrs. Daisy M. Tibbott.
Be ad: 143 So. Jackson St.
3 N. H_ Red { have ;
cockerels. $2.50 ea. Mrs.
Haley, Martin. Rt. 2.
t white or speckled Half
beans for seed. State
el. at once. Mrs: E. C.
. Union Point.
- Fila. _ Giant
ss bu. Brab seed peas
| mixed peas. for own use.
un to 100. Ibs..
Itiplying onions.
eol. and orice.
on or
State
Sam
Hubbard. Atlanta, 4043- No.
Rd. Ch POSS
ue nuts
Ea. pay postage. Mrs.
we, Cumming, Rt. 1.
3 Unadilla:
: bu. old fashioned
nest onions, also want 2
any breed geese. Quote}
at once. Mrs.
ford. rnen. Greenville
i Willetts Wonder Eng.
eed State price per
ele N. Fie hee sesscal
W nt any amount of Willetts
ae a elle hse gar-|
=
943 crop sage. dried,
t.. for white feed sacks,
ee of holes. Ea. pay postage.
PS. E. LL Lavender, Gordon,
lan printed feed ae as
as three alike. . Mrs.
ho Ticks, White Stone.
10 te 20 print feed
cks, free of holes and stains.
ate ce postpaid. Mrs. J. N.
Linton.
garlic bulbs for good,
ite and print feed sacks:
bs for 4 sacks: also exc.
Pinks, 4 Pinks for 4 sacks,
1 Lilac bush for 4 sacks.
Pay postage, Mrs, Adealee
t 2 or 3 tbs. fresh. dry
uote price per ib. Mrs.
iompson, Odum, P, O.
Pibwine as Mtn.
ured, 4 twists, 30c: 10
med. good chewing, 5c
Exc. either for printed
ae ae = of the
C. Stover.
on cate. Sugar-
Good strong |.
transpl
K.P.
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED.
WALNUTS:
Walnut MEATS, 1943 crop,
50c lb, Mrs. W. H. Hunphries,
Milledgeville, Rt. 2.
CORN AND SEED CORN
FOR SALE
800 to 1,000 bu. high class
Whatleys seed corn, $1.75 bu
a8 farm, 7 mi. Barnesville
. C. Collier, Barnesville.
Yellow pop corn, extra good
10c lb. Also large garlic bulbs
25c doz. Add postage.. Mrs.
Johnnie Harmon, Sugar Valley.
125 bu. corn, $1.50 bu. at try
barn, Ray Williford, Warren-
ton. Rt. 2.
for sale. Can del. any time.
A. D. Williams, Yatesville.
BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
_ Early \6-wks. table peas. 15c
per cup, or 2 cups for 25c post-
paid. Mrs. Clarence McMillian,
Dacula, Rt. 1.
Brown streaked and White
Half Runner beans, mixed, ten-
der, 35c teacupful postpaid,
Cash or money order. Mrs.
. Lon Ashworth, Dacula.
COTTONSEED FOR
. SALE
50 bu. hibred Half and Half
cottonseed, ist yr., $6.30 CWT
peed Leo Akins,.Graymont,
sel? }
1800 bu. Cokers 4 in 1 cot-
tonseed, 300 bu. Pettys Toole
wilt-resistant. $1/50;bu.- also
100 bu. New Stone-wilt cotton-
seed, $2.00 bu. All ginned on
private gin, kept pure. Harry
S. Petty. Dawson.
High-bred Halt
cottonseed, ist yr.,
sound. Reasonable.
Bunn, Midville.
Stoneville 2 B. ginned 1 var.
gin, graded, treated Ceresan,
$5.50 CWT: re-ginned seed,
$6.00 CWT. FOB. W. C. Mad-
dox, Griffin.
Genuine Stoneville 2-B, first
yr.. kept pure at l-var. gin.
High germination, recleaned,
and Half
pure and
Ceresan treated. $6.00 per 100
ondike fo at/ lb. bag.. FOB. M. 0. pile Bev
Ray, Fayetteville. Rt. 3
SYRUP FOR SALE
B = i. =
=
Sev. hundred gal. syrup in
new 10 gal. cans, for sale at
my barn- also 50 bu. Wanna-
maker big boll. wilt-resisting
eottonseed. ist yr.. $5.00 CWT
FOB. Joe M. Brown, McRae,
Star Rt.
30 buckets, bright Sorghum
syrup, $1.40 per at my
place. Come fer. S. P. San-
ders, Winterville.
PECAN AND OTHER |
|FRuIT TREES FOR SALE
j
State inspected, Schley and
Stuart pecan trees, $1.00 to
$1.50 ea. H. G,. Wiley, Cordele,
All season mixture lead. vars. |
old - trees,
$3.00 doz.
q. M. Webb,
apple trees, ko Yee
$2.00; 2 yr. olds,
State inspected,
Ellijay.
Peach trees, grape vines, lead.
vars., $2.40 doz., $15. 00 ,
$215. 00 M.; plum and apricot,
5e per tree higher than peach:
black walnut, $4.00 doz., $25.00
- : Mrs. EF. B. Travis, River-
ale.
Goose ae trees, 3, 35c: 6,
65c; 10, $1.00 del. P. P. Cash
or stamps accepted. R. P. Stein- ;
heimer, Brooks, Rt. 1.
Muscadine vines, 10c ea.; 75c
doz.; black raspberry, 90c doz. ;
yellow root, 35c lb. Mrs. a
a Ellijay, Rte3.
~~ Black muscadine vines,
brown turkey figs, hazelnut
bushes, old fashioned red and
yellow plums, 10e ea., $1.00
doz. Add postage. Miss Hazel
Patterson, Waco, Rt. 3, Box 87
Lead. vars. apple, 10, $6.50:
peach, $5.00; plum, 10, $9.00;
| persimmon, |
cherries, pears, Satsuma orange, |
eo
10, $9.50; pecan,
lemon, kumquats,
: d oth
| respectively, wt. 1050 Ibs.,
a.
PECAN AND OTHER .
| FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Finest and newest Bunch and
Muscadine grapes, grafted
grapes, Thornless Youngberry
and Boysenberry. Asiatic Ches-
nuts, fruit trees. Inspected. H.
A. Neal, Ashland.
All season mixture of leading
varieties of Apple trees, 1 yr.
trees, $2.00 doz: Large 2 yr.
trees, $3.00 doz. State Inspect-
ed. T. M. Webb, Ellijay.
State Inspected McDonald,
Early Harvest, Eldorado black-
berry, Mammoth Red, St. Regis.
Cumberland Black Cap Rasp-
kerry, $1.00 doz. del. Best va-
rieties 2-yr apple trees, 50c ea.
Shropshire Blue Damson plum
and Early Richmond Cherry
trees, 75c ea. Dr. J. M. Nichol-
son, Blairsville. ;
Pecan trees, govt. insp., Ist
yr. budded, Schley, Money-
maker, 2-3 ft., 75c; 3-4 ft., 90c;
4-5 ft., $1.05 FOB. Write for
prices on larger lots. Calvin
Harman, Stovall.
HORSES AND MULES|
. FOR SALE
_. -Mare mule, around 10 yrs. old
dark color. around 1,000 lbs.
sound, gentle. $100.00 cash at
farm, near Meigs or Ochlock-
ae C. F. Fuller, Americus,
WO
1 pr. mules, 6 and 8 vrs. old.
for
W. L. Gregory, Eatonton.
A, mule, wagon (cart), 2
planters. guano distributor. 4
plows. $125.00 for lot at my
place. John H. White, Austell,
Rt. 2, Box 353 A>
2 Mule colts. 7 mos.. old,
cheap for quick sale: also. Jer-
sey bull. wt. 550 Ibs. ou EK,
Mealer, Adairsville, Rt.
2 Mules, light bay. 3 yrs. old:
dark b
1300 Ibs... $600.00 cash.
Norris. Cochran.
Black mare mule, 10 yrs. old,
wt. 1200 Ibs., will work any-
where. Bargain at $85.00. E.
B. Birdsong, Woodland.
_ Good farm mare, wt. about
1050 Ibs.,
OLB: Francis,
sale.
Paul
Alpharetta.
lbs.. will work anywhere. Seil
or exc. for good 1-horse wagon.
W.S. Walker, Bishop. Rt. 1.
- 2 nice brood or work mares,
7-10 yrs. old, wt. 1100 Ibs. ea.
Good workers at reasonable
price. Alex N. Booth, Bowman,
| Rt 1, Se
Horse mule, 7 vhs. old, wt.
1100 or more; will work any-
where, or exc. for cows. Write
Re a me. J. Li: Bare, Nicholls,
Mule, sound, plenty of nep.
wt. about 900 lbs.. at bargain if
taken by De. 15th. QO. M
Moore, Buena Vista.
Pr. horses, mare and male,
9-10 yrs. old: work good any-
Dont write. R. C. Williams.
Douglasville, Rt. 1.
work anywhere; one-eyed mule,
11 yrs. old, wt. 1000 lbs., Cheap
or exc. for brood mare or saddle
mare. Pay difference if neces-
sary for value J.H. Smith, Ft.
Valley, Rt: 1.
. Good common mule, cheap.
Good stalk cutter, 2-horse disc
harrow. Also S. P. C. sow to
farrow Jan. 15th. No corres-
pondence. Come and see. J.T.
Spier, Sr., Thomaston.
Beautiful black mare, 8 yrs.
old. wt. 900 lbs. .3 easy gaits,
ideal for lady or ehild. Sac-
rifice for $195.00. H. W. Shealy,
Oglethorpe.
- 1 mule for sale. See at my
farm 1 mi. N. of~Riversdale.
Mrs. W. B. Wesley, College
Park.
1 Black Mexican Jack, 2%
yrs. old, good/condition, $165.00.
Earl Parson, Cartersville, Rt. 3.
1 Black mare mule, wt. 1,009
lbs., good shape, good _ eyes,
| $100.00. One 1% horse wagon,
$45.00. Mrs. Vegarge Andson.,
| Lyons, Rt. 35
1 pr. extra good farm mules
and farm implements, such as
planters, turn plows, 2 horse
riding turn plow with new disc,
etc. At my home near Nancy
Hart School,
well, Rt. 3.
Nice, gentle, sound, 15 mos.
old male horse colt, at my farm.
yrs. old, $75.00. .
Valdosta, Rt. AL
ay; 5. yrs. old: 1200 to |.
at reasonable price. |
Good mule, wt. roid: 1000.
where, $225.00. Come and see:
Real good blind horse; will
N. E. Reid, Hart-
Also 1,000 lb. mare over Iu]
R. I. Tracy.
LIVESTOCK WANTED
CATTLE WANTED:
Want good grade midget cow
with calf at side, crated and
shipped. Give age, how much
milk per day and cash price.
- Hamp Martin, Commerce,
a0. :
Want 1 good Jersey milch
cow, 3-4 gal. milk daily. State
size and price. Mrs. Alma Ben-
son. Louisville,
HOGS WANTED:
Want-t S; P.-C. and 0: hc
male, 4 to 8 mos. old pigs, with
reg. papers, State price, ete,
H. C. Burnsed. Ellabelle, Rt. 1.
Want purebred. big bone
Guinea boar pig. 6 to 12 wks.
old. Must be purebred, thrifty
and reasonable. G. H. Strick-
land: Dallas. Rt..1-
Want reg. Duroc vig, blocky
type. Give full particulars and
eash price. Knox V. Queen.}
Blairsville, Rt. 3.
HORSES AND MULES
WANTED:
Want young, gentle, Shetland |
pony mare, easily handled.
State what you have and price.
/ Mrs..W. O. Talley. Ohoopee.
Want mule or horse, not un-
der 1.000 lb. wt. No objection
to some age. but not too old.
Reasonable. for cash. W. M.
Phillips, Chamblee. Rt. 1.
Want pony with or without
cart. Must be gentle. Advise
age and price. Sam B. Hub-
gard Hrd: een, 4043 No. Ivy Rd.
See WANTED:
Want white. hie or any
color rabbits. male or female.
State what vou have and price:
Carlton Miller, Atlanta, 832
St. Charles Ave., N. E.. Ve 5479.
SHEEP Bee GOATS
WANT
eae common goats. Write
number, sie and weight and
number. size and weight and
Meigs: Rie 0: Boxmiis2- su
Want 1 young milch goat,
prefer reg. stock. Must be good
milker and gentle: Mrs, JC;
Way, Lambert.
Want 1 milk goat. fresh or
to freshen soon. Prefer Tog-
genburg, 4 ats. per day. State
particulars in full. C. H. Wil-
son, Oxford. :
CATTLE FOR SALE
Reg. Whitefaced Hereford
bull, with papers. Sell or exc.
with farmer having Whitefaced
Hereford with papers, to pre-
vent inbreeding. Call me col-
lect, ~J2 8: Easterlin, Jr., Mon-
tezuma, Ph. 100 or 132.
Polled dbl. standard Hereford
bull, 2 yrs. old, reg. in both |
associations. Domino breeding,
$200.00 for quick sale. Thos. G.
Ritch, Jesup. _
Milch cow and 3 heifers, all
to freshen in early spring. Al-
so 2 calves, 1 mule for sale. R.
A. Copeland. Dunwoody, Rt. 1
(Dunwoody-Roswell Rd} ds
Jersey stock bull,
old, wt. 600 Ibs.,
18 mos.
short horn
| type, purebred, not reg., $100.00
or will trade for heifers.
Shadburn, Buford.
Guernsey and Jersey mixed
cow, wt. about 900 Ilbs., to
freshen Nov, 20th with 3rd ealr.
Gave 4 gals with 2nd calf.
$125.00. J. H. Wright, Cham-
blee, 203 Tucker Rd.
Brown Swiss calf, beef type,
J. i.
wt. around 400 lbs., for market.
price quoted in Bulletin. G.
a Prince, Demorest, Rt. tf Box
Jerseys: cows, 1 ea. 5 yrs.
old, $55.00; 7 yrs. old, fresh,
$60. 00; 3 heifers, freshen early
spring, $35.00 ea.; 2 bulls, 9
mos. old, $12.50 ea. Vera Gam-
brell, Cornelia, RE: 4.
Jersey heifer, fresh in with
heifer calf, gives 7 qts.,.
for both. Also 25 or 30 White
Leghorn pullets, March hatch-
ed, $1.00: ea. C. H. Chaffin, De-
catur, 65 Craige St. De 6474.
Pure Hereford cows and
calves for sale at my barn. A.
M. Brackett, Hemp.
Nice med. sized muley end.
ed Jersey cow, fresh, with 3rd
ealf, gives 3% gals. milk per
day. for sale. Jack Jones.
Royston, Box 218.
Black Jersey milch cow, now
dry, give 4 gals. when fresh, 7
yrs. old, $65. 00, er exe. for
heifer fresh- -in nearby, M. M.
Rowell, Bremen, Rt. 2, Box 47.
$60.00 |
CATTLE FOR SALE
Jerseys: bull 17 mos. old
$50.00; heifer, 18 mos. oi
$45.00: calf, 5 mos. old, $25.0
purebred, in good condi ion
Mrs. W. W. Crutchfield, H
kinsville, Rt. 3, Box 187. |
Extra good quality mi
cow. Will freshen Dee. 1. Re
ford Jeter, Bowdon (2 Mi 5
Bowdon.)
A-1 reg. Guernsey bull,
1000 lbs., or will trade for an:
thing of value, $175.00.
Bowden, Atlanta, 435 C
St... N. E., Ph. Wa 524? ox
6401. ee
Black Angus: bull, 18
old. wt. about 700 Ibs.,
bred, not reg., $125.00: bi
mos. old, wt. about 400
$50.00. Also Cokers Wi
tonseed, Tl yretrom
1% in. staple. Mrs .A. P. |
| Lavonia.
20 Reg. pores cows,
fresh in, other close in, spr
ers. W. A. Biggers,
ville, P.-O. Box 22,
1% yrs. old, $75.00
H. Rampley, Carnesville..
20th with 3rd calf. 4 ga)
about 900 lbs. Guaranteed
every respect, $150.00. May
seen at 203 Tucker Rd... Ch
blee. J. H. Wright,. 163 ]
wood Rd.. Atlanta, Rt. oS,
15 heifers, all bred. Ee
over 500 lbs., $60.00 ea. W
Head. Social Circle, Rt. ue
2 reg. bred Guernsey
with some age, $75.00 ea.
Terese, S$) POG, alt. we in
bred to reg boar.,
taken at once.
Due to freshen Nov. 22r
Reeves, Greenville.
8 or 9 pure-bred G
bulls, fine lineage. From
| to 10 wks. old, $25.00 to $
ea. Ask for Royce Rame3
Neely Farm, Waycross.
Good grade Guernsey.
dark red, 12 wks. old,
or if kept to 16 wks. old,
Dae He Trawick, Tennille R
Fine bull, Jersey an
sey cross, in good shape
old, easy to handle. 2
corn. See him, 4 mi.
ford. Mrs. J. A. Pucket
ford, Rt. 1) ox. 50.
of butter a day; 10
ee feed. No calf.
C. Stephens, Warthen,
Nice Guernsey bull
from 1 week to i yr.
blood lines, sub. to r
to breed, sub. to reg.
Wicker, Ar PS ele
3 fine mich. cows 1 Jh
sub. to reg., 4 gal., .
Jersey (daughter of abov
seribed cow), freshen 1s
soon, $125.00; purebred
sey, soon freshen, daughie
6 gal. cow, $150. 00 at m p
Jno. S. Clark, Jacksonvi
Glen Haven Alcine,
old reg. Guernsey cow, $#
Arnold Bennett, Clarkstor
Purebred Polled and
Hereford cattle, all ages
sizes, both sexes. for gale.
Carl Daughtry, Metter.
1 reg., Red Poll bull, 2
old, for sale. Loy Dorsey,
land, ut: ee
Black bull, 11 mos, old
about 500 lbs., fat, excel
cond., for sale or trade f
mule. J. T. Morris, Bro
2 Guernsey -bulls, :
preeding, 6 mos. old, sub
reg.. $50.00 ea. W. A.
ferro, Blue Ridge.
Very fine Jersey cow, -
to milking Shorthorn bull
due now, $125.00. Also. spl
id mare mule, 8-9
200.00. Dr. We Ly
Decatur, Rte 25
Jersey mileh cow, |
gal. milk per day. Fi
ee her. See at my |
So. Massee. T. FJ
Adel Rt 1, ee
Jersey tested cow,
gals. when properly fe
at barn; also few young
Leys and Pekin -ducks.
Grantham, Jonesboro,
Complete dairy, peace of (3rd house on Tara BR
35 cows, part of them Holsteins, |
-also 10 can milk cooler and new | .
| Hinman 2 unit milking machine | m
right, S. Mundy s Mi
MTTLE FOR SALE |
Bown Swiss, beef tyne bull
alf, wt. around 400 Ibs., at
arket price. G. H. Prince,
Demorest, Rt. 1, Box 14.
Reg. Holstein bull, about 1
yr. old; old Jersey milch cow,
bred, giving gal. or more Saas
R. King, Decatur, Ri. 2
-Mileh cows, 2 fresh, others
1 freshen soon, 3-5 gals. milk
any. RP. L. Meadows, Vidalia..
-H Guernsey bull, purebred,
3 mos. old, dark red, $60.00,/Sa@y on this thing you call
Feorge. Abercrombie, Roswell,
abapple Rd.
Young thiten COW,
100.00 for cow only. Gives 4
gals. milk daily. Dovie Harris,
(Loganville, Rit 2
Good grade Guernsey bull
alf, red, 13 wks. old, $21.00.
rit keep until 16 wks. old,
cba J. G. Trawick, Tennille,
HOGS FOR SALE
.P. C. reg., e mos. old bred
rand. Champion boar. :
gilt and boar pigs, $15.00
; an treated, FOB.,. reg.
puyers name. F. C. Seago, Pine-
wurst, Rt. 1.
Big bone Blue. Guinen pigs,
pl. treated, $12.50 ea.: crated
nd shipped, $11.00 ea. at my
No chks. L. D. James,
a males. 1 fevanle Duroc J;
igs. 3 mos. old, $18.00 ea., reg..
ul OE, alas Askew. Dav-
sboro, Rt. 2. Box 72.
_ Fine 9 wks. old pigs, $8.00 ea..
also 1 nice saddle horse, $125. 00, :
Dr. W. W. Dan- |
my place.
Atlanta, 1705 coe Rd..
E Ve 7525,
SP, Cc pigs, 3 mos. old,
5.00 ea., sired by blocky type
boar (Gates breeding), dbl.
: treated for cholera, reg. im
-buyers name. L. M. Isler, Mor-|
Zan.
TG Shoats, wt. about 80 Ibs...
4e%b. L. P. Singleton, Ft. Val-
30 O. I. C. pigs, 6-8 wks. old.
No shipments, Delivery at my
ome. Fred_T. Allen, Doraville.
10 O. I. C.. and big. boned
tuinea pigs. 9 wks. old? $8.00}
. Mrs. Margaret Cochran,
Atlanta, 1600 Stewart Ave., S.
Wi a. 8712.
Reg. Hampshire boars aud
ilts, wt. 50-125 Ibs.,
0.00 ea., FOB. Dbl. treated,
rated, with papers. J Ps
Dorminy, Jr., Fitzgerald.
Reg. S. Pr. C, pigs, from best
lood lines, reg. in buyer's
name, $15.00 ea. at farm, or
18.00 F. O. B. Tifton. Walter
B. Leverette, Tifton.
0. I. C. and Guinea pigs
crossed, some Poland-China
rossed, $7.50.ea., C. H. Fowler,
nta, oe Stratford Rd.
- Reg. Ss.
wks. old. sow, $35.00; pigs,
$9.00 ea.
= Sandersville. Rt. 3. Box 39:
36. pigs, 8 and 10 wks. old, for
gale. Can be seen at my. farm.
J. G. Lee, Plainfield.
Purebred. Hampshire . male
spring pigs, ready for service,
$25.00 ea. Reg. in buyers name.
i. M. Flowers, Ludowici, Rt. 2.
Pigs, crossed, 8-14 wks. old,
for sale.
Mountain, Rt. 1.
8 Reg. O. I. C. Epo for sale.
6 wks. old. Bill S aylors, near
_ Royston-Hartwell nS, 2. mi.
of Royston. Canon, Rt. 2
95 young thrifty ance: wt.
60-75 lbs., ea. While they last,
: Also 12 sows, bred,
\ ; Roscoe Carden.
Forest Park, Rt. 1.
Pigs and shoats for sale, $4.00
and up. Also Turkeys (Lights
and heavies) Hens and Toms,|S.
. Ib. T. E. Davis, Concord,
2 p. C. sows, 11 pigs, together.
Sows, wt. 200 lbs. ea., $50.00 ea.
with pigs. Both, $90. 00.
PP. Cc. bred gilt, 1 yr. old, we.
125 Ibs., $30.00: 3 B. P. C., and
5. P, C. cross gilts, 6 mos. old,
wt. 140 lbs., $30.00 ea. IS.
P. C. boar, 1% yrs. old, wt. 200
Ibs., $35.00. L.
Lake Park.
Quick sale of 10 pure plood:
B. P. C. boars and gilts, 10-12
wks. old, innoculated, $10.00
with papers, $8.50 ea. with-
) ere if taken quick. Will
; Cotton, 207 N.
t Milledgeville.
fresh, |
$25.00 to:
. C. sow with 7 pigs,
Leon Higginbotham,
Charles Brown, Stone
1 Be
A. Kinsey,
Subsidies And Withholding Taxes
Honorable Tom Linder,
Route 2.
Whigham, Georgia,
-November 6, 1943.
Commissioner of Agriculture,
State of Georgia,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Mr. Linder:
I just want to thank
Taxes and Sales Tax.
you for what you had to
Subsidies and Withholding
- J am just a little farmer down in South Georgia,
Grady County, trying to help out in the war effort,
but I am not doing what I ought to be doing, as you
know the AAA says what you can plant and we
farmers go ahead and do our best to produce the
crops that the Government wants, thinking maybe
when we get the crop harvested we can buy a few
War Bonds to help our dear boys and girls, brothers
and sisters.\And then, the Mr. O. P. A. comes along
and says you can take a price which you know you
|cant produce it at. What
is the farmer going to do
when he cant be heard in Congress and no where
else to his benefit?
: I have four brothers in the service and three of
them across the water an
think of them over there
d it is pretty hard when I
fighting for our Country
and I cant buy a few Bonds to help them.
I think if these price fixers were over there they
would change their mind
about some of the prices
they are putting on the farmers crops.
Maybe at least, if they got hungry they could
= think where their living came from. If things keep
up like it is going, they wont have to go over there
Ito get hungry, as the farmer cant keep jeune and
"eden producing.
So, if there is anything you could tell me to do
once.
to be of more help, I wish you would advise me at
Your Farmer Friend,
_J. F. OATES.
HOGS FOR SALE
Reg. S.P.C. boar, fine indi-
10:
vidual out of litter of 15.
mos. old, wt. 200 Ibs., $40.00.
R. F. Hicks, Roberta.
12 shoaty pigs, O. I..C.-P. C..
cross, for sale, or will trade for:
farm size Hammer Mill or other-
machinery. Can use
tractor and harrow.
Walker, Franklin, Ret. 1,
20 O. I. C. pigs, 4% mos. old,
$15.00 or trade for good milk
cow. Arthur Roy Coleman,
Roswell.
19 Duroc boars
cheap
G.
and gilts,
April farrow, $23.50 ea., 10 for
$225.00. $4.00 ea. extra if reg.,
treated, crated, FOB. Excellent
bloodlines. S. GL, -Thornton,
Dewyrose, Rt. 1.
100 hogs, 6: pigs; B. PB. C.,
$3.00 up.: 10 big sows to farrow
Jan. and Feb. Also 1 riding|
cultivator, A-1 condition. Come
at once. Old Wainsboro Rd.,
near Pine Hill Church. E. H.
Green, Hephzibah.
Res: 0. 1..C: beam, 9eme6s.
old, 200 Ibs., $100.00 at my
farm J.C. McAlister, . Mt.
Vernon.
Pigs, 8 wks. old, $7.00 ea. at |.
my yard. Jay B. Johnson, Sr:
134 Chicamauga Ave.,
Atlanta.
12 shoats, wt. up to 45 lbs.;
5 gilts, 5 males, P. C., $7.00 ea.
here or $8.00 placed in exp. of-
fice C. O. D. Also 7-8 Guern- |.
sey bull, 1 yr. old, light serv-:
ice, mother 4 gal cow, $50.60
here. John Cowan, Pelham,
Rtas.
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
30 head Hampshire. and
Western bred Ewes, Lamb
January 1st; 2 pee Hamp-
shire rams, for sale. R. J. Si-
manton, Tallapoosa.
3 milk goats, oa Saanen.
freshen soon, 0.00 ea. if
bought within the oat 2 wks.
M. Hearn, College Park.
1238 No. Main St., Ca. 3570.
Purebred Saanen, heavy
milker, long lactation, bred to
freshen in February, for sale.
H. O. Hamby, Decatur, 917
East Lake Dr. De 3117.
20 good grade Hampshire
ewes, bred to reg., Hampshire
ram, $250.00; 1 reg. H.. ram,
$50.00. At my barn. C. D.
Creen, Grovetown.
At stud, Chickaming Stan-
ton Judson T-4979. reg. pure-
bred Toggenburg. High ad-
vanced reg. ancestry. Limited
service by appointment. Fee,
purebreds, $7.50; grades, $5.00
Warren Rollins, Atlanta, 349
Murray Hill Ave. De 6912.
Ss We
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE |
buck, $2.00, high milk product-
1 to above buck. S. T. Humph-
ries, Decatur, 313-5th Avenue,
Ph. De 5880.
At stud: Sir _ Roderick
most outstanding Toggenburg
buck of the South: naturally
hornless. Proven sire of high
milk producers and_ female,
hhorniess kids. Limited service,
Fee, $10.00. John Hynds, At-
a 93 Warren St. N. E. De
RABBITS AND CAVIES
FOR SALE
N. Z. White rabbits. 8 wks.
old, large type, heavy breeding
stock, $2.00 ea.
W. A. Stone, Jr., Louisville.
1 Beautiful grey Chinchilla
Box 231.
10 N. Z. white rabbits, 8-10
mos. old, $2.00 ea: 3. large
bucks, $3.00 ea. Belle Evans,
Talona.
3 thoroughbred white An-
goria rabbits Tor sale or ex-
change for heifer. Paul Har-
vey, Ellenwood, Rt. 1. -
1 Chin Buck, 5 mos. old,
Pedigreed, extra good, papers
furnished. From show type
stock. $3.00 money order. R.
aa Brantley, Wrightsville.
Rt. 2
3 N. Z. White bucks, 11 wks.
old, wt. 4 lbs., ea., from ped.
stock, $2.00 ea. Exp. Col. Mrs
Otis Mashburn, Cummings, Rt.
ie
1 brown buck, about 4 yrs.
| old, $2.50. Junior Blakely,
Union Point.
POULTRY FOR SALE
BARRED, WHITE AND
OTHER ROCKS:
Purebred B. R. rooster, $3.00;
3 guinea roosters, $1.00 ea. T.
J. Steed, Buena Vista.
Sev. nice purebred 7 mos. old
B. R. roosters, $1.50 ea. at my
place. GB. Bleckley, Dillara.
8 roosters, 2 W. R. and/l
Buff Orp., $1.00 ea.; 3 pullets,
2W.R. and 1 Buff. The 6 for
$6.00. Mrs. Lula McRee, Buck-
head (Morgan County).
5 W. R. capons, $3.50
S. M. Stout, Warm Springs.
50 large W. R. 4-A grade pul-
lets, spring hatch, $2.00 ea. Leo
Akins, a Rt. i.
Caz
At Stud: Saanen-Toggenburg
ion. For sale, 2 does, bred Nov..
F. O. B.. Mrs..
buck, 8 mos. old, $5.00 F. O. B.
Mrs. i Ni kson, | ?) .
Mrs. Annie Mullins, Jackson,, Miss LeRoy Hudgins,
POULTRY. co
{
RR baby dicks. $15.00 C;
also want.
po $1. 50: per 15;
some B. R. pullets and hens.
Mrs. Florence Van Leer\ Atlan-
ta, Rt. 4, Box 81.
Pure Fischel W. R. April pul-
lets, 10 or 12 in lot. $1.00 ea.
Crated and FOB, Mrs. Z. L.
Scott, Concord.
: BRAHMAS:
13 Light Brahma hens and
rooster, AAA stock, purebred,
hens laying, $2.50 ea. FOB.
Gordon Pece, College Park, 914
Bussey Rd.
CORNISH, GAMES AND
GIANTS:
18 mos. old Cornish rooster,
purebred, from hens with
bloodtested stock rooster, $3.00
FOB? No chks.- Mrs. R. T
Chatham, Adairsville, Rt. 2..
5 Dark Cornish yr. old hens,
$8.00 or $1.65 ea.: 6 April pul-
lets, $6.50, or $1. 10 ea... No
COD or chks. Miss Cova B.
Patterson, Ty Ty.
LEGHORNS: =
2 W. L. \roosters, $2.50 ea,,
or trade for 4 hens. Mrs. Hugn
C. Power, Marietta, Rt. 3.
175 W. L. hens, good breed-
ing stock, $1.50 ea., or $1.25 ea.
for 50: also 175 Red Hampshire
yr. old hens, $2.00 ea. Mrs.
Libbie Andrews, Ochlocknee.
200 Eng. str. young hens,
every day layers; and 50 White
Giant pullets, $2.00 ea. Ail
Jaying. Mrs. H. E. Dukes, Och-
locknee, Rt. 2.
25 Brown Leghorn AA hens,
2 yrs. old, $1.00 ea. for lot, or
$1.15 ea. at my place. Mrs. L.
L, Williams, Bostwick. .
50 large W. 1942 hatch, $1.00
ea.; 4 nice red shoats, 3 mos.
old, $8.00 ea.; 1 Red Face bull,
1% yrs. old, about 400 to 500
ibe. $40.00. Hope Lofton, New-.
nan, Rt. 4.
2 big type Ww. +. Eng., April
cockerels, $2.00 ea. Miss Cora
| Daniel, Hawkinsville, Rt. 3.
W. L. breeding cockerels,
bred from official contest re-
cord hens, large type, 10 mos.
old, reasonable price. M. W.
Kantala, Elberton. ;
29 AAA grade W. L. pullets,
| just begmning to lay, $40.00 at
my farm. E. H. James, Axson.
MINORCAS:
1 Black Minorca yr. old cock-
erel, from high laying
Show bird (worth $10.00), $2.50
FOB. W.C.Champlin, Atianta,
1050 Gordon St., S. W3 Ra 8535.
S. C. Black Minofea cocker-
els; giant type, 6 mos. old, $3.50
ea.; 2 for $6.00 in same crate.
| E. Maynard, Newton.
ORPINGTONS:
i
15 Buff Orp. pullets, May
hatch, $1.50 ea. Martin Strick-
land, Royston.
6 Buff Orp., ready to lay,
April hatch pullets, purebrea
and same age rooster, $2.00 ea.;
7 hens, dif. breeds, fat, fine
cond., some laying, $1.50 ea.
Bolton,
Fisher Ave. ; :
PEAFOWLS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC.:
Blue, Peafowls :2 pr., 4 yr.
old. $35.00 pr; 1. cock, 4 yrs.
old, $25.00; 1 pr. 1943 hatch,
$25.00; 1943 hatch cock. $15.00.
FOB. Cash. W.C. Day, War-
| ner Robins, 705 Muller Dr.
Blue peafowls, $20.00, $35.00
and $40.00 pr. according to age,
FOB. <Asbery Hughes, Buford,
Reg.
50 pen raised quail, $3.50 vr.
or trade for friers or turkeys at
market price. W. 8. Glenn.
8305. 155 Winona Dr., De
eu
REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRES
AND RHODE ISLANDS:
2 purebred Donaldson R. I.
Red March cockerels, $5.00 or
$2.50 ea. Mrs. Irene Wynn,
Glenwood, Rt. 2.
40 March pullets direct from
Hubbard, in full production,
heavy, culled, $100.00 for lot.
None less sold. Sat. guar.
Mrs. W. A. Tanner, Douglas,
Ri.
Fine Red rooster and 10 pul-
Jets, March-April hatch, $2.00
ea. at yard. No chks. Dan E.
Webb, Hortense, Care Coifee
Co. Fishing and Hunting Camp.
Us SiR 0.. Ps Sited. NEB:
chicks, $5.00 per 25; 50, $9.00;
$18.00 C: Eggs, $2.00 per 15.
Flock U. S. pullorum-tested. T.
B. Clarkston, Decatur, 921 East
Ponce de Leon Ave. De 5427.
6 purebred N. H. Red roost-
ers, $18.00 for et or $3.50 ea.;
trios, $10.00. M. O. Crate ret.
A. B. King, Adel, 8th St.
: Sees
ea.:
Rt.
Would _ like
str.
County near Marietta.
POULTRY
15 R. I. Red hens and 2 C
ers, Triple ee strain; -als
grown, $30.00 for lo
ship. 2 young Red cx
$2.00 ea. Mrs. R. re
Adairsville.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEES
DUCKS, EIC., FOR SALI
15 Blue Speckled gu
$15.00 or exc. Mrs. Cee
gle, Buford.
12 White Muscovy ducks, 1@
hens and 2 drakes, all
$14.00. Will not crate nor:
Come after. Mrs. Ben Den
Cochran, Rt. 4. ;
5 speckled guineas, 4 he
and rooster, 18 mos. old, $5.1
FOB, lightly crated.
Coffee.
$23.00 or $6.00 ea.
some nice print sacks. Ss.
Blackstock, Douglasville, Rt.
4 M. B. toms, $5.00 ea;
key hens, $4.00 ea.: $8.
$12.00 trio. Mrs. Walter
bree, Maysville, Rt. 1. _
Bronze gobblers, 18 los
2 hens and 1 g
$17.00. From ce pi
bone bronze. Of. ae
Grayson, Alma, sha ie
1% yr. old Bioiee. gobb
wis around 25 lbs., or more,
breeder, $12.00 FOB. ee
ney Mrs. C. C. Lynch, Re
POSITIONS WANTED
Man, 60, wants good
house, well in yd., place
chickens. Will raise hog
halves. Want 15 A. lan
cultivate, conveniences, Near
Atlanta-~Brookhaven on 50-5
basis. Mr. J. F. Garner, re
las, Rt. 2.
Want a 1-H. crop in Gees
it where could
raise Peanuts and hogs
would like job as overseer
C. Shope, Adairsville.
Man, wife and one ch d
want 1-H. crop on halves (wite
30, husband 50). Best of
Would consider chicken
ing and hogs. Want work th
1-H. crop on halves fox
1944. Charles Coley. De te
Elderly man with wife wa ts
job looking after small farm,
or farm work flooking aft
cows, hogs. Life time exp. Ne
churches and Christian Cc
munity. 3-4 rm. house. Sout
Georgia preferred. Write
once. R. L. Swafford, Gle
wood, Rt. 1.
Man 37 yrs. old wants farm
on 50-50 basis with stock and
tools and Run Bill and ha
be moved. Want truck
near market. Prefer |
Georgia. I. D. Skinner, Sto k=
ton.
Widow with hier cn
to work wants job on poultry,
turkey or bee farm. House with
running water and reasonabla
farm salary. (42 yrs. old.) Mrs.
Ada Waters, 2015 Coe at
Brunswick. ~ =
Prefer as Ne
W.
for standing rent.
Burdett. Roswell, Rt. 1.
Want on 1/3 and 1/4 ba
2-H. crop. Must be 5-rm. house
are larger in good conditio
near school or bus line. Have
good stock and tools. Prefer i
Floyd or adjoining count
aS R. H. Keeney, Rome, Rt
Want good 2 or 3 horse Yar
on halves, 2 good houses, lights.
near church and school bus. Be.
tween Atlanta and Rome pre
ferred. Also 100 bu. of corm
for sale. Leon J. Walter,
leyson.
North Georgia farmer ona
wife, educated, expr., with
supervisory and executive abil~
ity, Baptist faith. Open only,
for first class farm proposition,
sue N. Wooddall, Manet
Want job as good cow hand
and other light. work for next
2 in family, self-su=tain-
Martin, Rit.
Wanted smali i-H. fa m,
standing rent, near bus and 5
R. Station on schoo] bus ro es
Frerer South Cordele.
Johnston, Enigma, Rt. 1.
Want job overseeing or care-
taker on farm. Life time ex<
perience in farming. Tobacco
truck or general farming. Ref.
exchanged. J. J. Hubbard,
Hitgeer ald, RLS. Box 325. x
PAGE EIGHT
= FARM HELP WANTED
Want good man for good
_ stock and
paved Hwy. south of Macon
Fine residence, tenant houses
if needed, abundant pastures:
some cattle, a tractor and
equipment available.
G. L. Carver, 796 Patterson St.,
Macon. Tel, 2582-J.
-. Want farmer for a big 1-H.
- erop, 2 mules to tend it with,
on halves. 5-rm. house, wood,
pasture, good land,
chard, near C, M. Millers
Packing House, C. L. Cathey,
~ Cornelia.
- Want a couple who can live
in 2-rm, house and make 1-H.
erop on halves, good land and
stock, Will furnish. 2-mi.
from Buford on Buford-Law-
-renceville Hwy. Ivon Overby,
_ Buford.
e3 Want married -man, small
family, for general farm work
and help with small dairy,
house, vegetables, 1 at milk
day, prefer. teuck Expr 3 t50
per day at once. See, C. A.
Ww ite, Manager of farm, Ma-
Want white or colored farm-
er with force to handle two or
three horse crop. Good land.
eet equipment. New 6-rm.
house, running water, close to
Shurch and School on mail
o qust: off U.S. Highway,
: South Hapeville. %% mi.
Ww. Philadelphia Church. Roscoe
: den, forest Park.< Rt. 1.
Want wage hands by month
or $2.00 day, house, fuel. truck
atches, etec.: family, married
or single; on school bus Rt:
steady work: commence now.
pay every ea Church;
Thomson.
Want a colored farm family
for my farm on Macon Hwy. on
are crop basis with labor to
ndle 20 to 25 A. cotton and
some corn. [ will break land
aie my Seartok Will use
labor by day when not busy
with crops. R. EK. Cotton, 207
N. Columbia St., Milledgeville.
Want good tenant for 20A,
good land, 242 mi. N. of Mariet-
ta, near Arch Medford and
Cantrell farms. No house.
_ Standing rent. Nancy Anna
Maricit 208 Kennesaw Ave.,
f
fants a man who can de
ksmith work.
either salary or commission.
Ss in Se Waite: call or
recs. L: Bolton, Dawson,
free furfiish
tr Wade, 3136
edale RAS Hapeville, Ca.
ood -2-Horse farm for
ading rent or 1/3 and 1/4
ion church and school bus.
~ Reeves, Jonesboro, At le
on. fruit, Strawberry and
k Farm. Ladies to set.
: and pack Strawberries,
k vegetables, Peel peaches,
eS 4 Man truck drive. oO. E:
git th and Turpentine
p for 1944. Tobacco allot-
ment. Good 3 R. house: on
il and school bus route.
Good place for stock. Come see.
s. Ira Boatright, Alma.
Want Orchard man to take
tge of and care for 60 A.,
ng orchard. Steady work
all winter. $1.25 day, free
house, garden, firewood, and
H. 50-50 crop next yr., also
r 2 H. crop standing rent.
. 8. S. Storer, Douglasville,
1. share crop-
. With plenty
Good 4 R. house, good
14% mi. town. BCR
: Her nosyille.
t white woman, 20 to 50
ld, to do farm work. $25.-
mo., room and board. Mrs.
Tharp, Decatur, 204-4th
VYant iamily to cultivate and
her light 2 H. crop in 1944,
50-50 basis, Colquitt Co.
A quality productive land.
.. tobacco. Good mules ane
Write or -see. ,
Sees -
Want dares dtamily to. culti-
e232: H. fasm or_large 1H.
on =50-50 basis.
ish reasonable amount
general farm near.
Shares. |.
some or-
Will pay
Will
| 45- 60.
November 15, 19438.
purely a war measure.
4
the war. -
inflationary.
a New Deal policy.
controlled in their voting
to the administration.
This editorial by Tom Linder is reprinted
due to the number of requests for same.
The following is part of a statement made by
Tom Linder, Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture,
appearing before the Senate Agricultural Committee
in Opposition to Subsidies at Washington, Ds
Mr. Chairman and Senators:
Tf the proposal to pay subsidies was a war
measure, no one would seriously object.
Tf this was a problem that had developed as a
consequence of our engagement in a World War, the
payment of an additional few hundred million dollars
would not be of serious consequence.
. At a time when the national expenditures are
around three hundred million dollars per. day, no
reasonable man would quibble over the payment of
a few hundred million dollars for ee that was
PAYMENT OF SUBSIDIES ISA NEW DEAL
MEASURENOT A WAR MEASURE
Unfortunately, the idea of paying subsidies is
not a war measure. Neither is it a new proposal.
The purpose of paying subsidies is not to win
The purpose of the payment of subsidies is not:
|to control inflation, because subsidies themselves are
The purpose of payiee a of subsidies is purely
REAL PURPOSE OF SUBSIDIES IS TO CONTROL
VOTERS AND IS ALSO PART OF A CONTROLLED
WORLD ECONOMY
The people of Iowa are fine folks. Those ae
izens of that great state whom I know, are my friends.:
I am happy for the people of Iowa to receive = ben-
efits they can legitimately get.
EH 80 happens that the voters of oe are not
by party affiliation. The
people of Georgia in the past have been controlled
in national elections strictly by party affiliation.
In 1939, the year before the last Presidential
election, the powers that be in the New Deal knew
that Georgia would vote for the third term. They did
not know how the people of Iowa would vote.
Unfortunately, the Congress had provided sub-
sidies in the form of government payment to farm-
ers and had entrusted the payment of these subsidies
Lets look at the New Deals own record. and
|see what was done with subsidies to the smericgt,
farmers in 1939.
oo he US, Department of. Commerce publehed
its Statistical Abstract for 1940. If you will turn
to page 670, you_will find the table entitled, Farm
Production and Related Statistics, Table 633, Farm
IncomeEsiimated Gross and Cash Income and Gov-
ernment Payments by States: 1938 and 1939.
If you will run down the list of states in this
table to lowa, under Crops and Livestock Combined,
you will see that lowa Ss cash farm i income in 1939 was
.$585,800,000, while Georgias cash income from
and livestock was $132,700,000.
The farm population of Iowa was 968, 00
Sons.
This gave the farm population of Iowa
per capita income from the sale of farm produets
$605.00.
Georgia had a farm population of 1,
persons with an income of $132,700,000. This
Georgias farm population a per capita cash i
of $94.00 each.
Think of that, gentlemen of the committee
people who lived on the farms in Georgia in 19
ceived a cash income of $94.00 each for the ye
The President stated that the South was
Nations' No. 1 economic problem. I am sure
remember that. A section where the farm po
received only $94.00 per capita for twelve m
statement that the South was the Nation
economic problem. Under these circumstance
would naturally have thought that the people of
South would have been treated fairly in the pay
of these subsidies by the New Deal.
But, as stated, the National election was
ing on in 1940. The New Deal knew how G
would vote but the New Deal did not Know: he )
would vote.
The money | which Congress had prov
subsidies to farmers was not used as subsidies to
prices at all. That money was simply used in
fort to control the 1940 election.
T now call to the witness stand before thi
mittee, the same table of figures in the same
tical Abstract of the United States Governmen
~ Under the column of Cash Income and
Payments, you will see that lowa received a tota
cash and benefits of $655,300,000.~
_ Since Iowas total cash return from the Si
crops vas $585,800,000, this shows that gove 1
benefits or subsidies paid in the State of Io
$69,500,000, or a little more than $71.00 per | (
for each person on the farms in Iowa. ee
Georgia received as cash income and b
payments, a total of $158,500,000, while Geor
ceived from cash sale of crops and livestoc!
700, 000. This shows that Georgia received from
efits or subsidies, $25,800,000.
This gave the farm population of Georgia
per capita of farm subsidies as against $71.0
capita in farm smbsidies to the farm popu
lowa. > 3
The independent voters of lowa recained: e
four times as much subsidy as the voters of
' who were known to be controlled by party aff
Geo
SPEAKS TO FARMERS GUILD INy
FRANKFORT, INDIANA oe:
Leaving Washington on the afternoon of the -
I will address the State. Convention of the |
Guild at Frankfort, Indiana on November 161
I will give you a report on the Frankfort
in the next issue of the Bulletin, 3) >
TOM LINDER,
Commissionr of Agi ion
FARM HELP WANTED
FARM HELP WANTED
awe HELP WANTED
FARM HELP WAN
Ea
Wanted for 1944: Good share
cropper for light 2-H farm.
Good smooth fertile land, will
make bale or cotton per~ he all
cotton land you want. Located
on public rd., good communi-
ty, good house, good team,
plenty wood and water. Dr.
W. J. Green, McDonough, Rt. 2.
Want farm help for 10,000
yearling Turpentine boxes on
halves. House to live in con-
venient to timber. Bill Steed-
ley, Waycross, 223 Blackshear
St.
Want good 1 H. tarmer, large
or small family, white or col.,
for farm. Large and small
Tobacco acreage and cotton
acreage if wanted. J.S. Davis,
Bristol. :
Want man to. drive tractor
and help with other farm work.
Good salary for right man. W.
F.: Upchurch, Atlanta, 16
Brady Ave.
Want farm help, share erop=
pers or day hands,
Janta. House,
free. Regular work.
Travis. Riverdale.
Want farmer for 3 H. farm
on halves, 3 2/10 A. tobacco
allotment. 2 mi. West Sigsbee.
ae or write. Miss Dona Turn-
; Moultrie; Rt.-1. ;
Want unincumbered, settled,
white woman to live in county
home with elderly couple and
help do farm work. Between
old in zood peslih.
wood, garden
Be eB:
50-50 basis.
10 mi. At- |
Want woman to do. general
light work on farm. $4.00 wk.
and board. Mrs. Joe Set
Milner, Rt. 1.
Want unincumbered, reliable
woman to live in home with|
couple and help do farm work.
Give ref. H. G. McAllister,
Mt. Vernon.
Want
to live in home and help do
farm work. Board and salary.
Here Park, Lawrencevile.
Want farmer for 2 H. farm,
standing rent. Good aioiments
good pasture, elec. 5 mi. be-
low Griffin on Griffin-Zebulon
Rd. W. G. Beckham, Zebulon.
Want good man for farm on
Very best of Jand,
5 R. house on paved Hwy. near
schools and churches. Milch
cow furnished. Splendid prop-
osition to right man. H. C:
Martin, Lithia Springs, Box 7.
Want settled, white woman
to live in home and help with
farmwork. Mrs. Nora Schopfer,
Brunswick, Rt. 1.
Want white woman to live
as one of family and do gen.
farm work. $5.00 week. Mrs.
Geo. W. Calhoun, Cordele, ee
otha siy ==
Want share cropper for ] h.
farm on bus line to Columbus
near churches and school. Fur-
nish everything and provisions.
; Exc. ref., and will move party.
Haxtin, 1 Rt
ettled white woman
stock and tools furnished.
Want 2 H. farmer for 1 EE
farm on halves and part time
Fayette Co. |
pay, work for me.
1 mi. Lee Lake. Good land, 4
R. house: on school bus Rte eR.
By, Ellington, Wait eipne. Py |=
Want white or C0! s800d
farmer, able to furnish own
stock. Land high state culti-
vation. 5 R. house. Pasture.
1 mi. Redan. On 3rds and
ee C. W. Wellborn, Decatur.
Want man to work 6 acres of
grapes and about 15 A. other |
erops for salary. re McCol-
lum, Albany.
Want white woman, good
character to live with fumily
and do farm work. Room,
board and salary. L. W. Mc- |
Williams, Fairburn, Rt. 2.
Want reliable, white, healthy
woman to do farm work. $1.00
day and board. Charlie Head
Jones, Smyrna, 137 Gilbert St.
Want middle age Christian
woman, who wants a good home
to live on farm as one of fam-
ily and help with farm work.
Mrs. Ludia Humphries, Clay-
ton, Rt. 4.
Want good man with small
amily to farm on 50/50 basis.
Have 30 A. of good level land,
3.
rm. house and garden. pos S.
E. Russell, Brooklet, Rt.
Want settled woman a cae
work.
$7.00 wk. and board. 3 Et
- Want farmer tor
new 4 R. hoose
lights, 1 3/4 mi..
Couple preferred. re
Potts, Stone Mtn., Rt. 2
Want farmer for a
on 3rds. and 4ths. Near
mont, =-Mrs:- B.= 17 oO
Stockbridge. :
Want white woman ie
one of family in coun 1
allotment. On school
1% mi. to bus and chu
ee 50- 50 basis or
ine Cc. Hodges, Ludow
respectable :
couple to live in ho
for home, poultry,
and farm. Ref. wanted
want family or families
} or 90-50 basis on 1-1f
church. J. B. Fields, G
Want 1 good farm hane
age, that can do go
work with no bad. habit
pay reasonable price and
Can give ref: J.
Graymont, Rt. 1.
-Want farmer for
3rds. and 4ths. Have a
Farmall tractor wi
plow, cultivator,
planter and mowing