Tom nen
AGRICULTURE
COMM ISSION seh
a have ee returned from a trip to South Georgia. In
my life, I have never seen such bleak prospects for crops.
is now the first of May. Im counties where crops should
half made, they are not even planted. _ c
in sehr ground ahead of terrible rains, the farmer | is in
rse shape than if he still had the seed and fertilizer
er the shelter.
{any of the farms in Georgia have been so seriously,
ed by these tremendous rains that they would be in a
er shape if no plowing had been done. .
In many fields where the land is level, the water is
anding like mill ponds. In other fields, the terraces and
urrows are standing full of water.
In one small county, Friday morning, I saw 30 young
te men, practically all of them of the farm, being induct-
nto the Armed Services. -
I find in some counties that men, black and white, who
e now drawing Old Age Pensions, are afraid to take a job
fear of eae taken off the list and losing ar Old ee
From ice the newspapers and listening to the
io, it seems that this condition is general throughout.
farm belt. There are floods all over the country.
| OPA Ceilings 3 =
: The eeneral public has been grossly mis-led as to the |
ffect of ceilings on farm rops.
AN large percentage of city dwellers and even some
armers have been led to believe that an OPA ceiling meant
hat a farmer would receive the ceiling price for his crop.
a The fixing of a ceiling on a crop, does not guarantee the
armer anything: The fixing of a ceiling on a farm crop,
ply means that the farmer, under any conditions, cannot
Ive more than the ceiling price. The farmer can sell
or one-third or one-half as mitch as the ceiling price and
very often forced to do so.
The sad truth of the matter is that OPA ceiling prices
m farm products have been fixed without any considera-
n a elever for the farmers ability to pears at that *
OPA ehdes on farm products have ae fixed with
motive and purpose and one only. That purpose, is to
d the price down. The OPA has succeeded in this pur-
e and has held the price of farm products down below
ost of production. ;
ood To Eat Will Depend On Floors Not On Ceilings
_ If we are to escape famine in this country, we must im-
(Continued on Page Two)
- Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
April 28, 1944 ; Atlanta
Poebhace sacked, per CWT. - __-$2.00-$3.00
_ Cabbage Plants, crates 2,000 plants - 1.50
ae Collards, per doz. bunches 1.50- 1.65
Mustard Greens, per bu. hprs. 3 [5=- 1:25
Onions (Green), per doz. bunches .50- 1.00
Peas (Green), per bu. hprs. 1.75- 2.00
Radishes, per doz. bunches 60-75
Sweet Potatoes, per bu. baskets. 2.75- 3.25
Sweet Potato Plants, per 1,000 crates 3.00- 3.25
Salad, per. bu.. hprs. .00- .75
mbli
EDITORIALBy Tom Linder
A great many good citizens iene been convinced tha
the buying and selling of futures is a legitimate business
That is because these 2ood people do not eT
is involved in nearly all futures trading.
The fact of the matter is that almost all fiiibon trade ng
is straight out gambling. It-is simply betting on the ma
ket. i is no different from betting on a horse race or a do
race. It is no different from betting on the turn of a eard,
What is it That Gives Futures Gambling
A Respectable Front?
Futures gambling is the greatest rackt in the world.
Tt is just like a regular gambling house. The stake holder
always wins. 50 percent of the players always lose. B t
the winner and the loser pay the stake, holder on every
of the wheel. |
Many good people think futures gambling is a lem =,
mate business. They have been propagandized into th
idea that the playets are buying and selling actual com.
~ modities.
They have bear ee into believing i
when you buy cotton futures you are buying cotton, anc
that when you sell cotton futures you are selling cotto
This idea is purely a fiction. =
The public has been propagandized ait this idea
protect the stake holders who operate this gambling game,
Many Respectable People Play the Futures Game
Without Realizing They Are Simply Gambling
Lets take one concrete illustration:
_ During the fiscal year of 1940 on the Chicago Board
Trade alone the number of bushels of wheat Dowa he. an
sold was 6,849,940,000. ~~ =
The total Ww heat crop of the United ates | in 1940 was
less than 1,000,000,000 bushels, but the total wheat future
sold on. ihig one Exchange were nearly 7,000,000,000 bushels. -
The amount of wheat futures handled by the Kans
City Board of Trade was717,226,000, or substantially a
much wheat as we produced i in the United States. e
The amount of wheat futures handled by the Min
neapolis Chamber of Commerce was more than 539 000, 000.
_ bushels, or almost as much as our total wheat crop.
The wheat gamblers sold ten times as much wheat.
was produced in the United States. They sold twice as-
much wheat as there is for sale in twelve months in th
whole world. :
be There was no intention on the bari of the sellers ui th
- time these wheat futures were sold to deliver the wheat.
There was no intention on the part of the buyers to re
ceive or to accept the wheat. They were simply betting 0 on
the market.
If any proof of this is needed Revond your own com-
mon sense, here is the proof:
Only about one-third of one percent of the ae
futures sold are ever delivered. 300 bushels of wheat are
sold*on the floor of the exchange for each one bushel 0
wheat that is actually delivered. .
- All Courts Hold This Is Gambling fe
_ Every Court in the United States insofar as I have
been able to find out has made intention to deliver the act:
ual wheat the measuring rod to determine whether are s
contracts are gambling or legitimate trade.
In case after ease the Feder al Courts and the Stal
_ (Continued on bee Two) |
GEO RG [Ar
MARKET
Nircss all items S publi-
eation and all requests to be
put on the mailing list and for
change of address to STATE
UREAU OF MARKETS, 222
STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
- Notices ef farm produce and
appurtenences admissable un-
- postage regulattons insert-
ad.one time on each request
ey repeated only when re-
quest is accompanied by new |
> copy of notice.
Limited space wil not per-
mit insertion of notices con-
taining more than 30 words
including name and address.
Under. Legislaiive Act. the
eorgia Market Bulletin does
assume any responsibility
any notice appearing in
Bulletin.
shed Weekly at
1 122 Pace St Covington,
By Devariment of Agriculture
Tom Linder, Commissioner,
xecutive Office, State Capitol
Aflanta, Ga,
Publication Office
M4 hae Pace St Covington,
iforial ond Executive Offices
tate Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
tify on FORM 3578Bureau
Markets, 222 Siate Capitol
Filanta, Ga. -
Entered as second class matter
e ut Covington, Georgia, un-
er Act of June:6, 1900. Ac-
ted for mailing at special.
e of postage provided for in
Se Sor 1103, Act of October
-UTURES GAME
(Continued from Page One) |
Courts have held uniformly that the sale ict ie of
futures without intention to deliver the aetual commodity
8 gambling.
Cae have held uniformly that any debt contracted by
(Continued from Pare One)
mediately have floors, not ceilings, on farm crops
for 1944. The only possible hope for farmers to
produce enough food to prevent hunger, even:
with rigid rationing,
in this country, is floors
under the prices of farm crops.
When I say floors, I mean floors at an ad-
equate price to enable every farmer to hire all the
labor he ean get at whatever price it takes to hire
the labor,
When I say floors, IT mean floors announced
now, not when it is too lateto make acrop.
The government should now announce guar-
anteed floor prices under all farm crops at a)
figure that will encourage and enable the farmer
to Shir e all the labor he ean get to plant every acre
that he can possibly plant.
A Joseph Was Needed In The Years
That Have Gone
During the years, that have gone, we have
heard a lot of piffle about an ever normal grain-|
There is no such thing and no sane man
ery.
Weather con-
would advocate or ae ae TE:
{ditions make bumper crops some years and crop
failures some years.
During the good erop years that have just
gone by, the farmers should have been encouraged
to produce more, Any excess should have been
stored for the rainy day that is now upon us.
That is now water over the wheel. It is too
late to go back and rectify the foolish things that
were done in 1941-42-43.
It is not too late for the government to im+
mediately. announce guaranteed cash floors un-.
der all farm crops at. prices that will enable the
farmer to do the best that he can under existing
conditions.
There is no time to lose. The erop time of the
year isuponus. It is now or never.
Give The Farmer A Guaranteed Cash Floor Price
Give him plenty of seed. Give him plenty of
gasoline. Give him every possible plow, harrow,
tractor or any other farm equipment that can be
made available. Give him everything that is pos-
sible to give him and then, we will have a terribly
short crop this year, :
Congress Is The Only one Congress.
Alone Can Avoid Famine _
Any erop the farmer produees : this year will
| be ere expensive. At the very best he
do, his crop will be short. Any labor that he
hire will be very expensive. The farmer ca
possibly produce any crop this year at ceil
prices. Ceiling prices are far below the cost
production of any crop that he makes this ye
dt necessary for the farmer to know n
that he will receive a price for what he can p
duce that is in line with the cost of labor and tI
cost of supplies under wartime conditions. T
not a matter of the farmer making any mon
There is no chance for the farmer to make
money this year. The farmer would be better
from a selfish standpoint if he did not undert:
to hire labor. It is a matter of whether we
produce food to eat or not. It isa matter
whether we prefer O. P. A. ceilings and go h
ery or whether we prefer g guaranteed floor pe
with food, to eat.
The O. P. A. ceilings are simply ae oon
ments guarantee of cheap food to the eonsund
public. The farmer has no. guarantee of cos
yoluction. The time has now come when
farmer must have a guarantee on cost of prod
ion. Without such guarantee the farmer is fo
to curtail operations. If the government does
guarantee cost of production to the farmer
the government will not be able to guarantee
to the consuming public at any prices.
Congress Must Act
- No one ean do this except the Congress of f
United States. Congress can do it now if it w
It is a great pity that the people in the
of this country cannot understand this most se:
ous. situation which now confronts them in th
matter of food for the next 12 months.
It is entirely possible that a great many Se
ators and Congressmen do not themselves un
stand how serious the situation is,
It is entirely possible that they would.
a serious, determined effort to remedy existi
conditions if they did know. : ee
Wont you write your Senators and
gressmen today and tell them what the outloo
in your County for a 1944 crop?
If you will do this, do it today. | There's
a day to lose. ;
Write them how desperate the ipa
and ask for floor prices to be put under fa
crops immediately. Floor prices that will .ena
the farmer to produce these crops or as mu
them as he ean.
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agrienttn
LING
V
lost in trading in grain futures.
called especial attention to the people who were "dealir
these futures sales.
Judge Kenyon named some of these sartblers or dealk
in the farmers?
printing office, an insurance agent, a merchant, a Jaundi
mans wife, and an undertakers employee.
Is it not perfectly clear to any unbiased mind the
is purely a racket against the farmer for people who I
Federal Judge ise
products as: An ice dealer, an employee
a seller, buyer or broker, where actual delivery is not in-
tended, is a gambling debt and cannot be collected.
Futures Dealing Is A Racket Against the Farmer
_ Every one knows that the quotations on the New York
nd Ohicago Exchanges are the criterion for fixing the
value of the principal farm crops.
The amount of cotton, wheat and other crops offered
fox sale is the governing factor j in fixing these quotations.
df no one were allowed to sell cotton futures or wheat
futures except a farmer growing cotton or wheat, no one
could object,
___Even if you ailowed those who had purchased actual
tton or wheat for speculation to sell for future delivery
here would be no serious objection.
Ifa farmer growing cotton or wheat sold eotton or
heat for future delivery, he would intend to deliver the
same in accordance with his contract.
The man who bought eotton or wheat from a fitiner for
future delivery would expect to receive actual cotton or
heat. This would be a legitimate transaction.
_ When you throw the door wide open and permit any
nd every one who wants to bet on the market to sell the
ae short, you are simply running a racket at the farm-
expense,
In the case of DICKSON VS, UHLMANN GRAIN
OMPAN aS 288 U. S. 188, this as a suit to eoleet money,
no farm interest whatever to be selling the Farmers shor
the crops that the farmer grows? } -
The Uhlmann Grain Company lost its suit ve
customers because they were gambling debts. The Uni
States Supreme Court upheld Judge Kenyon i in his opin
The Uhlmann Grain Company dealt in grain, grain
vator, and grain brokerage business. All of this busi
was clearly. within the law. But, the Company also had
side line businessthat of dealing in FUTURES.
y hope that the special committee of the Congres
of South Carolina, appointed to investigate the mark
of farm products, will go fully into the matter of future
__. Nothing that Congress can do will be of more far re
ing importance to the Metners and white collar worker
this nation than the exposing of this futures racket. -
Nothing that Congress can do will be of more
benefit to agriculture and general business than pull
end to this gambling game.
This is a gambling game which crushes the inn
farmer who toils in the field.
The farmer is the victim of the ganie although he
not. oy in the game. ;
Let Congress abolish the Sutures racket NOW
TOM LINDER,
; Commissioner of g
Ww ee daffodils, a
0c $1, 50 C. $10.00 M. Yel-
. Single tiger lilies, |
= eae s 50 M. Mrs. Ruth)
Bremen,
ssi, Chinese sacred lily,
_ Tuberoses, 30 doz. FO,
Mrs. R. W. Wingo, Newman.
New giant art shades phlox,
mixed. New Dixie sunshine
marigold, dbl. lemon and or-
ange: red and yellow moss.
Giant. verbena, white, 10c pkt.
60c doz., $2.75 oa Paper Stamps accepted. Mrs. A. Hors-
Red.
oe in
Mittie
hite, 35c doz., $1.25
ler _ lilies. 60c doz.
0 checks. Miss
is, Smithville, Rt. 1.
ols. azaleas, iris, 50c doz.
yellow japonicas, dog-
pink almond, spider lil-
a SA Hemlock, white
[ "rhododendron, $1, 00 doz.
age. Mrs. Will Kinser,
ial perhene. scarlet,
pink, white, $2. 00 C. Dou-
err. 2 doz. $1.00
age n orders. less than $1.
Smith, Greenville,
ed, : 0 doz. _. Oriental
oD . 35c, $1.10 doz. 4 azalea
nes, 30c doz. Mrs. J. M.
Salhoun, Rt. 1. :
ite Easter lilies, red spider
s, blue grape hyacinths,
. airy lilies, 50c doz. oa
ms. dif. cols. 25c doz.
day lilies, snowdrops,
0 C. or $8.00 M. King Al-
daffodil, yellow narcissi,
C. Tiger lilies, 25c ea.
jostage. Mrs. Gussie Con-
ila Rica. Bt. 2.
cups large, double zinnia
10c cupful. If lot taken,
postpaig, money. or
Miss Lillian Hardin,
i t. Box 62.
sdenia cuttings, $2.00 C.
M. Camellia japonica
tings, single and double,
uk red and variegated, $3.00
Re R. F. Terrell, Green-
el w jonquil, butter and
bulbs, le ea. Catnip, 3 bu.,
neh: red verbena, 6 bu.,
e. Add postage. Miss Lena
mp, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
inger lilies, Bluebell, 30c
Trilliums, Jack-in-Pulpit,
ic doz. May Apple, 50c doz. bu.
olts Foot, 25c doz. Add post-
. James Walters,
land, Star Route.
artz and Elder daisies,
hite with yellow centers, blue
rennial asters, bloom in fall,
ixed azaleamums, all cols...
- doz. Catchfly, Physostegia.
vender, 25 doz. Others. Mrs.
E. Marshall, Reynolds.
irple lilac. 3-4 ft. Red
dbine, 3-4 ft. Pink oe
cluster rose, 3-4 ft. $1.
ple iris, 6; 25e. del, White
ach and pink mixed gladioli,
c doz. del. Mrs. Boyd Bag-
Douglasville, Rte,
doz. azaleamums, ee doz.
s Ladder, $1.15 C. Det.
iey order or cash. Mrs. H.
ret Atlanta, 160 How-
pit
ae a
nowball bushes, pink thrift,
c doz. Balm, catnin, 25 dos.
stamps. Mrs. D. M. Hollo-
Dahlonega, Red.
ushion chysanthemums,
red, $1.00 doz. Del. wu.
ller, Mountville.
Chrysanthemums slips, large
t.. 75 doz. small, 50c doz,
itd seed, 40 in. long, blue
man hyacinth bulbs, $1 doz.
B. Mrs. G. P. Nunn, Craw-
No
s althea plants, 10c ea.,
Te ea. over 25,.5 ea.
bir: Stockbridge.
E oy phlox, ageratum, ver-
, white violets, blue Span-
,- seve cols; fall. pinks,
oxglove. 30c doz. bun.
ter lilies, $1.00 C. or witi
. for print chicken feed
s. Add vostage on small or-
Miss L. M. White, Dah-
a, Rt. Box 35.
ple King iris, 20e doz.
Imond, 2, 20c. Pink peu-
e ea. All well rootee.
tage. Mrs. W. D. Tuck,
ijav, Rt, 3, Box 63.
ender Texas morning
ries, Jack beans, 10c doz.
rge dahlia zinnia seed, * luc
ul. Mrs. Elvira Chastain,
etta, RED.
ow on the Meant. 15
Mexican fire plant, potn-
fia plant, daisy and button
ns, 35 doz., or will exc., for
lia bulbs or angle wing or
steak begonia cuttings, Ada
tage oars Joseph Gibbs,
A perennial phiox, $1.00
2% doz. Cash with order.
: a ated violets, a
ee
ley, Waco, Rt. 2, Box 40.
Harmony marigold, Marigold
on Parade. large zinnias seed;
matchbox full. 25c ea. Add
postage. Mrs. Ethel Thurman,
Adairsville, Rt 2, ;
5 kind geranium cuttings, 4
cols. oxalis, salmon syltana
cuttings, rattail, round leat
eactus cuttings, black spotted
leaf cactus, all 10c, 20c ea.; or
6, $1.00. Larkspur, white, pur-
ple iris, Fe doz. Add postage.
Mrs. R. I. Williams, Cumming.
; Berennin -phiox, well rooted,
Ophiopogon, yooted. striped li-
lies, little redlilies, for sale, oz
will exc. for Sweet William,
snapdragons, stock plants that
will bloom this year. or prim-
roses, gladioli of dahlias. Mrs.
H. Thomas, Blakely.
Chrysanthemums, fieta-=
grown, red, wine, pink, purple,
other cols. Pompons, buttons,
Koreans, daisies, azalemums,
-assortment of 50, 51.28: PP:
Mrs. W. Z. Rooks, Arlington.
Snowballs, pink almonds,
purple lilac. 30c ea. Azaleas,
eee MiDS. pink crabapple,
60c doz. Blue iris, red and yel=
low japonicas, 25c ea. Butter-
fly bushes, 20c ea. Dark red
velvet roses, 25c ea. Add posi-
age. Mrs. Glen Moore, Ellijay,
Rt. 2, Box 94.
Cannas, yellow, 12, $1.00. Not
a than % doz. sold. Mrs.
. Thomas, Thomasboro.
Double aitheas, any col. 2 and
3 yrs. old, 20c ea: double al-
theas, any col. i yr. old, i0c ea:
Privet hedge, wel rooted, 15=30
in. English ivy, $1.00 C. Cedars,
2-3 ft. 40c ea. Mrs. Juanita
Driver, Rossville, Rt. 4, Shady
Lawn Dairy.
Small palms, 3, $1.00: 7, $z.
Small camphors, same price.
Small century plants, 75 ea. 3,
$1.25. Small coral vines, smatft
bana, $1.00 ea. S. M. Seboti,
Brunswick, e
Dahlias: 10 large asst. or 6
beize-winners, or 4 huge ex-.
hibition, $1.00. Gladioli, vu
mdium or 25 large, $1.00. 3
red, white or pink peonies, $1.
Sweet William candytuft, blue
phlox, blue ageratum, $1.0u
doz. Add postage. 10c exc. on
oe C. A. Dobbs, Gaines-
Vines 2 ay
Tall mixed col. poppy seed,
10c pkg. 20 doz. yellow lilies,
20 doz., in lots 3 doz. Fragrant
white Tilies, 3, 30. Perenntal
sunflower roots, 3 doz. 45c. Jon-
quils, 3 doz. 45c. All del. Mrs.
J. W. Hamm, Summit, Rt. 1
May narcissi, jonquils, 6a. 25
doz. Star of Bethelehem, Blue
grape hyacinths bulbs. 50 C.
or 500, $2.00. Miss Drucilla
Akins, Hartwell, tet te
Red, white, rose, wine, pink,
variegated, purple, lavender
verbena, 45c doz. Annual phlox,
gaillardia, 30c doz. No order
less than 50c. PP., in Ga. No
stamps. Mrs. M. P. . Combs,1
Washington, Rt. 2.
50 English dwarf boxwoods,
8 in. 30 ea. Latge pink weige-
lia, 3 ft. $2.00. Purple violets,
Lady O Lake, $1.00 C., old-
qd, 2 doz. bunches; 45c. Mrs.
E. B. Thornton, Bremen.
Jonquils and narcissi, 80c .
Add postage. Miss Lois James,
Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Mixed cols. larkspur plants,
110c doz. $1.00 C. Mrs. Cordelia
Deasee, Rex, Rex Road.
Blue ageratum, purple, dark,
light blue, yellow iris; bronze,
red, yellow and orange spotted
cannas, 50e doz. 2 doz. 50c. Dou-
ble tigee lilies, calamus, 30c &a.,
2, 50c. Mrs. J. B. Brarinan, Mc
Dorough. Rt. 2.
_ Corapact boxwood. 6-8 in. $1.
doz. Scarlet red verbena, $2.00
C. Bridal wreath, white English
dogwood, white spirea,. yellow
jasmine, red cydonica, japonica,
vardenia, 1 of ea. rooted, $2.00.
Cannas, $1.00 doz. Mrs. C. M.
Robinson, Greenville.
Rhododendron, mtn. laures,
1ed and white dogwood, rec-
buds, red maples, blooming
crabapple, holly. azalea, all 3-
4 ft., $1.00 doz. Mrs. Ethel
Chastain, Morganton, Hieis
Double tuberoses, ever-bear-
ing single ftuberose bulbs, 36
dez. Blooming size gladioli, 5Uc
doz. bublets, 15e doz. Gladioi
seed, 10c tbisp. Postpaid. Mrs.
Cc. W. Matthews, Woodland.
12 dabeled iris, $1.00. Many
colors. Wirs. W. W. a
x
"| Adairsville, Iris Hill,
S
| Others.
fashioned pink and purple mix-,
Daffodil bulbs,
cream wax, 50 doz, $2550,
Red maple, white spirea, lemon
lilies, purple lilac, watermelon
|red crepe myrtle, 5, $1.00. Mrs.
CoB: Robinson, Bowdon, Ras 2;
White narcissi, yellow jon-
quils, orange day lilies, 75c C.
UC. 7eas 5. 2he, Add postage.
3, 20e. Purple foxglove, yellow
butte reup, butter and eggs, 15
doz. pink -almond. pink althea,
Mrs. Will James, Hui-
jay, Rt. 3.
Bridal wreath, 60c doz. Pink
Dorothy Perkins roses, well-
rooted, 10c ea. Red spider lily,
25 doz. Mrs. W. E. Partaan,
Middleton, Rt. 1. -
_Rhododendrons, arbut ts,
Salax, calico bushes, azalas,
hemlock, laurel, spruce, white
pine, fern, dogwood, holly, sil-
ver maples. Others. Wet moss
packed. Special quantity
offer. Gordon Hunnicutt, =
lulah Falls.
Flaming red President can-
nas, $3.00 C. Yellow narcissi,
$1.00 C. White daisy mums,
pink verbena, 35c doz. $1.00
orders. PP. ee W. Seago,
Pinehurst.
Va.\ereeper, evergreen vinca,.
purple and white wisteria, red
hibiscus, Dusty Miller, nandina,
Dorothy Perkins roses, $1.00
doz. for above plants. Century
plants, 20c ea. Add postage.
Will exc. Write. Mrs. D. F.
Sheppard, Daisy.
- Yellow thornless rose, 4-6 ft.
high, 50c. White lilac, 4 ft. 20e,
2, 75. Pink wisteria, 10c, 56.
Star Jasmine, 5, 40c, white or
yellow. Flowering sweetpeas, 4
i $1.00. L. Coggin, Coving-
on. 2
\ Mums, chrysan themums,
Lady of Lake, $1.25 C. House-
leek, 3, 25t. Peppermint, 50c
doz. Star eircle, 25 ea. red
Jerusalem artichokes, $1.25 C.
Lemon lilies, blue iris, $1.50 C.
Jonquils, narcissi, $1.25 C. Oth-
ers, Mrs. E. B. Carroll, Bre-
lmen, Rt. 2, Box 188.
Dahlia bulbs, Jargest var.
Jane Cowl. World, Marygrace,
Kemps White, Robt. L. Ripley,
Kathleen Norris, Murphys
Masterbdiece, others, $1.65 doz.
rae Mrs. Josie Hopper, Clay-
on
Blue hyacinths. 75 doz. _Rea
spider lily, $1.00 doz. Whiteand
yellow jonquils, double btitter
and egss, long trumpet daffod-
75 doz. Miss Cecil McCurley,
Hartwell, Rt. 2. =
Easter lily bulbs, white and
blue, orange tree cuttings. 50c
ea. Well rooted fig bushes, 50c
ea. Exc, Easter bulbs for print
chicken feed sacks or 5e ea,
Exe. for other cuttings or for
print sacks. No orders for less
than 12. Annette. _Fulghum,
Douglasville. ;
2 double pink seraniums, 50c
$1.00 doz. All PP. Want to buy
Royal Poinciana plant, well
rooted. about 2 ft. high. Mrs.
Florence Robinson, Jackson.
Beauiful green boxwood
plants, field-srown, round,
compact, 8-10 in. above sround.
25 ea. 12 to 15 ih. 30c ea. Crepe
myrtle, double white Kerria ja-
poniea, Anthony Waterer spirea
$2.00 doz. Garenias,. 2-3 ft,
75c ea Mrs. B. L. Robinson,
Greenville.
Several-hundred old-fashion=
ed white iris bulbs fer sale, or
will exe. for old-fashioned blue
iris bulbs. H. K. Drake, College
Park, 431 E. Cambridge Ave.
Phone Ca 4358.
Tame honeysuckle vines, 3,
25e. Red, Editor, MeFarland
roses, 3, 40c. Sweetshrubs, 3,
20e. Purple Ylags, 80c doz., or
exc. for anything I can use.
R. 1, Box 36.
Double day lilies, blue and
Javender iris, orange and white
mums, pink foxglove, golden-
glow. 35c doz.| Small red* bloom
iris, 75c doz. Peach gladioli, 5ue
doz. Pink and red spirea, Fors-
ythia, 39c ea Add postage. Mrs.
Pearl Garrett, Ellijay, Rt. 8.
White narcissi, 40c doz. Blue
grape hyacinths, 50c C., 500, $2.
Mrs. Joel Bobo, Hartwell, Rt. 1.
Catapla. Scoteh Broom, Avr-
borvitae for sale cheaps or will
exc, for colored feed sacks. 25
kinds cactus for sale. Mrs. L. H.
Coe, Eastanollee.
* Assorted chrysanthemums,
button, pompon, Loreans, large
type, azalea mums, 75c doz. Add
postage. Mrs. .C. HH. Farrar,
Jenkinsburg.
Want 1 or 2 old fashioned
Wioss roses, any col., well root-
ed. Write first and quote price,
balled and burlaped. R. L. O2z-
more, Colquitt.
yw
Emperor, |.
Evergreen, yellow jasmine vine,
lot
| for $1.00 PP.,
ils, $1.25 C. Yellow larkspur,
ea, Small mixed althea planss,
Miss Bessie Lee Smith, Oconee,
Perennial eee phlox, 250
large clump. Poppies, larkspur,
mix. cols, 10c doz. Pink and:
red spirea, Forsythia, 10c
| Rooted and damp packed. Ex
|for printed or col.
\Ib. cap. Add postage under $1,
Mrs. Carl Kimsey, Hiawassee.
Giant asters, blue salvia, 40c
doz. Snapdragon, stock, perer=-
nial ageratum, marigold, rose
petunias, feverfw, foxglove.
zinnias, giant pompon. 85c doz.
Mixed chrysanthemums, 50,
$1.00. Mrs. Will Wise, Wadley.
Sweetshrubs, all cols. azaleas,
arrowwood, crabapple, rea
maple, dogwood, snowball, 50
vdoz,, well rooted. Lilac, 10c ea.
Add postage. Mrs. D. H. Evans,
Taiona.
Oxalis, physostegia, Queen
Anns Lace, Drummond phidx,
medium sized tuberose bulbs,
25c doz. Gen. lemon lilies,
Ophiopogon, 35c doz. Mums,
20c, 25c, 35c, 50c doz. Orders
in Cal Myscd. G.
Robertson, Carrollton.
Yellow chrysanthemum
plants, all over 4 in. high, 20c
doz. Good and healthy. Yellow
jonquil plants, 15 doz. No
COD orders. Iva-~ Williams,
Paavo, Rt. 22
Lemon, orange and tiger lilies,
25e doz. White oxalis, Star of
Bethlehem, rainbow moss and
running lace fern, 25c doz. Lav-=
ender spike Ophipadum, $1.00
Cu Add -nostate. Mrs: .O. -S,
Fields, Thomasville, 407. N.
Madison Street.
Yellow root, 10c bunch.
Tansy; 2, 25c. ea. Sweetgum |
bushes, 10 ea. Hazlenut bushes
$1.25 doz. Crepe myrtle, 25c
ea. Muscadine vines, $1.25 doz.
Box 123. Q
Azaleamums, cameo pink,
75 doz. Double erange day li=
lies, 50 doz. Butter and eg,
daffodil bulbs, 75c C. Add post-}
age. No stamps or checks. Mrs.
M. T. Tanner, Sandersville.
Giant snapdragon _ plants,
rose, pink, white, canary, sal-
mon, ros, ruby and mixed,
Frost=proof, wilt-resistant, 3
doz. $1.00. Add postage. Mrs.
Scott Davis, Hogansville. -
Pink thrift plants, good roots,
$100 C,,; $3:00..5 CC, $5.00 Mx
Mrs. G. G. Grizzle, Cumming, -
Coreopsis, Dusty Miller,
pllox, all dls. -15 doz, 2 doz.
25e; Add postage. Mrs. C. W.
Davis, Toomsboro, Rt. 2. :
Bird of Paradise, $1.00 ea.
White and yellow jonquils, dou-
ble butter and eggs, long trum-~
pet daffodils, $1.00 C. Blue
single hyacinths, 75c doz. Pep-
permint plants, 50c doz. Miss
gs McCurley, Hartwell, Rt.
Anemones, 50, $1.00. Shasta
daisies, Calif. violets, $1.00 C.
5 dif. types violets, blue, white,
yellow. birdsfoot, Calif. $1.00.
Emperor | daffodils, Poeticus
narcissi, $2.00 C.| Aithea, dog-
wood. azalea, bronze lilies, $1.
doz. Mrs. Addie oe Mor-
ganton.
Easter lily bulbs, 15 doz.
Buttercup, 20c doz. Magnolia,
shortleaf pine, red Holly, red
cedar, sweet myrtle, huckleber-
ries, soos@berries, crabapple,
plackshaw, 1 ft. 10c, 3 ft. 25: 4
ft. 35e: 5 ft. 45. Add postage.
Mrs. Jarnes Connell, Tooms-
boro. :
Extra nice~ rooted privet
hedge, 1 to 3 ft. high. Mrs. R.
H. Clark, Gainesville, Rt. 7.
All cols. azaleas, purple and
yellow iris, 50c doz. Phlox, 30
doz. Indianarrow. 75e doz; lilac,
spider lilies, 25c ea. No checks.
Add postage. Mrs. L. M. Tea-
sue, Elijay. Rt. 2. |
Red and yellow dahlia bulbs,
10e ea. Red, bronze and pink
gladioli,
ea. bunch. Sweet William, 25
doz. Red. white and yellow
pinks, 25c doz. Add postage.
Mrs. Hoyt Tippins, Talking
Rock, Rt. 2
Yellow, white, blue, varie-
gated and Calif. violets, snow-
drops, $1.00 C. 6 vars. ferns,
$1.00 doz.| Pink anemones. $2.00
C. Shasta daisies. $1.00 GC. Ar-
butus. mums, summer lilac, pit-
cher plant, others. 50c doz. Mrs.
J. H. Penland, Ellijay.
Double President Red canna,
with bronze foliage, 50c doz..
$3.00 C. All del. Dark laven-
der chrysanthemums, 50c doz.,
75 2 doz. Del. Mrs. Lois Pitts,
Smithville,
Grape and other bgonias.
20c ea. Boston, Sprengeri and
other ferns, 25c. Star of Beth-
lehem, 30e C. Double red ger-
anium- cuttings, I5e ea. Pink
ther water moss, 6, 25c. Mrs.
sacks, 100.
Mis. Leona King, Waco, Rt. 2,].
Add
50c doz. Verbena, 10c |,
pond lilies. 75 ea. Parrot fea- |
Mamie Stone, Adairsville, Rte 2,
__ Water lilies, 2,
lilies, $1. 00 doz. 3
Boe Dahlonega, R
Double guttadiige 3
cissi, yellow narciss
Cheap by thousand.
ae $1.00 C. Snow
Blue and whit
Tein 50e doz. ixer
fashioned gladioli, 25 doz
oe Hughey, Baa i
Well rooted HEniBae
shrubs, 50c doz.
ivy.
japonicas, lilac, tiles
Yellowroot, 20c doz. aha 10.
age. Mrs. Leola Evans, alo:
Mixed cols. azalea
Sweet William, 5
and | yellow. ia
lias,
Red
apple, . donwood: 0c
postage. Mrs. LF;
lona.
Red cedar, red holly, . ;
nolia, teadlive. shortleat- pi
Easter lily bulbs, 20c d
postage. 1 to 5 ft. 10c
No checks. Will exc. for Ww
sacks. Mrs. David ie!
Toomsboro, Rt. 3. .
ai
White and spruce
wood, mtn. laurel,
White and purple itis
and yellow fall. pinks, 60c
Althea, almond, 10c ea. ~
apple. red maple. 75 do
leas, 45c doz. Add ppstage
Matide Farist, Ellijay, Rt:
Margaret McGredy red
50c for 3. Jonauil b
doz.. Lavender flags, 30c
for print feed sacks. Mis:
tie Moultrie, Oconee, ae Qok
75, 2
American Beaty. rose.
cols. azaleas. dogwood. re
ple, butterfly, redbud. alt
laurels. crabapple, $1.0 =
Spreading juniper, sil
borvitae. 14. in. 3, $1.0
mones.. shasta daisies. p
phlox. $1.00 C. sadis
Blue Ridge.
Red holly, red cedar, m
lias. blaek haw, shortle
Easter lily ~ bulbs, Y
bulbs. buttercup bulbs, 20
Huckleberry, crabapple, 1
ft. 10c, 20c. 45. Will exe.
sacks. No checks., Add post
> Dee Colson, 0
Rit.3 3)
Cannas: President Red. i
Humbert, yellow and A
variegated, $3.00 -C.
daisies, 50c doz. Well
white wisteria, milk an
lilies, $1.00 doz. Mrs.
Camp, Cordele.
Double and single ora ge
es; 75eC,
doz. Add postage, Mrs.
Thomas, Adairsville.
Hatdy rose and pink
goldenglow, 25 doz.
pink .almond?20c ea. Dogw
pink crabapple, swamp |
wood laurel,
doz. Add postage.
Waddell, Eliiiay, Rt.
meet kao oak
esh col. daisy mums, 75
Montbreethia planta ae d
Red spider lily patee 40 do
Early light blue iris, 6
Royal Poinciana seed, 1
postage. Miss
Plant, Marshallyille.
age, 25c doz. Levee -
nias, mixed cols., 25 doz. As
ters, 35 doz. Make ord rs_ f
at least 50. Mrs. oy th
son, Valdosta, Rt. Vee
Mammoth pompon
zinnia seed, 10c . pkg.
large mums, Ageratum,
dias. double eamillia, b
25 doz. Oxalis, verbena,
5c. Cushion cactus. geranium
10 ea. Others. Mrs. W.
Lewis, Toomsboro.
Red geraniums, pink a
begonia, well branched, 5!
Sweet William, pink for F
nots, perennial white _candy-
tuft, 50e doz. No order le
than 50c. Moss packed
EF. M. Combs, Washing
Hedge plants, $6.00 C
wisteria, $1.50 doz. Runn
English ivy. $1.50 doz. Ora
day lilies. $1.00 doz... Pt
iris. 75e doz, m3
del. ivi
Rt: 2, Box 136.
King Alfred dafodil bu
50c doz. Double daffodils,
doz. ai 00 ar Jonquil -
75c C., $4.00 M - April
Charles B. Tanner,
ville, Rt. 1.
Several vars. narcissi
arate vats. ratun
doz. Assorted o!s, it
Mrs. E.C. Heaton, , Hariwel
1 ,)
0 ee from 2 ft. is _ tt.
oe to 10 i ee
ast
gail violets. wild iris, 75
$6.00 M. Pink almonds,
lilac, yellow and red
25e. "Flowering- quince,
Add postage. Mrs.
arks. Ellijay, - Rio ot
ferent vars. iris, mixed,
$1.50 C= Myrtle vine; light
: violets, 40c C. Double and
daffodils, butter and
arcissi, double and single
orange Hemerocallis. 60c a
-s, Mrs. Henry Eller, Elli-
fey Rt. 3. S
re nge- day lilies. Star of
hlehem, leopard lilies, white
60c GC, Goldenbell,
ubs; _ azaleas,, pink |
hibiscus, dogwood,
ree rose, 2, 25c. Purple
wild iris. 25c doz. Add
Miss Erma Henderson,
Ww HS poxwood . cuttings,
i dahlia bulbs, iris, for
a will exc. for print sacks,
lred, Esom Hill, Rt. 1.
cols. fall pinks, fox~
i and blue fall
Sad. 300 doz. Lemon
( iss double and |
Tee 3 eS
75e C.|5-
ish dog ood, pink hardy hi-
2, 25c. Purple foxglove,
d lilies, 40c doz. Others.
postage. Mrs. Manda Hen-
n, Ellijay, Rt. ae :
winning chrysanthe-
Geoies Anemones, buttons,
48 plants labeled, $2.
alabeled. $2.00. PP. Mrs.
: Woods, Donalsonville.
labeled iris, 5c ea., mixed,
Cy Fall ploomers, 20c, 7
fferent, $1.20. White calla
-20c and $1.00. Blue Au-.
lies, .10c, $1.00 doz.
yn. verbena, pink yarrow,
i loz. Add postage. Mrs. S.
E unter, 1 Lawrenceville, RFD.
110: hyacinths, 2 doz. 25c.
ders, 15c ea., or $1.00
Add postage. Mrs. GC;
; Buchanan, teh 2:
sey-Nerine, red spider
bs, bright red, 25c ea. 3,
d postage. Miss Clit-
es oO poe
lismes Dink - varie-
. $1.00 doz. New
rine, 15c ea. Mrs. W. H.
| Gainesville, Pt = 6.
3 cols. ong. 10c ines
Docia Harris, ai
Snow on Mountain,
lag lilies, 30c doz. Red
eS, sweeishrubs. 3, Be
oe Red vahhas be
es tole Mit-
aniok verbena, de
BcIris; oe sel
a oo cae Rock.
vines, 4. 50c. Red and |
rbena, 40 doz. aay
e plants well Seooiad
2 size, $2. 25 for 200.
de p eee son. Blue
< 4ris,- mixed cannas,-
- and eggs, jonquils, pur-
i oh 1S yellow chrysanthe-
r sale or will exc. for
, all. cols: lilac. japoni-
ias, white chrysanthe-
an iris, Fa. pax postage.
Bullington, Rebecca,
Aeerees, white mums,
Belts ahs Brown,
pieliat plcse 2 yrs. plants,
00 doz. Cape jasmines, 2 yrs.
_PP.. in Ga, Mrs.
PauCe
| dOZ.-
| wood,
Red and yellow
snowballs, lilac, Bridal Wreath.
| English dogwood, boxwood, 25c
lea. Red, white and yellow, oth-
er cols. dahlias, mixed azaleas,
75c doz. Add postage. Mrs. May
Bell Wright, Talona. ;
Purple lotus, Jemon lilies,
arrowwood, azaleas, dogwood,
crabapple,. sweetshrub, 75e doz:
Yellow japonicas, hododen-
red Star of Bethlehem. spirea,
butterfly bush, 20c ea. PP. Mrs.
J22B: Williams, Ellijay, Ri.
spruce pine, rhododendron, $1.
doz.. Dogwood, azaleas, iris,
crabapple, ~ goldenbell,
pinks, chrysanthemums,. ~50c
peas Lilac, monthly roses, 20c
Add postage. Mrs.- &. C.
Teague, Ellijay, tes
Rhododendron, mountain
laurel, white and spruce pines,
$1.00 doz. Dogwood, azalea,
iris. ecrabapple, goldenbell, fall
pinks, chrysanthemums, 50c
doz. Lilac. roses, 20c ea. Add
postage:. Mrs: <J--By Hensley,
Ellijay, Rt. 2.
Christmas cactus, oil run-
ning rose bushes, 20c cutting.
Catnip, 40c bunch. Cannas, 10c
ea. White yucca grass, Zebra
rerass, =-40. bunch. PP. Mrs:
Otis Mashburn Cumming, oh
Red
25e ea.
Snowdrop.
Arborvitaes, 20c. ea.
jonqul, orange li-
jlies, 75c C. Red dogwood. aza-
lea,
90 -doz. PP. Mrs. Cora
Lingerfelt, Loving.
Large cuaatlin: top size mix-
ed gladioli bulbs for sale cheap
or will exc. for other flowers
or shrubbery. Prefer magnolias,
or camellia japonicas. Mrs.
M. Erwin, Adairsville, Rie 2
- Wild Easter lilies, Star of
|Bethlehem, wild lavender and
purple verbena, 15c doz. $1.00
.
exc. | sacks.
Mrs. T. K. Womack, Dublin, Rt.
4.
wedium sized Gane Sine
doz. Mixed cols. hardy
~phlox, mix. cols. fall pinks, pink
thrift. goldenglow, 25e doz. 2 of
ea. Tiger lilies, lily of the val-
ley, tulips, ~ gladidli, red hot
poker, Spanish iris, cream,. and
blue ris; 75c. Others. Mrs.
Willis Grindle, Daleners Rt.
de
Red, purple, and pink Ver-
Bena, well rooted, 30c doz. Add
postage; also want Beefsteak,
and Cringleleaf begonias, and
some dbl. salmon col. geran-
iums. Mrs. Minnie Malphus,
| Tusculum.
- Lemon lilies, white, yellow
daffodils, bronze yellow mums,
white baby button mums, ead.
$1.25 C; royal blue King iris,
$1.50 C: butter and eggs. ver-
benas, 35c doz; goldenglow, 50c
doz: rose col. hibiscus, 3 tof-o5e
Stamps. accepted. Martha Wo-
unack, Bremen, Rt. 2, Box 89.
Trillium, peniiarr qack-in- the
pulpit, sweet violets, dif. col.
water lilies, 30c doz: lemon,
| tiger, blackberry and dbl. or-
ange lilies, 6, 50c} hardy hy-
drangea, hibiscus, 2 for 25c.
Moss packed. Mrs. M. 1. Eaton,
| Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
' Dahlias, named, mix. col.,
$1.25 doz. or exc. for large type,
bloom-only gladioli bulbs,
white, pink, yellow, lavender:
1 dahlia for 4 blooming size
glads: dbl. tube rose, small, 35c
Mrs lL. E Stewart, Mc-
Donough, Rt. 3.
Rhododendrons, Mtn. Tras:
hemlocks, redbud, pink Chero-
| kee roses, tulip, poplars, erab-
apples, dogwoods, yellow
thornless roses, flowering peach
trees. silver maples, white pine.
| strawberry bush, azaleas, 3 ft.
$1.00 doz. snowdrons, narcis-
sus, $2.00 C. Mrs. Gladys Rodp- |
inson, Mineral Bluff.
Mtn. laurel,
red and yellow azaleas, straw-
berry bush, tulip, poplars, dog-
hemlock. silver maple,
pink Cherokee SB rcs
ples. redbuds, ft. $1.00 doz.
Narcissi, aoe aeons. $2.00. C.
Mrs. _Bonnie Abercrombie,
d | Mineral Bluff.
- Jonquils, 15c doz. Double
butter and eggs, 35c doz. But-
tercups, whysostegia, 25c doz.
running vinca, 3. 25. Ribbon
grass. 10c ea. Althea, white ae
pink, 10c to 25c ea. Add post
{one Mrs. Henry Jarrell, But-
Jer. Rt. 2..
Purple rooted lilae, 25e. Large
purvle dahlia, double, 15c ea.
.| Large bronze chrysanthemums.
double, 10c ea. All del. Mrs.
_JElsie Patterson, Waco, Rt. 2.
japonicas,
7 Lae
dron, Sweet William, pink and
= Mountain Jaurel, white ne
fall:
Large type chryganthemums,.
yellow and white, 35c doz. Vi- |.
| vian Gable, Brooks, Box 104.
| $1.25 doz. Mrs.
japonicas, white ilies, ;
-Spirea, pink Dorothy Per-.
_kins rose, 20c ea. rooted, or will:
Add postage.
mhedodendron. ;
crabap- :
Goer English dwt
boxwoods, 8 in. and 10. in.
field-grown, $2.00 doz., $20.00
C. Red crepe myrtle, white
Kerria japonicas, $2. 00 doz.
Want to exc. evergreen red
flowering magnolias for any
\breed 1 yr. old hens, now lay-
Ini _Green-
ville, d
12 mixed iris, blue and _yel-
TOME 25c doz. Day lilies, single
or double, 25c. Single blue Ro-
Maude Hamby,
Mixed jonquils, daffodils, nar-
cissi, other bulbs, $1.00. C.
White and blue striped violets,
25c C. Add postage. Miss Mary
C. Florence, Durand.
Buttercups, hardy phlox, -85c
doz.| Blue August lilies. 3, 50c.
.White violets,
plants, 30c doz. Mixed iris, 75c
doz. Ancel Grindle, Dahlonega,
Rik.
25 heavy. well rooted, old
| English dwarf boxwood, 6 to 8
in. 15c ea, 25, Same var. 8-to
10 in. 25c ea. Well rooted Eng-
lish ivy. $1.00 doz., $5.00 C.
Ligustrum.
Woodruff, Greenville. e
Marshall pink ,Avelon, best
white, Treasure Island, Sweet-
heart, Waner, Kentucky, Pride
of Calif. Elite Glory. others,
H. H. Gils-
trap, Suwanee.
Physostegia. 25c doz. or 2 doz.
platis.- 45e.5 PP. Mise.
Whitfield, Jasper, Rt. 3.
lar, elm, yucca, white dogwood,
magnolia, 25c and 50c. Dorothy
Perkins rose, red or white; wa-
termelon crepe myrtle,
roses, 20c ea. Yellow jasmine,
honeysuckle, woodbine, 10c ea.
Others. Mrs. Wm. E. Buch,
Helena, Rt. 1. :
Yellow button daisy mums,
Mexican fire, Poinsettia plants,
35e doz. Snow on Mountain,
15c doz. Exc. for Angle Wing,
speckled leaf or beafsteak ber
gonias, or sprouted dahlia
bulbs. Mrs. Joseph Gibbs, oo
beeca, ie q
Yellow Easter rose,_ Serie
lilac, pink Christmas cactus, 15c
ea. Purple Easter iris, blue
June lilies, tuberoses, 80c doz.
-boryitaes. Mattie Duram Cum-
ming. Rt. t:
Asters:
zinnias, Calif. -giants, -35c doz.
Snapdragons, mixed cols.
Queen Anne's Lace, marigolds,
odorless foliage, 25c doz. Car-
nations, foo giants, 60c doz.
PP. Mrs, J. F. Haddan, Doe-
PUI :
All cols., iris, paper white
narcissi, 50ec C.. All cols. aza-
Jeas, red and white dogwood,
Japonicas, crabapple, water
moss packed, 50c doz. Mrs.
Florence Heaton, Mineral Bluff.
Mixed cols. hardy phlox,
gladioli, 30 doz... White and
light blue violets, 50 C. Double
and single orange Hemerocallis,
jonquils, single and double datf-
fodils, myrtle vine. 60c C. 3
cols. iris, 35c doz. Others. Mrs.
Doyle Eller, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Red, white and blue petuni&t
plants mixed, 15c doz. or 5 doz,
fors50c. Pro he. Re Daniel,
Thomaston, Rt. 3. So
White and spruce pine, dog-
\
|} wood, crabapple, 75c doz. Aza-
Jeas, red maple, 45c doz. Pink
Seven-sister rose. Weeping
Mary, 10c ea. Trailing ogbutus,
eatnip, 25 doz. Add postage.
Rt 2 Gertrude Reece, Ellijay,
Be i +
Several rooted bunches um-
brella plant, 15e bunch. 3 root-
ed cuttings Fishtail fern, 25c ea.
Christmas cactus cuttings, 10c
ea. Add postage. No stamps.
Miss Thelma McGinnis, Tilton.
Large type. short stemmed.
mixed cols. gladioli ~ bulbs,
blooming size, 50c doz. White
shaggy mums, 40c doz.
William plants, all cols,
5e<
Riso: =
chr ysanthe- | J
3 doz.
Prize-winning
cluding Prince . Albatross,
Friendly Rival, Monuments,
yellow and white and others,
10c to 20c ea. Instructions for
growing upon fYrequest. Mrs.
Marvin Farrar. Jenkinsburg.
Red maple, dogwood, erabap-
ple, sweetshrubs. 60c doz. Ar-
rowwood, 75c doz. Goldenbell,
25c ea. All cols. azaleas,
doz. Add postage. Mrs. J. B.
Farist, Oak Hill.
Carnations, dianthus, double
Sweet William. calendulas, fey-
nias, double larkspur,
dragons, asters, 35c doz.
snap-
JE. L. Smith, Wadley.
Mrs.
man hyacinths, 75c doz. $5500-6=
pepperment
$3.50 C. Blanche
Red maple, holly, tulip pop- |
velvet
grape hyacinths, 25c doz. Pink
Globe shaped boxwoods and ar- |
| arborvitaes,
Rosy Morn petunias,
Cherokee roses, pink and red.
Sweet |
Miss Beulah Frey, Dallas,
mums, all types and cols, in-}
50
erfew, Queen Anns Lace, vetu- /25
Pink - hydrania __ cuttings,
white with red center, hibiscus
slips, 10c ea. Cane jew, Minor
trailing vines, medium leaf
green Wandering Jew,- Dusty
Miller, 4, 10c. Want some solid
white narcissi. Miss , tB.
Moore, Suwanee. eee
Daffodils, Star of. Bethichenk.
tame sweet violets, orange day
liltes;=65 =; Snowballs.. pur-
ple and pink altheas, Forsythia,
Weeping Mary, 2. 25c. Box-
woods,\ 25 ea. Pink hardy hi-
biscus, pink almond, 2, 25c.
Others. Add postage. Mrs. Mat-
tie Henderson, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Rhododendron, mtn. laurel,
white pine; $1.00 doz. All cols.
azaleas, spider lilies, iris, 50c
doz. Crabapple, dogwood, lilac,
25c ea. Add postage. Will exe.
for box flowers. Mrs. C. W.
Plumley, Ellijay, Rt. 2, Box 88.
- Purple. and ~ pink altheas,
white English dogwood, yellow
jasmine, Goldenbell, Bridal
Wreath, purple Lilac, butterfly
bush, 1 of ea. for $1.00 or 2 for
25c. Star of Bethlehem, purple
foxglove, 75c C. Others. Add
postage. Mrs. Nancy Hender-
son. Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box 49 Fs:
Orange day lilies, 15c ea. or
12, $1.00. Honeysuckle, 10 ea.
or 19 for 75c. Old field balm.
15e bunch, or 12. $1.00, or will
exc. for half-runner striped
-100-lb. cap. Add postage. Money
order. Mrs. J. E. Sorrels, Roys-
| ton, RFD.
Blue hyacinths, all cols. Sweet
William. red, and yellow and
white dahlias, all 75e doz. slips.
Candle lilies, red and yellow,
$1.00 doz. Boxwoods, 20c ea.
Purple and variegated lantanas,
15e ea. Others-: Mrs. Lucy
Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
Pink and blue hydrangea,
ete: red and pink geraniums.
Guinea wing,: red and pink
conch begonias, rainbow moss,
orange and pink sultana; 10c
ea. or 2, 15c. Double petunias,
10c. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin.
Morn, Blacony, white and blue,
blood and rosy red _ petunias,
asters, white feverfew, salvia,
red thrift, 50c doz. a Mrs.
C. C. Lynch, Rome, Rt: 1.
Moss roses, 4, 50c. Box-
woods. dwarf. $2.00 ea. Silver
$1.00 ea.
spur. 10e doz. Violets, 50c doz.
globe arborvitaes. 5c ea. Col-|
lection roses. 8, $1.00: Mrs. W.
| M. Garren, Morganton.
400. ligustrums. 10-15 in. $8.50.
300 cherry laurels, 3-6 in. $2.50.
200 English ivy, $4.50. 150
vinea minor, $1.60. Crepe myr-
tle. flowering quince, Forsythia,
yellow Kerris, $1.00 doz. Lois
Woodruff. Greenville, is 5s
_ Yellow and white jonquils,
long trumpet daffodils. double
$1.00 C. Yellow perennial
eee 75c doz. Nora Mc-
Curley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Mixed petunia seed, mixed
cosmos seed, 15 spoonfuw. Mix-
ed gourd seed, 10c spoonful.
Uae: - John. Weve: Buchanan.
ve
Mies well rooted sds
6-12 in. talf: 20 ea.; candle
lilies, red and yellow, $1.00
doz.: purple iris, same price:
Jacob's Ladder, $1.00 doz.:
and geraniums, 15c ea. Mrs.
_ Star of Bethlehem, 15c doz.:
25c: horseradish, 15c ea., 2 for
25c. well rooted: pink crepe
myrtle, 25c ea., well rooted
goldenrod, 25c ea., winter jas-
mine, 2 for 25c. Mrs. B.
Osborn, Roy. :
Hedge plants, 12 in. high,
crabapple, red maple. dogwood,
all col. azaleas, rooted. 45c doz.:
yellow root plants, 20c doz.:
Add postage. Mrs. Ira Smith.
Cartecay.
Laurel, dowwood. umbrella
opine, Hi ft. 10c., 3 ft., 30c: 4 ft.,
c
2 GOL onc. Exe. for printed
sacks or anything can\use. Mrs.
. L. Cannon, Dublin, Rt. 1s
. White paper narcissi, $1. 00 C.
Yellow jonquils, same price.
All large bulbs.
Mrs. Joe Smith. erenien: Rie 2.
Box. 85.
Pink, a ue verbena, pink
-yarrow, var. fine mums, per-
ennial hardy blue asters, pink |
oxalis, Lady of Lake for sale
at mv home. No mail orders:
Mrs. B. H. Carter, 35 Weyman
VAVe, S. W.. Ja 0268W.
. Potunias, Dianthus, Sweet
Wiha: Snowe on Mountain,
Ce ralt pinks. chrysanthe-
mums, 50e C. Mint, 25 C.
Add 5c postage,
elie Hovere Rt.
}
oe EIS:
bean seed or white feed sacks.
Giant mixed verbna, snap-_
dragons, pompon zinnias, Rosy
POT ey:
ee and eggs; yellow narcis-.
purple and variegated lantana,
Mae Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6..
Easter. lily bulbs, 20c doz. |
Add postage.
White a blue oles
and cream flags, yellow dot
and single jonquils, pine
water lilies, fishtails,
Mrs. EE
Yellow and purple iris
prize-winning chrysanth mun
and tiger lilies, 50c
Red hot omer o8e |
wild iris, day lilies, single |
Mrs. E. . . McConnell. a
60c ea. Young. sprouds,
doz. Add postage.
/Waters, Dahlonega, Rt.
Yellow root, 25 1
cols. azaleas, 3, 25c, _
7c plant. Purple lilac, 3
red japonieas, 25c e e Gi
postage. VS Wee z
Paloma: +2
cream, yellow, la
and. purple; catnip, hoarh
Double English dogwood Ww
Jan bloga jasmine, 2!
est, Rt. 2
Double _japonicas, 6 yrs
Red cherry sprouts, black
white dogwood, $1.00 do
low, blue iris, March pin
. Add postage. ]
Evans, EM. Rt. 2. nas
~ FLOWERS AND SE
WANTED
Exe. dcHodil i Be
flower seed and old time
elor Buttons,. red and white,
| will pay for seed. Mrs.
Donaldson, Summit, ib
113.
Want 2 OLB bimene a
pink with white eye Verb
State price. Mrs. Hat
gins, Dahlonega, Rt. 4.
Want flower plants,
any color. Miss" Estelle
ley, Ramhurst. *
Want some Birds Foot |
in lot of 100. Mrs. Kirby S:
Decatur, 108 Evans Dr.
PLANTS FOR 2
<
os
>
Pp. x potato Hanis Gov.
treated, red and yellow ski
M. and up. $2.75 M. del; le
M., $3,00 M. del. Now r
Pic al, Griffis, Patterson. 5
Chas. Ww. cabbage olan :
65c, $1.20 M. PP.; in: Ga.
service. No checks. J.)
Milledgeville, Rt. oe
R. ae Lightsey, Bristol. =
Thousands | fresh ne
all vars. tomato. cabbage br
rcoli, beet, parsley, collard,
snip, all 50ec C. $4.50 M.
hot. pimento peppers. 25
Mes. HY. Vv Franklin. Re
Genuine P R. potato d
govt. insp., $3.00 M. 5 M
up. Good, strong plants.
count and. pee ship
C. Tyre. Bristol. :
150,000 ionneeo! rolaet
ready. $3.00 | Nice
plants. You pay .-
Prompt shripment. ~
Lewis, Nanhunta, Rt.
Calif. Wonder, ae
pepper plants, $2.50 M. Del.
3d zone. Marglobe, Red R
New Stone, Gr. Baltimo
Matchless tomato plants
M. Del. Moss. pack
stamps. Otis Pi tim: ane
Rit
Gr. Baltimore, ei
Rock, New Stone, Bonnie
and Marglobe . tomato pl
1$1.75 MM. World Beater
Calif.. Wonder pepper pla
$3.50 M. Full count, mos pa
ed. Promvt attention.
stamps. Alton a
ley. -REO4. =
~ Imp, red meated pe po
plants, $3.00 M. Bed of
Memory tobacco plants:
5 or 6 A. Will set bed.
offer. R. J. Boatright, Mer
Marglobe. Stone, /Bonnie 1
tomao plants, 300. $1.00:
Wo
$1.25; $2.00 M. Calif. W
World Beater and cayen
neues plants, 500, $2. .00 $3
Cabbage plants, po :
>
Pitts...
Genuine Macelone to
plants. true to name,
packed. $1.50 M., 50ce |
potato volants, govt. Insp
skin, $3.25 M., 75c. P:
Ready. Prompt s ipm
lor.
Mr = ee
Lightsey, Scre
arvest Basket Is Complete Without Beautiful Purple Eggplant,
purple egg plant fruits, are a
addition to the late summer
, of high nutritive value. They
iso decorative, since no har-
basket would be complete
this beautiful vegetable to
plete its color balance:
, meatless meal, egg plant
provide a substantial main
_ Of American origin, it has
its way around the world,
especially popular in the
rranean- area, and in the
_ The. chief limitation upon
e in this country is the lack
agination among the cooks,
ave learned few of the many
zing Ways in which this vege-
an be served.
s a slow growing Vegetable,
nts should be started under
protection. Since only a few are
required for the home garden, they
can usually be purchased. Being
very tender, the plants should not
be set out until all danger of ffost
has passed.
They require rich soil, and should
be spaced 18 inches apart in a row.
As soon as the fruit begins to set,
additional applications of plant food
should be made, as side dressings,
to. insure full development. Do not
allow the fruit to stay too long on
the plant. It is of good quality as
long as the skin remains glossy
but when it begins to dull the fruit
is too old to use.
There is a special strain of flea
beetles which attack egg plant and
make tiny holes in the leaves. It
can be held in check by eee
or nicotine dust or spray.
lowers Pine Their Best
ictory Garden Rows
re pate So Many Different Marigolds, an Entire Planting
Could Be Made of Them.
of annual flowers around
tory garden or along its paths
make the vegetable plot an
garden picture and help
/ inva pleasing manner with
ral landscape planting.
nnuals best suited for com-
g with vegetables are those
row upright and bear flowers
ig stems. They can be sown
S and cultivated in the same
er as the vegetable crops; and
pond to this treatment with
& vigor.
are also the Apwend which
t for cutting, so besides
g the Victory garden they
ae a constant supply of blos-
with which to decorate the
er table, or to fill vases around
se. The more annual flow-
said to jead the list of flowers suit-
there are so many varieties of
these, differing in color, size and
form, that an entire planting could
be made of them.
Asters, sown directly in the gar-
den, and thinned out to give them
plenty of room, will give a late sum-
AL
| Fred Yelton, Appling.
Wetherford, -Sr.,
{mato plants, $2.00 M. FOB.
500, $1.50;
Whisnant, Lenox, Rt. 2
PLANTS FOR SALE |
PLANTS FOR SALE
- Plenty well rooted Marglobe
tomato plants, $1.75 M. Can
ship at once. Calif. Wonder,
World Beater pepper plants,
$3.00 M. P. P. Mrs. Louise
Harper, Surrency.
White bush butterbeans,
white running butterbeans, 35c
or 3 los. for $1.00. Mrs:
Speckled running and white
running butterbeans, 50c Ib.
Butterpeas, 65c Ib. Early okra
seed, 20c cupful, Large coffee
beans, 25c for 15 seed. White
half-runner beans, 60c lb.-Mrs.
C. R. Sorrells, Monroe, Rt. 1.
Peas: Irons, Clays. Brab-
hams, Iron, Clays mixed, S. C,
and Ga. grown. O. B. Johnson,
Waynesboro.
6 bu. Brabham, peas, $6.90
bu. 15 bu. 90-day velvet beans,
$4.75 bu. 10 bu. New Era peas,
$6.00 bu. 20 bu. brown Whips
and. New Eras mixed,.$5.85 su.
5 bu. yellow soybeans. FOB. S.
A. Torbert, Greensboro.
100 Ibs. or more white lima
butterbeans, 22%c Ib. in smaller
lots. S. O. Chapman, Zebulon.
2 crop Clay. peas, $6.00 bu. at
Ri poy Andrew Gibbs, Pits,
5 bu. early Ramshorn black-
eyed peas, $6.00 bu. FOB. No.
less than 1 bu. shipped. J.. E.
OQuinn, Toomsboro. Rt. 1.
Brown striped, tender -half-
runner garden bean seed, 2 cups
40c, PP. Okra seed, 20c cupful.
ee H. P. McNeal, Gainesville,
-White and colored butter-
beans, 25c. cupful. Also white
fuano sacks, fre of holes, 25c
ea. Mrs. G.-C. Taylor, Buch-
atian, Ri. 1
- Several bu. Griffin peas, $5.
bu. FOB: >Fine table or hay
pea. W. M. Evans, Sees
Rt. 1; Box 224.
P.._R: govt. insp. and: treat-
ed potato plants. $2.50 M.. or
$2.00 here at my: place. You
pay exp. or postage. B. E.
Yellow skin P. BR. potato
plants, govt. insp. and treated,
ready about May 15th: $2.50 M.
Cash with-order. No checks.
Market price at bed. L. M.
Gainesville,
Rts 2
Marglobe tomato plants, $1.-
25 M. Del. Prompt shipment,
moss packed. Winifred Hol-
land, Surrency, Rt. 2.
Marglobe, Gr. Baltimore.
New Stone,
Matchless tomato plants, moss
packed. Calif. Wonder, World
Beater pepper plants, $2.50 M.
Del. ,Ready now. Otis Pitt-
man, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Genuine P. R. potato plants,
$2.50 M. FOB. Marglobe te
W. Rentz, Surrency.
Red skin P. R= potato plants.
$3.00 M. Rutger and-New
-|Stone tomato plants, $2.00 M.
All del.
Rt: 4
Imp.. P. R. potato plants,
govt. insp. and treated, $2.50 M.
Del. Now rere J. BK. Arn-
old. Baxley. Rt.
Certified P. R. potato plants,
$2.25 M. Now ready. BPs
to 8rd zone. Rufus Kirkland.
Camilla. Rt:
Tomato and cabbage plants
for sale. C. F. Cole, Atlanta,
680 Lee St.. S: W. Ra 1617.
W. C. Carter, Baxley,
Sweet potato plants, yellow
skin, La. vams. $3.00 M. Now
caeoy H. . Ledford, Mays-
ville
Imp. 3 =] Re = pobato 7 otal
Marglobe, Gr. Baltimore, New
/Stone tomato plants. <$2.00 M.
Good plants. Prompt ship-
eee F.N. Lewis, Baxley, Rt.
Artichoke plants, $2.00 for
200.- Balm. 25c doz. Apricot
sprouts, 3 ft:..$1:25-doz. Mrs.
Elsie Heaton, Mineral Bluff.
able for Victory garden rows; and
Baltimore and Marglobe to-
mato plants from cert. seed,
100, 50c: 500. $1.10c: $1.40 M.
Imp. pink skin P. R. potato
plants, govt. insp. and treated,
$275 Mi~ Po Pe Bu-
'ford R. Lightsey, Screven. Rt.
mer. and fall crop of beauty. Cal- |
endulas, calliopsis (annual coreop-
sis), bachelor buttons (centaurea-
cyanus) of red, white, blue and
pink, sweet sultans, cosmos espe-
cially in the north corners where |
their tall plants will not shade the
vegetables; salpiglossis and scabio-
sas are all excellent Victory gar-
den subjects.
This list could be made a great |
deal longer for gardens which have
room to spare, and in which dwarf
ribbon: plantings, and some of the
and marigolds may, be ksprawly annuals come be BrOWns
globe
Lj
Marglobe tomato plants. $1.-
75 M. FOB. 100, 35c. All del.
D. J. Johnson, Tarrytown, Rt.
2: Box 118.
Genuine true to name Mar-
tomato plants, moss
packed, $1.40 M. del. Govt.
insp. treated red skin P. R. po-
tato plants, $2.25 M. Del.
in
fay. L. D. Lightsey. Screven.
mato plants, treated and govt.
insp., $2.50 M. M.D. Williams,
Nicholls, Rt. 2. ae
Te
Red Rock and |2
| lion. to
~ Marglobe and: . Baltimore
tomato plants,
Moss packed, rood count. C.D.
McDuffie, Abbeville, Rt. 2.
Genuine red skin P. R. potato
plants, grown from vines, Insp.
and treated: $3.00 M. Del.| No
checks. J. W. Haman, Ocilla.
Chphase plants, $1.00- M.
Del. or crate of 3000: for $2.00
by exp. col. Send check, stamps.
M. . or will ship COD. J. W.
Lang, Omega.
Marglobe. New Stone tomato
plants, $1.75 M: Hot and Sweet
pepper, $3.00 M. Chas. W. cab-
bage, $1.25 M. All del. Mrs.
Bulah OQuinn, Surrency.
Red: skin P.
insp.. $3.00 M. Over 5 M., $2.50
M... FOB. M..O. only. Ready
now. W. R. ea Surrency,
ae
Gov.insp., PR: potato plants,
$2.50 M: Marglobe tomato, $2.
M.| FOB. P. T. Herndon, Sur-
rency. ; &
Cabbage plants,
George W. Calhoun,
1009. Sth St
Marglobe tomato plants, now
ready, moss} packed, full count,
$2.25 M. Del. A. R. Irvin, Bax-
ley, Rt. 1.)
Imp. P. R. potato plants, govt.
$1.50 M.
Cordele,
insp. treated, vine grown. $3.00.
M. M. O. only. J. D. Williams,
Screven, Rt. 1.
Imp. P. R. potato plants, $2.50
M. Also: tomato plants, $1.50 M.
FOB: Major Hart, Surrency.
10,000 P. R. potato draws.
J. M. Faircloth, Swainsboro,
Route 2.
Nice collard plants, now
ready, 10c C. Tomato plants,
same price. Moss packed. No
checks or stamps. Postpaid. J.
J. Adams, Pavo, Route 1.
Tomato plants, $2.25 M. Cab-
bage, $1.25 M. Del. Prompt
siunien G. L. Steedley, Bax-
ey.
Everbearing. strawberry
plants. 30c C.,.or will exc. some
for 2 white or col. feed sacks. I
pay postage on. plants. Miss
Estelle Grindle. Dahlonega. Rt.
I.
Red skin P. R.. plants, state
insp. and certified. $2.50 M. Del.
Floyd J. Story. Quitman, Rt. 4.
Fresh grown Wakefield,
Copenhagen Market cabbage
plants, now ready: Marglobe
and Rutger tomato plants after
May 15th, $1.50 M. . Good
count. 7. Mullis, Alma, Re.
Govt. insp. and dioecd ee Ets
potato plants, red skin, $2.25
M. Del. No checks. M. O. only:
glen C. Thornton, Screven, Rt.
oe
Gr.
Marglobe. Bonnie Best tomato
plants, $1.50 M. Now ready, P.
R. red skin notato. $3.00 M.
Prompt shipment, full count.
Vernon Griffin, Baxley, Rt. 4.
- Porto Rican potato plants, red
or yellow skin, state insp. Mil-
offer. Good, . strong
slants, full count, prompt ship-
ment. $3:-00- Ne a Ce Tyre,
Bristol.
Govt. insp. P. R. potato plants,
oink skin, $2.50 M. Del. M. O.
only.. L. L; Lishtsey, Surrency,
ies
Govt. insp. P. R. potato plans
red skin, $3.00 M. up to 5 M.;
$2.75 M., over 5 M. No chks.
W. R? Hutto. Surrency, Rta2:
Jewel, Gibson, Lady T ana
Wonderberry plants, mixed, 50c
C. White icebergs blackberry, 06,
50c. Dbl. tansy. garden horse-
mint, peppermint, garlic, 25c
doz. Add postage. No checks.
Mrs. Willis Grindle, ,Dahlonega,
Rt.
~ Imp, Maxglobe tomato plants,
from certified seed. $1.75 M.
Red Skin P. R. potato plants,
$2.75. ME. Now ready: Also
bright peanut hay. $28.00 ton.
| D, C. Nail. Baxley, Rt. 3.
Imp. Marglobe. New Stone,
Bonnie Best tomato plants from
certified seed, $1.65 M. W. C.
Altman, Baxley, Rt. 3.
Govt. insp. and treated. red
skin P. R. potato plants, 5000
or more, $3.00 M. FOB. Full
count, prompt shipment. D. M.
Cason, Bristol.
New Stone tomato plants,
now ready, $2.00 M. Hot and
sweet pepper plants. $3.00 dei.
Chas. W. cabbage plants. $1.50.
Collards, $1.25 -M. All del.
Beulah OQuinn, Surrency.
Copper skin Early Triumph
and P. R. potato plants, state
Insp. and treated, good count
ees quality guar. $3.00 M. M.
Red and pink skin P. R. to-|*:
. Williams, Alma.
as tified red and yveliow. skin
P. RR. potato. vlants: $3.00 ta.
C. F, Denigcn, Screyen, Rt. 1.
$1.80 i. PPS.
ibed. All ready.
R. plants, Gov.
Baltimore, New Stone,
Large leaf Sage plants, $1.0
. All orders amounting t
$1.00 del. Mrs. Joe W: Cra
Hartwell; Rt. 3. oes
P. RR. $3.06 MM: Marglo
New Stone tomato-plants.-$1.
M., Calif: Wonder and= Hot
.|pepper, $3.00 M. Now ready
+full count. moss packed.
David Miles, Baxley. Rt. 4,
Marglobe tomato plants, $2.
00 M., 25c-C.: imp. red skin P
R., potato, $3.00 M. or 40e Cra
CODs.
T. P. Musselwhite, Arabi.
1, phone No. 4310.
Dewberry, blackberry,
next. season), 50c. doz, sian
garlic, hoarhound, yellow dock,
25e doz. Add postage. Stamps
accepted. Tamar Teem, ees
ing. Rock.
La., potato plants, 500. $1.80:
$3.50. M.: red skin P. R.; 500,
$1.30: $2.50 M. del. Now ready.
e Waldri ip, Flowery Branch.
te ;
Marglobe, Baltimore, Genk
Best tomato plants; roots mos
ed, postpaid, 500, $1.00: $1:50_
M.; cabbage plants, same price
John B. Pope, Fitzgerald.
Marglobe, Bonnie Best.
Matchless, New Stone tomato
plants; $1.50 M. Imp. rd s
P. R. potato plants, $3.00 *M.
Now ready. Prompt shipment
ne count. Ina Griffin, Baxley.
4. %
Imn. P. R. La. copper hie
Triumph, old-time Boene, Red
Gold and Maryland Golden
potato plants, 500, $1.75; $3.
M. Bunch P. R. potato, 500, $2:
$3.50 M. Add postage, and 10
exe. on checks. C. A. Dobbs
Gainesville, 502 Hudson St. -
2 y ee
Genuine P. R.. potato plants, ~
govt. insp. and treated, 5000 or.
more, $3.00 M. ~ FOB. Dz Me
Cason, Bristol.
Pure P. R, potato ieee
state insp. and treated, $2.50 M
PP, April, May and June del
First M. O. first filled: au.
Sinyard, Hawkinsville, Rt. 1.
Hot pepper plants, $3.00 |
40c C. Sweet pepper plan
same. price. Tomato plants
Marelobe, $2.50: M; 30c C. Now
ready. J. W. Beckworth, i
ley, ae = :
globe tomato plants. $2.00 M.
a and quality guaranteed
pe Williams, Alma. :
ay hardy Eldorado pick
berry plants, 2 yr. No. 1. Will
bear this season, $1.50 C. 2000
$20.00. Lucretiay dewberr
same size and price.
shipment. Mrs. C. M.
son. Greenville. e
Genuine open field-srow
tomato plants, $2.00: M. De
Genuine P.R.. potato plants
S300 Wi = Dels read strong
plants. Now ready. J. P. Beck,
Baxley, Rt. 4: se
Garden assortment pe
100 tomato, 100 cabbage,
collard, 100 onion, 26 to
pepper, 12 hot pepper, all for
$1.90 del. Oscar Davis, Baxley.
Pure red skin P. R. potata
plants. state insp. and treated,
grown from vine cuttings, $2.
M. PP. M. O. with order. %
| ton Ricketson, Douglas, Rt de
Marglobe tomato plants, ot 50
M. Cabbage, $1.00 M. Onion
plants. $1.75 M: Collard, $1.50
M. Moss packed. Prompt ship=
ment. Detared G. L. Steed~
ley, Baxley. : oy
Imp. P. R. red skin potato -
plants, govt: insp. and treated.
vine grown, $2.50: M. M.-O,
oe G. D. Williams;. ae
t
Margiebe tomato plants, $i. 75
M. Hot and sweet pepper, $3. 00 -
M. Del. John O'Quinn,
rency.
All vars. cabbage amt
M: 500, $1.00; 200, 50c. N
globe, Rutger, O Day, New
Stone tomato plants,
price. All del. Full
prompt shipment. ae
All vars.
$1.50 M:; 500, $1:
Maralobe. Ruteer, I
Day. New Stone tomato plants,
same price. All del. Full count,
prompt shipment. Mrs. Dorothy,
Dills, Baxley, Rt. 4.
wilt-resistant, 60c Cv Vellowt
skin La. potatoe plants, P, R.
$3.00 M: Now. ready. Promp
shipment.- H. C. Ledford, Mave
ville.
_ Gr. Baltimore, sew Ss
Marglobe, Bonnie Best 107% :
plant, $1.50 M. Imp. reds
P. -R. tomato plants, $3. oe i
Pic mpt ship Tes At. Full eS
che
Vernon Griffin, Baxley, Rt.
field : grown tomato |
w Stone, Gr., Balti- |
eady and mossed, $1.10,
M. Del. in Ga. No
. Rowe, Ocilla, Rt.
Re.
5c. Mat
iS O Day. Gulf State, New
ie tomato plants, $2.00 M;
$1.25: 200, 50c. Strong
full count, prompt ship-
t. Now ready.) Mrs. Ruby
Ison, Baxley, Rito 4
Rutger and New Stone tom-
lants, $1.50 M; 500. $1.00.
ked. prompt shipment.
hecks. Cash with order, W.
a , Baxley, Rt. 4.
e P. R. potato plants,
50 M. Del. New Stone and |
globe tomato plants, $1.50}
el. Good plants ig full |
p Rt. 2.
aime tomato plants, G 59
__ oss. packed. M. O.
Agnes Cranford,
fied x R. potato
~_ $3.00 M. Del.
kes, Surrency.
5 insp. P. R. potato
ts. $2.50 M. Del. Marglobe,
floss packed, good, strong
Prompt shipment. C.
berlin, Surrency, Rt. 2.
insp., red skin Imp. P. |
0 M. up, $2.25 M. |
; uagiey A. Lightsey, |
. R.. grown from vine
_ insp., and treated:
and Gr. Baltimore
. <-Good plants and
Sippent gsuar.,
N. Lewis, Baxley.
plants, from vine
d. now ready. Insp.:
Me ce M. Money
Ls Griffis, Odum
otato plants, red Vel-|
50 M.: Red P. R.,. Early | bi
. Orders
ane
tobe. New: ae to- |
$ 50 M.; Calif. Wonder
ot Pepper, $3.00 M. D. D.|
xley, Rt. 4,
be tomato plants, $1.10
all over 5000, $1.00 M. |
ants and full~count.
ise Harper, Surrency.
tate plants, govt. ins.
s imp. red or yellow skin | Marshallville.
checks. Pull
shipment.
le ar ree ae P. i
= Mowery Branch, Rt.
Thee -one tobacco
strong. healthy plants.
for setting. 12% mi. S.
|. W. Tyler, Pavo.
yellow skin potato
el. in Ga. Clyde Har-|{
rcv, Rt. 1, Box 89,
ompt abr
ley Baxley, Rt. 4.
cabbage plants, $4
a 200, oe Mar-
full. cee
IP. Mullis, Bax-
tomato plants,
Mixed var. tomato
: M. Del. Moss
No chks. |
$2.50'|
Mary |
count, |
FG. Tyre.
i lachee., .
| Drive,
aoe
sale. C.
| Lee St. SW.. Ra 1617. {
$2.00 M: tomato plants, $2.00
M. Mrs. Fred Atkinson, Val- |
| dosta, Rt
'Fomato plants, large and
A shieny. Marglobe. Baltimore
and Stone, $2.00 M: 500, $1.25.
Roots mossed. Full count. E.
'L. Fitzgerald, Irwinville.
Baltimore. New Stone, Mar-
globe tomato plants, 40c C.:
500, 90c; $1.40 M
R. potato plants, $2.60 M. PP.
rate R. Lightsey, Sereven,
| Rt. T
P. R. potato plants, govt. insp,
fred and yellow skin. 500, 31.50,
$2.50 M. Del.
count, prompt shipment. W. G.
Murray, Odum. Rt. 2, Box 158.
Marglobe, New Stone and
500, $1.00; $1.50 M. Pink skin
-R. potato plants, $2.50 M.
PP. Leroy Lightsey, Screven,
Pants 4. -Boxi75.
Govt. insp, red or purple skin
rP. R. potato plants, $2.75 M.
Tomato plants, dif, vars. $1.35
M. 50 C. No checks or COD |
orders. Prepaid. Prompt ship-
ment. Paul Lightsey, Screven,
Imp. P. oe potato plants, now
ready, $2.50 M. Red skin, full
count. Del.~ George Lightsey, |
|Sereven, Rt. f.
Imp. red. skin P.. R. weiato
plants, govt. insp. $2.50 M. Del.
L. C. Lightsey, Sereven, Rt. 1.
SECOND-HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
i
Fairbanks- Morse wagon or
truck ae 12,000 Ib. cap., for
sale. A. B
Cultivator to fit Farmall A
tractor. good cond. a $80.-
00: sell for so aaa B. Skip- |
per, Macon, Rt. | Shen 393.
Minneapolis- earn 69 Com- |
ine. for sale. D:. .E.. Tatum,
Palmetto.
1 tractor, one 4-26 disc plow.
1 tractor mower, 1 horse
farm and daity equipment.
Good as new. Geo, Poss, Thom-:
son.
driven grain binder. 1 John /
Deere 550 disc tiller with 7 26- |
in. heavy discs, 1. 22x36 Case |
|racing machine and a D-4 cat-
erpillar tractor. O. K. David,
Fordson tractor, double disc
tharrow. All
$195.
yt Sten etta, Rt.
[oer Rd.
in good cond.,
4, Powder
fits tractor made in 1942. Green |
|Millsaps, Winder. Ph. 366.
| Allis-Chalmers combine No.
40 on rubber, used 2 yrs. Good
_feond. No letters ans.
see here. J.C. wi Sic Apa- |
food BP steam pressure Boller,
Suitable for small canning
plant, or for cooking syrup by |
steam on evaporator. Will sell |
|cheap. Some of flues need re-
ou Come see if interest- |.
fe
2 insp. ($3. 80 M:. PP. F
T. J. Sneed, Buena Vista.
1 old champion binder, cuts
| fairly = but will not tie,
$10.00. H. A. Martin, Luthers- |
ville,
1 No. 10 King plow, like new,
and other farm equipment for |
_|sale. Will exc. for turkeys or
chickens. A. D. Wood, Dun-
| woody, Gwar Long Island
1 Corona hand corn mill.
$5.00. J.
Box 142.
1 Madison pepper trans-
planter. Used 1 season. W. G.
Neisler, Reynolds. j
I No. 2 swinging hammer
power toe mill, $135.00 FOB.
H. A .Carter, Chipley, Rt. 2.
-1 O. K. farm bell in prime
coe
son,
signed by Georgia
r 11 at the DeKalb
sville, Ga.,
Sat 1: 00 OMe.
a Association, FO, Box 65, Station EK,
at 10:00 A. M., C. W. T. Sale
Breeders), will be held
Co. Fair Grounds, Pan-
W. T. Aberdeen. Angus
F. Cole, Atlanta, 680 |
Gold Dollar tobacco plants,
WM. Red skin P. |
Now ready. Full |
Baltimore tomato plants, 40C: |
)| drawn mower, and some other |
1 10-ft. Case power take- off}
Fred Cunningham, | :
Come |
D. Webb, Soperton, -
cond,, at my farm near Jack- |*
'G. W. Kinsman, Jackson. |
IVESTOCK AUCTION SALE
1 Auction Sale of Aberdeen-Angus Breeding 4}
te, consisting of 41 females and 14 bulls
'. | MACHINERY FOR SALE| BF
: Sone. nice cabbage wines {or
' Allis Chalmers combine, size |
set two times,
other farm equipment.
60. Power take-off. Perfect
shape. Good tires. Used very
little. Fred F. Virden, Mar-
-|shallville.
Complete 2 or 3 stand Con-~-
tinental 80 cotton gin outfit,
including wood frame, metal
bldg. Furnish Fairbanks-
Morse Diesel, TE elec., or steam
power. <All good cond., oper-
ated last sesaon. H. C. Gools-
by, Atlanta, 529 Clair Dr., NE.
2 units Conde milking ma-
ehine for sale, praciteally new.
case strong plants, Now ready. }
. Preston, Monroe. t
George T. Farrar, East Point.
Box 283, Phones Ra 2981, =
7245.
Riding cultivator with newt :
isweeps and disc in A-1 cond.,
/$75.00 at my farm 3 mi. from
Po eee we. i. Hurst, Manor,
Rt
eot-
ton duster, 1_or 2 row, $14.50.
Roy Shadix, Douglasville, Rt. 2.
2-H walking cultivator, as
good as new; 1 soda dropper f
that fits on cultivator for sale.
9 mi. NE Louisville. David
ae Lotisville, Rt. 3. Box
13
Set Pit Howe wauont scales
for sale, ic P
| Vista.
1 Appomatox peanut oe
in first-class cond. for sale.
M. Hubbard, Bluffton.
ing cond. $3.00 cash. I
10 genuine Oliver turner, $7.00.
1 Cole guano distributor, $3.00.
I Cole cottonseed planter, $3.00 |
Olin |
1 Joe harrow, $2.50.
Sages Maysville. Rt. Zz
SECOND HAND MACH-
INERY WANTED.
| Want to buy de Poet. a 66 ex
side plow (Athens) and 10 dise [
Farmall A tractor cultivator, . )
;
iealk
80 gal. syrup kettle, near Bain-
bridge. W. J. Meredith, Bain-
bridge, Rt. 3:
Want 1 belt tramper also 1
power unit to een 4-70 saw
gin outfit. J.E
ledgeville.
bime, in A-1 cond. State cash
price and cond. F. W. Bivings,
| Atlanta, 3110 Habersham Rd.
Want to buy for cash good
mower, late model John Deere
Fy McCormick, also good rake.
H. Wellborn, aN Rt.
thresher. Also want to buy ter-. ba
cond, in Ist letter. J. H.
kinson, Valdosta, Rt. 4.
Want hand or small power
}grimder suitable for -
grain for poultry. R. A
well, Boston, Rt. 2... /
Want. 4dise tiller and grain
seeder box for John Deere H
tractor. Prefer John Deere
-plow. State cond. and price.
-W. P. Franklin, Harlem. -
Want side plow for Fordson
tractor; also pulley for same.
rE. B Moody, Athanta, Rt.
Box 304.
Want riding or walking eulti-
vator and pe cultivator |,
outfit for V.' Case tractor.
Kirbie Duke, fia. et:
Want new or practically new
McCormick mowing machine
that runs on oil.
son, Palmetto.
' Want e Farmall Hi. or J.-D.
model farm tractor. Not
older Pal 1941 model. Wilt
exc.- Value for same. W. U.
Payne, Ashland. :
Want 1 good Benthal peanut
picker in Ist elass cond. Must
be eheap for cash. Geo. N.
Thomas, Thomasboro.
Want. 1 double dise harrow
in good Bee Write or
B. T. Johnson, Jr. Bluff-
ton.
Want. 2-wheel cultivator with
8-12 ft. or spring tooth inter-
|| Mrs. R.
| Box on
1 2309 Boulevard Dr,,
changeable to be used to draw
bar model B. John Deere trac-
RE - C. Garrard, Alpharetta
INCUBATORS AND
BROODERS FOR SALE
1 elec. Inc., aietek new, 100
cap., $12.50: also want buy a
2006 oil og ning EInc.,.same eae
~ Futeh, Adel, Ret.
1 oi! burning chick - brooder,
500 eap:, also 10. gal. sprayer
on wheels and some other farm.
equipment. _Stanley Christian,
Ss. E. De
Must be in good cone
McAfee, Smithvilte,
46.
1 2-H wagoh in good cond. }
Will carry 1 ton, $30.00. ates brocder
Hogg, Buena}
1 grain cradle in good work- |
No. |
tily picked,
. Chandler, Mil- |
i 'Pherson, Villa Rica.
Want Allis Chalmers Com- }
-at gin, Ist yr. $1.50 bu.
| FOR, :
Want used 2-H. wiowing ma- |
chine. State price, make =
. Cald- |.
7, |
F1/16
Oclivered: at nay
Elec. Incubator, 90 ese caD.,
$15.00; some
a. EL
Leverett, Parrott. :
2 Cypress Inc., 144 egs, One
is over 30 years old, had a very
good hatch in 1942: other much |
later model (need about $2.00
worth of repairs), $15.00 for the
2 and will throw in a brooder
and other equipment. Cant
ship. FE. W.
LaRoche Ave.
INCI ATORS AND
BROODERS WANTED
Want I elec. Inc.,
control, not over 100 oS
Want elec. prefer
Pay cash or
brooder,
sale. David
trade Indian game chickens for
Americus, P. O. Box 84.
Want ker. incubator
automatic egg turner.
tester, 150 to 450 eggs cap.,
ie to use. Quote best price.
F. Redfern, Mitchell.
Fe
Box 47.
O.
Want Inc., 4,000 0 to 6,000 cap...
oi burner, Twater Buckeye.
What have you? H. H. Hogan,
Lincolnton.
- COTTONSEED
FOR SALE
D&PL cottonseed,
from. breeder, $9.50
ment made dav order received.
J. H. Stephens, Social Circle.
Imp. Wannamakers Dixie
Triumph, 98 percent ger., wilf-
resistant, et big bell, eas-
direct
staple.
acres. 25 bu., at 6e lb., or 5c
Ib. for Iot. New bags. Cash
with order. . Rodd, Val-
dosta.
Wannamzaker- Cleveland big |
boll cottonseed, $1.50 bu. bia
yr. from breeder. W. W. Me-
Cokers 4 in 1, strain 4, wilt-
resistant cottonseed, kept nS
Porter, Bishop. 2
Stoneville 2-B cottonseed,
acca Ceresan treated, Ist
5.50 Cwt. in 100 Ib. bags.
FOB. 100 bu. lots, $5.00 Cwt.
rs Swanson, Fairburn.
Colers 100 strain 3, pure,
jgreee cottonseed, $1.50 bu. |
E. Porter, Bishop.
DPL No. 12 pure cottonseed,
ginned out 44 percent, cleaned
at gin, $5.00 Cwt. FOB. M. L.
Crowe, Jr., Gainesville, Rt.
Bagged, re-
cleaned: and treated, $1.25
bu. L. O. Benton, Monticello, |
500 -bu. Stone 2-B cotton--|
seed, Ist yr., recleaned, Cere- |
san treated, $1.25 bu. R.
Thornton, Monticello, RFD.
Stoneville 7-8
Ist yk;
kept
pure, cleaned,
o
= bu bass,
lots cheaper. FOB. J. H.
ley, Lavonia.
Tom Richard-| Genuine Stoneville 2-B cot- |
privately |
tonseed,
ginned,
easily pi
ist yrx.,
recleaned, big bolls,
ced, long staple, hish
germination, $1. 20 bu. for quick |
sale. Riley C. Couch, Turin.
Coker 100 wilt-resistant cot-
tonseed, strain 2, Ist yr.. kept
pure at gin, $5.00 Cwt. Coker
100 strain 6, Ist yr. kept pure,
$5.00 Cwt. 1-1/8 to 1- 1/16 sta-
dle. W. T . Allen, Danielsville,
Eee
s Choice cottonseed. 17
1-1/8 in staple, big |
bolls, cone picked, $6.25 Cwrt.
oo
CORN AND SEED
CORN FOR SALE
Piedment- Hastingss seed
corn, selected from stalls: in
field, $1.00 pk.. $4.00 bu.: 300
Ibs., No. 414 Cokers planting
cottonseed, $18.00 or exc. Also
I Jersey cow. fresh in. R. P.
| Steinheimer, Brooks, Rt. 1
10 Ybs. good shelled
corn, 20c lb. FOE. #H.
son, Palmetto:
Shelled corn:
pop
D. Wel-
for sate
bern ,
and see or me ae offer.
Grier,. Cermont,
and
Come
W. J.
Jewett, Savannah,
with heat
~ O. Bow: C
Jennings. |
with
also:
|gourd. all 10 spoonful.
Tae Weaver, Buchanan
WT. Ship-
ym. and better |.
Made 5 boles on 4
Seb
30 tons Stoneville 2-B cotton- |
seed, Ist year.
G1.
cottonseed, |
ginned on 1-var. gin, |
culled, |
graded and treated with new |
imp. Ceresan, packed in new
$6.00 Cwt. Ton |
Beas- |
. Cox, Roswell; Rt. |
boro.
-without rain,
freight.
a
Hand-shelled, imp.
peanuts, 15c Ib. Large t!
shell seedling pecans, 20.
/ Edible soybeans, 40c Tb.
, $1.00. Add postage. -
Cas.
M. O. No Checks. Mrs. 5
Prickett, Maysville. 3
100 Ibs. pecans: Stewa
30 Ib. Seer ings, 20 Ib. E
for some print feed sacks.
and 4 of kind, or for bs
chicks. N. H. Reds preferr
Mrs. W. B. Hester, Blakely
50 Ibs. Ga. runner peam
W. L. Mo
|i2e Ib. FOB.
oh Rt.
2.
Early | Gucet wate
seed, ripefis 6
wmph watermelon seed
cum to 150 Ibs. 25 pkg. N.
Thornton, Jesu, Rt 2,--
Stone Min.
- from choice 1
Tb. or *2.00 Tb. in
P, Oo. in Ga. No checks
phur Fr_st, Ellenwood, Rt
Dude Creek and Cw
Queen watermelon seed
Ib. 90-day velvet bean,
.bu; 50 bu. New Era peas, $6:
bu. Mixed peas, $5.50 bu. L.
| casterlin, Andersonville,
Pumpkin seed, 20c cu
Cucumber mixed toms
mixed hot pepper, m
. . Imp. Rockyford eat
seed, $1.50 Ib. vie Bruce
drews, Haddock, ft;
Broom corn eae 25e Tb.
| P. Pumpkin, citron, cantalow
25e teacupful. Colorful b
orgs tae 25c Ib. Add
ie Begs NM Magi. H
2 ;
Spineless eee pod
seed, 50c qt., $1.75 gal:
radish plants, 25 doz. $.
. Exe. for potato pla
| Would exc. dahlia slips |
oe for potato plants. I
. A. Woodring, Alto, Rt. 1.
Citron seed, 60c Tb.
Mt . watermelon seed, 35
cupful. Ear} green okra se
25e teacupful. Add postag
Rosie Crowe, Cumming, Rt
Dark yellow pumpkin se
20c cupful. Good, cho:
rined, Stone Mtn. and Kl
ley watermelon seed, 35 e
full. Catnip seed, 5c spo
ful. Catnip, large bunch. 20.
ea. Mrs. Mae Turner, Ga
lwille, Rt. 6. eee
Wonderful (new)
\soybeans, drougth, |
bean beetle resistant.
seed, spineless. J
Mrs. Clara Prince,
rRt. 1, Box 14.
Blue Ridge mtn. cl
tomato seed, runs to 15
seed culture, 25c, 1 pka. Wh
| cabbage-collard seed, 15 cli
Ing cucumber seed. free
order. War stamps accept
(Wit C. Smith, Pike.
BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
Colored ia butter
| seed, 35_ pt. P. PL Mrs.
i Mie , Menlo. 3
White punch butt
seed, 35 lb. or 3 Ibs. $f.
Mrs. Fred Yelton, Appling.
2 gals> nice, sound,
' butterbeans. running ~
bunch, 25 Ib. You pay -
age. Send stamp for
a L. Adbea,
more. H. D.
Gee
2-Crop Clay peas), gar
$6.00 bu.
barn or will ship, vo
: Andrew Gibbs, Pi
Rt.
Good sake peas, green
dry: very prolific. Bear ut
frost. For Sale. Jesse I Law:
Doraville. | :
White anc colored ee
butt rbeans, 35c Ib. No
for less than 4 Ib c
Crowe, ainesville,. -
Pure, recleaned Mami
and: Ogden soybeans:
ku. bags. Heavy prod
Make fite hay crop, $3:
; On Mi.
5 bu. mixed neas, $5.75 bu..
6 bu. brown whips, $6.00 bu.
bu. New Era peas, $6.00 bu.
| bu. velvet beans, $4.75 bu.
ellow soybeans, 6 bu. $4.25
FOB. fix Torbert,
ireensbore.
White Halt 4 Bonner beans,
5e teacupful: Bunch and run-
ing butter- beans, white and
*30c teacupful. Add post-
2, . Mrs. Lon Ashworth.
cula.
gee SALE
Mlosleys Wibear. Make 100
5 tons fine forage an A.
Ids 40 bu. A, under drought
onditions where other grain
rop not harvested. Grown on
any kind lahd. Good for horses,
ows, hogs and chickens. $1.00
por $12.50" Cwt COD.
_ Mosley, Clarkston, Ph 4511,
EGGS FOR SALE
extra choice
$1.25. for 15:
Rey.J. R.: Baxter; -Ar-
uchee. : :
Bourbon red turkey eggs.
Vrite for prices. Mrs. R. H.
arnette, Griffin, Rt; C.
Speckled Sussex eggs, $1.00
5. Add postage. Mrs. W.
Silvers, Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box
of ae
seh Brahmas,
Mammoth bronze
ges, $3.00 doz. P. P
turkey
Mrs.
rayden Davis: Chipley, Rio:
2 or 3 settings pure Donald-
on Red eggs,
-eartons r-*. This stock di-
ect from Donaldsons farm.
so G. . Clifton, Millen.
road-breasted M. B: turkey
2s, $2.75 doz. or $3.00. for
aoe checks. Mrs. Fannie
. Danburg, Rt. 1, Box
in ernoth a
rreasted turkey eggs, slightly
ossed with White Holland,|
3.50. doz. Add postage. Miss
oe Bellah, Stockbridge.
E..
$1.00 for 15.
broad-
CATTLE FOR SALE
urebred ree. eee, bull,
eady for service. Sire, Klon-
like Gay Beau. Dam, Klon-
like Royal Geisha, for sale. J.
. Turner. Atlanta, 1334 La-
ance Stl NES,
Purebred Hereford bull,
. old, not reg. $125.00. Here-
ford heifer, Hereford steer, 18
10s, ea. $50.00 ea. Also horse
ule. 5 yrs. old, wt. 1000 Ibs..,
200.00. Henry Brown, Nelson.
/ good milch cows, 1 extra
airy type: both to freshen
pen. ~1 Jersey bull, about 2
old. Prices reasonable.
Baer, J. Bell, Gainesville, Rt.
. (Near Candler Sta.)
Milch Soy for sale at barn.
65.00. S. . Sanders, Winter-
ille. Rt. _
V Hereford bull, 9 Foes and
ruernsey heifers, avg. wt. 250
bs. Sell one or all. Theron
obnson, Social Circle.
Jersey and Guernsev cow,
resh-in Feb: 2d el High in
utterfat, $75. vee . B. Garrett,
Morrow. Ri? 1
g. Jersey bull: 14 mos. old.,
Can furnish papers). for sale.
obert Goetz, Byron, Rt. 1.
teg. red polled bull, large
nough for service, for sale.
Loy Dorsey. Cleveland, Rt. 1.
Good milch cow, with young
alf for sale at reasonable price,
interested, see R. L. Lawson,
leveland hwy., about 10 miles
m Gainesville. Mrs: C. E.
4ee, Gainesville, Rt. 9.
Reg. Guernsey bull. 14 mos.
id. ready for light service,
est bloodlines. Reg. in buyers
ame, $75.00 at barn. A. T.
Owings. Meansville, Rt. 1.
Fine grade Guernsey heifer,
fesh, from 4-gal. cow. for sale.
Mrs, Jeek Bobo, Hartwell, Rt.
-
' Godd grade Guernsey milch
cow. with 4th ealf. Will calve
m Nov. Gives 3 gals. milk or
ver day. $100.00 at barn. J.
. Trawick, Tennille, Rt. 2.
2 Reg. Guernsey bull calves.
finest breeding and from
high producing dams, 10 days
ld, $25.00 ea. Fred Colwell,
sue Ridge,
z milch cows, 3 yrs. old,
yeshen in May, $200.00 or exc.
air mules, broke, Under 7
ole. wt. 1,000 lbs. ea. and
Gieeenns. J . W. Dockery,
2%
-and will make a topper.
Purebred Black .Angus bull, |
2 yrs. old, $100.00 for. quick
sale at barn. W. O. Flanigan,
Winder, Rt. 4.
2 fresh cows, 1 Red Poll, 1
Graded. See at my place.| G.
B. Barrett, Cornelia.
Reg. Guernsey bull, 2 mos.
old. sired by Riegeldale Illus-
trious Benjamin, beautifully
marked. excellent type. Madi-
son D. Short, Sr., Summerville,
Phone 113-30. \
1 young heifer,
White Face,
one-half
with first calf,
$75:00 cash. GesTidene Lewis, |
Adairsville, Rt.
For sale or oe I reg.
Jersey male, 1 Jack and 1 stal-
lion. All sound, gentle and
good animals. Also 3 pigs for
sale. J. - Lawrence-
ville, Rt.
FOR SALE
NZW buck, 18 mos. old:
NZW buck, 5% mos. old: grey
doe, 18 mos. old: NZW doe,
5% mos. old, $7.00 for lot FOB.
Ivan G. Addington, Blue
Ridge, Star Route.
Purebred NZ Red rabbits,
ir. does, $3.00; bucks, $2.50 ea.
Breeder bucks (at. stud), $7.50
pr. up. ,6-8 mos. old, $5.00 ea.
Does, $6.00 and up. Guar.
Chinchillas, 6-8 mos. old does
or bucks. Hubert Williamson,
Augusta, 1835 Walton Way.
N. Z. White: 20 ped. bucks
and does, 2-3 mos. old. $5.00
pr.: 9 are 3-4 mos. old, ped.
does, $4.00 ea.: 4 grown does,
not ped., bred, $4.00 ea. H. F-.
Fortner.
Sts. We.
Giant N. Z. Whites, 8 wks. |
old, $3.00 pr., $4.00 trio: Sires
of these wt. 10 and 14 Ibs. at
8 mos. old.. D. W.
Pike.
3 Guinea pigs, 1 male,
males, $1.25 ea,| Mrs. .O. H.
Hilliard, Athens,
Street.
1 dark grey oe bred, 18 mos.
old, $3.00. Herman Ward, Junc- |
tion City.
- NZ Reds, quality breeding
stock. 3 to 4 mos. old: does, $3.
bucks, $2.00. Papers furnished.
A. L. Alexander, Summerville. (
8 NZ whites, fully pedigreed,
6 mos. to. 18 mos. old: 2 bucks,
$2.00 and $3.00 ea: 6 does. $4.00.
Does weigh 10 to 12 Ibs.
ea.
FOB.
Grange.
Garl - J. Sehick, . aa
grey Chinchillas, $2.50 pr. at
6-8 wks. old; NZ whites, same
price and age. Also mixed
breeds, 6-8 wks. old, $2.00 pr.
Bill Buckland, vans.
HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE
Reg. Tenn. walking filly, 26
mos. old. Tenn. walking al
mare, 6 yrs. old, bred to reg.
walking stallion. Reg. straw-
berry roan, 6 yrs. old, %
thoroughbred mare, and filly.
colt, 2 mes. old. Mare rebred
to same stallion to foal in Feb.
1945. Thomas C. Wylly. Ten-
nille, Oak Lodge Plantation.
sale or exec. for good work
mare, wt. 1300 to: 1400 Ibs.
Want bred mare.. J. A. Van-
dergriff, Decatur. Just off
Lawrenceville Rd. Rt. 2.
Nice pony, wt. about 400
lbs., $50.00. W. G. Beckham,
Zebulon. ;
2 good farm mules, $65.00 ea.
Sacrifice. Mrs. F. G. Henry,
Atlanta, 1137 Glenwood Aver,
S. E.. Wa 3574.
1 gentle, bloeky built young
imule, tough and:sound, 3 yrs.
old, broke to work. wt. about
850-900 _Ibs., $190. 00: Fis.
Tyre. Odum, Rt. 1, Box 44 (4
mi. Odum).
Jron grey mare horse, 6 yrs,
old, aroun@ 1500 lbs. Splendid
draft animal. very gentle, work
| anywhere.| Can be seen on my
farm, 2 mi. Bostwick. $160.00
cash. R. E. Kimsey, Madison.
2 nice, young mules, wt. 1100
lbs. ea. or more.
or double to anything, gentle,
for sale. David. Benson, Louis-
ville, Rt. 3, Box 113. (9 mi. NE.
Louisville, )
Beautiful Tenn. walking ai
lion, 3 yrs. old, reg. Pure white
Devlin, Chickamau?2,
Horse. 6 yrs. old: gocd work-
er; 1 mule, 14 yrs. old. H. M.
Ce Walker, Ellenwood, Rtd:
| kids,. 3
Atlanta, 929 Gaston)
Chadwiclk, ($50.00. Mrs. Pe
fee
a 16 |freshen, cheap for cash
.953 Oconee :
and 2 wks,
1Cut.
| Lakemont.
Bovine orders for purebred | Purebred Saanan kids, from
lwinter milker.
imilk
| nished,
i ae te
| Toggenburg-Saanan
Pr. mules, wt. 2400 lbs. for | f
Work single.
_ HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE
or service: Ga. raised jack,
5 yrs. old, at my home 1% mi.
Cleveland.
| 2logging horses, in good cond
wt. about 1400 lbs. 7 yrs. old,
cheap. G. M.|
ea. Will
Gooch, .
district.)
LIVESTOCK WANTED
sell
Suches (Gaddistown
CATTLE WANTED:
Want to pasture \cattle at
$1.00 head per mo. Good pas-
ture, all under wire fence.
Mrs. Peg Taylor, Stone Moun-
tain, Royal Oak.
Want a good, ee work
steer, 5 or 600 lbs., state prige:
jalso. have some nice ducks fot |
RABBITS AND CAVIES
sale, A. H.. Wellborn, La-
Fayette, Rt. 1.
| HORSES AND MULEES,
| PONIES WANTED:
Want a shetland pony. Must
be very gentle. Also like to
have a pony cart. Mrs. Morris
Phillips, Crandall.
Want good young'pr. blocky.
mare mules.. Will pay cash for
right kind. Ww ant for farm work
and want them sound. J. E.
Catdell, Athens, P. O. Box 668.
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE.
Nubian milk goats, with 2nd
wks. old, male and fe-
male. A 4-qt. milker. Also
young Jersey cow to calve
May 10th, gave 3 gals. with 1st
ealf for 14 mos. Cannot ship.
These fer sale or trade. D. A
Bagley, Austell.
7 sheep, 7 lambs,
$150.00.
Also 2 sows, 5
pigs, 3 wks. old,
eg Taylor, Stone
Mountain, Royal Oaks.
Saanan milk goats, Sart to
J.D. Douglas, acene Rt.
Box. 245.
Reg. Saanan buck, Snow
Prince, No. S4740, Hornless,
yrs. old:
old doe, from above
buck and 7/8 Reg. stock doe;
heavy milk stock. John R.
Faucett, Atlanta, Austell-
Marietta Rd., at Mahaffy RR
"Phone Ra 1443.
1 fresh milch goat, gives 1
gal. day, $35.00; also 2 kids for
sale. Come see. Hoke Smith,
best. bloodlines and high pro-
ducing dams. Cannot ship.
Mrs.
3692 Atlanta Ave. Ca 1884.
Purebred and reg. Toggen-
-' burg does exclusively. Extra
nice bred yearling, due to
freshen about August ist, for
From heavy
stock. Certificate fur-
Reasonable. John
Atlanta, 93 Warren St,
, Phone De 5140.
ee Toggenburge buck, 16
mos. old, reasonable,| Will ship
at purchasers expense. C. D
Hood, Edison.
- 8 Toggenburg goats, 2 fresh,
2d kidding, about 1 gal. ea. $30.
| One to freshen May Ist, first
kid, $20.00. 1 buck, 1 yr. old,
cr ossed,
rom 6 and 8 at. day milk stock.
S. T. Humphries, Decatur, 313
5th Ave.
Purebred Toggenburg buck
kids, naturally hornless, 8 ad-
vanced Reg. does in Sires pedi-
greed and 11 imported stock:
mother is-.a
World record Polly Mac. Papers
to reg., $20.00 ea. Mrs. Ovatene
Highland, Lavonia, Rt. 1.
68 sheep for sale. Ben. R.
Stroup, Douglas. c/o Raymond-
Richardson Aviation Co.
Saanan goat, freshen first of
July. Heayy producing stock;
Nubian, freshen first August.
Both bred to reg. Saanan buck.
Mrs. M. H. Pattillo, College
Park, 4839 Roosevelt Hwy.
At Stud: Reg. Nubian bucks
of attractive appearance and
bicodlines; for sale, beautiful
buck kids, reg., in buyers name
in American Goat Society, Earl
S. Redwine, Madrcs.
HOGS FOR SALE
2; Guinea 2 yx. old: boars;
about 250 lbs. ea. 5 PC sows
0. Y ith pigs. 2d litters. $35.00 =
J.O.'59 P. C. gilts, 150-175 lbs. wt.
$30.00 ea; 75 shoats. wt.
75- 125
s., sell on round lot offer. All
life treated. Warren Coleman,
Mitchell.
Cleveland. Kk. S. Price,
| for> del.
ROB. By
lso 2 mos. old Beek |
led, $15.00 ea.
i a.
F. E. Hogan, Hapeville,.
| Decatur,
descendant of.
HOGS FOR SALE
Purebred OIC shoats,. far-
rowed Jan. 21 this yr. wt. 35
to-40 lbs. $10.00 ea.:; $1.00 extra
to-reg. in buyers name. At my
place. Clarksboro, Athens-Jef- |
ferson hwy,.| Ben W. Smith,
Athens, Rt. 2, Care R. C. Smith.
3 SPC bred gilts; 2 bred to.
son of Dutch Boy (Iowa Cham-
pion:) other bred to son of
Right Type (Gates breeding)
$50.00 ea. Reg. in buyers name.
Pigs. SPC. 3 mos. old, $15.00
ea. Reg. in buyers name. Dou- |
Mor- :
ble treated. L. M. Asien,
gan.
SPC pigs, subject to regs. far-
rowed Jan, 3 and 8, .$1250 to
$15.00 ea,
ter.
6 Duroc pigs, 11 = old; 5}
gilts. 1 male, $25.00 ea. or will
exe. for hammer mill in good
cond.
pigs if desired. James G. Smith,
Bowersville, Rt. 2, Ph. 4984
(Forsyth.)
SPC pigs, 6to% wks. id.
Also 2 Jersey heifers, 1st calves;
1 Jersey cow. 5th calf. smooth-
mouthed mniare cube wt, 900
lbs. ea. for sale. L. C. Garrard,
Alpharetta, Rt. 2.
Reg. young Duroc sow, for |
sale or trade. for good heifer
calves, or good, sound mule, not
over 15 years old. L. D. Haney,
College Park, Rt. 1.
.1 purebred big boned Guinea
; hoar, 2 yrs. old, fine cond., $30.
| FOB.
J. P. Tarpley, Crandall.
OIC pigs, for meat hogs and
brood sows:
breeding, $6.00 ea. at my place.
M. L. Wread, Daniplerilie, Rt.
bee :
Reg. a Choice litter of
12 pigs, $2.50 ea; 2 boars ready
| for service,-gilts and boar pigs,
3 mos. old, good as the best, for
sale. Ernest P, Carter, Baxley. :
Few,
shire pigs, 12 wks. old, ready
Cc. B. Collins, Hazle-
hurst.
Reg. Black PC pigs,
old, $15.00 ea.
A. Smith, * plberton.
Duroc- Jersey pigs, good stock
3 mos. old. male and female.
Reg. in buvers name and treat-
FOB. W. D.
Askew, Davisboro,
2 nice sow pigs: SPC and big
boned Guinea crossed, $10.00
Trade for hay or corn, a
nice work goat or midget pony
as. part payment. Come _ for
them. cant ship. J. C. Mayhue,
Cumming, Rt. 5.
_ Nice shoats, wt. 40 to 75 Ibs.
Treated for cholera. K.
Smith, Thomson. Rte:
Niece pigs, over 8 wks. old,
$8.00 ea.. $15.00 pr. Charles
Brown, Stone Mountain, Rt. 1.
1 young SPC. service. boar,
farrowed by 4-H Club prize
winner. Double
cholera, $25.00. Reg. in buyers
name.
gan.
Purebred Berkshire brood
sow, extra nice, not bred. Also
reg, Percheron mare, 5 yrs. old,
with filly foal. C. 1. Perdue,
Rt 1, De 1Ae8
1 brood sow, OIC and Duroc,
good breeder. Will sell at reas.
price. Come and see. (Near Po-
lice Rickmon on R eyStji F.
lice Rickmon on Riley St.)
Garnet Heaton. Toccoa.
18 big bone Guinea pigs, 6
wks. old, $5.00 ea., at my farm:
$5.50 ea. FOB. W. C. Phil-
lips, Sandersville. Deep Steep
Road.
7 nice P.-C. shoats. $15.00 ea.
W. E. Thompson. East Point,
West Washington Road.
10 wks. old, reg., white, oO.
I. C. pigs. $6.00 ea 2D;
Cochran, Monroe, Rt. 1
Duroc gilts, bred Sy out-
standing boar, shoats farrowed
September 10, 1943, All can be
reg., Buyers name. Sacrifice
price big, reg., boar. fe Ib;
also excellent bloodlines, pure-
bred. not reg.. Hereford bulls,
10-12 mos. old, $55.00 here:
$6000. 65: FOB Exp- S.
Thornton, Dewyrose, Rt. 1.
I
Reg.. S. P. C. boar, just in
prime. Can be seen at farm.
Theo Souther, Macon; Rt. 6.
(14 mi. Macon, East, near Ster-
ling Farms).
3 reg., Duroc sows, 2% yr8s.
old'=2 wt! about.350. 1ps.> 1
lighter; 7 pigs, about 12 wks.
old, not reg., $150.00 for lot.
Will not ship. Robert O'Reilly.
Macon, Rt. 3
Purebred pigs and shoats, wt.
50 to 135 Ibs. Reg. in buyers
nome. See at my home at
Birmingham (Fulton Co.) W.|
H. Nix, erent Rt. 3.
Gene Jones, pee
Papers. furnished with |
| pigs.
ea.
Reg.
1 male pig for :
Pinehurst, Ree, ATS
in buyers
choice, reg. Red Berk-
8 wks. |
2 for $25.00. |
acre,
treated for|
Roger McFather, Mor- |.
3 brood sows, 4 shoats (ab
90 lbs. ea.), 4 pigs, at Mar!
Price at my lot. $.-O, C
man, Zebulon.
Siew 0. 1C: ate ant
| hogs, 4 yrs. old, also 10 ks
pigs. Will swap male
related male. Mrs. J. T
Waynesboro, Rt. 2.
Nice OIC and Devlin
$3.00 ea.. purebred. = :
F. Morrison, Gainesville 35
7 purebred Black African
Guinea pigs, 8 wks. old, $10.6
ea. W. R. Fogg, Forsyth,
SPC pigs. Sired by |
Arthur, son of
grandson of ( 2
Out of sows of like roel
Double treated: papers furn.
wks. old, $15.00 ea. or %
Pe We OAS Taliaferro, :
Fide, (oe
2ilt, bl
stock, with litter
Guinea male, not rel
both weigh 150 Ibs. Oa. $5
for lot,1 fine lemon Jerse
gal. milk cow, fresh. $100.00.
A. D. Giles. Douglasville Rt Die
18 thrifty pigs, 6 wks.
and $5.50 ea.| 7 shoats
to 90. Ibs. 3 brood sows, at
place. Reas. priced. Ro
Ayers, Clarkesville, Star Ro
2 black Poe. shoats,
around 75 lbs, Treated :
cholera; sound $13.00 ea.,
Afri ican
ee 00 for the 2. Will shi
W. Adams, Jefferson. Rt;
4 SPC gilts, 4 mos, old, $2:
1 boar, same age, $2
in buyers name. trea
oe s
crated, FOB. Fred
Reg. SPC pigs, both sex
name. From
Souths leading bloodlines;
Guar. oak ae :
shotdars. 35 Tb. FOB, me
Hurst, Meigs, Rt. 2.
pe Higear: makes
bu., and. 5 tons forage o
~ Yields 40 bu. per A
der drouth cond., grows on.
kind land. Good feed for :
livestock. $1.00 gal.
CWE, -C,,O;7. D> Be MeN
Clarkston. Phone 4511.
ae
2 old fashioned Bee
$1.00.ea. at my place.
V. Vogal, Atlanta. 4
Memorial ot >: ee
fence bees, ri bes you
queen, $14.00 igh TA: ae
~
100 gal., Ga. Cane aves
gal. cans, for sale. A. H. "i
Byron, P. O. Box AN -
House). ,
, 100 gal., pure Ga, Cane:
in No. 10 jugs, $1.25 gal.,.a
wed 10 mi. East of Bainb
J. Meredith, Beinbride
-
50 gals. good, thick sorgh
syrup, in gal. syrup jugs,
for lot. Tom Richaee 2
metto. :
FOR SALE |
Horseradish plants,
Coriander plants, 3, 25c. di0)
plants, garlic bulbs, 25 do
Double tansy, -peppermint
for 25e. Balm catnip; 3:
ne: M. i: Eaton, kee
Sassafras roo, 30c ib
a lowdock root, 40c Ib. Will ex
for printed feed sacks.
Margaret Stamey, Mount. A
Garlic Bulbs, 25c doz. .
postage. oe Hazel Bisho
Waco, Bt...
Double a balm, 25 d Oz.
Comfrey, 5c ea. 6, 25c. Yellow
root, Gusen of Meadow, a
Ib. Mrs. pe BEY ah-~
lonega, Re ss
Good ee for saa an
wheat, 10c to 15c ea. Also SPC
pigs and gilts, subject to reg.
Guernsey bull calves, subject
a reg. Best bloodlines. Ge
. Wicker. Ametiens, Be 1
egestas yellow root,
b. Blackhaw root, 50c lb.
poshes 15e ea. Calamus,
Ib., plants, 30c doz. Com-
AO 30c - doz. Stargrass.. Mtn.
kleberry, Colts Foot, 20c
doz. Old-time, hop vine. 20c
dd postage. Mrs. Presley
oh, Diamond. ;
dbl. tansy, 2 doz., 25c:
ee Dubs: $b.00-C3 horse-
12 for $1.00; Dill plants,
Saas garden gooseberrry
. .M. L. Eaton,
eo ones eae, 5et=doz::
tron, pumpkin, yellow squash
ed, 25c per teacupful: white
ch butter-beans, 30c cup-
E wild cherry sweet gum
, s25=-lb elecampane,
ymirey, sage, horseradish. 10c
a Add postage less than 50c
: Mrs. ee J. Williams,
ming. alls
huckleberries and blackberries.
Want some dried apples and
peaches. Mrs. Re Cox, Dalton,
608 Oak St.
ae ANTS, WANTED:
pe sev. thousand a nck
weet potato hes Quote
Re a.
i e Re ee
Loe Leos or Will
ice Brooks, Vienna, Rt.
: Golden |
roots.
=
ant sev. pelade
Si and Rattlesnake -
Nancy Augusta,
SKS. WANTED:
W: _ printed or white deee:
. Will exc. white . flags,
onze mo lilies, cannas, etc.
r sacks ae pay postage.
J M. MeL eueh le: Green-
on
sy cup cane ao to make Syr-
ae pee oe ie on
Sit blatke wane meats,
n-use. Must be: nice and |
Will pay good price.
vise price es Mrs. J2S.
Broad Breast M. B. hohitar.
ceyS, i; hatching eggs,
_Also sree
50 usc Muscovy duck
ens, and 7 drakes, 1943 hatch,
$80.00' for. entire lot. Mrs. Ww.
Mealor, Athens,
White Pekin dusk: Bad
$5.00 for the 3. HE. M.
amine: _Winder. Rt. i
ANDOTTES: 3
White Wyandotte cock-,
Is, also 1 White Rock cock-
el, all AAA quality, June
943 hatch, $6.00 or $2.50. ea.
lus shipping chgs. oes L.
: BABY. CHICKS:
ae eee price. x
ohnson, Pelham.
y =RS- WANTED: s
W nt. last years red. hot
pper and some sage. Also
> get my order. in for
J. Bie
ae (NEW HAMPSHIRES:
. LAND RHODE ISLANDS):
384. So.)
11 rooster, $2.00
|King, Adel, 8th St. -
AND BANTAMS:
Donaldson Rear Red wis.
Pullorum controlled; 15 ea.
del: Eggs, $1.25 per 16: $2.25
for 2. del.: nice, young -hens
and cockerels, $2.25--@a,- FOB.
oy Grady Brown, Stone Mtn.
alm. Soran t. dae: penper- eee controlled. dark R.
Red baby chicks, $1.50 C.
Gere also Eggs, $1.50 per 15, del.
Mrs. W. D. Latham, Stone Mtn.
BARRED WHITE AND
OTHER ROCKS:
15 White Rock, lyr. old
hens, $2.00 ea.; also 10 N. H.
Reds, $2.00 ea. Mrs.A. J. Car-
ter, Newington. :
1 hen and 1 ope te
Rocks, 6% and 734 Ibs. ea.
$3.50 for -both: 5 fe and
rooster, Cornish, $10.00. All
1934 hatch and _ healthy, hens
laying. Sent Exp. collect in
non-returnable coop. Send
Money Order. Mrs, Ida Mae
Sullivan, Whitesburg, Rtsz.
LEGHORNS:
- Big Eng. type White - ae
horns: 78 pullets, 1 yr. old, and |
ee
de ee ins: 10. <Ib:= Sure!
ee strain Mohawk Cornish rooster,
2 yrs. old, $5.00; 8 or 10 fine,
pure str. Cornish hens, $200 ea.
FOB. Mrs.
Tusculum. -
2 young Blue dames, wt.
about 3 Ibs., $2.00 ea.; 6 game
hens, $1.50 ea.; 1. Clipper, 1
vr. old, $4:00. Jas. C. Bennett,
| Duluth, P.O. Box 161. me
Zi roosters and 14 plier aaa
hens, now laying, Indian
Games, $28.00 for lot. David
T. Jennings, Americus, P. O.
Box 84.
2 pit game hens, $2. 00 ea.:
also want 1 Muff stag or a 3
yr. old Muff ee cock: will
pay $3.00 for 1. C. L. Griffin,
Gainesville.
~ Want good farm hand. 1660
week... Good 6-R. house, gar-
den, wood. 1% mi. East Sandy
Springs, on Glenn Ridge Dr.
Woodrow Mann, Dunwoody.
Want man and wife to eare
for country place and look after
stock. poultry, etc.| Good salary
"15. hens, 2 yrs. old, laying 50|to industrious couple. J. R.
percent, $1.50 ea. | FOB myj| Thompson, Stone Mtn., Rt. 2.
place. Mrs. E. Sepnata,
Soperton, Box 162.
12 AAAA White large oak
English Leghorn hens and 1
fine rooster, no culls. . $15.00)
for Jot. Will crate proper ly for
express shipment. Sat. guar.
or. money back. D. W. Boone,
Newnan.
| MISCELLANEOUS
CHICKENS:
A few Ro OF BP. sired hens,
1-3 yrs. old, standard breeds,
for sale or exc. for milk goats
|of high production stock. J. G.
Buyers, Whitesburg.
-|PEAFOWLS, PHEASANTS, ~
PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC:
- Racing Homer pigeons, band-
$150 pair.
ae and working, S
Clarence e Greene, Porterdale,
a Box 133. i
6 pr. Mondenia, 4 prs Brower
and White and 2 prs. Snow
White, also.
mon and hen Mondenia), 1 pr. |
young from this pr., $15.00 or
$2.00 pr. All mated and work-
ing except young pr. Ben
Columbus, 3609-14th |
ve.
2 pr. Rea Chinon 15 pr.
White Kings, all mated, banded |
and. working, $6.50 or $2. BU pre.
|Dr. Wm. Bookhammer, Atlanta,
3064 Dale Dr., N. E.-
- Few Blue King male pigeons,
a large, Show type, $1.50
_J. H. Barr, Lumpkin.
340 laying hens, 150 Straight
Ne E790 N.-H.and Bre beg-
fore cross. All on-free range
and remar Kkable layers: also 150
March hatch pullets. Make
LOster.- du. Esselstyn, Howard.
"4 nice N. H. Red hens and
nice rooster, $1.50 ea. plus ex-
press chgs.; R. I. Reds, 1942
hatch, same price. Mrs. S. S.
204- 6th St.
Bizzell, ee
NE.
40 Pond 4 yi. old and oye
old roosters, $15.00. or $1.50 ea.
ae ee H. Reds; also N. Z.
ite rabbits, 20 mos. old doe
aw 9 mos. old buck, $3.50.
Buyers pay express on. all.
Write before ordering. A. B.
Tatum LaGrange, Rt. (Ja elx-
son St.)
New H. Red AAA hens, and
ea. All April
1943 hatch: Eggs, $1.25 per 15,
P. Money order. Annie B.
ae
CORNISH, GAMES
AND GIANTS:
Seed. darge. type -l-yr. old Dark
Cornish rooster, $3.50: trio
Cornish 6 mos. old, $5. 00: eggs,
same strain, $1.50 per lB: C. Cy
Se Sylvester.
Watson, _Loganville, ARK. 2.
ae April 28,
4
pri
Georgia Auction Markets es
.pril 19 {Wednesday Home
ri 20. (Thursday)Valdosta ~
ril 24 (Monday)Sylvester _
il 25 (Tuesday)Nashville
26 (Wednesday ) oultrie
priiee( Wednesday)-home .. 2 2
ma 26. (Wednesday) Vidalia ea es eee ees
= TOP. FED CATTLE
; il: 19 (Wiedoisdiy) Bane
ril'20 (Thursday)Valdosta _.
.pril: 24 (Monday)Sylvester _.. = si10,00- 13.00
April 25. (Tuesday)Nashville 2
April 26 (Wednesday)Moultrie
\ pril 26 (Wednesday)Rome i
1 26 aeenpedree eee Pee ;
1944 Ne Per Cwt.
~ $13.80
13.10
q3.15
- 13.05
18,25
13.80
13.50
prt ena nnn ener =
ac)
Seep aetna stay
~ =$16:50
ae 10,00-s14.20
- 9.00- 10.20
pe es 10. 00- 14.10
See 15.60
= 15.10 =
1 pr. (cock com-.
12 horses to work with.
Doerun, RtES3;
Want white, settled woman
small farm. Live in good home
and $7.00 week salary. Mrs. G.
1919, ;
ant white woman to do
some farm work, for comfort-
able home and smallsalary.
Mrs. John Rhodes, Pano
Rie Boxe.
Want capable woman to Hive
with couple in modern farm
home (all conveniences,) and
do farm work. Room, board
and good salary. No objection
to one child. J. C. Taylor, Ball
Ground, :
Want oaple < to live with
family and share crop: both to
work. Modern
Ground.
- Want woman, white or col.,
for farm work. $15.00 mo. room
and board. In good home. No-
tify Mrs. S. C. Dowda, Atlanta,
Rt. 9B Box 362.
croppers and.other farm help.
Black or white. E. E. Bishop,
Thomasville, Bt oA:
Want white woman for farm
work. Mrs. George W. Cal-
| boun, Cordele. 1009 Sth St.
Want assistant herdsman. for
dairy using reg. Guernseys. 4-R
house with running water and
wire for lights, milk and garden
-|spot furnished.| DeLaval mach-
ine used but applicant should
be able to milk. John W. Bus-
sey, Columbus, c/ EQ es aymore
Plantation.
Want oath man for 1 HL erop.
Good
land, 4-R: house, cistern . on
of help and not afraid of work;
like some cotton planted. See
farm, 2 mi. W. Chickamauga,
A. B.-Dean, Chickamauga, Rt.
11, on Charlie Simons Farm. ;
Want reliable woman to liye
in home and help,on small farm
Must be able to work. Wost of
land planted in oats for pasture.
Have nice lot of chickens, hogs,
cows and. goats, etc. See
write. J so Harner, Hortense,
Box Pa
Pe ty
of tobacco and other crops if
wanted. No house, but would
board ees Mrs. MM. L. Clance,
Alma, Rt.
Want jerimgdiiety
den and chickens, A. M. Zit- |,
trauer, Marlow, Ree
Want reliable white man to
ilook after large hunting club,
45 mi. Savannah, on good road.
Free house, artesian water,
horse to ride and can have gar- :
den, chickens and cow sand |
plant crops for own sale. $50. 00 |
mo. G. A. Coward, Savannah:
- Want ae clean, honest
man to cultivate 15 A., in corn
and peanuts, and help with
other work. Room, board and
$25.00 mo. Mrs. aes B. Lambert:
Want reliable, white woman,
40-60 yrs. old to live in home
and help with farm work.
| Room, -board and_ $7. 00 week.
Located 2 mi. Mableton.
Mrs.
BOE: Knight, Austell, Rt. 1.
Want good man for small
pasture, 4 R. house, and as
Ji
basis agreed upon.
Pe Villa Rica. i
Minnie SOUS, :
/Dear Mr. Linder:
FARM HELP WANTED.
to do general work around |
Eg Fournier, ees ree Ca
misaibauos ee es ee 1s.
| Avocados
conveniences. :
Salary. John B.. CE oheD Ball
-|Turnip Salad
- Want share or See rent.
lines
Onions (Green)
Peppers (Green) |
eyaeak
back porch. Must have plenty |
Ore
_ Onion. Plants eg ee
5 Want man tend 2 or 3 acres
wage ;
hand, 1 horse crop. Wages, $2.- | -
{50 day, with privilege of gar-'
February and Marrh.
Inspections on seeds Siege ke
| Seeds withheld not properly tagged 154,643.
much land. as wanted, on any |. ;
W. Ww. Me- 5 So ers - x = a oe
Ae fo S See Seed |
| Division _
: oe, 4. 194
Honorable Tonk Linder, : ee
Commissioner of Agriculture,
State Capitol, _
Atlanta, Georgia.
I submit herewith a force of the atk of.
Food and Feed Division, Boies | of Agricultu
for the first Meare ot pee os
Inspections
Withholds issued:
Samples taken to be ae
Abatements issued to improve ee
POU arIOnS 28 J ee
Be er
seid De
The following foods were destroyed unfit
for human consumption:
Shaaee
Beef el ee
Hamburger Meat
Lunch Meat
Pork Loin
Scrap Meat
Hog Heads
Fish
Miciners 2 i ee Os ee
Pig Feet
Ribs
ee ee ee
<< SS
ee
ee ee
Sugar
Se ae ee ee as Se
Bee Se
Oranges
Orange Concentrate
Peas (Dried)
Milk (Canea\.
Lettuce
Egg Plants
Potatoes Sweet .
Potatoes irish 2 Dec wat pe es
Potatoes Irish (Canned) .
Se ee Se ae ae oe =
1,060 ook
200. Ibs.
2,200 Bs.
70, 000 Ibs.
Mustard Greens eo es - . 402 bu
Collard Sprouts :
Welarae = ee ey eee ee ;
Spinach
Turnips
Beans (Greeny. Se
POCO Ss ee
BOT aeO Ce 2 aes oe Se see
Water Cress
ee
English Peas -
The following | foods and feeds were with
held from sale: :
ee ee 19,744 doz
Weed A fe Ss AZO 86- lie
Spe ee Ses re os eae 56714
Pie following plants were destroyed unfit
for planting:
Cabbage Plants :
Yours very irule Ug nee
A A. D. HARRIS, Directo
Food. and Feed Division,
Report | OF Seed Division
aN 12, 194
eee Tom ligdee
Commissioner of. Agriculture, ees S
State Capitol, ere - Se
Atlanta, Georgia. i
Dear Mr. Linder:
_ I submit herewith my suarterly report fo
first quarter of 1944 of the work of the Seed Div
Depatment of Agriculture, which | oe oy l
eee obs
Withholds issued 2 oS o
Samples taken to be analyzed ;
for purity and germination
Yours very truly, a
A. D. HARRIS, Directo