COMMISSIONER | Rb ghia is ele SEPTEMBER 6, A944 "1 Sell It for Moss of Po tage It was the export of cotton that gave this country a rable trade balance for generations. It was largely | export of cotton that made possible the building of roads, industrial plants and skyscrapers, | which has rked the growth of this great nation. God in His goodness has made a. large part of the th a cotton country, just as he made Jowa a corn coun- If the people of the south permit themselves to be ed and defrauded out of their inheritance as a cotton try, they indeed will have given their birthright. for = of pottage. oe COTTON AND THE LAND It is a very general idea, largely the result of. propa- da, that Cera soils were impoverished by the grow- of eotton. The growing of cotton does not impoverish I f good farming pees are followed. rew. cota or ca not erove ee a As a matter of fact, the production of cotton caer v little out of the land. . COST OF PRODUCING COTTON We are told that this country cannot produce cotton cheaply as South America and some other countries. Of course we know that we cannot maintain our ndard of living above other nations and Pogue cotton the same price that they can produce it. This argument, however, does not apply to cotton any e than it applies to every other commodity. If you apply that same line of reasoning, we cannot duce corn, because it can be produced cheaper some- re else. | We cannot produce beef because it can be duced cheaper in some other lands. Under that same of reasoning, we could not manufacture cotton, rayon, or any other industrial commodity. because labor is. per in other countries and thev could manuf acue it er than we could. s Under that line of reasoning, China could put in cotton 1 rayon mills and sell cotton goods and rayon goods at third the price that our mills must get.. Under that line of reasoning, Russia could build steel (Continued on Page Two.) tae Fresh Fruits and Vegetables | September 1 1944 - _ Atlanta & ies bulk, per bu. $1.50-$2.50 oS (Lima), bulk, per bu 1.05- oa = Snap, per bu. hpr. = a 2 S, per doz. bunches 5 = pea a : gplant, per bu. hprs. . 1.00- 2.00 ed Greens, per bu. hprs. : net Okra, per 8-Qt. basket _ bulk, per bu. Se as (Field), bulk, per bu. See eee peer be UES: 2.00- 2.50 weet Potatoes, per bu. baskets 1.00- 2.50 atoes, per 8-Qt. basket Oat te = 1.00- 1.75 rni salad per per doz. ne "25. 1.00 39 = j te. woke talical: dejan nts in Thusiness, industry an agriculture. = We all know that cotton is only one. of the crops | i will present a ee to be pavee to make aioe changes Stick are unealled for. : We see governmental agencies forcing social cha on the people under war powers. eS We see governmental agencies forcing ecotioatk nines. under war powers. | See We see governmental agencies oS business changes under war powers. fe We see some business interests acting in collusigg: with. these governmental agencies to gain business andi industrial advantages during the war by perversion of wal powers. Readers of the Bulletin have seen where the nationa government. through the operation of the Commod ty Credit: Corporation, the United States Secretary of Agri- culture, the Futures Commodity Markets Board, the Offie of Price Administration and other Federal agencies have fastened a life and death hold on the prices of the farme 3 cotton, wheat, eattle, and other erops. SURPLUSES : We are told today that we have great surplus stock of cotton, meats, grains, ete. Hivery day we see news items coming out from Wash: ington about the appointment of Mr. Will Clayton to di pose of these surplus stocks. We are told that these surplus agricultural siecle vil depress the price of the farmers crops. In fact they are already depressing these prices. A PLAN FOR COTTON a Readers of the Market Bulletin saw last week where fs the government had- paid an average of $13.65 per bale more than the market price for 255 000 bales of cotton. That. cotton was for lend-lease. It-was ee be given to our Allie It is an announced policy of W ashineton to contin this lend-lease indefinitely. This means that millions | (Continued | on Page Three.) Livestock Sales, Gee, Auction Markets | Reports received at this office show following average prices paid for No. 1 Hogs at the Livestock Auction Markets named. September 1, 1944 Per Cw. a August 24 (Thursday)Tifton B G14, 25 August 24 (Thursday)Valdosta _ Se fey aoe a = TABS August 28 (Monday)Sylvester = 1425 - August 30 (Wednesday)Albany - 1400 August 30 (Wednesday)Moultrie - 1425 7 August 30 (Wednesday)Rome ; : ~ 14, 10 August 30 (Wednesday)Vidalia ce en eee ela het : TOP FED CATTLE August 24 (Thursday)Tifton 9... August 24 -(Thursday)V4lidosta ~ August 28 (Monday)Sylvester August 30 (Wednesday)Albany August 30 (Wednesday)Moultrie __ kee as _..$10.00-$11.75 pee ee ee Os Se 10.00- 13. 00 10.00- 14.00 ee August 30 (Wednesday )Vidalia 25.0 3 ee eee : idee all items for publication and all requests to be put on the mailing list and for change of address tv STATE BUREAU OF MARKETS. 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta. Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable under postage regulations inserted one time on each request and repeated only when request is accompanied by new copy of notice. oe - Limited space will not permit imsertion of notices contaming more than 30 words including name and address. Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the Bulletin. ss: Published Weekly at 114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga. By Department of Agriculture om Linder, Commissioner, Executive Office, State Capitol ae Atlarta, Ga. Sak Publication Office 114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga. Editorial and Executive Offices State Capitol, Atlanta. Ga. Notify on FORM 3578Bureau-of Markets, 222 State Capitol Sot Atlanta, Ga. Entered as second class matter | August 1, 1937, at the Post Office | at Covington, Georgia, under Act June 6 1900. Accepted for | nailing at special rate of posteg= provided for in. Section 1103, f | of October 8, 19:1 OTTON OUR BIRTHRIGHT (Continued from Page One) mills, manufacture railroad irons, automobiles, yadios, etc. and sell them to us for one-third what the American producermust charge. When they say we cannot produce cotton be- cause it can be produced cheaper in another ountry, they are simply seeking to destroy the tandard of living of American farmers. - They are using the argument against cotton whieh can be used with equal force against any product in America. The fact of the matter 1s hat, if we are going to protect industrial pro- ducts of this country, then we must protect agri- tural products in the same way. Tf we are going to protect the shoe manufac- urer against the shoe manufacturer of foreign countries; the automobile manufacturer against he automobile manufacturer of foreign coun- ries; the steel manufacturer against imported teel; the iron manufacturer against imported iron; then we must protect the American ectton market against not only imported cotton, but against industrial rayon and other imported fibers that compete with cotton. | ~_-[ would like to call attention in passing, to the fact that industry and business will be in the ame boat with agriculture when it comes to the uestion of meeting world market prices. A policy which reduces the American farmer to a level of world prices will ultimately change he industrial worker and the business employee, ikewise to a level of world prices. It is im- ossible to have a high American standard of living either for agriculture or industry and at the same time lower our prices to meet the prices in world markets. , IN GENERAL Georgia to promote education in all its branches. This is as it should be. tion of an enduring republic. ions and our State Legislatures have ungrudg- ngly supported the development of our educa- ional institutions. | Great progress has been made in recent advantages to our rural youth. This has properly been done, not only with also been done with an eye to the building of a better agriculture and a_ better State eco- nomically. . | _ Unfortunately, we must face the fact that e better equipped our young people become in ral districts educationally, the more they are lined t the farm and go either to our A great deal has been said and done in| An enlightened citizenry is the firm founda- : other sections where their talent and education enable them to obtain more money. So long as our young people leave the loeali- ties where they are raised, we cannot make any real progress in the building of our State. So long. as this continues, the rearing and education of the voung people is a continual drain on our resvurces instead of constituting an addition to our assets. Many people have advocated Federal appro- priations to supplement our funds for educa- fional purposes. Without in any way discussmg the desira- bilitv of Federal appropriations, I wish to eall attention to the inescapable fact that the very our citizens, after they are educated, are not in- creasing our economic resources in those com- munities where they received their education. Whether we resort to Federal appropria- tions, or whether we do not, the fact remains that until such time as a young man and a young wo- man can leave high school or college and go back to the farm and there find a source of livelihood, approximating, at least, as good as they can find in other sections. then we cannot say that our agriculture is a success. : This is the reason that the Commissioner of Agriculture is continually, insistently, and ur- gently demanding a price for agricultural pro- ducts that will give the farmer a true parity for farm Crops. Nothing less than true parity for farm crops will make it possible to build a sound and prof- itable economic agriculture and business struc- ture in our rural areas. If we are to have better educated farmers and farm women than those that are found in other lands, then we must have more money for the same crops than farm- ers receive in these other lands. If we are to have higher economic living standards on American farms, than are found in other lands, then we must have better prices for the same crops than are received by farmers in other lands. = The idea that a well-educated, intelligent and self-respecting American citizen can produc onions as cheaply as a Mexican peon who works for 40 cents a day is absurd. | The idea that this American can produce cotton as cheaply as the natives of Brazil and Argentina is equally absurd. 3 The idea that a cultured Georgia can de- velop an eXpensive pasture, plant corn and po- tatoes, which must be cultivated, and then grow beef as cheaply as, beef can be produced on ihe natural lush plains of Argentina, is unthinkable. Tt is just as unreasonable to expect a Geor- via farmer to compete in price with the nations of the world as it would be to expect'an industry to pay American wages and then compete with the penniless hordes of China and Russia. This is the reason that the Commissioner of Agriculture continually and persistently opposes trade treaties and special trade agreements which permit the inflow of cheap agricultural products from other continents and from the islands of the sea. | TOM LINDER, Commissioner of Agriculture. FLOWERS AND SEED FOR SALE. FLOWERS AND SEED. FOR SALE Mixed Iris and narcissi, many Wednesday, September 6,1 need of Federal funds for education is proof that! _ Great strides have been made in our educa- ional system and succeeding state administra-. years in bringing better and better educational | n eye to the building of better citizens, but has! ) Rica, Rt. 2. Long Trumpet daffodils, yel- low, and April blooming white narcissi, each, 75c C; also: big let shrubbery, cheap, or exc. Alice Stokes, Jasper, Rt. 3. Gerberas, Deiners str. giant hybrids, true to name. and |properly packed with culture data, $1.25 plus 10c postage per doz. Arthur J. Jones, Atlanta, 15 Sereven Ave., NE. | 36 f, privet hedge, 3 ft.. wide hedge balis, bayonets, altheas. abelias, forsythia, yellow jas- mine, Eng. dogwood, A. A Thumbergia, white cluster spirea. Dorothy Perkins roses, flowering quince. Write. Mrs. E. Fountain, Fort Valley, Bt. Amaryllis, black Lily of In- dia, large, 75c; medium, 35c: small, 50c. doz. White Fairy lilies, 50c doz. Snowdrops, $1.00 C., $8.00 M. Pink crepe myrtle, purple lilac, 35 ea. Add post- age. Mrs. Gussie Conner, Villa kind, dbl. and single day lilies, P17 5 C; peonies, hibiscus shrunps 20c ea; perennials and other flowers. Exc. for print sacks and other value. Mrs. Delia Fife. Armuchee. 10 kinds cactus cuttings. 5 ea; some rooted, 10c ea; 2 kinds spotted cactus, 10c ea; 3e xtra for ea. rooted plant for postage. Write. Mrs. Clyde Williams. Cumming, Rt. 4. Rooted cuttings: _petunias, geraniums, Angel Wing be- | gonias, red begonias, 3 cols. Lantana, small, 50c, grape begonias, 12 ) Rooted cedar fern, sprengeria. cactus. rainbow moss, oOxalis, all for 75c PP. Mrs. Willis Grindle, Dahlonega. Bd : White and yellow. jonquils, long trumpet dcffodils, double butter and eggs, $1.50 C. Red and pink verbena, single lue hyacinths, $1.50 doz. Miss Nora McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2. |crabapple, sweetshrub FLOWERS AND SEE FOR SALE Yellow jonquils, butter an eggs, $1.00 C. Bird of Par dise plants, 25c ea. Mrs. Cy} Crump, Hartwell, Rt. 1. S Red, white and pink geran iums. Guinea Wing and ma begonias, red and pink cone begonias, pink, red and oran sultanas, rainbow moss, lz tanas, 10c cutting or 2, 15. Mr: J. A. Wilson, Martin. Canna lilies, 25c doz. Easte lily bulbs, jonquils, buttercy bulbs, running honeysuckle eladiol, daffodils. 25c doz. A postage. Mrs. Alma Colson Toomsboro, Rt. 2. dies Yellow Emperor daffod round and double nosed, extra large, 40c and 60c doz. White 40c doz. Bernadino, 50c doz, White jonquils, 40c doz. Mixed daffodils, $2.50 C. Add postage, Mary Lou Wills, Jefferson, Red hot poker, ' z5c clur Tris, 20c doz. 6 doz. $1.00. Ja Jasmine, 10c to 25e ea. Pu violets;. variegated, red, wh and purple perennial phiox, clrap..Mrs; EH. J.. MeConpr Demorest, Rt. 1.. * : Suffruticosa dwarf boxwocds (round leaved) 6 yr. field- grown. 10-12 in. above groun $6.00 doz.. 2 doz. $19.00. Sen perviren boxwood, same siz and price. White English dog. wood, 3 ft.. 50 ea. Red a white crepe myrtle, $1.00 d Mrs. B. L. Robinson, Greer ville. Rhedcdendrons, laurels, hemlock, azaleas, Cherokee roses, silve maple, thornless roses, tuli poplars. strawberry bush, 2 ft.. $1.00 doz. Fall pinks, da fodils,.. $2.00: CC. Mrs. Gi Robinson, Mineral luff. Red spider lilies, 40c Early light blue iris, 60c Cream narcissi, orange cup, doz. 3 doz. of either del. Or: Montbretia, 35c. doz. P. white narcissi, 30c doz. postage. Miss Ctaudia Plar Marshallville. : Butter and eggs. $7.00 M.. quils, $4.50 M. White iris, $1. doz. Yellow narcissi, 25 d White jonquils. Oct. bloomi 60c doz. Add 10c extra, if und 50c. Josephine Raley, Mitch Large grane hyacinths, 2c small, le ea. Jonquils, sar price. Prepaid. Mrs. G. C. Ta lor, Buchanan, Rt. 1. Rhodedendrons, crabapples, azaleas. hemlo sweetshrubs, tulip poplars, pil Cherokee roses, silver ma 2-3 ft. $1.00 doz. Fall daffodils. $2.00 C. Mrs. B Abercrombie Mineral Bluff, Several dif. cols. Ger iris, 25, $1.00. Deep cream orange cup daffodils, $1.0 Mixed long trumpet daffo white with yellow cun and lemon cluster, $6.50 M. Pu ageratum, 25c bunch. Mrs P. Jones, Lula, Rt. 2. Small palms, eamphor, orange, Washington oak, 7 $2.00. Small century plan 50c ea, ? $1.25. Banana plan $1.00 ea. S. M. Seabon, Brun wick. ; Mixed size white May bloon ing daffodil bulbs, few bloomi: size, $1.00 per 200; lantan bloomins size 2 for 25c; pi with deep cream center. Mi hogs E. Spence, Carrollto Dif. col. blooming size Iris, for 50c; 85c doz: Emperor da fodils, golden slow, 30c do orange day lilies, $1.00 | blooming size small white Fa lilies, 20c doz. Mrs. Ruth Hi Bremen. Iris, 10 labeled, 50 for $1.1 mixed, $1.20 C; 40 var. unlabel- ed, 50, $1.15; jonquils, 4 daffodils, 200, $1.15; narci cream, $1.10 C; white, 50 for Beacon, 25 for 60c. Mrs. -J Hall: Calhoun. Rt. 1, Blue, vellow iris. 40c mix. gladiolus, $3.00. spirea. goldenchain, br boquet, blue Weeping yellow forsythia. 35c ea. postage. Mrs. Pearl Gar Ellijay, Rt. 3. = Daffodils, Star of Bethleh tame, sweet violets, orange djilies. 75e C; pink hardy - cus, snowballs, purple, pi theas, yellow jasmine and ing Mary. 2 for 25c. Add age. Mrs. Mollie Hende Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box 49. : Mix. col. azaleas. yellow and purple ir, lilies. 50c doz; purple lils almond, blue Weepit 20e doz. Fall pinks. mums, 60c_ Evans. Ellijay URE OF COTTON (Continued from Page One. - of cotton will be given to our Allies and ountries. here is no justifiable rason why our gov- ent should be depressing the price of the rs cotton and then turn right around and remium for the same cotton when it gets e hands of the middlemen. m informed that Commodity Credit Cor- n has about two and one-half million bales ton out of the 1943 crop. propose that the United States govern- take over this two and one- -half million ince they are going : ship thie cotton in lease anyway, they should buy it direct the farmer and give the farmer the advan- of the lend-lease price. 53 points on New York for striet low mid- there is no reason why they should not he farmer 253 points on New York for strict Sinee the government paid Anderson-Clay- 8 points on New York for middling, there reason why the government should not pay armer 358 points on New York for middling. There is no reason why the government d not pay the farmer on this same basis for rade and staple length. | note that October futures are quoted in York at the close of business on September 944, at 21.65 cents. 253 points on this 21.65 d | vive the farmer 24.18 cents for strict low ling cotton with 31-32 inch staple. 8 points on 21.65 cents would give the mer 25.23 eents for middling cotton with 1 inch staple. f this two and one-half vation bales of cot- in the hands of the Commodity Credit Cor- tion was removed as a threat against the do- ic market and the government would per- he price of cotton to go up, the rest of this s crop would easily bring 25e per pound, if overnment would permit it. We know in all reason that this so-called plus cotton, surplus beef, surplus eggs and so-called surpluses are not surpluses at all. e know that they will be required for lend- o feed and clothe the hundreds of millions ery and naked people of Europe and Asia. We know within reason that, under some of lend-lease or extension of credit, we are ne to give all of these things away to the ple who need them. We know that this is , tegardless of the outcome of the Presiden- election in November. Since we know that these commodities are ag to be shipped to other countries for dis- ution and will not ultimately come on the nestic market, it is ridiculously unfair for to be used to foree down farm prices here ome. : Most of these so-called surpluses are soaeke erve stocks that have been accumulated ough rigid rationing. They have been accum- d for the specific purpose of feeding and hing the ravaged nations of the world at end. of the war. The American farmer, at the nt request of this vovernment, has produced ood and fiber by hereulean efforts and under st impossible conditions. Shall the farmer be the victim of his own patriotic efforts? t the farmer suffer because he is a patriot? What has been said with regard to cotton so- ed surpluses, applies equally to government S$ of grain, meats, ete. The government should immediately . de- e that these stocks will be used for lend-lease. nd we know they will be used for lend-lease.) will remove the weight of these stocks from ing the effect of depressing, domestic prices e in the United States. Let the Senators and Congressmen from the fon states get busy at once on this plan. Tet this plan include the so-called surpluses eat, grains and other crops which we know ultimately be donated to our Allies and to ppressed peoples of this world. nc en! ist the support of Renators and + 25e. yellow, 50c doz. Violets, 50c C.1 | ble Congressme and Middle West. _ We know that these eGnimadities are going to be given away regardless of who is President. | m th farm states We know that the farmer is the man who is en- titled to a living price for them. Then why not let the Government buy these direct from the producers instead of strangling the producer and paying a. high price to the mid- dleman for them? TOM LINDER, Commissioner of Agriculture. : FOR SALE FLOWERS AND SEED Snow on the doz; yellow, purple iris, 50 doz; Fall pinks, 50c doz: mix. col. abaleas, crabapple, sweet- Shrubs, 75e doz; red japonicas, well reoted, 60c ea. Mrs. W. I. | Reece, Talona. ince the government paid Anderson-Clay- | Red and pink hibiscus, and purple wisteria, 25c ea., $2.75 doz. Well rooted and damped vacked. Also, narcissus. bulbs, white, sweetshrubs. $1.25 Yonge Walker, Toccoa, Rt. o. Narcissus, Chinese Saceed. 60c doz. $2.40 C: Laurens Kos- ter, Diana Kasner, 60e doz: Apr. blooming. yellow cluster, paper white, 14.36c; $1.15 C. No, 1 bulbs. Miss Mittie Collins, Smithville, Rt. Limited supply pink hyacinth bulbs for early Fall planting. $2.25 doz., PP., in Ga. Also pa- per white narcissi bulbs, $1.99 doz. or exe. for other bulbs. ioe Tanner, Flippen, ~PO Box Orange Amaryllis hatin blooming size (plant now for spring blooming), 25c ea. Pa- per white and yellow cluster nareissi, 25e doz: pink. yellow Lantanas, blooming size. 15 and 25c ea. Add postage. Annie des Richardson, Hartwell, Rt. 6 yr. old Dwarf boxwoods, 25c ea. roots balled, prepaid in Ga., Only 12 in stock. A. J. Stanton. Newborn. Pink Thrift, 60c C; Siberian and German Iris; 50c doz. Mrs. J. iL. Garner, Warthen. mperor cream Wax daf- fodils, 50c doz., $2.00 . Large bulbs: watermelon erepe myr- tle, white spirea, 25c ea., also scuppernong and muscadine "vines. $1.50 doz. -Mrs.~C. Bi Robinson, Bowdon, Rt. 2. Yellow rattle: sassafras root, 25c lb. Catnip, hoarhound, pep- permint, balm, 25e doz. Water lilies, 2, 25e. Mrs. Martha White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 37. Pink hibiscus, yellow Easter rose, pink Christmas eactus, 15 ea. iris, verigated gladioli, 35 doz: rose and evergreen cuttings, 25c doz. Mattie Duran, Cum- ming, Rt. 1 Evergreen privet hedge, 50c C., $1.00 for 300. Hibiscus, 2, Cannas, mixed red and Mrs. J. D. Anderson, Blue Ridge. Blue hyacinth bulbs. $1.00 doz: Daffodils, butter and eggs, | $1.00 C. Azaleamums, cameo pink, 75c doz. Sweet violets, 50c doz, Add postage. No stamps. Mrs. M. T. Tanner. Sanders- ville. Red hot poker\ 25c clmp. Wild iris, 6 doz. $1.00, Jan. jasmine, 10e and 25e ea. Violets, purple, variegated, white and purple perennial phlox, 25 clump. Mrs. E. J. McConnell, Demorest, Rt. Z. Tiger lilies, single and dou- yellow daffodils, April blooming narcissi $1.25 C. Pep- permint plants, 50c doz. Purple iris, $1.50 C. Dogwood, crab- apple, redbud, silver leaf maple, 3, 50c PP. Mrs. Mattie Killing- beck, Morganton. Boxwoods, well rooted, 6-8 in. semi-dwarf, $7.50 C. Well rooted English ivy, Ligustrums, Bridal Wreath, Cherokee roses, $1.00 doz., $5.00 C. Blanche Woodruff, Greenville. Odorous Rugulosus jonquils, Lawrence Koster narcissi, King Alfred daffodils, $1.00 C. Ex- tra large red spider lily bulbs, 50c doz. Mrs. Cliff C. Dye, Mid- dleton, Rt. 1. Pink anemones, 50, $1.00. Shasta daisies, Calif. and Bird- foot violets, $1.00 C. Poeticus narcissi, $2.00 C. Altheas, pur- ple butterfly, dogwood. azaleas, mtn. laurel, crabapple, $1.00 doz. No checks. Mrs. Addie Wilson, Morganton mountain, 20c |- | doz. ee be i slightly mixed '20c ea. ready to bloom, 25c ea. FLOWERS AND SEED FOR SALE \ Giant pansy plants, Steels | 4 Mastodon jum bo, Oregon siants. nice, stocky, well rooted, $2.00 C. Sept. 15th del. Karl | i. Drewry, Brooks. Double white narcissi, -Add postage. Mrs. Brady, Cairo: Rt. 1. Narcissi, daffodils, yellow jon- quils, purple perennial phlox, purple anemongs, 32.00 C, Jap. iris, 50e doz. Spreading juniper, silver arbo-vitae, 3. $1.00. All cols. dogwood, $1.00 doz. Others. Sadie Wilson, Blue Ridge. Jonquil bulbs, $1.00 C. Mrs. G. Collins, Cobbtown, Rt. 2. Red hot poker, Plumbago, 20c ea. Red and yellow candle lilies, $1.00 doz. Well rooted boxwoods, 12 in. 20cea. Mrs. B. Mae Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6. Lemon and orange day lilies, purple phlox, 50c doz. Privet hedge, blue violets, 50c C. Pink Justicus, silver maple, 25e ea. rooted, del. or exchange for printed feed sacks. Martha Ralston. Ella Gap. Rhododendron. azaleas, silver maples, gaylax, Acer Dasycar-. pum, white pines, holly, dog- wood, laurel, calico bushes, ar- butus, ivy. Others. Wet moss- ed-packed. Gordon Hunnicutt, Tallulah Falls. Privet hedge, blue violets, 50e C. Lemon and orange day lilies, purple phlox, 50c doz. Pink Justicus, silver maples, 25 ea. Well rooted and del.} Exc. for printed feed sacks, Mrs. W. D. Ralston, Ella Gap. Few hundred white April bloeming narcissi, 50c C. Add postage. Miss Ethel Sullivan, | a Sd bulbs, 35e C; $3.00 M: Marietta, Rt. 2. April blooming narcissi, with March blooming daffodils, 50c C. Mrs. John Weaver, Buchanan, Rt. 1. Ligustrums, altheas, erepe myrtle, spireas, $1.00 doz. Iris, big leaved ivy, $1.00 C. Lemon lilies. blackberry liiles,-50c doz. ae Woodruff, Greenville, Rt. Tuberoses, 75c doz. Purple 5, 40 dif. vars. mixed iris, $1.50 C; $12.00 M. 15 labeled, 5c ea. Water iris, $2.00 C. Dutch Sib- erian, 40c doz. 5 fall bloomers, Add postage. Mrs. S. M. Gunter, Lawrenceville. Snowballs, lilae, 25e ea. Spruce and white pines, mtn., laurel, ivy, $1.00 doz. Al cols. azaleas, 40c doz. Add postage. Mrs. Lee Kinser, Ellijay, Rt. 2. Yellow oxalis bulbs, 25c doz: large paper white narcissi, $2.00 C. Add postage. Mrs. Fred At- | kinson, Valdosta, Rt. 4. Rhododendron, mtn. laurel, hemlock, white pine, redbud, $1 doz. All cols. azaleas. Spider lilies, iris, 50c doz. Lilac, snow- balls, dogwood, .25c ea. Add postage. Mrs. C. W. Plumley; Ellijay, Rt. 2. Fragrant yellow and white quils, $1.00 C. Fine iris, mixed, narcissi , yellow trumpet jon- quils 20 doz. Plnk hydrangeas Seotch broom, rooted, 20c ea. Add postage. Hiawassee. Madonna Lily bulbs, 3 yrs. old, $2.50 doz. Mrs. Carrie Tuggle, Bu- ford. Rt 3: Perennial white feverfew, Baptisia or false indigo; mix. cols. foxglove, 15c teaspoon- ful. Annual babybreath, 13e tbsp. and PP. in Ga. Mrs. M. P, Combs, Washington, Rt. 2. Medium = sized pink bulbs, shamrock leaf, 6, 30c; Jerusalem cherries, 6-8 in. Large jade plants, 25e ea. Ophi- opogen bulbs, 25c doz. All del. Mrs. H. Allen, Williamson. All cols. azaleas, iris, spider lilies, 50c doz. Snowballs, lilac, almond, 25c ea. Spruce and white pines, mtn. laurel, ivy, ts 00 doz. Add postage. Mrs. M. Teague, Ellijay, Rt. 2. oxalis 15 odendrons, Hattie Kimsey, | | ners Moaand bulbs, 15 doz: postage. Rosie _Crowe, Se ming, Rt. 1. Mimosa, $1.00 ea. Arbutus, ginger plant, Hemeroea ferns, $1.00 doz. Emperor di doils, Poeticus_ narcissi, drops, violets, $2.00 C. Bax Japonica, laurel, $2.00 \Z Azaleas, boxwood, $3.00 Others. Mrs. J. H. Penland, Ellijay. : Wild. Easter | lilies, S Bethlehem. bulbs, 15 doz., a C. Sweetbay. dogwood, unbrella china, red holly, greybeard and gallberry, 3 ft. 206; 5 fh ae Exe. for sacks. Add postag Mrs. T. K. Womack, Dublin, Rt. 4 doz. blooming size tulip bulbs. mixed cols. $4.00 PP. G. M. Moseley, Menlo. | : Red dogwood, azaleas, rho $1.00 doz. , vitaes, 35c. ea. day lilies, $1.00 C. Red nee teas, 8. $1.00. PP. Mrs. Ca Lingerfelt. Loving. : er flowers. Write first. Mrs. W. A. Coleman, Atlanta, ae Atwood St., SW. Purple King iris, orange lilies, trumpet daffodils, j quils, white paper narcissi, C. Pink almonds, Bridal wre yellow roses, purple lilac, fe Blue violets, $4.00 M.> C. Add postage. Mrs. Parks, Ellijay, Rt. 3. C. White iris, 50c doz: $2. Blue iris, 50e doz. $3.00 C geraniums, 35c ea. Pink and begonias, reoted, 30c ea. | F. M. Combs, Washington. ae Pride of Haarlem-Dar tulip. bulbs, rich, deep red, size bulbs, $1.00 doz. Smal 2 doz. $1.00. Same var. b lets. $1.00 C. No less than $ orders filled. Add postage. checks. Mrs. A. B. Pricke Maysville. se Double red and pink ger nium cuttings, 5c ea., 6, PP. No orders for less than Mrs. Effie Holton, Baxley, 1. Blooming size Emperor de fedils, $1.00 C. Tall-growir hardy hollyhocks, 3, 25c. id postage. Tamar- Teem, Talk jonguil bulbs, Emperor, Alfred; 50e C. del. radius mi. Mrs. Etta Mason, Alto. - Mix. narcissi, yellow. single and double. 75e C. blooming white narcissi, | C. Few white with y short cups, cluster var. doz. Tiger and red spider 20c ea. Add postage. Mrs. C. Heaton, Hartwell, Rt. 3. Blackberry lilies, 30c April- blooming narcissi, me iris, orange day lilies, hard) phlox, 2 doz. 30c., Ne 00 C. yer Ato Megs. I. . hee O White narcissi, yellow bee quils, $1.00 C. Red splote yellow cannas, $1.00 doz, ange day lilies. purple iri: doz. $1.00. Add PORES Clara Prince, Demorest,. Box 14. 2 double red geraniums, rosebud geraniums, 2 parlo ivys, 2 lantanas, 6 white striped jew. 2 Christmas cactus, nice cuttings, all for $1.00. Cash or M. O.- Ancel Grindle, Banonn ega. Rt. 1, Box 58. d Blooming size sprinz glory bulbs, 25c doz. 2 doz. 40c. Exc for old fashioned Bleedin Heart. Mrs. M. M, Kelley, thonia, Rt. 3. Small size Easter lily wel $1.50 C. Add postage, Miss Emma Dugger, Oliver. Golden yellow diant hardy red and pre white car- nations, columbines (aquilegia in deep blue or mix. cols., Die-_ hybrid double-fring: : daisy, $1.75 doz. Orange re Leo Schlageter per. phlox, $2.00 doz. Mrs. J. . Ingram, Lithon- ia- Lazidaze. Red geraniums, ea. or exc. for other bu. and flowers: Christmas cactus, kinds, 5c ea. Want exc. white pond lilies for red, blue, ye or yellow the large round tea kind. Mrs. Mattie Dalton, Rt. 3. Blue Roman nyaeinti: $1. doz. Lavendar ixias, dark, light blue, white iris 35 doz. 2 da: 60c. Calamus, Madonna lilies, | 30c ea. Mixed yelloy eee $1.00 C. Mrs. J. B. Bran MeLonouah Rt. Be w Big ls Your Brook? = By CAPTAIN GARLAND PEYTON ae ee Director, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining fete ae and Geology. = | side ey ee + - Every school bay and girl in Georgia has heard the poem about the babbling brook that goes: ge - Men may come and men may go, but I go on. forever. But how many kncw that the brook babbled with a Yankee ent? At least the poet was a Yankee and he certainly was not telling about, one of the small streams in south Georgia that was dry as dust for three or four months last fall. Any farmer in south Georgia who has a good herd of beef cattle would count a babbling brook that goes on forever as his nost prized possession. For cattle to thrive and show a profit every steer needs. about 15 gallons of water every day. Good milk cows heed twice as much. A herd of 100 beef cattle would be almost ioo many to water from a dug well by the rope and bucket process even be well could supply that much: It would mean raising 0 12-quart buckets a day, taking a man about 4 hours of back- breaking work every day. And yet 1,500 gallons of water are only one-sixteenth of an inch of water on a one-acre pond and only one-fourth of the amount that evaporates from an acre pond on a warm day! : ete te eat Fifteen hundred galions a day is even a smaller amount of water when you see it in a brook. It would amount to a trickle an inch wide, half an inch deep, and flowing about half as fast as a slow walk. Sone ae Well, if that is all the large a stream need be to supply. 00 head, why did people have to haul all that water last = Pie. demands for water by vegetation and the amount lost oration used up the seepage out of the ground so that ivers draining up to a hundred square miles dried up com- tely. Hundreds of small streams had no water in them for ee or four months, yet they were pouring out millions of ns of water a day last spring and again early this year. Just how serious a problem water shortages in South eorgia can be is shown by the records of the flow of the lapaha River in the coastal plain of Georgia. Autumn- drought conditions have occurred in 12 out of the past 14 ears. In seven out of 14 years the autumn drought lasted three months or more. In spite of the severe effect on the cattle industry in 1943, conditions were actually worse in 1931, the shortage being more severe and lasting longer in that year. Another period of frequent water shortage occurs in the spring when growing crops need an inch or more of rain each week. 1eAlapaha River records show that in seven out of the past 14 ears, spring droughts lasting three weeks or more have oc- red in sevem years. This indicates the need for supple- ental irrigation during the growing season. Of course, the Japaha River was flowing a good stream of water throughout all of these droughts, but the small brooks, many ponds and shallow wells were dry during the periods that the Alapaha River was flowing less than dne hundred cubic of water per second. For example, at the worst of the 1941 drought the alf of the Alapaha valley above Alapaha in Berrien County yielding only one nintieth of the amount coming from alf of the valley between Alapaha and the Statenville ag station in Echols County. = ee nformation on our Georgia rivers comes from the water- ources investigations conducted in: Georgia by the United s Geological Survey in coperation with the Department. Miines, Mining and Geology of the State Division of Con- vation. One hundred and six gaging stations are now in on on the rivers of Georgia. Many of these are sup- in whole or in part by contributions from the Corps o1 Engineers, the Tennessee. Valley Authority, the states ad- eo ty Power Commission. Assistance is also contributed by everal of the progressive cities of Georgia. The records from these river gages provide the essential information about the | ow that enables our engineers to. build dams for hydro pow- lood- control and water supplies, to design water works sewage disposal plants for our cities: and industries, to bridges and culverts, levees, drainage and irrigation pro-. ind to determine the fitness of our streams for recreat- , fish and wildlife. Without records of this nature river elopment would have too great a measure of guess. work resulting in waste and inefficiency. By ,having good reliable afo mation about our rivers, our engineers, cities and indus- ries can work out their plans on the basis of facts. It is no | longer necessary to overdesign hydraulic structuresadd to the cost just to make certain or run the risk of damcge should works prove too small. = eee _. The existence of records of water resources in Georgia is important to postwar planning. Those committees that plan to build adequate water works or to clean up their rivers with age treatment works can now study their needs with con- ace. Industries seeking favorable sites for new factories or nning to use new processes can now be sure of finding the amount of water they need in Georgia for Georgia has the |- ords to prove how much water is available. The amount ater used in modern industrial processes is enormous. Our bers of Comme:ce and our Industrial Agents can now rer the question How big is your river? nfortunately, it is not so easy to tell how much water lere is in a brook or how much an be expected from a illside. Every farmer who has planned to build a fish pond knows the difficulty of deciding how big a pond he should make on a given drainage area, or conversely, how much drain- fe area is needed to guarantee him that the size pond he s will fill with water and stay full but not overflow too mouch, If he Makes his pond too big for the amount of water, ait won't fill or it may-dry up ina drought, killing. all his 1. If his pond is too small, it may fill too quickly, making the ater muddy or flush out his fertilizer so that his fish starve or possibly overflow the spillway too often, making the main- fenance cost on the dam too expensive. ees When engineers design a dam costing several hundred sand dollars they would not consider planning without years or more of records of the stream flow. Those re- 1s would cost $500 a year. Yet one can hardly expect a er to demand that amount of information when the av-. ge cost of a fish pond is Jess than $500. Yet if every Georgia tm was to havea fish pond the total investment of public private-funds would exceed a hundred million dollars, as en as all the water works and dams in the state have cost. y a project of this magnitude should be based on good wiedge of our water resources even though each indi- cnd. site can not have its own gaging station. Nhile this cost of farm ponds seems high when lumped : gether, it may prove to be one of the finest investments ever made in~ Georgia. Most of the interest in ponds now seems to be for fish but it must be remembered that the ponds, if roperly designed, will make stock raising and dairy farm- ing much more profitable and possibly even more important, the ponds will provide a ready source of water for supple- atal irrigation..The excellent work at our agricultural ex- ment stations in the southeast has demonstrated the value _| in-Georgia. : Best of all, irrigation takes much of the gamble out of raising food cropsan important factor if Georgia farmers are to feed the workers in Georgias growing indus- trial centers: . = The water-resources investigations in Georgia are being directed more and more towards the measurement of small streams because of the development of farm ponds and be- cause the need for information. on rural water supplies is assuming growing importance. As rapidly ,as appropriations permit gaging stations are being established on representat- ive small streams. Single measurements of flow are being made on other streams where gaging stations have not yet been astablished. Plans are being made for using suitable farm ponds as gaging stations. Ultimately there should be. at least one of these in every county of Georgia. In addition to the basic information being collected from gagings, research is underway to develop methods of predicting the expected yields of small watersheds. The time is not far distant when the farmer planning a water supply can know without guess- ing just how big to build his pond to have it: fill within a reasonable time, stay full during the worst drought and not + overflow in severe floods. myrtles, pink almonds, 35c January jasmine, Jap sunfl ers, 30c doz. Exec. for Regal Madonna lilies. Mautile Ha rison, Bremen. - 50 Dwarf Eng. type boxwoo: rooted, 8 in. 30c ea; 2-17 boxwoods, $3.25; yellow na cissus, $1.25 C; rose _phio goldenglow. 35c doz. Mrs. B Thornton, Bremen... FLOWERS AND SEED WANTED Want seeds of variegated Fo OClocks, also small, dbl., pin and white althea bushes, wate melon red crepe myrtles and a _theas, to be not over 3 ft. hig Write or phone. Mrs. Frar Hames, Atlanta, 18 Howar SE, 3 Want some hollyhock single white, red and pink. M1 L. Geiger, Macon, 2204 N - Want 12 common. boxwo plants, 18 to 20 in. 2 plants, to 2 in.. near enough to Ather so that I may come for the Quote best price. Mrs. Ea Braswell. Athens, Care the Bar ner-Herald. : Want Regal, Amarylis or oth er lily bulbs. State what yo have, <-price,: ete: Vins. Bb; ee Atlanta, 60 Rogers $ Want Regal, Amaryllis, other lily bulbs, State wha have and price. Mrs. G.- Turner, Fitzgerald, No. Lee S Want 2 doz. blooming si aster lily bulbs, also few olan of Queen Annes Lace. M L. Pearman, Pavo, Rt. 1. Want seed of deep rose Will exe. white wi red center hibiscus seed, or se 200 seed of mine for 10c. Als exe. for stiff leaf Elephan Ear. Miss F. B. Moore, wanee: 20 Want tulips, narcissi, daf dils : jonquils, Easter lilies, S lilies, ands other bulbs, cant evergreens, hydrangea, cinths, neonies. Mrs. Mae Ro erts, Svivania, Rt. 3. - Want established clumps. ter grades of iris, . perenni phlox, Columbine, red hot pol er, bleeding heart, candytu scabiosa, August, Tiger an gale lilies, other perennials. Frank Winecoff, Atlanta, 2 Peachtree Rd. ; ak PLANTS FOR SALE Early Klondike straw plants, 25c C. Also large India peach seed, 25c doz. Yello crookneck seed, 40c cupful. . postage. Rosie Crowe, ming ons, fe . : - Bushels white and red mi tiplying onion sets, 50c qt. gal. Evergreen bunchi ions, 50c doz. Ga. -Wakefield cabbage, 60c M. Eggplant; hot pepper. ley. All del. Mrs. H. V din? Register, 2 Nice rooted sa e fe (| Wright, Alto, Rt, tone ona Bal- an MT 30c C; pleats. 25c ea. Pepper- 5c bunch.: Mrse (C..E H riwell, Ric i. we _ rooted sdge Sient. Horsemint, 50e doz. Gar- s, $1.00 doz. Comfrey, rge bunch. Gooseberry oo 00 doz. Mrs. Mae ai esville Rt. 6. d plants, 35 C., $2.00 gr ioe os: See. % sie and toma- So) S180 VM 2 Vaes pack. plants, 25. for _ Crow, Gainesville, : Bnd heading hele nts,7 35c C.) $2.00 M: ODs and checks, E. erford, eanees. Rt. tomato plants; nice . $3.06. M. Edgar Cornelia. e well rooted Red Gold] Jumbo strawberry .00 M.. PP. -Mrs:- R. lark, Gamesville, Rt. 7. XS E D FOR SALE | shallot onions, $130 ite nest onions, same Cash or M. O. Be 3 ae Lon Ashworth, ele s green Goa c pint, $2. 00 gal. , (dry), 25 pt. root, 35 lb. Horse- _ plants, 25c doz. Also ite guano sacks, aeacned: a I A. Woodring, okra Gar-: Horse- ery. nice, $1.50 gal. rray, Americus. me shallots and white ions, $1.10 gal. Cash . No checks.. Mrs. L. shworth, Dacula. : wltiplying onions onl ns, $1.25 gal. White, ten- ialf-runner garden beans, cupful. Striped half run- rden beans, same _ price. free stone peach seed, ePe3e.. aMliss Gennie Ball Ground, Rt. Les iS. W. and earky Flat cabbage seed, $2.75 lb. Top White Globe Tur- ed, $1.00 1b. Early Won- eet seed, large Boston $2.25 Ib. B. R. Wood- wery Branch, Rt. i $ ultiplying | al. del. Mrs. Clarence . Gainesville, Rt. 2. Purple Top White be ip Seed, 60c Jb. P. 50c Ib., in small lots: 40c 1 100 lb. lots. FOB. C. yn Americus. = allion onion buttons, 50c d fashioned English Peas, 40c ecupful. Slick ustard seed, 15c tblisp. sage, 25c cupful. Double Sy and catnip. 25c doz. Mrs. i M. Jones, Lula, Rt. 1. hundred Ibs. onions, Purple on request. ay onesboro. ef collard seed, slightly | with white stem ecol- sweet White Globe tur- , 10c oz... or $1.00 Jb. dleaf mustard seed, 75c Ib. a. Whigham, Rt. ecleaned Purple Top lobe turnip: seed, del. 1 lb. or more, 75c Ib. M: uldin,. Lavonia, Rt. 2. F hundred Ibs. turnip PROBOIn, Purple Top, Ege. Good germina- Add: postage on 1 Ib. ve Ibes= Robert.< Hunt nest onions, $1.25 gal. le half-runner bean seed}. kled half-runners, 30c , white multiplying on- sets, free of trash, $1.25 gal. P. in Ga. Prompi attention. Adams, Pavo. ard, seed, 25c cupful. P. seh. As Bivens. Hiram, pepper, 50c gal.;. mixed id green; old- time 1944 ach _ seed, a ea. Add - Sorrells. inon Ball $1. 50 lb. Mrs. J. -}planting, $1.25 gal. Pure Pexad Rea militiplies| onions, very rolific, $1.00 gal. |Add postage. x - = Mrs. Waco Ag- eee Canon, Rt. 1..\ E Clemson spineless a e a ie 40c lb. Not. del. ee For sale or exc. for pears, apples or peaches. | Mrs. Mae Bazew ays Americus, Rts tf for fall: planting, 40c C,- 400, $1.50. White yinllipiyene or nest onions, $1.00 gal. Can- watermeloh seed, M. Bobo, Hartwell, Rt. 1. 20 gals. aries enyislade onions, 6 gals. red aps onions, $1.00 gal. Mrs. Wooten, Camilla. RE 2. White nest. onions Ton fall ee ATE Ga. No checks. $28.50 for 100 lbs. FOB. Mrs. H. L. Fields, McDonough, Rtea 3 gals. jon sets: . rd multipivine on- for nice apples. M. G - Mims, Cuthbert, Rt. ae Straight leaf austen seed, 40c cup., 75c pt. Mrs. John Weaver, Buchanan, Rt: Green glazed collard seed, 25c oz. Ga. headnig collard, 2 ozs., 30c P. P. Tom Steed, Buena Vista. Ga. white stem collard seed, (9 los 1.0. tbs,. $0-00% 20: Toss $10.00: 100 Ibs.. $30.00. ~ Bar- tow Everitt, Whigham. Old-fashioned white nae plying onions, $1.50 gal. Mrs. Guy Crowe, Cumming.,. Rt. abe Scallion onion buttons, $1. 00 gal. Not less than 50c orders filled. Fresh, shade- cured leaf sage, $1:50 lb. Add postage. Mrs 6. oe oe Mewes Rt. 1. 20,000 to- 50, 000 lbs. blue pa seed, clear 6f trash. - . McCranie, Milan. 20 Ibs:. ae Top turnip seed, $1.00 lb. P. Also S. Pc male, wt. 200 dbs $25.00 at my barn. Sanders, Vienna. ee About 50 Ibs. curly leaf mus- tard seed, 50c lb., if all taken at one time, 75c lb., or CG. O. D. Mrs. J. Hal Rucker, Elberton, Re 6. = New Purple White - -Globe turnip seed, 50c Ib. in 50 or 100 Jb. lots ~ Curly mustard seed, "5c Ib. M. O. only J. Poole, Sumner. : White eg urnip seed, 1944 crop. pure and sound, $1.25 lb. Rt Pein Gay ee FO, Box 65. 1b Ee W. sEeonp HAND MACH- | MACHINERY FOR SALE 4 No. 61 McCormick- Deering. 6 ft. Eombine, on good rubber, in good cond.. with field pea and | Lespedeza attachments. $350.00. G. A. Franklin, Stapleton. One heart cypress Side bar syrup pan, 10 ft., length, 12-1 deep, 3 ft. wide, $8.00 at my home, 4 1/2 miles. No. Ameri- cus on Bumphead Rd. M. O; Gazaway, Americus, a = OR i os 18 in. Meadows grist mill, 6 H. -| P. ker. engines, good running cond., $175.00. Call or write..G. VM, Wagoner, Blairsville, Rt. 2. Model B Allis-Chalmers trac- tor with planter and distributor and cultivator complete, also 18 in. bottom plow. $1.000. Answer at once. H. B.-Lowery East- man, Rt. 15S as new. actrncnnk and parts lists included, $12.00 money or- der. W. B. Waldrep, Buchanan, oe ee DeLaval No. 10 Pon sepa- rator for rent or sale, also a 2- horse wagon. T. J. Biggers, Bre-= men. 1 old model power hay baler, good cond., operate with trac- tor or eng. belt drive, $75.00 FOB. E. W. Brown, Newnan, Rt. 4..c/o Maxim View Guer- nsey: Farms. 1 egular Farmall tractor, $300.00: db disc I. H. C. har- row. $75.00; 2:disc trailer plow, $75.00: 5 disc I. H. C. Tiller with seeder, on good rubber, $300.00. Call. or wire. Wray Smith, Sparta. McCormick- Deering tractor, 17 disc tiller, sub-soil plow, 6 ft. Cutaway harrow, new disc.. 8 extra disc for harrow, 4 extra disc for tiller, 28 in., good cond., 1940 model, $1, 500. 00. L. E. Hose: Beey Rt 4s, sas | Alma. Old- fashioned ehaitoe Shige: dise dbl. cutaway harrow 1 gal. white onion} sets, $1. 00 gal.. for Ee or exe. Willie Tanner, | power, good cond., $50.00; Deerny 2 H. mower. Spied cond., $60. 00 FOB, Mrs. Laura Dudley, Warthen. oe 2 2 Horse and 1 horse tapes plows, cotton planter. tobacco spray pump and other farm equipment. Mrs. J. Ce Goolse. rs == Sears bene Economy KingJr., creafn sepa-. vator, used about 3 mos... g000 . MeCoracele Deering mowing Woachine. 5 fti, in running cond., Americus. ae planters. and cultivators, also 26 nd 24 in. 4 disc tiller on yubier $1,500.00. James H. Ivey, Louis- ville, 1 Horse Picdmont wagon, 6 mos. old, $100.60. Ben Sereen, Portal. 2: t 1 strong farm. wagon (hold up any load). $50.00 at my~ home. Manuel Bailey, Washington, Rt. 3. Good 2): HL wagon, - $60. 00. Francis Westbrook, 2 eet es Ride oa 75 hp. sieam eng. 16 in 40 ft. boiler-smoke stack, used. in gin, cheap for cash, 8 mi. East Rome on Chulf. Rd. M. H. ee Sil- ver Creek: 2 FL, plow and abl. tree, $15: 1 plow junior, $5.00. Both good shape. G. Ww. oe eS ce mont. : : S ioe eee pay for B Al- + lis- Chalmers tractor, corn har- vester, power cane. mill and copper: pan. See. No letters. Guy Oxford, Culloc en: Jad: side delivery rake. used on 75 acres peanuts, now under shed. good as new. $125.00. W. B: Ouzts, Tennille, ne oe Meadows corn: aid) with In- ternational motor, now running, 1 corn sheller; 1 mi. city limits Cartersville .on Dixie Hwy.. cheap for. cash. W-TS Hives; Carter sville, RFD 1. t ek D. tractor mower, 7 feet blade, McC ormi ck-Deering grain drill, 10 ft. No letters ans- wered. C. B. Lamb, Louisville, phone 3922. =) Farmall 14: high spesd a ety on rubber with 2 row cultivat- ing equipment, International a disc harrow and. Case Wheatlin plow. Sell or trade for Farmall A, .l row. tractor with equip- ment. W. J. Williams, DeSota. Farmall F 12 tractor (motor just: overhauled), new rubber on front, steel on rear, cultiva-. tors, suano distributors, plant- ers, dbl. disc turning plows, dbl. section harrows, all lacoochee. . _INCUBATOR: - Shee Hat- cher elec., Inc., 375-egg size. Come see. Can't ship. Want sell- at once. Claude Carman, Stone Mountain.. PO Box 31. International Feed Grinder. $18.50; Buffalo: platform scales, $19.50: Deering Ideal mower. | $20.00: 30 in. Meadows Grist mill, corn sheller, 20 HP. motor. etc.. only ground around 150 bu. corn. K. W. Sproull, Stiles- bHoros = Tractors, | planters, distribu- tors, cultivators, disc harrow, tiller: 2-row outfit A-1 cond. Alwyne O. Ade ae Carrs Station. Farmall teactbe 1938 model, first class cond., with harrow and bottom plow. $600.00; cot- ton duster, 6 row, mule or ae hp. Intl. eng. used in farm work, $100.00. Emory. Travis, River- dale. Farmall F-30- and Ferre: both A-1 cond., used slightly. R. E. Evans, Hazlehurst. Box 161.: Phone No, 2. : 2 Minnesota Moline tractor, 2 16-disc harrow. H R Greene, yrs. old. with prewar rubber, Suwanee, Ri 1 Fordson tractor with dbl. sec. harrow., 14-16 in. disc. Cleveland. Elberton, Rt. 2, Box LS oss: 42 in. grits mill, good shape, with eng, etc., 1 cream sepa- rator, also incubator. See M. A. Newton, or W. W. Nesmith, Statesboro, Rt. 4. Farmali F-14 tractor, J. D., 8 ft.. tractor binder and grain- drill. Ty D. Whitaker, Hephzi- bah. ~ ae JI light wt., 4 disc J. D: tiller, used 1 season. L. BE. Tanner, Alamo. . eee ees fall | bargain. Mrs. SB. Tr. Russ, Ni- model Bradley /- Buckeye Inc., for} $950.00. George McCranie, Wil- : Cade | LN. G. Godbee. Macon, Rt. ; Avery mowing machine and rake, also Avery corn planter, in running cond. Sell at cholls, Rt. a hay press with tramper and -,eng. base, yr. eld, but never run. Gerald Tuck, Thomasville. 18 in. tractor turning plow, practically new, $50.00; also 5 tier dbl. sec. battery brooder, perfect cond.. $75.00. Mary D. | Clingman, Eatonton, Bo 290. $25.00. FOB. C. L. _ Ryne, | z k eee Large Ohio ensilage cutter, : revolving feed table, ounted, Farmall B eS on: pubes a = with lights and starter, fert. disc 75.00: smaller-cutter with sta- tionerv table. not mounted, $30. W.H. Ivey, seco Rts Box 8. ~ a Dixie Pea. huller, $25. 00. C. J. Hardman, Commerce. Well made government car, light body, seat, detachable shafts. Cost $80.00 to make: Sell or trade. EOS Week s, Harlem. Good, heavy duty 1 H. wagon, $50.00. Trade wagon and a | young 250-lb. PS sow with 4 inice pigs at $30.00, for gocd mower and rake or good Cole planter. Berry M. Moon, Shiloh, 4 Rt, d, Box 125, Williamson steel stump puller with plenty good inch cable (not rotten, ete.. $175.00; also style 17 E, 210 cap... automatic self-turning trays. $20.00. ee W. Mec- Donald, Vidalia, Rt. 2 row Avery tractor and com- plete equipment, A-1 cond.., also | good 2 H. wagon and some mis- cellaneous farm tools. See. Mrs. The Re Denny, Eastman, Rb Farmall M tractor planting and cultivating | equipment. plow. ahd 6 ft. Bush and Bog harrow. 6 ft: Combine, Grain drill: 2 F 12 Farmall tractors | planting and cultivating equip- ment with ea. Paul A. Potts, Gabbettville. A 16 -{t, chain type Hentset peanut picker, horse power hay press, Intl. make. at my" barns: 2-H. Castleberry, Lumpkin, E Good McCormick mower, $55.50: want a Bull Wheel out of an old Champion Binder. James Reup. LaFayette, Rt. 1. Some farm implements Tor sale at my Randolph Co. Farm. Mrs. W. E. Melton, ee Box ae 1/2 Radium Spring Rad. ~ McCormick-Deering mowing machine, & disc cutaway har- row. section harrow and 2 H. turning plow. All practically new, at my place on the Honor Farm Road at Pantherville. mailing address. J. L. Shirah, Decatur, Rt. 1. mea ; SECOND HAND Want 2d hand, 14 in. Cane Mili roller with the Jong neck. ei A. Thompson, Swainsboro, 28 i Want late model M Farmall tractor. or other popular make, equivalent in size and horse power. Give cond., age, price, etc. Dorsey Matthews, Moultrie. Want 1 No. H. M. 150 plow (3 disc) for International M, tractor. W. R. Andrews, Car- negie. Want 2 H. walkin Scan Advise cond., price and make. W. H. Chew. Macon, 523 Lin- den Ave. | Want Scitivatar and turn plow distributor and nlanter, for Al= lis-Chalmers tractor model Bt row, in good cond. J. Ww: Ozg- den. Odum. Want Farmall H or A. fae: tor, 4 or 5 disc tiller with seed- } er, tractor peg tooth, section harrow. Submit particulars. R. B. Whitney, Atlanta, 5th Floor, Witt Bids. Want. medium size grain threshing machine. Advise size, make and price. W. P. Chap- pell, Newnan, Rt. 1. Wani 2 H. walking cultivator. Advise make, cond. and price. 2: Want power Cane mill and pan in good cend. Pay cash or trade syrup. Joe M. Brown, McRae, Star Rt. Want 18x22 power hay press. Prefer Case.or Intl. Myst be in good cond., and reasonably priced. B. W. Middlebrooks, Barnesville. : : Want 10 drinking fountains | for cows to be used in dairy j)barns, BE. M. Clark, Ringgold! Both for $300 | or Avery. _ | MACHINERY WANTED No checks. Want good 4 or 53 dise good grajn with fertilizer att: chmert. Make best cash and state what you have | Sikes. Lawrenceville. Rt. New, 16x18 Rosey duty ines : Atliss Chalniers. iracto el B, 1 row, in ae 20 WwW: Ogden, Odum. Want 1 large power ca Advise best cash price. Ferrell. Albany. PO Box Want biacksmith shop p drill, with hand power, in go shape, for cash. J. J. See Pavo,Rt. 1. Want Sooltin: Killifer Drainer. Ball Dia, 2 1/2 or 1-2. inches. State price, nd. and location. S. V. Larsen. Sa eannah, Rt. 4. Soe Want. Jate added Gane plow and harroya. attac Leslie J. Steele. .Jr., At 172. Whitehall St. See Ge Want heavy 3 aa olen a tiller) also an Allis-Chalmer } combine. Do not reply unless in A-1 cond. aS. G, Ingram, Tal botton.. 3 Want power sugar cane m new or second-hand, me sii W.C. James, Manor. Want J. D.,.4 dise tile in. disc.. in good cond., no ju -also have for sale a 1 1-2.h power 9g&@s., eng., used in farm work. rick, Jackson. fat = 12 ve best . price. ae Tate. Want 1 power mower fo D. tractor mower: No.=5,4 Tedeet oe 5 5 have 3 ene cused McC mick-Deering walking c tors. for sale Re Cochran. Rt. 2. Want 1 wanic cultivator, Int Good Pug Riding cultivator for. sam . G. Godbee. MACON: Ri. 2 Re Creek Road, Want 2 alin eultiv Will trade International oo M, D.., eae se INCUBATORS: : A 2100 cap. incubator tically new, in good cond wosRe McCants, Butler, GRAIN AND HAY FOR SALE i RE t tou Fulligrain seed oats, $ bu. Coker smut and proof, $1.05. bu. Coker- tar ton, $1.35, Ist vr. from breed FOB. Ralph ,; Collier, Victor grain seed: Sie aS bu. Recleaned and re dy plant: in 3 and 5 bas: eee oat and _ 40 or 56 ae * gdeeeas ee wheat, $2.00 bu. FOR. ~ Phillips; Palmettou <3 -New Sanford seed $2.25 bu. at my farm on Her derson Mill Rd... Rt. 1 Dec tur. D. L. Wells; Atlanta. ee Ave., N. Ne ae Sine New Sanford Saee es | $2.00 bu. FOB. Jac. B. WwW Brooks. aa 10, 000 bu. Victor evain 5 outs in 5 bus even wt. bags. bu. FOB farm: in 100 bu. or more. W. H. Dav = Valley. ~ : 400 bu. Anpler seed Highest yielding var. College tests for 10 yrs.. bu. Cash with order. Wiley, Cordele. . Robert N. Tene : Fayetteville, Rt. 1. as 1800. Ibs. hairv. ee cleaned, 124%c Jb, FOB. ten. Farning. eaintor FOR _= FOR SALE. (1.0 cer oats in new. bu. gs, for sale here. Y. a, Woodland. rye, mixed with teh, clean and sound, ready sow, $3.00 bu. FOB. Ralph Wager, Atlanta, 1345 Emory E. bright wheat straw, n FOB. 10 Ba 6% mi. S. . Kinman, Cal- - Ganford. wheat. Made: - to A. this yr. Mark T. en, Dewy Rose. peardless barley, Abruzzi rye, $3.00 okers Victorgrain oats, - Sanford seed wheat, In good bags, pure, md free of Emory. Jackson, Gog-| Tel. 361 M 2-Barnesville. med beardless barley, | n College strain), $2.25. stem wheat. reclean- bu... LL. P. Singteton, : alley, Reo: 7. tons peanut hay, most $9700 tin at barn. rill have about 406 bu. or nore this: fall. ~J.-G. 60 bu. Cokers. cae oats. J. H. Patrick, 100 bu. clean. bu. Hastings bright and luce 101 bu. to A. this yr. binder when ripe and bu. in 5 bu. bags. ip less than 100 bu. artin, Canon. barley, recleaned, om breeder, $2.50 bu. : rifty purebred black s, immuned for life, ie 4, wt. about 150 5/00 Will crate and os Db. Sanders. Eaton- Oe ea. Also cnet. aor Westbrook, Bremen. Write for list. fe rs matty for fall del. | COTTONSEED. WANTED: , Bllijay, Rt. 3. forum Conon: Also few - $3.00 ea. Exc. wit. . Mis. Grady tone Mountain, Rt. 1. red Buff Orpington .M for 15 P. P. Crates Cornish cues $4.25. cor Miss Leona Simpson, i ae R FOR SALE mixed _ turnip -broad-leaved la or cans. Cae Mrs. H. FE. Dukes, Hicckice. Wto als. syrup in cans, 90 re. ote like to sell to : ; Kennedy, At Rome | Noxious | - Fulgrain | flowerin is shrubs. | price and | Mrs. for price. 94 Ibs. sound Stuart pecans, or Radium Springs Rd. 25c Ib., 175 Ibs. small seedlings, some faulty, $20.00 for lot or 15ec lb. in small quantities. Miss Belle Timmerman, Bron- wood, Box 83. POTATOES AND VEGETABLES FOR SALE 2 A. sweet potatoes, ready for market. J. R. Kinney, Ft. Valley, 216 Persons St. 1 A. sweet potatoes in field. Now ready. Will dig any day, except Sunday. F. A. Bryan, Omega, Rt. 1. wb. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 50 ibs. used goose feathers, in good cond., 508c Ib. Mrs. O C. Goolsby, Alma. About 45 Ibs. $14.00 FOB. -L. A. McLaugh- Thin, Senoia. Leaf sage, hand-picked, shade dried, $4. 25 Wp: 3 to 10 Ybs., $1:00 - Ib. $1. 50 Ib. , Pulverized, $1. oP) Will fill 25ce and 50c orders. V. Keith; Alvaton. Plants: permint, 6, 25e. Miss Martha . men, Rt. 2, Box 89. 100 standard chicken feed sacks, 12%c a.; 200 or 300 print cloth feed sacks, 25 ea., free of holes. exp. cash with order. checks. ville, AR. Nice shade-dried Sue, 5c. Sundried apples, 35c we Ib. I,. 5. B Sage, rewn, Toccoa, Rt. 2 shade-dried, hand- 9 gathered, % Ib., 30c: 14 Tb., 55c: |1 Ib., $1.00: 3 lbs. or more, 95' co | Ib. Over 10 Tbs. 90c tb. P, P. | Harrison a Brown, Toccoa, Kt. 2 _ MISCELLANEOU a: WANTED os Want some of the Broadwell cottonseed. if Docia Morris, 644 Yorkshire Rd., N. 7947. GRAIN AND HAY WANTED: Want 500 bu. Cokers Full Grain oats. Quote best cash price. Can furnish sacks if dsired. Ike Cowart, Colquitt. Want sev. tons any kind hay, _ ee sev. bu. @rain mixture for]. grazing and soil building. -A. D. Carpenter, Stone Mtn., Rt. 2. Phone Clarkston 2103. Will pay market price for . sev. tons new baled hay del. Mrs. Helen Rt. 2, Box and 50. bu. corn. R. Street, Atlanta, 564, Buford Hwy. HONEY, BEES AND BEE |SUPPLIES WANTED: Want few hives Bees. old- fashioned gums or late hives. Advise FOB price, etc. L. M. 1 Sraith, Haddock, P. . Box 7. Want 8 lbs. beeswax. Quote | price. Dr. H. H. McLndon, Lincolnton. QUINCE WANTED: 2 Want % bu. ripe Quince, old fashioned type. Give price, etc. Mrs. Chas. W. Curry. Sa- vannah, 209 Hast 49th St. ;|SACKS WANTED: Want 1 to 200 burlap. sacks, Pay 3c ea. and] 100 lb. cap. exp. charges. }Greenville. _ SEED WANTED: Maude Hamby, Want 1 gal old time red that State shallots, the hot kind, make long root onions. price, parcel post paid. J. as Meeks, pereRc eas, Box 336. : Want a peck to % bu. of this yr.s good peach seed. Quote A. S. Johnson, Pelham. Rt. CATTLE FOR SALE _ ford 4 cattle fer | Richards, Rydal, Rt. Ra 4 clean oose. |feathers, 40c Ib. Also 9 pure- bred W. R. hens and 1 rooster, Ground sage, Horseradish, House. Leak, 8, 25c: Hoarhound; Pep-' Add postage. | Womack, _ Bre- Add postage or. No| Major Crowe, Gaines-. | cow and calf. i naturally butt-headed, Advise amount, wilt-resistant. Vel due to freshen Sept. 8th and putter on. | Doster, | Peer, 315278. jfords for immediate sale. s-lold, wt. 850 or 900 | Mrs. Jersey cow fox ade 19% EK. Melton, Albany, Cow with 2nd calf, heavy milker, at my barn. Mrs. down Black Top Rd. near Timber Ridge). Reg. yearling Polled Here- ali. H. M. Peabody, Ma- Tretta, Rt. 3: Ph, | Smyrna | 136 R. Halt. Ji ersey, half polled | Her eford bull, 14 mos. old, for sale at my barn. _ Will not ship. Fred Johnson, AMarietta, Rt: 3. 5 fine Jersey milch cows; 1 Holstein male: 1 black Jersey \male, both about 14 mos. old. 'See at my barn. ,H. Wadsworth, Woodland. Mrs. J ewell Pr. matched steers and other sate. See. . C. -B. 20 Whitefaced yearlings and calves; few cows. Make offer. EH. Maynard, Newton. _ Cows and calves, T-B. tested, gentle and good milkers. Come With truck if interested, $100.00 ea. and up. Mrs. W. H. One IEn. Alma. ' Fine Jersey heifer of exc. breeding, due to freshen if Sept., gentle and in good econd., $75.00 if taken at. once. Miss Annie G. Fields, _Hamp- ton, Rt. 2. Jersey bull and cow, $50.00 ea.: heifer, $60.00. Also young mule. At Arnoldsville the ork: Sanders. ees ville, Ante: Good sow, bred to White- faced bull, due to freshen Oct. 5th.. Whitefaced heifer, due to freshen January. Bull calf, 4 mos. old, 42 Whitefaced. L. C. Whitmire, Cornelia, Star Rit. : Jersey cow, giving 9 dts. milk daily, freshened in Feb. with first calf: gentle and eas- | ily milked, $80.00. R.A. Strib- S. Ww ling, Atlanta, Am2762. Fine Whitefaced male, wt.' 1100 lbs., $100.00. J. Mil- ler, Woodland. Small Jersey ae Guernsey a. Culberson, N. co Rt 1 ident of Ga.). 2 Guernsey-Jersey heifers, fresh in with heifer calves, 10 - | wks. old, for sale or trade for Hampshire sheep. A; Hanes, Indian* Springs. 4. eream colored Jersey heifers, wts. 250 to 325 Ibs., 10c Ho, dS. Te Beck. Bowdon, Rt. 1. _ good Sersey milch cows, 12th, give 1% Ibs. common feed; 2 Jersey bulls, 2% yrs. old and 15 mos. old. Come and see. 4 mi. S. Bu- ford. Mrs. Emma M. Puckett, Buford, Rt. 1, Box 50. f 10 reg. horn type Hereford heifers, 9 to 24 mos. old. Bred to Super Domino 15th, one of the best bulls in the S. EL Perey A. Price, Albany. Purebred Ayrshire bull, about 2 yrs. old, $65.00 at my barn; also milch cows and sprhgers reasonable. Pink Paradise,\ Ben Hill, Rt. 1, Cas- cade Ra: Reg. Guernsey bull, 14 mos. old, best bloodlines, vigorous and well developed. Wm. H. | Mayfield, Atlanta, 3688 Bakers Ferry Rd. S. W. Ra 1818. Guernsey bull, reg. for sale. or exe. for beef steer. At Hol- brook Campground. Clay An- | drews, Alpharetta, Rt. 1. Purebred Guernsey cow, very gentle, 6 yrs. old, giving 14 qts. a day. Mrs. Pearl Atlanta, 969 McDon- ough Rd. Rt. 3. Ma 0210. Reg. Guernsey bull, 8 mos. old: sire, Riegeldale Majestys dam: Riegel- dale Phadors Careful, 661352, exc. - type. Frank Agnew, Summerville, Rt. 3. Cow, fresh in, giving 3 gals. | milk daily; grey Jersey cow, fresh in Sept. Suitable for dairy. Joe i. McBrayer, Tem- ple, Rt. 1. Foundation herd: reg. Here- 5 bulls, 18 cows and heifers. Popular type and bloodlines. Closing out. J. Luther Arm- strong, Sr., Cartersville, Rt: 2. Half Whitetaced eee. 3 a ill plow and work to ae $100.0 We B. Trulock, Rebecca, Re 1. R. Owenby, pape both ; =] oad, Buchanan, Rt. 2. $40.00 FOB. - Herman C. Brewer. Reg. in buyers name: | CATTLE FOR SALE HOGS FOR SALE 9 nice high grade cows and | heifers, 3 milking; 2 Jersey, 1 purebred Guern- Guernsey, 1 sey bull. not reg.; 3 Guernsey heifers, 3 Jersey heifers, fies 00 to $100.00 ea. FOB. M. M. W.| Newsome, Sandeteville. A. Martin, Gainesville, Rt. 4. el rai. 3 Whitefaced beef yearlings: 3 good Jersey milch cows with calves: Whitefaced male, purebred. 2% yrs. old. Prefer to sell all to one party. J. J. Davidson, Pineview. Rt. 1. Ree. 4 Star, White Jersey bull, 2 yrs. old in November. $150. 00. J. C, Allen, Stone Mountain, Rt 2. ~ Phones Clarkston 3351. and Atlanta Wa 2368. or cross cow, 2nd calf. T. B. test- ed. Around 3 gal. milk day. $70.00. Jack L. Howard, At- oe Rt. 9, Box 401. Main 0079. Good Jersey cow. Now giv- ing 9 qts. day; freshen in Feb- ruary, gentle, easily milked, 30.00. R. A. Stribling, At- Janta, Sewell Road. Am 2762.) ~ | Baker St. .N. &. HOGS FOR SALE | Duroe gilts, bred, pigs, out- standing bloodlines. at hadt price; also Purebred Hereford bulls. 14 mes. old, not reg. Cheap. S. L. Thornton, Dewy- rose, Rt. 1. Hereford pigs, lines, reg. males, $17. 50 ea.; gilts, $20.00 ea. FOB. Leon Watson, Una- dilla, P. O. Box 214 2 young O. I. C. sows, bred, O. 1. C. boar, 18 mos. old. Have papers. R. F. Williams, Guy- ton, . OC. Box 103. 8 shoats, big bone Guinea and P. C. cross, 3 mos. old; 2 O. i. . and Durec mixed, $15.00 ea. Exec. for fresh cow, or will buy cow. Cc. E. ton, Atlanta, 3385 Oukerae Rad. (Adamsville section.). OT. C.sow pigs, 8 wks. old, best blood- wt. 40 to 50 Ibs., $12.50 ea. up. Papers free, or reg. in buyers name, $2.00 extra. Extra spe- cial bloodlines. D. B. Duke- hart, Decatur, P. O. Box. 488. S-2. pigs: 2 nics. old, out. of litter of 13. Wt. 35 to 40 lbs., $15.00 ea., not reg. $16.50 ea., reg. Treated, crated. FOB. Fred C. Seago, Pinehurst, Rt-1. Black Essex male, 8 mos. old, wt. 150 tbs., at my place, Poplar Springs Church, Wt. Sat rett, Buchanan. ~ Reg. S. P.-C. males, 18 wks: old, cholera immune, papers furn. regs. in buyer's name, $14.00 ea. Carl Wheeler, Macon, Rt. 5. Reg. Duroc-Jersey boar, 16 mos. old, exc. cond., fine _con- dition. _ Reg. papers furn., QO: M. Cates Greensboro. O. I. . pigs for stock hows. Order now. I will ship. Price reas. Lewis H. Jones, Faytte- ville, Rt. 3. ; 10 bie bone Guinea. pigs; 8 wks. old, $4.50 a.., for tot. Cannot ship. Mrs. Will Howell, Mitchell, Rt. -1. boar, about 1 yr. old, wt. 250 lbs. Excellent breeder, $30.00 FOB. G. E. Stahlkuppe, Mor- row, Rt. 1. Rep. Berkshire hops, from vry bst of breeding, either sex and dif. ages. double trat- ed for cholera: BF. Mauidin, Lavonia, Rt. '2. g Big bone Black African Guinea pigs, 6 wks. old, ae 50 ea:: 8 wks: old: $12.00 ea. Danrels- Vilte, Rt. 3. Reg. Hereford hogs, | Good. pigs, weaned, best bloodlines, $22.50. ea.: $40.00 pr. Few, spring bears and gilts, extra fine, $75.00 pr. unrelated. F. S. Furstenburg, Atlanta, Hogan Rd., Rt. 1. Reg. Duroc boars and silts, Jan. litters, wt. 200 Ibs. and under, $35.00 6a., down to $12.50 ea for pigs. Ernest P. Carter, Baxley. extra inoculated, O. L. C. boar, 5 mos. old, wt. 150 lbs. Extra bloodlines. short nosed, stocky type, $25.00 6a. Exe, for H. Nix, good, young sow. W. Alpharetta, _ 9 shoats, 3 tos. old. Aue, Wt. 65 to 70 Ibs. 6a: % O. I Y% bis bone Guinea: y E Special barvain for jot at m' barn, Phe A. Sh in old Jersey-Guernsey : in buyers name | Stan- | jor yearlings. Write for details, or $40.00), l yrs. old: well BrOKS: 92.1 : 8 reg. S. P. C. pigs, 10 old, wt. 40 Ibs. Mrs... Morten, Gray P. C. and O. I. C. pigs, 8 12 wks. old. Cheap. 4 m out W. Washington Rd. W. Thompson, East Point, Washington Rd. 6 shoats, 1 boar, 5 gilts, pur -bred Durocs, papers furn. mos. old, wt. 150 to 175 Th $35.00 ea., or $200.00 for | for tractor, no dri J. attachments. Barnesville. 8 O. I. C. pigs, 6 aka ol N. G. Forester, Buford, Rt. 2. Duroc pigs, blocky ty $15.00 ea. reg. uye name. Some SS E 3exn = Sais. ne ida Wi liams, Baxley. 5 sows, bred, $25.00 ea. OQ: tC. boars, $20.00 ea. / cows, calves and mule. red and white rabbits, Red; N. .H.' Red. White R and Buff Orpington hens, $1.2 to $2.00 ea. Other poultr Mrs. Bs I. Rembert, Atlanta, % James G. oe Nice, young P. e sow 250 lbs., with 4. pigs, $30 Berry M. Moon, Shitoh, R Box 122. HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE | ne Bay esddie Horse. 1200-1400 lbs., $115.00; very gentle mare mule, 1000 lbs., $65.00. Miss John nie Davis, Atlanta, 42 Gro Park Pl, N. W. .Phone /2012 W. ps3 plug mules in very 00: cond., for sale. - Mrs. A. Webster, Cornelia. Rt. 1. Mare mule, wt. about | lbs., $50.00, or exc. for Mrs. Alice ton, Athens, Rt. 1. Brood mare, 4 yrs. o 1000 lbs., bred to large j (draft type): gentle and \ work anywhere. Cannot s R. I. Tracy, Valdosta, Rt. Good farm mule, i nd., reas. priced. ae T. Medlin or Homer D. Den sey, _ Oakdale Ra jack; mule colt, 2 - ole work mule, 9 yrs. old. T. Whitaker, Hepzibah. Fine roan brood mare 1340 lbs. Gentle, good wo 10 yrs. old: has horse c - mos. old. $130.00 cash. = Westbrooks, oe 2 mare muies, re. Mrs. Nellie Wo Ty Ty, Rt. 1. (3 miS. ey 2 mules for sale at my ry Mrs. Wooty =. pa os Pony, 4 yrs. \1bs. for sale. Purebred big bone Guinea| Moreland, Rt. 1. Pr. mare mules, 6 yrs. ( wt. 900 lbs., for Sale. 1 Sosebee, Cleveland, Rt. 1 Mule, wt. 1000 Ibs. and will work anywhere. or trade. H. J. Crawford, Alavita, Rt. 1. Bok 2 a.; 8 yrs. old: work any ywhe Sell or exc. for tractor pay dif. Beckeeat Rt. B for quick sale at my Homer Butts, Young | 6 Gentle bay horse, yrs. old. colt, 1 yr. old $75.00. Adams, Preston. Tnn. walking horse, 2 old: good breedifig and prospect. Dr, Earl Fis lanta, 2725 Cheshire Rd. Goe-Bu-Ma Farm. RARBITS AND ea vi _ FOR SALE _ Chinchillas, 3 doe sin: ii os SHEEP AND GOATS FOR SALE and senior stock, healthy vite for low prices: Brantlen, Wrightsville, JN, 2 Reds, 5 eke! old: es, 4 mos, old: 6 does, 3. a: 1 buck, 10 mos. .old. d, but not reg. All for Z. M. Thompson, Mil- , Rt. 1, Box 176. he rabbits, 4 mos. old, Chinehillas, $4. 00 -Angoras, 1 yr. old, ockard = Atlanta, xander St.. N. W.- mixed rabbits; 10 that are 20 mos. old; 7 are 2-3. $1.50 ea., $17.00 for lot. Dumas, Atlanta, 339 Jos- r St. N.B, Cr 4436. a good standard Chin. does, ready to breed. be reg. buyers name. | foundation stock. $20.00 G. Smith, Atlanta, Rt. gian doe, 10 mos. old, } or $3.25 ea: .3 Reds, 8 old, $1.35 ea.; Red, 4 mos. 0; 1 Dutch, 8 wks. old, 2%. Ca 4907: ian enilk goat, fresh, giv- 3 qts. daily, with pr. kids. roe dry feed. $35.00 for B. Mrs. Grady Reed, Seaman milk goat. with- rns, % to 3 qts. milk : about 18 mos. old, very BR. Banks- isposing of entire herd, ity, reg, purebred Tog- rg does and kids and in- Reasonable for quick Warren Rollins, Atlanta, oo Hill Ave., N. E. 3 ik goat, 2 yrs. old. also and nannie goat, ea. 5 id,.fer sale. Cade Cleve- Elberton, Rt. 2, Box 18. burg milk goat, 1 . old, 1 pr. French . old. for ba er 8 Adair eee ee ducks for sale at 75c ea. .|C. Roberds, i. W. Mur-| 41% mos,; | |about October F.| pullets, 3 for $5.00. Outstandnig Reg. Searian buck of 20 Ib. 11 oz. produc- tion breeding at stud. Fee, $4.00 with free return service inside of 90 days: bred and open does and doe kids, and 1 reg. yearling buck for sale or trade. ta, 695 Paynes Ave.,. N. W. At Stud, Sir Randolph ts 4159, from Jone line of im- ported Swiss 8 qt. stock. Young and vigorous. Outstanding for number of doe kids. Naturally hornless. Fee, $5.00. W- R. Mills, Decatur, 123 4th Ave. LIVESTOCK WANTED CATTLE WANTED: Want 2 work steers, wt. 1200 to 1800 lbs. prefer good matches: also have few Jas. a Reup, Lafayette, Rt. 1. . Want 10 purebred Guernsey or Jersey heifer yearlings. T. Savannah, Rt. 2. Bonaventure Rd. Want an ox that works single. Will.trade milch cow for ox. Vernon. (ORSES AND MULES: WANTED: Want good plug mule, 10-15 yrs. old, in good cond. Cheap for cash. Also want 5 bu. rye rat $2.00 bu. 10 bu good oats, $1.00 bu. Must be clean and sound seed. _ Lester Massey, Danielsville, Rt. 3. fs SHEEP WANTED: Want 3 ewes, bred to pure- bred buck. Give best price, del. C.e. Spence, Carrollton. POULTRY FOR SALE 3 mixed bantam _ roosters, March 21, 1944 hatch, 50c ea. Sy L. Wilson, Fairmount. Bantams, 10 wks. old, $1.00 at my place. Cc. Be Croekett, Avondale Estates; 367 Rock- bridge Rd. & small type brown bantam 'cockerels, spring hatch, 75c ea. Also red or brown nest on- ions, large amount, $1.00 gal. Jimmie Wimberly, Chauncey, eo Dark Cornish and Red Pyle, eld English game bred from Exhibition stock. Cockerels and pullets: Dark Cornish, $15.00 and $20.00 trio; Red Pyle Old English, $10. 00 (io. ae GC Om, Augusta, Box 910. 1 Brown Leghorn Se reoster, about 20 mos. old, wt. 2 lbs., color, black-red back and black tail, rose comb, $1.00. A. L. Barlow, Cadwell, Ree ke BARRED, WHITE AND OTHER ROCKS: 25 White Rock pullets, will lay in ee and Cctober, $1.50 ea- J. J. Davis, Rutledge. Some B. R. April hatch, also | Red and White chickens, pul- llets and cockerels, $1. a lus express less than in jot. Cash. J. W. Fulghum, Douglasville, Rt. 1- B. R.,-3-A pullets, tis Boul Greene; Atlanta, oule- Saya. N. E. Phone At 5771. Good laying hens, 1 and 2 yrs. old; some pure 4 A White Rocks, some mixed; also 5 April hatch pullets and 1. pr. 1943 hatch M. B._ turkeys. Write. Mrs. W. H. Williams, Chipley, Rt. 2. 6 purebred B. R. cockerels and 7 pullets, all April hatch, also - purebred White Rock cockerel, about 15 mos. old, $2.00 ea. Mrs. Robert Daniel. Demorest, Rt. 1. 10 April hatch White Rock pullets and rooster, $13.50 if taken at once. laying H. | Douglasville. 35 big B. R. laying hens, $42.00, or $1.35 ea. Mrs. Odell Carden, LaGrange. Rt. 2. CORNISH, GAMES AND GIANTS: Purebred Dark Cornish pul- lets and cockerels, wt.. around | 14% and 2% Ibs. ea., $1.00 and $1.25 ea. FOB. my _ poultry yards. . .M. Moorman, Lovett. ao . Large type Dar ornis sane an eockerels, 2 cule ot 50; money order.. M. H, Clark, ee 217 First St. Edwin Simpson, Atlan- John W. Collins, Mt.! bantams, | R.|lay, 5 mos. old, $2.00 ea H. M| Adams, mation address W. Decatur. LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALE -The Georgia Hereford Association, Ine., will have a Registered Hereford (both Polled and Horned) Bull sale at Macon, September 23rd. This sale will be sponsored by the Macon Chamber of Commerce, and for further infor- C. Denny, Secy.-Treas., 4 POULTRY FOR SALE Purebred Dark Cornish fry- ing size cockerels, $1.50 ea.; also eggs, $1.25 per 15; 30 for $230. Carton ta be ret. M. . only. Miss Cora B. Pat- terson, Ty Ey, Rt. 3. BOX. 14. .2 Blue Jap hens, $2.00 ea.: roosters: 1 Blue Jap and 1 Red Quill crossed, $2.50 ea.; Blue Jap and Shawl Neck crossed, $2.00; Red Quill and Irish Grey crossed, $2.50: young Blue Jap, $2.00. . Jas. C. Bennett, Duluth. Pure Grist Grady Ses and pullets. None better. W. G. Jones, Blakely, P. O. Box 361: 20 or more purebred Allen Roundheads, pullets and stags; also 13 young guineas; also A pr. Bourbon Red Turkeys. Sell together or by head. Charles V. oung. Stone Mountain, Rt. 1 (5485: Memo- riak Dr) 20 game hens crossed with} Zoundhead, Clairborn, Cuban Blues, Carolina Blues, good laying hens and fighting stock. hateh, same $2.50 ea. 12 stags, April kind; 3 fine eocks, for lot... Cannot. ship. Bagwell, Canton, Rt. f. All kinds of Pit Games: cocks, -$10.00 ea.: hens, $5.00 ea. Trade 2 hens for 1 good cock. Pay express: also have 1 purebred Duroc Jersey sow. bred, $20.00. Tom Weaver, Canon, Rt. 2 | 15 purebred Cornish cock- -erels, extra fine, March and April hatch, $1.50 ea. Lake Brantley, Seperton, Rt. 2. LEGHORNS: 12 Brown Leghorn hens and rooster, $10.00. Come after; also want some Deer Tongue for flavoring tobacco. W. Franklin, Fairmount, Rt. 1. Approximately 500 W. Leg- horns, 12 wks. old, $150.00. Sell entire lot only. Five mi. No. Clarkesville . D.. Dam- mons, Hollywood. 150 AAAA Eng. W. lets, $2.00 ea. at my door. L. pul- Mrs. L. L. Cartee, Metter. 80 Eng. W. L. AAAA April pullets, $1.50 ea., or $115.00 for lot. Mrs. Jack Mims, Boston. 16 big type W. L. 13 mos. old pullets, healthy and laying, $14.40 for lot FOB. Money order. Mrs. Ji: s W. - Hamm, Summit. : e 10 B. L. hens and rooster, yr. old in June, hens laying, $17. 00 for lot: 6 pullets, 1 roos- ter, 4 mos. old, $7.00. Everlay strain. Mrs. W. R.. Richey. Lavonia, Rt. 1. About 50 W. L: pullets, 3-A grade, good percent now lay- ing, $1.50 ea. FOB O58: Bradbury, Sr.. Bogart. 375 Eng. W. LL. pullets, wormed and treated, ee hens, yr. old, laying 2 crates eggs weekly, $1.75 ea. Mrs. H. E. Dukes, Ochlocknee, Rt. 2. 80 Rice Master mated W. L. pullets, 10 wks. old, $75.00 'FOB., and party furnish crates. Chiff T. Tanner, Sandersville, Tt. 1c PEACOCKS, -PHEASANTS, - | PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC.: 5 pr. Homer Racing pigeons, $2.00 pr. Exec. for bantams or other chickens, rabbits or gui- nea. pigs. Reed F. Fowler, Roy. 20 common pigeons, large sized, mixed colors, mated and working, 50c pr., or 20c ea., if all taken. F. A. Bryan, Omega, Rt. 1. Common pigeons, all cols 75c pr. Money order. Ron- ald Hinson, Fitzgerald, Rt. 2. . Quail, $1. 25, $1.50 and $1.95 each, at my home. Mrs. T. W. Allgood Atlanta, 1169 Arling- ton Ave. S. W. Ra 7266. White King pigeons, $2.50 pr.: mixed pigeons, $1.50 pr.; trio common bantam chickens, $1.50; 1 full grown nannie a. $3.00, Cannot ship. goat. E. Moore, Thunderbolt, Sar 6: Box 67. Bill mostly. L.| GEESE. DUCKS, ETC.: - POULTRY FOR SALE 3 pr. Racing Homers, $5.00: ' 20 small type mixed game bantams, 4. wks. old, wt. less than pound when grown, $4.50: white cabbage- collard seed. 15 oz.: 60c per % Ib. Mrs. Willie Smith, Rolsten. Aristocrat pigeons, sev. large breeds, extra fast workers, mated prs. and young birds, from finest breeding stock. Write for prices. J. H. Barr, Lumpkin. ORPINGTONS: Purebred S.C. tne str. Buff Orp:. about <3 Hos: ave: pullets and cockerel, | $15.00: 20 pullets and 2 cocekerels, 20.00. Mrsoe Cx. WW. Griffin. creven, Rt. 2. REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRES AND RHODE ISLANDS): 20 hens, 1942 and 1943 hatch New Hampshire Reds, 10 pul- lets, 1944 hatch, all A-1 cond., $2.00 ea. for entire lot or in 10 to 12 in lots. Money order. Mrs. Annie B. King, Adel, 308 West 8th St. 30 N. H. Red Mareh pullets, from bloodtested, U. S. proved flock, $2.00 ea. or more. Ship prepaid. Ben Davis, Martin, Rt.-2. 15 purebred N. H. lets, 4 mos. old, 75ec ea: W hens, $1.50 ea:.. FOB.; also Jer- sey cow with heifer calf. fresh- jened August 16th. and Guern- sey-Jersey mixed heifer. fresh in October, $75.00 ea. Mattie McPherson, Rabun Gap. 40 nice hens, R. I. Reds and |B. Rocks, med. to large, be- ginning to lay. $50.00. EK. S. Blackwell, Shady Dale, Rt. 1. TURKEYS, GUINEAS, 10 speckled Guineas, 1943} hatch, 8 hens and 2 roosters, hens all laying, $10.00 FOB. Chk. or money order. W. H. Wood, Martin, Rt. 1. 15 large Blue geese, $2.00 ea. Mrs. Alhie M. Russ, Nicholls. 16 guineas, 14 hens, 2 roost-| ers, 5 white hens, $16.00 for the 16; also pr. horses. 6 yrs. old, wt. past 1,000 lbs. ea. Good heavy wa- gon and Deermg Mower. .J.{ EF. Wellborn, Rock Springs. 2 Mallard ducks. 5 mos. old, for sale. Floyd R- Williams. Atlanta, 1533 noes PE, S. W. Indian Boones ducks, ever- | laying type, $3.50 pr., $5.00 haben AT: -Thompson, Cald- we 14 geese of extra good stock, | all full size, part raised this spring. $6.00 pr.. $40.00 for lot. Mrs. H. G. Reed, Austell, Rt. 2, Box 238. WYANDOTTES: 40 super White Wyandotte pullets, 6 mos. old. and 5 roosters. best str., $90.00. J.| E. Hudson, Douglasville, Rt. 2. Silver Lace Wyandotte AAA cockerels, 6 mos. old. $2.00 ea. J. B. Craven, Dunwoody. - POULTRY WANTED | POULTRY WANTED - BARRED ROCKS WANTED: Want 12. March or April hatch B. R. pullets and rooster. Would consider Rhode Island Reds. State bst price. T. H. Patterson, Dalton, Rt. 2. ~ CORNISH WANTED: Like to swap good mated} prs. of pigeons for some good laying hens, Dark Cornish preferred. _J. B. Brittingham, Columbus, 1335 Benning Dr. GIANTS WANTED: Want some March or April hateh Black Jersey Giant cockerels. Mrs. B. H. Purvis, Helena, Rt. If. MINORCAS WANTED: . Want 6 or 8 ready to lay Black Minorca pullets, or young hens, purebred. ~ A Johnston, : Aulenta, 1269 Ridge- | chi oe Dr. N. Clk Wa 653 10 ap- | Ship 106 Red. pul-. | church and city. | POULTRY WANTED LEGHORNS WANTED: Want 50 young hens, either White or Br F. K. Robinson, Atlanta, | Vedado Way, NE. | | FARM HELP WANTED Want reliable, pleasant w man to live in home with maz and wife and assist with ehores around farm. Ww Thornton, Albany, Box 22: ily to gather 2-H. crop work truck farm on 50-50 ba next year. Good land and house. Claud W. / teh ri | Conyers, Rt: 2. : Want good. surveyor tablish lines on large tract land... W..H. Adams, Mac Want eee white to live in home and assist v farm work, $30.00 mo; ro and board. Mrs. John | tain, Alpharetta. Want man and wife to wee on dairy or man with hel old enough to strip cows /beink milked. tae er information. Winston, Rt. 1. Want tenant for 2-H on 50-50 basis. Good pasture and land, 2 scho: ses by door: on mail rt. 3 E. Norcross, 20 mi. from lanta. Also want tenant ~ 2-H. crop, thirds or Writs for particulars. = co McDanield, Koes Sent sharecropper for: 19 Have good land, in FE Co., near Pave and Barney; 4 R. house, good water, 2 A. to bacco allotment. near se and churches. liable pecvl. i i Rev. G- T. Dell. Moultrie, Want good, reliable farm to share crop. Do some ok ing and gen. farming. they furnish stock and r cei a larger goes of n About 35 A. good land. Chi ford Tyler, Naylor. Want good, exp. farme terested in tobaeco: have A. allotment. Good jfence, house, barn, water an wood; on school bu near mail rt. and chu community. 3 mi, A Beatright, Alma. .Want good, clean, | white, middle aged wom. live as one of family a /\+farm work, $i. 00 week, b rd and room. - L. Hum es, Atlanta, 5 eo Memorial good work|N. EF Want white over 50, for farm work. sonable salary, boa room. Good home an ant surroundings. nie D. Lide, Whitesbur: Want refined, whit woman for work aroun Mrs. C. A. eer verdale. Want single man, whit look after cattle, hogs other such work on fa J. Simpson, Atlanta, Glenwood Ave., S. E. Ja Want farmer with stock 1945, standing rent basis, } or H. crop, 1% mi. W. Me ough, 28 mi. So. Atlanta. | land. pasture, 4-R. small barn and large r nearby. Mail and bus rt. S or write Mrs. Mary Kimbrel Brinkley, McDonough. Want exp. Dairyman, only. Prefer with son or ber of family to help. house, and salary. Near schoo Cc. N. Re berds, Sevannah, Rt. 2 venture Rd.). Want 2 2-H. share croppers for 1945. Good river far Fulton Co. David Medl Atlanta, Rt. 2.. (At Med bridge.) Want white or col hel clean up farm and ditch. contract jeb. House availal L. R. Wade. Hapeville Springdale Rd. Want farm help for. fa mi. Atlanta. | House> wood, garden free. Fair wages. R port immediately for wor dont come if lazy or. d honest. Large or oe fam, ilies, white or col. zB . Travis Riverdale. Want honest man fo 4ths, or standing rent. G 6-R. haves: ie barn and Pod vast Ss FARM | HELP WANTED Want Seba white woman for farm work. Room, meals and extra good salary. Communicate with Mrs. Pearl Pickett, Atlanta. 829 Ponce de iaeon Ave... N. E. - Want eage for 1945 to cul- tivate 1145 H. crop on 50-50 basis. - toad water in yard, lenty wood, running water on place. 10 A. bottoms. % mi. church. 10 mi. No. Can- ton. H. Y. Brown, Canton, AE. a Want fray to live in Hance en place and do general farm work. Both to vwork. Write or see for full particulars. Mrs. Nesbit Shivers, Pavo. Want shar croppers. and eneral foreman tor la.ge farm in Talbot Co Good land, houses, -P. Corley. Manchester. Want reliable man for use f farm. .No rent expected. 25- -30 A. cultivation. Located on Satilia River in Charlton Co.. 3 mi. Co. Hwy. and school bus. Allow part time use of mules (which I will 4urnish feed for) and farm tools. Must uke good. care of property. frite. . Lester Varn. Folkston, 2 Box 82.- Vant tenant with help to rate 2-4-h. farm. 70\A. cul- vation: strong uvoland and ottom land. Near Sharon and Bronwood churches, in lower pact of Forsyth Co. Cec Bagley, Suwanee. Rt. 1. CORRECTION: Want share opper for 4-H. crop for 1945. Good land, house, water, wood and tools. Must be able to drive and repair tractor. | urnish labor on farm until crop time, $1.50 to $2.50 day. Good school, good paved oad, 20 mi. good market. Ap- ply. at once if interetsed. Max Zugar, Pittsburg. Want elderly white man, alone, with means to support self, -to live in and take care of place. Garden and chick- ens and furnished camp home. rs. Harrison, Savannah, 412 anderson St. Want young, married, white nan to work on poultry farm. Modern house furnished. Write W. T. Bennett. Com. Manager, Pine Mtn. Valley Farms, Pine Mountain Valley. Want 1 or 2 H. farmers. pre- furnish own stock. Have d tobacco allotment and ad opportunity for good ( rkers. Wm. Johnston, Haz- shurst. ~ Want woman for farm work, garden, etc., live as one of family and. salary. B. H. rage, Sardis, Rt. 1. Want Dairy Herdsman to ake charge of 80 cow milking results. . Use: Must be ex- ; a competent. $160. 00 mo. and good-house ith modern conveniences. Iton Shedd, Jesup. "standing rent, will work for : Nene LaGrange. 8 Can take posses- ion immediately. Mrs. Rob- rt H.: Stovner, Hogansville, Ppt. . Man and wite with 2. chil- : , want job on truck or dairy farm. House with lights, water in or nearby place. Must inance moving. Consider ther work. M. J. Mcleod, ublin, Rt. 2 f Want 2 h. crop on: halves, Wife and 12 yr. on to help farm. Go. any- TIETE:. Dont drink. 47 yrs. tee EK. Enlow, Sugar Val- 5 or 30 acr es. Want 30 A. farm, standing ent or 3rds and 4ths, on public oad, in 20 mi. Atlanta. An- erall letters or see the oe G. L. Jackson, Lilburn, ae St ~ Want job on farm as Over- eer, Give ref: if req.. N. D. ook, Atlanta, 21 Rawson St., = W. Ma 6467, Want job on farm, any kind f work around farm. Clar- nce Bass, Reidsville, Box 662- F-2- Des Man, white, age 30, wants ob on farm, doing light work Elderly eouple wants job as aretakers on farm, looking r cattle, poultry. elc., nable salary. Need diving a P. W. Wills, , Deca- | stock and equipment. | Will] ee man, for weekly - Answer at once. _ Lee ark Hartwell, ra> | MARKET BULLETIN Wednesday, September 3 le ataon For Farming And Agricultural Jobs Dean, College of Agriculture, University of Georgia, Athens. Today everyone who wants to work can find a job. There are now more jobs than there are people to fill them. For persons seeking employment this is the most favorable situation that. has ever existed in the history of our country. But it is a condition that will not last forever. Soon the audation will be om- | pletely changed. When the war is over, 10 niilnou service men will come home. Everyone of them will want a job. Also, there are now more than 10 million men and women working in war plants. These people are} making guns and ships and tanks and airplanes. But once the war is over these things will-no longer be needed. The workers now engaged in making them will be forced to look for new jobs. Within two years aiter the fighting is over, be- tween 20 and 30 million war workers and service men will try to find employment in peace-time jobs. In addition, there will be from 4 to 6 million boys and girls, who have grown up during the war years, looking for the opportunity to earn a living. There will not be enough jobds to meet the needs of all these millions. Some will fail to find satisfact- ory work opportunities. Again, as before the war, there will be some unemployment in the United States. There will also be a much more limited market for farm products than exists at the present time. Today wise people will look forward to these conditions which will exist Lomorrow and prepare to meet them. What can be done? Let Us aueider first our young peopleboys and girls now living on Georgia farms. : There is little or nothing that one boy or girl ean do to prevent. unemployment on a national scale. But every young person can solve his or her own). problem by getting a good education and special training for some worthy occupation. What happens when there are several applicants for one job? Usually, the one best prepared, on the basis of training and experience, get the job and the others are left out. In other words, there is compe- tition in which the best man wins. The same thing applies to farming. Even in depression years some farmers make money. ; After the war is over competition for Joos will | be keener than ever before. Millions of service men and war plant workers have already been given spe- cial job training at public expense. But that isnt all! After the war Uncle Sam has promised every ser- vice man and woman school and college training. Hach one of them can get $500 a year for college training, plus an additional sum for living expenses. Millions will take advantage of this training oppor- tunity. = What will this enh aay to the boys and. girls now of high school age? It will mean that in earning a living they will face keener competition for work opportunities than the boys'and girls of any gener- ation that has ever lived in this country. The only: way they can meet this competition is to prepare themselves equally as well. Those without educa- tion and special training will, I fear, face a. difficult future. , Education And Praising For Fie Boys Sven out of ten Georgia boys live on farms. Many will wish to engage in farming as their lifes work. Others will wish to capitalize their ies and experience by eens into aescueirt work of| some kind. No one can force these boys to make special preparation for their lifes work. All that can be done is to provide them an pS This nes been done. Today every ee farm boy - alives: within reach of an accredited high school. This was not true 25 years ago. Today most of these high schools offer courses in agriculture. This was not done for the fathers of todays Georgia farm boys. In addition, specialized training for farming and 101 other occupations is offered at the College of Agriculture, which is part of the University of Geor- gia at Athens. Two years college work may be se- cured at the Abraham Baldwin College, Tifton. Boys finishing at Tifton may .come to Athens and com- plete their requirements for a degree at the Uni- versity. _ The College of Agriculture has a wonderful concerned; 99 per cent of them over a period of more than 25 years have found work in the fields for which they were trained. There is no reason to be- heve that that record eannot be continued in me fu- oo We have a wonderful pene We awe a 3, 000 record of achievement, so far as its graduates are | farm. No field work nor hard acre farm. Our production of farm products runs Do Us A Favor The Department of Agriculture is asseml ling data on the amount of goods sold and | bought through the columns of the Market Bul- letin. Many have written us giving us thes fivuies If you have sold or bought anythin through the advertisements carried in: the Mark et Bulletin, please write us at once, plving u these facts. Tom Linder. ; Farm Land Issue September 2" Gar Special Farm Land Supplement wi be published September 27th; Farms for Sale For Rent, Wanting to Rent and Buy, and I Exchange For notices MUST REACH TH MARKET BULLETIN, 222 STATE CAPITO ATLANTA, not later than Wednesday, Sep tember 20th. We go to PRESS with this specia edition on Wednesday, September 20th and an Land Notices received after this date (Septem ber 20th) will necessarily Dae to be OMITES from publication. . Notices for this Land ee must not exce fifty-five (55) wordsthis to include both nam and address. Notices will be CUT to meet th ' requirements if necessary. SPACE IS LIMITE POSITIVELY NO REAL ESTATE nor REA ESTATE AGENTS nor CITY PROPERTY, FIL ING STATIONS, STORE HOUSES, OTHE ~ BUSINESS PROPERTY, nor OUT-OF-THE STATE PROPERTY notices will be published however, notices will be carried OF GEORGI LAND and PROPERTY for owners who for an reason are not in the State at this time, if th land is properly described as to location, count in Ga., etc. Tf you have submitted a Land notice withi the past several weeks, do not send in anoth as all such notices cn hand will be published SEND IN YOUR FARM NOTICE IMMEDIATE ; Klizabeth Hynds, Editor-Bulletin, POSITIONS WANTED POSITIONS WANTED Exp. Gsitenien wane a dairy or stock farm; nee mail routes. Middle or | preferred. Have to be m ab once.22 he Swafi Brunswick Rts 1. = Want for 1945 a good | farm on 50-50 basis, near Valley, with good 3. or house, with good wate venient. Experienced. oe Outler, Ft, Valley Want large I- H e halves. Prefer Fulton Co bus route and carlin move at once and finan 5 in- family able to ~ Must have go00d house. casaway. Pow ot Surings - Want 1-H. < crop ~