VOLUME 28
ow World Trade Affects America
s An Internationalist is not and eannot be a patriot.
An Internationalist will destroy his own country for
own private gain.
- When a government launches into Tnterudions lig it,
betrays its own people.
The appointment of such International millionaires as
R ckefeller, Stettinius, Ickes and others to governmental
partments dealing with other countries can only bring
e sweat and fears to great masses of American citizens,
_ The following extract of a speech by Congressman
lfred J. Ellioft, of California, which comes to my desk,
ows how this administration is attempting to destroy
the cotton growers of the United States in the interest of
Jnternationalism.
A. small group of land and cotton barons op- |
erating just below the border in Mexico will reap enor-\
mous profits at the expense of United States cotton
growers and taxpayers if the proposed Mexican Water
Treaty, now up for a vote in the Senate, is ratified,
Representative Alfred J. Elliott of California charged
today.(March 14) on the floor of the House. s
-~ Furthermore, the Congressman declared, Sec-
retary of Interior, Harold Ickes, while seeking to limit
the ownership of lands in the United States irrigated
by government projects to not more than 160 acres is,
in the Mexican Treaty, collaborating on a plan that
will give huge quantities of Colorado River water from
the United States to owners holding hundreds of thous-
ands of acres in single parcels in Mexico.
The Mexican Treaty would take billions of dol-
lars out of the pockets of the farmers of the United
_ States, said Congressman Elliott.
The Delta area in Mexico that will be irrigated
by the Colorado River water from the United States
_is now hee: used almost exclusively for production of
cotton.
The water given Mexico by the Treaty will in-
crease, it is estimated, the cotton acreage there from
500,000 to 800,000 ce and it will mostly benefit a
few wealthy landowners who control the larger part
_ of the Mexican Delta land. One of these barons is a
_ citizen or a former citizen of the United States.
For a good many years, Elliott pointed out,
Congress was called upon to appropriate millions of
dollars annually to help out the cotton growers of our
country. That was because these growers were facing
cut-throat competition from cotton growing areas in
other parts of the world. In fact, during each of the five
years prior to 1943, our Federal Treasury paid out
more than $200,000,000 to assist our cotton growers.
_ Now, in this Treaty, the State Department proposes to
bring. that cut-throat competition.a little closer home.
a Secretary Ickes and his henchmen have been very
Soe. SGontiaued < on ee tee,
EDITORIAL By Tom Linder
And it came to pass in those days, that there went S
* out a decree from Caesar Augustus, that all the world
shall be taxed.Luke 2:1...
At the time of the birth of Christ the World was <a
by one government.
hay world government must necessarily levy ti
on the whole world.
Iias impossible for any one country to support. the
great armies and military equipment that is required
rule the whole world. o
The government of Augustus Caesar found tha:
must tax all the countries over which it held sway.
: Any world power today whether it consist of the go
ernment of one nation or whether it is a combination
the big three or the big four, will find just as August Is
Cacsar did that all the world must be taxed. :
The great movement on foot today to set up a erea
super- -world government to control the whole world is
lowing in the footsteps of the Caesars of Rome.
This movement for a world government and the n
eessity following for all the world to be taxed is just
other sign to Christians of the eminence of the time w
Christ soy come again.
EASTER THE SIXTEENTH DAY OF THE MONTH
This month shall be unto you the beginning of
months: it shall be the first month of the year to you
Speak ye unto all the congregation of Israel, say-
ing, in the tenth day of this month they shall take to.
them every man a lamb, according to the house of
their fathers, a lamb for an house.Exodus 12:2-3.
_ . And ye shall keep it up until the fourteenth day
of the same month: and the whole assembly of the con-
gregation of Israel shall kill it in the evening. Exo
dus 12:6.
Tt is clear that the line of the lamb was on the
teenth day of the first ont of the year. God set th
parture of the children of = from HKgypt at the Sprin
equinox.
At that time the sun crosses the equator moving 1
the Northern heavens.
The fifteenth day of the month was the full m
The children of Israel traveling north would have-a fu
moon to enable them to travel by night as well as by da
In addition to this they would reach the land of Cana
in the warm part of the year.
And God said, let there be iohts in the fi
ment of the heaven, to divide the day from the nij
and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and fo)
days, and years. -Genesis 1:14.
The calendar which vou see hanging on your wwal
a device of man.
On your calendar some months have thirty a
some have thirty one days.
God set a calendar in the heavens. The:
twenty-eight days. The new moon is the first d
Oormned, on Page Two)
GE = oe
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
- Address all items for publication and all requests to be put
on the mailing list and for change of address tv STATE BUREAU
F MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable
--wnder postage regulations inserted one time on each request and
- repeated only when request is accompanied by new copy of
- motice.
aes Limited space will not permit insertion of notices containing
-more than 30 words including name and address.
5 Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not
f@ssume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin.
Published Weekly at
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
_By Department of Agriculture
fom Linder, Commissioner,
- Executive Oftice, State Capitol
: Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
s _ Editorial and Executive Offices
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of
. Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
_ Entered as second class matter
August 1, 1937, at the Post Office
gt Covington, Seeley under Act
of June 6 1900. ccepted for
mailing at special os oi postage
provided for in Section 1103, Act
of October 8, 191.
ASTER
(Continued from Page One)
month. The full moon is the fifteenth day of
~ the month. : |
Christ was crucified on the fourteenth day
of the month. The lamb which was slain by the
~ Children of Israel in Egypt on the fourteenth day
of the month, typified the Christ to come and die
on the Cross.
According to the scriptures Christ lay in the
tomb all the fifteenth day which we- are told
was the Sabbath.
At the beginning of the first day of the week
which was the sixteenth day of the month ee
game forth from the tomb.
In the end of the Sabbath, as it becnn :
to dawn toward the first day of the week
came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary
to see the sepulchre, es
And behold there was a . great earth-
quake: for the angel of the Lord descend-
ed from Heaven, and came and rolled back
the stone from the door, and sat upon it.
Matthew 28:1-2.
Khe Children of Israel killed the lamb on the
: Pe xteonth, and sprinkled the blood upon the
post and lintels of the doors.
- During the evening of the Hficenth the sire
of the Lord went through the land of Egypt to
slay the first born. On. the sixteenth the Chil-
dren of Israel were on their way to the promised
and.
. Christ was cruetfied on the fourteenth. He
lay i in the tomb on the fifteenth. He arose on the
sixteenth.
aster commemorates the resurrection of
Christ. Easter is the sixteenth day of the month
according to the calendar in the heavens which
_we eall the Lunar months.
LESSON FOR US
As another Easter comes aroundas we
nove into the warm sunshine of another summer
and kee the blossoming of the-flowers and the
udding of the trees, we should see in this a re--
newal of Gods promis.
the words of Jesus:
Let not your heart be troubled: ye be-
lieve in God, believe also in me. In my Fath-
ers house are many mansions: If it were not
so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a
place for you.
We should remember
: And if I go and prepare a place for
_ you, I will come again and receive you unto
myself; that where L am there ye may be
se a ehn 14: 1-2-3.
TOM LIN DER, :
: Commissioner of Agricalture.
1 500.00.
good. timber,
FARM LAND FOR SALE)
Good 60 A farm in Walton
Co. Good house, 2 wells. Out-
buildings. Plenty saw timber
and wood. Good river and pas-
ture. Reasonable price. V. E.
Johnson, Monroe, 117 5th St.
360 A farm in Brantley Co.
35 A in cultivation. Tobacco
allotment. Balance woodland,
turpentine and saw mill tim-
ber. 6-room dwelling with
electricity. Outbuildings. On
school bus and rural rt. J. L.
Herrin, Nahunta.
Good 6914 A farm in 12 miles |
of Athens, between Athens and
Smithonia, Oglethorpe _ Co.
Large 4-room ceiled dwelling.
Plenty outbuildings. _ Fruit
trees. Good pasture. Timber
for saw and pulpwood, $25.00
per acre. See or write N. El-
lenburg, Colbert, Rt. 1, Box 22.
Small farm in DeKalb Co.,.
on the Stone Mt. line. Good
home with modrn conveni-
ences bath. 3 bed rooms, 2-car
garage, electric pump, water
heater, screened porches, $6,-
L. C. Mandeville, Car-
rollton, P. O. Box 268.
100 A improved Jand 1% mi.
of Palmetto, Fulton Co., house,
barn, etc., on good road, $50.00
A. Mrs. M. R.
etto.
House, barn, servant house.
furnace heat, 25 2/10
practically level in DeKalb Co.
Water, electric. and telephone
service, nice spring, 1072 feet
paved front. Mile outside city
limits of Atlanta and Decatur,
$1200.00: also:4%4 A for $1500:
9 A with barn 30x40,
All have same conveniences.
R.E. Eittie, Decatur; 3076
Glenwood Road.
1136 A cattle farm, q miles,
Forsyth in Monroe Co., 500 A
fenced, graze 200 head. Op-
erating 8 plows. 300 A pulp-
wood. $9.75 A: 79 A Cobb Co.
6 rooms, lights, 18 miles, At-
lanta, $4950.00. L. P. Cobb,
owner, Atlanta, 218 Red Rock
Bldg.
Farm in square body 500. A
in Henry Co. Half mile off
Hwy. 42 and 2 miles south Mc-
Donough. 6 good tenant
houses. Much timber. Good
land. nee water, $25.00
per acre. H. . Childs, Locust
Grove.
460% A. Burke Co., farm, 4,
miles north of Sardis, approx.
2/3 open, balance in woods and
swamp. 32 under fence, large
stream, good fishing and hunt-
ing, public road.- School bus
and RFD by farm. Mrs. Lottie
| Bageron, Sardis.
395 A. farm, west of Griffin,
8 R. dwelling, 2 tenant houses,
good outbldgs., running water,
elec. lights, saw timber, 4.000
cords pulpwood; school bus
and mail rt. by door, $17,500.
Groover Ison, Brooks, Spa:
ing Co.
I 33% A, in No. Fulton Co..
5 mi. No. Alpharetta: well lo-
cated. 3 houses, 60 A. in cul-
tivation, lot good saw timber.
cs Cook Rd. See or write for
further information. A. M.
oleombe, Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
80 A., on line of Coweta and
Heard counties (farm known as
Charles Davis place.) 4. R.
house (needs repair.) Antioch
Church for white in middle of
this tract. T. K. Barron, New
nan, Box 33.
94 fertile A., comfortable
country home, lights, elec.
pump, screened porches; shrub-
bery, good, young peach or-
chard. 40 A.- in cultivation,
pasture, good lake site, plenty
outbldgs., in good
repair; 4 R. tenant house. 6 mi.
So. Douglasville, Douglas Co.,
on school bus and mail route.
DAO:
ee
520 A. farming land, 6 mi.
East Waynesboro, Burke Co.,
31 mi. Augusta bordering Bri iar
Creek, with branch flowing
through center of place; never
goes dry. Make ideal fish pond
and stock farm. No improve-
ments. Lots of timber. Pro-
duce any crops grown in this
section. 4% mi. to elec. and
telephone. Good roads. L. E.
Hatcher, Waynesboro.
94 A. in Macon Co., on pub-
lic road from Oglethorpe to
Murries Cross roads. Plenty
water, saw timber, 4 R. house,
barn, school bus, mail route by
door. Reasonable price. Joe
meron Ellaville, Rt. 3, Box
2 small farms, 42 A. with
good house, lights, running
water; other 44 A. with house
and barn; in Sumter Co. Felder
Ethridge, Doerun, Rt. 3.
40 A. high state cultivation,
geod 4 R. house, good fence;
outblgs. Close to town, $3, 000.
Thomas and Brooks Co. Mrs.
Minnie Adams, Pavo, Rt. 1.
Holley, Palm-
A land}
$3000.00.
Flowers, Douglasville, .
| city
Now,
How World Trade Affec
America
(Continued from Page One)
zealous in trying to see that any American
in the United States receiving water from a
government project could only. irrigate not
more than 160 acres of land.
in this Treaty, in effect, Mr.
Ickes says to give to the landowners in Mex-
ico an uncontrolled use of our water, deliv-
ered through American works built by mon-
ey of American taxpayers for the use of Am-
-erican citizens.
cating the removal of
ed.
Senate,
A few days ago it was reported i in the
press that our State Department was adv
all tariff barriers be-
tween the countries of the Americas. At th
present time, Americas cotton growers are
given some little protection in our domestic
cotton market by reason of certain tariff _
measures. Under the State Departments
*
Only a strong and immediate expres:
ion from the American public can prevent
this Treaty from being rushed through the
Congressman# Elliott declared.
FARM LAND FOR SALE
FARM LAND FOR S
The Hill Farm, 51 2/3 A. Fer-
tile land. 3 A. original forest,
2 streams, lake site, pasture,
barns, 4 R. tenant house with
lights and water, fruit and pe-
can trees. 2 story brick home,
mod. conveniences; landscaped
grounds, dbl. garage, servant
house, 4% mi. R. R. station on
| Roosevelt Highway. Mrs. W. H.
Hill, Palmetto.
Coweta Co,)
145 A. farm, 95 cultivated,
7 R. house. 5% A. tobacco.
Graded road, school, ice, maii
routes. Good land. Some fruit,
pecans, timber. L. A. Williams,
Pavo, Bt. 2 =
"00 <A. farm, brick home,
slate roof, elec. and phone. En-
tire farm or will divide to suit..
1% jin cultivation, bal. timber
and pasture (mostly under
barbed wire fence,) 4 tenant
houses, 4 R. each; large stock
barn, outblidgs.:on good roads;
school:and mail rt., good free-
stone water. 44 mi. WwW. Atlanta,
4 mi. East of Bremen, in Har-
alson Cos Ted. Biggers, Bre-
men.
(Fulton and
6% acres iand, 6 8/10 fenced
and cleared; fine piece of land.
3 R. house, smokehouse, poul-
try house; mail and school bus
rt., %4 ME Ambrose. $1,500.06
cash, D. K . DeBerry, Ambrose.
80 A. land, 35.in cultivation;
good pasture, running water,
lots of fruit trees. Good 3 R.
house, 6 mi. Gainesville, 14 mi.
Athens Hwy. Hall Co. J.-P:
Osborne, Gainesville, Rt. 4.
200 A. good farny land, wa-
ter on it; mica mine; stock
feed, tools, all together, farm
implements, etc. Or would sell
separately. 7 mi. No. Thomas-
ton, Upson Co. Good farm. W.
M. Fortner, Meansville, Rt. 1.
170 A. land in Walton Co.
4 room house, stall barn,
and other outbuildings. Well
in yard, running water in pas-.
ture, lots of pulpwood, some
saw timber. on mail, school
bus, and REA line. Near 2
churches, $15.00: per acre. %
cash, W. C. Gower, Dacula:
57% A. land, fenced, part in
venient, electricity. House.
plumbing, laundry, barn and
outbuildings in good condition,
metal roofs, log tenant house.
REA service. W. J. Linker,.
Eatonton, Rt. 4 -
40 A. farm. Good 4 room
home, barn and -outbuildings,
electric lights, deep weil
pump and running water. some
saw timber, fish pond stocked
with fish, 1% miles off paved
hwy. 81, 2 miles from Cov-
ington. F. B. Hill. Covington,
Dey phone 2275 only. z
' 40 A. Land in Cobb Co. 4
room house with large hall,
newly painted inside, lights:
Electric pump. on geod road,
5 miles east of Harietta, 150.-
000 ft. saw timber. Plentv of
fruit. Close to Bell Aircraft,
$4,000.00 cash. J. E. Smith.
Marietta, Rt. 3, Box 176.
40 A. land in Haralson Co.
on White Creek, 1% miles west
of Draketown, $20.00 per A.
Grant Eaves, Atlanta, 587 Cen-
tral Ave. s. We Call Wa 7983.
limits. comfortable, con- |
55 Habersham Co.
miles Ny E. Clarkesville,
productive land, timber,
good house, barn, best of w
ter. Come see place if iz
ested: Mrs- Donnie D.
Clarkesville. Rt. 3.
ft. front: and back porch, |
floor. 4 stall barn, smoke
nice pasture, running a
Well at door 6f house.
scuppernong orchard, elec
ity in house, good roa
school bus and RFD R
win Simpson. Atlanta, 605
iver St.. N. W.
60 A. Land in Troup
4 room house, barn, on)
and school bus route, |
from LaGrange, $1250. 00;
so 10 A. land. with
house and barn, a
LaGrange, $600, Og. Each
1 mile off Paved Hwy.
Taylor, LaGrange.
25 or 50 A. i
son Co., on State Rt. 10
and school route, saw and
wood, UMREt 5 f
vineyard. Ga.
water line, aa branch
ning through premises.
further information wri
A. James, Tallapoosa, Rt. ;
15 A. running water, 4 r
house, lights, well in
some fruit, 18 miles of go
market. Catoosa Co. Mrs.
lotte B .Blaylock, Rossv
. open and in orchar
A. in timber. Will sell or e
for other property in o
Atlanta. W. G. Owenby, -
tta RE i :
Good jand, good house
in good community
church and school. Hwy. .
7 miles north of Thomasvl
W. J. Jackson, Thomasvi
Thomas County.
7 Ae land, 2 houses, 1 ne
Church, $3250 or i FE
Ellenwood, Rt. 2, Clayto
193 A. land ae
ty on creek: 40 A. bott
A. Bench land. Can all
tivated with machinery.
ty water, spring and bran
good pasture. very good 41
house, 3 good barns. $35.00
acre. Joe N. Cloninger. Ta
ing Roel.
202% A.
of Irwinton on Du
winton Hwy. vi
pines, 16 yrs: growth. ha
swamp timber: 245 A. Gi
2 H, farm, open land, 20
fencing. One 8 room dwelli
one 4 room tenant. several 0
buildings. all metal roofs.
tiraber. On school and
route. Near chureh and
line. Plenty of wood and
ter year round. J. pe
Toomsboro, Wilkinson Cc ur
Farm 7 miles
blin a
ye sone all io: 5)
6 miles south of Rive
J. Jackson, Jone 0.
Clayton Co.
at nocnccnarnceme
= ae
. in No, Greene Co., 4
Raxeys, fairly good build-
plenty water, some bot-
jland, enough saw timber
iv for place. Also
with 4 R. house, good
and good land. Both
1 good road not paved;
school bus route. T
College Park.
A good farm land, 12
rom Macon in Jones Co,
1 good streams and pond
of old house. REA line
rough property, $25.00
Vrite G. P. Jones, Macon,
yth Road.
between Lula and
lle, near hwy. New 5-
Jed and painted house.
e barn, water in pasture,
ity saw timber: 15 A branch
m. Docia Harris, Lula,
ounty.
A good land in Jefferson
ty, 5 barns, 4 mules, cul-
ing equipment, 2 painted,
es, Come, see. Cheslie
s, Stapleton. i
Y% A upland. for sale in
Co, WC... Fowler,
ston, Rt. 2,
38 acres rich land 1% miles
Palmetto, Coweta County.
buildings on good _ road,
7p - tub. Holley,
in sight of Lithia Sprs.
wy., and RR. Water and
xf wood. Good lake site.
Pharr, Lithia Springs,
is County.
A land, 83 in cultivation;
pear orchard. Well tim-
ed, saw mill, turpentine
pulp. Good dwelling and
ant house on REA lines.
se wired and elec. pump, 4
S. W. T. Graham,
water in back yard located
s of Union Point in_ good
umunity. Pulpwood. E. C.
ar, Union Point.
_A farm in Gordon Co.,
A under fence. 5-room
use. Big barn, 1 mule wagon
harness, 2 H mower, 2 H
harrow, 2 H iron drag
w, 1 Jersey cow; 50 young
htrees, few apple trees
ing, good pasture, plenty
water. Ask at Mableton, T.
rason, Austell, RFD 1.
good land in Carroll
good houses and barns,
h electric lights. Plenty
; 4A hog pasture with
ining water; 25,A barbwire
mce pasture of Bermuda, les-
pane Dallas grass. On 2
bus routes, 300 yds. from
and 3 mi. from paved
$7,000.00. John K. Lee,
iten, Rt. 2;
A land in Gordon Co.,
salacoa Creek, 45 A in good
om land. Good . 4-room
ouse, ceiled, water on porch,
lectric lights. Plenty of wood,
food pastures, RFD mail by
se, school bus %4 miles
- $4,000.00, J. E. French,
lasing outLivestock fapm;
pout 500 acress, good grazing,
bundant water, dividing
s, 60 head grade Angus,
efords, Jerseys, Guernseys,
etrie milker, aerator, other
ry equipment, lights, new
dern barn, IHC tractor,
nower, side-delivery rake, disc
lammermill. Fireproof dwell-
George Birch, Macon, Rt.
12: mi. NW Jackson, short
Le. ; soe :
50 A farm near Turin. in
weta Co. 2 dwellings and
rns. Good land, plenty
and wood. Cash or
_F. C. Underwood, Quit-
A= 105 A: 112 Av 92. A:
| 32 A; house and barns
ach, no wood on 2 of them,
iod and some timber on
1 to 4 miles from Roy-
No: letters. G. G. Ridg-
Royston, Franklin Co,
01% A farm, 7 miles north
Tallapoosa, % in high state
tivation, 10 A of good
land, upland make bale
tton to acre. Good house
rn. 1 mile of church and
mail and school bus route,
000:00. J. T. Speight, Bu-
nan, Haralson Co. =
A land in Richmond Co.,
miles from Keysville, 700
rom Brier Creek, about
iles from Augusta, 2 H
m, cleared land, 1 tenant
use. Nice site for fish pond,
t of dam ready built. J.
Rhodes, Blythe.
38 ~ farm, ae A glonted.
arming, @00 stock range
fishix ecaanl bus nearby |
ringfield. See
100 Ain Jackson Co., on
Athens and Commerce Hwy.
House and barn, 6 miles south
of Commerce. 1 mile of con-
solidated school and churches
at Nicholson, 2 mules and farm
tools. Mrs. Mary E. Johnson,
Nicholson. S38
181 A farm in Gordon Co.,
for sale or trade for a smaller
place. Timber estimated at 6,-
000 ft., $450.00 per acre. Frank
White, Fairmount, Rt. 2,
63 A land located 4 miles
north Stone Mt., 4-room house,
hall. Plenty of outbuildings,
good water, plenty of fruit, pe-
ean orchard. On mail an
school bus route. Plenty wood,
oak, hickory and pine. J. P
Marks, Stone Mt., Rt. 2.
317 A good farm in Lee Co.
West of Leesburg. 5 houses.
110 A in cultivation. Deep
well. Plenty wood, electric
lights. $15.00 A. Write John
Murphy, c/o Furlow Adams,
Leesburg.
101% A land, 2. dwellings,
lasting water running through
entire place; good upland, 12
A bottom, plenty of growin
timber; close to. church an
school bus. Ideal for stock
farming or truck, $2,250.00. Al-
vin Pope, Tallapoosa, Rt. 2,
Haralson County.
124 A land in Johnson Coun-
ty. No house, 4 A in fish pond.
Land stiff; 184 A lot saw tim-
ber, average land. Near mail
and school route and church.
W. A. Douglas, Wrightsville.
-150 A farm in Cherokee Co.
1 mi. to church in Fulton Co.
14 A bottom, 27 A upland in
cultivation. Plenty young tim-
ber. 2 pastures with running
water in each. 9 room painted
house with basement; 4-room
house. Large barn, crib, 2
small chicken houses, old fash-
ion water mill, all newly cov-
ered. Electric lights. % mi. to
H. F. Wright, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.
137 A farm in Tift Co., 40 A
in cultivation, rest in pasture
and timber. 4% miles south-
west of Tifton on public road.
Good fishing lake. 1 main
tobaceo barn, mule barn and
other building. W. M. Hall,
Tifton, Rt.-1, Box 1,
5 3/10 A truck land in Ful-
ton Co. Some bottom land.
Niece 4-room. house, well on
porch. Barn. Smokehouse. All
new. New fence. Some fruit
and flowers. 1 A in oats and
No, 1 graded. 1 mile off Roose-
velt Hwy. Mail at door. C. A
White, College Park, Rt. 2.
North Fulton farm. Vicinity
Spalding Dr., and Dunwoody
Rd. Surrounded. by exclusive
estates. 131 acres, 2 tenant
houses and 2 wells; 40 acres
good open farming land, bal-
ance in woods, $100.000 per.
acre. W. M. Leppard, owner,
Atlanta, 811 Forsyth Bldg.
70 A land in Hall Co. All in
| woods, on Lula and Gainesville
Hwy. No. 13, 8 miles from
Gainesville. 3 or 400 cords of
wood on_ place. New house
started, $2000.00 all
cash. E. Callas, Gainesville.
180 A good land in Heard
Co. Plenty running water, Ail
kinds out houses. All under
wire. New home with every-
thing. Good tenant house and
big barn. 4 miles from town on
mail and school bus route. Less
than 60 miles from Atlanta. T.
J. Bailey, Franklin.
202% A good farm land or
dairy, Meriwether Co.; haif
under fence; 2 houses, % mi.
from Roosevelt Hwy on Harris-
Woodbury Road. $25.00 A. Mrs.
H. F. Avery, Greenville, Rt. 4.
1200 A. 200 in cultivation in
Wilkes and Oglethorpe Coun-
ties. Lots of young timber.
$6,000 cash; also 458 A. Wilkes
Co. Good dwelling. 2 tenant
houses. Youngtimber and pas-
ture, _REA and Greensboro
Hwy, $4,500.00; and 900 A.
Warren Co. 150 A. cultivation.
Pasture. Young timber. Dwell-
ing and tenant house, $5,400
cash. A. M. Bennett, Washing-
ton, Rt. 4.
6 A. fenced waterfront prop-
erty, McIntosh_ Co. Flowing
artesan well. Good ceiled 4-
room house. Fruit trees. Near
shipyard. Mrs. Hary H. Ham-
brick, Meridian.
101% *A, 20 in good creek
bottom land. 25 in upland.
Good producing land. 3 pas-
tures with running water. 3
and 4-room houses. Good barn.
Other outbuildings covered
with metal spring and well at
each house; Good orchard, all
varieties of fruit, 8% miles,
south Douglasville on school
bus and mail route. Near store.
Good soil. 20 mi. Atlanta, Rea-
tsenable price. J. M.
. Hall, Dou
&
gla, BG 4.
-| soil,
school bus line, $7,000. Mrs.
house and 1 small house. Good |*
or half
Paved road. Good farming land
well supplied with water. Lo-
cated near churches, school
and. stores. Good _ building.
Plenty of timber, $30.00 A. For
uick sale. Call J. M. Dodd,
Ipharetta. Phone 4295. >
140 <A. farm, Morgan Co.
Good land, houses an
Good road eonvenient to
schools and churches. Plenty
farm equipment. Furnished 7-
room house. Can move in any
time. 5 miles from Madison.
$1000.00 worth of timber. To-
tal gum, $5500.00, Dr, G.
q| Dunlap, Madison.
184 A very vroductive red
Lincoln Co. Will make
bale to acre. School bus by
door. Plenty timber and water,
$4000.00 Gess than 23 per acre.)
Dwelling and improvements
worth more than $4,000. J. G.
Tiller, Lincolnton.
255 A farm in Columbia Co.,
3% miles RR and paved hwy.
4-room ceiled house, barns and
2 pastures; 2 A orchard and
garden, fenced.. Large var.
fruit: 40 A in cultivation on
mail and school bus route.
R. Rheney, Harlem, RFD 1.
50 A_ land Muscogee Co.,, 5-
room house. Outer building
for stock and - seed, $2000.00
cash. % miles, Leslie, Mrs.
Tempie W. Bass, Columbus,
1400 17th Street.
100 A land, Spalding Co. 4
room house with hall. Good
pasture. Plenty outbuildings.
Mail -route by door. School
bus route and 2 churches near,
$3000.00 worth timber. 14 m1.,
north of Griffin, $3000.00 cash.
L. L. Peeples, Griffin, Rt. A.
10 A land in Troup Co., 6-
room house and outbuilding. 4
miles from LaGrange. West
Rd, $3000.00 cash; also 60 A
land. 4-room house, outbuild-
ing. Good bottom land. Plenty
water. Near Chipley, $1000.00;
120 A land. 5-room house. Out-
building. Good land. . Plenty
lot rock house on West Point
Hwy. $35.00 cash. F. L. Lane,
LaGrange, Rt. 1, Box 104.
15 A farm in Madison Co.
110 miles north of Athens on
between.
Carnesville Hwy.
Neese and Ila. 5-room dwell-
ing, tenant house, barn, $2500.
D. G. Jackson, Decatur.
- 125 A land in Clarke Co., %
mi. from city limits of Athens
on the Commerce Rd. (slated
to be paved after war.) Shoul
then sell for $200.00 or $300.00
per A.) Pasture and_ shelter
for 20 heads of cattle, $21.00 A.
Dont write, come and see it.
J. L. Pendley, Athens.
80 A land in Franklin Co.
Good 4-room house, barn, and
pasture with water. 40 A cul-
tivated 50000 ft. timber, $2500
cash; 60 A near Royston and
Franklin Springs.
and wire pasture with water.
Half in cultivation, half in
woods and pasture, $10.00 per
acre lease. A. Lunsford,
Carnesville, Rt. 1. ;
sale. 273% A pines with 1200
ft. of board measure to smaller
ones, $25.00 per acre. Write
or see. W. W. Crews, Millwood,
Rt. 2, Ware County.
92 A., 45 in cultivation, 7 mi.
Swainsboro, Emanuel, 4 miles,
Graymont; near Methodist and
Baptist churches; on daily mail
and school bus rt., good grade
6 bbls. Turpentine per dip-
ping;) on large creek, fine
branch for fish pond, fine stock
range, 4 R. frame house, out-
bldgs. Free of debt, $2,500.00
cash. R. E. Barnes, Swainsboro
114 West Pine St.
_ 569 A land with good dwell-
ing house, electric lights, ar-
tesan well, 2 tenant houses; 150
A in pasture. Public road run-
ning through place. Apply J. H.
Ivey, Louisville, Rt. 3.
10 A rich land in Blythe and
small house for rent. See
P. Hope, 2nd house on right
going south at Turtle River
Bese: B. O. Fussell, Bruns-
wick.
316 A land in Elbert County,
9 miles east of Elberton. 1 good
4-room house with well and
pump, outbuildings. On school
bus-route. Land not worked in
of bottom land. K. EB. Rucker,
Elberton, Rt. 6.
50 A farm on Rockbridge Rd.
4 miles east of Stone Mt. Un-
der 2 strand barbed wire fenee.
4-room house wired for Delco.
Good outbuildings, spring and
running water. 40 M ft. saw
timber, Dont write. See Fred
1g
King, Stone Mountain, -
Rock Si
Couns
440 A ta eid Aton Go
water.
H./running water, 3 good
C.'Clayton Co. Site.
water. $3000.00 cash; and_1 A M
running water.
-4-room |
|house. Barn needs repair. Well gee Sa
Farm and timber land for.
creek loam soil (could dip}
timber. Near REA line, plenty |
136 A good level land: 5 Al
pecan trees. One 9 and one 7-
room house with lights, 2 ten.
houses, plenty of outbuildings.
Good pasture with plenty run-/
ning water year round, %4 mi.
Meansville,. Reasonable price.
J. A. Grant, Pike County... x
100 A farm 4 miles north
Bremen in Haralson County.
Just off paved hwy, 2 houses,
one 6 rooms, one 4 rooms. On
mail route. Electricity . in
houses and barn. About 60 A
closed, balance in woods and
a good pasture. Plenty . good
Wells.
$30.00 A for entire farm. D. E.
powell Bremen, Rt. 2, Box
273. A farm with about 50
bearing pecan trees in Wilcox
Co.,, 2 good barns, 2 good
houses with lights, wells on
back'porch. On mail and school
bus route; 128 A cultivatable
land, rest in pasture and pine
timber. Some good tobacco
land, 3% miles east of Rochelle
$5500.00. L. P. Rhodes, Roch-
elle, Rt. 1. .
107 A in Rabun Co., 3% mi.
Nationally
known vegetable, fruit and
tourist section of northeast Ga,
Young timber, springs, streams
water falls, good stock, chicken
and vegetable farm. Good or- |.
cahrd land and lake site for}.
fish. Mail and school rt. at a
peraai. B. T. Dockins, Clay-
on. :
5 adjoining lots for Victory
Gardens, North Atlanta, color-
ed section. Near transporta-
tion. No loan. Electricity. M.
L. Hall, Atlanta, 120 Mobile
Ave,, NE., Fulton
_ 60 A good farm land in Cobb
Co., 5-room tenant house, barn,
pasture with running water,
lake site; 35 A in cultivation,
beautiful building site with
enough timber to build. Tele-
phone and electricity available.
School bus line and_rural rte,
on paved highway No. 9 just
beyond city limits of Roswell.
rs. T. G. Perkins, Roswell,
Phone 3165.
157 A loam soil, 102 in cul-
tivation. Good pasture. Last-
ing water. On highway near
school and churches. Makes
<7 truck, peanuts, corn, to-
acco, 7 6/10 A tobacco. Nice
5-room house, electricity, ten-
ant house, tobacco barn, pack-
house, feed barn,
acre. Mrs. H. W. Law, Chula,
Pitt Co :
Stock farm. Will sell in part
or trade. 1050 A completely
fenced, cross. fenced. Ampie
pasture, running streams year
round, Stocked with Hereford
cattle. Large John Deere trac-
tor, combine, etc., all first
class cond. REA electricity,
Mrs. A. Hale,
Hapeville, 738 Central Ave.,
Fulton County.
210 A land in Upson, Co., 2
1 six-
room dwelling, fine _ barn.
Plenty running water, lots of
good timber, all under_ wire.
Good pasture. About half way
between Thomaston and Bar-
nesville, 2% miles from The
Rock. Ideal for dairying or
trucking. Joe W. McKinley,
The Rock, :
200 A good land in Harris
Co., 11 miles west of LaGrange,
1% mile off Roanoke x Glenn
Hwy. Good bottom and, lots
of pulpwood and saw timber,
$1500.00. Write or see Mrs. J.
W. Holmes, Sr., Hamilton, RFD
101% A farm with good
house and land in Harris Co.
Outbuildings, plenty. of grow-
ing timber, branch and creek,
plenty of bottom, well at back
door. Land wired in orchard
and new garden. Located on
Roosevelt Hwy. 185 near
church and school. Electricity
available. On bus line, $1500.00
cash or on terms. Berry M.
Moon, Hamilton, RFD 2.
65 A farm in Douglas Co., 3
H.| miles south of Douglasville on
the best road in the county. 5-
room plastered house, electric
lights. On school bus and mail
route, 2 churches and store
less than mile, school house, %4
mile, Plenty of wood and wa-:
ter. Come,.see or phone 366i,
$2500.00. Terms if desired. J-
T. Feely, Douglasville.
3 A land and good barn in
Fayette Co., 4-room house
completely refinished with
new interior walls and ceilings
of sheet rock which have been
Kem-toned and exterior cov-
ered with brick siding. On
paved hwy. No. 54 just out-[
side city limits of Fayetteville.
| Electricity will be available as
soon as -war restrictions per-
mit. A good bargain for quick
Ts Mrs. Lilla Holt, Fayette-
Co., Ch 5034. |,
$75.00 per}
{ture and timber,
ing. 3
500 A on the Broad F
Elbert Co., 2000 ft, timber
and hardwood, 3000 cori
wood. Hay meadows. Spr
Fenced pasture. Good it
ment. L,. Clark, Elberton
20 A of land in Henry C
ty for sale. 4-room house, ele
tric lights, barn, 4% mile ea
Locust Grove. Emmet Smit
Locust Grove.
725 A farm on paved higt
way, 2 modern dwellings
tenant houses, 3_ barns,
running streams in each
500 A open, balance timbe
pasture; 5 A peean grove. Lake
stocked with fish; also 250 .
farm on paved hwy. All unt
fence and cross fenced.
bearing pecan trees, well
tered. Modern 5-room d
ing, tenant house, 2 barns, $7
500.00 with terms, near Amer
cus. R. L. Lesueur, Americu
Sumter County.
198 A. 40 A.
100 A. fenced, on public -
mail route, good springs, p!
running water, 3 R. h ;
outbldgs., $2,500.00; 175
cultivation, 3 R. house, $97
90 A. in Dacula, Gwinnett
2 4-R. wired houses, k
smith shop., 36 mi. Atlanta.
Bargain, $100.00 A. Early pos-
session. H. L. McMillan, Ma:
12 A., 10 A. cultivated
in pasture, all fenced,.1 m
Smithville, Lee Co. School b
by door ,on 2_ public roa
Small 3 R. livable house, g
barn, good open well;
mule and some feed. $1,500.
for quick sale. Mrs. Me
Pettis, Smithville, RFD 2.
87 A., adjoining city li
Demorest, Habersham
high state cultivation, no wa
6 A. Kudzu and serecia.
apple, peach, pear and pl
trees. 2 elec. power line to
c
the property. aes <
er, Demorest. = :
75 A very -productive lan
4-room residence, REA av
able; 100 A ideal, Good
dence, REA, lasting spr
300 A livestock, good residen
barns, REA, water and las
streams. All adjoin. Loca
in Brooks County, good co
munity and roads for qualit
Reasonable terms. Hamp Har=
rison, Quitman, ae
_ Dandy farm, 80 A., 50 in
tivation, some fruit and p
trees; nice view and a |
good home, 7 R., elec., good
blidgs., bunch of timber;
through farm. School bu:
door, 2 pastures. Church near,
Good road, 10 mi. Bell Bombe
Plant, $5,000.00. D. F. Puryear,
Acworth, Rt. 1, Box 20, Cob
County. ae
70 A. more or. less, 1
east of Ellijay, Gilmer Co.
Cartercay River, 17 A. in
tivation, 9 A. River botto
A. pasture, 2 houses, new
crib, plenty other buildings
sev. good springs, over 100,01
ft., saw timber. Excell
eation for party interes
bees. Good hunting and fi
ing. Plenty
handy. Reasonable price.
B. Parker, Ellijay, Box 117.
50 A. DeKalb Co., on Tuc
and Stone Mtn., paved hwy
R. house, barn, other outbid,
lights and good water, sch
bus by door, good pastur
ber. Located 2 mi. Tucker
W. Brown, Stone Mtn., Rt
225 A. land. Saw *~
pulpwood building wor
|price, also 1 pr. 1100 lb. mu
and 2 H. wagon, plo
etc., for sale. S. S. Elder.
field, Rt. 2, Hancock Co
More than 300 A. ad
Ohoopee River, 175 A., feng
30 A. stumped, will grow
thing, plenty timber for b
ing purposes, 2 miles
and church, mail rt., an
bus. In Emanuel Co
fishing, hunting,
per A. W. A. Sumn
35 A., on Chattooga Lak
R. fine house, elec. lights,
young bearing apple tr
A., for Pprcet hae rest in
ig oak :
trees, pretty lawn. Idealh
Walter J. Clear, Young H
Towns County.
_ Farm of 282 A., 3.
limits of Commerce,
Co., on paved hwy., 4
and all equipment ec
of 4 mules, D. C. Case
-harrows, hammer mill
machinery, and 20 heac
cows; also 2,000 grape v:
H. Adams, Commer:
: xX
539 A. Jefferson (
last year from 5 bal
6 houses, 50 A., i
ber. Suitable for tr
= mi. off No. No.
21 AS fan oe sale or jease
- 10 miles from
imber oP. Daniel, Co-
WSs 1116 3rd. are
: 7 room
electricity, 2 baths, on
| paved road with oil sta-
store site. Mrs. Minnie
sood, Culloden, Monroe
. land, 5T in cultiva-
one
~ room
2 big barns,
electric lights,
ool and mail.rte. 4 miles
fo n, 200,000 ft. of saw tim-
: country store on place.
N. Wates, Felton, Haralson
A. land, 3 miles south of
horpe on paved Americus
20 A. cultivatable, 12 A.
ring pecan grove. Beautiful
e site, on bus and REA
ower line, near school and
ideal community.
-everlasting
n, natural site for gov-
mment built fish pond. Ben
Gilmer, Andersonville, Se
2A. imp. farm land, well
d, 2 miles from town,
power | grist mill, 25. A.
ee pasture, 5 ten-
; promised soon. eRe price |
and oe write or see, Lov-
Richland, Stew-
e land in LaFayette
alker Co.) for sale, lot No.
in th district. block H.
as LaFayette Highland.
for cash.
at
to
Bledsoe,
Hees ae
. Ethel D.
-good tenant
from Duluth,
: Good school,
ches, Hospital, and school
door. Cash or terms,
as ae Payne, Duluth.
2m Duluth, Gwin-
few. Sores Creek Bot-
_ hofse on country
Peachtree Rd. 50
pt Eee Not rented
will. sell cheap. de
Duluth.
A. farm, large new barn,
Re house, out-bldgs., I
West Berryton Cotton
ine ea Co., $6,000.
Wilson, Summerville,
[ ill
~
00 up to 1,000 acres
at
1.00 acre;
Several houses,
vel roads, RFD. school bus
ublic. bus by door. Heal-
on, (Villa Rica, Car-
de 8 mi. Covington,
ton Co., just off Rt. No.
~ovington-Jackson
A. For further particu-
idress, Mrs. M-. C. John-
iad about half is
ee ee 2 good houses.
=n
if - interested.
Campbell, Morganton,
. at edge of Quitman,
rent houses for white
paved: road, also live-
market barn, tobacco
ther out-bldgs. 6 R. res-
_ Water, lights, screen-
al roofs: very best
. berry, stock, dairy and
farm; timber, well water-
AST. Milteer, Sui
(Brooks Co.)
00 A. Hammock land, lots
ber, 350 A. in cultivation, |
guses, never dry creeks.
p. Also 175 A. farm,
cultivation, balance
+, one 6 room brick
oped with lights and
deep well. 12 acres pe-
oe Bee ae scup-
a farm. lands,
1w house, modernly
d, $10,000.00. I.
Dublin, Rt. 6.
- room
ayes at Br ockton
ol, church, and store,
acre. ae -Wilkes,
and other fruits:
Hwy.
3
Hi. Anderson, Elberton, Rt. 2.
Mis A? end. Wilkes Co
ae timber, 4 tenant hous-
| es, homes rented, Dwelling
4 and 4 tenant rents land, 3 bales
Methodist. Church, 1 mile from
Baptist. School route, $12.50
Aw Armour, Rayle.
525 A. good red stiff land,
225 A, in cultivation. 150 A.
in pasture, bal. in woods and
timber, 1 mile from Kite,
$25.00 A. W. W. Claxton,: Kite,
Johnson Co.
Estate of J. D. Fox: 154 A.
Land, located 5 miles north of
LaFayette in Walker Co. Qn
concrete Pike, 4 large springs,
electric lights, 150,000 ft. of saw
timber. Mrs. O.
oes Fletcher St., S.
306 2A Land ia "th land
dist. Dooly Co. 10 A. Pecan
trees, bearing, plenty second
hand fence to. run nearly
around land. Grow. peanuts,
corn. cotton, grain, any crop
suitable to this section. $9,-
000.00. 1/3 cash. Write J. W.
Morgan, Vienna.
236 A. Stock Farm on Buena
ays ptanle ys
WwW.
Vista and Columbus Rd. Plen-
ty of water and good land,
25 miles from Fort Benning
and Columbus markets: 125
A. under hog wire, rest under
cow wire, $20.00 per acre.
oS G Humber, Butler, Tay-
oro;
200 A. Farm in North Ga.
50,000 ft. saw timber. school
bus service, Spring on place,
40 A. bottom Jand, good up-
land. no waste land. $3,500.00.
{1/3 in eash, balance in terms
at 6% interest. Will exec, for
City property, good car, truck,
or eee as part payment.
Hi Robertson, Resaca, Gor-
aoe Co.
226 A. Tana 9 miles south
of LaGrange, 1 large creek, 4
branches, some saw timber,
both pine and hardwood, 44
from Blacktop Rd. M. A.
Wells, West Point, Box, 62,
Troup Co:
$2: A: good land facing the
public rd., joining lots with
the Church of God at Towes
Chapel, 30,000 ft. of saw tim-
ber. -Will sell cheap. L. A.
Towe. Adairsville, Rt. 3. Bar-
tow Co.
20 Vacant lots on Champe
Ave., covered with well bear-
in Grape Vines, plums, figs,
also enough
stone to build 2 good houses.
J. D. Martin, Atlanta, 826 St.
ee Ave., N. -E., Fulton
O
1 to 70 A. land for sale, %
mile Forest Park and U. S
General Depot. Bus service,
school and electric lights, small
cash payment and long time
notes at 6%. interest. J: C.
Kite, Atlanta, 968 Rose Circle,
Ra. 2709. Fulton Co.
B12 =A. land, 90 in cultiva-|b
tion, good pasture, well wat-
ered, some good timber, I mile
from Odum on State hwy. Fine.
land and a desirable location,
$35.00 a acre; $3,500.00 in
cash,
balance. Security Deed. Mrs.
Maud Tyre, Jesup, 165 Macon
St., Wayne Co.
150 A. farm ie AGiee and
barn, some fruit trees, = mi.
from paved highway No. 7, on
mail route. Place cant be beat
for poultry and. stock raising.
Fine growth of young timber.
E Wilson, Talking Rock,
Pickens. Co.
60 A. Farm, 3% miles north
of Auburn on good road. 1
good 5 room house with elec-
tric lights and one --od 3 room
house, good barn, good pas-
ture, plenty of wood, - some
saw a good well on back
porch, $1,400.00. Hinton H.
Wages, Auburn, RAlsT,
163 A farm i in Rockdale Co.,
22 miles SE of Atlanta, 9 miles
from Conyers. Strong Jand,
$5000.00. W. G. Keith, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 8.
153 A farm in . Walker Coun-.
ty, about half in -cultivation.
Good bottom land; plenty pas-
ture and timber: - houses,
8 rooms, electricity: school bus.
creek, 2 wells, cistern and
spring, 214 miles, Chickamauga
peace Goodson, Chickamauga,
Rt.
A Jand i in. Elbert County,
2 big houses, 3 barns, 3 big
pastures; 75 A open land, 25}
A bottom. Hay meadow, lots,
timber, plenty of water.
86 A farm, 1 mile north of
Attapulgus, hwy 27. Fenced,
lights, running water, dwelling
J tenant house, equipped for |
900 hens. Outbuildings, $5500.
W. G. Robinson, Attapulgus,
Box (31, Decatur County.
50 A farm in Crawford Co., a
C . 30 A open, 3 A transplanted
Pees, 7-room house, 7 a oe
ta paved hwy
Fra
jin . cultivation, $5000.00.
cash, balance to suit purchaser.
6% interest on unpaid
2, 4,
39 A farm in Fulton Co., 2% |_
miles east of Alpharetta - on
State Bridge Rd. school,bus
|line. 15 A in cultivation, good
cotton, plenty streams, tg mi: |
pasture with running water.
-V. Shirley, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.
654
Some
A good jJand, 5 fenced.
pecan trees. 7-room
ences, located on main street
at edge of city limits, also main
hwy. from. Atlanta to Tampa.
Good location for chicken and
vegetable farming. Extremely
low rate city, state and county
taxes. Other farm land avail-
able if desired. Priced to sell
immediately. Write or wire
for appointment to look it over.
S. W. Brooks, Boston, Thomas
County.
= Oma acreage. 2 House)
well built chicken house, for
Hee C. J. Jones, College Park,
212 A on Oostanaula River
known as Gaston Place, Gor-
don County, Curryville; 180, A
70
HG. Smith, Jesup, Box 54,
Land. for sale in Clayton Co;
land lots together, 90 A in one,
through both lots. Some tim-
ber and houses. Near Selina
and Riverdale about 18 miles
tivated in some time. Mrs. J.
S. Cousins, Jonesboro.
Well established 8 cow dairy
for sale. 8-room house, 5 A
land, % mile from good school
and college. D. Willis, Norman
ac
208 A good farm for sale, 2
miles south of Richland in Ste-
wart: Co. Mrs: 3J;-T.<Purner;
Richland,
Cattle or dairy farm, ap-
proximately 300 A in Troup
Co., 75 A bottomland; 75 up-
lands; excellent stand White
Dutch Clover (bottom land,)
lespedeza, Bermuda, Dallas
grass, ete., on each.,.2 miles
from stockyard where weekly
shown on application. Ely R.
Callaway, LaGrange,
205 A farm for sale in Car:
roll County, 100. yds.
paved Bankhead Hwy., 40 mi.
west of Atlanta. Good. 8-room
newly painted house, 4-room
tenant house, 2 ey tin- roof-
ed barns; good 30 A pasture,
running water, good fish pond
site; 57000 ft. of timber, elec-
tricity, near school bus. Sold
for $10,000.00 several yrs. ago.
$27.00 A or will sell 130 A with
all bldgs. for $32.50 A. Henry
tt = Coop, Atlanta, 322 State
Capitol.
Wimberly Farms, 815 A. Half
|in cultivation, 200 acres in pas-
ture, balance in woods. Owned
y same family over 100 yrs.
Lies level, fine for peanuts,
cotton, other erops. Creek and
springs. Large colonial home;
tures, some timber, pines and
hardwood. On 2 paved high-
| ways, located at Henderson, 9
from Perry, $22500.00.
miles
Call or write A. C. Pate, Un-
lanta, 517 Ridgecrest Road. -
35 mountain acres. cold
spring water; old camp house,
few acres cleared out; 6 mi.
Sell or trade for farm in South
Ga. and pay cash difference if
any. G. N. Hackney, Blue
Ridge, Box. 146:
Good place for farming, raise
stock, fish, game and timber,
on river and railroad and hwy.
Write for information. M. Cha-
son, Groveland.
50 A jand in Johnson Co.
Tenant house and barn with
good. foundation for remodel-.
ing. Located on hwy. REA line,
RR.,- rural rt. and school bus
Thy to accredited high school,
considered ideal tobacco land.
$20.00 A. Mrs,
Wrightsville, Rt. 1
177 A good Tacd. rich bot-
tom, bold streams, dake site.
45 ft. wood, saw timber mark-
ed by forester: old house, 10
yrs. old tenant house, barn, on
graded roads, 1 to be paved, 2
pastures. %4 mile of town on
paved hwy., 3 churches, ac-
eredited high school, electrici-
per St., NE Ve. 0429.
69 A land in Clayton Corer
mile east of Elienwood on mail
route No. 1; 10 A drained. for-
est and some fine timber land.
{Bottom land, $1200.00. J. N.
Willingham, Atlanta, 188 Eliz-
abeth St., NE., Wa 0329. -
Well equipped blacksmith
shop and building, in county
house with modern conveni- |9
70 A in other. _Branch runs |
from Atlanta. Hasnt been cul-|1121%4 A
cattle sales are held. Will be
from.
2 barns, 5 servant houses, pas-.
adilla. or J. LL. MeCord, At-{
West Blue Ridge, Fannin Co.:
Hey Jackson, |
Fulton Co.
ty, $30.00 per acre. Mrs. Chas..
J.|E. Newell, Atlanta, 1002 Juni-
seat town, 50 yards from pac
N L
Small farm. 40 As
less, real new 6 R. house, good
5 R. old house, running water,
good well, lights, both houses |
wired, about 134 mi. town, bus
by door. Sell or trade for.
smaller place in or near town
if suited. Write or see. Mrs.
Jessie Stancil, Clarkesville, Rt.
103 A farm, 7 miles, Rock-
mart in Polk Cp, 134 mi. paved
hwy., on mail route; 60 A cul-
tivated, 15 A bottom. One 4-
room house: one 5-room house.
Well finished good outbuild-
ings. Nice vineyard and or-
chard. Sale or exe. for small
acreage imp. Atlanta or
other town. -G. _ Durham,
Rockmart, Rt.\3.
2 farms in Madison Co., 3 mi.
Commerce city limits, on Com-
merce-Danielsville Hwy. ee
farm, 891% A., 6 R. house, elec.
on paved road, $6,530.00; other
farm, 414 A., 3 R. house, $1, 200.
Terms. Harrison Carlton, Com-
merce. See
55 A.,; in Warren Co.,7 mi.
Norwood, full of pulpwood. No
building, $1,500.00 cash. Mrs.
Fred. Atkinson, Valdosta, Rt. 4.
55-A. more or less. on paved.
hwy. Mail and school bus by
door; lights available. $6,500.00
also good business location,
1485 ft., from paved
road, $5, 500.00: both have
plenty wood, saw timber, last-
ing running water on ea. Good
houses, 6 mi. West Carrollton,
Carroll Co. Walter S. Fester,
Carrollton, Rt. 2.
Pictureque tract, containing -
large mountain: creek produc-
ing beautiful water falls, site
of old time grist. mill, swim-
ming or fish pool:. accesible
from Atlanta over State Hwy.
Rd.,. with daily. bus service;
consists of 120 A., with ereek
flowing through half mi. of
this property. Title Fee Simple -
can be del. at once to purchas-
er. Located 2 mi. Dahlonega
(the Gold city of Georgia.)
|Write, owner. Craig R. ee
Dahlone 2.
232 A. young timber land in
Baldwin Co,, 128 A., good farm
in Habersham Co., near Mt.
aus Aw F, Quickel, Macon,
135 A. some bottom land, .
new 5 R. house, barn and other
outbldgs. Running. water. to
house, good wired pasture and
garden. W. H. Brock, Mt. Airy,
+
100 A. farm,
tion (cut into 5 parts:) 6
house, small tenant house, 9
good wells of water: on REA
line, also on paved hwy. 2%
mi. town. School bus rt. Buy-'
70 in- cultiva-
fer can get possession any time.
G. Williamson, Eastman, Rt.
2, Dodge Co. .
50 A 3h: house, well on
back porch, barn and outbldgs.,
some fruit, 2 H. crop cleared,
rest in young timber; can work,
tractor. Strong red and some
gray land; on RFD, % mi. City
limits, $1, 200. 00; $300. 00 Aow
rest, $10. 00 mo. Ula Wilson,
Villa Rica, Carroll Co.
288 A., 120-in cultivation, 3
: dwellings, plenty outbldgs., to-
bacco allotment. Fish pond, 6
A. pecan trees. REA current;
good stiff, rocky soil. In Tat-
tnall= -Go D.c 8; PHOonH
Manassas.
950 A., in Terrell Co. 350 in
cultivation, some saw timber,
fish pond, running water, 8 R.
house, mod. conveniences, elec. :
deep well, good barns. 6 tenant
houses. B. C. Bynum, Sheli-
man.
150 A. farm, half in pavevee
tion, half in timber. and_pas-
ture, 3 mi. Wrens, 1 mi. Hwy.
No. t. number of springs near
more or
000.00. Half -
Athens, $2,750.,
| Mrs.
$3 A=-6-R house:
lake site, 15 ae fence :
plenty wood, runni Ww
Fulton Co., 34 mi. Fai
H. R. Horton, -Atla
White Oak Ave. SW
outbldgs., all need som
pair; about 50 A. open
rolling to hilly, - about
bottoms, fine lakes
cellent crops; some frui
grapes. Can Feut
small farms. $2,750.00. Te
if desired at 6 per ce
est. Immediate. possession.
B, Ellard, Cornelia, Hepes
0:
T75 A100 a hous
large room | house and
house, 3 H. crop been cle:
rest in woods; some s
ber, fenced pasture, Wy
RFD and elec. 6 mi. No
Rica., $2,000.00. Terms.
lace Wilson, Villa Rica
76 A., farm, 8 mi. Wes
yers, Rockdale Co ote
138. Plenty wood, "water
about 50,000 ft. saw timber,
cash. | Ba
terms. Mrs. Joe Glea a
lenwood, Rt. 1
100 A. Se 600 ft
Douglasville city limits.
6 R. house, outbldgs.,
pasture, 3 springs, ~
plenty wood. Tenant hou
Good land. Ideal home.
.|McKelvey, poe R
Douglas Co.
50 A., good 5 R. eee
plent wood, lec.. on.
roe-Stone Mtn, Hwy.
also 165
houses, barn, fine Saw t
about 1 mi. off Hwy. $3,500.
O. P. Nelms. Atlanta, 705 |
tral Ave., ae:
Quite a nice little:
around 110 acres, 2 mi. Qu
man. Lots of bldgs., and.
modern conveniences.
of. big pecan and frui
oH Gaddis,
Box 427, (Brooks Co.) _
101% A,, 70 open land
pastures. Running wate1
2 good springs, 3
place for pool,) 5 R. an
good houses.2 Barn and
outbldgs., all. good. tops.
improved. 2 A. nice: ore
all kinds. School bus and |
by door. Carroll Co. Lives!
separate if desired. W. W
Pherson, Villa Rica, Rt.
~ 60: A. farm, good dwe
and outbldgs., plenty r
water, fine pasture; 50 A.
good 6 R. house, barn, plen
wood to furnish the. pla
use. Good. pasture. 5
way. J. W. Wood, Gite
418, Spalding Co. :
50 A. good hee ee a
house and barn, good w
near school and church.
exc. for good tractor. | y
| Waddell, remen, Rt. ,
son Co.
243 oe Fara. good and
A. in cultivation, good '
keep up place, .
}road near school and
miles from. Cleveland
200.00... L. S. Turner,
epas Rt tT. White Co.
211 A Farm, lots o
-bottom land, plenty of
water, most all under
summer and winter pa
houses, lots of timber, j
of good land. in -cultiv ti
bound by 2 roads, on.
dwelling, %4 mi. power line: 2+}
dwellings. Plenty timber. Ideal
for cattle raising. C. Gunby,|
Tennille, Washington Co.
140 A. in Cherokee Cas 0
mi. No. Canton: 2 wells 3 and
5. R. houses, plenty timber for
fuel; some saw timber or wood.
Near store, school, corn mill }
and cotton gin, % mi. church;
2 mi. church. $1,600 or swap
for smaller place in Cobb or
Contact. H. G.
Brown, Canton, Rt. 3.
_ 73 A. land, cleared, % mi. off.
Bufcrd Hwy., 1% mi. Duluth
on. good road from. Hwy. 7
R. house, 5 stall barn, crib and
all necessary outblidgs. 25 -mi.
oe Atlanta, in Gwinnett Co.
. J. Allen, Duluth.
Approximately 525 A. Em-
anuel Co,., 200 good land in cul-
tivation, fenced in 3 big fields,
Val. woodland, well - timbered.
Close to schools, churches, |
saw timber -
Bees Thomspr 325,
11% A: in Fallow es
Roswell, about 30 ~
drive from 5 points, : hos
and pulp
Reasonable price. Joh
Gord
$70 AZ ae in Walke
6% miles east of. LaFaye
State Hwy. 23 miles so
Chattanooga, Tenn. Wil
all or part of farm. 5
and 3 barns. Lasting
running through farm.
Johnson, Rossville,
Chickamauga Ave.
_ 100 A farm in North p
Co. Several A. in. wi
and pulpwood. About 3
cultivation, good pastur
branches. spring, ne
house, good well .
graded soil. road, scho
line. Within 30 mile
lanta; Also 15 A. farm
markets. Wired for elec. (Main Kalb C
dwelling and timber worth lots
more than price. asked.) $1
AL . J, Kent,
a)
ws
in cultivation,
qand. oe oe
and
both covered with
2: miles of oaks:
in Habershank
well imn. land, 4 miles
: r, Madison Co. Average
ile cotton per acre for past
Running water in pas-
some saw -timber: Also
A. well imp. land, 4 miles
Danielsville, Madison Co.
mail and school bus tt.
. imp. pasture land, 10
bottom pasture, plenty of
yung and also saw timber,
2
: Lowe, Comer,
200% acres, all under wire
errell Co., 6 miles of Daw-
consisting of 40 A farm
good .4 room house and
60 A. beautiful lake with
v of fish and used as mill
) power now harnessed
( ehis turbine ready to go.
d 4. room a house, | Co.
he AS ville (Gwinnett Co.) Hwy., 2
A... nee 9 miles south
ae Rotite: 54. 7 rooms,
~ Kelley. Conley,
oA: land in (Washington |
or sale_on cash or terms. :
150 A, good earn land. 1 mi.
lots of pulpwood and
Ww timber, good free branch,
for dairy or general far-
in Morgan Co. near Mad- |
Light
Black-
some cotton land.
e had easgilv. E. S.
e,
ans, plentv of outbuildings,
1ain dwellings with lights,
3 nt houses, just out of
limits of Meansville. Farm
eas-
SA, rant,
in ville, Pike Co.
A. Mountain land
County, located
ey a Rd. 50 A. of creek
ap
iene, Water of springs,
= nches. Some. merchantable
imber, located in good setile-
$1500.00. Write or see,
ee Sautee, Rt.
is fence. 3 story wo
ouse. store bldg. and sheds.
oO 4 room houses, 2 barns,
ect iy Ae ifoneed one
dar and spillway, 12 miles
southwest of Americus, Sum-
r Co. $7,000.00. G. W. Israel.
Smithville, Rt. 1. Phone 2309.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
ARM LAND FOR SALE
Ge orgia farms Sarita by
ies .
fF the. State ~ all land
list d in this issue is Geor-
Land, for sale.
eee
PAS or more in Candler
, Georgia, 6 mi. Metter, on
d public road, about 30 A,
land,. stumped,
wire fence. Good grain:
eanut; 1.8 tobacco allot-
ent Good tenant house, barn
E plenty extra good stock |
(hog especially), $1,900;
o 8 or 10 breed gilts, young:
eifer. (ist _ calf,) on
Navy Yard 53, S.C. 125 E. Ben
a an St. :
ighwas Shroas ae, 5: R.
; near spring; plenty out-
2 pastures, water in
ear church and school.
ated in Union Co:, Georgia,
ver Young Cane Dist. Write.
V. Dean, Culberson, N.
~A. land in Union Co.
near Natla Dam: Lies
plenty running. water,
pring, some timber for.
firew: od, 4 R. house, small or-
|, some outbldgs., on good
near schools, churches,
ete; and mail rt. Want
sell at pec: Addre: Me Own-
Mamie Rich, Murphy,
16 wells,
fon Temple- Carrollton Road
running :
who have recenily
|} phone.
Ce
| Turner,
; Street.
Ey LAI CE
| FARM LAND F FOR SALE
Georgia ferme owned by
Apantics who have recently
left the State *** all land
listed in this issue is Geor-
| gia- Land, for sale.
ra 158 A.,,
Dooly. and other part in Pulaski
Co., Georgia, 7 mi. Unadilla
and 12 mi. Sy 500
A. cleared: No timber. 2 mi.
fence, 6 tenant houses, 3 Sei
bordered on north
and south by bold creeks. $15
per A. Easy terms. R. S. Con-
ner, Bowman, S. C.
Excellent farm, 288 A., a
1 mi. Sandersville, Washington
Co., Ga. Large farm. residence
and 4 tenant houses, 2 barns; 1
large, other small. About 925
A., in cultivation. REA line
nearby. For ee informa-
tion, write. D. Collins,
Nashville 4, ook 2007 Lom-
bardy Ave. .
Farm, 18 ee Atlanta, Putten
Ga. 1% mi. off Lawrence-
houses, 1 good barn, 2 pastures.
running water: bus and mail
lroute: timber, 43 000.00. H. A.
Wiggins, Maysville, Ala.
38.44 A. farm,
Temple, Carroll Co., Weecr
2
crop land, other in timber and
pasture. Good Spring. .-3 Bi
house. Write if interested. J.
T. Turner, Pisgah, Pa Re
Box 9.
| WANTED |
EXCHANGE FOR FARM
LAND
Want water mill, fish pond
or old site, with few acres, to
gia. W. J. McGarr, Cordele.
Want buy, rent or lease for
long term small acreage on or
near deep salt water, near
eoast, in McIntosh, . Glynn,
Camden of Liberty counties,
be priced reasonably.. J. T.
Holmes, Covington.
Want to trade my equity, (ap-
| proximately $30,000.00) in in-
come property for a good farm,
well equipped preferred, in
good section of the state. For
particulars communicate with.
B. -F. Holmes, ~ Atlanta, 795
es St:, NE., phone At
Church. of Christ. James W.
Chastain. Emerson.
Want by veteran, 200 to 300
acres between Athens and
Gainesville. Must have creek,
pasture, elec. timber and be
desirable for poultry and dairy
farming. eee T. Allen, At-
lanta, Rt: 1, Box 147.
Want bas small farm in Car-
roll or Coweta Co., near town.
WwW. B. Stepler, Newnan, Ri 5:
Want to trade some income
property for good, well equip-
ped farm. Paul Glenn, Atlanta,
393 Mell Ave., N. E.
Want es nice place in north
east Georgia mountains, equip-
facilities.
All
answered.: J. H
Webb, At-
anta, 314 4th St., NE. phone
Ve 5490,
Want exc. 140 A., good, red
land, about 50 A. in cultivation,
: with: good Poaes. and good
under
See for.a:-good 1 H. farm.
Ww. Wallace, Dallas, Rt. 3,
(Paulding County.)
Want buy farm in Madison
or Jackson County, 75 to 100
acres. .Write what you have
or see me at once. Alen Swain,
: Danielsville, Rte
Want. for Cash, a farm i in Ful- |
north
ton Go,.2 within: 20
Wil-
or east of Atlanta. :
mi.
Cahi
liams, e 3104 Piedmont
Road.
Want ae 400 to 600 A,,
cultivation, plus timber land:
anywhere between LaGrange
and Atlanta. Give full inform-
ation. Marshall Kovsky, At-
Janta, 285. Boulevard, N. E.,;
Apt. 4.
out houses, near Brookhaven,
Buckhead or: Marietta, Fulton
and Cobb Co. Describe and
give price,. at. once. W. V.
Turner,
Street.
school, church, mail route.
State kind of soil and price, or
no reply will be made. Roy
Gece 350 Oak
Want 1% to 3 acres land on
te. }the ere. having small house
cd tract, oe in
first letter. R. L. Simms,
house,
town. Must be in white settle-_
eae OR
develop. Prefer in So. Geor-:
improved or unimproved. Must
~ Want buy farm with water
mill, on good: road, near the
ped with electricity and tele- |
letters |.
Want buy farm, with or with:
1 Pike -Co,,
Gainesville, 350 Oak:
Want buy a farm, near town.
LAND
Want bay favin in Georzia.
Enclose stamp for reply. P, L.
Mull, Clarkesville, Rt. 3.
also,) on highway, prefer 42
or 41 Hwy., not more than 15
mi. Atlanta. J. S. Huicheby,
ae 976 Underwood Ave
Want mountain acreage on
75 mi. Atlanta.
good view of mountain range
fairly good timber, bold sprgs,
| good stream with site for lake.
Title cash price, all ge
lanta, Box 175, Station C.
Want not over 75 or 90 acres
land. with livable 3 or 4 R.
not over 3 mil. of good
ment. Do not :want swamp.
land. Mrs. Edith Whatley, At-
ae L3G ge Shoals Ave.,
~
x
Want buy small farm on
mail and school, route, prefer
(eon some timber on place.
1% mi. north |R
D. Hague, Atlanta, Plo, Box
ae
Want 50 or 75 A., close toa
ijchurch, no red Jand, with 4 or
5 R. house, on school and RFD
rt., and within a mile of the
Greyhound Bus line, with
plenty water and good pasture.
Mrs. E. Raley, Forsyth, Rt. 4,
Box 121.
Want to buy for $1, 500. 00 to
$2,800.00, or rent for cash rent
of $150. 60 to $250.00 yearly, a
farm with good house, 6 or
more rooms with elec.,
water, good pasture, on or
near bus hwy., in middle or
north :Ga. Would like firewood
and some fruit: Give full de-
scription of house and farm in
first letter.. George M. Saund-
ers, Demorest.
Want 2 or more acres land
with 4 or 5 R. house, on or near
the LaGrange-West Point Hwy.
Price must be reasonable. Mrs.
Elma Wilson, Manchester, 8
Wilson Street.
Want grist mill, water op-
erated, within 50 mi. Atlanta.
Give daily. grinding cap., land
acreage! on which. mill is lo-
cated, directions for travel 0
mill from Atlanta, size of
stream or lake and price. H. R.
4+ Hunter, Atlanta, 561 Lakeshore
Dr., 5 Oe
- Want: buy 2 or 3 acres land
with or without small house,
on highway, within 10 mi. or
Will pay cash. D. A. Shirley,
Atlanta, 779 Boulevard N. E. -
of buying, small farm on bus
line, or convenient to town or
city, suitable for poultry and
truck growin. Must be on rural
price with terms and ~ also
png R. S. Earles, Saye ees
, Box 198.
oe some waste land, well
seeded in- small pines, no
houses, prefer adjoining coun-
ties to Sumter. Must be cheap
for-cash. Jr.
Want. small farm of 10 or
more acres with livable house
and other outbldgs., near high-
way, or 4lec. line: within 20 |
mi. Atlanta. Do not object to
run down farm of larger acre-
age, or small modern home
with fewacres. All letters ans.
|L. A. Dykes, Donalsonville.
- Want buy med. 2 H. farm,
good house, elec., good Jand,
pasture, .- outbldgs. - Prefer
around Athens or Madison or
any good location. Not. South
Georgia. J. Wray Smith, Lavo-
me Rte 1:
some arable, on tidewater, near
village; no bldgs. Preston
Grady, Clarkston.
Want some improved or un-
improved Jand on clear lake
or river. Prefer small house
and fruit trees. In South Ga.
Lee Snyder, Macon, 205
Villa Esta.
Want some open land to es-
tablish Kudzu on and get, part
of the land for my pay; gullies
and other erosion troubles ex-
pected. Prefer within 50 mi.
but take anywhere
in middle Ga., on terms fair
to both parties. Y. M. Ander-
son, Williamson.
FARMS FOR RENT
i
85 A. Jand, 30 i n 1 cultivation,
in Elbert Co., in Elam District,
near | Bethel Baptist Ch
Standing rent or par
| WANTED TO BUY OR|
| EXCHANGE FOR FARM| __
Want good farm with good
house (would like a branch,
000 . all- weather road, within.
Must have
good |
pasture,
less from Five Points, Atlanta.
Want to lease with privilege.
route. State best purchase and |:
Suttles, Ameri-
Want bay for cash, 100 acres,
Large 2 H. farm, good. aa
pastures, 5 R. house, 6 mi. W.
|Fayetteville (Fayette Co.) also
large 1 H. farm; good land,
pasture, 1 mi. Sw. Newnan
(Coweta Co.) for standing rent.
Ardath Loyd Bradshaw, QOcilla,
Rte.
Good 1 H. crop for rent lo-.
cated 2% mi. Carrollton on
Atlanta - Hwy.
Land will make bale
good. Write or se.
Brown, Carrollton, Rt 1
5 house,
house, feed shed, -
15 or 20 AS tillable land, house
ceiled and painted throughout,
REA lights: near Hogansville
and Grantville. School bus and
mail daily; church in walking
(If you have more in.
family:than needed to make
distance.
farm, can get work at nearby
mills.) Write or see. F. T. Mea-
cham, Grantville.
50 A. good house, 4 rooms;
30 A. fertile Flint. River bot-
tems; 77m NE, Manchester;
and 7 mi. SE Woodbury, Mevi-
wether
hog and poultry farm. See or
write. John B. Alford, Man-
chester, Rt. 1, Box 124.
2 He farm 2, AL 5 A. tobacco.
For rent. A. S. Hicks, Adel.
Some property in Hiawassee,
Ga., for rent. See or write. Por-
ter L. Mull, Clarkesville, Rt. 3.
WANT TO RENT ae
Want small farm near At-
Janta, . prefer in direction. of
Mableton - or Austell, with 5-
6 R. house with elec. Would
M. E. Cheek.
N. We
rent: or trade.
Atlanta, 1082 Center St.,
He 3087 W.
Want dairy farm with ete ock
and tools. Cash rent. J. F.
Williams, Thunderbolt.
Want a 4 or 5 R. house with
lights and water and 10 acres
of land suitable for poultry
farm, not over 12 mi. Atlanta.
Pay standing rent or monthly
rent. Write. eek Cotter,
Warrenton, Rte2
Want rent or mrotbhly buy
a 1H. farm for 19467 small
farm,- good land, fair house.
barn, ae water, wood,
etc
or near Atlanta or near Maco
( Bibb Co.) for other good nae
ae sown O. A. Stone, Dallas,
Attention Veterans!
MARRIAGE CERTIFICATES
Required as evidence in types
- of claims filed with the Vet-
erans Administration)
(Prepared and released by C.
Arthur Cheatham, director,
Zeorgia State. Veterans Serv-
ce Office. ):
There are many cases filed
with the Veterans Administra-
ion which require that the
marriage in question must be
oroven and made a matter of|
preeord. If you are required to
submit proof of your marriage
to. the Veterans Administra-
|tion, you may. establish your.
marriage by submitting the
best evidence obtainable in the
following manner: First, by a
sertified copy of: the public
record of marriage over the
signature and seal of the offi-
cial having custody of such re-
sords. This record may gen-
erally be procured from the
County Clerk of the county
where the license was issued,
or, second by a copy of the
church record . of marriage,
certified to by the legal cus-
todian of such records: If the
|above are not obtainable the
reason must be stated and,
third, an affidavit of the clergy
man or magistrate who offi-
ciated must be furnished or if
}such is not procurable, fourth,
by. the production of the ori-
ginal certificate of marriage ac-
companied by proof of its
genuineness and the authority
of the person to perform the
marriage, or, fifth, by the af-
fidavits of two or more wit-
nesses to the ceremony. In the
event a common-law marriage
is claimed
in jurisdictions
where such
< marriages are
recognized, then by the affi-
davits of one or both parties
supplemented by t the affidavits |
Will furnish |
,|plenty guano, good stock and
| tools.
jeotton ver acre if cultivated |
Harold
pendants.
Co. Ideal for cattle,
in Fulton Co. a
have been! marric
their marriage - tO. ea
rand should include
of each prior husban
fiavringe and. the da
place of each marriag >
death of each _ prior
barn, chicken | 2"
auto and
wagon sheds, plenty barn room.
Sete: Office will be pl
to. render any assistance
sible to veterans and 1e.
In addition
Main Office, located a
State Capitol, we have b
offices located in Albany
con, Waycross, Columbus
gusta, Gainesville, Rom
vannah-and Athens, I
in need of assistan
contact one of our offi
tioned above, and our
sentatives will be ples
be of service to you.
CERTIFICATE OF Br
REQUIRED ON VET:
ADMINISTRATION
ny many cases where
are filed with the Veter.
Administration, birth
cates are required as.
the evidence. As an exam
when application | is, mac
pension benefits based o
service of a war vete
widow with children
quired to submit the
tificates of all minor ch
under the ages of 18 yea
Birth certificates in ca
this nature are necessar
cause the Veterans
tration has placed limi
on the amount of
widows may receive, as
age limitations of minor
dren. Payments will be
i0 widows of war vete
they meet the regulat
the Veterans minis
and if the income of
with no. children does ne
ceed $1, 000 annually, thi
annually in event. the |
has minor children. No
limitations are placed on
ows of men killed in actiol
men who died of a service-
nected disability.
-In other cases, such ~
tional Service . Life Insu
and not War Risk Inst
the beneficiary is require
submit his or her birt
tificate because payments
made to the beneficia
The practice of having b rth
recorded began in mos
of the country ee en
orded, as is the ate
instances, it is necessai
secure a delayed
tificate. You may secur a
certificate by applying
clerk in the Court of Ordiz
in the county where the
occurred. You must furni:
clerk with at least three pi
of the following ev ae ce
statement from the atten
physician or mid-wife;
older relatives. Or
who had knowled
birth; a statement
Cradle Roll or ot
record; record. take
ance he te
local, omen
_~ No shipment.
= qudson Zachary, Hamilton, Rt.
ger Beans, 16c lb. FOB. Wil-
Morgan, Americus, Rt. D.
' 35e ib. 5 Ib. lots or more,
_Beans, $5.00 bu.
- $6.50 bu. at farm. Buyer fur-
* Also colored or white Bunch
- Butterbeans, same price.
= Mrs.
Rt.
eslightly damaged,
~ planting, $4.50 bu. at my barn.
= Hutus Martin, Hogansville, Rt.
-B. C. Wells, Thomson.
prolific, bears from early sum-
-mer fill frost, 35c lb., in 5 and
bunch Butterbeans, 20c Ib.- 2
~tibs. select Stone Mt. Water-
_melon Seed, -$1.00 Ib. plus
postage. Mrs. J. F. Brown,
- Campton; Rt. 1.
prepaid.
Metter.
Hitcheock, Devereux,
_ Black Field Peas, 10 ibs., $1.40
- Want Nigger Killer potatoes or
_ yar.) Cottonseed,
* hun. in 100 lb. bags.
with order.
PAGE SIX
/
..ARKET BULLETIN.
Wednesday, March 21, 1945
BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE.
NX
About 200 lbs. Jackson Won-
lie Trammell, Chipley.
Henderson Lima Beans,
1944 crop, 30c lb.; 10 Ibs. or
more for 25c lb. del. White
Musk Peas, 10 Ibs. for $2.00
del. R. C. Williams, Soperton.
Edible Soy Beans, 50-60 lbs.,
g0c lb. for lot. Mrs..C. R.
Colored Bunch Bulterbeans.
c
lb. 1944 crop. W. M. Cain,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
40 bu. Running Velvet
W. H. Mad-
dox, Danville, Rt. 2.
8 bu. Good sound Tory. Peas,
nish sacks.
Sardis.
Red Speckled Crowder and
White Brown-eye Peas, 50c at.
G. C. Bargerson,
PP.
Cc. G. Taylor, Buchanan,
de
_Brown-eyed Crowder Peas,
fine for
50 bu. New Era Peas, $6.00
per bu. FOB. Love Atkinson,
Monroe.
7% bu. Clay Peas, $6.00 bu.
White buneh Butterbeans,,
1944 crop, hand cleaned, very
50.1b. lots; 0c lb. in smaller
lots. PP. Mrs. H. S. Mullins,
Milner. :
1 Bu. Red Rinper Peas, $6.00.
1 V. Bramhold,
Mt. Airy, Rt. 1.
25 lbs. White bunch Butter-
beans, 25c lb.: 5 lbs. colored
60 Ibs. Sugar Crowder Peas.
20c lb. 25 lb. PP.- 20 lbs. Red
Hull Javas and 5 lbs. Tillman,
12c lb. 5 Ibs. Lady Finger,
and 2 lbs. little Blackeyed
Peas, 30c. Four last items not
Mrs. -J. D. Coston,
60 bu. Clay Peas, $6.50 bu..,
. in 2% bu. bags: 2% bu. mixed |
peas, $6.00 bu. Also 50 bu.
Stoneville No. B Cottonseed,
$3.50 per 100 lbs. FOB. W. J.
18 lbs. colored Bunch But-
terbeans, extra nice, field rip-
ened, free of weevils, 20c Ib.,
plus postage for lot. 1944 crop.
White Half Runner Beans,
40c cup; 2 cups for 75c. Brown
6-wk. Peas, 25c cup; 3 cups for
69e. Cash or money order.
Mrs. Lon Ashworth, Dacula.
. speckled bunch Butter-
beans, sound and clean, 30c lb.
in lots of 5 Ibs. or over, del.
25 1b., 25 ibs. or more: 25c Ib.
POR, C. R. Smith, Buford, Rt-+
Little Two-Crop Peas and
P. P. Also long pod Okra,
Ib., 35e. Old fashioned runner
Butterbeans, 35c teacupful..
planis. State price.
aE:
Trowell. Ambrose.
COTTONSEED
FOR SALE
-
_- Stoneville 2B Cottonseed, Ist
yr., ginned 1 var. gin, de-
linted and new imp. Ceresan
treated, $6.50 per hun. in even
wt 100 Ib. bags, FOB. Innis
M. Cole, Sharpsburg.
Cokers 100 str. 7 Cottonseed,
ist yr. Kept pure at gin. $6.00
per hun. at my farm. Ton
loss cheaper. D, M. Roberts,
Lithia Springs, Rt? 1.
D&PL No. 14 Cottonseed, 1st
yr., big boll, 42% lint or more.
Kept pure at gin, good staple,
$5.00 per CWT at my farm or
$6.00 per CWT FOB. Osear L.
stone, Loganville, Rt. 3.
Cokers 100 str. 7 Cottonseed,
Cokers wilt-resistant (atest
$5.00 per
Cash
j Herbert Breed-
love. Bishop.
-DPL 14 Cottonseed, delinted
ahd Ceresan treated, Ist yr.
from originator, but 2 yrs. old,
$5.50 CWT. FOB. Leo Gren,
Suwanee. oe
. Cokers wilt resistant Cot-
tonseed, $1.40 bu. Can ship.
Timing is Vital in Growing
eae
ada cme
Wax Bean
Beans, one of the Victory gar-
dens most important crops, should
not be planted until the ground is
warm: They are very tender to
frost or to cold cutting winds in
their younger stages. Gardens with
light, warm, sandy soil can get an
earlier bean start than those with
heavy colder soil.
The first crop, in which we take
a gamble with the weather, should
be given the warmest, mellowest,
and best drained patch in the gar-
den. Later on when the frost dan-
ger is past it will make little dif-
ference, as the bean is the most
obliging of vegetables and will even
produce a fair crop in positions
much more shaded than some other
vegetables will tolerate.
The choice of varieties is first-of
all whether you. want to grow green
beans or wax beans. Both have
their advocates as to superiority of
flavor. Then you may choose wheth-
er you want a round podded ora
flat podded bean. Round pods are
thicker and filled with flesh and
have higher table quality, but the
flat pods yield a larger crop.
There are .numerous excellent
varieties from which to choose and
almost any sort offered by a relia-
-
With few exceptions, more seeds
of a vegetable are sown than there
is room for plants to mature, so it
becomes necessary to.thin out the
excess plants, to give room for the
rest. to develop fully.
When this is neglected, and too
many plants are left, the harvest is
lessened rather than increased, and
the quality of the crop may be se-
riously affected. However you may
dislike uprooting tiny plants which
it must be done.
Sowing thinly in the first place
will greatly lessen the work of thin-
ning, and also save seed. To make
sure the seeds graw evenly, if your
garden soil contains much clay,
prepare a special lot of soil in which
sand and humus are mixed freely
to make it light and porous; and
cover the seeds with this, instead
of with the heavy garden soil. In
sandy, or light loamy soil this will
not be necessary.
When beets and carrots are
sown thinly, thinning may be left
until some are large enough to use.
It is the half-grown carrots that
are most delicious, and the growth
is so much more in length than in
the diameter of the root that the
thinning process does not disturb
the others so much.
Turnips must be thinned before
they begin to form. The early tur-
nips are round and flat. They do
not grow well if crowded. If thin-
ning if postponed until the roots
begin to form the growth of all is
checked and the ravages of worms,
which are always ready to feed on
turnips, are likely to be fatal. If
the young plants are pulled up so
they stand 4 inches apart in the
row in a remarkably quick time
they will be large enough to use.
Beets. are more easily. handled
than turnips when they are a little
larger, and one should not fail to
try a dish of beet tops with the tiny
roots just beginning to form. It is
a delicious introduction to the gar-
den menu. The beets which are left
in the ground showkd be spaced 2
ve Westbrook, Roswell, Rt.
NS
inches apart, .
Fine Beans All Summer
s Are Considered by Many to Be Tenderest of All,
grew from seed which you sowed, |
ble seed house will give excellent
results. /
The one warning concerning their
cultivation is not to work the patch
while the leaves of the beans are
wet, either with dew or from rain,
Rust seems to follow. A rust spot-
ted pod ruins it for culinary use
and this is about the only disaster
likely to happen to a pod bean.
Pole beans are the heaviest yield-
ers of the family, and in the small
garden will give more food for the
space occupied than any other
crop. :
They are later in season and
more tender than bush beans. They
should not be planted until the
weather is settled and the ground
warm, Plant six to eight seeds in
a hill, and thin out to .the four
strongest. The hills should be two
feet apart.
fhe seeret of quality and abun-
dant yield in pole beans is to pick
them before they form seeds and
keep the vines picked clean. Ken-
tucky Wonder is a favorite pole va-
riety. It will produce pods ten
inches long, if you wish, but these
pods will have strings. If they are
picked half grown the strings will
not bother and the quality will be
much better.
Skill in Thinning Out
Gives High Food Yield
Thin Lettuce Plants to Stand One
Inck Apart, at First.
Salsify, parsnips and chicory,
which are to remain in the ground
all season, should be thinned early
to 3 or 4 inches apart in the row. If
your soil is rich the smaller inter-
val will.do, but if it is not, then give
more room.
Bush lima beans will never de-
velop properly if crowded. A foot
and a half to 2 feet should be given
to each plant for best results. Bush
beans, green pod and wax, should
have 3 or 4 inches, depending on
the richness of the soil. Peas are
not usually thinned but should be
planted with plenty of room to
grow.
Radishes are usually thinned by
using them. This always results in
a lot of imperfect specimens which
must be thrown away. It is a good
plan to thin the seedlings when they
first appear.
Leaf lettuce should be thinned,
when growth begins, to about one
inch between plants. As lettuce is
usually planted, this means dis-
earding the big majority of the
seedlings. Those remaining will de-
velop rapidly, however, and soon
will be large enough for some to
be used. Pull up alternate plants
for this use.
Seed Disinfectants Cut
Loss in Early Sowings
Seeds and infant plants (seed-
lings) are often attacked by moulds
or fungi whichdestroy them. This
is most likely to occur when condi-
tions are unfavorable, and they be-
come either too wet, cold or warm
for quick germination and healthy
growth.
Seeds started indoors, or early
in the spring before the ground
warms up, are much more likely
to be attacked than those sown in
warm; sunny weather. There are
said to be 500 different organisms
which may be present in soil or
on the seeds (like bacteria in the
human system) waiting favorable
conditions to develop.
One way to protect your sowing
from these attacks is to disinfect
the seeds, with one of a number
of disinfectants which haye been
proved to be effective. This pro-
tection is especially worth while
when you are trying to get an
extra early start, either by sowing
indoors, or in cold weather out-
side.
There is no danger to the seed
using these materials provide
the simple directions furnis}
with them are followed, precisaly
Never use any disinfectant in er
er strength than recommended
is remarkable what a small a
will do, A
For example, in using
infectant as a dry powder
quantity which can be lifted
blunt end of a toothpick is 5
cient to coat and protect thi
in a standard-size packet. Teg
corner of the packet, insert
dust and shake thoroughly, and th
job is done.
Most of these materials can
be used in liquid form, the g
being soaked in the solution,
dried before sowing, :
Information about the best
infectants can be obtained f
seedsmen, from state experim
stations, from the Bureau of
formation of the Department
Agriculture in Washington, an
from most garden centers and Vig
tory garden headquarters.
Only Home Gardener Can
Enjoy Peas at
Peas are a luxury crop in the
Victory garden. Served garden-
fresh, within half an hour after
picking, they have tenderness and
flavor which only the home garden-
er can enjoy, because they lose it
so rapidly.
Like sweet corn, their sugar
changes to starch rapidly after
picking. For the space occupied,
they yield a relatively small crop,
because only the seeds of the plant
are eaten, Care should be taken to
get the most out of-:the space used,
where garden space is limited.
Where spring comes late, fol-
lowed quickly by hot weather, only
one crop of peas can be depended
on, and this should be sown as
soon as the soil is prepared.
The best way to prolong the har-
vest is to sow at the same time an
early and a midseason variety, plus
a late variety in sections where
there is time for it to mature be-
fore hot weather.
Seeds should be sown two inches
deep and not closer than an inch
apart in a single row, and double
rows should have six inches b-
tween them. Even dwarf peas bene-
fit by having support, so brush or
low fencing is often set between
double rows for -the vines to
elimb. The semi-tall and tall vari-
eties require support.
Peas have a short harvest, and
quickly lose quality when past their.
prime. They should be harvested
before the pods begin to turn
Their Best
Half an Hour from Garden to 1
Is the Rule for Top Pea Flay
yellow. If there are too many
the table, the surplus shoul
canned while at their best ra
than allowing them to lose qu
In new gardens -it will
inoculate the seed with a cul
which seedsmen supply for the
pose, containing nitrogen-fixing
teria. The soil should be well
tilized with a balanced plant
at the rate of a pint for a twi
five foot row.
Tiny, Tender Summer Squas
A Dish for the Epicure
Victory gardeners who neglect
summer squashes and marrows are
missing one of the summers most
delicious offerings. This is no doubt
due to the imperfect knowledge of
preparing these delicious vegeta-
bles. One is so accustomed to find-
ing them cooked in such a soupy,
uneatable manner that it is the nat-
ural thing to ignore them, whereas
they can be made a dish for the
most discriminating epicure.
Boiling the squash is, the most
ordinary method of preparation,
and it is true that this manner per-
mits of a mushy texture. It may be
eliminated to a large extent, how-
ever, by draining well before serv-
ing. A better way is to bake the
squash, or, it may be fried in much
the same manner as eggplant. Mar-
rows are best fried.
Follow this procedure for frying
Squashes and marrows: slice vege-
tables into slabs about one-half inch
thick, dip them in milk in which an
egg has been beaten, and then after
breading them with crumbs, fry in
deep fat, An ordinary skillet may
be used in place of. deep frying
provided that adequate grease is
used to prevent burning. They may
be turned like pancakes. If you
forget your aversion to these two
vegetables until you have tried this
new recipe for cooking them, you
will be pleasantly surprised to find
that they represent a delicious ad-
dition to your summer table.
Still another method of serving
squashes is peculiarly available to
the home gardener, It is the boil-
ing of fruits which are just a few
days old, boiling briefly with the
skin on and serving them with melt-
ed butter like asparagus, The Ital-
ian marrow is especially suited to
,
iA
t
2
Italian Marrow Can Be Used at Al
Stage of Grewth. 4
this treatment. Pick it when if
about 1 inch thick; when cold
may be sliced and served with m
onnaise. All summer squashes
be served the same way in the ba
stage. 4
The squashes like a rich, loa
scil. Plant them in rows from
to 4 feet apart, and in hills ad
the same distance apart in-
rows. The same cultural insi
tions apply in the ease of the m
rows, except when planting the
ing types, where 8 to 10 feet s
be allowed between the rows
well as the hills, Suecession
ing every few weeks is a good
supply of 3
as it will assure a constant fr
young vegetables
summer months.
ould Erase The Industry
y Drying Up Production
By Chas. G. Henry
Cotton producers are fairly well informed about
various troubles ahead of them and are, of course,
nterested in the proposed
Everywhere emphasis is placed upon the neces-
remedies.
y of producing cheaper cotton. Farmers know that
h better varieties and methods they may, on their
est land, get some favorable results in that direct-
on, but the rising labor costs, which seem inevitable,
jay offset the gains. Mechanical operations are very
asy to talk about, but are
very expensive and ace
veral years in the future.
The low economic condition of the South has
yeen caused, according to most of the authorities, by
he low price of cotton during these many years. If
is true, it would seem rather foolish to plan our
ire on still lower prices.
Farmers are interested in all branches of the |
-otton industry which make up the economy of the
uth, but regardless of how friendly they may be,
ey. cannot be expected to produce Cotton at a loss
st to keep the industry alive.
Shift To Other Crops
SS urdiens will try to grow cotton as long as it is.
rofitable, but low prices will, either voluntarily or in-
oluntarily, put them out of cotton production. They
May gradually cut their acreage and shift to other
eYOps. until the ratio of supply and demand reaches
point where the price is profitable.
The undisputed figures given at the Pace Con-
ference were that producers of raw cotton only re-
ived 7.50 cents on the consumers dollar. If this is
orrect, it might seem that even if we gave the cot-
n away, the 7.50 cents would not save the industry.
ere seems to be a philosophy that farmers should
ay at home and work long hours to produce cheap
ood and fiber for city folks to handle and enjoy.
nners for the future must be careful or they will
up. the supply. .
et FOR SALE
eed Cane, No. 31-511, dark
chewing or for svrup; also
9-116, large green, 5 to 7 ft.,
20.00 per thousand stalks at
. Malvin Collins, Whig- |.
Eabout 2000 stalks of P. O, J.
eed cane, $10.00 per thousand
Iks. N. A. Boyette,
J. and Indian Seed eane,;
4 ft. stalks, one cent ea.
bed: Write for del. prices.
nald Braswell, Adrian.
jreen Cane, No. 29-116, good
$16. 50 per thousand
t WwW. W. Williams, Quit-
0, J. sugar cane, short,
ut well eyed, $1.50 per hun-
d: $12.50 per thousand here,
xe. for small sweet pota
es for seed, the pink or vel-
w skin Porto Ricans. Y. M.
son, Williamson. |
lbs. 1944 Long green pod
ay o cleaned, $12.00
M. Chapman, Chula.
ecard seed. 10 dipper
5 ee handle Ae seed, |
White Velvet okra seed, ae
5 Ibs. or more, 40c Ib.
Gates, Chipley.
ones watermelon seed, $1
Banana muskmelon, 40
piul. Add eer: Rosie
e. Cumming, Rt.
Tender Cornfield a seed,
jc large cupful: Add postage.
M. P. Forrester, Talona.
y 6 wks. White tender
neh beans, white Hall Run-
1ers,. White Tender Crease-
ack Cornfield beans, no. we-
okra seed, all 40c cupful:
s beans or okra seed, 75c.
postage. And few Ibs.
ite Lady Finger peas, 25c
iy te Mrs. Wesley Reece,
oz: oe potato pumpkin
2c doz: also watermelon
"seeds, 10c. Add
ei : alle
Hes
OB. tito seed, 25c.
At least 60,000 stalks of P..
120c Ib.
SEED FOR SALE
oz; Dixie Queen, 20c oz: also
want White NZ rabbits. RB, 2>
Fowler, Roy.
Blue Ridge Mt. climbing
tomato, runs 10 to 15 ft. wt. up
to 2 lbs. Long bearing, 200
seed culture, 200 certified |
Marglobe, 100 Red Pear toma- |
War or postage
stamp. Will C. Smith, Pike.
Moseleys Sagsrain plant in
bu. per acre and 5 tons forage
grow on any land, $1.00 gal;
$12.50 per 100 Ibs. COD. E.
M. Moseley, Decatur, 639 Syca-
more Dr.
Cannonball Watermelon
seed=hand saved from person-
ally selected melons, $1.50 1b.
1944 crop, pure seed, high.
200 lbs. imp. Cannonball,
shade dried, Melon seed, $2. 00
lb. W. H. Stinson, Gordon,
Ri.
500 Ibs. hand saved, Cannon-
ball Melon seed, Seemisan
FOB.
ohe, $1. 50 ib. W.
| Birdsong, Gordon.
Soy Beans, 25c Ib., in 10 ib.
lots or more; Speckled Crow-
der Peas, 20c lb, in 6 and 10
Ib. lots or mote: Vine Peach
seed. 30c for a tbl. spoon. All
PP. in Ga. T. T. Brown, Ball
Ground, Rt. 1.
Heavy Everbearing (till
frost) bunch: Butterbean seed,
50e large teacupful; Long
Green Okra. Seed, 35c teacup-
ue V.M. Johnson, Shellman,
te
Green Stringlies Bean Sed,
Exe. for printed feed
Mrs. Le-
Ria 4.
sacks or dried fruit.
roy Bowen, Baxley,
Box 198.
75 lbs. Cannonball Water-
melon Seed, from selected!
melons, $1.75 lb. R. W.
caster, Hawkinsville, Rt. 2.
Yellow Meat (ice Cream)
Watermelon Seed, improved,
$2.00 tb: Bruce Andrews.
Haddock, Rt. Eo Box 126.
ct ody Black Canonball Wa-.
termelon Seed, $1.50 lb. Del.
Mrs. W. R. Chasteen, - Locust
Grove.
Marglobe Tomato Seed, $2.00
lb. New Stone Tomato Seed,
$1.50 Ib. Collard Seed. Ga.
and Heading, 85 Ib. Del. Iuee
Crow, ee Rt. 2, Box
1153.
\ large melons,
{| colors,
White cabbage coliard, 15c:
drill or broadeast, makes 100)5
+10e
treated, saved from large mel-]{ 5.
Lan-{
Seed, 50c Ib, African Squash
(the only squash now), 10 a
start. All PP. Tobe Milner.
| Cuthbert, Rt. 1, Box 31.
White ahd Colored Half
Runner Bean Seed, 45 lb. PP.
a H. Christy, Dahlonega,
175 lbs. of good clean Series
Seed. 20 Ib. A. D: Pope,
Senoia.
10 Ibs. Sonnonunl Water-
melon Seed, hand saved from
shade dried,
$2.00 Ib. R. E. Rowe.
Alvaton.
Pure
Del.
Simms Watermelon
Beans, 50c .-Ib.;
Brown Crowder. and Purple
Hull Thl. Peas, 5 - for, $1.00.
Del. to 2nd zone. M Jones.
-Grayson.
Early Queen 60 Day Melon
Seed. $1.00 Ib.: 60c 14 Jb., by
pareel post. Aliso few ibs.
Giant oe Sunflower, 25c
ie J. H. Rooks, Spring-
vale.
Broom Corn. -euptul:. 25c.
Bunch Striped Bean Seed, 30c
cup. Speckled Pole Bean,
dried, 30c cupful. All have
few weevils. not to hurt. Odes-
sa Dodd, Alpharetta:
_ Sericea Lespedeza Seed, well
cleaned, 20c Ib. OB: FG
Green, Suwanee, Rt. 2.
White Velvet Okra Seed, 50
lb.: 5 lbs. or more, 40e Ib. D.
es Gates, Chipley.
+ermelon Seed for sale, $1.50
lb. Del. in Ga. Lois Wright,
Marshallville.
700 Ibs. Red Top Sorghum
Seed, grows on big stalks.
1 es for syrup or silage, 17%4
ville,
Citron Seed, 65c Ib. Early
green Okra and yellow Crook-
ous Squash Sed, 30c teacup-
u
$1.00 lb. Jonquils,
Add _ postage.
Cumming, a
Half bu. of Tender - Hull
Cornfield Seed Beans, mixd
25e pint. Esce,< for
printed feed sacks. 5 W. Al-
len, Ball Ground, Rt.
Cannonball | Was melon,
$1.60 lb.: Dude Creek, $1.95:
Cuban Queen, $1.50. New Era
Peas. $6.50 bu. Brown Eyed
Crowders, $9.00 bu. Mixed,
$6.00 bu. Brabs, a 00 bu.
Velvet Beans, $6.50 :
Hasterlin, Aaa eeay ae
"8 bu ener Seed, $6.00 bu:
H. G. Harris, Royston, He 1,
Pumpkin Seed, 30e cupful;
20e doz.
Rosie Crowe,
| Martin Gourd Seed, 25 for 12c: |
40c cup. Mixed Turnip Seed,
spoonfuls. 15c. Jack Beans.
10c doz. me
Ellijay, Rt
5 to 7 new Cat Tail Millet
Seed, not recleaned, $12.50 per
hundred lbs. Recleaned, $15.00
per hundred. No orders sent
for less than 100 lbs. Check or
money order to be. sent with
order. J: T. Byrd, Broxton.
Ga, a and Elberta Peach
Seed, le ea; Sunflower seed,
spoonful: Catnip, - 30c
bunch; Martin Gourd seed, 10
spoontul. Plus postage. Bil-
lie Marshburn. Cumming, Rt.
8 Ibs. Cannonball
melon Seed, - selected from
Choice Vielons, dried in
shade. $2.00 Ib. Del. Mrs. W.
E. Ellington, Rupert.
Perkins
Pod Okra, English Peas, Hen-
dersons bunch Butterbeans,
20c cupful: 3 cups for_ 50e, 26
2 lot Butterbeans, ~25c Ib.
lso hice clean Beef Tallow.
sue Ib. in. 1 or 2 ib: dots) 6
Ibs. for $1.50. PP. Mrs. J.
G. Whitfield, Jasper, Rt. 3;
12 Pints Wine Clored But-
terbeans, 40c_ pint. Home
grown, very prolific White
bunch Butterbeans, same
price. Exe: pint Crowder {1
Peas for 1 pt. yellow Queen
|Popeorn for planting. ep
phis Timms. Auburn, Rt.
Early Green ve
ripens 60 days from planting.
pkg. seed, 25c. Also Yellow
Watermelon Seeds, pkg seed,
25c. Exe. for-pot flowers. Mrs.
E.W. Tidwell, Alpharetta.
Dark Yellow Pumpkin Seed,
25e cupful. Choice Water-
melon seed. 35 cup. Field
Peas, $6.00 bu. Catnip seeds,
15 spoonful, Popall Seeds.
50c cupful. Mrs. Mae Turner.
Gainesville, Rt. 6. pot
Sericea Lespedeza Seed,
Water
der tee. 30c
Sn
. Stock dge, I RFD a
one Tender. Groen One|
finest cane ever
Seed, $1.50 1b.: Heavy bearing
{Black Pole
Hand saved, Cannonball Wa- | W
Loyd Keadle, Yates-
Jones Watermelon Seed.
ey Eller,
Mammoth Giccs
searified and ee a, dow.
New Dixie Honey Carle
Seed, Ist yr. from Hastings,
syrup or feed, 25c 1b. in small
lots. Include. postage. R. T.
Dempsey, Adairsville. Rt. 2.
About half -ton Kobe Lespe-
deza seed, combine run, lle lb.
700 lbs. Kobe Lespedeza seed,
cleaned, 16c lb. for quick sale.
W. S. Lowe, Comer.
Cantaloupe, 36 soo0d
for $1.00 Ib. Also
Beans, Palma Crystal hand
pee seed, 25c per package.
. Courson, Soperton.
Limited Amt, Texas Seeded
Ribbon Cane Soghum Seed,
very. rare, and makes the fin-
est svrup available, 5 Ibs. seed,
$1.25 PP. $20.00 per hundred
lbs.. FOB. Cash with order.
Frank H. WNely, -Norcross.
(The Neely Farms).
Cannonball Watermelon
Seed, picked by hand, Pride of
Ga.. and Stone Mt: rmixed,
$1.25 lb. Mrs. W. G.
McDonough.
Blue Ridge Mt. Climbing.
runs 15 ft., wt. 2 Ibs., 200 seed
culture inst. with 200 certified
Marglobe Tomato Seed, 100
Red Pear Tomato, 25. War or
postage Stamps. Will ~=C.
Smith, Roy.
25 lbs. Colored Bunch But-
terbeans, 35 lb: PP; 2 Ilbs.,
Moon and Star Watermelon
Seed, $2.00 Ib: Mrs. W, M.
DeLay, Lithia Springs, Rt. 1.
Rocky Ford Cantaloupe Seed
Ist yr. from breeder, 45 Ibs.
it and mildew _ resistant,
$1.50 16. PE. LG, Daniels,
Vienna, Rt. 4.
100 Ibs. hand graded Can-
seed
germination is
$125.00 for lot. FOB here,
$1.50 Ib. in or more 1b. lots.
J. C. Adkins, Ft. Valley..
Crimson Clover, 1744 Ib:;
corean Lespedza, $9.95 per
Cwt.: Kobe Lespedeza, $17.50
Cwt.: 500 bu. Iron peas,
bu. FOB. R. E.Aveock, Mon-
roe. :
Straight Leaf Mustard, 75c
pt.. Mixed Gourd, 50c_ cup.
Pumpkin, 50c cup. Castor
Bean. 25 pint. Cuctimber and
squash, 10c spo6nful, Mrs.
Beans. 6 wk. Pole Beans, 60c
John Weave, Temple, Rt. 2.
White Half Runner Bunch
qt. White Field Peas, 12c Ib.
Dried Leather Britches, 40c tb.
Dried Pumpkin, 25e Ib. Exc.
same for White or
guaranteed,
order with order. Add postage.
Mrs. J. J. Ear ereOr, Quill. |
PLANTS FOR SALE
150, 000 Govt. insp. Potate
plants weekly, Write or come,
ae D. A. Lightsey, Odum, Rt.
White Bermuda onion plants, | 5
$2.00 M. COD.,-now ready, full |
count;
plants, $3.00 M at bed. Ready
by April 15. Mrs. T. P. Mus-
eigiite: Arabi, Rt. 1, Phone
Pink os PR. porate plants,
$3.00 M. Prompt del., begin-
ning March 20. Mrs. M. Dick-
son, . Osierfield.
Red raspberyies, Van Fleet
Southern, Ist yr. 20c ea: also
very fine 3 yrs. Sage plants,
20c ea} All PP. Mis. J. H. Dun
Nett, Sandy Springs. oS
Large fresh sprin
early Jersey and Cha
bage plants, 500 for 90c:
; el, PP. $1.00 M
col; also Marglobe tomato
plants, now ready, $2.00 M.
Del. PP. Roots mossed, prompt
shipment. F. F.
gerald.
Fresh Spring grown Early
Jersey and Charleston cabbage
plants, $1.50 M; tomato plants,
now ready, early varieties,
i 50 M: 5000 or more, $2. 00 M.
iy Stokes, Fitzgerald,
Rooted sage plants, 25c ea; 6
fer $1.00: catnip peppermint,
25e bunch: garlic bulbs, 50c
doz. Mrs. C5. Crump, Hart-
well, Rt.1.
Eatly Jersey frostproof aa:
bage plants and Bermuda on-
ions, 300 for 85c; 500 for $1.10;
$2.00 M: also Marglobe tomato
seed, $1. 75 lb; Marglobe tom-
ato plants, ready, 500 for $2.00;
aay M. Del. R. Chanclor,
itts
Geniune Red Skin - Porto
Rico Plants, all State. insp.,
$2.50 M. A. R. Jones, Pelham.
Cobb eee ahd onion plants,
$1.50 M. Del. Tomato plants,
ready round April 1 a GL.
grown
W. cab-
$1.35
Exp.
Gaff, Fitzgerald
|bage-
grown for
i Re. 1.
Castor |.
Oglesby, ||
nhonball Watermelon seed, good | 2.
$7.50
Printed |
-|Feed Sacks, 100 Ib. cap. Money
Red Skin PR. potato
|Add postage.
Stokes, Fitz- |
plan S,
tomato plants, rea
1$1.50: 500 for $2.0
All del. Ovie Com Tr,
Copenhagen marke
plants, now ready, $1.3
Del. to 3rd. zone. Money
or cash perferred. Ot
man, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Cabbage plants, 30c
M; collard seed, 85c
vine tomato seed, 150 se
L. A. Crow,
potatoe plants, Governm
$2.50 M. Moss_ ae
Gaff, Fitzgerald, Rt.
Gold Dollar
ready for setting April Ist
mi, south Abbeville on Ab
ville-Fitzgerald Hwy. Se
L. Newman, Fitzgeral
Cabbage and onion
$1.50 M. Del. Tornat
ready around April Js
Steedley, Baxley.
$2.00 M. Del. Full -count
ready. E. H. Hall, Arabi
Gvt. insp. Porto Rico potat
plants, $3.00 M. Ready Apr
if y D. Tomberlin, Surr
Jersey cabbage pla
for 85c; $1.60 M. Fu
prompt del. PP. Ww.
Abbeville, RFD 2:
Imp. Porto Rico pile
from vine grown S
seed, $2.50 M. Del to 3rd :
also Marglobe ys pd.
$2.00 M. Del, ron
ment. J. F. Gruber,
S. ple Skin Red m
potato plants, -
pe
plants, Marglobe tomato pl
ae
$2.75 per M. Ready in Api
ay. R., J. Boatright, Mer:
Govt. insp., Bors Rica
tato plants, April del.
5000 for $13. 00; 10,000
No checks or COD. G
and good plants. E.
Baxley, Rt. 1.
Chas. W. and favly
Spring grown nice
plants, 500 for $1.00;
also New Stone, Margi
Baltimore plants, $2.00
New Stone, Mar aging an
timore plants,
count and moss vecne
Coffey, Fitzgerald.
Chas. Wakefield
plants, 500 for $1.00;
Del. Prompt shipment.
Mathis, Gainesville, Rt
* Early bearing, we
Strawberry plants, 5
in Ist and 2nd zones. es
H Duran, Cumming, R
Chas. Wakefield Ca
Plants, 500 for $1.00:
Del. Prompt _ shipr
Dew ey Mathis, Gainesvil
4 Tobacco Beds E
Will be ready to set
the ist of April.
houn, Tarrytown, Rt
Marglobe Tomato 2
now ready, well packed,
Mrs. O;
Faircloth, Pulaski, Rt ike
Hardy strong No. 7 2
Eldorado a
prolific bearers, $1.50
for $20.00. Careful pa
good count, prompt ser
Mrs. C. M. Robinson, G
ville,
Large Crystal Was
eats Sa: see
Denes. Plants, Bale 75
Sage Plant $1.15-d
Bulbs, 3 doz, for $1.
postage. Cash or Bo
der. Ance Grindle, :
Rt. 1, Box 58.
Certified Port Rico Pe
Plants, Copper E
Plants, $2.50 per M. -
Remond. Pelham.
Spring Chas. Ww.
Plants and White
Onions, $1.80. per
$1.20: Marglobe 1
Orders flea pron
x
Fitzgerald. byt
thas. Wakefield or Golden
-e Cabbage Plants, Crate of
or $2.50, exp. col. $1.25
Send check. J. W.
Strawberries,
~ $1.50. Del. No stamps
cks Mrs. R. H. Cathey,
irkesville, Rt. 3. eS
fenuine true to name Mar-
be tomato plants, ready. to
ip. moss packed, full count,
per M:. Del. Govt. insp.
Skin P. R. Potato Plants,
dy to ship April 15, $2.50
SDel ds: Lightsey,
proved Red Skin P. R. Po-
Plants, $3.00 M. Ready
V _Marglobe and New
one Tomato Plants. 50c C:;
WO; for 90e.; $150 M. PP,
rood open field grown plants.
fo checks or COD orders fill-
. Leroy Lightsey, Screven,
Box- 197.
one, Baltimore and Mar-|
lobe Tomato Plants, good
rong healthy plants, 100 for
Oc; 500 for 95c; $1.60 M. Ready
_. Good Red Skin P. R.
otato Plants, Govt. Insp. and
eated, 500 for $1.75: $3.00 M.
Ready ye No? COD
{ d. Buford R. Light-
specreven, Ft. <1,
Marglobe, Greater Baltimore
nd New Stone Tomato Plants,
00 for $1.25;$2.00 M. Del.
Ss packed. Now ready. P.
otato Plants, Red or Yel-
skin, ready April 1st. All
od plants, $3.00 M. Del.
=a and prompt ship-
2.
Tomato plants, now ready
or shipping, $2.50 M. del, {.
ton, Baxley.
Genuine Marglobe and New
tone tomato. plants, now
eady, good plants and good
nt. Moss packed, $1.75 M:
Mand up, $1.50 M; 50c C.
V. D. Lightsey, Screven,
insp. P. R. Potato
nts, grown from vine cut-
s, 00d plants, full count,
; -per M. del. Marglobe
-omato - plants, $1.75 M. L.
C. Lightsey, Screven, Rt. 1.
Kudzu Crowns, free to per-
n digging same. Mrs, T. M.
dolph, Marietta, 403
rtified Marglobe, Rutger
fromato Plants, now ready,
Ss packed, $2.00 M.- Mrs,
Smith, Ailey, Rt. 51.
ABERDEEN-ANG
_ The ANNUAL SPRING SALE of REGISTER-
SD ABERDEEN-ANGUS Breeding Cattle, sponsor-
ed by the GEORGIA ABERDEEN-ANGUS BREED-
ERS ASSOCIATION wi
Stock Yards, East Alban
WT). For catalog address, ALBANY CHAM-
BER OF. COMMERCE, Albany.
G. Murray, Odum,
baga, Bermuda, and Nest On=
ions, Endive, Lettuce, 50c C.
Any amt. Bell, Pimiento and
Hot Peppers, Climbing Toma-
toes, Parsley,, Garlic, Cress,
Evergreen Bunching Onions.
Salsify. 25c: doz.. Mrs. H. V.
Franklin, Register.
White Iceberg Blackberry.
Plants, 6 for 50c. Garden
Horsemint, Peppermint, Gar-
Jie. Eansy, 3562 doz. Lady
Thompson Strawberry, 60c C;
Mixed Watermelon
Pumpkin Seed, Vegetable
Gourds. or long Squashes, 10c
per pack: 3 for 25c. Add post-
age. Mrs. Willis Grindle, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.
Marglobe Tomato Planis,
oven field grown, large stalky
plants, most packed, $2.00 M.
Del. 50c C. Now ready.
eee A. OQuinn,; Surrency,
Tez: :
Hastings Ga. Heading col-
lard plants, young good planis,
$3.00 M. Del.; 500 for $1.45
del. Mrs. Boyd Baggett, Dou-
glasville, Rt. 1. a
PECAN AND OTHER
RUIT TREES FOR SALE
oe
Large sive: Conord. and. Nic
agara grapevines, 60c ea., 3 for
$1.50. Also nice, shade cured
sage, $1.50 lb. All postpaid,
Ground, Rt. 4.
Phim trees, 6 for $1.50;
Peach, 6 for $1.60.
vines, 2 for 20c. Blackberry,
Te ea.; $7.00 C. Add postage.
Bearnest Moultrie, Oconee, Rt.
2, Box 75.
2 and 3 yr. old. Boysenberry
and Youngberry, $1.00 doz.:
$8.00 C. Himalaya Blackberry,
25 for $1.00. 2 and 3 yr. Kud-
zu, $2.00 C. Semesan treated,
postpaid. J. W. Toole, Macon,
33 Burton Ave.
Apricot plums, 35c ea., 2
melon seed, hand saved, shade
dried, $1.50 teacupful.
postage. Mrs, Lee
Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Hazelnut sprouts, *50c
red sassafras roots,
Blackhaw roots, 50c lb. Chas.
Silver, Talking Rock, Rt. 2.
Muscadine and Scuppernong
vines, 50c ea. Mrs. Chas. Rob-
Jinson ,Bowdon, Rt. 2.
US SPRING SALE
Hood,
n.
ll be held at the Albany
y, on April 26, at 1 P. M.
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
March
bbage Plants, per erts. of 2,000 plants
Kale, per bushel
23, 1945 Atlania |
$2.00-$2.50
~ 1.00
.ettuce, crates, 3-4 doz., Iceberg Type
Mustard Greens per bu. fiprs: 22" 1.25-
eions (Green); per doz. bunches 2
- 5.34
1.50
.90
4,25.
6.75
eee pyaar ee
2.65
1.50
1.25
~ Thousands of Broccoli, Ruta- |
Seed..
| war veteran.
Mrs. Nathan Weatherby, Ball
Grape-
for $1.00. Stone Mtn. water- |
Add.
25 Ib.
Want nice, white woman to
help with farm work, for good
salary and board. Good home
for right party. Write or see
at once: Miss Ruby Lee Col-
-lins, Lyons, Rt. 3, Box 221.
Want man and wife to. do
on shares. or for
wages. 3 R. house now Vva-
cant. Mrs. Cleo H, Long, Jef-
ferson, Rt, 1. :
Want good man for good 2
H. farm on 3rds-and 4ths, or
rent house, pasture and gar-
den without farm. C. E. Bag-
gett, Adairsville, Rt. 3.
Want family to truck farm
on - halves, preferably world
4 R. house, out-
and hogs
bldgs., pasture.
Oconee Co. A. R. Saxon, Far-
mington, Rt. 1.
Want good man who has
own:mules and tools, for 1 H.
crop at Riverdale. Good 3.R.
house afd barn. Can furnish
help to right party. Dr. A. M.
Williamson, Atlanta, 1064 West
Peachtree -St., N. W.
Want man for 1 or 2 H. farm
near Griffin. Must _ furnish
self. Standing rent. S. Curtis,
Atlanta, Box 4538.
_ Want good man for 1 or 2 H.
crop on 3rds and 4ths,. 4 R.
house on school bus and mail
route. Work by day at $2.00
day when not in crop. Good
land and buildings. C. Anne-
berg, Marietta, Rt. 1.
-Want farm hand to tend 1 H.
erop, plow and help any other
way needed. Prefer draft ex-
empt man, 45-60 vrs. old, hon-
est, no bad habits and a hard
worker. Part cash and_ part
crop to right party. Grady
Brown, Canton, Rt. 3, Box 57.
Want 3 families to work on
plant farm, drive tractor, ga-
ther and wrap plants and
drive truck. Can use women
in plant shed. O. F. Baker,
Sycamore, Rt. 1.
Want middleaged woman to
live in home and care for poul-
try and other work around
small farm. Good home and
salary. Mrs. C. E. Castellow,
Macon, 422 Johnson Ave.
Landscaping experience. Pay
monthly salary. Bart Powell,
| Athens, Rt. 3.
Want good, reliable white
man with own stock and tools
and ean finance self to culti-
vate heavy 1 H. crop in South-
ern White Co., for share rent.
Good land, lies well, can use
tractor; 3 R. house, ete. Daily
mail and school bus. See.
ne Neda Bowen, Cleveland,
Want man exp. in gardening
and gen. work around cc & iry
home, near Atlanta, for saiary.
acres bottom land. Nancys
Creek and Northside Dr. Hugh
Richardson, Atlanta, 3600
Northside Dr. Phone Ch 1400
or Ma Slit. =
on. farm. R. house with
elec lights. School bus. J.
Sanders, Danville, Rt; 1.
Want white or col man to
milk 1-cow and other light
farm chores. Write. da,
Locke, Butler, Rt. 1, -
Want at once good man with
small family for 1 H. Crop
on 50-50 basis. 3 room house,
good water, electricity. good
land. Must be sober and have
good character. Mr. P. C
ter, Hiram, Rtz 2:
truck farming, also raise calves}
ted,
--Want man with Nursery and}
Also want man to cultivate 25]!
Want white family to help |
H|
Les- |
Want single man or couple
to tend to poultry, cows, hogs
and other light farm_ chores.
Weekly salary and 2 R. house
with city water and _ lights,
near Decatur, Come at once.
J. H. Tribble, Decatur, 903 Col-
lege Ave.
Want couple past middle-
age to. stay in home with elder-
ly woman and assist with light
farm chores. John W.. West,
College Park. ;
sy
Want farm help for 1 or 2
H. crop and bearing fruit or-
chard, white or col. 50-50
basis. Good house, garden and
firewood free; on school bus
jand mail routes. Near church.
See S. S. Storer, Douglasville,
Rt. 4.
Good land.}
Want 2 good wage hands at
once to plow and other gen.
farm work. Good wages. A.
S. Hicks, Adel. ?
Want party to raise chickens
on halves; will supply _ best
grade of chicks. Prefer in vi-
cinity of Atlanta. Want these
chickens for own personal use
and not for resale in any form.
R. A. Stribling, Atlanta, 594
Lynhurst Dr., 5S. W
Want settled couple or wo-
man to care for poultry, gar-
den, etc., for good home, elec.
fire place, etc. Write. J. E.
Ingram, Lithonia, Lazidaze.
Want farm held for 1 or 2 H.|.
farm, 50-50 basis. Good land,
mules and plow tools. Locat-
ed 4 mi. McDonough, Henry
County. G. H. Hayes, Mc-
Donough, Rt, 3.
Want man with family to
work large crop on halves.
Good land, stock and 5. R.
house. G. T. Wade, Austell,
Want white man to run
dairy, with wife to help with
milking; electric milkers. 3
R. house, water on porch, con-
venient to school, mills. Wood
and vegetables. $100.00 mo. to
begin with. Exp. not neces-
sary.. Mrs: W. C, . Hilliard;
Camilla.- = :
Want farmer for farm near}
Carrollton on 50-50 basis. Good
houses and land, or rent on
| 3rds and 4ths or standing a
O.
F Conger,
Rhudry
Carrollton,
st. i
| Dalton.
County. Also
- Want farm hand
Married or single. Go
and salary. Write or
F, Jones, Metter, Rt.
26132 :
Want young man
small water powered flou
and learn business. Go
osition to right man,
house, garden, pasture,
lights. Mill on farm ne
ton. Write. Gordon Ke
Want farm help fo
-H. crop en 50-50 basis.
4 R. house, elec. lights,
land, stock, plenty wood
ter, 1 mi. church and sc
Can help if needed.
schel Smith, Winder, Rt. |
~ Want man or family t
ate dairy farm. $100.00 m
with house and garden.
tractor work, one side
pay. Julian M. Head, |
springs, Rt. 1s
Want exp. poultry
work on large
Sandy Springs. PF
upon experience.
see. W. Nunnally,
Rie 3.
Want farm family to w
on vegetable and berry
Pay man $2.50 day;
family in proportion.
R. house with elec. Com
me. R. F. Sams, Clarkst
Want farm help:
tractors, 3 mules, )
elec. milkers, plenty
have 1 man but need
4 R. house, 15 mi. west
lanta. John P. Glore,
Rt; 2. ;
2 H. crop to rent; w:
you 2 H. crop, (grow all
own feed stuff) to boar
for my home care: hav
house. Mrs: B. T. Os
McDonough. =
Want 1 and 2 H. farme
grow general crops,
want 2
hands at $2.00 day with
families. L. H. Edenfiel
na
Tv
(white or colored). Goo
good house furnished.
school: age children.
Johnson, Savannah, Rt.
462.
by the
HEREFORD CATTLE SALE
The SPRING SALE of HEREFORD CATT
: GEORGIA - FLORIDA - ALAB
BREEDERS ASSOCIATION will be held Tuesd:
April 3rd, at Donalsonville. Sale begins pr
at Seminole Stock Yards,
FORD cattle, 25 bulls, 25 heifers. Also 100 hig!
type grade Hereford heifers offered. Most of
tle first and second prize winners at Cattle
1 P. M. 50 Reg., H
Shows. JOHN J. CUMMINGS, Donalsonville.
x
2
LIVESTOCK SALES 5
The ANNUAL SPRING SHOW AND SA
the SOUTHEASTERN POLLED SHORT 0
Hotel Colquitt. W. E.
Moultrie
BREEDERS ASSOCIATION, will beheld
Livestock Auditorium, Moultrie, Friday, Ma
Cattle judged at 10:00 A. M., Auction Sale
P, M. Cows with calf at side, open and bred
ers, bulls of various ages. Polled Shorthorns. |
ner meeting Thursday Evening. Reservations f
AYCOCK, Sale Mar
TOWN
MARCH
LBS.
180/240
245/270
275/300
305/400 }
155/175
135/150
~ 130/DN
180/350
350/450
Strs. & Heifers
Strs. & Heifers
Strs. & Heifers
Strs. & Heifers
Soft
Moultrie
21st
Soft Hard
Per Cwt
14.35-
14.35-
14:35-
14,35-
13.80-
13-50-
.13.60-
13,60-
14.00-
Atlanta
2lst
Hard
Per Cwi
14,25- 14.50
14:25- 14.501 -
14.25- 14.50 |
14.00- 14.00
~ 14.25- 14.00
14.50- 13.50
- 12.50
13.50-.
13-75
13.50- 13.25
13.50- 12.50
Sylvester
19th
Ocilla
16th
Soft * dard Soft
Per Swi
14.25-
14.25-
14.25-
~:14.25-
14.25-
13.35-
13.50-
13.50-
16.00-
Per Cwt
14.25-
14.25-
14.25-
14.25-
14.13-
13.75-
13.50-
13.50-
15.00-
15.00- 16.00
14.00-
11.00-
8.00-
10.00-
8.00-
6.00-
6.50-
-8.00-
--13.00-
: 10.00-
15.00
12.50
10.00
12.00
9.50
7,50
8.50
6.00
12.50
14.00} _
11.50 |.
14.00 -
13.00.
11.75
10.00
9.50
8.00
12.00
6.00
10.00,
13.00,
15.60
14.00
12.00
11.00
10.10
3.00
12.50
6-50
PR ee eae 8
Poe a Re a eee
14.00
ApSD ee 1250)
Hard Soft
SS
11.00)
GEORGIA AUCTION MARKETS LIVESTOCK SALES
~ 15th
Aard|
Per Cwt
14,.35-
Tifton | |
- 1
Per cwt
Soft Hard
\Sofz
Ward Soft _
- Per Cwt Fer
14.35-
14.35-
14.35-
14.35-
14,00-
13.60-
13.60-
15.00-
Pee ee SO ay eC