COMMISSION ER. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1944 international Trade _(Vontinued from last week) ternational trade is not a matter of pulling a rabbit hat. There is no magie involved. oreign commerce must rest on solid common sense. nds if it benefits the parties to the trade. Let us take some concrete illustration in order that nay readily understand how foreign trade can be a ment to a country. : SOUTH AMERICAN COTTON itators of foreign commerce are continually harping ~ question of foreign exports of cotton. They tell us re must produce cotton at a price that will enable sell cotton in the markets of the world. They say st meet the price of cotton in Brazil, in India, in in Russia, in Egypt and other countries of the world. lake the item of-eotton produced in the countries of- he: question of South American eotton production is ally held up as a bugaboo to the producers of cotton United States. All of this is a boogy man. It is a scarecrow. There is no real reason why the cotton outh America should cause seit to the eotton rs.of the United States. view of the many statements in newspapers, on the nd statements from what is considered authoritative s such as the National Cotton Council, ete., I realize s statement may sound absurd to those who have ight the problem through. "he Good Book tells us, Let us reason feuetlier! n this instance, let us reason together and see whether t cotton produced in South America is any handicap lould be anv bugaboo to the eotton growers of the States. SOUTH AMERICA NEEDS ALL THE COTTON IT GROWS Phe people of South American can use every bale of they produce. They need it. The only reason that of South American cotton is exported is because ountries of South America do not have cotton mills i their cotton and to make it into clothes. South America had cotton mills to spin the South an cotton and weave it into cloth, every yard of that | would be needed hy the neople who live In: South they would not have any cotton to ee here be no oceasion for them to export it. The shipping uth American cotton to the United States, or to Mng- or to any other country, to have it manufactured and (Continued on Page Two) Fresh Fruits and Vegetables October 20, 1944 Ailanta $1.20-$1.75 1.50- 3.25 125-175 - 1.00 1.25- 2.00 1.00- 1.50 D0- 15 50- 1.75 Z .d), per doz. punghes SS ee ve bu. ePrr ee mS : ime. bud, per bie (Snap), per bu. hprs. = ; , per doz. ee -EDITORIALBy Tom Linder ie Tam receiving : a number of Jetters from farmers. Ww are much dissatisfied with Prices being paid for cattle : hogs. A visit to a cattle or hog sale will convince you immed- lately that something is wrong. Some cattle are selling as low as 3 cents perpound foot. Some hogs are selling as low as 4 and 5 ae pe pound on foot. Go into the stores to buy meat and-7 you 8 find meats of all kind are selling around OPA ceiling price Once in awhile, you might see some meat selling for a littl ae than OPA cole. but this i is the exception and rule. During the last few days, T have had survey made of of the larger chain stores in Atlanta handling meats. result of this survey shows the following as to these chain stores. 1. Hold ceiling prices in practically all meats, may drop a little on slow moving cuts. 2. Receive ceiling prices for about 98% of meats Sell some beef, pork, lard, breakfast bacon be: low ceiling prices. -M ostly low orade a coe be low ceiling when long in stock. | 4, Hold ceiling price up to 99% of all fi ti 5 5. Hold ceiling prices up on meats, more es pecially on pork, ham, bacon and by-products. 6. Hold all meats up to ceiling prices. May drop one or two cents if overstocked on some grades. 7. Can sell all meats we get at ceiling prices Pork, in particular, very short. I have devoted some time to checking up on the caus of this situation. For years we have beer trying to Dass the produc: tion of cattle and hogs in Georgia and have made wonder- ful progress along this line. It seems too bad now for Georgia farmers who have invested their capital, labor and their time into develop ing hog and cattle farms to have the ground eut out fro . under them 4 in any such manner. OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION AND WAR FOOD ADMINISTRATION iy making investigations of this condition, I have had several conversations with men in the OPA and in th WEA. : The OPA has match very clear that they are not in terested in anything except to see that cattle and hogs de not bring above OPA eeiling prices. They are not inte ested in ow cheap cattle and hogs sell. They say this 1s a matter of the law of supply and demand. The WFA on the other hand, tells me that they ia n have any support price on beef eattle. They only have subsidy in certain cases: WIA also tells me that the matter of the subsidy (Continued on Page Iour.) October 20, 1944 October 18 (Wednesday)Rome = October 18 (Wednesday)Vidalia _.._. TOP FED CATTLE | : October 18 (Wednesilay)Vidalia Ses Se NS See | ee all items for publication and all sence to be put]> the mailing list and for change of address ty STATE BUREAU MARKETS. 922 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta. : ~ Notices otf farm produce and appurtenances admissable ader postage regulations inserted one time on each request and peated only when request is accompanied by new copy of " Limited space will not permit insertion of notices containing ore than 30 words including name and address. Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin des not sume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the ulletin. Published Weekly at 122 Pace St., Covington, Ga. ty Department of Agriculture. Tom Linder, Commissioner, Executive Office, State Capitol i Atlanta, Ga. Publication Office 4-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga. Editorial and Executive Offices State Capitol. Atlanta. Ga. Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of : Markets, 222 State Capitol | Atlanta, Ga. ered as second class matter ugust 1, 1937, at the Post Office Covington, a under Act of June 6 1900. ceepted for ailing at special! a oi postage vided for in Section 1103, Act October 8. 19% : griculture, Industry | And international Trade (Continued from Page One). hen shipped back to South America is econom- ally unsound. For us to be a party to bringing South merican eotton to the United States for pro- cessing and then shipping cotton goods back to jouth America is simply a way of borrowing ouble and paying for it at the same time. . CAUSE OF WORLD CONFLICT One of the greatest contributing causes to poth of the World Wars has been commerce with South America. The tremendous trade ee between Ger- many and England over South American trade has been one of: the principal reasons why every effort to bring about. world understanding has) m a The rank and file of the people. of Seth merica had nothing to gain by this foreign mmerce between South America and Hurope.: Thile on the other hand, the common people of urope had nothin to gain by this rivalry over uth American trade. _ If the people of South America had been spinning and weaving their own cotton, there uld dave been no way for hifermational finan- ial interests of Europe to have profited out of sweat of the farmers of South American untries. Ther would have been no way for iternational financiers to have profited out of the consumers of cotton goods in the countries f South America. _ There would have been no cause fas Huro- pean countries to fall out and fight about a pro- duet that is grewn and ultimately consumed in|. auth America. GOOD NEIGHBOR The way for us to be a good neighbor to South America is to encourage South Ainerica to uild cotton mills and spin their own cotton. [n- ourage: South America to spin and use their wn cotton in South America. Encourage them spin and, use their own cotton and thereby re employment to millions of their own people. STANDARD OF LIVING - The way for us to be a good neighbor to i | oole of South America is to help them to se their standard of living. Encourage them produce more and better goods for their own yple. There i is no way, really, for the people of. the: ads f we wanted to be utterly selfish and for- t the idea of being a good neighbor our own elfish interest would dictate tas we encourage e people of South America to hecome self-sus- ing and independent. JET'S BUY COFFEE, NOT COTTON e coffee. - jneed, but do not have. ed States. .| States. prognee mp y coffee, abundance. _- We could ship all ie cotton machinery that South America needs to spin its own cotton. We eould get pay for it in a little while in coffee. Let us ship South America industrial ma- chinery, which they need and-do not have. Let us buy from South America coffee which we on international commerce upon a common sense basis beneficial to South America and to the United States. When we bring cotton from South America, we are taking away the very thing they need. When we ship cotton goods to South America, we are sending them what they should produce for themselves. Only those few men who get a little profit on the deal are benefited. All others have lost by the transaction. WORLD COTTON PRODUCTION lion bales per year. The United States produces about one-half the world supply of cotton. It would require 150 million bales of cotton to run the world one year. The world only produces one-sixth enough cotton to supply the worlds needs. _ However, let us say that the United States has a higher standard of living than the remain- der of the world. Let us say that people in the other countries shall use only one-fifth as much cotton per person as we use in the United States. It would require 30 million bales of cotton a year for the world to have one-fifth as much cot- ton per person as we have per person in the Unit- That is more cotton than the world has ever produced in any one year. In the greatest cotton year in the History of the world, 1937, the world did not produce jenough cotton to give the people of the world one- Fifth as much cotton as we in the United States consume. - COTTON BY COUNTRIES - We hear a lot of talk about Chinese cotton: The greatest cotton crop China ever produced. was 3 million bales. There are four times as many people in China as there are in the United Certainly China can use that 3 million bales if they only had machinery to spin and weave it into cloth. India was 6 million bales. There are three times as many people in India as there are in the Unit- ed States. Certainly India can use 6 million bales of cotton if they only had the machinery to make it into eloth. The largest cotton crop ever produced in Russia was 4 million bales. There are almost twice as many people in Russia as there are in the United States. Certainly they can use 4 million bales of cotton if they only had the ma- chinery to make it into cloth. The largest cotton crop in Ke eypt v was a little more than 2 million bales. Certainly the British Empire can use all the cotton produced in Egypt. 5 REST OF THE WORLD | It is easy to see from the above that the only available cotton for Portugal, Spain, France, Holland, Belgium, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Greece. Yugoslavia, Rumania, Bulgaria, Austria, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Switzerland and many other countries is the pitiful little 5 million bales that the cotton growers in the Unit- ed States have for sale to exporters each year. COTTON MILLS ARE A COTTON MARKET There is no necessity of a production prob- | lem of cotton. There is no necessity of control of produc- tion problem for cotton. There is no necessity of consuming problems for cotton. The only problem is to get enough cotton mills over the world to spin the cotton. If we encourage South America to spin and use its own cotton, if we encourage China to spin and use its own cotton, if we encourage Russia to spin and use its own cotton, if we encourage India to spin and use its own cotton, then the problem will reverse itself. Then, the question will not be, Where can we sell cotton ?? Then Phe. United ee does not} the question will De; Where can we find some cotton? : ee Brazil produces coffee in Then we will be carrying! World production of cotton is around 25 mil-| Ors tors, John Deere Model EH tract The greatest. anton erop ever produced in -|No_ letters: ans. MACHINERY FOR S/ _ Model Oliver Grainmaste combine, with sacker attach ment and platform; in A-}t co 2 2-H. wagon gears, in e cond, R. E. Aycock, Monr 1 self-feeder Liverman pea: nut picker: 1 mule- draw: Royal hay press, both in g cond., $225.00, for both. M. Hamlin, Richland, Rt. 1, B 98. Ph. 2203, Preston. Cole 3-row grain drill; w le ing cultivator; drag harrow, sale. Also want Fordson tracto with double disc side ploy Theodore Cox, Canton. Rt. 3 with cultivator and planter, 3- disc Athens tiller. 8-dise Inj harrow. Power mowing chine (2-blade;) wagon tra All to-be sold together, $169 No letters ans.- W. D. Bu Middleton, Rt. 1, Tel. 486-J. 1927 Fordson tractor, Athens double disc side Dp. Ready for work. Also oth tractor parts. G Jasner, Rt. 2. F-14 Farmall tractor, in class cond. 1 5-dise tiller; | ft. weeder; 1 20-disc. har 1 8 ft. -duas- harrow, 4lg spreader, $1,100.00. T. K. Hoi ton, Davisboro. z Late mod. Farmall. Bi tra on rubber, with lights, cultivators, . planters, distrib tors; 5 ft. double section ha row: 6 ft. Sell together or s parately. W. E. Parker, Co ington, Rt. 1. 2-row planters and- cult equipment complete, Seeder for John Deere Mod. tractor. Corn binder McCo mick-Deering:) ensilage cu Hay baler, gasoline motor r. en (motor inc.) All in good See Virgil Raye, Ball R Rt. -2,.0r write Dr. Jac Jones, Atlanta, 711 Medica A Bldg. : 1 6.disc. Athens tiller, 2 days, with 26 in. disc po lift, $240.00, for sale or for 6-disc John Deere, in shape. J, 2H: Clements, Ca Ria, 3 j- H. wagon for sale. Chi C: Cook, Alpharetta, Rt. f 10 to 12 41; evaporator, per syrup pan. As good as $45.00. Cole, 3-dise oat slightly used, goad as new H. C. Sumner. Adrian, Rt. 3. DeLaval separator. Se new disc will make good as =i 00. W. A. Sumner, Adi ist class Papec 5 Isilee hay cytter, complete with sufficient for 1150-ton v silo, recently overhauled, | class operating cond. $300. cash at my farm. Come afte Frank H. Meely. NOS Ca Neelv Farin. 3 No. 1. McCormieck- hea cream separator; orig. cost sacrifice for $50.00. Need, minor parts to place in Is shape. L. W. Smith, Montr John Deere | Model A tra with power lift, planters, fe: tilizer . attachment, _ harrow: 6 blade tiller on ber. No trash: Bought new season.- H. M. ee Sprin2! Field. * - Oliver 20 2-H. coe $1 for sale or exc. A. B. T Rochelle, Rt. 1. F) 30 Intl. tractor, in mech. cond. good rubber. 3. -Athens plow, $1,200.00 for B-Allis-Chalmers, with m $700.00. E. K. Fowler. Ath Late model 1020. MeCor Deering tractor on good rub Bo Ree Griffin, Ph. 4586. 6 gal. elec. churn, prac. $35.00. 1-H. plows; 1 all : harrow; other equipment. A. D. Carpenter, Stone Mo tain, Lawrenceville Hwy. - Garden fertilizer distri Ss. Christian, Atlanta, 23 levard Dr NE. De 5753 Case V. C. tractor, cond., with planting and_ tivating equipment, $1, 000 H. Cosey, Perry, Rt. 1: New Blackhawk corn she $6.00. C. B. Hicks, Reyno d 1940 Model H. Joh tractor on rubber, with p! and cultivators. 3-dise A tiller on rubber and cui harrow. In exc. cond. Baughcum, Bostwick. _ F-30, Intl. Farmall tr< steel. Gceod runnin $650.00. Intl. 7-ft. tan row, $125.00. J Monroe, Te. a CON INER ht yubber tired wagon, $50 | rubber tired wagon,. $60. Thompson, College Park Box 48. Ca 6490. - No. 10 Oliver turn plows; turner: 1 cotton planter. J. C. Goolsby, Alma, Rt. : Marshallville. r A turner; 1 No. 10 urner; 1 Gee Whiz; dis- . Ga. Cracker planter, plates, prac. new. 1-H. , prac. new. Also mule, bout 1350 lbs. Some age. Geise, Armuchee, Rt. 2. ring binder, 2-H. Gee 1-H. Gee Whizs: 60- drag harrow; Cole com- planter; and other farm 2-H. wagon: 1-H. and furners. J. E. Caude?l. s. Rt. 1, Box 668. 1. T-20 Crawler tractor. tor, tracks and some other newly equipped with take-off and fulley, broken, $100.00. E. Monticello. e pick-up hay baler, with msin air-cooled motor. cond, G. L. Cooner, Rey- x ood 12:75x28 tractor tires ubes, now being used on fl. tractor, Do not need, converting into stationery unit. Sell reas. Wire, or write. W. C. Rice, Vid- Ttical 24 corn meal rocks e, like new, $20.00 here. Cooper, Ashburn, Rf. 2. Cormick-Deering 8 hole attachment, $45.00. No L. Holland, Manassas, D. 3 or 4 disc tiller and ler attachment, $175.00; cul- tor for model H. tractor, Emory McRee, Buck- stout 2-H. wagon, $65; 2-yrs. old mare mule, $125 de either or both. _Need a tor plow, mold board or r mold board plow for a ase tractor. J. E. Wat- in hand-turned churn, 6 p. triple tin, in good cond. dd nostage. Tate Smith, ille, Rt: 1. oy drill, 2 speed, hand. or No, 2. Prac. new. $20. Douglas, Wrightsville. rmall A. tractor and disc for sale, Also want to armall H. tractor, cul- rs, distributors, planters, plow, for Farmall M. r and plow. all in A-1 . F, Jenkins, Munner- ractor used only about 30 H. L. Eason, Nashville, Case 6 ft. combine; works. tly, $550.00. 1 6-disc Gase new disc and 2 wheels on $160.00, FOB. A. B. n, Monroe. _ metal lint flue, $25.00, Want gullett airline clean- so want 15-20 HP. up- eam boiler. F. G. Pe- uitman. . Super hatecher bator, (oil), in good cond., 00. Cannot ship. Mrs. C Bowen, Abbeville. 0 chick cap. Sears coal ier brooder. used 1 time, PP, MO only. Mrs. M.. orse wagon, $10.00 and other farm machinery at my home, at Birming- Ga., 30 mi. Atlanta. C. Alpharetta, Rt. 3. hn Deere tractor, Model steel wheels, for sale. Ss Oxford, Culloden, Rt. 1. nall M. tractor, with Case hay baler, with ry motor. Call or write. Smith, Sparta. 9 McCormick-Deering r, slightly used, $100.60. etters ans. Come see. C. illiams, Monroe, Rt, 1. churn and other farm ment. Mrs..A. D: Car- Stone Mountain, (Law- lie Hwy:) Cy Fifty Sc Years Of erie| * Kathryn G, Cooley For fifty-six years the Georgia . Agricultural Experiment: Station has been endeavoring to deter- mine the basic facts underlying the production, im- provement, marketing and utilization of farm prod- ucts; thus enabling our farmers to make a better | living, according to Director -H. P. Stucky, who has served the institution for thirty-five years. Since the outbreak of the second world war, states Dr. Stucky, the work of the Georgia Experiment Station has been further streamlined to meet the war needs of the country. Projects have been revised to give great- er assistance to all citizens of the State in their efforts to produce more as an aid to winning the war. During this long term of service to southern agri-. culture, the Experiment Station has grown from an institution with four staff members and a hundred and thirty acres of land located at Experiment, Geor-| gia, to its present staff of more than fifty. well-train- ed members, twelve of whom hold doctors degrees, and an experimental area of more than a thousand acres, In addition to the local acreage, the Station operates 14,000 acres of Federal owned land in Put- nam County and approximately five hundred acres at the Georgia Mountain Experiment Station in Union County. : The Station came into existence in February, 1888 as a result of the Hatch Act of the Congress of 1837 which authorized an annual appropriation of $15,000 to each of the states for the support of ex- periment stations. An act of the General Assembly of Georgia in December 1888 provided for the ap- pointment of a Board of Directors and for the -per- manent location and organization of the Georgia Ex- periment Station. The following year the bid of Spald- ing County for the Station was accepted. The bid made by this county comprised $5,000 in cash and a farm of a hundred and thirty acres, known as the Bates farm, one and one-half miles north of Griffin. There with meager facilities on July 1, 1889, the Georgia Experiment Station began its study of practi- cal agricultural problems, explained as follows in the Second Annual Report made to the Governor in Jan- uary, 1896: / Those questions which seem to demand imme- diate attention will be first considered, the aim being to make the Station at once instructive and profitable to the agriculture of the State. The object will not be to make money by the experiments that will be con- ducted on the Farm, but to find out the best way to do every kind of farm work, the best methods of draining, plowing, composting, fertilizing, feeding, and dairying. The Station officers do not profess to know everything; but their aim will be to add to knowledge already attained by instituting and con- ducting experiments with such appliances and with such-precautions against error as will insure the most accurate and reliable results in the shortest time. These results and conclusions will be published for the information and guidance of those who are en- gaged in the business of farming for a livelihood. ' The Adams Act of 1906, the Purnell Act of 1925, and the Bankhead-Jones Act of 1935 author- ized the appropriation of funds for additional phases of research. As a result of these acts the work of the Station has been greatly expanded. se The present well-equipped administration and laboratory building, the Flynt Building, was com- pleted in 1929. Prior to its erection, two buildings had served as the Stations administrative offices, the first being a small, two-room, frame structure. In addition to the main building there are four oth- ers which contain laboratories and offices. Also there are four greenhouses, many large barns, necessary. storage buildings, dwellings, and several tenant hous- es:on the Station grounds. . In the Flynt Building is the library composed of approximately 11,000 volumes and recognized as one of the best scientific libraries in the South. Re- cently the library has been used more by the general public than ever before. - Perhaps the greatest expansion made by the Station came in 1932 when the institution became a part of the University System of Georgia under the control and guidance of the Chancellor and the Board of Regents. Research is earried on at the Experiment Station by ten departments whose duties are as fol- tO iene, to direct the research activities and fiseal affairs of the institution. Agricultural Economics, to make studies in mar- keting, farm pipes. farm tenure, and other ic problems of the farm. | Deena to deal with field crops and soil fer- tility problems. Animal Industry, ments. ~ == Botany, to study plant diseases and plant breed- to. carry on livestock experi- as Chemistry, to study plant composition and plant land animal nutrition. Entomology, to determine methods for the con- trol of insects. Food Proces: ing, to devise new methods of pro- ee eessing foods. - Horticulture, to carry on research with fruit vegetables, and ornamentals. __ ae Home Economies, to specialize in problems nutrition and of food utilization. The Station has had only six directors. Dr. Stuc the last of these, came to the Station in 1908 as h ticulturist and was later made director. While | Stuckys greatest accomplishments have been in the field of horticulture, other phases of agricultural re- search have not ben overlooked. Under his sup: vision and friendly encouragement the discoverie; made in these departments which are proving ben ficial are too numerous to list, but a few should be mentioned to make clear to the public the type of work being accomplished. Their value to agriculture is worth many times the cost of maintaining the in- stitution. fi Working out methods of fertilizing cotton o the principal soil types of the State and determinin the proper fertilizer mixtures and amounts to use in peach orchards have lowered the cost of fertilizerg to the farmer and at the same time raised the yields \ and the quality of the products. The Station has pioneered in the chemical anal- ysis of soils-for fertilizer and lime requirements. At the present time one of the largest and best equippec soil testing laboratories is located at the Experiment Station for the use of Georgia farmers. Every year several thousand samples are analyzed without cost for the residents of the State, and from the resultg obtained the agronomists make specific recommend- ations for each farmers needs. ee 3 The one-variety cotton community work start and sponsored by the Station in cooperation with the Agricultural Extension Service has been a big suc- cess throughout the State. This has been of great benefit to the farmers in that they have kept their seed pure and received better prices for their cotto1 _ The discoveries that blossom-end rot of tomatoes can be controlled by supplying soil moisture, that the use of trap crops will control the pickle worm i cantaloupes, and that pecan crops can be increased by interplanting early flowering varieties to serve a pollinators were made at the Georgia Exerime Station. ee = = Research with pimiento peppers and peanuts, two important Georgia products, has resulted in an improved Truhart Perfection pimiento and bet varieties of peanuts.*At present the Station is acti ly interested in developing new uses for peanuts. It was here also that experiments proved the hi vitamin A content of the Perfection pimiento, which is doubtless responsible for much of the increased demand for the canned product. eee Results of pasture improvement tests enable farmers to scientifically plan pasture mixtures that furnish a long grazing season and have a high carry ing capacity. : oe | The development of new crop varieties well adapted to this section is one of the numerous s vices rendered farmers. The Station has introduce two new varieties of wheat, Gasta, which averages a barrel of flour per acre more than ordinary types, and Sanford, which is resistant to leaf rust, is a high producer, and composes forty-five percent of the wheat planted in the State; a new oat, Terruf, tha produces seven bushels per acre more than varie ties in common use; a cabbage-collard that withstands local winter temperatures; a new soybean, Doxi, that equals or surpasses the best commercial varieties i both hay and seed; a sweet corn, Cherokee, whic out-yields all northern varieties yet tried; a numb of improved varieties of muscadine grapes that a: more productive and of better quality than older va- rieties; and a new peanut, G. F. A. Spanish, a high yielding strain of the small white Spanish variety. Georgia agriculture needs more cash crops. Ex periments indicate that the production of muscadine grapes for making wines, jellies, and unfermentec juice will prove economically practical for Georgia farmers. Recently the Station has received as ma as fifty requests a day from interested persons a prospective growers for information on muscadi grape production which is a growing industry Georgia. ee Experiments have shown that dried peas an beans, spinach, turnip greens, and kale have a hig! proportion of available iron, a necessary mineral in the diet, while collards, mustard, tendergreens, anc lettuce contain a little less. . ee ee The first comprehensive list of varieties of fruits and vegetables suitable for freezing published in this country, was published by the Station in 1930. Th list has been extended during the last fourteen year to include other products which, at one time, wer considered unsuitable for freezing. : Three years ago the Georgia Experiment Statio: set up equipment for artificial insemination use in t dairy herd. Since that time the Station has been work ing with breeders over the State, showing interes parties the equipment, methods, and technique. This work is of valuable aid to the small dairy commu ity and expansion of the program is contemplated. : se by the Station which was the first institu 'State to begin this wo. | _ Wednesday, October D HAND -MACH- NERY WANTED | Wand iibctor: end con- John Deere or Farmall, steel tires. Want harrow jller with seeder for same. : Childs. Abbeville. rant. 1 pony buggy or cart. Hicks. Conyers. t buy for cash a Farmall actor tiller for dbl. disc. cultivator at once, for 38 be in good cond. Tabor, Albany, Ries: x aid, Want eh and apple prad- machine, power operated. ewer pump for orchard spray hine. Give make and cond. Mays, Stockbridge. nt Farmall H or M tractor, eed cond. Must be reas. . Mrs. -Edgar Fowler, i es mt 2 tractor harrows, Case i 4 Hane, 24 20-in. disc. SD ro about 9 in. apart. Will ay oC price. J. = Duke, Ft; iat 6 ft. combine preter Al- almers ) S35 orice. cond. etc. J. Ft. Valley, Rt, .1. ant at once 1 high tension agneto, complete with _ fit- ngs, ready for installment, for Fordson tractor. Must be od. cond. for immediate use. oe details. pee 5, H. n Deere 1 row, in good : with full. equipment at rice. J. F. Bryant, Sane nt manure spreader, also and Bog harrow. C. 1 10-row 8- | drill fertilizer attachment -row grain drill fertilizer yoment, horse-drawn. J. razier*Jr., Zebulon, RFD. 4 tractor, cheap for cash. r. made and make. H. I. dale, Sumner. t+ garden tractor: with er and planters, cultivator, any light mower, not horse- wn, in good cond, Beek. dges, Manassas. ant -row wheat and ont somewhere near Jefferson. Pate Potts, Jefferson, Rt. i & fibeow Avery. disc -, horse-drawn. s new and reas. for cash. Simmons, Camilla. C {hens - 4-disc tiller. Must ye in A-1 cond, a a Fish- McDonough, Rt. 1. Ph. 2814. Vent 3-mule nee torn . State make and _ best R. J. Boatright, Mershon. ee 1-good garden tractor, + on rubber. with good at- ments, sin! Prefer 3 4-2 or 4 HP. particulars in 1st letter. _ Prather, Monroe, Rt. 1. t Intl. riding cultivator: ist be in good cond. Give . D. Todd, Danville, Rt. ae cer cutter, size F. Gore, Quitman, Rt. 2. ant a late model A or B ie tractor, good rubber li equipment. good oecnd. want a good second hand 20 Mrs. Carrie S. Hender- ea: bracket to attach a 1 Huston side plow to the y of a Fordson tractor. O. ish, Leathersville. 1 ANTS FOR SALE Cabeaee plants, $1. 25 M. er jots cheaper at field. Tew i. M. B. Evans, ge plants, $2.30 M. 8 io 10 at field; good size. ans, Gainesville, Rts WwW. eabbage plants, 500, $2.75, a pees plants, State complete Must be] good working} Icattle And Hog Prices| (Continued from Page One). entirely up to the packers. get the subsidy unless they pay up to a certain price. On the other hand, the packers can buy at prices far below the subsidy figure and make money by not getting the subsidy. When I asked WEA what could be done to bring the price of cattle and hogs up to a figure where the packer would get the subsidy, they told me that the only remedy was to get addi- tional buyers and create competition 1 in buying so as to run the price up. \ Everyone knows this is impossible. In the long run, thre are no buyers of cattle and hogs except packers and slaughter houses. We can not go out and create new packing houses | over- night. OPA CEILING PRICE For your information, I am quoting OPA celling prices In Georgia on beef cattle as follows: a Choice15.60 to 16.60. : A Good14.80 to 15.80. : Commercial12.00 to 13.50. Utility9.75 to 11.20. Canners and Cutters6.95 to 8.45. Bologna Bulls8.25 to 9.75. _ If you will visit an auction sale barn i in Geor- gia, you will find that most beef cattle are selling at prices ranging from 1 to 5 cents per pound, .-|under these OPA ceiling prices. For instance, you will find Bologna Bulls 1! selline as low as 5 cents per pound. Under WEA rules, if a Bologna Bull will tdress out 41 per cent, the packer would be en- titled to a subsidy of 50 cents provided the packer paid not less than 6.30 for the bull. How- ever, if the packer buys the bull dressing 41 per cent for 5% cents per pound, the packer in that event would be getting 80 cents per hundred out of the farmer instead of setting 50. cents per 100 out of the government. In the case of a Bologna Bull dressing 50 per cent, the packer would have to pay not less than, 7. 65 i in order to get the subsidy. of 50 cents. If the packer buys the bull dressing 50 per cent for 614 cents, then the packer would be getting $1.15 out of the farmer instead of getting 50 cents out of the government. : In the ease of a Bologna Bull dressing 53 per cent, the packer wOonlde have to pay not less than 8. 10 to get the government subsidy. | If the packer buys this bull at 7 cents per pound, then the packer would be getting $1.10 out of the farmer instead of getting 50 cents out of the government. On Commercial steers dressing 55 per cent, the packer would have to pay not less than 11. 45 in order to get a government subsidy of 90 cents per 100. If the packer buys this steer for 914 cents, then the packer would be getting $1.95 out of the farmer instead of getting 90 cents out of. government subsidy. FARMERS PRICE HAS NO CONNECTION WITH CONSUMER CEILING PRICE Under this setup, there is no connection whatever between the price that the farmer gets for beef cattle and the consumer coling price fixed by OPA. | : THE PACKERS SIDE OF THE STORY What is the packers side of this story? The packers tell me that their storage facil- ities are over-crowded with meat of Commer- cial, Utility and Canners and Cutters grades. The packers say that the consuming publie will not buy these grades of beef in sufficient quantities to relieve the congestion. The packers say that the general consuming public i is making so much money that the demand is for choice and good cuts of beef and not for the lower grades of beef. : The packers say that the government re- quires them to set aside a large perentage of the best beef for government use. This creates a tremendous shortage in the Sg a better cuts of beef but results in a oe over- rseradish | supply of _ lower grades of Lees aoe If thei The packers do not itt You eaanel go into the stores i in Goaree n find it. Very often you will be unable to br meat. - : Only yesterday one man in this Deparimes tried to buy some bacon and was forced te go 5 different stores before he could find any. Aa other employee, the same day, tried to buy baco and went to numerous stores and never did fin any bacon. Tf there is a large supply of meat. in storas for government use, then this government m is not available for civilian use, and the far should be encouraged to produce meat for vilian use. If there is a large supply of beef im dll establishments that is not held by the gov ment, then why is it that stores are unable to bi it? Tf there is such a tremendous supply of 1 that beef cattle and hogs should sell at starvatic prices, then why does the OPA maintain ceiling prices to consumers? _ 3 Tt all simply does not make sense a and the } is a nigger in the woodpile. OPA REGULATIONS ON SLAUGHTER Mueh of the confusion in the meat busi and some of the low prices for meat is du OPA sepulapons over the slaughtering | of m animals. Prior to the OPA, a farmr could bute a cow and sell it direct to the merchant. Un this arrangement the merchant could pay farmer the full wholesale price of the beef. Under present regulations of the OPA, i necessary for every anal to be slaughtered someone who is licensed by the OPA. : A specific case in point as to how this O. control works:is as follows: | A few days ago at Hazlehurt, a janne a merchant were trying to trade on a cow. farmer complained about the low price that merchant was offering for this animal Th chant, however, explained that if he bought cow he would have to pay the slaughter h $5.00 to send and get the cow, $5.00 to b 6) the cow and another $5.00 to bring the butch beef back to his store. x we All of this $15.00, of course, had to com of the price of the cow. The farmer pet 8 less than the cow was worth. Zs RATIONING 2 df there is an actual shortage of b that rationing of. beef is necessary, then tainly beef cattle should. he bringing OPA ceil prices. df there is such_an ov ersupply of beef beef is selling for 50% of ceiling prices, there is no need rationing and there is no n of forcing the farmer to pay $15.00 for the Pp lege of selling a cow. THERE IS SOMETHING FISHY ABOU' THE BEEF BUSINESS = Not long ago, according to press repo from Washington, the United States Departm: of Agriculture gave orders to all its employ forbidding them from giving out imformat about our business with foreign countries. They claimed that it would not be to t the b interest of our war effort for the America ple.to know what kind of trades we were ma with other countries affecting agrieulta products. _ | 7 | Some time ago, I: was in New Orleans got first hand information about large shipme of eggs, beef and pork from Argentine. In large quantities of these commodities were be unloaded in New Orleans while I was there. _ Since the United States Department of riculture has cut all information from the pu regarding our dealing with foreign countri is time that our Senators and Congressme vestigate this matter and find out to what e imports of foreign beef is responsible - present beef marketing situation in this Iti seems unreasonable to believe tha the tremendous demand of the war, ~ mendous demand of our armed fore 28, mendous demand for beef for Len ts Allies, that the American fam er erican market wil ite handicaps 1 un-|- sh farmers have labored. _ his low price of American beef cattle is imports, then certainly it is time for those o be cut off. the present low price of beef cattle is not foreign imports, then certainly it is foolish to talk about trading with foreign coun- that produce beef. CEILINGS WITHOUT FLOORS | s is another illustration of the fact, as ore in the Market Bulletin, that eel] he spread bu ween the farmers price and sumers price is greater than at any other n the history of this.country. TOM LINDER, Commissioner an Agriculture. PLANTS. FOR SALE raspberry plants, $1.50 e cherry sprouts, 25c -postage.. No CODs. ry, Ellijay. Rt. 2. lants, rooted. $1.40 Ib. sage, 80c gal. Ancel Dahlonega, Rta. blackberry plants, No. 1, hardy. strong, field $1.50 C; $20.00 for 2 ] pt, careful service. M. Robinson, Green- agen market, EK. J; as. W. cabbage plants. ady. Promot shipment rnon Griffin, Baxley. W. cabbage. plants; 500, $2.50 M. Del. 10 M. $2.25 ol, Satis: guar. -W. . Flowery Branch, Rt. 1. se, well rooted sage plants 10, $1.00. Spearmint, int. balm, 2oe doz- PP: Horsley, Waco, Rt. 2, ings. Ga. heading collard -45c C. Del. Full count, shipment. Limbertwig trees, 4, $1.00 del. Mrs. agsett. Douglasville, Re. W. pabbase plants, now 10, $2.00; $3.00 M. Del. rt shipment. No. stamps. cks.-Marie Wolfe, Bax- 3. sionary eeidiry anise arlic heads, $1.00 doz. . Hartwell, = Rt. 2. r | -bearing strawberry extra large, 50c C. Mat- aring strawberry. plants vars. (Mastodon, Gem, Well $1.50 C. Mrs. J. T, Patterson, sWaco, RiO2S Hastings strawberry. plants, nice and fresh, $1.00 John Ginn, Hartwell. Chas. W. cabbage plants, fresh, fall-grown, 500. $1.50: $2.50 M. PP. 1: L. Stokes, Fitz- gerald. Bais tiGnae y strawberry plants. 75e C. Garlic, 10c head: $1.00 doz. - Rhubarb, 75c doz. Miss McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. Chas. W. cabbage plants. 500, $1.30; $2.50 M. Del. Prompt shipment. E. C. Waldrip, Flow- ery Branch, Rt. 1.- Chas. W. cabbage plants, now ready. 500, $1.50: $2.60 M. del: $2.50 M. at patch. Prompt shipment. Dewey Mathis, Gain- esville, Rt. 2. Young Klondike plants, 500, $1.60 $3.00 M. Del. No checks. Ethel Crow, Gain- esville, Ries Everbearing str awberry plants. 50c C., $4.00 M. Add -postage. Also 2 white reg. rabbits. Mrs. oe Pirkle, Flowery Branch, Chas. W. cabbage planis, now $2.50 M. at patch. Prompt ship- ments. Claudie Mathis, Gain- esvifle, Re oe Chas. W. cabbage palnts, $2.- 50 M. Collard, $2.00 M: White Bermuda onion plants, $2.50 All COD. Now ready. Mrs. Pe Musselwhite, Arabi, Rt: a. Wakefield cabbage plants. 40c $2.50 M. Collard. 30e C; fi. 70 M. Del. Klondike straw- berry plants, 50c C; $4.00 M. Del. Lee Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 3 {8 Box 143. 35c Oe $3.00 M. PP. . Carnes, Cumming, Rt. E abbave plants, $2.50 M. No order less than 500. J. 4. W. cabbage plants, 500, $2.50 M. Del. Prompt Belle Crowe, W. cabbage plants, now 00, $1.30; $2.50 M. Del. i Flow ery and Chas. W. cabbage now ready, full count, shipment, 500, $2.50 M. ) checks or stamps. R. -Baxley, Rt. 3. ary strawberry plants. Calamus plants, $1.25 ermint plants. 50c doz. cil McCurley, Hartwell, plants, $2.50 M. FOB Govt. Hogan, Hogansville. . cabbage viants, $2. 50 w ready, Prompt ship- Ii count, Mrs. Ina Grif- ey, Rt. 4 ermuda onion plants, Cabbage, frost-proof, ictor grain seed oats. lliams, Quitman, plants now ready, 30c C; Large. strong Chas. W. cab- bage plants. 500, $1.50; $2.50 M. Ready to ship. Also Chas. W. and Early Flat Dutch cabbage seed. $2.50 Ib. White, yellow, red. Bermuda onions, $3.75 Ib. 1B: R. Woodliff, Flowery oe teks Cabbage plants. 30c C: $2.50 M. Collard, 25c C: $1. 75 M. Azzie Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 2. Klondike strawberty plants, 30c C;. $2.50 M. Del. Lady*T. strawberry plants. 35 C: $3.00 M. Del. G. L. Durand, Gaines- ville. Ri 2: Klondike strawberry plants, +150. $1.00 del. 6 Red Golds with |. ea. order 500 plants. No checks. Mrs. Pearl Pinson, Ellijay. Rt. 2 Everbearing raspberries, a $1.00: garden gooseberries, scuppernong and grape. vines, white and black apricot, Dam- son plums, $1.50 doz. Sassafras root, 3 Ibs. $1.00. M. L. Eaton. Dahlonega. Rt. 1. . Sage plants, $1.00 doz. at my place, cor. Crew St., and Wey- man Ave. Hutch Carter, Athens, Atlanta, 35 Weymon Ave., SW. Ja 0268 W. Chas. W. cabbage plants, 25 Cc. Add peste Rosie Crowe, Cumming. Rt. Mastodon oe plants. limited amount. Young and strong, full count, $3.00 u PO money order only. Ake Poo Duran, Cumming. Rt. 1 has. W. Scie FE, J., and Chas $1.50. r, {500; Alon Pittman, Baxley, Rt. 4 2 rooted idee plants, strawberry ready: 500, $1.50: $2.65 M. Del. | , Collard plants, 40c C $9. 50 M. Del. E. G. Wetec. Gainesville, Rt. 2: E. J., and Chas. W. cabbage plants, ready. full count, 40c C; 500. $1. 50; $2.50 M. del. 3d] zone, Money | order or cash. Ottis Pittman, Baxley, Rt. 4. Missionary strawber ry plants, 75c C. Mrs. Cromer McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2. Ga. and heading collard plants 25 C., $1.50 M. Cabbage, 30c C., $2.00 M. Old-fashioned red | shallots, $1.00 gal. L. A. Crow, Gainesville. Pulse Thousands nice rutabaga plants, Ga. collard, 60c C. White and red multiplying or potato onion sets, 50c at $2.00 gal. All del. Mrs. He - Franklin, Register. li vars. frost-proof - cabbage | plants, $2.50 M: 500, $1.50; 200, 85ce, Everbearing - strawberry plants, $4.00 M; 500, $2.50 200, $1.25. All del. -Prompt -ship- ment. Full count, now ready, ue Ruby Lee Wilson, Baxley, Chas. W.. and, eabbade plants, 500, $1.50; $2.75 M. Del. Prompt shipment. Crosby, eS Rt. 4. SEED FOR SALE 25 Ibs. Cannon Ball water- melon seed, $2.50 lb. Hand- saved from 1944 crop. Add post- age. Luther Holland, Byrom- ville, Rt. 1, Box 165. White. multpilying onions. $1 gal. Add postage. Mrs. Eliza- beth Cawthon, Lavonia, Rt. 1. Old fashioned Ga. cone, white beardless ribbon and govt. cane for seed or truckers C3 my farm 9 miles, NE Alma. liams, Alma. Seed. cane, $25 M. i fhe thousand. Govt. var. white] cane; nice and long. Remit with order. Ship any time. Onselow Maxwell, Cairo, Rt. 1. _ Large, white multpilying on- jons, nice and clean. $1.50 gal. Del,. PP. No. checks. L, J. Brown, Colbert, Rt. 2. = Purple Top White Globe tur- nip seed, 60c Ib. PP 50e An small lots: 40 in 100 Ib. lots. HOR.C. i Rhyne, Americus. in lots of thousand. Long white govt. var. MO only. Ready now, or ship later. George Griffin, Cairoe Rt. 1. 12 Ibs. seven top turnip seed, $1.00 lb. or $8.00 for lot. 5 Ibs. $4.50. PP. Mrs. Mamie Stone, Ad airsville. Brown streaked half-runner bean seed, 35c Ib. Catnip seed, 15 spn. Pumpkin seed, 25c eun. cup. Mrs. Mae Turner, Gaines- ville. Rt. 6. 8 to 10 gals. white nest onions; $1.00 gal. M. M. Murray, Am- ericus, Ri. 4. White multiplying onions, ae Bermuda onion sets, ea. $1.00 gal: Bermuda onions for eating, 6c lb: smooth leaf mustard, col- lard and lettuce seed, 10c tbsp; Jerusalem artichokes. $1:50 bu. Add_ postage. N. W. McLeod, Cuthbert. Rt. 3, Box 118. Sev. thou. planting: fine syrup producer, | hardy. Govt. No. CP 29-116, $30 M. Orders and remittance to be sent by buyer now. Ship- ment when customer desires after Nov. 1. we H. Robinson, Cairo: ' 150 lbs. Cannon Ball water- melon seed. hand-saved, shade- cured, $2.00 Ib. if taken at once. Starling Yawn, Vienna. 4 to 6 ft. long: You cut and haul beforef rost. bank. B. R. Olliff, Statesboro. Cannonball watermelon seed, hand saved from selected me- Jons, $1.50 lb. if ordered early. Pure and good as the best. J. J. Bloodworth. Gordon, Rt. 1. Yellow shallot multiplying onion sets, clean, $1.00 gal. post- age paid. Checks or stamps ac- cepted. L. T. Anderson, Au- gusta, Rt, 4. White Stem collard seed, 60c Tb: 10 Ibs.. $5.00; 25 Ibs., $8.00; 100 Ibs.. $30.00: Shogain tur- nip and smooth leaf mustard seed, 75c lb. 3 Ibs., $1.50. Alton Ponder, Whigham. Seed cane: 1 1-2 acres Govt. improved seed cane, ave 6 and 8 ft. tall, one cent per stalk for entire patch, or 1 1-2 cents stalk by the housand.| Come at once 16 mi. West | Bainbridge. M. A. _ # Johnsons store. Johnson, Banbridge, /0 Et Mary M. . BH. Wil- Planting seed cane, $28.00 M. Banana mushmelon seed. 35c, seed. eane fer POJ seed cane. $5.00 M. stalks | Now ready to}. Wylie A, _ SEED FOR SALE Guar. half-runner bean seed, - 1944 crop, 30c large cup. Add post- age. Mrs. Louisa Kimsey, Eli- Tayo 25 Shallots, 35c: Cannon Ball watermelon seed. $1.50 Ib: Sun- dried peaches, 40 lb. Miss Vena Brown. Hartwell. GRAIN AND HAY FOR SALE Cokers Fulgram seed oats, eee in 5-bu. lots up. FOB. A. D. Clements, Woodbury. Hastings 100 bu. seed oats, $1.00 bu. New Sanford seed wheat, $1.75 bu. You furnish sacks. James B. Woods, Brooks.. 1000 bu. Apple seed oats. $1.10 bu; you furnish bags. $1.25 bu. my bags. FOB. W. B. Fam- brough, Cordele. 500 bu. Coker Fulgrain oats, 1000 bu. Terruf oats. 1000 bu. Lee Victoria oats, $1.10 bu. 800 -bu. Marretts beardless barley. $1.75 bu. Recleaned and in 5 bu. bags: Barley. 2 1-3 bu. bags. J. H. Park, Molena,. Ph 122-R. Good, hkright, pure turf seed oats, $1.10 bu. Sanford seed wheat. free from weevils, $2.00 bu.| Riley C. Couch, Turin. 200 bu. abruzzi rye, $3. 00 bu. FOB: J. O;- Jacobs: Warner Robins, Rt. a ~ Imp. Fulghum_ oats, com- bined, fully ripe, $1.25 bu. FOB. No checks. MO only. Horace Darnell, Winston. 5000 bu. Cokers Fulgrain seed oats, recleaned and in new 5 bu. bags. Buford Fowler, Man- chester, ; 2 ss. 500 ku. pod ae Victor- grain oats andve tch, $1.25b u. -W. M. Clemones, Rome. Ris; Tel. Co. 260. Sou. giant bur wuclaber in bur, reas. clean, in 5 bu. bags, $10. E. C. Kelly, Monticello. Victorgrain seed oats, 2nd yr. from breeder, $1.00 bu. in even wf. 5 bu. bags. Write for quan- tity prices. G. T. Cassels. Am- ericus. Thousands pounds bright, sound seed oats, $3.00 ewt. your bags at my barn 2 1-2 mi. EK. Orchard Hill. Ph 4690. W. H. Kinard, Griffin, Rt. B. 3000 bu. Fulgrain seed cats, $1.00 bu. at farm: $1.05 FOB. here.| W. H. Thames, Ft. Valley,: Ria Ph 2949. Choice kudzu hay, Biss some Yellow corn in shuck. Write for del. prices. B. W. Middle- brooks, Barnesville. 2500 bu. Cokers Viclor grain seed oats, in even wt. 5 bu. bags. $1.00 bu. FOB. J. D. Duke, Ft Valley. 1000 bu. Whaileys prolific corn in shuck at market price, FOB farm at Piedmont.: J. C: Collier. Barnesville. 100 bu. good corn, 1000 bun. fodder, -50 bu. black- -eye Calf. peas (picked before rain and thrashed clean), for sale at barn O. M. Bennett. Lawrenceville, Rit. Sanford . wheat, free from weevils, thrash run but very clean, for sale. J. P. Simpson, Red-Oak, phone Atlanta phone Ca 6859. 60 or 70 tons mixed bottom meadow with considerable les- pedeza. Bermuda. Johnson and Dallas grass hay, $30.00 ton at my barn. R. F. Cotton, Mill- edgeville. 207 No. Columbia St. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE T 7 lbs. shade-dried sage, $1.00 lb. for entire Jot. $1.50 lb. in small quantities. PP. Mrs. R. 1F. Pace, Temple, Rt. 1. Purple skin multiplying onion sets and buttons, 50c qt.| Mrs. Susie Shirley, Hollywcod. Garden sage plants, $1.25 doz. Sugar pear sprqits, 2-3 ft. high, 40c ea. John B: Grindle, Dabs Jonega, Rt. 1, Box 58. Buck Wheat: 25 lbs., Buck- wheat for sale. Charlie C. Cook, Alpharetta, Rt. 3. 2 bags goose feathers, (used) 20 Ibs: and 30 Ibs. ea. 50c Ib. del. In good cond. Mrs. J. C. Goolsby, Alma, Rt. 2. 40 100 lb. feed sacks, 10c ea. Clean and free of holes. Ship on receipt of ist money order. sound. tender white Sage. shades cee. $1.0 1 to 10 Ib. lots; ground, Tb. pulverized, $1.25 lb. 25c 50c orders filled. Rooted sz Vv. Keith, Alvaton. 25 lbs. used feathers le ose) in good cond., $12.00 f Cash or MO.| Mrs. L. iH. ME Metter. Horseradish roots, plants 256 doze & 25e qt. Dewberry Plant doz. 15 einity of Atlanta. James M. nox, Atlanta. PO Box 62 SACKS WANTED: ? Want some guano bi sacks, free of holes, at 3 each: also, have for sale PL cottonseed. made over b per acre, 5c Ib. Raymond e Camilla, Rt. 4. Want about 200 plain. printed feed sacks.| Write and full particulars. R. M. Leer. Atlanta, Rt. 4, Box 8 BEES WANTED: Want honey bees in box patent hives.. Also for sale pullets, 3-A, grade. ZOO now laying, $1,50 ea. - Bradburv, Bogart. fs old-fashione Mrs. }CHINQUAPINS AND | CHESTNUTS WANTED: chestnuts, Mrs. Blakely. = FEATHERS WAN TED: Sam teir goose feathers and os duck feathers. Send Sai Pope, Atlanta, 1180 IN. Highland Ave, NE. = } MISCELLANEOUS I CANS WANTED: | Seedling pecans wanted; send sample and price per 100 Ibs. F. . Schmidt, Augusta, Rt. 2. RUIT WANTED: rant some dried fruit, pea- ts. pecans or any grains for . Will exc. chicken feed 3; for above. Mrs. M. O. haxdson, Brookhaven. cPPER WANTED: red pepper, ANTS WANTED: Want 1 lb. dried Rosemary; o some plants.! Give price of ach in ist letter. Marie Beck- tt. Fairburn, Rt. 2. sassafras for Clayton Douglas, CKS WANTED: Want col. print chicken feed cks, free of holes and in good id. State price, quantity and -of same print design. Mrs. M. Herrington, Hazlehurst. D WANTED: , Jant to buy from 500 to 5000 . Kobe or common lespedeza ed for Dec. or Jan. del., for use on stock farm. P. A. Price, bany. fee SHEEP AND GOATS "FOR SALE ajor Junior, No. 2-5967, of ystal Helen. Fee, $5.00. Ss. E. W- Deckard, Atlanta, 2 Ponce de Leon Place, N. E., 9350. . Nice, young nannie goat, 1dy for breeding; good stock. Pilgrim, Douglasville, Rt. rand son of Ludwick of Sunnyslope herd, $60.00, or $50.00 and 1 doe kick back. C. '. Gaines, Buford, Rt. 2. anan doe, purebred, 4 mos. id; reg. in buyers name. argain at $25.00. Joe J. Wil- Decatur, 828 Third Ave., 0354, Mixed Saanan-Nubian billy orniess), 1 yr. old,.from 6-qt. nny, $10.00. J|. E. Justice, fapeville, 2981 Stewart Ave. id female; 1 bred yearling 2 does, bred, to freshen -Dec.@ Reas. prices, breed- msidered. F. E. Grubbs, t Stud: Reg. Nubian bucks, ebred Nubian buck kids, to reg. in name of buyer, for e. Earl S. Redwine, Madras. Stud: Gas outstanding lb. production bred Saa- _buek; fee, $4.00. Free yes boarded; fresh doe (2 doe ids); sev. grade Saanan bred oes, some milking, for sale ade. Edwin Simpson, At- , 695 Paynes Ave., N. W. Billy and nanny goat, milk Japs giving 2 qts. milk ly, $45.00 for both. FOB. l letters ans. Theodore EI- tt, Cumming, Rt. 3. - anan nanay goat, 3 yrs. milking, not bred, $15.00. 1 nanny (Toggenburg aanan), 5 mos. old, $5.00 Toggenburg-Saanan nan- 8 hs old, $7.00. Cannot E. H. Burson, Norcross. ucks, naturally hornless. bloodlines, 8 mos. to 1% and 6 yrs. old. Ship any- here FOB, $35.00, $45.00 and 0.00 ea. MO only. Mrs. Jvalene Highland, Lavonia, ree. reg. 'Toggenburg c $20.00 FOB. 21 mos. old. . Hood, Edison. Reg. Toggenburg buck, sired y Sir Roderick, 2 yrs. old; aturally hernless, gentle. Sac- price: for quick - sale. John D. Cox, Decatur. bred Saanan doe, 4 mos. Reg. in_ buyers name. ain at $25.00. Joe J. Wil- Jecatur, 828 Third Ave. 54 tud: Sir Randolph Ist, from long line imp. t. stock; young and Ss; a te for num- Ss earns 0n oar At Stud: Toggenburg buck,|2 eg. Nubians; pr. kids, male 1 { farm 2 mi. W. Suwanee, across rm service inside 90 days. irebred Toggenburg AGS. Reg. Black Angus bull for sale or service in tested herd in return for keep. Ellet Hopkins, Atlanta, 997 Peachtree Battle Ave., N. W. (Call Ch. 8915, after 6:00 p.m.) Nice heifer, 18 mos. ofd, will freshen in March. Can be seen at barn. Mrs. Lizzie Bearden, Palmetto. 3 calves, $45:00 for lot: 3 milch cows, $65.00 ea. Giving over gal. day; more on good feed. Mattie MePherson, Ra- bun Gap. Large Jersey cow, fresh in, giving 4 gals milk daily. Jesse Warwick, Stilesboro. : Nice Guernsey and Jersey heifer, 8 mos. old, $50.00. Mrs. Laura Dudley, Warthen. | Dairy heifer yearling, Hol- steins; Jersey and Guernsey ealves; yearlings from 6 mos. old to 1% yrs. old. Inoculated against Bangs and other dis- eases, Mrs. C. Brown, Junction City. : Shorthorn roan bull (white and red) about 18 mos. old. Also 800 bu. good ear corn. C. B. Collins, Hazlehurst. Reg. horned typ Hereford bulls, Ga. raised, Domino and Woodford breeding. Percy A. Price, Albany. Reg. Jersey cow, 7 yrs. old, med. size, healthy, good qual- ities, 5 gals, day when fresh: freshen 1st Mar., $100.00 at barn. Papers furnished. Also 3 roosters, 35 young White Wy- andotte hens, $65.00, or $2.00 ea. Mrs. S. P. Jones, Lula, Rt. Fresh milch cows and heif- ers; yearlings and bulls. hogs and pigs, any kind and size. Victor Lang, Cumming, Rt. 4. x Good butter cow, giving 214 gals. milk daily, $85.00. Full blooded Holstein heifer, from 7 gal. milker, $50.00 at my place. Jennie A. Jolley, At- lanta, Rt. 7. (Last house on N. Hightower Rd.). Guernsey bull, grain fed, wt. about 700 Ibs., $65.00. 80 bu. corn: 2 tons peanuts, FOB my barn. W. L. Cousins, Decatur, Rt. 2. - Black Angus bull, purebred, 16 mos. old. wt. 600 Ibs., $125.00; 2 half-breed heifers, both bred, Ist calves: 3% Black Angus bull, 3 mos. old, $290.00} I for lot, or exc. for small trac- a Ed Craft, Carnesville. Rt. 22 Whitefaced cattle on my river; some reg. Some 8 wks. old. Also Poland-China pigs, $8.00 ea. Also grape vineyard of James grapes on 2 vacant lots. J. D. Martin, Sr., At- lanta, 826 St. Charles Ave., NE. Ve 5513. : 12 young, purebred Black /Angus bulls; 15 young, pure- bred heifers. . Also 100 South- down sheep; 8 young, Ga. rais- ed mules. R. S. Anderson, Hawkinsville. 3 Jersey cows, now milking. Mrs. Eula G. Anderson, Bax-: ley, Rt. 2. 3 Shorthorn bulls, 2 Short- horn heifers, purebred, not reg. Miss Josie Hamilton, Baxley, Rt. 2. g 1 Jersey cow, 5 Hereford heifeys, 1 Shorthorn Hereford bull, 11 Guernsey and Jersey heifers, 2 calves, for sale at my farm. Charles W. Specht, Lithia Springs. 2 fresh milch cows with calves 3 and 4 wks. old, $75.00 ea., with calf: 2 nice stock Jer- sey bulls, 3 yrs.. and other 18 mos. old, $100.00 for both. 4 mi. So. Buford, 2 mi. Wood- -wards Mill. Mrs. J. A. Puck- ett, Buford, Rt. 1, Box 50. 3 yr. old, Reg. Jersey bull, good blood and good service. Sell to prevent inbreeding, 1 mi... Ringgold. Write or see Willard Sisson, Ringgold. 20 cows, some springer heif- ers and_ yearlings. Also 4 mules, at my barn. Mrs. W. D. Davidson, Cartersville, Rt. 3. Black Jersey bull, 1 yr. old, wt. about 450 Ibs., at my barn, $30.00. Wade Chastain, Talk- ing Rock, Rt. 2. Large Jersey heifer, to freshen soon, from heavy milk producers, $50.00. Also hogs for sale. Shoats, wt. 40 to 100 Ibs. Various prices. A. B. Weatherly, Fayetteville, Rt. 1. Sev. reg. heifer calves, 3 and 4 mos. old, $60.00 ea.; also sev. E. B. Bras- turally horn- ( W. R. Mills, }reg. a ee Z . furnished, Also} 1 hen Good Jersey cow, with little age, freshened Oct. Ist. Nice heifer calf, not reg., very gentle, easy to milk, $100.00 cash and keep calf. Good Jer- sey Bull; 3 yrs. old, $100.00: good markings. W. O. Hall, Danville, Rt. 2. HOGS FOR SALE Hereford. pigs,1 0-12 wks old, reg. buyers name, $15.00 and $20.00 ea.; bred gilts, $75.00 ea. FOB. _E. B. Smith, Marietta, | Rt 3, Box 171. _4 Hereford gilts, best blood- lines, 11 wks. old, wt. 65 Ibs., $22.00 ea.; 2.males, 9 wks. old. wt. 50 Ibs., $18.00 ea. Prefers 1 Will ship. -COD, Quick sale. J. Corris Sanders. Canon, Rt. 1. Reg. O. I. C. boar, 14 mos. old, blocky, well built, 250-300 lbs., and 13 mo. old reg. sow, $35.00 ea; 6-8 wks. old pigs, $10.00 ea. Reg: or $8.50 ea. not reg. W. L. Helms, Buena: Vista. 9 OIC pigs, 7 wks. old. Also 2.mules, one is 9 yrs. old, wts. about 1100: other 16 yrs. old. W. L. Yates, Carrollton, Rt. 2. 6 Big Bone Guinea and Black P. C. cross pigs, 2 mos. old, $6.00 ea. Also Toggen- burg female goat: Nubian milk goat, 12 mos. old, $10.00, or exc. for 10 hens, 2 roosters, any good breed, H. A. Chamber- lain, Douglasville, Rt. 2. __10 purebred Duroc pigs, about 8 wks. old, blocky type, $12.00 ea. at barn. Hubert Davis, Warrenton, Rt. 2, Box Also | 39- African Guinea shoats, pure- bred, big bone, 3 mos. old, treated and crated, $12.50 ea. J. H. Tribble, Decatur.. 903 E. College Ave. : : 12 extra fine blooded OIC pigs, 6 wks. old Oct. 28th: short nosed, blocky . type: reg. in. buyers name. W. H. Nix, Al- pharetta, Rt. 3. : SPC pigs, out of litter of 3; medium, block type, best of bloodlines, wt. 50-60 lbs., $20.00 ea. Reg... treated and crated, FOB. Fred C. Seago Pinehurst. rc cig Prood sow, oe be res; ess an. 3 yrs. old, wt. 500 Ibs., $50.00, nman. _P. C. pigs, crossed breed, 7 wks. old, $6.00 ea. Will crate and ship in prs. Also Maretts barley, $2.50 bu. K. D. San- ders, Eatonton. i Reg. S. P. C. breeding stock, both sexes. from some of the Souths leading type, reg. buy- ers name, crated, FOB. W. B: Leverett, Tifton. SPC reg. pigs, 2 mos. old, wts. 30 to 40 Ibs.. both sex, $15.00e a. Reg. Alan N. Winkler, Ross- name. ville. Purebred,. modern type, Hampshire hogs; reg. in buy- ers name. All ages. W. B. Fambrough, Cordele. Big bone SPC pigs, from} The Hero and Perfection Lady, $15.00 ea. Reg. in buyers name. Kermit B. Grogan, Ma- rietta, Rt. 4, Box 475. OIC sow pigs, 19 wks. old, wt. 40 to 50 Ibs., $12.50 ea. up. 2. gilts, 5 mos. old. Papers free or will reg. in buyers name for $2.00 extra. bloodlines. D. B: Dukehart, Decatur, P. O. 488. 2 purebred OIC reg. sows, 20 OIC pigs, 4 wks. old: 1 sow with Ist litter. other 4th. Can be reg. $150.00. for lot. Zack Cheek, Elberton, Rt. 2. _ SPC reg. pigs, world: grand ehampionship blood: no bet- ter breeding anywhere. Double treated and crated, 12 wks. old, $12.00 ea. Good young boar, 6 mos. old, $20.00. Bred brood sow, $40.00. W. A. Taliaferro, Blue Ridge. Little bone Black African Guinea sow, -purebred. Big bone male, purebred, 10 mos. old, $35.00: 2 gilts, 9 mos. old, (big bone, little bone crossed), $25.00 ea. 8 pigs, 10 wks. old, %4 guinea pigs, $10.00 ea. T. V. White, Dalton, Rt. 1. Now booking orders for reg. Black P. C. pigs for del. at 8 wks. old, around i5th Dec. The finest in south. M. Y. Jor- dan, Comer. 7 nice white shoats. White Chester crossed with P. C., wt. 50 to 75 lbs., priced right. Wil- | CATTLE FOR SALE | | $3.00 ea. Frank Reeves, | in buyers} Special |. 65. lie Tanner, Flippen, P. O. Box RABBITS AND CAVIES | FOR SALE _ 3 purebred N. Z. Red does, 1 buck, sub. to reg. 12 mos. old, wt. 12 lbs., $4.50 ea. $16.00 for lot. Robert C Counts, Haral- son. N. Z. Red does, 6 mos. old, Sr. does, 16 mos. old, wt. 10 lIbs., $400 ea W. L. Winn, Fitzgerald, Box 571 N. Z. W. doe, 5. mos. old, $1.50. 7 N. Z. W. rabbits, 6 wks old; $4.00. Buck, 2 does, 1? wks. old, N. Ze W.,- $3.50: Buck, 12 mos. old, $2.00. Pre- paid in Ga. if lot is taken, otherwise, collect. Cecil D. Ward, Junction City. English Angora wool rabbits; Does, $5.00; bucks, $4.00. Does bred or open; Jr. does and bucks ready to wean in 2 wks. Does, $2.00; bucks, $1:50; trio, $5.00. All letters ans. M. K,. Fuqua, Hawkinsville. | N. Z. white buck, 4 mos. old, $2.00. Weldon Davis, Haral- son. Sr. pedi Youngs cavies, = $1.50. zea. Any col. Purebred N. Z. Red rabbits; does, .4 mos. old, $2.50; bucks, 4 mos. old, $3.50. Exp. eol. Sonny Weeks, Edison. Pr. grown white $5.00 pr. 4 young mixed rab- bits, (1 grey, 3 whites), 2 mos. old, $1.00 ea. Also Ga. collard seed, 60c lb. Mrs. Fred At- -kinson, Valdosta, Rt. 4. 2N. Z. W. bucks, 7 mos. old, $2.50; 2 N. Z. W. does, 7 mos. old, bred; $3.00 ea Pr. N. Z. Whites, unrelated, $6.00. N. Z. W., 10 wks. old, 2 does, 1 buck, $4.50; does, $1.75 ea., bucks, $125.. Mrs. J. H. DunNetft, Sandy Springs . ' 4 mos. old N. Z. White rab- bits, $2.00 ea:; 3 bucks, 5 mos. old, $2.25. ea.; 1 pr. common bantam chickens, young, $1.00. Exp. col. White feed sacks, unwashed, free of hole, 100 lb. cap-., 15c ea., plus postage. Mrs. Otis Mashburn, Cumming, Ries " N. Z. White rabbits, 4 grown, $1.50 ea; the 3 small, $1.00 ea. 5. guinea pigs, 75c ea. Also cultivated strawberry plants, 25c C. LeRoy Hencelv. Forsyth, 1125 East Main St. Rabbits, all breeds: and sizes, also guinea _ pigs, cheap. See (on corner Washington Drive) or write. Mrs. Marvin Bul- lington, College Park, Box 163. 3 prs. White N. Z. rabbits, 2 mos. old, $1.75 pr.; 3: bucks, 5 mos. old, wt. 6 Ibs. ea., $2.00 ea.,.or trade for N. Z. Reds. L. E. Burroughs, Atlanta, 694 Dalvigney St., N. W. HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE _ ~: Mare, 34 mos. old, for sale or trade for cows, riding cul- tivator or anything can use. Write or see. J. L. Hayes, Nicholls, Rt. 1. Good mare mule, pig, shoats and: goats (mixed with milk type), for sale. Otis Myers, Washington, Rt. 2. Red mare, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1,000 to 1,100 lbs., gentle, work anywhere, $100.00 at my farm. Loy Lester. Rockmart, Rt. 3. Good pair mules, $200.00 for the mules; also 50 bu. good} corn and a purebred Guern- sey cow, coming in with 2nd calf, 4 gal., with Ist calf: 2 gal. now. All for sale at my. barn. W. W. McPherson, Villa Rica. - Gray mare mule, work any- where, good eyes and legs, for sale. 5 mi. Buford, 1 mi. Cum- ming-Buford Hwy.: also want exec. 5 Ibs. Speckled Crowder peas for 5 lbs. large cream crowders. Ea. pay postage and send sample. Wm. T.. Eu- banks, Buford, Rt. 3. Red bay mare mule, wt. 900 lbs... Gentle, sound and will work anywhere, $125.00. Come! see. John L. Bennett, Screven, Rt. 2, Box: 31, - 3 good work mules, cheap: Also Sanford seed wheat, 99.68 pet. pure; germ. 91 per cent, $2.50 bu. Abruzzi rye, $3.00] cleaned. bu. Wheat _ triple. J. E. Caudell, Athens, Rt. 1, Box 668. Mule 5 yrs. old, well trained to work anywhere; gentle and'| fine qualities. Homer War-|} wick, Cleveland. = "Wednesday, October 25, rabbits, | P HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE Mare mule! also P. C. boar and a Jersey bull for sale. J, A. Weaver, Milner. Pr. brood mares, wt. around 1000 lbs, Work~- single or double, sound and quiet: reas, price for quick sale, or trade * pr. small mules. James A. Turner, Blairsville, Box 94. Young mare: mare mule 15 -mos. old, for immedia sale. Mrs. J. C. Goolsby, ma: Rt, 2. Sound work horse mule, about 950 lbs. Work anywh $75.00 at barn. W. R. Garn Cordele, Rt. 2 . oo Dark bay mare, 7 yrs. wt. 1100 Ibs., $175.00. farm mare and> gentle, J. Strozier, Stovall. Red saddle gentle, sound, thing, wt- 750 Ibs. white pony, cheap. 5 D. Carpenter, Stone Mount (Lawrenceville Hwy.). * Small black horse-mule, yrs. old, well broken to wor single or double, $100.00 FO F, A. Smith; Elberton. a Good mule, also 1-H. wago $40.00. Also Milch cows an yearlings cheap, for sale. Als want buy about 4 tons lesp deza hay. ' A. W. Stapp, | catur, Rt. 2 (Near. Rehobet -Church.). = Pr. young mules; also wi: gon, walking cultivator a other tools; 200 bu. corn an hay: 2 cows and calves. J. Scarbrough, Odum, Rt. 1 Tenn. malking horse, b wt. 1100 Ibs., 5 yrs. old. Ve gentle, excellent show Good plantation horse for |: or gentleman. See or w Mrs. Henry J. Barnes, Gree ville. Saddle horse, very gentl 8 yrs. old, $100,00. Also Je sey cow, 4 yrs. old, 4-ga milker, fresh in about No 1st, $87.50. Hogs and p $8.00 ea. to $25.00 ea., w up to 200. .. Helens, Street, Atlanta, Rt. 2, Box 56 A-l farm mare, 8 yrs. ol blocky type, wt. 1400 (Bay), for sale or trade. Black horse, 9 yrs. old, about 1150 lbs. Work am where. Also good 1-H waga $165.00 for lot, cash. Ma Webb, Alpharetta, Rt. 2. _ Pr. mules, 6 and 7 yrs. ol wt. 1000 lbs. ea. In good. Work anywhere, $350.00. Is 5 or 6 tons good hay. Flo Riddle, Coosa, Rt. 1. horse, oO At Studs. tes: stallions; fee, $15.00. guar. (Mares. boarded re Easters Red Allen No. 350 dark bay; Brantleys MacA: thur No. 421676, snow w H. Clayton Garrett, Gai ville, Box: 56. Saddle horse; mule, about 1200 lbs., about 12 old. H. I. Langdale, Sumn Mare, 6 yrs. old; (work | saddle horse), wt. about 9 Ibs., $125.00. Mrs. H. T. ter, Norcross, Rt. 1. Good horse, work anywh sound and gentle. Cheap cash, or trade for hogs, yeat- ling or chickens, or anythin, can use. H. C. Cruce, burn, Rt. 1. 3 mules, wt. 800 to 950 ea., gentle, made crop year, for sale or trade f cows, beef cattle, hogs or whi have you. L. R. Wade, Hap ville, 3136 Springdale Phone Ca 3723. = LIVESTOCK WANTED HORSES AND MULES WANTED: ee Want good mule, wt. 1150 to 1250 lbs. yrs. old. Must be cheap. cash, or will exc. fine mai mule, 8 yrs. old, wt. 1250 Ib for pr. small ~ ones. o Barnes, Carrollton, Rt. 2. mi. Atlanta. John E. son, Blairsville. Want sev. reg. Polled H ford heifers. - State all essential facts letter. R. E. Avery, Circle, Rt. 1. yestock sales are held iday. A Livestock Auetion Sele will be held at ue ortheast Georgia Fair Grounds, Gainesville, iday, October 27, 1944, beginning at 1 P. M. Herbert M. -Aderholdt, every second and fourth Secy.-Treas, : fo WANTED POULTRY FOR SALE 14 2 Jersey milch cows, with 2nd or 3rd calf. t be good milkers, and in cond. State age, price uantity milk given. . J. E. nolds, Hazlehurst, Rt. 3. OULTRY FOR SALE CHICKS AND ITAMS: hatch Golden Sebright tam cockerels, $2.00 ea. M. O. only. isn. Bartow, P. O. Box Cornish bantams, good stock, trios, reasonable s and Z. &: Lott, Au- es. Write. , Box 910. RED, WHITE AND ER ROCKS: oes ebred, Aristocrat, AAA Rock pullets and cock- .00, $1.50 and $2.00 ea.; Indian Cornish . crossed g type Cornish, $1.00, and $4.00 ea. Mrs. B. Osborne, Roy. NISH, GAMES AND hite Giant pullets and i ae 00: 3 mos. -old and game cock and 2. hens, ; stags, $7.00 ea.; S. A. 1 Gray stags, $7. 50 ea.: trio. Pit cocks, 15, 2 uC Canon, Rt: 2: Dick Johnsons Brown larets, also few Shaw Write for further infor- _ Artie Perdue, DUBE: Tom ark Cornish _cockerels, 1.25 and $1.50 ea. This years = Legs, S130 for Cartons to be y. Miss Cora B. ferson, Ly Ty, -Rt-, 3. pit games, Blue yeler-Allen Roundhead: 2 , 2 pullets; 1 stag,-3 pullets wn Red and Dom cr Oss, 50 for lot: Also 3. prs. er pigeons, all mated: ingham clean legged, for jot: $350 pr. J. gle Scheider, Savannah, 5, Fairfield. . nisn, purebred, blood- d, Mar. and Apr. hatched erels, $2. 00 ea. .Pullets, -a, ~ Hens. - $2.00 ea: kerel free with every 10 or pullets, M .O. only. OF Sanders, Vienna. Dark Cornish 3-A chicks, . Old, 50c ea. Purebred ter, 1 yr. old, $3.00; 3-A tched, $5.00 FOB; ship- ight crates. No checks. R. qT. Chatham, Adairs- : , $2.50 ea. Also lead cattle, 4 nice spring- yokes young work steers, ne Hampshire buck sheep. as Old-for sale. J. F-. born, Rock Springs. in, Coops of 10 cockerel, $15.00 Eng. ack Leghorn cock- els early 1944 hatch, open , now ready for service, .00 ea. FOB. Mrs. Perry O. P, Hartwell, Rt. 3. 3-A Master Mater W. L. ts, 3 mos. old, $75.00 FOB. fumish crate. Chit r- Sandersville, Rt. 1. 2S. C. W. L. 18 mos. old best grade: make excel- reeders, $2. 00 ea. Mrs. Carson, Graiffin, Rt. C. pis English type W. L. -pullets, ready to lay, a., or swap for nice eifer, ready to freshen. certificate. with hens: Oo Smith, Nicholls, Rt. Malcolm | vaccinated. | aider pure Bacon Warhorse $110.00. C.2W. ee reasonable price. 45. AAA White hens, good layers, $1.25. ea. Money order. Mrs. Je Ae Me- Gowan, Graymont, Rt. PEAFOWLS, eee PIGEONS, QUAIL, RTC.; 7 pr. high quality White Kings; pr. Red Kings. Select- ed, fast workers, $3.00 pr; FOB. William S. Todd, Jr., Decatur, 2 2-yr. old Blue peacocks, $20.00 ea. W.C. Day, Warner Robins, 705 Miller Drive. Ringneck pheasants, $4,00 ea. Billy Turner, Union Point. 1 pr. ea. Red and White Carneaux and-2 pr. Silver Kings, $4.00 pr.: I pr. Homers, Leghorn $1.50; 2b pr. Blue Gazzi Mo- denas, $3.50: 2 Silver King cocks; $1.50 ea: Henry W. Rhodes, Jr., LaGrange, 614 Winzor St. REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRE AND RHODE ISLAND): | 100 N. H. Red pullets, 6 mos. : old, vaccinated and in fine cond., beginning to lay, $2.00 ea. T.. W. Morrison, Winter- ville, PO Box 48. Phone At- lanta: Ma 6701 evenings. Dark R. I. Red cockerels,| ready for mating, $3.00 ea. Eggs, $1.50 for 15 P. P. Mrs. Don Donaldson, Decatur. De | 2405. 10 very dark purebred R. I. Red (Donaldson strain). Apr. hatched pullets, $2.00 ea. Will ship if coops are furn. See at 556 Memorial Hwy. Mrs, Chester S. Haynie. Stone Mountain, Rt. 1, Box 458. . 5 ped. N.. H. Red roosters, 6 mos. old, from Best Egg mating by individual R. O. P. males, from Dams record 250- 331 eggs, $12.50 for lot. Send crate. Mrs. dalia. 405 Church St. Phone 498. WYANDOTTES: 6 purebred S. C. Wyandotte | R. C. cockerels, from reg. stock. February 1944 hatch. Wt. 8 lbs. ea., $1.50 P. P. No checks. Miss Lydia Gibbs, Uvalda. DUCKS, GEESE, GUINEAS, TURKEYS EUG: Gander and goose, cheap. Eugene Sutton, Dublin, Rt. 2. Mammoth bronze, broad- breasted type: turkey toms,: March hatch, $6.50; 2 $12.50. 10 Ringlet B: R. hens, Thomp- son strain; bred-to-lay, mos. old, $17.50 FOB. Mrs. J A. Wilson, Martin. 12 Muscovy ducks for sale -or trade for 10 hens and 2 roosters (Barred Rocks), each pay express. Mrs. C. E. Bailes, |'Leesburg.R t.2 . 65. turkeys, dark _ broad- breasted Bronze, $260.00. at my home, for quick sale. Mrs. D. F. Warnock, Tarrytown. Pure Wagon-Wheel B. B. B. turkeys, April, May and dune hatch. Individual mating, ex- cellent breeding stock. Hens, $10.00 ea.stoms, $15.00 ea. No hens shipped under 15 Ibs. - No toms, 20 Ibs. April hatch ready now. Lester McCrary, Molena.: ; POULTRY WANTED LEGHORNS WANTED: - Want 50 to 100 April hatch White or Brown Leghorn pul- lets, also 50 N. H. Red or B. R. | pullets.. Mar ch hatched. Mrs. Ida Carson, Griffin. MINORCAS WANTED: Want 10 Black Minorca early hatch pullets. W. S. McCarty, Dalton. Want 10 Black Minorea hens or pullets, spring 1944 hatch; no culls or hens in moult: Will not pay over $1.50 ea. for 3- A best grade. H. P. Malcom, Social Circle, Rt. 2. Box 47. DUCKS, GUINEAS, GEESE, TURKEYS, ETC. WANTED: Want 8 to 10 Speckled gui- nea hens and 1 hooster, at Notify at once. Hugh ee Cuthbert, Rt 1 with general light work around ant houses, 2 deep wells, Write for particulars. Mrs.| farm in: Brooks Co. Ha | public road, near good ohbel Ida M. Morgan, Doraville, Rt.| tractor and 2 good mules. Goox and churches. Write. B. B. i land; on school bus and mai Earle, Thomasville. - route. Good tobacco and cot Want ambitions, young,!ton acreage. | Hast Ellenwood. Lessie Fox; Vi-| settlement. | house, outbldgs. 12-18 ee "SHOW AND AUCTION SALE Want good man for farm in. Announcing Show and Auction Sale of 10 ae oO oes ao Superior Grade Aberdeen-Angus Reg., bulls and Underwood, Atlanta, 1163 As.|| females at Albany Stock Yards, Albany, Mon- tor Ave. SW. day, Oct. 30th. Show 9 A. M., Sale, 1 P. M. _ CWT; Consignors of these cattle are 19 of the leading breeders of Aberdeen-Angus cattle i Georgia. W. Hill Hosch, Sales Megr., Atlanta, 340 W. Peachtree St. Want -nice, respectable. wo- man, around 50 yrs. old, to help farm for good home. Mrs. H.| A. Duncan, Ben Hill, os 1: Campbellton Rd. Want good man for 250 acres, 2 mi. East of Iron City, for. 1945. Approximately 150 Aso in cultivation, 100 A. in pasture and woodland. 2 eS ey HELP WANTED Want tenant for 25 A. farm.| Want share cropper for 4H Mrs. Ell McCor Morven, Rt. 2. : Want col. farm fa rie w. sev. workers for farm 20 mi. Atlanta. Good house, runni water, elec. Will move you Good wages, with guar. year. round work for both men anc women. Fred H. Neely. Nor. cross, The Neely Farm. Want good man. for good farm and water corn mill, lo- cated near church and school. 3 mi. East of Cleveland. J. H. Campbell, Cleveland, Box 122. 2-H. white fellow, married or single, with orchard experience, to operate 100 aeres good farm land, The Callaway plan. Write in full, giving references and experience. I. C. Hitchcock, Atlanta, P. O. Box 4141. : Want 2 farm tractor drivers at once, $3.00 day and up for good hands: I furnish good houses. with running water. Permanent job. G. C. Harrel, Want col. man or couple for} WPi#ham. : farm work. One who can| Want single man or man drive tractor. State sal. ex-land Wife to do farm work pected. in ist letter: <