COMMISSION ER
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1944 ~
Gontinusds:
st ee I suggested that a good neighbor policy
il would require that we urge them to develop
wn manufacturing industry.
n this week's papers, we see where Brazil hee recent-
urchased 2,500,000 spindles from the United States
uild cotton mills in Brazil, These news items further
d that Brazil would purchase approximately 6,000, 000
spindles in the next few years.
This is a very hopeful sign and is ds it eheuld be.
ere is no redson for Brazil to export cotton. Neither
e any reason for Brazil to export cotton goods. This
1e because the people of Brazil and its neighboring
ies in South America need every yard of cloth that
il can produce and manufacture.
MASS OF PEOPLE NOT INTERESTED IN LARGE
BUSINESS OF WORLD TRADE s
One ak the peculiar things about all this agitation
rorld trade is that it comes from a small group of men
are interested only in making a profit dut of the needs
-people of the world.
The people who produce cotton in Brazil have no
nterest whatever in the export ot: cee cotton
er countries.
he people who produce cotton in Brazil need a
for their raw cotton.
tton mills in Brazil will give a eas to the Brazilian
n producers. The millions of people in Brazil who will
sume these cotton goods certainly have no interest |
ipping cotton out of Brazil when the people of Brazil
it themselves. .
Therefore, the export of raw cotton from Brazil and
mport of cotton goods to Brazil cannot possibly ben-
ine people of Brazil generally. It can only benefit a.
ew people who get a commission and profit on the
when it goes out of Brazil and on the cotton goods
n they come back into Bide, 20s =
What has been said with regard to Brazil is equally
icable to Russia, to China, to India and to Egypt.
iO IS Ty amet iS MAKING WAR ON COTTON
IN THIS COUNTRY?
Did Jou ever stopto think why anyone would want
stroy cotton and the cotton industry in the United
Let's inquire ao the reason for anyone wanting to
oy cotton and the cotton industry in this country.
s inquire into the reason for the tremendous
of of money that has been spnt to develop pater,
(Continued on Page Eight)
vestock Sales, Georgia Auction Markets
_ October 27, 1944 Per ea
r 18 (Wednesday )Albany : 3 a.
tober 23 (Monday)Sylvester = = 14.95
ober 24 (Tuesday)Nashville re
r 25 (Wednesday)Moultrie | oe
iP ec oe ee Se ae ee ae
10. (00- 12.00
- EDITORIALBy Tom Linder
Beginning alone the line of Georgia and Tennes
the Appalachian Mountains stretch roughly parallel to the
Atlantic coast line on our Kast.
There is no more beautiful sight to be seen in ce
America than the mountains of North Georgia, Tennesse .
Western North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia.
Thrown up by great upheavals of nature in ages gone
by, these mountains are rich in minerals, timber, granite
and marble beyond the wildest dreams of those who have
never had an opportunity of traveling ge this Bree
creation of God. : :
We read in the Scriptures many times abouts %
mountains.
There is something about the mountains that lifts o
out of himself and makes him see the vastness of Cr
tion. When you are in the mountains and see the mag!
jicent heights to which these peaks rise, when you look
down into the valleys and see the richness of the soil
when you look into the great spaces from one mountain
Pes to another, you cannot help but see the Hand oT ;
Great Artificer of the Universe in their making.
God endowed the mountains with strength | in e ve
way.
The people a live on the land, in the course e rer
i tefleet the character of the land on. which they
ive 3
If you will read re history of the World, oan
see that throughout the ages, the people who came from
the mountains have been the people who overeame the
greatest obstacles in the march of the human 2 race alk
a road which we eall time.
MINING COUNTRY
There was a time, many thousand years azo, wlie
much of the land where these mountains now stand wer
covered with dense forests before these mountains were
Tormed. ates
When the water from the ocean broke theca
ocean bottom and found its way into the intense heat 0
the earths center, hydrogen as was given off ine
mendous quantities.
The same thing happened in tho euter of the a th
that occurs when you pour cold water on red hot: iron
Tt blows up almost like gun powder.
This tremendous pressure in the center of the a
had to find a way out. 88 came out where this range, 0
mountains now stand.
As this tremendous pressure forced its way from the-
center of the earth, it raised the rock, the clay and th
minerals with it. :
As it came out of the pare with an awful roar, th ex
remendous forests were buried hundreds and thousa ds
of feet below the surface of the mountains. -
Tn the course of thousands of years, these preat bur 06
forests became coal.
They were buried by hee voleanoes, ane te
heat, they formed beds of coal very much i in the
( Continued On Page Two)
= resh Fruits and Vegetables
October 27, 1944
Beans (Lima), Te per bu. -
~ Collards, per doz. bunches
-Mustard. Greens, per bu. hprs. .
Pppers, per bu. hprs: ..
Squash, per. bu. hprs.
Sweet Potatoes, bulk, per bu. __
Turnips (Bunched); per doz. bunches
Turnip Salad, per bu. fs ;
PAGE TWO MAR
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
_/ Address all items for publication and all requests to be put
on the mailing list and for change of address to STATE BUREAU
OF MARKETS. 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
Notices ot farm produce and appurtenances admissable
under postage regulations inserted one time on each request and
repeated only when request is accompanied by new copy of
notice.
Limited space wil! not permit insertion of notices containing
a than 30 words including name and address.
~ Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not
--ssume any responsibility for eid notice appearing in the
Bulletin.
eS Published Weekly at =
414-122 Pace St., Covingten, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
Tom Linder, Commissioner,
Executive Office, State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
114- 122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
' Editorial and Executive Offices
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
~ Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of ;
Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
_ Entered as second class matter |
August 1, 1937, at the Post Office. ;
at Covington, tae under Act :
pf June 6 = 1900. ecepted for ;
mailing at special Hoe oi postage
ae for in Section 1103, Ac
ee ees 8. 1917.
arkets In the
_ Mountains
(Continued from Page One).
manner that charcoal is formed when you burn
it in a charcoal kiln.
Men learned to use coal to generate heat and
as his demand for coal increased, he searched
more diligently to find increasing supplies.
_ Finally, he discovered the great beds of coal
in the bowels of the mountains, which nature had
begun to provide many thousand years ago.
Today in the mountains of Wes Virginia
and Pennsylvania, millions and millions of peo-
_ ple are engaged in getting this coal out from far
below the surface to supply the industrial needs
a this great American Empire.
For many generations the coal miners were
: a the bottom ot the ladder in the economic
_ world.
When I was a boy, I used to read of the pit-
_iful conditions of the coal miners in England and
in the United States. I read how they went into
_ the mines before sunup and came out after sun
down. I read of their pallid faces, their emaci-
ated bodies, their ragged and hungry condition.
erated men to oppress their fellow man. Before
_ the coal miners were organized in the Unions,
_ they were slaves of the coal mine owner and op-
_ erators.
Since they have pre mined into Unions, they
have demanded and received shorter hours, bet-
_ ter working conditions and better pay.
a (Before any one condemns the coal miner
too harshly, it would be well for them to -ask
: themselves the question if they would like to
swap jobs with these miners.) .
Millions of these coal miners in West Vir-
- ginia and Pennsylvania are receiving good pay
today. They are able to buy what they need.
_ They are not very far from Washington.
On the back page of last weeks issue of
_ the Market Bulletin, I carried a letter from Mr.
- Paul Blackshear, an old Laurens County Georgia
-boy, which gave a lot of worth while information
about the potential markets in these mountain
mining towns.
= There are hundreds of these mining towns
and from 3,000 to 30,000 people in each town,
With markets near enough to these mining
_ towns, we could sell unlimited quantities of Geor-
gia farm products.
Jt is not practical for us to ship ear loads of
produce from Georgia to these towns; they are
too small for that. However, with a market or
thousands of trucks would be coming every day:
Tit has always been the nature of unregen-
KET BULLETIN
towns to buy fruits, vegetables and truck crops
of every kind and description that we could grow.
LET GEORGIA AWAKE
The Bible tells us, Where there is no vision,
the people perish. 0 Let us have vision. Let our
young men see visions. Let our old men dream
dreams.
We can do the things we visualize clearly.
We of Georgia are blessed with unlimited oppor-
tunities if we will take advantage of them:
The winters are long
foi towns of West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
The wives of the miners are hard working and
industrious. Through the summer days they will
can and preserve the familys winter supply of
food, if the food is made available to their hands.
We, here in Georgia, can help ourselves and
help them at the same time.
It will take some money, of course, to get
it started. Why should not Georgia spend some
money to develop its agriculture?
Agriculture is the backbone of Georgia. It
has always been and will continue to be.
Economic conditions of Georgia farmers
will determine whether or not our young men
and young women will stay on the farms or
whether they will continue to migrate away
school.
We talk about rohabiliation of returning
service men. Can we rehabilitate successfully
our returning soldiers unless their labor will pro-
vide them a livelihood when they get back to
the farm?
No. x
Our hearts, our hands, our heads, our health,
Constitute our oreatest wealth
With markets for each Georgia crop
We climb the mountain to the top.
Our future farmers, staunch and steady,
Are waiting now, equipped and ready
To reap the crops and sow the seed
Ready markets are what they need.
oo TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture.
_ FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
Red and white dogwood, mt.
Jaurel, azalea, crabapple, hem-
lock, red maple, $1.00 ea. Rho-
dodendron, Cherokee rose,
pussy willow, 20c ea. Tiger lil-
ies, evergreen galax, golden-
glow, 35 doz. Hollyhock, 50c
doz. Exc. for sacks. Add post-
ae Mae Roper, Mineral
u od
-. Red and pink hibiscus, 25 ea
$2.75 doz. Purple English wis-
teria, altheas, forsythia, others
same price. Well rooted. Yonge
Walker, Toccoa, Hts o.
Hardy phiox, butiercups, 40c
aor Mixed iris, 50c doz. Span-
ish iris, 75c doz. Well rooted
sage plants, $1.35 doz. Add
postage. Cash or M. O. Mary
Stephens,, Dahlonesa, Rt. 1,
Box 58.
_ Pink weigela, dvupie yellow
japonicas, double almond, lilac,
dogwood, arborvitae, boxwood,
2 abelia buches: 15% ft. high
5 tt. across ,other 4% ft. high
Arborvitae, 5 {t. Come dig
them. Others. Mrs. D. J. aca
derburg, Lawrenceville, Rt.
Easter lily bulbs, large, 25c
ea: medium; 20, $1.00; very
small, "5c C. Add postage. No
checks. No orders less than
eae Miss Margaret Driver:
Ade (Si bee
Jumbo pansies, 50, $1.25; $2
Cc. -St. Augustine lawn grass,
$2.00 bu. Bulbs; daffodils, oe
cissi, jonquils, thrift ube
white blue, 25c doz. $2.00
Mrs. Will Wise, Wadley.
Compact boxwoods, Semper-
viren, dwarf, English, field--
grown, 4-6 in. $40.00 M. Sam-.
ple, $5.00 C. Mixed. bulbs.
highest quality, fragrant, 25.
Le Maude. Hamby, Green-
ville.
Biue Roman hy acinths, 6c
ea. Light pink, rose, dark red |
tulips, 7c bulb. White narcissi,
10c doz. Mrs..J. B. Branan, Mc-
Donough, Rt. 2.
Red dogwood, mix. cols. aza-
leas, white dog wood, red ma-
ple, 75c doz. Pink Cherokee
roses, $1.00. doz. Evergreen
galax, tiger lilies, 20c doz. Well
rooted. Add postage. Mrs. H
W. Wilkins, Mineral Bluff.
Red and white dogwood,
mtn. laurel, ivy, crabappie,
Cherokee roses, 2-3 ft. well-
rooted, $1.00 doz. Pussy wil-
low, 20c ea. Trailing arbutus,
galax, 25c doz. for sale or exc.
for white sacks. Mrs. W. D.
Davis, Mineral Bluff.
1000 nandinas, 2-3 in. $45.00.
Lugustrums, waxleaf and tall
growing, spirea, forsythia,
Flowering quince, $1.00 doz.
Ivy, vinea minor, verbena, $2.
e mols Woodruff, Greenville.
Wt:
Large, blooming size, tiger
lily bulbs, 1214c ea. Add post-
age. No checks. .Miss Mary
/} McIntyre, Calhoun, Rt. 2
Emperor and oe wax daf-
fodils, $2.50: large bulbs.
pink phlox, 25 doz. Tiger and
lemon lily bulbs, 15c ea. Add
oe Lora Shepard, Ellijay.
Red gladioli, 40c doz. Aprit-
biocoming narcissi,. white with
yellow cup, 30 doz. PP: Mrs.
ib.) Blhott Lavonia, Rtk.
20c doz. Cannas, 25c doz.
panese sunflower seed, 10c
large spn. Princess feather
seed, 10c spn. Christmas cac-
tus, 20c buneh. Mrs.
Mashburn, Cumming, Rt.
Large red and yellow can-
nas, 6, 95e. Crabapple, sweet-
shrub, 45c doz. All cols. aza-
leas, mtn. laurel, 50c doz. Won-
der Jew, 45c cutting. Golden
bell, 25c ea. Add postage. No
eng Miss Clara Fanist: Oak
i
2 cape jasminges, roosed, $l. 25
ea. both $2.00. White, peach,
salmon and red gernaiums,
ea.
Mrs:
Hed
Magnolia, tea-olive, cedar,
W atermelon. red crepe myr tle,
yellow jasmine, red holly.
Include cash with order.
J. 8). Sorrells:
Wednesday, November 1s
and cold in these moun- |
sweetshrub,
from the farms as soon as Pay hee finished |
FLOWERS AND<
FOR SALE
Small century plane 5
POS 25; Cpe ee tu
gs By Cc;
feed sacks, 2, 3-or 4 alike
of_holes. Mrs. Bettie Robe
Tallapoosa, Rt. a ah
Standing cypress,
gailardia, 25 doz. 2
Blue physostegia, 20c do
=
All cols. azaleas, 50e *
Mtn. laurel, white pine,
doz. Crabapple, dogwood,
sweetshrubs, 50
Goldenbell, 25c ea. Large
and yellow cannas, $1.00 f
No checks. Add postage
J. B. Farist, Oak Hill.
Azaleas, all cols. red m
dogwood, .
apple, yellow cannas, 50c.
Iris, blue and yellow, 45
Red and yellow japonica
ea. Add postage. Mrs.
Evans, Talona.
Well rooted evergreen
plants, Ie ea. Nandinas, li
spirea, pink and. white, |
Day lilies, (Dr. Regel =
var.) periwinkle, ground
te eae 10c ea. Mi
NY
Daffodils, deep cream >
orange cup, $1.00 C. S)
scented cluster yellow,
Mixed bulbs, long tru
white narcissi, others,
misty blue, $1.50 C. 1
iris, 20 dif. cols, $1.00 doz
teria, large, 753c ea. Mrs.
Jones, hula Rt..2.
Weeping willows, 1
black walnut, 25c ea.
pomegranate, 2 yrs. old, 35
Native cedar, 4 yrs. old.
ea. Add del. in Ga. A. J
ton, Newborn.
Tea-olive, magnolia,
watermelon red crepe m
yellow jasmine, sweet
golden seal, grancy greyb
wateroak, 1 ft. Wess fe
it. 45e; 5 ft. 45c. Add post
No checks. Mrs. James
nell, Toomsboro.
Well rooted boxwood, |
$5.00 C. 6-8 in. $7.50
25c.ea. Blue and lavender iris;
Jonquil and narcissi bulbs,
Ja
oo
$2)
Royston, :
- markets in easy trucking distance of these towns,
Also peach, eae plum trees
red, yellow and bronze scup-
spernon black | muscadine
vines, $2 50 -doz.* Mrs. C. B
oO these markets from these US mining
ote Bowdon, Rt. 2.
sweetshrub, golden seal, water-
cak, Grancy Greybeard, 1 ft.
We Bott: 25ce.7i4- tt. 456. Add
postage. No checks. Mrs. Dee |
Colson, Toomsboro.
gustrums, Cherokee rose
ter jasmine, butterfl
bridal wreath, crepe myrtle
doz. $5.00 C. Blanche | W
ruff, Greenville.
All cols. azaleas, red
sweetshrubs, dogwood, 65.
Holly, white pine, rho
dron, laurel, $1.00 doz.
bell, yellow and red jap
weigelieas, aoe spider
10c ea. Mrs. L. M. Teagu
jay.
Rhododendrons, mtn. lau
red. and white dogwood,
buds, red maples, pink bl
ing crabapple, yellow p
holly; azaleas, red, ye
white orange, 3-4 ft. $1.0
Well rooted. Mrs. Ethel
tain, Morganton, Rt. 1.
Privet hedge, blue.
50c C. Goldenglow, ora
lilies, white daisies, 50
Weeping Willows, aa
pussy willow, brida
silver maples, 25c ea., 5,
Exe for printed. feed
Martha Ralston, Ella Ga
Hedge plants, ce
9-12 in. le ea. Any m
PP. -Mrs. Wi Hi. Lacy
Mountain.
Perennial sweet pe
cols. 2 yrs. old tubers
doz., 6, $1.00. Mrs. M. P.
Washington. ae
Elephant ear bulbs,
erepe myrtle, snowbal
and white lilac, peacht
yellow thornless rose, $1.2
15 ea. Jonquils, $1.00 do
for ee chicken feed
Miss L. M. White, Dabl
Rt, 1 Box 3 ie
Fragrant lemon
doz. Blue Roman hyacint
ea. Evergreen runnin,
John Wort, 15c ea. Root
cuttings, 1c ea. Add post
orders less than $2.00. |
M. McMillan, Palmetto.
Peonies, red; pink, -
white lilac; pink almon
ea. Iris, 50c doz. orang
lilies, $1.00 C. Tuberroses
spider lilies later. Mr
Thomas, Adairsville.
Well rooted evergreen
plants, $1.00 doz.
$1.00. King Alfr ed
bulbs, 50c doz. Paper,
'No_ checks.
Mes coe lev
dersville. he
Mrs. B. FE. Parks, Atl
Boe St., SE. Ma 7 7476.
Orange day 2s
ea. 35 doz. Jonqgui
FOR SALE
00 boxwoods, dwarf and
on, (vars. sizes) 25c to $5
place. Flowering shrubs
tbs. Mrs. S. P. Reed,
fell, Rt. 1. /
d spirea, snowbali, hardy
hydrangea, Christmas jas-
red trumpet honeysuc-
oxwood, azalea,_ peach-
roses, 10, $1.00... Jack-in-
iilium, pink thrift
M. L. Eaton, Dahlo-
1 oe
coming locust, Christmas
uckle, others too large
Take at low _ price.
Locust mailed, 35e and
4, Miss Ethel Arthur, At-
246 Ormond St., SE.
ce, large gladioli bulbs of
er vars. in white and cols.
doz. PP., in lots of 4-doz.
ore, Myrtice Moses, Waco,
whalls, white spirea, pink
, purple lilac, 25c ea.
ls. azaleas, iris, 50c doz.
and yellow japonicas, dog-
, 26c ea. Butterfly bush,
ea, Add_ postage. Mrs,
Moore, Ellijay, Rt. 2, Box
ue August lilies, 3, 45c.
woods, 6-12-15 in. high, 45c
and 60c. Sage plants, $1.25
ohn B. Grindle, Dahlo--
Pi Bos 5S:
planted, mixed, col.
hocks, 35c doz. Seed, 15c
in envelope. (if. you
p.) Violets, pink and pur-
roena, 25c doz. del. No
less $1.00. Mrs. Grady
Stone Mountain, Rt. 1.
andering Jew, white strip-
mall leaf, large leaf, 3, 50c.
75e doz. Dif. cols. tulips
oz. Boxwoods, 3 yrs. old,
0 ea. Add postage. No
} Mrs. W. M. West, Car-
Star Route.
d Heart cedar trees, 12 in.
8 in. 4, 25ce; 50, $2.00; $3.00
dd postage. Thomas H,
ands, Lula, Star Route.
ols. azaleas, iris, 50c doz
onicas, red and yellow; lilac
dogwood, 25c ea. Add post-
rs. Will Kinser, Iilijay,
w Dianthus (snappi,)
ines, all shades, Alaska
Dieners double fringed
daisies, hardy carna-
d, rose and white, $1.75
Summer-blooming _ iris,
p (Oriental,) huge.
mms, $2.25 doz. Mrs. J. KE.
ram, Jithonia, Lazidaze
larcissi, Chinese Sacred,
ens Koster, Diana Kasner,
d0c and 60c doz. Double
e, mixed sizes, 35 doz.
45c doz. April-bloom-
jonquils, $1.00 C. No chks.
: ay Collins, Smith-
verblooming yellow, thorn
, rose; azaleas, rhododen-
boxwoods, Globe and
er Arborvitaes, $3.00 doz.
matis, Forsythia, dogwood,
hea, $2.00 doz. Snowdrops,
tornia violets, $2.00 C. Mrs.
Penland, Ellijay.
uil and daffodil bulbs,
gal. Add postage. Mrs.
Timms, Atlanta, 989 Cas-
ve., SW. Am 1245.
denias, 2-3 ft. blooming
pirea, wax leaf Abelia,
donica japonica, bridal-
white English dog-
, white, red, lavender
be m@ rtle, 50c ea. Mrs. C.
mson, Greenville.
-exica large Gardenia
nes. Mrs. J. T. Sheppard,
e Mauntain.
ainbow tulip bulbs, 1 yr.
$5.00 C. No orders less
00 filled. Pink thrift, 40c
k verbena, well rooted,
Add postage. Myrtie
Douglasville, Rt. 1.
ight-blooming Cereus, 1 to
rs. old, 50c up. Large
plants, 25c ea. Miss S.
Cunningham, Atlanta, 553
iby St., SW
0 '
xwoods, 3 to 4 ft., $35.00
ot. W.. EK. Kalt, East
nt, 223 Pine Ave.
er white narcissi, yellow
juils, snowdrops, daffodils,
lilies, white Shasta daisies,
C.. Mrs. J. KE. Brigman,
lilies,. cuttings, white,
llow and pink, 75c ea.
nard lilies, 25c ea. Pot
_ lilies, 20c ea. Night-,
oming Cereus, 15c and 25c
oted. Pink geraniums: 3
double petunia, cuttings,
2, 2 Add postage.
Ga. Nunn, Crawford-
2
| dogwood, 10c ea. Aza-
15e ea. Boxwoods, 25c ea.
ogwood, 15c ea. Add
. Buster Daven-
ERS AND SEED |
: thas,
1 sweetshrubs, 75c
x
FLOWERS
"FOR
AND SEED |
SALE
African violets, small, well-
rooted plants, 25e. Larger, 50c
to $1.00 ea. Add postage. Mrs.
B. M. Moore, Tallulah Lodge.
Aris, mixed, all cols. 10-20
vars. Inc. Indian Chief, Gold
Imperial, Morning Splendor,
ete. $2.00 C. 300, $5.00. New
Margaret Mitchell, light claret
col. iris, $2.00 ea. 3, $5.00. PP.
No checks. Mrs. Will M. Jones,
Lyerly. ss
Giant red thrift, $1.00 doz.
Hardy oriental iris, dif. cols. 10
plants, $1.00. Very fine beard-
ed iris, 10, $1.00, Shasta dais-
ies, tuberoses, single, $1.00 doz.
Old fashioned - yellow cluster
narcissi, $2.00 C. Mrs. Carl C.
Holley, Atlanta, 3, 23 Memorial
Dr. SW.
Deuble lilac, pink almond,
hydrangea, tame honeysuckle
Weeping Mary, goldenbell, red
and white dogwood, 50c ea., 3,
$1.00. Lemon lilies, hardy
phlox, 40c doz. . Jonquils, daf-
Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Nandina bushes, strong, 1 yr.
old, 25 ea. Mrs. W. L. Beau-
champ, Williamson.
Tulips, mixed cols. 80c doz.
White Easter roses, Christmas
cactus, 3, 40c. Pink Radiance
roses, pink weigelia, Deutzia
limbs, 25c doz. Chinese.Sacred
lihes and peonies. Gladys
Duran, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Bridalwreath, Lady of Lake,
white narcissi, 25c doz. Purple
iris, galdenglow, 35c doz. Fors-
ythia, 50c_ doz. Blue ageratum
40c doz: French marigold, Red
Ridinghoed seed; 15c tobacco
boxful. Mrs. Clyde Logan,
Austell, Rt. 2.
Privet_ hedge, blue violets,
50c C. Orange day lilies, pur-
ple phlox, goldenglow, 50c doz.
Pink justicus, silver maple,
weeping willow, yellow japon-
icas, 25cea., 5, $1.00 del. Well
rooted. Exe. for printed feed
sacks. Mrs. W. D. Ralston, Ella
Gan.:
rarifty nandimas, 12 in. Well
rooted, 15c ea. Blooming size
white and yellow cluster nar-
cissi bulbs, 25c doz. Add post-
age. Annie Lou Richardson.
Hartwell. Rt. 3.
Double pink oleander, well
rooted, 37c ea; double red, dou-
ble yellow oleander, 6 cuttings,
not rooted, 20c. Double tube-
roses, large, 40c doz. Add 5c to
checks. Miss Mattie Collins,
Smithville, Rt. 1. ~
Camellias, azaleas, pyracan-
gardenias, Ligustrums,
Pittosporums, junipers, spireas,
tea-olives, nandinas, _ cherry
laurels, crepe myrtles, all kinds
shrubbery. State insp. Wyman
J. Pearce, Cairo, Rt. 2.
Red and pink begonia cut-
tings, deep red; salmon, Ameri-
can Beauty sultana cuttings, 8,
50c. Deep rose gladioli bulbs,
10, 50c. Del. No stamps. Ethe
Wright, Alto, Rt. 1.
All cols. azaleas, mtn. haga
white dogwood, red maple, re
buds, crabapple, 3-5 ft. $1.00
doz. Arborvitaes, 2 1-2 ft. $1.50
ea. Mrs. B. M. Milhollan, Mor-
ganton.
All cols. Bee, ea ae
i re maple,
apple te a vee. oa
e red-an
ers $1.00. No
Reece.
bell, 25c ea.
yellow cannas, 06,
checks. Mrs. Horace
Talona.
ink oxalis, 50c doz. (tubers)
PP. Large, well rooted Giant
pansy plants, Steels Jumbo
and Oregon Giant, 50, $2.00 C.
EF. E. Drewry, Brooks.
Blooming size bulbs, 3, 25c.
Blue ina 55c doz. Miss Grace
Mclane, Hartwell, Rt. 1. \
White dogwood, red maple,
laurel, crabapple, poplars, 3-9
ft. $1.00 doz. Arborvitaes, 2
ft. $1.50 ea. Mrs. Louise Payne,
Morganton.
Pansy plants, Giant Swiss, $2
Cc. $1.75 C, in lots 500 or more.
Ruth Harrell, Doerun.
Hedge plants, red running
rose, cactus, blue blooming jew
3 cols. geraniums, honeysuc-
kles, crepe myrtle, 1 ea. $2.00,
or 30c ea. Perpaid. Ira Boat-
right,/Alma, Rt. 4.
Thousands President ane
King Humbert cannas, peren-
nial pine in 14 distinct shades
and other beautiful _peren-
nials. Pearl Hudgins, Flowery
Branch.
Verbena, 5 cols. 25c doz. for
sale or exc. for mixed cols. aza-
leas. No orders less than $1.00.
Add postage. Mrs. Faris Mal-
com, Monroe, Rt
Sweef scented, white, cluster,
April-blooming narcissi, 75
Exe. for lilies, tulips, crocus of
everblooming roses. Miss Alice
ganton, Rt. 1, Box 34.
fodils, $1.00 C. Naomi Barnes, | P
'Mrs. Addie Wilson, Morganton.
all cols. azaleas, redbud, mtn. |
C.| holly, Acer Dasycarpum, dog-
.FLOWERS AND 5
| FOR SALE
.2 kinds spotted leaf c:
right size for winter poe 1
ea. Maple, white and pink
conch begonias, white and pink
oxalis, geranium cuttings, 5c
ea. White, purple iris, 20c doz.
Others, Mr : UC
Guinmming rs. Ralph Williams,
Yellow jonquil bulb
Miss Vena Brown, Martens .
Paper white narcissi. snow-
drops, 50c doz. Jonquils, daf-
fodils, Yellow May Narcissi, 25c
doz; rooted, red, white,\ pink,
purple double Altheas: "blue
es, Neer vier 50c
jardenia, $1.00. Mrs. E,
L. Stnith, Wadley. oF
cissi bulbs, $1.25 C. Orders for
100 or more bulbs PP in Ga.
Evelyn W. Seago, Pinehurst.
_Amaryllis, Black Lily of In-
dia, large, 75 ea; med. 35c
ea. White Fairy lilies, 50c doz.
Snowdrops, $1.00 C. $8.00 M.
ink crepe myrtle, purple lilac,
Altheas, well rooted, 35c ea.
Lemon lilies, $1.00 C. Others.
Add postage. Mrs. Gussie Con-'
ner, Villa Rica, Rt. 2.
Pink Christmas cactus, yel-
low Easter rose, purple lilac,
pink hibiscus, 15 ea; mix. cols.
tulips, tuberoses, 75c doz. Pur-
ple iris, 35 doz. Weigelia, rose
cuttings 25c doz. Mattie Dur-
an, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Azaleas, 45c doz. Mimosa,
o0c ea. ate almond, Eng-
lish dogwood, chrysanthe-
mums, 10c ea. Laurel, spruce
pine, Indian Arrowwood, $1.06
doz... 2 red hibiscus, 15 ea.
Crabapple, red maple, 20 ea.
Add postage. Mrs. Maude Far-
tat Wiley Rt 3
Boxwoods, 12-1 in. $2.00
doz. Anemones, 50, $1.00.
Shasta daisies, birdfoot violets,
Calif. violets, bronze lilies, $1
C. Yellow dogwood, laurelse,
redbuds, Cherokee roses, but-
terfly, crabapples, altheas, $1.-
25 doz. 10 rooted roses, $1.00.
x
Pink Radiance, Red Glory,
Paul Neyron, cream sunbrust,
roses, golden raintree violets,
goldenglow, tuberoses, 2c doz.
Mrs. B. H. Carter, Atlanta, 35
Weyman Ave., SW., Ph Ja
0268-W.
Pink hyacinth, bulbs, all
blooming size, $2.25 doz. Pa-
per white and double narcissi,
$1.00 doz. Exe. narcissi for
other bulbs. What do you
have? Willie Tanner, Flippen,
PO Box 65.
Bird of Paradise plants, large
40c ea. Add postage. Mrs. C
R. Sorrelis, Monroe, Rt. 1..
Yellow roses, 4-6 ft. $1.00 ea.
Wisteria, pink, 10 ft. $1.00.
White lilac, 4 ft. $1.00; small,
25c ea. Yellow woods vine, 50c
ea. Red honeysuckle, 50c ea.
Silver maple, 6 ft. $1.00. Bridal
wreath, Yellowballs, Snow on
Mountain, 4 ft. 50c ea. Mrs. J.
L. Coggins, Covington.
Iris (10 labeled) 50, $1.15;
mixed, $1.30 C. Palidma Dal-
mahea, 50, $1.20. Jonquils, daf-
fodils, 200, $1.20. Narcissi,
cream, white, yellow, $1.10 C.
Beacon, 25; 60c. Peonies, mix-
ed, 4, $1.10. Mrs. J. M. Hall,
Calhoun, Rt. 1,
Field grown boxwoods, 6 in.
to 3 ft., 10c ea. to $5.00 each.
Transportation charges not pd.
Order or come. Mrs. Allie
Thaxton, Franklin, Rt. 3.
Mix. cols. hardy or peren-
nial phlox, mums, pink thrift,
25e doz; 2 of ea. tulips, tiger
lilies, red hot poker, cream,
purple, lavender, blue and
Spanish iris, gladioli, Jacohs
Ladder, all 75c. Red, yellow,
pink, spotted cannas, 6, 25c.
Mrs. John Blackwell, Dahlo-
nega, Rt. 1.
Nice, well rooted boxwoods;
red hot poker, var. lantana,
purple lilac, snowball, all root-
ed, all 20c ea. .Mrs. Mae Tur-
ner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
Dif. cols. iris, No. 1, 75e doz.
No. 2, 50c doz. No. 3, 2 doz. 50c.
Double yellow Humbert can-
nas, goldenglow, orange day
lilies, 30c doz. $1.85 C. Mrs. &.
B. Thornton, Bremen.
Boxwoods, priced. right.
Come see them. Mrs. J. M.
Mathis, Dahlonega, Rt. 3, Box
50.
White flags, day lilies, April
narcissi, jonquils, Star of Beth-
lehem, purple wisteria, for sale
or exc. for Madonna and Easter
lilies, feverfew, azaleas, bloom-
ing size. Mts. I. N. Johnson,
Manchester, 20 Third St.
Azaleas, arbutus, laurel,
galax, calico bushes, silver
maples, Ilex Opaca, hemlock,
white pines, rhododendrons,
wood. Others. Wet, moss pack-
EED |
_ Fragrant yellow cluster nar- | C
Cora Lingerfelt, Loving.
FLOWERS AND SEED
"BOR SALE
ey
day lilies,
gloves,
New Years bush, $1.00 doz.
7 J. B. Jones, Dahlonega,
snow drops, fox-
Double red,
8-10 yrs. old, 65c ea. Dif. cols,
azaleas, 2, 20c. $1.00 doz. Won-
ering Jew, 3, 50c. Maple, white
doz. Red, yellow and _ white
fall pinks, 50c doz. Add _ post-
rage. No checks. Mrs. Wesley
Reece. Cartecav.
Cannas: City Portland, Hun-
garian Pink, $6.00 C. Giant red,
$7.00 C. President Red, $3.00
C,. King Humbert, yellow, $2
Armenia, var. $2.60 C.
Shasta daisy plants, $2.00 C,
Vines of white wisteria, 6, $1.00
Mrs, J. R. Camp, Cordele.
Small White Fairy lilies, var.
running yard honeysuckle,
asparagus, 25c doz. Pink and
ble white spirea, pink althea,
10 in. English boxwood, an
white English dogwood, 40c ea.
Mautile Harrison, Bremen.
Royal Poncianas, 2 and 3 ft:
less than 50c. Add postage.
Prompt shipment. M. QO. only.
Ss E. G. Anderson, Baxley,
_ 3 kinds coleus; red begonias,
red geranium cuttings, 10c ea.
for sale or-exc. for ferns, lace,
Boston, Roosevelt, sword, Os-
trich plume. Mrs, Oe
Quinn, Surrency, Rt. 2:
White narcissi, yellow. jon-
quils, $1.00 C. August lilies, 3,
$1.00.. Purple iris, orange day
lilies, 3 doz. $1.00. Add postage.
Mrs. Clara. Prince, Demorest,
Rt. 1, Box 14.
_ Pink thrift, well rooted, 50c
doz. Gladioli bulbs, peach col.
6, 25c. Yellow narcissi, 25c doz.
Mrs. Cromer McCurley, Hart-
well, Rt. 2.
200 blooming size _gladioli
bulbs, $1.00 C. 100 smaller size,
50c C. Mrs. T. G. Fleming,
Athens, Rt. 1.
Verbena, red, pink and
ple, 35 doz; 3 doz. $1.00. Si
of Bethlehem, 50c C. Pink
ageratum, 12, $1.00. Sage
plants. Mrs. Burell Bennett,
Alpharetta, Rt. 1.
- 1000 cape jasmine cuttings,
4c ea. Mrs. H. B. Ford, La-
vonia. | a
* Globe arborvitaes 1% ft. $1.
ure
Silver arborvitaes, 2 ft. $1.00
ea. Dwarf boxwoods, $2.00
ea. Palma _ violets, 50e doz.
Snowdrops, $1.00 C. Narcissi,
25e doz. Shasta daisies, $1.25
Mrs. W. M. Garren, Mor-
ganton.
Abelia (rooted) $1.00 ea. John
Ginn, Hartwell.
300 boxwoods, $1.50 ea. FOB.
Solon Ware, Woodbury.
Trumpet daffodils, yellow
and white narcissi, yellow jon-
quils, mixed, 75c C. Double
Hemerocallis lilies, 2 doz. 50c.
Day lilies, 200, $1.25. PP. Mrs.
is Powell, College Park,
Crabapple, butterfly bush,
laurel, redbud, all cols. azaleas,
dogwood, roses, bridal wreath,
red maple, 4 ft. $1.50 doz. Pink
anemones, per. phlox, shasta
cissi, $2.00 C. Sadie Wilson,
Blue Ridge.
All cols. azaleas, 50c doz.
White pines, hemlock, rhodo-
dendron, $1.00 doz. Snow-
balls, lilac, spider lilies, 30c
ea. Add postage. Mrs. lee
Kinser, Ellijay, Rt. 2, Box 90.
Single and double yellow
Kerria. Red flowering pear,
forsythia, all rooted, 3 plant
$1.00. Charges pd. Mrs. W. W
Trimble, Adairsville.
Collection bulbs $1.00 (inc. 4
blue Roman hyacinths; 3 blue
Dutch hyacinths; 3 tiger lilies,
6 double daffodils.) April nar-
cissi, jonquils, 80c C. Del. 2d
zone. No checks. Mrs. Annie
Fee LaGrange, Rt. 4, Box
79,
Jonquils and buttercups, 70
PP. for sale or exs. for dried
on
we
peaches or pears. Miss Mar-
garet Hollaway, Thomaston,
Rt, 2:
Red flowering quince, white
althea, rhododendron, 20c ea.
Pink flowering lotus, 25c_ ea.
Azaleas, red and white dog-
wood, crabapple, 75c doz., Ar-
borvitaes, 30c ea. Mrs,
Blue yellow iris, double yel-
low day lilies, 5 doz. Mixed
gladioli, $1.00 C. Small red iris,
Yoc.doz. Sweet almonds, fors-
ythia, goldenchain, purple but-
terfly, 25c ea. Pink and white
monthly roses, 50c_ ea. Add
ed. List mailed. Gordon Hun-
Stokes, Jasper, Rt. 3, Box 3.
ae
nicutt, Tallulah Falls.
JEllijay, Rt. 3.
| FLOWERS AND SEED |
Jonquil bulbs, Tc C. Orange |
25c doz. Summer cedar, |
yellow japonicas | L
pine, 75c doz. Sweetshrubs, 50c |}.
Crt
| white rooted hydrangeas, dou-.
yellow forsythia, pink abelia,| De]
lars,
25e ea. No orders filled for] 9
and pink
tar | $1
laurel, azaleas, crabapple, hem-<
daisies, white and yellow nar-| pp
FORSALE
a
Pink verbena lac 6 tins ae
clump. M. O, only. eae
Carter, Valdosta Melrose St.
Yellow and white jonquils
double butter and e Be
long trumpet daffodils, $1.25 C,
arge pansy plants, mixed cols.
40c doz. Chinese pinks, mix.
cols. $1.00 C, iss Nora Mc-
Curley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Orchard yellow tulips 00
doz. Yellow. and pune ee
50c doz. All cols. azaleas, 1.06 4
doz. Jonquils, 25 doz. Blue _
Weeping Mary, 3-4 ft. 25c ea.
Crabapple, poplar, dogwood,
Pe 2% Add Postage. 2 ae
C . Mrs. J, H. ns, Elli-
eee Evans, Elli.
Bird of Paradise, $1.00 each,
Sweetpeas, mix. cols. 50c Son
mix cols, Chinese pinks, phlox,
$1.25 C. White and yellow jon.
quils, double butter and eggs,
daffodils, $1.25.C. Miss Mattie
ee
McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. 2
Shasta daisies, ni
plants, 40c doz. Se
rooted
3 doz. $1.00;
el. No orders less than 1 LOZ.
Lj Pearman, Pavo> Rt,
=
Verbena
. all. col ge:
(rooted.) corors. tOc Ham.
Ragged robin plants.
doz. Trailing and bone
coleus, 10c ea, Elephant ear,
15c ea. 2, 25c. Mrs. J. W. Ing=
ram,. Commerce, Rt. 4. |
Mix. cols. hardy phlox, mums _
pink thrift, day lilies, 25 aor ;
Tiger lilies, red hot poker,
Spanish iris, mixed: hibiscus, 4,
25c. 2ea. blue Siberian an
other cols. iris, all for 60c. Blue
winter verbenas, 6,
25c. Add postage, Mrs. Willis
Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt. ie
Beautiful boxwoods, 8-10 in.
above ground, $10.00 C, 12-15
in 25 ea. White Eng. dogwood,
3-4 ft. 50c ea. Gardenias, $3.00
doz. Watermelon red and
white cepe myrtle, $2.00 doz.
Searlet red and white peren<
nial verbenas, 60 doz. Mrs. i.
L, Robinson, Greenville. _ a 5
Hastings giant pansy plants,
50 doz. Hastings mixed. col.
delphiniums, 50c doz. Blue
feathers hyacinths, $1.25 doz.
Double butter and eggs, white
and yellow Jonquils, dattodils, S
: . Miss ~MeCur!
Hartwell, Rt. 2. pee a
_ Yellow jonquils, white nar-
cissl, Orange day lilies, 75e C,
Mixed cols. violets, 50c C. Pink
althea, pink almond, goldenbell
10c ea. Evergreen yellow jas-
mine vine, 4, 25c. Buttercups,
foxgloves, 15 doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. Will James, Elli-
jay, Rt. 3, Te
Red and white dogwood, mk
lock, $1.00 doz. Pussy willow,
rhododendron, 20 ea. Tigers
lilies, galax, goldenglow, 35
doz, Add postage. Exc. for
sacks. Mrs. C. W. Roper, Min
eral Bluff, a
Umbrella china,
tea-olive, red and white dog
wood, cedar, yellow jasmine,
sweetshrub, greybeard, re
holly, crabapple, 1 ft. 10c; 3 ft.
25e; 4 ft. 35c. 5 ft. 40c. Add
postage. Mrs. Alma Colson,
Toomsboro, Rt. 2. e
Mixed cols. azaleas, dogwood,
sweetshrub, crabapple, 75c doz,
Weeping willow, Indian arrow,
red, yellow japonicas, pink, red
white spirea. Pink weigelia,
purple lotus, buddlea, 25 ea.
in Ga. Mrs. J. B. Williams,
Ellijay, Rt. 2.
Rhododendron, laurel, spruce
and white pines, $1.00 doz. All
cols. azaleas, 50c doz. Red and
yellow japonicas, 30c ea. Add
postage, Mrs. C. W. Plumley,
Ellijay, Rt. 2, Box 88. |
Mtn. laurel, rhododendron,
red and white dogwod, azaleas,
redbud, red maple, holly, crab-
apple, all well rooted, 3-4 ft.
$1.00 doz. Johnson Chastain,
Morganton. pe
Mimosa trees, 6-24 in. 25-
ea. Umbrella chinas. 25c to 50c
ea. Gladioli bulbs, butter and_
eggs, 25c doz. Purple wisteria,
15c ea. Crepe myrtle, 20c doz.
Mrs. B. Brady, Cairo, Rt. 1,
Box 132.
Wild Easter lily, Star of
Bethlehem bulbs, | $1.00 C
Sweetbay, greybeard, galiberr
dogwood, long straw pine, red_
holly, umbrella china, liveoaks,
3 ft. 20c: 5 ft. 40c. Add post<
age. Exc for sacks. Mrs. T. K.
Womack, Dublin, Rt. 4.
A
Azaleas, mtn. laurel, red and
white dogwood, crabapple, mt..
pine, $1.00 doz. Exc. for feed
sacks. Add postage. Mrs. C.
F. Barton, Mineral Bluff.
Calendulas, double, mixed,
stock and dianthus, 35c doz.
Mrs. J. L. Way, Albany, 320 Ne
Broadway. ena:
Thrift, $1.25 doz. Jonquil, |
25e doz. Add postage on orders,
magnolia,
postage. Mrs. Pearl Garrett,
$Dahlonega, Rt. 1. _
No checks. Ancel Grindle,
2, 50e doz. orange day li-
;. yellow narcissi, double
og Humbert cannas, dif.
ols. and types chrysanthe-
mums, Jap. sunflower, 35c doz.
xe. for 100 Ib. print feed sacks
-of kind, without holes.- Mrs.
th Head, Bremen.
Japonicas, lilacs, all sizes,
yell rooted, 25c and 35c each.
for f uit aoe or other
rs. O. M. Mullinax,
ul Neyron_ roses, abelias,
altheas, bridal
sal 2 VCs strong plants,
a: PP. Mrs. Jennie De
aah Townsend, Reo Ly
sa bushes, 25e to $3.00. All
oming size and large. Ex-
wess. only. PP., in Ga. Also
tor beans, 50c qt., $1. oe gal.
E. Eason, Austell, Rt.
Lemon lilies, $1.25 C. Ge
arcissi, King Alfred jonquils,
1.50 C.. Yellow dahlias, 3, 25c.
dd postage. Martha Womack,
remen, Rt. 2, Box 80.
ris, mixed, 20 cols. 25, 40c.
ight blue violets, 40c C. Abe-
juniper, arborvitae, 20c ea.
ic. Pink and white Spirea,
doz. Purple wisteria, pur-
je lilac, goldenball, pink myr-
Forsythia, others, 65e doz.
: Henry Eller, Ellijay, Rt.
2 Pyramid arborvitaes, 12
i 15c. ea. Forsythia,
Pink. bachelor button
aaa 5e and. stamped env. No
checks. Mrs. R. H. Whelchel,
Dawsonville, Rt. 3.
white iris,
50 Dwert Suffruticosa: Ss
90d, 15-20 in. above ground;
2 in. thick, heavy roots,
oS ea. at my place. State
- Come after them, pre-
oe Ponce. double butter
nd ege bulbs, le ea. Garden
sage, 15e bun.; 2, 25c. Catnip,
t permint, 3. bun., 20e.<-AdG.
Miss Lena Crump,
vhite pines, hemlock, $1.00
z. Azaleas, / iris, 50c doz.
A japonicas, 25 ea. Crab-
dogwood, ivy, laurel, 25c
z Add postage. Mrs: Pearl
tover, Talona.
Nice white pines, holly, oe
vy, 25c ea. Rose bushes, 15c
* Green long leaf mt. fern,
B0c doz. Spearmint, star grass
lants, 25 doz. Horseradish,
0c doz. Add postage. Mrs.
resley Fowler, Diamond.
ris, 5 fall bloomers, i $1.00.
abeled, 10c ea.; mix. iris,
r iris, $2-00 C. White cal-
lifes. 10c, 25c and 50c ea.
: mall, $1. 00. 5 amaryliis,
1.00. Add postage. Mrs. S.
M. Gunter, Lawrenceville, Rt.
{ibiscus, blue, yellow iris,
ses, ver ena, -almond, 10c ea.
ardy phiox, foxgloves, day
ies, 25e doz. Add postage.
nps accepted. Mrs. Tamar
Teem, Talking Rock.
epocquils. grape hyacinths, 2c
ea. Also large, early straw-
berries, $1.00 C plants. Also
rhite guano sacks, rinsed, let-
ers not removed, 30c ea. Mrs.
C, Taylor, Buchanan.
Blackberry lilies, chrysan-
naemums, 30c doz. Hardy
phlox, 5G C07.. Blue iris,
range day lilies, 2 doz., 25c.
White -bridalwreath, 932 25e;
Add postage. Mrs. I. A. Wood-
, Alto.
iow rambler roses, 3 yrs,
d, $1.00 ea. 'Goldenbell, for-
ythia, blooming size, 2, 25c.
P rple wisteria, 20c ea. Hibis-
, white with red centers, 150
eds, oe Miss F. B. Moore,
.
eric: bulbs; mixed, hy-
brid Meade strain, % in, 3c;
,in., 4c ea. P.P. on orders of
00. Bulblets, 2c ea. Joseph
DunNett, Sandy Springs.
pice ae
t. laurel, Wwitite pine, red
white > dogwood, azalea,
her ee roses, ivy, 2-3 ft.,
ooted, $1.00 doz.
reas heartease, 25c
_Exe. for_ white sacks.
di Davis, . Pes tidee!
Pubs iris No. 1, 75c doz.
| via, 3 clmps.,
7 blooming roses, $1, 95 ea.
Trailing ar- |
AEE
ED | FLOWERS AND SEED
= FOR SALE.
Orange. day lilies,
Bethlehem, wild purple iris,
fxelove; (Se... Co Shasta
daisies; soc doz. FP ink= and
peach gladioli, 75c doz. Sweet-
shrubs, purple and pink al-
theas, azaleas, Weeping Mary,
yellow jasmine, 2, 25c: Exc.
for sacks. Mrs. N fancy Hender-
son, Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box 49.
Wonder lilies (cream fol-
lage), 3, 25c. Hardy blue sal-
25c.. Variegated,
bronze, pink, white and purple |
iris and tuberoses, 25 doz.
Mrs. W. M. Vickers, Siloam.
Red spider lilies, 40c doz.
Imp. Hearts-Elder daisies, 60c.
doz. Nandinas, bearing stock,
5-6.-in.y .$1.50 doz.: 8-10: in,
$2.50 doz. Pure single and
double yellow daffodils, 60c
doz. Others. Add postage.
see Claudia Plant, vo
ville
Monthly roses, large Sie
40c-ea.; crepe myrtles, water-
melon pink, $1.00 doz.; pepper-
mint, spearmint, balm, oy doz.
Large sage, 5 for 50c: for
$1.00: 2 Py Pon 350c ie.
Mrs. A. Horsley, rae: Rt, 2,
Box 40. :
Pansy plants, Super Swiss
and Canadian Giants; Jumbo,
largest pansy, 35c doz.: $2.10
C;-- Add. exe. to checks. P.Ps
in: Ga. Mrs.-F.. Ve Combs,
Washington.
Azaleamums, cameo pink,
75e doz. City of Portland can-
nas, pink, $1.00 doz.
lace vine, 40c ea., $1.00 doz.
Double Day lilies, 50c~ doz.
| Daffodils, butter and _ eggs,
aes Add postage. No
stamps or checks. Mrs. Miles
T. Tanner, Sandersville. .
Coralberries, ~hedge bushes,
silver leaf maples, ALE BS 256;
-| Trailing - arbutus, evergreen
-| galax, 20c doz. Butter and
eggs, 15c doz. Miss Belvie
Holland, Mineral Bluff.
All cols. blooming size aza-
leas, 60c doz. oxwood, ar-
borvitae, double yellow japon-
ica, red hibiscus, althea, snow-
ball, almend, white lilac, 25
ea. Pink rose, perennial phlox,
lemon and tiger lilies, 15c ea.
No checks. Add _ postage.
Martha Eller, Ellijay, Pte:
Snowballs,
berries, plums, Easter pee
bridal wreath, Hlae.= 25e=
Azaleas, 50c ea. Winter ans
water moss, 50c doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. Leolar Evans, Ta-
lona. :
Ciinbing lies DOG ea=
Striped lilies, wine with white
stripe, white. with wine strive,
40c ea. Cannas, red, ylllow,
red with yellow, salmon, 2, 25.
Snow white spider lilies, 25
ea. Dainty red Chinese iris,
$1.00 doz. Mrs; Maude Gran-
ger, Reidsville.
-Privet hedge, aoe rooted,
$2.00 C. 6 dif. cols. double
geranium euttings, maple be-
gonia, 10c ea. Add postage.
Mrs. A. P. Gladden, Talla-
poosa.
20 Irish junipers, 2% ft.,
$1.25 ea.: $25.00 for lot. Also
want to exc. white red eyed
peas for large peanuts and
butter beans. Syrup cane seed
for sale. J. E. Spain, Rock-
mart: Rt. 2.
Single ble hyacinth bulbs,
oe 00 . Add postage. Mrs.
. L. Carter, Lula, Star Route.
Azaleas, 50c doz. English
dogwood, snowballs, red and
yellow _.japonicas, apricot
plums, May cherries, black-|-
gums, maple, poplar, 25c ea.
Add postage. Mrs. L. F.
Evans, Talona.
White pine, foe $1.00
doz. Azaleas, 50c doz. Snow
balls, dogwood, yellow and
red japonicas, lilac, althea,
crabapple. Add postage. Mrs.
Maybell Wright, Talona.
All cols., blooming size aza-
leas, 60c doz. Perennial pink,
rose phlox, iris, 20c doz. Pink
and white altheas, double pink
almond, 25c ea. Laurel, rho-
dodendron, crabapple, sweet-]
shrub, Indian Arrow, dogwood,
$1.00 doz. Ferns, galax, 50e
doz. Add postage. Mrs. Hen-
ry Waddell. Ellijay, Rt. 2.
Iris, pink, blue and white,
lemon dilies, Jacobs Ladder,
mixed or all one color, $1.15 C.
Cash. No CODs. Mrs. H. O.
Padgett, Atlanta, 160 ee
Sty bs W.
Yellow sonal double Date
ter and eggs, $1.00 C. Water-
melon pink crepe toe 25
ea., or 6, $1.00. Mrs.
Srump, Hartwell, Rt. L
x BEES
me et
Star of}
Silver
| Exc. for. sacks.
winter huckle- :
| laurels,
| pine, butterfly bush, $1.50 doz.;
jax, Mtn. fern. 35 doz.
1 del.
-azaleas, 2-3 ft.,
FLOWERS AND SEED |
_ FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE | ae OR SALE MACHINERY F OR SAL
sare oe <7 oe al: single. and | - F-20 tractor, ve one
apple; plums, yellow jasmine,
crepe myrtle, silver leaf ma-
ple, 1-to 4 ft., 10c to 35c ea.,
plus postage. Ivaline Connell,
Toomsboro. Rt. 2.
Red and yellow azaleas, rho-
dodendrons. mtn. laur els,
hemlock, crabapple, silver
maples, redbud, strawberry
bush, tulip poplars, 2-3 ft.
$1, 00 doz. Fall pinks, blue
itis; snowdrops, daffodils, $2.00
Mrs. Bonnie Abercrombie,
Mineral Bluff.
Mtn. laurel, * bridal wreath,
dogwood, red maple, tulip
poplar, white pine, coralberry,
2-4 ft. $1.25 doz. P. P. Star
of Bethlehem, day lilies, shas-
ta daisies, galax,- $1. 25 H,
Leila Dickey, Morganton.
Red and yellow azaleas, rho-
dodendrons. mtn. laurels, hem-
lock, tulip poplars, red buds.
crabapple, pink Cherokee
roses, 2-3 ft., $1.00 doz. Fall
pinks, snowdrops, blue iris,
$2.00 C. Mrs. Gladys Robin-
son, Minerall Bluff.
Daffodils, orange day lilies,
Star of Bethlehem, wild iris,
(purple with yellow petal), 75
C. Old-fashioned gold button
mums, deep purple verbena,
25 doz. Pink hardy hibiscus,
double pink almonds, 2, 25c.
Add postage. Mrs. Mollie
pos oe Rt. 3, Box
ors.
~ Boxwood, common var., 5
tO; d211; 50-10 30G, 64,3 In 16
Of In. 30C.d0Z.2 $295 Co Add
postage. Mary. Condor, Pal-
metto, Box 73.
Euonymus, Roses, 20 -ea.:
Lantana, Angel Trumpet, Abe.
lia, Boxwoods, Butterfly bush,
dubl. white, pink ae ing
almonds, babybreat snow
garland, St. Johns Worth 15
ea. 5c extra postage. - Exe. for
sacks. Mrs. oe ivy Lewis,
Toomsboro.
Azaleas, mtn. laurels, hem-
lock, erabapples, red, white
dogwoods,- red maple, $1.00
doz.; Cherokee rose, pussy
willow, sweet shrubs, rhodo-
dendrons, 20e ea.; goldenglow,
evergreen galax, Tiger lilies,
tansy, 35 doz. Add postage.
( Hazel Roper,
Mineral Bluff.
Crabapples,
red maple, sweet shrub. Mtn.
rhododendrons, white
trailing arbutus, evergreen ga-
Ger-
trude Roper, Mineral Bluff. i
Pussy willow, sweet shrub,
red dogwoods, erabapples, mtn.
laurels, rhododendrons, - red
maples, white pines, butterfly
bush, $1.50 doz.: galax, Mtn..
ferns, trailing arbutus, 35e doz.
Exe. for sacks. Mrs. Belle
Barnes, Mineral Bluff.
Crabapple, redbud, dogwood,
yellow forsythia, 3; 50c: Shasta
daisies, single, yellow daffo-
dils, April Blooming narcissi,
ooh 95 C; peppermint plants.
35c doz. No checks nor stamps.
| Mrs. Mattie Killingbeck, Mor-
ganton.
Butterfly bush. Spirea, Bri-
dalwreath, purple lilac; winter
jasmine, Peachtree rose, flow-
ering quince, 15 ea.: 2 for 25c,
Mrs. JA: Wilson, Mar-
Er .
Giant, blooming size, Milk
and Wine lilies, 3 for $1.00;
Lemon, Fairy, Madonna and
dbl. Bronze lilies, some of ea.,
8 for $1.00 P. Po Myrtle Pace,
apa Rie Je
Jonquils, daffodils,
es lilies, purple
75c C; lilac, snowballs, wei-
gelas, yellow japonicas, red
flowering japonicas, red aza-
leas, 25c ea.; winter pinks, 20c
doz. Add pastage. Mrs. Frank
Pards, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Pink thrift, good
$1.00 C.; 500, $3.00: $6.00 M.
Large, undivided clumps, 25c
ea. Postpari. Prompt ship-
ment. Write for prices on
larger lots. Mrs. C. G. Grizzle,
Cummyng, Rt. 2. :
Red and white dogwood,
Cherokee roses, crabapple,
Mtn. laurel, white pine, ivy,
well rooted,
$1.00 doz.; pussy willow, 20c
ea. Exc: for white feed sacks.
Mrs. Clifton | Davis, Mineral
Bluff.
Mtn. * laurel, ivy, Cherokee
roses, azaleas, red and white
dogwood, -crabapple, white
pine, 2-3 ft., well rooted, 20c
ea.; galax, trailing erbutus,
heartease, 25c doz. . Exc.
white feed sacks. Mrs. Ww. D.
orange
king Iris,
Davis, Mineral Bluff. *,
piste te
eee 5 Byte
: 2
ioe
red Be can:
roots, |
nille, Rt. 2.
double day lilies, 35c doz.;
$1.25 C: 300. $2.50. Mrs. Newt
E. Spence, Carrollton, Rt. 5.
FLOWERS AND SEED
WANTED
Want small, sweet yellow
narcissi bulbs, flowers bunch-
ed on'single stem. E. L. Fick-
ling, Macon, 713 Second St. ~
Want 24 old English box-
woods, 42 ft. high. Price must
we reas. Mrs. A. E. Paris, Rome
ie
Want sev. thousand bulbs of:
pink Picardy gladioli. St ate.
price. Mrs. V. Carter, Whites-
burg. A
~Want to exc. 1000 baby glad-
ioli-bulbs at ic ea., red bloom,
(will bloom: Ist yr.) for large,
white, yellow or lavender
chrysanthemums,-large gladioli
light pink or red. hardy phlox
or Sweet Williams. W. H.
Johnson, Decatur, 135 Coving-
ton, Rt. 2.
Want sev. doz. large daisy
plants. Also want sev. aspara-
gus plants; Eftie- Caldwell:
Hawkinsville, 105: Darby St.
Want some Jersey Beauty,
Kathleen Norris and Thos.
Edison dahlias. Will exc. 2 yrs.
abelia, Lauren Koster narcissi
for above. Mrs. T. C. Bee, New-
nan, Rte 3:
Want dif. oes tulip bulbs.
J. R. Gardner, Locust Grove.
Want 1 red Chirstmas cac-
tus; well rooted... Mrs: i -V:;
| Johnson, Cedartown, Rt. 3. :
Want Rex begonia, Star be-
gonia, flufty- ruftle fern, white
and yellow monthly blooming
rose bushes, dahlia bulbs, nan-
dinas, japonicas, cape jasmines.
Mrs. Ed Harper, Fitzgerald, oll
Oemulgee St.
Want wild Roosevelt fern,
wild begonia, wild geranium,
yellow violets, trilium, yellow
wild iris, bitterroot and blood-
root plants. Miss Annie Mc-
Daniel, Rome, 3 Woodcrest
Drive.
Want large number tiger lily
bulbs. Dr. -C..C. Harrold, Ma-
con.
Want cuttings various Coleus
and sultanas. Mrs. J. W. Hen-
drix, Statesboro, Rt. 2.
Want some seaweed. Buy or
exc. water lilies for some.
Each pay postage. Sgt ue
Adams, Bogart Rt.
- Want all kinds 2
State best price on large amt.
Also cut flowers. Mrs. R. S.
Hudson, Decatur, 952 Church
Street...
Want some early, hardy
chrysanthemums. that bloom
in Sept. or early October. Do
fe want cushion mums. Mrs.
H.W. Law, Chul a.
Want cypress (standing)
plants or seed. Mrs. James F.
ee Albany, 1108 Seventh
ve
Want. 3 large, well shaped
magnolias, over 12 ft. del. Mrs.
Arthur K. Adams, Dunwoody.
Ch 1087. |
Want 2 or 300 jonquil bulbs.
State price del. to me. Ad-
dress A. S. Thompson, Atlanta
3, 406 V olunteer Bldg. ;
sey Beauty dahlia bulbs for
next years planting. Mrs. W:
H. Godwin, Warm Springs.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
/
~ Model B Allis Chalmers trac-
tor, new tires, cultivator and 5
H 20 disc J. D. harrow, 2-dise:
Athens breaking plow, all first
class cond. Willis Tanner, Ten-
Farmall cee F 20, rubber
on front, excellent mechanical
cond. $550.00 FOB farm. Mar-
vin Peed, Butler.
Riding cultivator, 1 disc plow
for 3 mules, ea. $30. 00; pr. good
mules, $300. O07: FCs Mthridge,
Hamilton, Rt. es
2 new Lilliston walking cul-
tivators, 1 or 2 horse, com-
plete set, cultivators and
planters for Allis-Chalmers: C
tractor 2 row.. J. C. McLean,
Millen. P.O, Box 637.
A 60 Allis-Chalmers All
crop. harvester, 1941 model,
needs few minor. repairs, $475..
Ri Campbell, White Plains,
af model Far mall tractor and
equipment, in jam-up_ cond.,
+ Verse: change-over, ysed
' Allis Chalmers C 2 row. trac
/Wellborn, Rock Springs. Co
Want Jane Cowl and Jer | -
M. Farmall tractor and pl
reasonable price. Curtis. Tum- ae
haul, suitable for parts for
milar tractor, $150.00.
within 100 mi. for $200. 00
Lee Nielsen, Douglas. 5
1 small hammer mill, N
A, Intl. Ne. 1 cond., also
power hay press, fair co
ae 00 for both at my farm. ie
. Smith, Fortson.
, sf
8. disc., 2-H. McCormicl
Deering dise, used 1 week, $4:
2-H. MceCormick-Deering wall
|ing cultivator, $35.00. Capt.
C. Crawford, LaGrange, Rt
3 HP gas. eng. also H
lespedeza combine, No. 10
ver 2H. turning plow and
Kelley duplex feed mill.
Polk, Jr.. Barnesville.
A second-hand 12 to 15
gas, eng.. in good order,
for grinding corn for
and feed, for sale. See.
Hurst, Luthersville.
Oil burner brooder, cap: 15
chicks, in. good cond., used
seasons, $12.50 here.
Newsom, Mitchell.
Turner hay press withot
motor or trampler, $100. 00.
B. Lewis, Alapaha.
2 sec. drag harrow, 50 ts
ea. $18.00; David Bradley 8
cultivating harrow, quick
son, $30.00: Oliver 2
board trailer tractor plow, se
power lift, crank depth re
Franklin, Lawrenceville, R
Oliver walking cultiva
with plows and harrows, $2! :
at my home, C. M. aes B
gart.
or outfit and all farming equi
ment, practically new, on far
1 mi. So. Unadilla, on Hwy. 2
41. Holland Peavy, Unadilla
Big farm bell, for sale.
ington cotton dropper for sal
H, T. Williamson, Soperton,
i:
1 Hercules stump pulle
ft. cable, 2 take-ups. Write. H
Ve Pylant, Atlanta, 4314
well Rd :
MACHINERY WAN
Want 45 buy a 15 ft.
packer for planting grain. Sta
what you have and ee
Ewell ~ Gay, Atlanta,
Spring St.. NW. Ve 7703
Want a Wil
140 bullets. hatch,
sractore:
ge:
| @.. Stephens, Gainesville, Ri
Want. tractor with: p
cultivating and turning ec
ment, J. D. or Farmall. Mu
be a 2 tractor on rubbe1
full details as to pric
cond: =D, A, Law, Chula,
Want 1 H. wagon at -
able price.| Blount. Morga
lanta, Rt. 8, Box 111, Ra:
Want 1 row tractor wi
tivating equipment.
Smith, Statesboro, Rt. 1.
Want tractor with pl
gears, tiller plow, etc.
model and make, and if on
ber. PPay right cash pr
Harvey Langdale, Sumne is
Will buy for sat good s
power driven cane mill,
or without evaporator. Ww
V. Larsen, Savannah,
- Want cheap for cash, Mo
oe
to match, that will sta
sround deep. What have y
W.S. Price, Harrison.
Want 20 disc sec. harro
good shape, for model B All
Chalmers; and a 1 or 2
duster. mule drawn, with
justable widths. W. C. Paj
Pembroke. Se
Want buy Ford tracto
Ferguson equipment. G
Reinhart, Dublin. s
Want. good So taenie
im good econd., within
Nashville. Arthur Jane
ville, Rt. 3.
Want a oe a tractor
W. Hooks, Macon, .
Lanier.
i
' Want good. oubice
cond., preferably wae
Deering No. 42, J. D.;
Chalmers; also grain ar
fertilizer ; atlachme Ss.
1
in, ee Rt. 2.
ants, now ready:
. 500, 1.50;, $2.50 M.'
3ermuda onion plants,
Collard,
. P. I. L. Stokes,
1 plants, 35c C; $2.00
Rooter sage plants, 25c
Blue plum sorouts, $1.00
p Pv.in eS Me Bey
proof E. J. Copenha-
md Ch cabbage
$250 M. Now ready;
iffin, Baxley, Rt. 4.
rooted, extra nice,
Big Jumbo strawberry
C. for orders 500
No checks. Mrs. H.
~ Gainesville, Rt. 1.
efield cabbage plants,
eady.
$2.25 M del. Guar. good
G._E. Waldrip, Gaines-
plants, $1.40 doz. Dry
80c gal. Ance Grindle,
mahi: b, Box 58.
cabbage plants,
500. $1.50: 300,
E. T. Clements,
f. Del.
eo,
is. W. frost-proof cab-
slants, Bermuda onions,
.00; 500, $1.30: $2.30 M.
Watson, Pitts.
s searlet everbear-
wherry plants (will
per. plant_ during
= 60e@3C:
r-bearing strawberry
~50c C. $4.00 M. Also
reg. rabbits, for sale
home. Mrs. G. L. Pir-
owery Branch, Rt. 1.
. W.. frost-proof cab-
plants; white Bermuda
plants. 300, $1.00; 500,
295 MPP. R. Chane-
W. cabbage plants,
ady, 500, $1.40; $2.60 M.
mpt shipment. Dewey
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
. cabbage plants,
500: 5$1:405- $2.25
10 M. lots. $20.00, at
xp. col. W. O. Waldrip,
Branch Ra te
WwW. Karly J. W: cab-
lants, 500, $1.50; $2.25
collard plants, same
All del. Prompt ship-
.Ma M. Crosby. Baxley,
bape plants, EK. J: and
W.. 30c C: 506, $1.40:
. Del. to 3rd zone: Full
Jl orders given special
ee Pittman, Bax-
, $2.50 M. Now
Prompt shioment, full
: oernen Griffin, Bax-
gs Ga. heading col-
C. del. Lim-
g apple trees, hlue
plum, $1.25 del. Govt
Few. old-fashioned clear
each trees (small), same
Mrs. Bovd |. Baggett,
Milles he:
-and Chas. W. cabbage
ts, strons and good, 30c C;
$1.40: $2.50 M. del. 3rd
Bottom special tobacco
enous!. for 100 yd. bed,
aved without rain; .300-
ed, $1.25 del. Otis Pitt-
Baxley, Rt. 4.
. red spring shallot on-
12 in a bunch, 10c_ per
. Now time to _ plant.
NG. Forester, Buford,
r more pure Ga. Sugar
d, 3-5 ft. lengths, $4.00
dred; also 2 fine stock
, purebred Cornish,
ize winning stock. wt.
2 \bs., 2 yrs old, $5.00
Johnnie Granger, Reids-
amoth Russian sunflow-
d, $1.00 gal., Okra seed,
.90 gal. postage paid. /
. Elliott, Lavonia.
fe nest onions, $1.25 gal..
nice, clean dried apples,
Vy
> patch oF PO) cane.
e, for sale. % mi. West
gerald. Mrs. J. M. Swear- |.
Fitzgerald, Rt. 2, Box
londike strawberry, nice,
mts, $1.50, 500; $3.00
J. H. Durand, Flowery
Rts =.
plants, $1.00 doz. at my
. Crew St., and Wey-
fe. Hutch Carter, At-
Weyman Ave., S. W-
500, -$1.25, | Ww
$2.00 M. at my
shipment.
| Mrs. W. @. Bryan, Turin, Rt.
lbs. Cuban Queen seed, $1.00
for lot. 1943-44 hatch. Luther
cleaned, no
Wekelicld cobbice gpa
now ready, prompt shipment.
500, $1.75; $2.50 M. ;
Volfe, Baxley, Rt. i oe
. Chas.
-
W. cabbage plants:
White Bermuda onion and Ga. |
Collard plants, $2.50 M
Good count. Mrs. T. P. Ree
wate, Arabi, Rt. 1, phone
All _ var. eabba e pl ;
$2.50 M; 500, $1.25: 200, She:
everbearing strawberry. $4.50
count, prompt shipment. he 500, $2.50; 200, $5955, All|
el. Prompt: shipment. Full
count. Now _readv. No COD.
Mrs. Ruby Lee Wilson, Bax-
ley, Rt--4.
Shallots (the greatest multi-
dlier of all onions), 35c C: $3.00
M; Feverfew. 25c doz.
J. M. Bobo, Hartwell. ~
- Nice size Washington as-
paragus roots, 25 for.75c: 50
for $1.25: $2.00 C. Postpaid.
- Toole, Macon, 33 Burton
Ga. and Heading cdllard
plants, 30e C: $1.75 M: collard
seed, 60c Ib: cabbage plants,
40c C; $2.00 M. L. A. Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Chas; Woe cabbade Slants.
500, $1.40: $2.60 M. Del. Prompt
Full count. Mrs.
yoo Crowe, Gainesville, Rt.
Early Klondike strawberry |
plants.-$1.00 for 150, del. <A.
D. Call, Ellijay; Rt 2. = -
Ga. and Heading collar
plants, now ready, $2.50 M.
Prompt shipment, good count.
H. G2 Evanse Chipley. Rt. 3:
Imp. Eldorado blackberry
plants, heavy bearers, 2. yr.
roots. $2.00 C: $15.00 M. Maude}
Hamby, Greenville, Rt. 3.
. Chas. W.* cabbage plants.
500. $1.30; $2.30 M. Del. 5 and
10 M. lots, $2.10 M. Exp..col.
Prompt shipment. E. C. Wal-
drip, Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.
Thousands of strong Ruta-
baga plants. ready; Ga. col-
lards, 60c C; white multiply-
ing and potato onion sets, 50c
at. $2.00 gal. Large or small
lots, all del. Mrs. H. V- Frank-
lin, Register.
SEED FOR SALE
2 gals. scallion onion but-
tons, $2.45 or 2 gals. old-fash-
joned shallots. 75 gal. Double
tansy, Catnip, 30c doz. bunches.
Add postage. No checks. Mrs.
Henry M. Jones, Lula, Rt. 1.
40 Ibs. nure Stone Mtn. wa-
termelon seed, hand-saved
from fine melons, 75 lb. del.
if lot is taken. Also 10 3-A
White. Minorca hens, 1943
hatch. $1.25 ea. del. in Ga.
as
Sev. thousand POJ seed
cane, $6.00 M. at patch. Sev.
bu. little two-crop peas, $5.00
bu. Red nest or mul. onion
sets; 5 Ibs. $1.25 prepaid. 100
bu. corn, $1.25 bu. at barn.
Thos. P. Trowell, Ambrose.
45 lbs. Cannonball and 150
lbs. Dude Creek watermelon
seed, $1.50 Ib. Hand-saved. 50
Ib. De. L. F. Easterlin, An-
dersonville.
-POJ seed cane, any amount,
1.00 C. at farm. Also 3 turkey
ee 3 hens, thrifty. $35.00
Holland, Byromville, Rt. i,
Box 165.
Clean, waite multiplying
nest onions, $1.50 gal. del.
Cash or M. O. Mrs. Grace ,
Murphy, Jasper, Rt. 2.
Blue Ridge mtn. tomato seed,
grows to 15 ft- 200 seed_cul-
ture inst: 200 certified Mar-
globe: 100 yellow pear tomato
seed, all, 5c. War stamps ac-
cepted. Will C. Smith, Pike.
8 Ibs. little prolific garden
pea seed, 45c Ib. W-L. Ogles-
bee, Girard.
1.00 gal. . Exc. for_any-
tae can use- Mrs. A. E. Whit-
mire, Cumming, RES 3:
- GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE
Hastings 100 bu. oats, pure,
and in new bags,
95 bu. and over,
oats, $1.10
Greenville,
recleaned.
$1.50 bu., "
$1.40 bu. Fulgrain
bu. O. F. Mathews,
Rt. 4. ;
Sanford wheat, pure, sound,
(recleaned), $1.85 bu. Lee Vic-
toria and Victorgrain oats, re-
smut, rust or Nox-
ious seed, $1.35 bu. Also: good,
Seed oats, in -
Mrs. :
sound mule, $75.00. R. D. Ta-
tum, Palmetto. . tees
Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
_ 2500 bu. Cokers Viotoretain
even Wt.=5 bu:
bags, $1.00 bu. FOB. J. D.
Duke, Fort Valley. - =
_ Cokers. clean, bright Vict-
orgrain seed oats, 2,000 bu. in
even wt. bags, $1.10 bu. FOB.
D. O. Lane, Fort. Valley.
Victotgrain seed oats, $1.10
bu. FOB. Runner ae vee
$20.00 ton. J. W. Lang, Omega.
Hastings 100 bu. seed oats,
$1.00 bu. New Sanford wheat,
$1.75 bu. You furnish bags.
Jas. B. Woods, Brooks. ~~
Sanford wheat,: $1.75 bu.
Rust-proof oats, $1.25 bu. Mrs.
~ W.. Ford, Lithonia; Rt. 1.
Good. briaht, pure turf seed
oats, $1.10 bu. Real good San-
ford seed wheat,
weevils, $2.00 bu.
Couch, Turin.
5,000 bu. Cokers Victorgrain
oats, $1.00 bu; Oats mixed
with Vetch, $1.00 bu. R. E.
Aycock, Monroe. ie
Peanut hay,
seed oats. seed
free from
Riley C.
*
seed wheat,
rye, Cannon
Ball and Cuban Queen melon
seed. L. G. Downs, Andersofr
ville. eas
- BEANS AND PEAS _
FORSALE
White rice peas, 15e Ib. Java,
10c Ib. Striped Half Runner
beans, 30c cupful; Jack beans,
10 doz. Mrs. Henry Eller, El-
Mia ate 3s
Little white mush peas, extra
early yellow corn seed, Perkins
long green pod okra seed, 25c
cupful; old fashioned cypress
frost blooming, catnip, dill, 10c
pkt: mustard, mix. kinds, 20c
ecupful. Add postage. Mrs.
Presley Fowler, Diamond.
Some good Crowder peas, 25
at. del. G. W. Akins, Gray-
mont. .
Red speckled Crowder peas,
20 Ib. in 10 1b. lots or more.
No checks. G. T. Brown, Ball
Ground. Rt..1. -
HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
Fancy grade strained honey,
case of 6-5 Ib. glass jars, $5.80
Cs. Money order. No chks. E.
J. Lewis, Nahunta.
Nice grade, spring. crop,
strained table honey, packed
24 1-lb. jars to case, $5.75 case
FOB. Write for lower price in
Jarge lots. Marcus D. May,
Pembroke. ee :
10 8-frame Queen and Drone
traps, $2.50 P. P..No checks.
M. O. only. Tom Kittle, Car-
rollton, Rt. 5.
44 stands bees, $3.00 ea. at
my hcme at Birmingham, 30
mi. N. Atlanta: also new bee
smoker and suit. Also 35 Ibs.
buckwheat. 25c lb. Charlie
Cook, Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
146 . cases. 6 5-Ib, and 38
eases, 12 214-lbs. of extracte
honey. Earl S. Gibbs, Willa-
coochee. :
Fancy grade strained honey.
case of 6-5 Ib. glass jars, $5.80
ease. MO,| No checks. E. J.
Lewis. Nahunta. .
1944 stand bees. Charlie C.
Cook. Alpharetta, Rt. 3. ~
Sey. gals, nice, extracted
honey. $1.50 gal. in glass jugs,
at mv home 4 mi. Hinesville.
Otis Wells, Hinesville, Rt. 1.
FRESH AND CURED
MEATS FOR SALE
Nice, sugar cured country
ham, wt. 30 Ibs., 40c Ib. Add
\postage. Clyde Garrison, Cor-
nelia, Rt. 1.
PEANUTS AND PECANS
- FOR SALE
1944 crop peanuts, $4.00 bu.
Mrs. J. E. Sorrelis, Royston, Rt.
1
Stuart pecans, extra grade,
nice and dry. 35c Ib. in 10 Jb.
Jots or more, Mrs. B. Brady,
Cairo, Rt. 1.
Large red peanuts, $1.50
peck: also few hundred AAA
Barred Rock 11 wk, old PEE
$1.00 ea. at gy farm. P
Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1. -
Large red peanuts, $5.00 bu.
or $1.50 peck. No chks. G. T.
RAP GCS, 712
1 able prices. State insp. T.
+ Jumbo, extra nice,
PE
N AND
oe
OTHER
JIT TRE
_ Celeste figs, well branched,
bearing size, $1.10 ea.| Mrs. M.
P. Combs, Washington. A
Yellow Press and clear seed
peach trees; 2-3 ft., 4; $1.00: 3-
5 ft. 3, $1.00; del. in Ga. A. J.
Griffis, Patterson, Rio.
Wellg rown Ga. Satsumas 2
and 3 yrs. stock. Del. parcel
post, 65c and 75c ea; 10, $6.00:
10, $7.00. A. S. Johnson, Pel-
ham. Se Ss
Victory orchard: 2 ea. early
summer and fall apple trees; 2
grape vines, mixed. $6.00 for lot.
del. T. M. Webb, Ellijay..
Tungoil trees: 6-7 ft. 16, $5:
5-6 ft. 10, $4.00; 3-5 ft. 10, $3.00:
10-24 in. 10, $1.50 in lots 10 or
more. Mrs. G. R. Thigpen, St.
Marys.
Tung oil trees, 1-6 ft. 20c-
25e ea. Also Sundried pears,
45c lb. Add postage.
Brady, Cairo, Rt. 1, Box 132.
Fruit trees, grape vines, nut
trees, shrubs, prices right.
Seedling peach trees, $1.50
doz. $6.00 C., $50.00 M. Mrs.
E. B. Travis, Riverdale.
Lead vars. apple, peach,
plum, pear, pecan, persimmon,
| apricot, satsuma orange, lem-
on, kumquat, grapefruit, tung-
oil trees. Grape vines, berry
bushes, others. State _ insp.
Guar. true to name. Wyman
pee Cairo, shite 2. Box
Brown secuppernong, musca-
/dines. May cherry. figs, apri-
cots; 2 yrs. old, 15c-6a--$1:50
doz; Blue. Red, Yellow. 10c
ea., $1.00 doz. State insp. pois
zu crowns, 100 for $1.00; $10.-
00 M: old time plum-peaches,
12c ea. $1.25 doz; $1.00 or more
orders del. 2nd zone. W. A.
Moon, Waco. <
Lead. var. Apple and Peach
grapevines, at BPS
Webb, Ellijay. a
Vigorous, well grown Ga.
Satsuma trees, free P. Post,
on 2 and 3 yr. stock, 65c and
75c ea. Cant_mail less than 3
trees. A. S. Johnson, Pelham.
_ FRUIT FOR SALE
Nice sundried apples, free
from. coreg and worms. 25c Jb
in 10 Ib. lots.| PP in Ga. Mrs.
W. H. White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,
Box 37. ; 3 Z
30 Ibs. nice sundried, old-
fashioned peaches, 35c Ib. Sev.
lbs. nice. sundried apnles. Free
of worms, cores or peelings, 30c
Ib. 1944 crop. Mrs. P. W. Rylee,
Maysville.
Nice, sundried apples. 40c lb.
del. in Ga. Henry F. Weaver,
Marion.
1944 crop sundried seedilng
peaches, cut in even sized pieces
double treated to prevent
worms,.40c lb. Del. to 2nd zone.
Cash or MO. Mrs. A. F. O-
d| Kelley, Maysville, Rt. 1.
- Nice dried apples and peaches
35c Ib. or 3 Ibs. $1.00. 1944
crop; free of worms. MO. Add
postage. Also sage. $1.00 Ib.
Mrs. Cora Adkins, Stephens.-
Nice. sundried, sour apples,
free of worms and cores, 40c
lb.| Del. Bonnie Weeks, Dial.
Sev. lbs. nice, sundried ap-
ples, 50c lb. Add postage. Write
first. = irs. = W.- WV Taylor,
Clarkesville; Rt. 3.
POTATOES AND
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Collardscarload lots ready
for sale. on Highway No. 21.
Robert Brooks, Louvale.
5,000 Ibs. No. 1 Porto Rica
sweet. potatoes, no strings or
3%c Ib.
by the ton or 3c lb. for entire
lot. J. D. Miller, Chipley.
SYRUP FOR SALE
400 to 500 gals. Ga, cane
syrup. Make offer for lot. FOB.
Guy R. Crosby, Pavo.
325 gals. pure Ga. cane syrup.
wigs W. Hand, Hazlehurst, Rt.
65 gals. sugar cane syrup.
Write for prices. Mrs. H. G.
| Seigler, Milan,
June, 2 Ga. Belle: 2 Elbertas; 4 |W.
Mrs. B.{
S FORSALE|
|. Bright leaf, flue cured
bacco, 20c Ib. del. to 3d zc
Clyde Harper, Surrency,
Box 89. Pe a
_ MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
@
Black walnuts, this
crop, unhulled, 15 or 20
40c bu. for entire lot, at my
home. Albert B. McKoy, Ne
nan. : oe
New crop 1944 brig it
leaf Sage, $1.00 Ib. FOB. *
W. Morrison, Winterville,
O. Box 48. :
Nice dried apples,
Meats, $1.25 Ib _
twist chewing ~ co, I
twists, $1.00. Exc. for print
feed sacks, with at least 3 of
same color. Mrs. R. C. Stover,
Pisgah.
this yrs hatch. $1.00 Exp.
Sy ee Cummin
.
- in Ga., -P, P.,. $3.00:
apricot sprouts, 4 ft. high
for_ $1.00; Boxwoods. all size
and prices. Send postage
inquiry. Mrs. Elsie Heat
Mineral Bluff. 2 Ss
Sage, shade dried, hand ga
ered, % 1b. 55c; $1.00: Ib:-3
more lb. lots, 95 Ib. Postp.
pee TT. Brown, <fo
New downv feathers, 50c TI
or lot of 25 Ibs. for $11.50 de
Sample on request. Mrs. r
Collins, Cordele, Rt. 4.
Yellowroot, vellowdock, bu
terfly, Queen of the Meadov
cherry tree bark, 25c lb. pei
permint, Jrusalem oak see
'25e. Add postage. No check:
Mrs. W. J.. Reece, Cartecar
Hot red_ pepper,
Giant garlic bulbs, 25e do:
Add postage. Stamps accepte
Tamar Teem, Talking Ro
_Large lot dipper and Ma
tin gourds, 25c ea. Also cab:
bage and collard plants. 40
C. Strawberry plants, he
M.. PsP. Add postage. 1.4
Ellis, Cumming. ee
-%5 chicken feed 100 Ib. sacks
unwashed, no holes, 12c ea. i7e
doz. included for postage.
not mail Jess than 25 to
person. H. D. Oakes, Gain
ville, Rt. 6. os
Large sage plants. well ro
ed, 3, 50c. 10, -$1.00. Peppe
mint, spearmint, Balm, 25c
doz. 50c orders P. Da
moss-packed. Mrs. Av
Waco; Rt. .2, Box..40,
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
CORN WANTED:
Want 200 bu. good corn at
market price. del. my farm,
Mrs. h::- 2;
Puckett, Jesup,
phone 941. Sse
BEES WANTED:
Want. 12 or 15 hives bees
and hives. Quote price. Joe
rIingram, Waverly Hall. ee
HAY WANTED: el Ras a
Want a ton to 2500 Ibs of
leafy peanut, peavine, lespe-
deza or good mixed hay, Quote
price FOB your. station or
deliv. my place. C. E. Tuc
Dorchester. aoe
CORN WANTED: a
Want 5 bu. feeding corn %
$2.00 worth of fodder, del. to
me. Mrs. Zora Brown, Scott-
dale, Rear-Woodland Ave.
FRUIT WANTED: oye
Want some nice dried fruit
Will exc. pecans or feed sacks
for same. Mrs. Anna E, Se
kel, Cairo, Rt. 3. oe
FRESH AND CURED
MEAT WANTED: =
Want smoked, sugar-cured
ham:or shoulder. J. E. Jorda
Columbus, Box 483.
| FRUIT TREES WANTED:
Want small lots hines'
clingstone seedling peach trees
few yellow peach trees, cling-
stone var. 2 yrs. old. preferred.
E. Y. Paulk, Sycamore, P. O.
Box 84. 2b ae Ste
SACKS WANTED:
Want some white sugar |
feed sacks in good, cond. 106
Ib. cap. Will exe. large, gian
red thrift for same. Mrs. Node
Hamrick, Bremen, Rt. 1,
obas
Gainesville.
LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALE |
A Livestock Auction Sale will be held at the
Northeast Georgia Fair Grounds,
Friday, November 10, 1944, beginning at 1 P. M.
Livestock sales are held every second and fourth
Friday. Herbert M. ae Secy.-Treas.
Gainesville,
: MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
HORSES AND MULES |
FOR SALE
SEED WANTED:
Want 2 or more me No. 1)
on seed peas. W. O. Gibbs,
nigma.
ANE SEED:
orrection: Want sugar cane
ed, cP 31-511 var. for imme-
diate or spring ee State |
price, time del. etc. S
n, Savannah, Rt. 4.
TALNUTS WANTED:
Want sev. ibs. shelied black
ralnuts, this yrs) crop. State
ce. Mrs. M. W. Branch, Ars
ngton.
ag AND MULES
: _FOR SALE
-
t. bid. black mare mule,
out 875 lbs.: good worker
nywhere, $175. 00 and take 1.
wagon for part payment.
. T. Boleman, Royston, Rt.
Reg. Tenn, walking stud colt, |
Wrays Red Rover, No.
724, ipsied May 5th, 1943,
smut color, $175.00; black |
rey Percheron filly, 20 mos.
id> wt. 1000 Ibs., $100.00. H.
Bo Garrett, Gainesville,
Ox ee ;
Heavy black mare mule,
od shape, good age, smart,
$50.00. L King, Atlanta,
387 Avon Ave., S. W. Ra 8202.
Fine black horse, age 6 yrs.,
ood saddle and work harse,
or sale at my barn. V. J.
ait, College Park, Bts2:
, strong healthy; also mare,
Ye yrs: old, about 800 tbs.,
entle, but no broke to work.
Sell either or both reasonable.
san Geia, Lawrenceville.
ennet, 8 vrs. old, $25.00, or
de for good milk goat. Work.
anywhere. gentile: children can
andle. Will not ship. E. W.
Dockery, Cleveland, Rt 4.
Bay horse, 9 yrs. old, wt.
Ibs. Sound, gentle, works.
feadily, rides good, $85.00. F.
. Sexton, Norcross.
rs old. Children can han-|
_Owner in service. Mrs.
; . Johnson, Atlanta. 972)
erne St., S. BE. Ma. 7571,
xtra nice, blocky mare
le colt, black, 6 mos. old,
round 500 Ibs., $65.00 cash, at
place, 10 mi. West Ham-
fon, Judson Zachary, Ham
ton, RE: :
solid - black, blocky, nice}
arm mare, gentle, work any-'|
here, about 850 or 1000 Ibs.
epeut 8 yrs. old, for sale, at
near Flat Creek
a - W. Aiken, zee:
3rood mare, wt. 1000 Ibs.,
ke, gentle, had colt this.
pring; now bred for mule colt
out, May ist. Would take |
RL
Valdosta, Rt. 4, Box 236.
sound, fat brood!
res, open, matched team'|
-roans: 1 brown mare, all
bout 7 yrs. old. Well broken
1d good workers, for sale or
rade for good No.
, Scrubs,
Bee
af milch
(or
in ee cond.
lack. Macon, Rt. 3.
ef prade Percheron, grey, wt. |
oat 1500 Ibs. 9 yrs. old. good
rk horse, $150.00.
ralking hors, about 9 yrs, old, |
ay, ae hands, $225.00. Mrs.
. Adams, Dunwoody,
ood, gentle horse and LH
gon for ~ $75.00. Not sold
arately. W. L. Copeland,
unwoody (3rd house N. Side
widing Dr. on left).
imare mules, 4 and 5 yrs.
well broken. Also: milch'
1s
lug mule foi sale an:
wk anywhere, wt. about 900)
s Just cff Fair Oaks and|
oT Hwy., near. Hicks
re. Dont write, come.
Tie oe See ios Rt.
| Chamblee, Rt. 1.
Lar- |
+Banks, Shady Dale.
| Good horse mule, work
anywhere, $150.00, wt. 1100
Ibs. Come see. No letters
| M. K. Fuaua, Hawkinsville.
not ship.
json,
Beautiful Tenn. saddle mare, |
General s Pride,
| burg bucks,
-lrect from Sir Roderick. Mrs.
|, At Stud: Reg. Nubian bucks,
Tate Smith, Bere
Good mare mule, work any-
where, gentle, $45.00, for sale
er trade for mare that will.
work. Guy H. Summey,)
Bay horse, wt. about 1200
ibs., 8 te 10 yrs. old. Fine
plow or saddle horse. $125.00
for quick sale at barn. James
P. Barker, Fairburn, Rt. 2.
j] jennet, black with white
points, 3 yrs. old next spring.
Good size for age, $45.00. or.
trade for anything can use.
Cc. H. Gray, Bolingbroke.
Shetland pony, (gentle, safe
for children) and cart. L.
ans. Also about 400 bu. corn,
$1.75 bu., if purchaser takes |
ail at gathering, in shuck. 1000
bun. tops, $3.00 cwt. Ray Sut-|
ton, Clarkesville, Rt. 2.
Good, smooth mouthed bay
mare, wt. 800 lbs.,. work any-
where, $80.00. Nice little black.
horse mule, 4% mos. old,
$45.00. Also good milch cow,
2nd calf, 4 mos. old, fresh in.
Apr., 065. 00. See. Bud Hol- |
land. Dalton, Rt. 2.
RABBITS AND CAVIES -
FOR SALE
hh Ses
Angora rabbits, 2 mos. old
| Nov. 2nd., $1.50 ea. Purebred
Se Angoras, bucks, $3.00: does,
$4.00. Reg. Angoras, $5. 00 ea.
N. Z. White rabbit. 2 yrs. old,
wt. about 12 Ibs., $3. 00. Will
COD. Wade Chas-
tain, Talking Rock, Rt. 2.
Young cavies, $3.00 pr. Sol-
Bbuck, born May 28, this yr.,
ids or brokens. Reg. Nez
wt. 7 Ibs., $4.00. Good color.
Exp. col. Sonny Weeks, Edi-
N. Z. W. purebred and reg.
stock, $3.00 to $15.00 ea. Few,
not purebred, $1.50 to $3.00 ea.
H. H. Fortner, 929 Gaston St.,
S. W. Ra 0736. a
Angora doe, with cross-bred
litter of 10, $6.50. Bred Chin-.
echilla doe, $3.50. 2 Chinchilla
and 1 NZW bucks, $2.50 ea. 3
N. . W. bucks, 3 mos. old, $1.50)
OB Ve A: New. Atlanta, 1281)
Boulevard Dr., S. E. De 5697.
6 purebred N. Z. Reds, bucks
and does, 2% mos. old, $10.00
or $1.75 ea.: 1 purebred Red}
doe, 7 mos. old. $2.50 FOB.
Jamie H. Crawford, Jr., Chip-
ey.
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
Purebred, reg., 4 mos. old:
Tog. doe, also 4. mos. old Saa- |
nan dee from heavy milk
sir ain; for sale. Will also serv-
ice reg does, $5.00, and grade
does, $3.00. Reg. Toggenburs |
T-5818. R.
M. Loy, College Park, Rt. =
Box 86 H.
Toggenburg buck, 21 mos.|
old, naturally hornless, reg.,
\from fine stock, $15.00 FOB.)
ic. D. Head, Edison.
Purebred and reg. Togsgen-
from high pro-'
ducing dams, 6 mos. and 2 yrs.
old; extra large and fine, di-
i
| J. I. Hinson, Americus, Rt. D.)
Reg. Saanan buck, (Show!
|Prince), No. S 4740, 2%: yrs.
old, large, hornless and gentle.
John R. Faucett, Austell, Ma-
pe Rd., at Seaboard Cut or
E. S. Faucett, Atlanta, 1067
Whiteoak Ave., 5S. W.. Ra 1443.
jalso for sale, splendid Nubian)
buck kid, to be reg. in buyer I
Hi priced. H.
| 500 Columbia Dr.
African
1 old, $40.00.
| with 11 pigs 4 wks. old, $70.00.
old, $15. 00 ea.
"SHEEP AND GOATS
-F OR SALE
S milk goats, 1 male, reas.
B. Mays, Decatur,
Cr 1823.
Pure Saanan buck, father
| Snow King, mother excellent
|milker, hornless, ready for
breeding, fee, $2. 00. Lewis E.
Tabor, Albany, Gillionville
| Rd. Rt. 3, Box 616.
HOGS FOR SALE
Dependable Berkshires
(have been breeding continu-
ously for 33 yrs.) single pigs,
$15.00 ea.; 2 for $25.00. C.
| Hardman, Commerce.
O. I. C.. sow pigs, (10 wks.
old, 40-50 Ibs., $12.50 ea. up:
2 gilts, 5 mos. old. Papers free
or will reg. in buyers name for
$2.00 extra. Extra special
blood lines. D. B.' Dukehart,
Decatur, P. O. Box 488.
6 purebred little bone Black
sow pigs, stay-fat
kind. Ready for shipment
about Nov. 13th. Treated be-
fore shipping, $10.00 ea. M. O..
only. Hubert W. Daniell,
Winston.
SPC pigs, farrowed juty 20;
reg. in buyers name, $25.00 ea.
oe A. Brasington, Pavo,
10 SPC pigs, 8 wks. old, ige:|
male, $5.00 ea., male, $4.00 ea.
C. R. Roberts, Macon, Rt. 9d.
Hereford hogs. Sacrificing
some of my finest blooded
sows at $65.00 and $75.00 ea.
All bred to exceptionally fine
herd boar. Julian . Fursten-
_|burg, Atlanta, Hogan Rd., Rt.
1. {2 horn reg. bulls, 8 mos. old;
Regs. whiteface boar, 1 yr.
Reg. OIC sow,
Also 2 mares, 8 yrs. old, work
anywhere, $250. 00. Wagon ims
cluded. oH: Rohletter,
Clarkesville, Rt. 2.
3 SPC pigs, 3 mos. old (male
jand female), Gates breeding,
wt. 65 lbs.: double treated for
cholera, $15.00 ea. Reg.
buyers name. LL. M. Isler,
Morgan. .
Reg. Herefords: Sow, about
{350 Ibs., bred to reg male,
$60.00; sow, about 275 ibs.,
$50.00, or ship both together.
$100. 00: 3 male pigs, 7 wks.
Papers in buy-
ers name. Also 4 shoats, %4
Hereford, 35-50. ibs., $10.00 ea.
a i Montgomery, "LaFayette,
3 choice Berkshire gilts, far-
fened July 2nd, $15.00 a., 2
for $25.00; or the 3, with non-
related boar pig, farrow Aug.
25th, for $50.00: Dam of above | J. G. Buyers, Whitesburg.
gilts, $50.00; 125 Ib. boar,
$75.00. . LL. Porterfield,
Danielsville, Rt. 1.
4S. P. C, males, 4 mos old,
Toe:
blocky type, $17.50 ea.,
buyers name: dbl. treated,
best of breeding, FOB. G. W.
steele, Lilly.
1 hog, half Berkshire, half
| P. C., bred, due to farrow 2nd
1 litter December 4 for sale: also
|heifer, Jersey-Guernsey cross,
freshen Ist January. ;$60.00 for
the heifer. FOB. H. D. Wil-
son, Palmetto:
2 reg. S. P. C. sows, grand-
daughters of Conquest: -one
with 9 pigs, $60.00; other with
5 pigs, $45.00. Pigs, 5 wks. old,
sub. to reg. 4 mos. old pigs,;
both sex, $20.00 ea. 2 for
$35.00. Reg. buyers name,
crated, treated. Fred C. Sea-
go, Pinehurst, Rt. 1, ~
CATTLE FOR SALE
Guernsey and Jersey milch
cow with heifer calf; cow giv-.
ing 5 gals. daily; Holstein and
Jersey cow and calf.
imy home.
ken, Rt. 1.
Reg. Guernsy bull, hie
bred, Clear Springs Gay
King, from Foremosts Gay
Lad, 5% yrs. old. Priced reas.
ROA. Young, Jr., Darien.
Fine, reg. Guernsey bull, 214
yrs. old, wt. about 900 Ibs.,:
$125.00. J. B. Lay, Winder.
Some dual-purpose cattle,
name.
oS
Farl S. Redwine, Mad-
Saanan nannie, 3. yrs. old,
milking, not bred, $15.00;
Billy and nannie( Saanan- Tog
genburg), $5.00 ea. Toggenbu:
nannie, 8 mos. old, $7.00. Ca
fine red cow with Polled Milk-
, ing Shorthorn bull calf, 1 mo.}
old. Bred heifer, 1 open: bull!
calf, 4 mos old. A. W.
wood, McDonough, Rt,
Sher-
1 purebred Guernsey male,
jcow -with papers, for sale at
my barn,
not ship, E. H. Burson, a
cross. : Ls : : ie
: }
*
ner,
S = Peete it eres Pe 3
Beet 5 = fe Mee
~|M. Puckett, Buford,
in |
jist letter.
| Marietta, Rt. 5.
see at!
LJ. Crews: _Hobo-'
J. PB. mesh a
prices were: Schleys, 32c;
ties, 26c-27c;
Tuesday during Season.
Welinesday, Noventhes 1,
PECAN AUCTIONS AT VIDALIA :
More than 300,000 pounds of pecans were on sale
lat Vidalia, Tuesday, October 24th. O. P. A. Ceiling
large Seedlings, 21c; small Seedlings,
18 lb. Sales proceeded orderly at these prices with
very few rejections by Growers. Pecan Sales each
Stuarts, 28c; Mixed varie-
CATTLE FOR SALE
POULTRY FOR SALE
2 fat Shorthorn bulls, good
markings, for stock or beef; 2
good milch cows, with calves,
4 and 5 mos. old: l_ heifer.
Cheap for cash.. Exc. for good
mileh cow. See; 2 mi of
Woodward mill. Mrs. Emma
Ris eas
Box 50.
Extra fine bull, blue and
grey crossed, 18 mos. old, wt.
about, 700 Ibs., $75.00. J. E.
Spain, Rockmart, Rt2
14 head young cattle. Bull,
wt. 400 Ibs.; 2 small bulls, rest
heifers, from 3 yrs. old down. |
2. to freshen in Feb.; 3 later,
300.00 cash for lot. . Gordon
rizzle, Cumming, Rt. 2:
1 polled and 1 Horned, Reg.
Hereford bulls, 18 mos. old;
your pick of 12. reg. Hereford
calves and 4. reg. Guernsey
calves. A. K.. Chamblee,
Sparta.
Nice young cow, freshened
Jan 14th. Haif Red English
and half Jersey. $90. 00. J.
= 3 Pilgrim, Douglasville, Rt.
2 yr. old heifer, Jersey and
black angus cross, from a 4
gal cow. W. Cochran, |
Marlow.
2 horn reg. bulls, 17 mos. old;
1 stallion, 7 yrs. old, wt. 1200
Ibs. Work horse and a good:
one. F. L. Toney, Greensboro.
17 dairy cows. including 6)
reg. Guernsey and 3 reg. Jer-
seys, all young, also 3 reg.
Guernsey bulls, for sale or
trade for reg. Black Angus and |
Hereford. H. D. Florence, At-:
lanta, P. O. Box 492. Phone
3184.
LIVESTOCK WANTED
RABBITS AND
CAVIES WANTED:
Want hear from party hav-
ing Rex ao of oacantane eangog Be
. breeding, price, etc., 1
ist Miss Alice Sharp,
SHEEP AND
GOATS WANTED:
Want exc. 20 ROP sired, 4-A.
grade WL. hens for milk goat,
or sell hens at $2.00 ea. cash.
CATTLE WANTED:
Want purebred polled Here- |
ford bull, just ready for serv-|
ice. Also want purebred, se
bone, Duroc-Jersey (blocky
type) male hog. Ludie E. Phil-,
lips, Colquitt. (9 mi. SE Col-
quitt.)
Want 15 young cows, not less
than 3 gal. per day cows. Must |
be cheap for oe John P.
Glore, Austell, Rt.
Want reg. Red A iked cows or
heifers. State age and price.
Luke Gill, Manchester.
HOGS WANTED:
Want reg. Black Essex male,
7 or 8 mos. old. Give parti-
culars. J. F. Gore, Quitman.
HORSES AND.
MULES WANTED: |
Want small mare mule, wt. |
800 te 900 Ibs. 8 or 10 yrs. old.
Cheap and no over 50 miles.
Would consider good blind
mule if healthy and works
eaem Jim Drawdy, Jesup, Rt.
L
POULTRY FOR SALE
BABY CHICKS
AND BANTAMS:
1 trio Black Tail Japs, very
fine birds, male bird a show
bird. $7.50. H. A. Barwald, At-
lanta, 835 North Ave, NE.
1 rooster, 1 hen, Golden Se- |
brights, $5.00 for the pr. Boyd
Williamson, Commerce.
Mixed bantams, del. prepaid
: by exp. Hens, $1.00 ea; roos-|
ters, $1.50 ea, Small and vari-j
ous colors. G. L. Toole, Och-'
locknee, PO Box 1803.
Fine, purebred RI bas.c.ams:;
also Black RC and Dark Cor-
nish games. Prize winners, $5:
pr... Also- want good laying.
hens, any breed. Mrs. Helen)
| tams, mixed, good stock, about
vonia.
BARRED AND
{ 75.
| yr. stock or 18 mos. old irs Ce
1 Grove.
inish, Mch.
| cockerels,
jtis Tumlin, Madison, Rt. 2
| Buford.
| PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS
}PIGEONS, ETC, FOR
| Rock White Kings, mated work
| REDS (NEW HAMPSHIR
| 3 purebred Parmenter
13-A roosters, March hatc
| TURKEYS, DUCKS,
1 net Atlanta, Rt, 2, Box.
5 brown bantam hens, 3
roosters, 75c ea. Cannot. ship
Cc. S. Winn, Atlanta, 28 Os-
borne Rd. Ch 5178.
3 common bantams, $1.25 |
trio. 1 white pit game o
1 red quill cross hen. j
Wilcon, Macon, 225 Ninadel D
Trio white cornish bantams,
$7.50: pr. for $5.00. RI Red
bantams, same price. All iro
good exhibition stock. R. HH,
Shumway, Atlanta, 4323 Peach
tree-Dunwoody Road.
35 or 40, 1-2 yrs. old ban
15 roosters; good laying hen:
25c ea. Tom Cawthon, La
OTHER ROCKS:
17 March BR 3-A. pullet:
now: laying. Also 1 pr. witiie
NZW rabbits, subject to re
for sale or trade for corn.
R. White, i epee
Purebred Buft Rock | n
Speckled Sussex Mch, hate
cockerels, $2.00 ea. or exc. for
few Buff Minocra pullets, this
hens. Make best offer. Mrs.
R. Sorrells, Monroe, Rt. e
16 3-A. BR hens
strain, 1 rooster, $15
my home. Mrs. A. M.
Norcross.
CORNISH, GAMES
AND GIANTS:
2 Blue game hens, $2.00 ea:
6 Blue Japs and Irish en
cross, $1.50 ea_.. 1 Blue Jay
Shawlneck and 1. Shaw! ne
hen, $2.00 ea. J. C. Bennett
Duluth. +
Purebred Dark Corhish ay
hatch cockerel, $1.75; June
hatch, $1.50. Money order only.
. Cora B. Patterson, Ty
~~
2 burcbeed -Dark Cornis!
April hatched cockerels, $2.0
ea. J, | Gardner, L
5 purebred Dark Corni
game cockerels, April hatch:
wt, about 7 lbs. $2.00 ea.
oS Akers, Fender.
Purebred, blood-tested Co
and Apr. ha
$2.00 ea; pul
$1.75 ea, Hens, $2.00 ea, |
cockerel with every order of
ope or hens. M. O. oni
. Sanders, Vienna.
i nice brood pit game
$2.00 or exc. for 3 game
lets or 2 pit game hens.
Griffin, Gainesville.
35 white giant pullets, 7 m
old, just beginning to lay, $1
ea. cash at my home. 8.
May, Alma, 40 16th St. -
LEGHORNS:
150 WL.: hens dareey
ginning to lay. Price ee = c
White Leghorns, 98 pul
40 per cent now laying, and
rooster, 4-A, $175.00 or |
ea. Will exc. Quillian Tugg
SA ay
Aristocrat pigeons: Ply
ing pairs, fast producer
ee white meat. squabs, $
3 prs. $10.00. Write
fine on other breeds. J
Barr, Lumpkin.
5 prs. White Kin S ee
and working, $10.00
J. McDaniel, Panes ;
Club Drive, NE.
AND RHODE ISLAND)
$3.00 ea. Mrs. T. O. Bra
poperton, Rt. 3.
2 nice NH Red cocks,
winners at county fair,
ee we coe T. Trawick, Te
4 SCRI Red pullets, M
1944 hatched, 4-A., 3 cockere
$2.00 ea. 8 pullets, May
hatch, 4-A, $1.75 ea. All pu
bred. Mrs. G. H. fey.
Plains.
GEESE, GUINEAS, BTC.
FOR SALE.
20 ducks, 1 drake,
hens, 1 yr. old and othe
this: yr. $15.00 for lot or
separately. Mrs. G
er, Alma, Rt.
e
By C. H. ALDEN, Director
_ While the Department of Entomology is one of
the smaller, separate Departments of the State, its
ork effects, directly or indirectly, the interests and
welfare of all the people in the State. For instance,
the Japanese beetle is trying to get in from the North
nd the Sweet Potato Weevil from the South, and it
is the job of this department to stop the encroach-
ment of these noxious insects on farm and other prop-
erties within our borders. The Japanese beetle, which
feeds on over 200 different agricultural, horticultural
and ornamental crops, has already gained a slight
oot-hold in this State, and every effort is being made
to eradicate it and prevent its spread. If the people
of this State could see what it does to crops,in other
States, they would be shocked and worried.
_ J have seen the beetles so thick on peach trees
in New Jersey that you could hardly see the tree,
and when they had finished feeding, there was noth-
g left of the peaches, but the stones hanging from
the branches. We also have a light infestation of the
eet potato weevil in the State, but this area is un-
er quarantine, and its spread is being prevented.
his insect becomes established in the sweet potato
growing counties, it will cause untold losses to grow-
ers of tubers and sweet potato plants.
The Department of Entomology functions under
the Entomology Act of 1937, The Bee Disease Law
of 1920, and with the Department of Agriculture,
the Insecticide and Fungicide Law of 1920. It has
charge of insect pest and plant disease control in the
tate. While it is impossible, within the scope of this
ticle, to give the control measures advised, and the
les, regulations and quarantines set up for the pro-
ction of the people, complete information can be
optained by writing to the Director at the State Cap-
itol, or by contacting the Departments inspectors in
e field. However, a brief outline of the projects
arried on each year and the results obtained will
e of general interest and will give the people an
idea of the scope and necessitv of the Departments
ork. - -
State projects carried on each year are as fol-
$s: sweet potato plant certification; tomato plant
rtification; package and queen bee certification;
bee disease eradication for shippers and honey pro-
ducers; production and distribution of beneficial par-
tes for control of injurious fruit, pecan and truck
p insects; fruit pest investigation and control;
nforcement of quarantine against serious insect
ests and plant diseases; nursery inspection; en-
cement of insecticide and fungicide law; cotton
ed certification; issuing of informational literature
plant pests; identification of insects and plant dis-
ses; mounting of specimens and care of State in-
t collection; production and colonization of Ve-
dalia beetles for the control of the cottony cushion
ale; household insect control; Irish potato certifi-
tion; and control of general insect pests and plant
eases. Projects carried on in cooperation with the
deral Government are as follows: phony peach
isease control; sweet potato weevil eradication;
ontrol; white fringed beetle scouting; pink boll
orm scouting; and general insect pest surveys. For
s work, the Department has its main office in At-
ta and field offices in Cornelia, Dahlonega, Fort
alley, Tifton and Thomasville. :
During the year, the Department certified 300,-
00,000 sweet potato slips in 77 counties; 600,000,-
0 tomato plants in 15 counties; made 10,000 in-
pections in 23 counties for the sweet potato weevil;
spected about 60,000 colonies of bees for package
nd queen shippers for the location and control of
erican foul brood and other bee diseases; certi-
d all shipments of package and queen bees; identi-
ed and gave control measures for all insect and
lant diseases submitted to the Atlanta and field of-
ices; inspected over 4,000,000 peach trees for phony
ase and removed more than 46,000 diseased
s; inspected and certified 7,500,000 trees, shrubs,
es, bulbs and soft bodied plants for Georgia nur-
rymen in 62 counties; bred and distributed free,
illions of beneficial parasites for control of fruit and
an insect pests in 41 counties; reared and distrib-
scale in 32 counties; inspected about 100,000
es for white pine blister rust in 11 counties; put
ps for the Japanese beetle in 22 counties and
| infested areas in Atlanta and Toccoa; In-
and certified 7,000 acres of seed cotton for
rs
| shipment of disease free cotton seed: inspected and
apanese beetle eradication; white pine blister rust.
ed free Vedalia beetles for control of cottony cush-|
MARKET BULLETIN __
certified 100 acres for certified Irish potato seed;
conducted life history and control recommendations
on fruit pests and sent out circulars of information
to all growers on the mailing lists; xamined and reg-
istered about 200 brands of insecticides and fungk
cides ; promulgated quarantines against serious pests
and plant diseases not found in Georgia or which
have not become general spread over the State ;
made all required cabbage, onion and pepper plant
inspections; and issued the necessary rules, regula-
tions, tags, tape, certificates and licenses to keep the
various projects properly functioning.
The following list of bulletins and circulars have
been printed and are available for free distribution
when needed: Pecan Insects and Diseases; Sweet
Potato Diseases ; Pecan Scab; Melon Diseases; Ori-
ental Fruit Moth; Beneficial Parasites; Peach Insects
and Diseases; Household Insects; Beekeeping; Ap-
ple Insects and Diseases; Insect and Disease Control
in the Home Vegetable Garden; Apple Spray Pro-
gram; Blister Beetles; Control of Cherry and Plum
Insects; Control of the Peach Tree Borer; Dormant
Sprays for Peaches and Apples; Control of Insects
Attacking Stored Grains; Grape Spray Schedule;
Mites and Chiggers; Self-Working Bands for Codling
|Moth; Spray Schedule for North Georgia Peaches;
Spray and Dust Schedule for Middle and South Geor-
gia Peaches; Sweet Potato Seed Treatment; The
Nematode Disease of Wheat; Vedalia Beetles: and
Seed Treatment for Irish Potatoes.
The Department has prepared the following
series of educational colored motion pictures which
will be loaned to school, farm and civie organizations
having 16 mm projectors: Queen Bee; Package Bees;
Japanese Beetle; White Pine Blister Rust; Sea Is-
land Cotton; Flower Gardens of Georgia; Beneficial
Beetle. :
Owing to its favorable geographical and climatic
location, Georgia is one of the largest shippers of
plants of any State in the United States and many
of them are certified and approved by the Depart-
ment of Entomology. These plants bring in millions
of dollars each year to the growers and also result
in more and better food crops for the producers.
Georgia has the only laboratory in the South for the
production of beneficial parasites and predators.
Georgia is the largest producer of package bees for
shipment and sale to other states and Canada, and
this industry, along with the honey produced, brings
in more than $1,000,000 each year. Georgia is now
free of many of the noxious insects and plant diseases
that are doing so much damage in other States, and
it is the duty of this Department to keep it that way.
The control of insects and plant diseases is get-
ting more difficult each year, due to the importation
of new pests and the mass planting of agricultural
and horticultural crops. Any new or serious infest-
ations should be reported to the Department as soon
as noticed and an inspector will be sent to determine
the cause and give control recommendations. When
ed the crop, is the time to apply control measures.
The Department stands ready at all times to assist
citizens of the State in the control of insects and|
plant diseases or in any of its regular certification
and inspection programs. * a
f : a
Why Not A Paint Factory For Georgia!
es Athens, Ga., Oct. 20, 1944.
Honorable Tom Linder, ee -
Commissioner of Agriculture.
Dear Sir:
WHY NOT A PAINT FACTORY FOR GEOR-
1GIA. :
As a post-war industrial development, why not.
Recently a prominent speaker stated that:
What Georgia needs is two coats of paint.
Take a ride over the State and see if he is right.
Georgia has many of the raw materials for paint
know. 2
| Kaolin, Yellow Ochre, Iron Oxide, Turpentine,
Rosin, Cottonseed Oil, Peanut Oil, Soy Bean Oil,
Tung Oil, and many other substances which enter
into the composition of various grades of paints, var-
nishes and enamels. ; |
These raw materials are produced in the State
and shipped in great quantities to other States, man-
ufactured and shipped back to Georgia for use.
Someone ought to do something about it. Why
not you.
Very respectfully,
| W. M. BURSON,
245_ Oakland Ave.
and
| white breast,) $1.25 ea..
Parasites; Sweet Potato Weevil; and White Fringed |
the damage is first discovered and before it has ruin-
manufacture. You know where they are, or should
3 Vienna, Rt. 6:4
18 guineas, grown, raised
yr. $18.00 or exe. Mrs. Ca:
Tuggle, Buford, Rt. 3.
_ 30 brozne_ turkeys,
grown, $120.00 for lot. Com
and. see. J. E. Hudson,
glasville, Rt. 2. ee
3 Blue Speckled guinea
1 guinea - rooster
Forester, Buford, Rt. 2.
WYANDOTTES:
8 RCSL. Wyangotte c
mos. old, from reg., 4-A
tested stock, $1.50 ea
Harris, Lula,
BROWN LEGHORN _
BANTAMS WANTED:
Would trade BL B
rooster for purebred BL Ba
tam rooster to prevent
breeding. Also trade some
breed for Golden or Silver Se
brights. G. E. Stahlkuppe
Morrow, Rt. 1. oS rns
PEAFOWLS, GUINEAS, cae
GEESE, DUCKS, ETC,
WANTED: ee
Want pr. each of young pe
fowls, Brown China gees
Gray African geese and F
tail pigeons: also have son
nice Game roosters for
J. F. Wellborn, Roek Spri
Want buy 50 or more gu
T. W. Hooks, Macon, c/o Ho
Lanier. ce Sa
2 (man with boy) exp. har
milkers, would take dairy jo
also exp. Grist miller an
blacksmith, Take job at eithe
Must have house furnished. C
work-.any time. Write, F
Akin, Waco, Rt. 1. c/o
Bune Garner.
Want good 1 H. farm on
land, to share crop, aroun
Homerville or Waycross, ne
school and churches, and wit
good 5 or 6 R. house. Appl
pare Smith, Homerville, R
Want by reliable,
farmer good 1 H. farm for 19
with good water and buildin
and about 2 1-2 acres tobacc
allotment. Prefer in. Applin
or adjoining county, for stand
ing rent only. F. McbLau
Surrency, Rt. 1. ce
Man with 8 in family v
2-H. farm on. shares for
Exp. in farming. Have t
moved and furn. Go anywh
Let me hear at once. Ezra M:
bley, Fitzgerald, Rt. 3,
White man, 42 yrs. old
gle, wants job on_ farm
refined people. Write.
Johnson, Atlanta, 318 Old Iv
Rd. ee
Want small place on halves
with good, small house, woo
and water. Can move any ti
Have to be moved. Walter R.
Harrell, Barnesville, Rt.
Want job looking after stocl
milking cows, raising chicke
or a miller for. grist mill, |
month or on halves. Prefer
Ga. C. V. Lane, Arlington, Bo
123. cS
Want job on farm with goo
man. Am young, white m
30 yrs. of age. Want pay
week, board and laundry. Have
no bad habits. Ollie Clark,
Hartwell. nee
Want i-H farm for sia
rent: good stock and hou
W. Maloney, Morven.
Want 2-H. farm. Am \
exp. with cattle and hog
Plenty help. Write making :
fer. Newton Chauncey, Hom-
erville. =. i Ree
Want small 1-H crop on ha
ves for 1945. Prefer near Perr
or Macon, R. A. Land, Bon
aire. ea
Want work on farm. Am 3
yrs. old and have 4 mos
baby. Can do any kind
Mrs, Ella Mae Brown, $
Circle; Rt. 2, Box 74...
Refined, intelligent, mi
aged woman wishes emp!
ment on well equipped fa
will go anywhere. Carch
Graden, East Point. Gen. D
Want farm within 50 m
lanta: 7 in family. .Man to
tractor or I will buy one. Want
to sow lot of grain, any amt.
75 A. up, CalD, Hei Cum
ming, Rt =. ites
Want farni- ss Latek
| basis, 50 to 60 A. in D
adjoming
counties. 1%
stock and tool ce
af
se ietcrnatiunal Trade
(Continued from Page One)
nylon cae other substitutes for cotton lint.
iO. MONOPOLY POSSIBLE IN COTTON |
PRODUCTION
The real reason. for the fight on cotton is
that no one can secure a monopoly on the pro-
uction of cotton in this country. .
- Any man who has some land and a mule
an produce cotton.
Ttnaturally follows that no one can get com-
rele control or: develop a monopoly - on raw
cotton.
In the case of rayon, nylon and other cotton
ubstitutes, tremendous manufacturing plants
re required for their production.
ao accumulations of capital, can go into the.
usiness of preducing rayon, nylon, etc. ~~
AE it is possible to get the American public to
using rayon, nylon and other cotton substitutes
instead of cotton, those manufacuning establish-
ments which can produce these substitutes will
have a monopoly on their productions. They can
then = the price at whatever figure they see
e The farmer cannot be on out of pushers
1 producing cotton entirely but the farmer is
automatically put out of business when it comes
the production of rayon, nylon and other sub-
utes that must be produced in fae manu-
uring plants.
FOREIGN CAPITAL AND RAYON
Paice the outbreak of the present war, Brit.
capital had built rayon plants in this country
osting two hundred million dollars.
This tremendous rayon plant with others
like it, would have a monopoly on the consumers
f the United States if they could eliminate the|
sduction of cotton in this country. _
The E. 1. DuPont Company, one of the larg-
st international companies in the world, has a
onopoly on the production of nylon. No won-
er these great corporations with hundreds of
lions of dollars to carry out their plans would
to put the ioe cotton grower Oue of
hese. ta
E FARMERS | PRICE FOR COTTON - VS. THE
CONSUMER PRICE FOR COTTON
The tremendous spread between what a
rmer gets for raw cotton and what the con-
sumer pays for manufactured cotton is ample
proof of the relentless war that is now being
carried on against the American cotton farmer.
BILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF THE TAX PAYERS
MONEY WILL BE USED TO DESTROY THE
_ AMERICAN COTTON GROWER
; ee the war began, it is reported that 17
ion dollars of government money has been?
sent for the erection of plants that will be used
fter the war to manufacture rayon.
These government plants have been built
h money that was paid by patriotic Americans
or war bonds and tax with which to carry on
his great World War.
- At the beginning of this war, the United
States government required many cotton mills
fo convert from production of civilian goods and
) devote their entire production to war mater-
ials for the government.
This has caused a great shortage of cotton
oods and cotton garments for civilian use.
Taking advantage of this war condition, the
producers of rayon garments have flooded the
ores all over this country with rayon. When
ou go into a store now to buy wearing apparel,
oul find-in a great many cases that you must) *
uy rayon or do without.
Every time an effort is made to raise in
e of cotton, we hear a great hue and cry
ae inion oe inflation and igh pric-
+
MARKET BULLETIN =
| nish self for farm 10 mi. Gain-
| Would
shares to exp. dairyman who
+eould put in $1,000 on feed or
| house on farm. Want one who
202, Seventh Ave.
cee hens Mrs. Arthur K Adams,
a Soot 50% of wai it es during and im-
mediately after the last World War. _
The price of cotton goods and cotton gar-|
ments where they can be found, are substan-
[tially as high or higher than they were when
{|cotton was 40 cents per pound.
_ There is no relation whatever between the
price of cotton and the price of cotton goods and
| garments to the consuming public.
Cotton shirts, for instance, we run from
$2.00 to $7.00 each. 3 ins
There is about 10 cents worl of cotton in-
volved in the production of a shirt.
If the farmer made a present to the cotton
mill of his bal of cotton, it would not change
the price of a cotton shirt in retail stores.
~ Ladies cotton dresses are selling from $3.50
ye
a pound to $350:00 per pound. At this rate, a bale}
of cotton made into the cheapest dresses would
cost $1,750.00. A bale of cotton made into the
. . |highest price dresses would cost $175,000.00.
No one except a millionaire, or see with S
If the farmer gave the cotton away it could
not possibly make any difference in the price
of cotton dresses.
This simply illustrates that the continuous
war against the price of cotton is a war to des-'
troy cotton.
The continuous demand in newspapers and
on radios that the farmer must produce more
economically and a better grade of cotton is ce
surd. ass
a= Why qeeold the fener produce
cheaper when he is already soiling - ne. cotton:
at a price so low that it won't affect the consumer
if he gives the cotton away.
We hear a lot of talk that the price of rayon
Hs getting cheaper and cheaper. This is simply a
drive on the part of the rayon manufacturer to
drive cotton out of the market and to destroy
the American cotton producer. PE eS
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture.
7
>
FARM HELP WANTED FARM HELP WANTED
Want martied,. exp. dairy.
help for 100-cow dairy: 2. milk-
ers, 1 milkroom . man; pas-
teurize, all retail. On school
and mail rte. 14 mi. S. Macon,
Want white woman for gen-
eral farm chores. Small fam-
ily: good home, satis. salary:
Mrs. M. M. Minchew, Albany,
hingt St.
606 eeener = 600 -wile vo: static a. VN. Weide-
Want man for 10 A. truck man, Macon. Rt. 3.
and garden space; half of 7-R.
house. to. be shared by owner. Want tenanis for 3-2-H farms
Miss Lena bese ae Atlanta, |i for standing rent, other 2 on
12550 Cascade Rd. . A, \halves. 2 4-R. houses, 1 6-R.
ee 2 good barns, some repairs to
Want man for dairy work, be made on 1. Good land; mail
$60.00 mo. 4-R. house, wired | and school. bus. rte; near
for elec:, running -water, wood, churches: pasture and water on
milk and garden spot furn, J. ea. place, 1 near Riverdale; 2!
W. Bussey, Columbus, Clay- near Jonesboro. W. J. Bar-
more Plantation. nett, Riverdale.
Want 1-H. tenant able fur-
Want family to tnd 25 acres
general crops, _ on halves.
Good land, 3 R. house (now
vacant,) elec., if wanted. 2 1-2
mais INO: Auburn: in sight of
good church, on RED and
| school bus rt. Garden and
patches free. Will ans. cor-
respondence, or see. J, M. Wall,
Auburn,
esville, in Bark Camp Dist. in
Hall Co. Good 4-R. house, barn |
pasture, wood and fruit trees.
H. V. Johnson, Gainesville.
Want farm and dairy trelp.
consider renting on
give best refs; 40 cows, 3 mules
s tractors, 2 dwellings. John
. Glore, Austell, Bt. 2:
Want family to dake small
crop and do other work, look-
ing after stock part- time and
farm work; honest, healthy
people, live on paved hwy., .
Want. farmer fe 2 tk. crop,
50-50 basis, pasture, water, out
bldgs., 6 R. with hall, 2 porches
dwelling, otis West Carnes-
ville; School bus rt. on Stone
Mtn. wy. E. S. Forester, Car-
nesville, Rt. 1.
E. Barnesville. I. L. Wright, Butterfly or ginger iiss 10c
Yatesville, RFD. 'ea. $1.00 doz. Yellow and scar-
Want i f let -cannas, 25c doz. Sweet-
ant share-croppers or scented yellow narcissi, Star of
1945. Have sev. farms to let.
R, W. Jackson, Lovett.
- Want tenant for 1-H. crop on
Bethlehem, 50e C. Also want
pepper and spearmint, lemon
pees white nest onions. Mrs.
50-50 basis. at Cedar Grove T. Stokes, Macon, Rt. 3, Box
School, 8 mi. from Fairburn. 408.
Have tractor and. good land. Several . kinds shrubbery.
William Gurley Smith, Fair-
burn, Rt. 2.
Want tenant for 2-H. crop,
3rds and 4ths. 10 mi. from Dou-
glasville: 4-R. house, sev. out-
bldgs:, good community. H. V.
Michel, Atlanta, 882 Dill Ave.,
Sw. Ra 1708.
Want middel aged, settled,
white man for light work on
farm. Room and board fur-
ee Ref. required. Mrs.
. A. Sewell, Red Oak.
Want elderly man with no
encumbrances for farm; able
do carpenter work, build farm
Must-sell at once. Too large to
mail. Take at low cost. Miss E.
es ee Atlanta, 246. Or mond
Yellow Kerria, pink almond,
purple lilac, forsythias, wis-
teria, golden bell, bridal
wreath, 65c doz. Mixed gladioli
30c doz. Orange lilies, single
and double, 60c C. White and
blue violets, 40c C. Myrtle
vine, 25c doz. Abelia 20c ea.
Mrs. Doye Eller, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Snapdragon seed, all cols.
15c tspn. Red salvia,. 36. seed,
10c. Iceplant, same price. Add
postage. Mrs. N.
Commerce, Rt. 4. ~
Evergreen Scotch Broom,
double pink altheas, . yellow.
can do finishing work. Must
be sober. Unless so, need not.
apply: Mrs. Ada Keen, Albany,
Want man to grow. fats and ivhite hydrangea, 20 e
-postage on orders unde
Dunwoody, Chl 1087. Mrs. Carl Ki
Wednesday, November 1,
tily. Need at once.
rand garden. spot.
phone 2505.
Travis, Riverdale,
cotton |!
Tallulah Harrison,
cattle farm and raise poul
home,
Age
ing, good outbldgs.,.
Pal
rates
church
Minish, : J
rorsythia, pink spirea, pink a Tri
FARM HELP WAI
~ Want farm labor to pic
ton, gather corn, etc., in
diately.. Mrs. Lee Bivings
ee 3110, ate
Wank: man who can.
tractor, with large famil
will work in poultr
house, and will move t
GA
ardson, Evans. c/o Pin
Poultry Farm. :
~ Want tractor driver ae
Dog Farm, near Cochran.
day, furnish good house, wi
_ App!
Macon, | 3
Wood, eos i
Walls,
mage
R.
6500; or J.
Want refined, middle-a
white woman for farm ;
near Atlanta: $8.00 ve
and board. Mrs. -C. A. Middl
brooks, Riverdale. Dee
Want farm help, not - af
of work, white or colored,
est, for farm, 10 mi. A
House, wood, garden f ee
wages, regular work, I
growing peanuts, corn, ha
small grain for 30A. land
house, barn, garden, wood
ter. Also farm. Help to
Bextra jobs on farm. Ir:
Boatright, Alma.
Want good, honest c 1
caretakers on farm. Wil
more land> if needed,
Mrs. ey ye ]
and chiskete free, in excl
for looking after place. |
412 W. Anderson Ste-
Want: someone to 1s6
Salary or share basis.
land, fences, ~
houses. On Mail and =
bus. Located in Heard Ci
drinker. Must be reliabl
Knight, Mableton.
Want farm couple fo
4 mi. So. Claxton on
basis, live in part of 8
po
everything except stock
labor. Tobacco
garden spot, etc. $3.00 d
Turner, Atlanta, 133
France St., NE., c/o coe
Leon Dairy.
zood, Tare 2 and 1
on Chattahoochee _
Holcomb Bridge.
ENard, Alpharetta, Rt.
Want exp. dairy hel
man with: family. Wh
C. N. Roberds, Savanna
Bonaventure Rd., c/o.
Dairy. i
mule for sale. -H.
Soperton, Rt 120)
Want Zood Ree fo
also close to :
Pow y,. 3 mis foe: Mrs. :
Puckett, Jesup, phone 2 .
Want share ero RSE
on large farm. Have trac
R. house. On school bus _
Rockdale Co. eo
woman, 40-50 vrs. of age t
as one of family and do
work. Board, room and s:
Mrs. Jo Moses, Aaa
Windsor, St.
Want lor 2 hoe on
for 2 or more A. tobacc
5 A. cotton, all sweet po'
wants, peanuts and fee
stock; on school bus_
ro. o: mise, Alina. a
lis, Alma.
Want give rent OL i
Clermont for my board.
give all the place make
rent on 3rds and 4th
houses, plenty frui
and school n
Homer Hulsie nearby. M
T. Osborne, McDonough
Want tenant for 2-H ar.
50- 50 basis for 1945; g
house, running water
elec. 452 mi. of sche
line: 1-2 mi. to church.
ae who can opera
. B. Mathews, Howar
Peonies, silver
white, fle pink
$5.00 doz. d
Iris, many col:
lilaes, 10) ed
$15.00
Loa: