Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1945 December 19

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TOM LINDER.

COMMISSION ER



WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1945



SOLOS

The babe in/Marys arms proved Cae $ gift fo man. On Christmas Day we oe
His birth, and in Church His words bring us Solace for our tribulations, hope for the future,
and faith in each other. Each Christmas renews our faith in our fellowman and makes _

us thankful for each friend we have. With kindest pomp niDrances and

Tom Linder

here is now pending in Congress a bill to raise the coe
r mined in the United States.
e price of silver and the price of gold are questions that
Jd be of vital interest to the rank and file of the people
rica. Not only the price of silver and gold is of vital
ee, More vital is the question of the use to which
and gold is put.
out twelve years ago Congress raised the price of gold
20 00 an ounce to 35, 00 an ounce. At that time the
ates had very little gold. Most of the gold then be-
to the international bankers and foreign countries.
e great marvel was that as soon as the taxpayers had

and paid $35.00 an ounce for this foreign gold, Congress.

President took us off the gold standard and buried the
na mountain in Kentucky.
it were a good thing to pay. a high price for foreign gold,
a crime to pay a high price for American silver? Are
ans entitled to less for their product than are people of
untries ?
we had no need for gold a silver, then it is foolish for
ernment to buy it at any price.
we do need the gold and silver, then why should we be

ng to pay the American producer at least as high a price

ay to foreign countries?
relve years ago our currency was on a gold basis. Every
of paper money in cireulation was euaranteed Py a
of gold in the United States treasury.

n the late twenties we had shipped 3% billion jollars of
Europe to pay for importing goods into this country.

which brought on the depression of 1929, At that time
aid that it was imperative for us to acquire gold to

ur banks and our currency.
ently Congress passed what is aoe as the Bretton
\greement. Under the Bretton Woods Agreement, the
as oe on sage Te



Commissioner of Agriculture:

wrerr es

In the year . 1493 B. C. the children of laa slew the | m
and sprinkled the blood on the posts and lintels of the doo
At night, the destroying angel passed through the Jand
Egypt to destroy the first born, but he passed over every he
where the blood of the lamb was on the post and lintel of t

door.

At that time, God said unto Moses and Aaron This mon
shall be unto you the beginning of months: it shall be ues

month of the year to you.Ex. 12:2.

For 1456 years the children of Israel observed the feast
the passover according to Gods command.

The keeping of the feast of the passover ae year we
the milestones that marked the time from the deliverance
the children of Israel from Egyptian bondage to the crucifixi

of Christ on the eross. .

The lambs that were slain for the keeping of the passor
were emblematic of the death of Christ on the cross.

Each time that the children of Israel kept the feast of
passover, they were one year further removed from Egypt:
bondage and they were one year nearer to the En ol
promised Messiah.

A few faithful souls among the children of Israel stil

7 tained their faith in the coming Messiah when the st:

Bethlehem appeared. |
The great majority of the lorashie had ceased to ha

: fying faith. He ee of the oe the ee of fhe w

to S an eee to them.
The priests, the scribes and the Phun had all i
away froma living faith. Se :
The high priest had received his office by order
Roman government.






SEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN

Address all items for publication and all. requests to be put
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OF MARKETS. 222 STATE CAPITOL. Atlanta.

ee Notices of farm produce and appurtenances Siac
under postage regulations inserted one time on each request and
repeated only when is accompanied by new copy =
notice

BE Limited space wil! not permit insertion of notices Gopinine
more than 30 words including name and address.

Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not
assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
Bulletin
Soy Published Weekly at
114-122 Pace St. Covington, Ga
_ By Department ef Agriculture
Tom Linder, Commissioner,

















































Executive Oitice. State Capito!

: Atlanta. Ga

S Publication Office
114-122 Pace St.. Cevington, Ga

Widitorial and Executive Offices

- State Capitol. Atlanta. Ga.



Netify on FORM 3578Bureau o}
Markets. 222 State Capitol
Atlanta. Ga.



as second class matiei
August 1 1937. at the Posi Otfie
gt Covington. Georgia. under AC
of June 6 1900 Accepted for
s mailing at special rate 01 postag:
provided tor in Section 1103. f-
Soh Ore:

S Enterea









(Continued from Page One)

=e

nintries, including England, also agree to put up
heir proportionate part of gold for this mterna-
ional bank.

billion dollars whieh is twice as much as Englands

part in the international bank.
5 The loan wheh the United States has made
o England carried a condition that the labor gov-

iWeods Apreement. The Bretton Woods Agree:
ent was largely proposed by the Churehill govern-
ment of Enland. We are forcing the Attlee labor
government to accept the Churchill governments
yroposal in order to get the loan. This is the real
reason that the British Parliament haggled so long
and made sneh bitter remarks about the American
loan to England.

Attlee government in England to force the Attlee
overnment to approve this Bretton Woods Agree-
ment.

News has just come, as I am dictating this
article, that the British Parliament has approved
the Bretion Woods Agreement. This was delayed
until one day after it approved the 41% billion
dollar Joan from the United States.

Are we loaning England 41% billion so they
can put up 2 billion? It would have been much



of loaning England 4% billion and requiring Eng-
and to put up 2 billion.
_ If gold is not good to stabilize United States

currency, why is it needed to stabilize eurrency in
other countries?

INTERNATIONAL BANK AND
INTERNATIONAL BANKERS

_ Did it ever occur to you that an international
f ank and the international bankers are one and
the same.



this gold over to an international bank, we will be
urning it back to the international bankers? Had
you thought that the international bankers are the
ame crowd that we ye 35.00 an ounce for this



Dee: in 19459 =:
The international : bankers have. caused the





{| bloody war oe alae
; Wars with this same gold.

j war.

ILVER AND GOLD

nited States proposes to put up billions of dol
ars of gold im a so- -ealled international bank. Other

We have just made a loan to Hnipland of 4%.

a dollar.

ernment of England. must approve the Bretton

It seems that America is using this loan to the

cheaper for us to put up 2 billion more instead.

_. Had you ever thought that when we turned{



Today we talk about world peace and no more
At the same time, we give this bloody gold| -
back to the same international gang that are re-

sponsible for the millions of lives that have been

lost in these bloody wars.

These same internationalists
building of Hitlers war machine.
the building of Japans army of aggression. They
are now receiving this geld at our hands to enable
them to finance the next bloody war.

INFLATION

The editorials I have read are opposing the
purchase of American-mined silver at a higher
price. They advanced the argument that raising
the price of silver will create inflation. It is ri-

Bameccd the

diculous to say that raising prices will create in- | w :
| DAariow.

flation. You might as well say that using a bigger
bucket to draw. water out of a well will cause the
well to run over.

Inflation is an increase in the amount of
money.
High prices are the natural
antidote to inflation. _ High prices are eaused by
inflation.

' We already ee inflation. This inflation was

High prices for sil-
\ver, for cotton, for labor, nor for anything else, can

ahue inflation.

MONEY STANDARD
It is only when you use gold and silver as a
basis on which to issue money that the price of

gold and silver has any bearing whatever on in-
flation or deflation.

When we were on the gold stdndard. 4/20 of}
}an ounce of gold was. the measure of the value of
When we raised the price of gold to
$35.00 an ounce, then 1/35 of an ounce of gold, be-

came the measure of the value of a dollar.

The raising of the value of gold from $20.00.
an ounce to $35. 00 an ounce reduced the value of

the American dollar'to 59 cents measured in gold.
When we went off the gold standard, gold was no
longer the measure of the value of a dollar. The

|price of gold now has nothing to do with inflation

or deflation.
Silver would haye to go to about $2.00-an ounce

before it would be on a parity with the present.
price of gold.

If the Federal government would use this gold
and silver to give us sound money in the United

States, instead of giving it to the international

haitkers. this would do more to relieve the housing
situation, create jobs and alleviate labor troubles
than all the control laws that Congress can write
on paper..

The people's party in the 1890s made a fight
for free and unlimited coinage of silver and gold.
Thev wanted to keep our money sound, but at that
time we had deflation of money. We did not have
enough money.

We need coinage of silver and gold today to
substitute for a lot of paper moriey. We need this
to make our money sound. 3

One of the principal-causes for high prices of
real estate, especially around large cities, is the

|desire of those who have large sums of money to

swap that money for substantial property.

- If these people could get silver and gold money,
they would not be so anxious to trade it off. If sil-
ver and gold is thrown into the fire and melted, it
ean still be raked out of the ashes and has a ee
power.

If silver and geld are outlawed as money in
the United States, you can still carry this silver
and gold into other countries and it has a buying
power. This is not true of paper money.

The psychology of hard money cannot be dis-
counted, especially in times of inflation. We need
y | this gold and silver coined into money and substi-
* | tuted for a lot of paper money.

TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture.



They financed

| High prices require more money to buy
the same commodity.

caused by unlimited use of government credit and
by the increase in the amount of money from
|6 billion to 27 billion dollars.

ay have finance e | MACHINER}



-[ prices.






































































2 unit Serge milking
in perf. cond. Of pre
terial, $300.00; ake
machine for dairy, $50.00.
Moorehead, Fitzgerald, Rt

42 McCormick Deer
bine, t

lespedeza, etc., $350. 00,
farm 6 mi. co W.
Thomas G. Scott, Sr.,
Rt-3

1 new John Deere
er. Dr. L. C. Fisch
burg, Rt. 1.

2-H arawe ee Johi
side del. rake, | No.
10 ft. binder, No. 10 H
mill, Tractor peanut
Allis Chalmers. Combi
Letz 240 Series all purp:
mill. <A. S.. Chambl

60 tooth Spike Harro
Planet, Jr., .seed d
a Spring tooth harro:
tion.) All good con
Milteer, Quitman.

Aermoter Windmill,
tower, 10-ft. wheel, 18
complete. In good
chaser to take down.
J.C. Ward; Perry

McCormick Deering s

rake, $130,00. -Peanu
Turner - make,
press. J. H. Levere

No. 12 DeLaval
Needs 1-2 new parts f
work, $25:00. FOB.
Tucker, Sandersville

tivators, distributer and
ers, 4 disc tiller, double
harrow, seeder, side de.
Lilliston Weeder, Benth
nut picker and hay ba
sold for $3,000.00.
a ames, Warwick.

_ Equipment for Reta!
prac. new 2 double ui
Cormick milkers;
cooler, 12 cans, Strai
capper, bottles and ca

ters. ans. H. K. Rebuc
aire, Rt. 1. eos
2 unit DeLaval

milker with elec. mo
also 1h. p. Frigidaire
sor and elec. motor. Bi
and compartment for
cans, $400.00. Norma
Thomasville. Se

1 late model B. Joh:
tractor, 1 24-dbl.
duty harrow: le

Deere tiller and seede
Mosely, Thomaston, 634
ter St.

John Deere irae
rubber with power
planter, cultivator,
seeder box and dise-

complete, $1,500.00. J.
Tanner, Sandersviile,
40251.

1 case pick- up
equipped with sli
new. Z. P. Almon, |

1 No. 60 Aj -C. m
good running cend. R.
len, Jenkinsburg.

1 All steel body 2
$85.00. 1 steel beam 2 |
ae 00. A. T. Raymer
Rt, 1; Bex gues

in good shape. i
4-H. Leroy High speed

$200.00; also, Deering
binder in good shape w
canvas, $150.00.
Newnan, Rt. 2..

Farming tools for sale
Come see. J.
Mt. Airv.

1941 B Allis Chalmer
in A-l cond. with
cultivating equip., F
tributor, 8-ft. weeder
tooth harrow, 2 * dise -
plow, 20 dise dbl. secti
row, $1,100.00. No lett
Frank Bryan, Davisb
Phone 185-J-3, Tennille

Model B John Dee:
tor, planting, cultivati
dise tiller, harrow, wee
del rake, Turner peanu
press, motor. 10 Mi.
bridge, W. of Rive
Humphrey,: Colquitt.

9

2 rew Farmall 1

rubber with trailer . i
section harrow,
planters and fert.
All in good shape.


3 mi. W. Cecil. W.





|Hahira, Rt. 2

eis pike gas





Y FOR SALE |

AN
MACHINERY FOR SALE,



ll Tractor on steel.
or nearly new

rubber and pay cash:

A. LL. Sparks,

ium size late model
wheel orchard type

See Mr.
wy. at Flint river,

and Fayetteville.:
142

Atlanta,

Tractor and plow

p. In good running

vcks off Covington.
1 Birdsong, Lithonia,

ning order, $400. 00

1 be seen 4Vy mi. out
om Barnesville. O.

Barnesville.

row stalk cutter, 1
16 disc. cut-away

good cond. | - Jack B.

pee distributors,
: ae _ new

; = Case - row corn
r Al eo Picked

engine, water
also .

0 200 gal.

p. with 5 h. p. New
Pegine. Rubber hose
guns included. Mule
wo 3, , Bivins,

et:

aall tractor and a
Her, used -1 yr.,
= andition. Ernest z
; chelle, R. 2;

model Allis
bber; 12 disc har-

plow, planting, fer-|.

Itivating equipment,
mule drawn
e-del. rake, used
$950 cash, Mrs. J,

; r, regular, on
Itivator,. fert. attach-

isc turning ptow, dbl.

all ae cond.
x _ J. W. Giles,

n Deseo "tractor onl,
% ee

J ohn Deere

a dg. A, Brazeal,
Rt. 3, Phone 1202.

power Cane mill,
Yt. self skimmer
300.00 -at farm, 5
s. W. A. Dicker-

wagon, running
large hay frame (No
Robert Spruill,

o ae elec. motor
ll and 8 in. IHC Feed.
my place on Wel-
Rd., 1 Mi. off Roose-
$86. 00 for both. A.

College Park, Rt. 1-

t ll tractor
2 disc plow.

ractor on rubber.
: Come see..
sricus, 124 . West

with
and
In

ational 8 ft. binder
In good
1, Neisler, Reynolds.

eady ae _ma-

Hayes.

Chalmers

| ber,
planter, also 1 pr. 900 Ib. mules,:
\all cheap at my farm, 1% mi.

John |



42 MeGormick Deering. Conk :

bine in good cond.. D. M. Nix,
Crawford.

1. Upright Grist mill, 30-in,
Rock complete outfit. Motor,
sheller, scales, belt. E. M: Les-
seur, Winterville.

4 Disc Case Tiller, almost

new in A-1 cond., $110.00, WwW.

C. Bates, Covington.

Practically new I- 6 Interna-

tional tractor with 5 dise tiller.:
Wray Smith,

Dont
Sparta.

write.

2 International Riding Culti-

vators for sale in A-1 cond.
KE. R. Yarbrough, Mershon.

4 70-saw Continental Extrac-
tors in A-1 cond. S. E. Mercer,
Metter.

No. 62 International eyes

er Combine in good cond. Can
be seen at my home. A. O.

| Sands, West Point, Rt. 2.

al cultivator with distributor,
$65.00; 1 Cole Cern and bean.

planter with distributor, $30.00;
1 Cole Cotton dropper for $23. 00
Not prepaid. een Thompson,
Gibson.

- Good 1-H wae J. H. Con-
a Monroe, Rt. 2.

Ford Ferguson bottom plow,
16-in size. Good as new, $100.00.

. J. J. Wright, Marshallville. _

-1 Walking cultivator, good as
new. Right and left turn: plows,
2 sweep plows; $80.00. See or
write. W. J. Overstreet, Rin-
con, Rt. 1.

General Elec. 12 can milk
cooler and Aerator, 1 yr. old;

also 2 dbl. unit milkers com~"

plete, $650.00. Loyd J. Keadle,
Yatesville.

John Deere 6 disc. tiller, lat-
est model. Used 3 days.. Tom

. Richardson, Palmeto,

Set of 2 row planters, di
tributor and cultivator with

plenty of sweeps also, power

lift for model. B tractor. Sell
or trade. Norman Wright,
Woodstock, Rt. 2.

Turner. peanut. picker and
power hay baler in A-1 cond.,
$750.00; also 1 Dixie - 2 Tow
tractor drawn Cotton Chopper,
$175.00. H. W. Shealy, Ogle-
thorpe.

cooler. In good cond., $150.00.
RVs Wimpey, Ellijay, Ried:

60 Horse boiler, 40 horse En-
gine in good cond. - Also: com-
plete Gin outfit. Curtis .L.
Combs, LaGrange, Rt. 1.

Farmall F-12 on. nearly new

pre-war rubber, oversize tires,
with cultivators. |
cond. &. , Watren, Ocilla, Rt.
ds

F-14 Farmall tractor in good
A. D. Dean,

cond., good rubber.
1 Ty Ty, Rik.

1 ea. good Riding sativater
Cole or Avery Distributor, No.
10 Oliver Turner, Oliver Goo-
Gee Whiz, Avery. Corn

Soperton. Roscoe Sammons,

Soperton, Rt. 3.

A seeder for 7 D8 disc
Tiller plow, $35.00. M. L
Shealey, Oglethorpe.

Light, single sec. Harrow,

with new 20-in disc. and cast
bearings, cuts 5% ft. R. F.
Jenkins, Munnerlyn, phone ae
459W1.

Spring wagon, buggy, Black

mare, wt.. 1150 or 1200 Ibs.;
Oliver plow, Gee Whiz, Black
Hawk Corn and Cotton planter,
distributor, set blacksmith tools,

all in good - shape, for $250. 00.

J. A. Franklin, Rydal, Rt. 2.

Ford-Ferguson 2 bottom 14
plow: with extra set of. slat
wings, complete; also rolling
coulters, $165.00; Rome, 8 disc

cutaway harrow, 9-in. spacing,
pick-up. type for Ford tractor,

perfect cond., $175.00; set Cov-
ington planters fers Ford trac-
tor, extra plates, $75.00. G. A.

_| Lewis, Elko.

Farmall A tractor, plow and

-|front half of tandem harrow,

e, | 14 disc.

jold wheat.

,| pair.

.| hay baler, old but in good shape;
thrash, running
shape; 3 row grain drill; Plano
wheat binder, needs some re-
uC. Martin, G



Iville, Rt.

| cyondale.

-tilizer

good cond.,

All in good:

or without
| tractor, model H or M with fer-
tilizer, planting, and cultivating

Used very. little; power.



( aines- in.



MACHINERY FOR S. =



A 42-in. Grits aoe 110 J. D.

Hammer Mill, Allis Chalmers

|power unt, 35-h. p., with equip-

ment, $1,000.00. Will not sell
separately. J.B. McLeod, Val-
dosta, Rt. 3, Box 41. :

1 Gantt cotton planter, dis-

tributor, 1 grain cradle, all near-
ly new, copper evaporator, 1
planet Jr., garden planter, 1
farm bell, for sale.
Tifton, Rt. 7.

Aeromotor Wind Mill, 10 ft.

Wheel, and other parts, $75.00:

and buyer- take down. Good
cond. S. A. Thompson, Videlle.

Chattanooga reversible
disc plow, worn out only 1 disc,

2 disc. good as new, to go with

plow. Perfect cond. See it.
30 mi. West Atlanta on Bank-
head Hwy. at Winston. Will
ship. Horace Darnell, Winston.

- F-20 tractor, I. H. Cy with

28 in. dise plows and disc har- |
|row, 24 disc, good shape, for

sale. Sam Love, Rocky Face.

other plows.
Cobbtown.



_ SECOND-HAND

-MACHINERY WANTED

Trade 1942 Farmall H Tractor.

on rubber, lights, starter, in exc.

cond. and fully equipped for 2
late model: Ford Ferguson trac-
tors, fully equipped. Will pay
difference, H. G. Bell,

Want cultivating type tractor
on rubber big enough +o pick
up. kudzu crowns. Write for
particulars. Y. M: Anderson,
Williamson.

Want 7 by 9 Grain and For.
drill. Will -give good
price for any standard make.
J. W. Lindsey, Lnox.

Want 30 or 40 gal. churn in
and reas. priced.
Also will trade 20 mo. old Tenn.

Walking horse colt for baled.

oats or good hay. C. H. Year-
wood, Macon, Rt. 6, Box 142,

Want Farmall Aor Farmall
H tractor with all equipment.

Grady Moore, Metter.

* Warn Farmall model A trac-
1943 model Elec. 6 can milk.

tor with all equipment for cash.
. M. Henderson, Pearson, Rt. 1.

Want 4 or 5 disc tiller.
fer John Deere. State cond.,
makeand price. Also want Letz

|feed mill and: mower for W. C.|
W. Hz.

Allis Chalmers: tractor.
Foster, Rome, P. O. Box 405.

Want a good whirling lime
spreader suitable for all kinds
of fertilizer, seeds and the like.
G. C. Adams, Social Circle.

Want power hay baler with
engine. Farmall

equip. only. Give full details.
M .L. Gross, Sandersville.

Want tractor, disc and equip-
at once.
Wray, Rt. 2.

Want pair scales suitable for
weighing livestock. Roy C.
Singletary, Ochlochnee.

Want 1 power Cane mill.
Good cond. Also Evaporator
from 12-16: copper. State price
and cond, Ans. all letters. S.
P, Collin, Cobbtown, Rt. 2.

Want International 2 bottom
plow with 16. in. bottoms. in
very good cond. Prefer on rub-
ber. Hugh Hogan, Ocilla, Rt. 2,
Box 108.

Want 1 set rear steel wheels
for Ford Ferguson tractor.
reas. cash price. T. ~
Eliijay.

Want 1 good planter and. dis-
tributor for model A, 1 row
Farmall, tractor. Julian Frost,
Vidalia, Rt. 2.

Want 2 dise plow and culti-
vator for Farmall A _ tractor.

Must be in good cond. - S.:

Lewis, Summit, Rt. 1. |

Want 1 Garden Tractor. B.
H, Upton, Macon, 308 Lyn-
more Ave.

Want to buy 2-H_ turning
steel plow. . Write full details,
WwW. R. Walker, Dial,

Want Grist mill, not over 42
. rock. Paul Cole, Newnas,

W. M. Hall,

F-50{

'2 Riding cultivators, 2 plant-
ers, peanut weeder, Fowler and
_W. O. Boatright, |

Gookins,

press.

Hal-.

Pre-.

Mrs. Ada A. Hester,

Pay |
Webb,



ant planters, distibaies
and cultivators for Allis Chal-
mers W-C tractor. Carl T.
Johnson, Blackshear, Rt. 2.

_ Want pair of steel wheels for
37. yr. model B John Deere
tractor or 1 wheel with spokes:
made. for rubber tire. D. A.
Law,- Chula.

Want small 2 row tractor with
equip. Would consider 1 row;

also, Farmall H or John Deere

B with equipment. R. H. Wright,
Sycamore, Rt. 3, Box 144.
Want medium _ size

Write kind, cond.
Fo B. Jackson,

epuipment.
and price.
Wrightsville.

Want double disc harrow, In-
ternational, John Deere or any
standard make for tractor.
Must be chegp and in good
cond. W. H. Grimes, Colquitt.

Want 1 2-disc tiller or 1 8-

disc bush and bog harrow in

good cond. W. G. Spears, Jef-
fersonville, Phone 2612, 75

Want Combine in good cond.,
Price must be reas. Burnell
Willacoochee.

Want screw type cotton
Write cond., price and
where may be seen. Gordon
Bush, Macon, 601 Broadway.

Want Allis Chalmers Tractor,
WC 60, Tiller and Harrow.
Also want Knocker Fertilizer
Dist., 2-H Riding plow and
other tools. E. J. Hart, Duluth,
RFD.

Want late model. Ford. trac-
tor. A..H. Haslam, Moultrie,

A12-ist St, S. WwW.

Want a 2 disc. tiller plow.
C. A. Franklin, McRae.

Want cultivators,
and distributors for Model tC
Allis-Chalmers tractor. L. E.
Mize, Madison, Rt. 2.

Want a 3 or 4 H. P. Garden
tractor in good cond. cheap for
cash, or will buy motor for
same. B. E. Mobley, La Grange,
102 Fair St...

Want to Bie a syrup kettle,
60 gal. size. J. O. Taylor, Pat-
terson, Rt. 1.



INCUBATORS AND
BROODERS



Want.2 automatic drinkers for
poultry. .G. B.:/ McNeal,
At,1.

1 ea. elec brooders: Farm
Master, 500 chick cap., $25.00;
Lyons, 350 cap., $25.00; 5 elec.
battery brooders, 100 cap. ea.,.
$10.00 ea. 3 Ker. brooders, 100
cap., $4.00 ea. Feeders, water
fountains free with entire lot,
All good cond., and priced my
farm. No shipments. CG.
Faulkner, Monticello, Rt. 2.

Want a 600 cap. elec. incu-
bator, in good cond., at reascn-
able price. -State what you
have, price, and how long in
use. Oxford Denham, Eaton-
ton, Box 264.

3 coal brooders, slightly ee
1,000 chick cap. to ea. brooder;
also 24 good big feeders, good

cond. J. W. Ingram, Commerce, |

Rt. 4,

Brower hot water outfit for
starting chickens or turkeys,
$350.00; also 5. deck elec. start-
ing battery, $60.00. Exc. for
chickens, hogs. or cows. Write
J Be McLeod, ees Rica,
Box 41.



ae AND PEAS
FOR SALE



I Bu. of sugar crowder peas;
handshelled, 15c Ib. in 5 Ib, lots
or more.
shipped. Add postage. Mrs.
Emma M. Puckett, Buford, Rt.
1, Box 50. 22

Purple Hull and 6 Wks. Crowd-
ers improved Blue Whipps and|

large Speckled running butter-
beans, 3 cups of any for $1.10.
No. chks. Mrs, L. R. Ashworth,
Dacula.

Butter Peas: White Bush Dix-
ie, % Ib, 35c; Speckled, also,
White running, 40c lb.; 1 tb. ea.
of running and % Dixie bush,

$1.00. $1.00 or more order P. P.
No checks. Mrs. Ay B $l

in Ga.

tractor |
with planting and cultivating

planters |

Ginned on al Var. Gin.

No less than 5 Ibs.





18 bu. Dee sae un
peas, slightly mixed. $6.00 k
at my barn. A. W. Ha len,
Thomson, Rt. 2. o

White tender er
beans, 1945 crop, 35c lb. Add
postage. Also, sev. lbs. striped
half runners. Same price.

D. A. Vandiver, Dial.

4, bu. Calif. peas, $25.50. f
lot; 75 Ibs. Hendersons Bush
lima beans, 40c lb. for lot. Add
Express Chgs. to all. W.
a Swainsboro, Rt. 1, Box

Bunch colored butterbe
1945 crop, 30c Ib. plus postag
All orders filled imme. Mrs.
Pollie Jackson, Waco, Ri, 2
Box 94. paso



CORN AND SEED CORN
FOR SALE



Best grade So.\ American Pc
corn, 15c lb. in 100 Ib. bags.
under 100 1b., 20c lb. Seaborn
eoperts, Royston, Rte ee

Good yellow shelled Pop cor
in 75-150 Ib. sacks, lle lb, C.
Adams, Waco, Rt. 1. |

Nice white clean shelled
corn, treated for weevils, 12
Ib. No less than 50 Ibs. shipp
Postage not paid. J. T. Bro
McDonough, Rt. 2, Box 137.

So. American yellow |
corn, shelled, 10 lbs., $2.25; 28
Ibs., $4.25. Postpaid. A, he
Rogers, Trenton, Star Rt.

75,000 lbs. Golden Queen Pop
corn in new, 125 lb. bags. Re-
cleaned, ready to ship in. 1,006
to 30 ton lots, $8.75 per hundred.
wt., FOB Cash. C. D. Colt S,
Cordele, Rt. 4.



COTTON. SEED
FOR SALE



Pure D. Pp L. No. 14 Cotto
seed. Ist year from Breede
$6.06
per 100 ibs. FOB. E. H. ch

| Lavonia, Rt. a

Hibred Half and Half Cot
seed. Pure and sound. 1st ye
from Summerours Breeders
Reas. priced. F. H. Bunn, Mid-
ville.



SEED FOR SALE _

2



: | a ae
- Collard seed, 50c 1b; 1
$4.00; $20.00 per hundred lbs;
Shogoin turnip, 75c Ib. A.
Ponder, Whigham. =

Red nest onions, $1. 00.
also scallion onion buttons,
gal. Add postage. Mrs. Hen

M. Jones, Lula, Rt. lb

White scallion onion bu

H. $1.00 gal; sage plants, 10

12 for $1.00. Mrs. C.
rells, Monroe, Rt. 1.

Gourd seed: Bushel, 15
10c;' darning and Martin
other mixed, 25 for 10c, or |
pkg of ea. kind mixed, =

| Mrs. Ben McBryant, Fitzgerald,

Rt. 3.

Purple Hull Crowder pea
50c cupful; Broadleaf must
and Southern Curled
clean 1945 crop, 50c_ cl
Mrs. V. M. Johnson, She
Rt. 1, Box. 54. 2

90 Ibs. States Best hand ved
shade dried Cantaloupe
$1.25 lb.; 25 lbs. Cuban
Watermelon seed, $1.00
James A. Bloodworth, Sack 1
Rt. 2, Box 1417,

Good combine run Kor
pedeza seed, 10c lb.; Recl
No. 1 seed, 17c tb. in even
bags. R. A, Allen, Jenkinsbur

6 Tons Kobe Lespedeza C
bine run, exc. cond., 10
FOB. J. A, Cobb, Har
Rie 8: Le ee

10 tons Kobe Lespedez
combine run, exc cond., u
wt. bags, $175. 09 ton at

seed, $45.00 at barn. R.
ren, Dewy Rose. :

Hand saved Cannon B S
on seed, $1.00 tb. Postpai
es Brannen, Unadilla. _

Collard seed, 50c Ib;
Dollar tobacco seed, (25
this. full; Home_

P. P.






a Kohe and: ones

seed; also, Peas, Bi+
. Send sam-|

ddwell, Guy.

sespedeza seed, 10 Ib.,
$30.00 Ton. Victor
ommerce, Rte

50 doz.! Small clear seed,
; Purple Hull table
gt.; Yellow Crookneck

h, 25 eupful: Blue Dam-

_ Add
Cum-

m_ seed; 25 doz.
ee Rosie Crowe,
SL

ean Lespedeza_ seed, com-
n, almost free of dodder,

yuse near Nancy Hast
use, 10c. Ib. Newt a
jin 5 and 10 M_lots, $1. 75 M.
Exp. Col.
+ shipment..
= Branch, Rt, .

m - Gold tobacco seed,
ed for germination, 75e OZ.
Redmond, Pelham.

ie tested Marnmoth Gold:

seed, 75c 0%.
Pelham. :

tb. Chambers special Bie

By OR,

co seed. Will produce 1,500)

$2.00 pi; -P. Po RON,
ys Sereven, Rt. 2.

Ww crop, hand saved, 100

A-1 Cannon Ball melon.
00 Ib. Prepaid. Luther |
ee Be 1, Bee White Bermuda Onion plants,

All plants

L,

_ | Yarrow, 25 doz.,

$1.00. M.
Shipped imme, Mrs. Otis Wil-'

mmoth Gold Tobacco seed, :

enny match boxes for $1.00.
postage. 350 bu. heavy
$1.50 bu.;
50. 00 ton.
Tarrytown.

Clyde E. Phil-

non Ball melon seed, hand
and: selected, $1. 50 lb. }
( Shallot onions,

Miss Vena Brown, Hart-

ombine run Sericea
ao Decatur, RE,

roa leaf Tobacco weed 5c
poonful; Collard seed,
Bee A. Crow, Gainesville,

Lespedeza seed, com-
Fie J Sericea Les-
2a eed, combine run, 13%4

-my farm. Clay L,

n, Hartwell, bse =

~ Fashioned Shallot on-
Oc C: 400, $1.00. Mrs. J.
, Hartwell.

ee Kobe Lespdeza
15.00 100 lbs. FOB. L. J.
ton, Jackson, Rt. 1.

a Lespedeza seed, com-

n but unusually clean.)

ant to buy young Hamp-

It bred to farrow Feb.
Che AW AG. Cartledge,
Pp; O. Ox 220;



| ANTS FOR ate



iS Aghd Cc. W. Cabbage,
M.; $1.25, 500: Improved
ry, $3. 50 M.; $2.00, 500.
Prompt shipment.
ae Evans, Gaines-

: 2 ile NOFDSIT,

. Strawberry plants,
29; 500, $2.00; $3.75 M.
300, $1.75; $2.50, 500;
young plants, No
D. Crow, Gainesville,

nesh extra early Jer-

-W. and Copenhagens,.

Pn) Wie Dal
M, $7.00 Exp.
di onion plants, same
rompt shipment. Satis.
es piss Fitzgerald.

post-
White

hagen

= hteer,
bh iced: Large Red In-|

doz. del. in. Ga.
liams,

jien plants,

Steedley, Baxley.

5 tohs peavine |:

~ Nice.

seed,
' dodder, $15.00 100 lbs.



_ Jersey Charleston et Cepen
- eabbage |
plants: Crystal Wax and White
Bermuda onion plants.
J. M. | Coffey, :

frost proof

$1.00,
500; $1.50 M.
Fitzgerald, Box 62.

Rabbit= -eye Huckleberry plants,
strong, 15 ea. or 12'%c ea. by:
T. Mil-

hundred lot.
Quitman.

FOB. A,

Red Raspber ry ine

132:

Charleston Wakefield Cabbage,

plants. Now ready, $1.50, 500;

| $2.00. M. Del. Prompt shipment.

Mrs. Gainesville,

Rt. 2.

Ohorieciah Wakefield Cabbage
plants, $1.20, 500: $2.00 M. Del.

Belle Cr owe,

Full count. Prompt

yr. Washington Asparagus,
ne $1.00; Thornless Boysenber=;
lry, 127 $1. 00: Boysenberry, Him- |
yalaya. Berry and Youngberry,

15, $1.00. All postpaid. J..W.
Toole, Macon, 33. Burton Ave.

Red and Yellow Bermuda On-
He C300, $1.00;
$3.75 M. Ga. heading Collard

plants, 400, $1.00; $2.00 M. del.

ville, Rt. L:

Early Jersey Cabbage and

$1.50 M: $1.25, 500.
del. Prompt shipment. G.

Cabbage plants,

liams, Baxley, Rt. 4..

strawberry plants
sale, 30c C. Postage paid. A.
D. Luckey, Harlem, |

Strawberry plants, 500, $2. 50: :
garden

Striped half runner
bean, 35c cupful del. No checks.
Money orders. Mrs. Bartow Bar-
rett, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

Large arly Jersey and

Charleston W. Cabbage plants,
$1.50) &

Bermuda Onion plants,
Me Sd. 00, 500; Same price. P. P.
Orders filled promptly. E. L.

| Fitzgerald, Irwinville.

Sage plants, $1.00 doz.; To-
baeco seed, 50c tbls.;

$2.60 doz. L, J. Ellis, Cumming.

C; Raspberry plants,

1 pair N. Z. White Rabbits, 3
mos. old. Ped. stock. $4.00 exp.
col. Mrs. Otis Mashburn, Cum-
ming, ae

Klondike strawberry plants,

60e C; $2.50, 500; $4.50 M.; Mas-

todon, 70--C; -$3:50,, 500; $5.50
M. Well rooted. Prompt ship-
ment.
ming, Rt, 1.

Frostproof Charleston Wake-
field Cabbage plants, $1.50, 500;
$2.00 M. Del. Now ready. Dewey
Mathis, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Charleston Wakefield Cabbage
plants. Now ready. $1.50, 500;
$2.00 M. Del. Guar. good strong
plants, count and prompt, ship-
ment. Claude Mathis, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 2.

Sage plants, well rooted,
._| Muscadine vines, Beechnut trees,
Old Fashioned peach trees,
| Crabapple trees, 20c ea.; Dew-
berry. vines, $1.00 doz. Mrs, W.
Gainesyille, Rt. 6.

Well rooted sage plants, Crab-
apples, Old. fashioned peach
trees, Clingstone and plum
peaches, Beechnut bushes, Mus-
cadine vines, 20c ea.; Gooseber-
ry bushes, $1.50 doz. Mrs. Mae
Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.

Charleston Wakefield frost-.
proof Cabbage plants and Ber-

muda onions, $2.25 M. Postage
paid. Otis Conner, Pitts.

Frostproof Cabbage and On-
ion plants, $1.50 M. W. W- Wil-
RDS; Quitman.





GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES FOR A
ous CHRISTMAS AND

MARKET. BULLETIN AND ATs. EDITOR.

"BLIZABETH Hy NDS.

D NEW YEAR FROM





| dive,
bage,

EC: Waldrip} ak Bie

for:
accepted.

del.
Well rooted sage. plants, $1. 23:

Gourds,

Iceberg lettuce plants,

Mrs. A. D. Jones, Pag

plants.

Be



Mastodon. pee plants,
young, well rooted and damp
packed, 75c C; $5.00 M. Postage
paid only in Ga.- Mrs. A. oF
Mayfield; Cumming, Ri

Early Jersey, Copenhagen and|>
Flat Dutch frostproof nT
500;.
White Bermuda onion

plants, $1.00, 300; $1.25

$2.25 M. ;
platits, same

price. Postage

| paid. . R. Chanclor, Pitts.
$1. 00).
Mrs. J. L. Wile.

ee ee Box! io M lots, $2.00 M. del.

count
Horace

and prompt

- Allison, Gainesville,

Rte.

Iceberg Lettuce, beats en-
$1.00 C; Wakefield cab-
rutabaga, kale,
carrots,
and Bermuda - onions,
parsley, garlic, asparagus, arti-

chokes, 35 doz. Any -amt. del.
Vai Franklin, Register.

- Klondike,

A.
Strawberry plants,
50c C; $2.50; 500;.$5.00 M; Mas-
todon, 60 ea
M;. 1945 dried peaches, 60 1b.;
Apricot plums, 35c ea., 4 for
$1.00. Add postage.
shipment. Mrs: Tec
Gainesville, Rte os

No. 1, 2 yr. Eldorado Black-
berry, healthy, strong plants,
$1.50 C; 2 M for $25.00.

Hood,

Robinson, Greenville.

$1.00, doz. Balm,
Spearmint, Peppermint, Catnip,
50c_ orders
postpaid. Damp packed. Mrs.
A. Horsley, Waco, Rt. 2,.Box 40.

Fresh grown Klondike straw-
berry plants, $1.00, 200; $2.25,
500; $4.00 M. Del.
ville, Rt. 2.

Chas. Wakefield Cabbage,

hite B da Onions, Collard
White Bermuda Onio agers ton FOB my barn. M.

| ly, Oglethorpe.

plants, $1.40, 500; $250 M. All
hoe Hall, Arabi, ie i

doz.; Dry sage, 30c qt.; $1.00
gal. Garlic bulbs, 3 doz., $1 00.
. S. Stephens, Dahlonega, Ret. 1.

Well rooted sage plants, $1.25
doz; dry sage, 30c qt; $1.00
gal.
Ance Grindle, Dahlonega, Ries

Blakemore strawberry plants,

Chas; W. Cabbage plants; 25 50c C; $2.50, 500; $4.00 M. Del.

40 doz.:
plus postage; Catnip 25 bunch;}

in Ga. Charles M.
Cumming, Rt. 5.

Chas., Early 7

Thompson,

cabbage and.
2502 s
extra. early strawberry, 50c C;
white Eng. peach trees, 25 ea.
Add postage.
lips, Royston, Rt. 1.

Extra fine Wonderbarier, Gib-
sons Red Gold strawberry, 75
C; raspberry, Iceberg blackber-
ry, rooted sage, horseradish, 6,
50c; horsemint, peppermint, '35
doz. Add postage. No. chks.
Mrs. Willis se. Dahlonega,
Ro

Large, footed Kudzu crowns,
trom 2 to 3yrs. old, $1:75'.G;
$12.00 M; 5 M lots not prepaid,
$10.00: M. Mrs. H. Leslie, Green-
ville, Rt. 1, Box 50.

Gem Everbearing strawberry |
plants, bear from early Spring

until. Fall, $2:00 C; $15.00 M.
Billy. Stanton, Warner Robins,
Box 22,

Missionary strawberry, 75c C,
Spring Shallot. Onions, 40c C.
Mrs. Cromer McCurley, Hart-
well, Rt. 2.

Copenhagen, Chas. Wakefield:

and Early Jersey Cabbage
plants, $1.50 M, $1.00, 500. All
del. Prompt shipment. Mrs. O.
L. Deal, Baxley, Rt. 4.

Longest and best
Mastodon Everbearing Straw-
berry plants, state insp. and cer-
tified, $3.25, 500; $5.50 M. Guar-
Satis. Del. Mark Woodliff,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.

Charleston Wakefield frost-
proof cabbage plants and White
Bermuda onion plants, 500,
$1.25; $2.25 M. Del, Ovie Con-
MEY Pinte ie 13

Frostproof Chas. Wakeficld
Cabbage plants, $1.00, 500; $1.50
Maze Ca. Detar Zone. No
stamps or checks. Alton Pitt-
man, Baxley, Rt. 4.

Chas. Wakefield Cabbage
Frostproof. Now ready.
$1.50 M; del. $1.00,.500. Money
orders preferred, Ottis Pittman,
Baxley, Rt. 4.

Everbtaring sttawhead
plants, 75 C; $5.00 M. Del. Mrs.

x 152

St ee

- Charleston Wakefield Cabbage | barn.

plants, $1.25, 500; $2.25 M; 5 and
Full
shipment.

collards,
Chinese cabbage, nest,
50c Cs:

$3. 00, 500;~ $6.00:
Prompt
Good |,

count and packing. Mrs. C, M.

or. car lots.

No- checks.
Cc. W. Smith, Gaines=*

Few bu.
Wheat, free from weevils, $2.50

Garlic bulbs, 3 doz., $1.00..

Mrs. Lester Phil-

ibu. - You furn.- bags.

flavored ||

Ss. Johnson, Lees = Oo. ; =



Crystal Wax - White Bermuda

onion plants, 500, $1.10; $2.00 M.

postpaid. J. H. Davis, Milledge-

Ri. 5, Box 126.

GRAIN- AND HAY
FE OR SALE



Peanit a $15.00 Ton FOB

C. Ward, Perry.

200 Bales Soy Bean and Pea-
vine Hay, 50 bu. slp. shucked

corn, 100: bales Wheat. and. Oat

also 17 pigs (cross |
bred) for meat, J Moorhead,

straw hay,

Decatur, Box 387, DE- 5301.
Good Peanut Hay for sale.

20 stacks of hay and 2 shoats. s

| Peanuts |
$3.50 bu.

Cannot load in cars. J.

Pic pecs ni
and delicious, 35
Packed. 5 Ibs. and wu

~l express or freigh
| for packing.

0. e

Sr., Bogart.
4 bu. White: Span

mixed,

~ Pesta

Mrs. Wille Mae ~
hurst, Rt. 1. :

New crop of s

bile pecans, 40-

5-10 lb. lots.
checks. <A. B.
Box 418.

New cr op of St

: Schley pecans, Jat
} filled out,

| crop dried
del. in truck load tots, 3:8 Tons:

to. the load. Write for prices.
James Lewis, Arabi.

40
peaches.
worms, 50 lb. d

Td. M. Jones, bet YS

for sale at farm on Statenville| eq ir

and Jennings Hwy. W. A. Min-|'miles;
extra.
10 tons. No. I Soy Bean Hay. Ag
and 100 bu. ea., Hastings Yel-
low and Whatleys White Corn. |:
M. S. Woodward, Atianta, 3905:
-Tuxedo Rd. N. W., Ch-8832.

tor, Lake Park.

3,000 bales Lespedeza
cea, Lespedeza and Meadow

Grass hay, baled, without rain,|.

| $1.00: bale or $30.00 ton;
Large sage plants, well root-

Ga, 5, 50;

3,000 Ibs. Sericea seed, 17% c ib.
All FOB my place, 4 mi, So.
These prices good only to. Jan.
5; 1946.
sonyille.

Choice Lespedeza hay i in truck
Can deliv. KE. V.
Vaughn, Bogart.

Peanut Hay, $15. 00 Ton, also
corn, $1.50 bu., at my farm. H.
B. Roberson, Chula, RE.

39 Tons peanut. hay, $15.00
L. Shea-

High. quality Coker full grain

seed cats, recleaned, 95c bu;

Pure Sanford | seed

bu; Kobe Lespedeza seed, free
of dodder, 12c lb. Riley e:

Couch, Turin,

1,000 bundles bright fodder,

$4.00 C. Near Epsus Church at)

Winston. R. E. Prather,
Rica, Rt. 1.

Sey. cars. of bright wheat and
Oat straw in truck or car load
lots, $15.00 Ton at my barn.
Del. prices on request; also, 00
tons of Lespedeza Hay, $25.00
ton. .Charles H. Murrow, Farm-
ington.

400 bu. Cokexs
Oats, $1.00 bu.

Villa

full grain
Recleaned, $1.10
vis, Hawkinsville, Rt. 2.
Spanish and runner Peanut
Hay, $12.00 Ton in Car. FOB.

a F, Thompson, Shellman, Box
os

25 Tons Bright Runner and | (
and black walnuts,

Bunch Peanut Hay, $20.00 Ten
FOB my barn. P. D. Meadows,
Hawkinsville, Rt. 1.

Seri= |

also

Bud Thompson, Daw-

P= FE Da-



aver 150 p
0. B. Cam

Frotschers, 40c

Graytone,
Soe

a5e:7
ee

135.

hand shelled and cle
meats. $i. 00 ib... Pt





black scuppernong
of the Grape Family)
vine; also some fr
nong Bronze, 35 e
E. N. Mathis, Abbe
Grapes: Niagara, W.
donia, R. W., Munso
Concord, all Black, Lu
Catawba, all red,
Manito, Ives and
cadine), all black,
30e ea. 2-3 yr., 55e.
Carnesville, Rt. de

Scuppernongs, cr
and white, 2 yr. vine
Early bearing sweet
Figs, fine plants, 50c e
huckleberry (Gaylusse
native Blueberry |
selected plants, 2!
Maude Granger, R

Swear plums; =
huckleberry, rasphe
black walnut bus

$3.00 doz. < Mrs. G
| son, Mineral a

Mrs. Bonne Abercrom
eral Bluff. :





- Special

Notices relative to

et Bulletin.

toonly when received

engaged in trade.

_FARMERS.



Notics

To All Patrons Of The Bulletin.
- Interested In FEED SACKS:

- A further letter from the Third Assista
master General, Washington, D. C., with re
t notices of Feed Sacks, advises that the
-Rulingspecial notice of which appeared |
issue of October 31was in part misinterp

seed and feed an

sacks for sale and wanted, submitted by IN
UAL FARMERS in the State of Georgia ma
tinue to be ACCEPTED for insertion i in th

Tt will, therefore, be noted that the
letter was Satwaded to PROHIBIT notices r
(and in the intere
from Dealers, Buyers and Sellersor Busine

BEGINNING THIS ISSUE WE WILL A
PUBLISH NOTICES OF FEED SACKSSE
AND BUYINGwhen submitted by INDIVI

ELIZABETH H ]













Giant Tulips Are
rites in This Country



ae tulip bulbs shipped
Holland this fall are of

the invasion were the most






















this a3 together and
Jarwin tulips, but cata-
ide them into Darwin, Cot-
reeder classes. This di-
sed upon ancestry, and
Ss reason for it each
se the three classes are
s-bred_ to. such an extent
cially in the newer vari-
characteristic differences
f aly: marked them tend
ee

no reason to limit plant-



ass, since they harmonize
and bloom about the same
may select from all three
that: you wish, and group
ther with assurance of a
t, aL your. colors are well

1S sill do their part, cack:
flowering size) produc-



u planned; for there is
nore dependable in the
ut of color effects.

dest of these classes is the
talled because the. old

e flowering Classes which.

d or border to varieties

characterized by soft colors,
-an overbloom of white, and a re- -

-on schedule exactly in|









Tall, Late Tulips in the Garden.

duce striped varieties, which were
highly. esteemed centuries ago., The

solid colors of some fidwers in each -
| planting would break into gay

stripes and blotches, and these were
the desired kinds. It is now known.
that they were afflicted with mosaic
disease carried by. aphids, and in
American plantings they are rogued
out, to prevent the spread of the
disease.

Cottage. tulips. originally were

smaller than either Breeders or
Darwins, and had egg-shaped blos-
but in >

soms with pointed petals;
recent-years they have been crossed
with the other classes; and among
the hybrids are the largest varie-
ties yet produced, and many with
large cup-shaped blossoms of love-
ly color blends,
Darwin tulips were
late in the last century, and are
supposed to have. been developed
from Breeder parents; They are
with

markable color range. The blos-
soms are cup-shaped, on very tall,
strong stems. A selection of the

best varieties in each color would -
include all these classes, and when
| planted, .or arranged in bouquets,

together they are always harmoni-
ous.

|plums, 2 ft. tall, 25c ea.
DeV ane, Cuthbert.

pas Teet.,

He | to name.
EREZ3:



introduced -










of a very few from Eng-
cico, alllily bulbs offered
in this country this fall





_ years before Pearl
y bulbs imported from.

ae is limited, there
0 provide a few bulbs
, and a few lilies will
way in providing garden
ies are not effective in
tings. They are best
all groups, or even sin-
as accents at garden



























lilies are best planted in
Bulbs are dormant now
spend the winter either
und or in cold storage.
etter off in the ground.
that lilies are hard to
all basis in fact. Quite
is true in the case of
ies.
iLis a good sandy loam
be suitable for most of
ies. They do best ina
perhaps because of its
drainage. Most of the lilies
ret soil and will show im-

the effects of standing
good loam, rich in leaf

e for them.
eat the soil to make it
| would for rhododen-
o not lime it. A neu-
best, Manure should
except as a top dress-
it must be a year or



laned plant food is fine, and

J cties will need additional
ations. Use one pint
f soil. Spade your bed
2 setting out the bulbs.
the ground will be
the bulbs arrive, give
leh of leaves or straw







senek or Royal Lily,
_ Best.

to keep it from freezing until you
can get the bulbs in.

A loation where the base of the
plant is in light shade is a good one
for most lilies. While they dislike
standing water, they also dislike
drying out; and a summer mulch
a peat moss or rotted leaves is
appreciated. Depth of planting is
important, -Lilium candidum, can-
adense, martagon and superbum
should be planted only 3 to 4 inches

deep; but the others should go in

about four times the diameter of
the bulb, usually. from 8 to 10
inches.

Many lilies blossom in midsum-
mer when there is a natural let-
down in garden color, and the lilies
are more than welcome. We find
ourselves admiring and depending
upon them well into September.
Regal lily, a queen of-lilies, *should
be in every garden, where its gor-
geous pink striped fiowers with
golden throats are ner nese for
Be ys



One of the |






|PECAN & FRUIT TREES |

FOR SALE



Leading varieties apple and
peach trees, grapevines at reas.
prices. State inspected. Lim-
ited amt. left. T. M, Webb, El-,
lijay. ;

trees,
$25.00
Mrs.

Leading
Grape vines,
C. Black

var. peach
$5.00 doz.;
Walnut trees,

|E. B. Travis, Riverdale.

Nice rooted. yellow and red
well

rooted Mimosa, 50c ea. Howard)

Budded. Schley pecan trees,
$1.25. ea.; 4-5 ft., $1.75
ea: 5-6 ft. $2.00 ea.; 6-7 ft.,
$2.25 ea; 7-8 ft., $2.50 ea. True
R. L. Adkins, Cordele, ,

Sey.
2-7 ft. high. Reas. prices. Mrs.
G. R. Thigpen, St. Marys.

Gov. inspected, leading var.
Apple. trees, 3-5 ft., White: and
Black Scuppernongs and Brown
tigs, 50e; 1 yr. Peach trees, 18-
24, 30c; Pear, plum,. golden apri-
cot, 3-4 its 75c: Grapevins, Zoe:

Dutch breeders grew them to pro- : Papershell pecan trees, 3-4 ft.

{$1.75 ea.

Lee Head, Cor nelia.

Gr apevines: 5. var. home
grown, rooted, 15c ea; 2,000 cut-
tings, mix. ot separate, - two
(2c) cents ea; 100 in bundle,
S115: Concord, Ludie, Niagara,
Caco, Mootes Early; raspber-
ries, 2 kinds, Boysenberry, 15c
ea. Cash. No shipping. R.

Jordan, Atlanta, 878 Barnett.
St., N. E., He- -3563-R.
May Cherry, Sour, Filberts,

Hazlenuts, apricots, 2-4 ft. root-
ed,. $150 doz; hickory, native
persimmon, pewpaw,. $5.00 doz;
black and red thornless rasp-
berry, $5.25 C; red, yellow, gray
goose plums, * $1. 50 doz. Mrs.
Elsie Heaton, Mineral Bluff.



FRESH AND DRIED
FRUIT FOR SALE



Nice sundried peaches, 1945

-| crop; 50c lb. Fill orders imme.

J. H, King, Bowdon, Rt. 2.

Nice sundried peaches, 1945)

4 erop, 50c lb. Fill orders imme.

Mrs. Ambers Bowdon,

Risse

King,



SYRUP FOR SALE



50 Gal. Ga. Cane syrup, $1.25
gal.; 65c % gal. in cans and jugs.
Come and get. J. H. Sanders,
Danville, Rt. 1.

1,500 Gals. pure Ga. Cane
syrup in barrels and in gal.
buckets. J. Clifford _ Dollar,.
Bainbridge, Rt. 3, Box 97.

1,000. Gal. A-1 syrup in gal.
cans. New crop, 90c gal. Don-
ald Harrell - Climax, Rh 2,

Box 70.

1,000 gal. pure Sugar Cane
Syrup made before frost fell.
D. T. Crow, Colquitt.

8,000-10,000 gal.
syrup. packed in %
with attractive label.
rell, Albany, Box 492.

10 new barrels. Ga. Cane syr-
up, A-No. 1 grade, 35 gal. ea.,
$35.00 per bbl. FOB; also 2 Cs.
6- 1 gal: to case, $6. 00 Cs. FOB.
L. EF. Harrell, Whigham, Saher

gal.* cans
igo Ri giere



MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE

/ARTICHOKES:

Nice lot of artichokes, .25c
lb. Postpaid. Send small ones
if seed is wanted, same price.
G. C. Adams, Social Circle.

CAMPHOR TREES:

Smail camphor trees, sev. in.
tall, $2.50 doz.; also sev. Hamp-
shire Red- Cockerels, old enough
for service, $3.00 ea. FOB. Mrs.
aly Burk, Tifton, Rt. 3.

POTATOES:

Around 6,000 ibs. red skin
Porto Rico sweet potatoes, 2
cents per pound, FOB at Farm.
a, Y. Marrell; Raine, Rt.

ROOTS AND HERBS:

Red Sassafras, Queen of the

Meadow, Yellow, Yellow. dock,
Blood > root, colt foot, Pepper-
mint, Cherry tree bark, witch-
hazel bark, 35c 1b., 3 Ibs. ppb 005
Nice Black Walnut meats, $1. 00
Ib. No checks. Vernie Stover,
Pisgah, C/o R. C, Stover.

hundred Tung Oil trees, |

good grade!

fertilizer materials.

depending on soil

results.

will bear practically

Kind of Fruit

Bunch Grapes ___

premises.

cultural agencies.



The Home Fruit Orchard

F. F. COWART

Georgia Experiment Station,
Experiment, Georgia

The planting of a home orchard should anpeal te
those having space in the back yard on a city let and
to owners of farms who do not specialize in fruit grow-
ing. It is far better to have a small well kept orchard s
than a large one which is neglected. =

Only fruits which are adapted to the particular :
region should be planted in the home orchard. Such
fruits as muscadine grapes, figs,
be. planted in the mountainous region of north Georgia;
apple trees will not grow and produce very satistacter-_
ily below. the central part of the state; cherries should
be planted only in the most northern part of the state
blueberries, of the type recommended at present, may be
grown in th: Piedmont and Coastal Plain area; certain |
of the cold resistant citrus fruits may be grown in he.
extreme southern part of the state but in no other; and |
some types of blackberries and dewberries may be
grown over practically all of the state. 2

Such fruits as peaches, apples, and bunch grapes
can not be grown successfully without adherence to a~
spray program designed to control insects and diseases.
While these fruits are well adapted to growing in cer-
tain parts of the state they should not be planted unless
some kind of spraying equipment is available. oe

A fertile, well-drained, sandy loam or sandy clay ~
jtoam, with a ciay subsoil will be found suitable for
most orchard fruits. However, it may be necessary to
sacrifice soil advantage in order to conveniently locate
the orchard. The land for the home orchard is pre-
pared very much in the same way as for the home gar-
den. It should be broken and harrowed smooth before
planting. Nearly equal results may be expected with in-
telligent usage of either stable manure or commercial
Commercial fertilizer materials are
preferable in a great many cases because they are more
economically obtained. The fertilizer needs will vary

type and its management.

cases 600 pounds of a 6-8-6 or similar mixture per are
applied each spring will come close to giving Cpa

It is best to patronize the nearest nursery which:
sells good plants at reasonable prices. A common mis-
take is to select very large trees or. plants. Smaller ones

ly as early, are easier to transplant,
and develop into aS shaped plants. Dig holes large
eonugh to accommodate the root system after the brok- |
en and excessively long roots have been removed. Set
plants at the same level or slightly deeper than they ;
were oo in the nursery.

No. Each Var.
to plant

1 Stuart, I Sehiey,

1- Farley
1 Golden Del., 1 Red
Delicious, 1 Baldwin,
1Staymen Winesap.
1 Baldwin, 1 Keiffer,
1 Douelas=

2 Dixigem, 2 Red
Haven, 2 Early Hiley,
2 Halehaven, 3 Elberta
2 Methley, 2 Red June
2 Winesap

2 Hunt, 2 Dulcet,

2 Yuga, 1 Male

1 Brown Turkey,

-1 Celests

2 Myers, 2 Hagood,

2 Clara

4 Niagara, 2 Concord,
2, Delaware

Blackberries ____ - 3 Lawton, 3 Barly
Wonder, 3 Eldorado
Dewberries _____ 6 Youngberry,
6 Lucretia
Raspberries ____10 Sodus
Strawberries __.:75 Blakemore,

75 Missionary

Figures refer to number needed for suggested plant
ing arrangement shown above requiring about one-half
acre of ground. This plan may be altreed to conform
to the particular area involved. Pecans and figs may
be added to this plan or planted elsew here around the

More detailed information may be secured from.
your county agricultural agent, State Experiment Sta
tions, State Department of Agriculture, or ene ager.

and pecans should

Dist.
Plants (feet)



































































































In most

between

40c

30.
30



x









Collards, per doz, bunches
Mustard Greens, per bu. hprs. ..
Sweet Potatoes, PortoRicans, per bu. bkts. .
Turnips (Bunched). per doz, bunches
Turnip Salad, per bu, Nereis ee = oe i

Fresh Fruits and Vegetabies

December 16, 1945

$1.00-$1.50










Atlanta _

- 1.23
178+ 265:
1,00- 1.56




Wednesdsys q







ISC LLANEOUS-
oo SALE



e llow Root, Witchhazel beeke

: fras root, 30c_ lb.; Walnut

ats, $1.00 pt. Add postage.
Ellis, Rolston.

B ckhaw roots, 50c Ib.; Black-
aw bushes, 25.ea.; Horse rad-

: Red Root, 25 1b.;

Bhp. 5c. doz.
meats, $1.00 pt. Add_ postage.
Mrs. Presley Fowler, Diamond.

out 300 good sacks for sale.
B. Alexander, Cornelia,
E:

; dry sage, $1.50 1b.;
plants, A for 60c; Winter

Onions, $1.00 , small sets, 50c.

arlic, Peppermint, Rust free
.sparagus plants, 60c doz. Myr-
Pace, Temple, Rite |

e -ound sage, $1.50 lb.; Ground
ot pepper, $1.00 lb.; Rooted
ag plants, 2, 25c; 5, 50c; 12,
09. Aldora: Keith, Gay, Rt:

me cured, hand picked
ground, $1.00. lb. at my

me. Mariah Brown, Rich-

and, Rt. 3, Box 48.
at sage, $1.00 lb.; 10-20 Ibs.,

b.; ground, $1. 50 Ib.;_ Pul-
rized, $1.25 Ib.; rooted sage

lants, 2. 25e: 5, 50c; $1.00 doz.;
c.

ave Keith, Alvaton.

ank picked, shade dried leaf
ge, 1945 crops, and Hot Pep-
rs, $1.25 lb. Postpaid. Mrs. S.
ae mith, Barnesville, Rt. 1.

5 crop hand gathered shee.
nade dried, $1.00 Ib. J.C. J.
rown, Toccoa, Ret. 3.



Be taneous
WANTED |



nt 4 or 5 colonies of bees.

save ample winter stores.
. W@orman, Atlanta, 55 Del-
, Dri, NE; CH- 1353.

Want | 10 to 200 colonies of

ee State kind, a cond.

nd jocation. Carl E
sylvania, Rt. 2.
HL. NQUAPINS:

Want some Chinquapins and
hestnuts. Quote price del.
eve Johan, Albany, Box 527.

TTON SEED:

at. some White Gold Cot-
n seed suitable for planting.
olin Alexander, Cleveland,

. Reddick,

Want 3 tons Peavine, Beggar-
veed Clover hay del. by Frt.
H. Jones, Waycross, Reynolds

- gome good goose or
k feathers. State what you
, cond., and price. Mrs.

os Owen, a Rt. 4,

mt some Ginseng bulbs.
ee best oe and amt, for

ant sev. salt-cured country
ot last fall). . Prefer

yrs. old; alee Apple trees.
Coy. tephens, Columbus, Rt. 1,
ody Rd.

Pay $1.00 for 3
ira -C. Hudson,

. State what you have and
- Mrs. Sallie McMurphy,
ho ale, Rt. 4.



CATTLE FOR SALE



Heretord bull calves, 6
old, wt. 500 lbs. ea. Horned
$100.00 ea. Near Center

LaFayette Clarkson, La-|

We ica. in, 6 yrs.

deza,

Black Walnut

| $140.00



HOGS FOR SALE



x

Pure Guernsey male, 15 mos.
old, $50.00; also Sericea Lespe-
25c Ib. Recleaned and
scarified. Germination test OK.
H. W. Thurmond, Farmington,
Rt. -1,

2 cows, 1 reg. Both freshen
| soon; Reg. Hereford calf, Jersey:

heifer to freshen soon, 1 bull Sr.
ealf; also Reg. grandson of
Xenias. Sparkling Standard,
Nobly Born Dot Standard,
Dropped Aug. 1944. -Wyman
Walker, Forsyth, P. O, Box 43.

Young, fat Shorthorn Here-
ford bull, 11 mos. old; also Jer-
sey heifer, will freshen in Jan.
James Avery, Ben Hill, Dan-
forth Rd. RA-7449.

Purebred Guernsey male
calves. Sire Reigeldale Conquers
Pride and Producing danis of
Pone_ deLeon herd. Will reg.
in buyers name. G. J: Davis,
Rome, Rt. 2 (At Bells Ferry).

Reg. horn type Hereford bulls .

from 8-30 mos. old. Domino and
Woodford breeding. Percy A.
Price, Albany.

3 thoroughbred Black Aber-

den Angus bull calves, 4, 9 and].

10 mos. old. All reg. and in
A-1 eond. Charles A. Shook,
Tiger,

- Reg. Hereford bull. hele 6 mos.|
old, Domino strain, $150. 00 or

trade for cows or calves;: also
small farm mule, smooth mouth,
extra good plow mule, $75.00.
Trade also.
Decatur, Rt. 1, DE-2975.

2% yr. old Reg. Guernsey bull

|from Bibb -Countys Knight of

the Masonic Home. Priced to
sell. H. W. Blasingame, Fort
Valley, Rt. 1.

Reg. red Jersey cow, be fresh

in March. Now gives 3. gal.

day. Very gentle. At Budapest,
on Bankhead Hwy. near. Talla-
poosa. R. E. pone Talla-
poosa, Ri

2 Jersey cows, 1 fresh and :
dry (freshen in late spring),
mule, some age but extra ae
and gentle; also turnips to
truckers. Alex Trent, Smith-
ville, Rt. 1, Box 82.

Fine Jersey heifer, fresh in
January, $60.00; also 50 New
Hampshir re red pullets, ready to
lay. Ho
tain, Rt. 2.

50 Holstein herd dairy cows
and 40 Grade Jersey and Hol-
stein heifers, W. P. Elder, Cul-
loden.

Reg. Jersey bull, Royal Pri-
mata Lad, No. 465037Q. Sire:
Royal Primata, No. 413976.
mos. old. Exc. qualities.
C. Boyd, Jonesboro, Rt. 1.

Short Horn bull about 5 yrs.
old and 1 bull calf. Both reg.
W. J. McDougald, Gaddistown.

1 fine Jergey heifer, freshen
dJast of March; also 2 goats. of

Carl

milk stock. Must. go. Come see.

Mrs. Julia Varnedoe, Atlanta,
130 So, Candler Rd. S.E.

Pure Jersey male calf, 5 mos.
old, son of Fillpail
Linda ( valued at $400.00 when
Yr. old), an outstanding Sire
also. $100.00. Warren Smith,

a Reef,



HOGS FOR SALE



Reg. Duroc Pigs, 2-3-mos. old,
All Cherry King and Check-
ers bloodlines. S. B. McNeely,
Bartow, Rt. 1.

Purebred Hampshires, reg. in
.| buyers name, All ages, unre-
lated to bred gilts. Del. in Jan-
ey W. B. Fambrough, Cor:
ele

8 purebred. OIC pigs, 6 wks.
old Dec.. 16th, $15.00 ea. or
$29.00 pr. or lot for: $115.00. J.
R. Cheek, Elberton, Rt. 2.

Spotted Poland China pigs.

Reg. .10 wks. old, wt. about
50 lbs. $20.000 COD. C. L.
Smalley, Augusta, Rt. 2.

OIC Brood sow, will farrow

|Feb, 2nd. 2 good work horses,

wt. around 950 Ibs. ea. Work
anywhere. V. N. Dillard,
Clarkesville, :

7 pigs, O. I. C. and S. P. C.
crossed, 7 wks. old Dec. 15th,
it. ea. G. L. Wallace, Ben

i

2 nice shoats, OLC, 4 mos.
old, 1 P. &., 75 Ibs., $50. 00; also
11 black mare. mule, 11 yr. old,
gle W. Green, Thomas-

| buck, Fee, $4.00;

-uary Ast.

Essex, also 1 brood sow

Mrs. C. W. Harper,

Wilson, Stone Moun-.

gentle.

32

Arctotis

horse.



For Service: Simpsons Mas-
terpiece 275949, S. P. C. boar.
Cash Fee, $5.00 or choice of lit-
ter at 6 wks. old; reg., 20 Ib.
11 oz. production pred Saanan
some young
bred does for. sale. Edwin Simp-
son, Douglasville, Rt. 1.

- purebred Hereford shosats,
125 Ibs, ea. also 10 reg.
Hereford pigs, 6 wks. old Jan-
EB. A. Smith, Ben Hill,
Rt. 1

QO. I. C.-and-S. P. GC. pigs,
ready for sale. Wyman vin Eee,
Forsyth, P. O. Box 43.

250 lb. Black sow, Ist litter

1(5 pigs ), month old. .No scrub
| stock. $90. 00.

Carter Williams,
Senoia. Rt. 1.

10- pigs, 10 i old, S. Be:
and 1
young boar. Ali or separately.
7. C. Gitbert, Lithonia. Bik

Few nice pigs and
$12.00-$20.00, ea. at my place on
Welcome- All Rd; 1 mi, .-off

-| Roosevelt Hwy. AL M. Mixon,

College Park, soe i:

HORSES AND. MULES
FOR SALE





Stallion, 5 gaitad. Reg. No.
21392, under Amer. Saddle Horse
Breeders. Assn., coming 5 yrs.
old. Sire, Jean Valentino, No.
11724; Dam, Lady
No. 21289. See or write. Charlie
Sheton, Harrison, Rt. 2.

Shetland pony, 7 yrs. old, wt.

450-500 lbs., with wagon, at my:

place, % mi. So. Ranger. Gar-

land. Foster, Ranger.

Pr. 1,100 lb. -black mare
mules, willing workers any-
where, around. 10 yrs.
$200.00; also a 5 yr. old Reg.
Jersey. bull, sure breeder, gen-
tle, $75.00. Trade any of above
for heifers. F. R. Kennedy,
Stone Mtn., Rt. 2.

9 yr. old saddle -horse, also T

good Jersey cow (2nd calf), 2
milk goats and about 100 chick-
ens and ducks, Sell cheap or
take as part pay grown turkeys.

R. Street, Atlanta, Rt, 2.

A 10 yr. old, 850 lb., red spot-
ted saddle and work horse, very.
Sell very cheap. E. H.

Jones, Waycross, Reynolds St.

Coming 7 mos.
Walking Herse colt. Spotted in
color, sired by Plantation Gold
Bug, No. 370449. - $150. 00. A. F.
Bell, Hartwell.

Good working small mule,
takes little feed, very gentle.
Sell or exc. Calvin E, Ray,
Hapeville, CA-2426.

Mare mule, wt.
Eula Wren, Garfield.

6 yr. old, 850 lb. bay mare,
$75.00 or exc. for heifers; 3 yr.
old bay horse colt, $50. 00; 2%
yr. old horse mule colt, $75. 00.
L. H. Wood, Jeffersonville.

8 yr. old nice bay mare, wt.
1,000 Ibs. Work double or sin-
gle: 3 yr. old iron gray filly,
gentle, -work anywhere.
for mules: R. B. Crowe, Tren-
ton, Star Route.

2, 4 yr. old. mules, wt. about
950 lbs. ea.; also 2 farm mares,
age 4 yrs. and 9 yrs. Sell
chep. J. R. Page, Soperton, Rt.
3 (% mi. from Orland station).

8 yr. old Jarge mule, wt.
about 1,150 Ibs, $100.00. 10 yr.
old small mule, wt. about 750
lbs., $50.00. Good mules. R. H.

Ware, Newnan, 136 Jackson St.

Pair match. mules, 1 mare

;mule, 1 horse mule, wt. 900 lbs.,

8 yrs. old. Sound, work any-
where; also 1 old 2-H. wagon
and farming tools, for sale at
my place on Pirkle Ferry Rd.
Leonard Gagrett, Buford, Rt. 3.

Pair mare mules, wt. about
850 lbs. ea. Smooth mouthed but
lively. Fat and in perf. cond.,
A-1 qualities; also 2 H. wagon
in good running .cond., farm
tools and feed stuff, Reas.
priced. A. J. MecMichen, Car-
tersville, Rt. 2.

8 yr. old fine , gaited black

mare. Very gentle and easy to

handle. Herbert Bowman,
oe Box 3788, 1124.

3 Shetland ponies; age 3, 5,
12 yrs., for sale, R. F. Jenkins,
Munnerlyn, phone 459-WI. .

Gentle, medium size farm
oO. B. - Francis, Alpha-
retta. ee

$15.00 ea.;

Gr.

shoats,

Oakledge,

old, a

old - Tenn..

1,000 Ibs.

Exe. F



_ HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE |



Nice horse, 7 yrs.
pigs, 3: mos. old, wt. 40-60 Ibs.
OIC and Poland China crossed,
3 or 4 nice Heifers
due in about March and April.
H. C. Walker, Whitesburg, Rt. 1.

Pair farm mares, wt. 1,100
lbs. ea. Age 10 and al yrs: Work
anywhere, especially to riding
cultivator.
miles East of Soperton. $200.00
for pair, A. H. Phillips, Soper-
ton.

Good mare mule, gentle and
full of pep. Will work any-
where. In exe, health. John J.
Hill, Decatur, P. O. Box 223.
2881,

Black mare, 8 yrs. old, wt.
1,050 lbs. Work anywhere. High
spirited. $100.00. N. ~ Odum,
Baxley, Rt -4.

10 yr. old Black mare foie

Work anywhere. Good cond.,

$75.00; also, 1 bull calf, 3% mos.|

old Jersey, $15.00, or both for
$90.00. T. E. Sheriff, Red Oak.

Good mule, work anywhere,
for sale. Bill Helton, Newnan,
Rin 2:

A.5 yr. old mule, about 900

| lbs., work anywhere, for sale or

trade for a good saddle horse.
Ben Whisnant, Jr.,



RABBITS AND CAVIES
FOR SALE



Giant New - Zealand white
Rabbits, 2 does and 1 buck, $7.50
for the trio. All grown. - Bob
Richardson, Palmetto.

Young healthy rabbits. Large
type. Whites, Reds, Blacks. 6-8
wks. ~$1.25. Older, $1.50 ea.
Cash. Exp. Col. Frances Shel-
nutt, College Park, 220 E. Co-
lumbia Ave., CA- 1452.

1 male, 2 female Guinea Pigs,.

5 wks. old. Large English breed,
$1.00 for male; $1.25 ea. for fe-
male. Charlene Wiggims, Ma-
con, 207 Berkeley Dr.

Pair of large white rabbits
with pink eyes, $3.00 del. Mrs.

| Ruby Reese, Norwood, Rt. 2.
See and make offer. Mrs, Helen, = =

Ped. stock Giant Chinchillas,
8 wks. old, $1.50 ea; add $1.00
per month. for older stock, or
a for cavies or angoras; also
Stud, *Toggenburg buck,
Gen, Pride, Reg., 5299, Ser.
Fee, $5.00, by appointment, J.
S; Querry, Statesboro, Rt. 2.

Guinea pig mothers (expect-

ing young soon), $2.25 ea; bred

mothers, $2.00; 6 mo. old, 60c
ea; males, same price. Prepaid

Exp. No order less $2. 00. Mrs.:

J. W. Jones, Madison. Box 347.

2 giant N. Z. White does, 7
and 7 mos. old, 1. bred with 7
young 6 wks. old; other not
bred. $10.00 for lot.- J. S, Syd-
boten, Fitzgerald.

2 White N. Z. does and puck,
large, 2 yr, old, $10.00; 3 Black
King does, $12.00 for 3. Docs
are all bred. Must go. Mrs.
Julia Varnedoe, Atlanta, 130 So.
canter Rd.



SHEEP yee GOATS
- FOR SALE



Nubian milk goat, 3 yrs. old,
naturally hornless, dark brown,
gentle and easily kept. When
fresh gives 4 quts.
Vv. W. Salter, Naylor.

At Stud: Roddys Lucky
Strike, young son of the most
outstanding Toggenburg buck
of the South and his dam of
same. quality stock.
ited service this season and by
appointment only. Fee $7.50.
John Hynds, Atlanta, 93 Warren
St., N. E., DE-5140.

Nice 19 mos. old White Saa-

{nan Billy goat, naturally horn-

less, from 6 qt. mother, $10. 00
cash. Will give him even for
large Nubian work goat. Will
not del. J. C, Mayhue, Cum-
ming, Rt. 5.

At Stud: Rebel, T-5268;
among Georgias Better Toggen-
burg Bucks. Fee $5.00. By ap-
pointment only... R. L. Stallings,
Atlanta, 912. Adamson St., SW,
MA-2516. \

3 nannies, 1 yr. old, from gal.
a day mother, $40.00 for lot; 3

White Pekin dacks, $5.00; pair

W.N, Z. 1 yr. old rabbits, $3.00.
J. E. Hatcher, College Park, Rt.
2 (Flat. Shoals Rd. atc. Union

oo

eld Tk

See at my home 12

Lenox. Rt. 2.

$25.00. Mrs.

Very lim-



en ieee Match ae
2 very good size, 1 mec

2 should give 3-4 ats.,
All gentle and easy |
$50.00 for the 3. J. W
la Rica.

100 goats, $3.00 ea

ae Poland, i

LIVESTOCK WA ;



CATTLE:

Want 20 to 40 heave i
ing, disease free milch
due to freshen in Januar
ruary and. March,
tested for Bangs, si
T. B. at time.of pu
use in own dairy,
Kinley, ee
7311.

HOGS:

Want 2 Reg., OC,
nose type, gilts. Sta
cash price. David Cob
man. - Rt. 1, Box 146.

Want Z jomale Blac
Guinea purebred pigs. (
tails. Edgar Hoge

price. Hugh O'Neal, G
Rt. 3;

Want 1 male big on
African Guinea hog, fre
10 wks. old. Clyde
Pavo, Rt. 2. -

SHEEP AND GOATS:
Will exc. N. H.; R
and 10 beginning to 1
for a good. miik goat,
ing or will freshen |
Atlanta. O. B. Pree s,
betta. :



POULTRY FOR Si



AUSTRA.WHITES:.

cockerels for breedin
old, beginning to-c
$3.00, or more at $2.
Alsa pullets, same pric
Seay, Ellenwood, Rt: 2

BANTAMS:. ;
- Purebred Golden

-bantams, from prem

lines, Trios, $6.50; Pa
cockerels, $2.25 ea.
yer, Dublin, Rt. 5.

8 Buff Cochin hen:
roosterstrio, rooster
hens, $7.00; $5.00. pr.,
rooster. Purebred sto
ship Exp. collect. Billy
Cuthbert. eS

Trio purebred Mode
Breasted Red Game
$10.00;. also 1 Black
rooster, $2.50. B. Hol:
East Point, 302 S. Harri:

Mixed Bantams,
Hens, 50-75c ea. Roo:
ea.

Clarkston 4471:

4 hens, 2 woos: ;
50c. also Game coc
Warhorse and Roundhe
White Hackle, $3.00; S
and 2 Cuban and R
hens, $1.50 ea. Can.
Come after. Lowell .
Hill, Rt. 1, Butner Rd

10 smail type mix
Bantam hens, 1 yr.
1 lb. when grown (go
and mothers) also 2
$10.00 for the 12. Will
Roy.

BARRED, WHITE AN
OTHER ROCKS: 8

_ 19 pullets and | roos
bred B. R., 6 mas. ol

FOB. H. Grady Mor
ford, Rt 3.

cond. ist order for
them. . Exp. col. in
returnable coop.

Sullivan, Whitesburg, =

5 White Rock Pullet:
grade and cockerel,
$12.50 for lot, 16 wks.
Rowan, Athens, Box 7

300 White Rock
New Hampshire Re
by Dee. 21st, $1.00 ea
for lot. Also. White
lets, AAA qu

Buyer to furn. ci
vin Hutto, Baxle

180,




Rock Fryers, also
tock hens, April 1945
Erle L.

. very fine

( owls, Chas,
rna, Oakdale Rd.

k ped, bred White

Write for informa-
lumes, Columbus.

.R., 7 wks. old,

= MES, Joe

epererels, $1.00 ea.
p No less than

ockerels from hae
ing ped. parents,
, R. I. Reds and B.
Joe Ingram, Wav-

Shipped exp.
ock direct Parks.
he Plyler, noe

. PoekiGe good

and R: fe Reds,:}:

1 pr. White Guineas,"
_ Mrs. J. M. Walker,
St, S.W. Ra 2013.

broadbreasted Light
els, $3.50 ea. T.

GAMES AND

game stags, nice
ea. Also few: -pullets
N. S. Crow, Royston,

cocks, 1 ea. Travel-'
s. old, and Speeder
oss, 2. yrs., $10.00

young, Travellers i

trimmed, $7.50 ea:
uchanon, Rt. 2.

ernish Cotkerels, 5

: a. Also want
Will pay 40c }b. for
; 35c Ib. other grades,
Curd wales, So-

type Dark
ets, average wt.,
1 cockerel, 6% Ibs.
ebred, $20. 00 for lot.
kemore strawberry
>. del.; 500, $4.00;
. Hubert E. Hill,

xc. for anything
~ R. Owen, For-

Games, cock and hen,
sale or trade for

Gainesville, 718

me a $2.00 ea.
le rooster, around 6
d, $4.00; 2 young
rs, $2.50 ea, Jas:<C,
uluth, Pa; Box 161.

ett. - Games: cock,
ao 9 mos, old.
, 5% be 2.,

% each), $3.00 ea.
s, $5.00 for both; 3
a { and | Blue

Frank J. Wat-:

3% Blue Cuban
Grey stag, and 1
ock. All . good
oest offer for en-

Pate, Avera.

ed Black Jersey
ae $1.75 ea.

: | July hatch, $15.00; 6 hens,
_|mos. old, $15. 00; pure Guernsey

--here.

; vester.

| gled Hamberg feorie e

| No:
| Newnan, Rt. 2.

51 100 W. L. spring pullets, $1.80

ing cert, 25 extra.
siter, Atlanta, 35 Rockyford Rd.,

3
7 | hens, laying, $2.00 ea.

No. 777-32.



2g pit game cocks

T. Holden, Dallas, Rt. 1,
4 June hatch purebred Cor:

-;nish cockerels, wt. 5-6 Ibs. ea.,
| $2.00 ea.;

9 pullets and cocker-
els, 6 wks. old, wt: 1-lb.--eq,,
same breed, $10. 00, or $16.00 for
i Johnnie Granger, Reids-
ville.

Real Games: 1 trio aes
$10.00; stags, i ea. Grey Dragon
Muff, Oneal Dom (brood), and.
Yankee | Clipper, $750 a;
Thompson White, $10.00; 1 ea.

_| Southern Roundhead hen, $5.00,

and pullet, $2.50. Guar. on ar-
rival. J; H. Akin, Atlanta,
2898~Gordon Rd., S. W.

10 pure Dark Cornish pullets,
18

male, $50. 00. H. W. Thurmond,
Farminghton, Ht.

3 large type

t

Cornish April

cockerels, Rose comb, long yel-
low legs, $2.50 ea., cratd, FOB!

SER: for same breed.
Mrs. W. J. Hall, Summit: =}

Large type Cornish cockerels,:

$3.75 ea; also 15 eggs,
breed, $1. ee

same

half Spangled half Ginn Red,

lall April hatch, $15.00 for the 4.

M. O- Clayton Elrod, Carnes-
ville, Rt. 2.

HAMBERGS:

2 hens, 1 cock of Siiver Shan
gled Hamburg. AA Berry strain.

Mrs. J. H. White, Dalton, Rt. 5.}

5 purebred AAA Silver Span-

hatch, $3.50. ea.
liams, Toccoa.

LEGHORNS:

500 more or less 4-A: W. re
hens, laying, $2.00 ea.
ship.
after. Prefer selling no less
than 100; also 300 pullets, 4-5
mos. old, for sale. Guy Ones
McDonough. RFD 1. .

Harold Wil-

300 4-A W. L. pullets, 7 mos: :

old, now laying, wormed and
vaccinated, $1.50 ea. at my
place, 9 mi. Newnan, phone
HVled2. = Nirs: Fred Adcock,

-ea. at my place. M. O. Richard:
son, Broekhaven. 413 Pine
Grove Ave.

5) 1% mos.

W. LaFayette St.

25 W. L. hens, $2.00 ea. ne:
-Yongema, Atlanta, Rt. 4, Box
294. Ra-4327.

20 purebred W. L. pullets, 3/
mos. old, $1.00 ea. Mrs. J. T.
Spier, Thomaston, Rt. 71,

250 purebred, AAA W. L. 18
mos. old hens, now laying, $2.00
ea, Mis Fo LL. -Banier, Jr.,
Summit, Rt. 2.

12 Brown L., Everlay str.

hens, Yr. old, now laying, and
H |b rooster, $25.00. Will not ship
_ 7.| COD. Mrs.

Woodrow Wilson,
Eastanollee.

W L. hens, AAA, best egg
grade, 1944 hatch, $1.25 ea.;
1945 hatch, $1.50. ea. G. W.
Ross, Eastman, Rt.

7 Roselawn Pop Ped. Mating
No. 1, May hatch, 300 to 337

egg cockerels, leg banded, vac-

cinated and wormed, $3. 00 ea
FOB. Photostatic copy reed-
W. R. Las-

N. E. De 2681.

100 direct Rice W. L. pullets,
3 mos: old, $1.25 ea. Mrs. Fred
Atkinson, Valdosta.

500, more or less, 4-A W. L.

ship. Bring coops and come af-
ter. Prefer selling no less than
100; also 300 pullets, 4-5 mos.
old, for sale. Guy Osborn, Mc-
Donough, RFD 1.

300 4-A W. L. pullets, 7 mos.
old, now laying, wormed and
vaccinated, $1.50 ea, at my
place, 9 mi. Newnan. Phone
Mrs. Fred Adcock,
Newnan, Rt: 2,

20 White Leghorn pullets, 3
mos. old, purebred, $1.00 ea.

| Mrs. 4. ae PEACE, spe: Rt.
etd

and |
stags; Shawls and Roundhead.
-|eross, and 1 Dom. Sacrifice. for |
a 00 at my farm, at once. I:

C. O. Sikes, Syl-:

1945}. -

4 lanta, 469 Metropolitan Pl.,

Will not
Bring coops and come.

old stock roosters;
ee 4: A, large type W. L., $1.50 ea:
ee D..S. Terry, Quitman, 912

-talso 1945 crop,
. | peanuts,

Will not:

jhens, $2.00 ea.;

for sale or exc. for small Fine
Bantam hens; 1 hen for 2 Ban-
tams, or 5 Cochin Bantams, 1
for 1. Bring Bantams and get
hens. 2 mi. Powder Springs, on

|Marietta Rd. Mrs. H. R. Rich,

Powder Springs, Rt. 2.

250 purebred 3-A WL hens,
18 mos. old, laying, $2.00 ea.
Mrs /P ok. Lanier, JX.;
Ri, 2; Boxe7:

-MINORCAS: -

Big. type, full bred Black

|Minorea rooster, $4.00 or trade

for 3 large type pullets, any
stock. Ea. pay express. | Mrs.
J. W. Rister, Decatur, 525
Ponce de Leon Place.

Early Fancy Giant Mincrea
Cockerels in service, $5.00. L.
B.. Millians, Newnan.

ORPINGTONS:

Purebred S. C. English strain
Buff Orpingtons, almost grown
eae and roosters, $1.50 ea.

OBB. M. O, please. Mrs. C
W. Griffin, Screven, Rt 2.

PIGEONS:

Giant Homers
Howe | str.),
Bars.
standard

(the. famous

type Homers, $2.25

Purebred Homers,
banded and working, choice
birds, $2.50 pr. Young ones:
75c ea. C. H. Overby, Colum.
bus. 3609 14th Ave.

Some common pigeons. for
sale. Mrs.- J. O. Chitwood, EI-
berton, 413 No. Oliver St.
-REDS:

REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRES
AND RHODE. ISLANDS):

20 N. -H. Red pullets, hes
bard strain, laying, /and cock-
erel, $55.00. L. L. Wallace, At-
255,

_ mated,

2 Parmenter -Red
April hatch, $5.00. for the 2.
Barred Rocks, same age, saime
price. . Money order only.. Also
Red hot pepper, 75c lb. Mrs. J.
B. Brown, Eastman, Rt. 1.

3 extra fine 4-A cockerels, m
N. H, Reds and 1 Thompson

breeders, $5.00 ea.
good laying hens
price.
North Ave., N. E.

10 March atch New Hae

Exc.
at

standard poultry shipping
crate for $22.50. Money order.
From direct stock. George A.
Chapman, Augusta, Box 964.

4 N. H. Red Roosters, March
chatch,. 1945 from U. S. approved
bloodtested flock that have high
laying record, $5.00 ea. Postpaid.
Money order only. J. Y. Davis,
Martin, Rie 2:

Pure R. I. Red Rooster, April
hatch, $5.00. Exp. prepaid.
Mrs. L. E. Hooten, Milledgeville,
Box 472.

3 full stock R. I. Red roosters,
$1.50 ea. Mrs. Ella Wilson,
Ranger) Rt 2.

Parmenter Red hens, laying,
$1.75 ea., or $22.00 for lot. Will
not ship. Mrs. Carolyn Akin,
Atlanta, 2898 Gordon Rd., mW.

1 N. R. Red rooster, $3.00;
hand picked
$4.00 bu.
dried apples, 50c Ib,, 10 Ib. lots,
postpaid to 2nd zone. Dam-
son plum seed, 25c doz. Add
chgs. No chks. nor
Mrs. J. E. Sorrells, Royston, Rt.
Le

25 or more N. H. Red pul--ts,
$1.25 ea., at my home or buyer
pay express. John Cowan, At-
Janta, 585 Boulevard S.E., Wa
2545.

N. H. Red pullets and roost-

|ers, 9 wks. old, $1.00 ea. FOB.

Ship no less than 12. M. O. with
order. Charles Fulghum, Aus-
tell, His 1:

Christie N. H. Red - pulieis, 8
-mos. old, 100 per cent pullorurn
clean. Write for price. Chas.
T. McMillan, Gainesville, Rt 3.

Choice N: H. Red cockerels,
for breeders, Kerrs special mat-
ings, $5.00 ea. Will ship. David
| Brinkman, Augusta. M. R. 38.

10 purebred R. I. Red young
10 hens, now
laying, $2-50 ea: also 10 pure-
bred White Rock hens, now lay-
ing, $2.00 ea. Will ship. Mrs.
(2k Smith, a Rt. 4,



we, 00 ea.

Summit, |.

Silver and. Blue
Mated prs., $3.00 up; also)

up. R.-Lamar : Brantley, Wrights-
| ville, Rt. 2.

y |. 3 game roosters, half Ginn
_| Red and half Warhorse, also 1

mie a hens, under 8 Ibs.,

trios, del. within 20 mi.

Ringlet B. R. Extra select for
for:
market |
C.-W. Page, Atlanta, 149:

shire pullets, laying since Aug-|
ust, FOB Exp. office in new

at 40c lb. at my home.

Mild, acid,

stamps. |
Fendley, Danburg, Rt.



y-|
ne and 1 rooster, Papell hatch,
Will ship | 10 or more.

ork Rhodes, Kingsland,

4.N. H. Red March 1945 hatch
roosters, from U. S. Approved,
bloodtested flock with high lay-
ing record; for breeding, $5.00
ea. Postpaid. M. O. only. J. Y-
Davis, Martin, Rt. 2

40 Parmenter Red = pullets, 6
mos. old, ready to come into
production, $1.75 ea. here. Will
not ship. Cash. Mrs. G L.
McNeil, Fairburn.

About 50 ea., N. H. Reds and
White Rocks, 13 wks. old, $1.25
ea. in lots of i0 or more; less,
$1.50 ea. Ship Exp. COD. S. A.
Lokey, Arnoldsville.

20-25 R. I. and N. H. Reds, 5
mos. old, $1.75 ea. FOS. oy i
Bankston, Ashburn.

TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,

DUCKS, ETC., FOR SALE:

1 Broadbreasted M. B. turkey
tom, wt. 37 lbs., $15.00 FOB RR
Sta. Mrs. L. E. Strange, robe.
town, Rt. 2.

-1 pr. Bourbon Red turkeys,
1944 hatch, wt. 25 Ilbs., $15.00.
M. O. only... You pay shipping
chgs. Mrs. L. . C. Humphrey,
Norwood, Rt. 1.

- Imp. Muscovy ducks, black
With white markings, 1944
hatch, large. $8.00 pr. at yard.

-E, Maynard, Newton.

Pure Buff Orp. ducks (some
Welday str. $3.00 pr. drake
and duck; $5.50 for 3 ducks and
drake; $1.50 ea. M. O. only.
Fred E. Grubbs, Demorest, Rt. I.

Few extra fine B. B. Bronze

-breeding toms, leg-banded, will |

average 25. lbs. at 22 wks. G. H.
Shafter, Douglasville, Rt. 1.

50 turkeys, toms, 8-15 Ilbs.,
and hens, 8-12 Ibs., 50c Ib;
55c
lb. Write for prices on lots Or

many as 6 in lot. L. B. Me-

Wherter, Roopville. .

Dbl. breasted Bronze turkeys,
this yrs hatch, 16 hens and 9
gobblers, $200. 00 at farm. Mes.
Agnes er ene Eastman,
Rid.

1 gobbler and \3 turkey 1945
hatch hens, $25.00. M. O. re-
quired. Mrs. Milton Meche
Denton, Rt. 1.

ey Quackless ducks, from gooGa
laying: stock, almost grown,
$25.00 Del. Gash with order.
Clayton Boatright, Alma.

56 turkeys, wt. 10 to 25 Ibs.,
Mrs. A.
C. Ward, Hoschton, RFD 1.

5 Muscovy ducks,
hatch, 3 hen's, 2 drakes, mix.
colors, $10.00 for lot. Frank L.
Adams, Statesboro, Rt. 4.

18 Common grey and white
market geese, $3-00 ea, W. M.
Rockel, Thomasville, Rt. 1.

Mammoth Bronze Broad brest-

-ed Turkeys: Toms, $12:00; Hens,

$10.00; Trio, $30.00.
ey, Helena, Rt. 1.

1 Pr, Red Turkeys, wt. 25 lbs.
1944 hatch. $15.00. Money order
only. You Lee for shipPing
charges. Mrs, L. C. Humphrey,
Norwood, Rt. =

Large black Bronze Turkeys,
all this years hatch, 45c Ib. FOB.
Mrs, T. S. Wilson, Swainboro,
Rt, 2.

eM RB. Snurkey gobblers,
$8.00 ea.; 10 hens, $6.00 ea. Ship
anywhere, M. a. only. Bennie.
1, Box 48.

6 white African guineas, 1945
hatch, $1.50 ea. Sell imme. Some
late hatch pullets S. C. Rhode
Island Reds, Donaldson stYain,
$1.25 ea Mrs. C, A. Black, The
Rock, Rt. 1,

Extra fine
turkey toms,

TG. Bail-

Broad breasted
May 1944 hatch,
over 30 Ibs., $14.00 ea; May 1945
hatch, 20 lbs., $2.50 ea; fine
brood stock: mother hen now
sitting. Vaccinated stock. Mrs.

J. W. Hendrix, Statesboro. Rt. 2.4)

Quackless ducks, \ white and
some sPotted, $5. 00. trio, $2.00
ea; and party pay Exp., also 8}
mixed Bantam roosters, about
1 Ib. when grown, 1945 hatch,
75c ea. Add Chgs.
LaFayette, Rt, 3,

WYANDOTTES:

_ 4 Purebred Silver laced Wyan-
dotte roosters, April hatch, $2.00
ea. Come and get.
Peenenones Colbert. =

old, and rooster, older;

or as}

number,

|Park by

this yrs

Begin work Jan. Ist.

from 1-5 plows or crop and f

J. ES Bailey,

vannah,

Wits CH.
+ Bolden, Temple, R



Want 1 boy tase pu
Cornish 1945 hatch roos'

want 1 bu. Unknown peas. Mrs

Beulah J. Joiner, Willacooe eC
Rt. 2, Box 58. ay

| REDS:

Want 5 or 6 R. I, "Reda.
White Cornish Indian (arg
Must be full bleod. Stephen
eee Atlanta, _ 469 10th ?

nuoKs:
Want 1 large White Pe

duck. State price. Mrs. D.
Collier, Barnesville.

BANTAMS:

Wnat Black Cochin ant m
rooster and few hens, young
stock. J. T, Brown, Elbert

Rte.

Want 2 Golden Sebright ban-
tam hens and: rooster. J.

| McNair, Stapleton.

BARRED ROCKS:

Want 4 B. R. hone. 9- 12 mo:
also.
White Pekin ducks, all females.
Conrad Daniels, McKinnen.

PEAFOWLS:

Want I Peafowl, also i
lard drake (pay not over $15
for the drake), also Blue Game

| stags and cocks. Write what ye

Winder, 38

have. R.. Boles,

Richardson St. Ae
PHEASANTS: cos

Want some Pheasants. State
age, kind, and price. G. M. Can-
trell, Atlanta, 516 Woodw ad

DOVES WANTED:

Want 2 White doves, both r
sters; Vester L. Oliver, bese
la-

GUINEAS,
WANTED:

Want a Guinea rooster,. prefer
White. Virgil Bramblett, Warner
Robins. Ri. 1.

Want some Geese and ae s
at reasonable prices. Harty Le
Clark, Keysville. Rt. 1, Box 121,

Want 2 to 12 young White
rican Guinea hens and 1 sa

breed rooster. Quote prices
Ss, J. Whalley, Plat

DUCKS, Ere

ville,



FARM HELP , WANTED



Want good man for 4 H. fas
50-50 basis, or 1, 2 or 3-H, fa
Good land, mules, 3-4 R. house

| school bus line.

If interested and willing worker
come see. 7 mi. So. College
Cooks Crossing
follow paved to end, turn.
fork one hundred yards, then
East about % mi. B. Tra
Riverdale.

Want good relia bie woman
live with widow to help w
garden and other light fi

chores. Good home, board, laun-

dry and salary. Mis. as ae Chan i
nell, Ellaville. j

Want man for 1946 on 50-50
basis for truck farming. Must
have force to cultivate 75-100 A
In Walker Co., on good road.
Will move within 100 Mi. ra
dius.. Max Zugar, Pittsburg.

Want man and wife to live wa
home with old couple and -
25. A. on halves, Cotton, Corn
and Peanuts. So. Ga, Good ia
Mrs; L;
Webb, Sumner, Rt. 2. z
. Want share

sev, croeppers

rt
Extra good houses and

wages.
Grow all crops, in ee

land.

Have some mules.

tors. arm
G. C. Harr 1,

near Pelham.
Whigham.

Want tenant for f er 2 |
farm on 50-50 basis. 3 A. to-
bacco allotment. Will furn. st
and all fertilizer for en
crop. Extra good 1 ad. See x
at once. .O. A. Irwin, Ludew

Want colored ecuple to {
farm on shares. Can give di
work until time for Spring
House to live in. W. F. B
Savannah, Rt. 4, Box 230.

Want colored family for ai
work at Bethesda .Home
Boys. Comfortable hous
good wee, Segee
~ 0 Boxs tos.
Want farmer for 2-H
mi, No. Temple on ards
or halves. 2 houses, good
pasture, plenty wood.







(Continued from Page One)

e for the commandments of Jehovah against aj)

ful and unbelieving world, they had actually
ormed a league with the controlling earthly power.

What pretense of worship they made were
re mockeries. :

And then at a time when they in their sinful
nd abandoned hearts were no longer expecting
e Messiah, the Messiah came,

After Christ had died, after He had arisen
nd ascended to the Father, the church began to.
seep the birthday of Jesus. For 1,912 vears
hristmas had been celebrated each year,

-Kaeh Christmas had been a milestone along

e road of time from the ascension to His second.
oming. ms

Hach Chrishuas we are one year ee from
@ Gross and tle ascension and we are one year
rer to His reappearance.

A few days ago the ae
ount of a great. challenge to Christianity.

One newspaperman said that Christianity. had

iled because it had not been able to ee the
orld war. _ .

The writer of that article revealed his utter

of understanding of the teachings of Christ.
_ Jesus answered, my kingdom is not of
this world: if my kinedom were of this world,
ven would tiv ser vants fight, that I should not:
e delivered. unto the Tews: but now is my
gdom not from hence.John 18:36. |

hrist is the eood Shepherd. Those who ac-
nt Him are. his. sheep and no- man is able to
uck them out of His hand.
They know His voice and believe all the things
iat He says.
~The revelation of Christ to John on the Isle of
Patmus, a as well as His sayings to His disciples
while He dwelt among them, leave no doubt about
the ereat tribulation and time of trouble which lie
ahead for those who dwell upon the earth.
Sueh tribulations and such time of trouble
must needs be that His words be fulfilled.
Each Christmas Dav the hearts of true believ-
s are lifted up beeause they know they are one
year nearer to the time when He shall come for
His own.
Christmas brings no cause for rejoicing to
se who reject Him. They are one year nearer
0 the dav of condemnation.
OPH multitudes which followed and went be-
re Christ into J erusalem were very much disap-.
pointed that He did not set up a temporal kingdom
nd take the crown of David upon His own head.
Those who expect Christianity will turn the
ae of people on earth into an army for Christ
and bring about the millennium are following an
qually vain hope.
__ **Which also said, Ye men of Galilee, why
Stand ve gazing up into heaven? this same

family |

house, fine pasture,

farm and raise broilers,
ning water,

earried. an.

mtd,

Want So colored farmer and:



ie gee oe WANTED



Have Ede : home and.
salary to settled woman who is

dependable, for light work on.
farm including caring for small

2 days off
W.. Smith,

vegetable garden.
Weekly. Mrs, Sam
Hazlehurst, Box 325.

Want white man with small
to work for.
wages on farm in Cobb Co. 8
Miles from Marietta, Mes.
Wondve Atlanta, 3905 Tuxe-
do Rd. _ Ws (ce 8832.

Want exP. man and wife to.

werk on farm for $10.00 month,
board and 1/2 of crop.
level creek bottoms, good 7 rm.
house, elec. pump, water in
Lop. Bur
ger, Cave Springs, RE 3.

- Want: farmer for 1- -H
for standing rent of 3rds and
4ths. 4 1/2 Mi. East of Buford,
near church,
house.
Racer:

Want small white family to
Must
references.

give 4 character

Salary, $75.00, lights and run-
Joe Shields, Stock.

ridge.

Want col; family to work on.

farm, 3 rm, sealed heuse, with

lights, water in house on paved

3 1/2 miles from town.
to right
Mrs, Edward F, OCon-
Milledgeville.

hwy-
Good salary
Write.

nor, Jr:

Want reliable small colored
family to live on farm and run

-good 1-H erop on 50-50 basis. |:
Everything conv.

1/2 mi, La-
Grange Hwy. See me at once.
T. W. Murphy, Grantville, P. O.
Box 214, :

' Want good Man and wife to

help on stock farm, Good pay /

for each, If desired can have
plenty good land and bottoms
for crops and patches and have
all you make if can give me am-
ple help by day. Good house,
water in yard, school and mail
Rte Re AN: SESS Forsyth,

wife or daughter to help on
small. dairy and have crop: on
50-50 basis. Good land, stock

and tools, close to good colored

school, on mail Rt., 4 R. ceiled
house, on Roosevelt Hwy. bet.
Palmetto and Fairburn.
Bomar, Palmetto.

Want reliable farmer for 2-H
crop farm near Commerce. 6 rm.
house, plenty wood and bottom
land, B. R. McConnell, Mays-

-ville, Box 484.

Want colored man: to work
small farm and do garden and
vard work. Can. give light
farm work for wife, if depend-
\able.. 4 rm, house, James A-
very, -Ben Hill, Rt. i, = Phone

| RA-7449, at night.

drive
Also
Must
IVirs.
feo.

Want at once man_ to
truck: and .care for hogs.
do general farm work,
be sober with good ref.
St. J. Davis, Decatur,
Phone Ve-3908.

exc. |

weekly :

Good

and

farm.
- school bus by
J. J. Johnson, Sees :

and 1-H. farm.

party.) satisfactory. basis.

Winston. At Bill Arp,

H. Phillips,

Be Ps



Wasnt oe white hia. tol.

share crop 100-200 A. with trac-
tor. and walking |
Good land and 8 rm. house, elec.
lights, on paved -hwy.
from Augusta. School bus: by
door Exe. ref. D. Russell
Wright, Augusta, 1304 Meigs St.

Want middleaged |
white or colored to do _ very
light chores on farm in exc. for
room. and board = and small
monthly salary. Mrs. B. S.
Davis, East Point, 107 W. Wash-
ington Ave.

Want 2.mule and a 1 mule

farmer, with family able to make
gather own. crops.

good mules, houses, on school,

bus and mail and rolling store.

Rt. Labor in Cane when not
busy in crops. 8 mi. Albany.
See. write of wire my expense.
J. T. Douglas,

Want good farmers for a 2-H.
1 bale cotton
or 100 bu. corn rent for ea, plow.
Good land, pasture, good house,
large barn; near Highway and
school pus. Plenty wood, Eu-
gene Brown, Manchester,
128.

Good 1 H, crop, good land,
good mule, 3 R. house, 9n school
and mail Rt. to good white or
col. family on 50-50 or other
E- E. Logan,

Want sev. families for.
work and share farms, F,
Jackson, Wrightsville.

wage
B.

Want good farmer for 35 A.
farm, neat Marietta. Clean, 4
R. house, on paved Rd, and bus
line. Also have elec: Mrs, J:
Atlanta, 1040 Gil-
E, MA 2300..

with 2 plow

bert St. S.
Want family,

hands for 2 H. farm, 50-50 basis.

4- mi. No. Monroe, on school and
mail: Rt,= Large..3. B2. house;
Elec. Well at door, barn, pas-

ture, running water; good land.

2-4. yr. old mules. Want good,
honest, hard working family.
Carl Perry, Monroe, Rt. 3.

Want good farmer for 2 H.
farm on Causey Place, Rt. 42,
near. Musella, Standing rent.
Wm, M. Carson, soe 121

Ridgeland Way, N.E,

Want good fatm aa (2-08
3 children o. k.) for 125 A, farm.
Little creek ;ad 2 branches;
gTow anything in Vegetables,
Fruits, other crops. Good stock,
plenty feed, tractor, ete. Furnish
all and give tenant 3/4 of all he
makes on farm and free garden.
Other advantages. Jas. S, Har-
ris, Buford. Rt. 3.

Want good man, able finance)

self to make crop, pay taxes
and insurance on farm and do
repair work, (furnishing mater-
ial for same) for use of the farm
for 1946, See me.- Mrs. Frances
Gay Underwood, Atlanta, 1163
Astor Ave.-S, W.

Want experienced man _ to
grow crop. and Bulbs on shares.
Contact. B. O. Fussell, Atlanta,
c/o King Hardware Co.

Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven,
shall so come in like manner as ye have seen

him g0 into heaven,

SA ets ] iy

TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of. Agriculture.

cultivators.

1522 mie

woman,

Have

Albany, 1153-
Dawson Rd. Phone 1604.

Box |



3:

Exp. farmer ra
5 in family to w
work all fhe ti

-any kind of farm .

and sober, Wa
live in near scho
B. Lanier, Garfi

- Want small cro
-plant in corn, lit le
and potatoes. Wor

when not in cro

moved.
Harrell,

Lifetime exp. fa
wants 2-H crop
good land, stock
Close to Doravi
Buckhead or A
Akins, Norcross,

Want 2-H farm

with peed tobace
truck or dair

2 in famil
Barnesville

basis with good

stock, tractor a

Near school and

Manderson, Savann

phens Court,
Christian mai

35,, desire work and

is good farmer,

, tryman, live stock

is hard worker, ]

Scottdale,. =
Colored man

crop and day labo:

farm or daify work

Preter Fulton oF Co

L. Sims, Temple, Rt.

Want job over,

Jarvis, Mate y

Jefferson St.

Want job
Walking Colts.
training and caring

|and other livesto

Wright, Covington
Young, single m.
on dairy farm. Home

Herschel R. Phillip
193. Woodward A

Man with 4 in fa
job on farm for was

tamily to work.

time and go any p
Fulton. or pera

on 50-50 basis,
water and with sr
Have to be moved.
Ga. Write or come
Godwin, Alma, Rt.
Music.

White woman
work on fatm, with
people. Know how
once. State salary
lars in first letter
nie McLeod, Millen

Young man, 29
job on farm.
work and drivin
hot Gdrink =o =
someone a good
month with roo
laundry. Julian

}108 E. 10th St.

GEORGIA AUCTION MARKETS LIVESTOCK SALES

= AON Atlanta
_ December 12th
GS Soft - Hard
Per Cwt,
14.50-
14,.50-
14.50-
14.50-
14.50-

Sylvester
ess llth
LBS.
_ . 180/240
245/270
215/350
. 355/400
155/175
135/150
130/DN
180/350
350/450

Feeder
Hogs
13.00- 15.00

Albany
5th
Soft - Hard
Per Cwt.

Bainbridge
6th

Soft - Hard

Per Cwt.

No
Hogs
Auctioned

Feeder
Hogs :
13.00- 15.00.

Mcultrie
13th

Camilla
_ 12th

Feeder
Pigs
12.00- 15.00

Feeder
Pigs
12.00- 14.50

Macon
ith

Feeder
Pigs
14.25-



Strs. & Heifers
Strs. & Heifers.
Strs. & Heifers
_ Strs. & Heifers

12.00
6.00

10.50
ood Calves .

ed. Calves oo.







Common Calves -

a F

12.00 |

12.00- 13.00
11.00- 12.00
9.00- 11.00
9.00- 10.00 - 10.00- 12.00
3.00- 9.00 9.00- 10.00
7,00- 8.00 - 6.50
10.00- 11.00 - 7.00- 3.50.

5.00- 6.00
8.00- 9.00 9.00- 10.50
13.00- 14.30
10.00- 12.50
8.00- 10,00

8. 00- 12.00

~12.00- 13.00:
10.00- 11.00





~12.00- 14.00

10.00- 11.00.

10.00- 11.00
8.00- 9.09
7.00- 8.00 -
8,00- 12.00
4.00- 6.00
9.00- 10.00

12.00- 13.00





10.00- 11.00