rTORIALBy Tom Linder.
ast heel I was in Washington, D.
ppeared before a House Com-
on. national legislation for farm- |
fi peed Wednesday morn-
efore Senate Agricultural Com-
x
of which Senator Elmer Thomas,
lahoma, i is Chairman.
week a dinner meeting was
onsored by sonie of the State
missioners of Agriculture.
uests sixteen
ht Congressmen. In addition,
ere others who are especially in-
ed in agriculture and the nations
He. welfare. The total number
at the meeting was one hun-
and thirty-two.
ort talks were made by Senator
of Oklahoma, Congressman
Pace, of Georgia, and myself.
enator Thomas, who had just re-
d from attending the International
Sonference in Quebec, Canada,
most interesting recital of facts :
Some of |
he learned at Quebec.
cis: were astounding.
r instance, Senator Thomas re-
that in India the average daily
yf a laborer producing eotton is-
emember this i is 7'4e for a whole
ber the speaking was over: we
ustrated to those present how -
economic laws continued | to
our: national economy,
ad slides prepared, by techni:
ho have been engaged by the |
Committee of the National
iation of Commissioners. of Agri-
These slides were thrown on.
s and were explained by Mr..
Wilken, of Sioux City, Iowa.
Invariably when farm prices go
it follows that within six to twelve
other prices and wages go into
pin. When farm prices start
up: other prices start upward
ix to twelve months...
national i income is. always seven
e farm income. Some. people
ied to maintain that the farm in-
ne-seventh of the national in-
ther than that the national in-
seven times the farm income.
they would contend that the
farm income Henends on
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1948
case
NUMBER
eucrale |
We had
Senators and.
national income rather than that the.
national income Bees on the farm
income.
One of the seman able things about
these graphs is their demonstration of
the fact that the farm income always
' goes up or down six to twelve months
before the national income starts in the
same direction.
Tf the national income sontrolied
the farm income, then it would be in-
evitable that the national income would
start first to go up or down and the
farm income would follow.
These Government figures show
unerringly that the farm income al-
wavs goes up or down first and that the
national income goes up or down fol-_
lowing the change of farm income.
Some other most intexesting facts
were developed:
NX
Most of us are familiar for instance
with share cropping on the farm., We
know that if a share cropper is getting
one-half of the crop he gets one-half
regardless of the price of the crop. If
eotton is 10e per pound the share crop-
per gets half. If cotton is 20c a pound
the share cropper gets one half.
We have all heard so much about
hours and wages in industry. None of
us had ever thought. about there being
a natural economic law to determine the =
share of production which the laborer
gets independent of hours and fixed
wages. 3
This eraph shows however bey ond
any doubt that natural economic laws
prevail and that natural economic laws.
determine the wages. of labor in indus-
try in the same manner that the share
-eroppers. oe are determined on the
farm.
For ence for year after year
fae coal miners of. the nation have re-
~ eeived sixty per cent of the market
value of the coal they mined.
Tf, instead of the eoal miners get-
ting so many cents per hour, they had
been mining on terms of sixty per cent
of the coal, they would have received
- exactly the same amount of wages they
did receive, that is 60e out of every
dollars worth of coal the operator sells.
It is true that the individual miner
gets a higher wage per hour now than
he did a few years ago, but the secret is
he uses improved methods of mining
coal.
And the individual miner pro-
ae the farm income.
duces more coal dna be did a ~ yea
ago.
When she mined ad with ae
and shovel he got sixty per eent 0
coal he mined. Today, when he use
hydraulic or electric drill, one min
produces a great deal more coal an
gets sixty per cent of the coal he m
right on.
Ile is just like ie share -
who plowed. one mule a few years
and now drives a tractor and cultivs
four times as much land as he did.
still has the same interest in the e
| that he had before, but he produces m
cotton, more corn and more wheat,
has the same share ina larger Pp od
tion,
Z
Railroad ial: get. 48e.
every dollar the railroad compa
take in. One railroad man with. Or
tracks, modern locomotives and mo:
methods transports more goods
the same man could transport a fe
years ago. Therefore, one railroa
produces more revenue for the
pany.
fe
_ When that railroad man gets hi
out of each dollar of gross revenue
has more oe a we call. hig
Wa ges.
Wier you try by arbitre
means to raise the coal miners wag 7
the railroad mans. wage without, at
same time increasing the income 0
railroad company or the coal ope
you are going against a natura
nomic law. : a
Tf, on he other hand, you u
7 take to raise the income of the r
company, the coal mine operator
railroad employee or the coal
without first i increasing the farm in
you are still going against. a ne
economic law. :
The truth of the matter is, t
a natural law of division of all Ol ny
ities between all people. Mone
simply a medium. of convenien
making this divison.
The only way you can weal
-evervbodys wages is to produce
commodities. ~That is th
wages have been raised for thi
ticular groups like railroad emp
and coal miners. They increase
- duction and thereby: raised the
The national income is determi
Thess ati
(Continued on P
repeated only when request is
notice.
assume any rsponsibility for
Bulletin:
Pass Published Weekly at
114-122 Pace St; Covington, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
Tom Linder, Commissioner,
Atiatita, Ga.
Publication Offive
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga
/of June 6 1900. Accepted
- of Octover & LQ
. : thc all items for publication and all requests to be put
{ on the mailing list and for change of address tv STATE BUREAU
OF MARKETS. 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissabl
under postage regulations inserted one time on each request and
Limited space will not permit insertion of notices containing
wor than 30 words including name and address.
Under Legisiative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not
Pwrecutive Office, State Canitol
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga. | i
editorial and Executive Offices |
i
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau Gi |
tered as scond e1ass chattel |
August 1, 1937. at the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia, under a!
or
mailing at spcial rate o1 postage
provided tor in Section 1103, Ac
accompanied by new copy of
any aotice appearing in the
SECOND HAND |
MACHINERY FOR SALE
4941 Fordson Tractor with
new motor on good rubber,
Ferguson system equipment,
Two disc plow with new rub-
ber tire, New Cultivating equip-
ment, 2 new Covington _plant-
ers, New Weeder. Double sec-
4ion hattow and pulley, for
$1,450.00. Allis Chalmers 4 ft-
-@ombine in . good condition,
350,00. Fertilizer spreader,
$85.00. Equipment at my farm.
Bronwood, Ga. Leo Mallard,
Covington. ;
Cole dbl. hopper planter
(plant8 corn, peas, beans and
peanuts, or cotton seed -(alon),
used very. little, $20.00. B. R.
Woodliff, Flowery Branch,
Route 1.
_ 4 Madows Grist Mill, Inter-
national, 6 HP Motor, also Intl
No. 2 Feed Mill and Corn Shell-
et. J. W. Reese, East: Newnan,
Route 3.
1. 06 MeCormiek- Dr. Orch-
a type Tractor on rubber; 300
PK Friend power take-off
Ge she on rubber; 9 ft., dbl.
- gee, vy. duty J, D. arrow.
WwW. B. Butts, Thomaston, P.O.
Box 107.
Large Aermotor Wind Mill,
complete, $150.00. Mrs. C. M.
Cheney, Shellman.
Model A Jonn Deere Tractor
with cultivators, planters and
fert. attacht, 6 plow and dbl.
| @i8. harrow, all good cond.
J. M. Hood, Swainsboro, Rt. 3.
TRACTORS:
4 Papec Hammer Mill, has
been under sheiter, used very
little. Dr. Harvey E. Griggs,
Conyers.
Allis Chalmers W C Tractor
with power take-off, prac. new,
C. L. Henderson, Monticello.
~ 1945.5. D. model A, with cul.
_tivators, planters, harrows, trae-
tor wagon, and AllisChalm. C
Tractor. Call Brandt Malcolm,
fonroe. Phone 4561.
mick-Deering, nearly new, $130.
~Furner Peaniit Picket, good
cond., and hay press. Reas. oor
- Leverett, Parrott.
ed Buggy, good running shape,
. Come after it. Dont write.
Jim Drawdy, Jesup, Rotite 1,,
Box 10.
1 ea. model A 2 D. 'Fractor,
6 dise Tiller, Case Combine, 12
ise Grain Drill, 2-way Harrow.
All slightly used. R. C. _Cham-
bets, Milan.
= ae tractor, A-1 cond:,
oh avid Bradley 8 dise cut-
hafrow, same as hw. Ans:
all etter. Li ; LaDuke, Dal-
ton.
- MeCorm.-Deering No, 1 Ham-
Mer Mill, good cond., $60. at niy
farm. H: L. Rawlins, Douglas-
Ville. Route 4.
1 ta. 2-H. Wagon; steel fram
and Wheels, steel beam 2-H.
Plow, 2-H. dise plow, 2-H David
Bradley Mower. A. T. Raymer,
Sr, Decativ, Columbia ahd
Rainbow Drives,
Side deliv. hay rake, MeCor-|
SECOND - HAND
MACHINERY FOR =
J: D. model H, with 2 row
planter, cultivator, fert. attach,
$1,100. 00: Farmall type H,- 1944
mod., $1; 400. 00; also Tntnl 6 ft.
Grain Drill, $250. 60. All good
as nw: Write E. K. Cargill, Ma-
con, 103 Lamont St., Pho. 3746J.
3 Rollet Cane Mill, also Sed-
er for J: D. 6 disc Tiller, $35.00
ea. Both in good cond, M. L.
Shealy, Oglethorpe.
Powr Carle Mill, good cond.,
for sdl. LL: A. Wisenbaker,
Lake Park. Phone 630 R a:
Handiman Garden Tactor, 3-
4h. p., reversible hillside turh-
er, steel bam for diff. points,
tool carriage with eultivator
points and plow, 1 set 6 aise
hos; and eart for tractor. W. A.
MeFarland, Alto.
Olivr Combine No. 2, almost
hw,; $650.; Oliver 16 disc Bush
and Bog Harrow, $210.;,1 ma-
hiite spreader and lime spread-
er, $210.; 9 ft. Hay Rake, good
shape, $50. G@. H. Ledbetter,
Cumming. Rt. 2.
Grain box for J. D. 4-disc
Tiller (tiller made for J. D. Trae.
model H), with complete chain
and sprocket, Ist. cl. cond. G. F.
A. Williamson, Fitz grald,
Route 2.
Cultivatot, horse drawn, 5-
tooth V-shaped adjust., used 1
season, $9.75 at my home. A,
Bierman, Atlanta, 1025 Belle-
vue Di. NE. .
2 Cole three-way drills, good
eond:; $18.50 ea: also Intnl
power. Hay Baler, 16x18, on
Steel wheels; good as. new, $350.
Ts Me, Tillman, Athens. 128 Col-
lge Ave. Suiiset Farin.
8H. P. stationary eng., gas
fuel, ker, oprated. magneto, for
Grist Mill, Hammer feed "Mill
and geh: farm purposes, good
running cond. $65.00 cash: Will
not ship. Robt. J Landrtiin,
Adairsville, Rt; 3.
Big 2 roller syrup till and
new 84% ft. copper pan, $35.00
or both; 14% prac. new Oliver
stalk cutter, $40.00; also 200 gal.
good sorghum syrup for sale.
4% mi. E. Buford at Roberts
Cross Rds. Berts Tuck. Buford,
Route 2.
Farmall F 12 Tractor with cul-
| tivators,; planters, distribs, on
rubber; $500. On Warner Rob-
ins Rd, C. W. Bryant, Macon,
Route 3.
Farmall Abdel Ay Tractor,
planters; cultivators, 20 dise
harrow, all A-1 cond. See H. L.
Williams, 0/o REA Sandersville.
Oliver DP 43 plow; 3 dise,; 1st.
class cond., $125.00 FOB my
farm, 3. mi: . Decatur: J. YT.
Gibson, Decatur. 1000 Candler
Rd: Cr2258,
General manure spreader, in
perfect cond. for sale. E. N.
Adams, Stapleton.
J. D: power Hay Press, used
very little, $175.00; would del.
for extra 10 mi. both ways; also
have med. size Hammer Mill;
$65.00. Loyd Keadle, Yatesville,
Route 1.
rust, ball bearg, $60.;
| Wagon, $50.
| SccOND- HAND
iad ache FOR =
Benthal Peanut Picker, good
cond., for sale cheap. W.
P Sammons, Register
16 disc Intnl Grain Drill, good
cond., for sale. Grady Fox, Ft.
Valley, Route 3.
3 roller, used Cane Mill, none
also ieie
See or call, Lee
Cosby, Blythe Isle, Brunswick.
1 Case Peanut Thrashing Ma-
chine for sale or exc. for equal
value. Write Owen Edge, Au-
gusta, 129 13th, St.
3 row Grain Drill with fert.
and grain dept., $12; 2 2-H. dbl.
disc reversible plows, $25. ea.;
middle buster, and 2 1-H. turn-
ing plows, $5 ea:;
10 in. turning plows,
J; Li; Shadburn, Buford.
J. D. model B tractor with
planting and cultivatg. equip.
$6; 6a.
S. R. Saye, Rutledge.
Lilliston Peanut Picker and
an almost new J. D. Baler. See,
dont write. Jack Peed, Butler,
Route 2.
2 Roller Cane Mill (big, old=
'}fash., good rollers); pan needs
repairing, $20. or exc. for hogs.
See or write at once: James
Warren, Reynolds, Box 1138,
Rt. 3, o/o Horace Colbert.
60 h.p. Intnl motor and No. 10
Intnl hammer mill, also 5 dise
tiller, Call, dont write,
Smith, Sparta.
1 Reaper and Bidder, tractor
operated, (new. in 1941), $200.;
3 riding Cultivators, $85. ea. All
in A-1 cond.; game as new; also
4. good farm mules, $100. gach.
Mrs, = J: Gay, Cobbtewn,
Route 2.
McCormick- Deering size 10x8
dbl. rut Grain Drill, used 1 sas;
$165.00. 7 mi. E. Hahira. Perry |
Fields, Ray City, Route 1.
Ford tractor .and plow, for
sale. See J. E. Sikes, Barnes-
ville,
12 can Intnl Dairy Box, 4 unit
Surge milking machine and few
other ddiry equipment. H. B.
Pritchett, Fortson.
F-12 late model Farmall trac-
tor, good tires, $700.00; disc
Tiller plow; $200.00. Cash. J. G.
Morris, Forest Park.
Parts of Upright. Grist. Mill,
very cheap for cash. Write or
come see. W. J. Allen, Pidcock.
Model H and model A Farmall
tractors, good eond., with: all
farm equipment, namely plant-
ers, guano distribs, cultivators,
tillers, cuttaway harrow, ete.
L. H. Ednfield, Stillmore.
Riding gardh tractor, 5 HP,
4 cycl sing. cylinder air cooled
motor, A-I cond., together with
10 in, turn plow; 5 ft. dise plow;
drag tooth harrow, 2 cultivators,
shovel and spring-tooth type,
and _asst: attachments, $400.00.
M. R. Baker, Savannah. 615 E.
49th. Stret..
J. D. modl L. tractor, coni-
plete with all neces, equip., $750.
Otis M. Cowart, Stimiit, Rt, 2.
1 Henkle Lespedza Seeder,
used very little, $65. No letters
ans, B: J: Whatley, Fayetteville,
Route 1,
Grist Mill, Sheller,
Ford motor; 20 in. Rocks, $100.
RW: Eaves, Grayson.
Model L. John Deere tractor
with cultivators, good cond.
Wray
| Ernest Turner, Plains,
1 good open buggy, first iss
cond., $50.00 FOB. Luther Hol-
land, Byrenville. Rt. 1, box 165.
Small Fairbanks-Morse Corn
shucker, Sheller and Cleaner,
A-1 cond.; _used only 3 wks.
0. W. Haygood, Athens; Rt. 3.
1 livingston walking cultiva:
tor, No. 1 eond., $65.00 at my
place. Ernest Webb, Richland.
Old model Fordson Tractor,
8 dise harrow, in good cond.
Frank C. Pruitt, Dahlonega,
Route 1, Box 67.
2 h.p. gas eng.; used for most
any light job on farm, last used|
in August; good cond., $35.00.
W. B. Champion, Chipley.
Correction: 50 HP boiler, 45
HP steam engine, A-1 cond., can
be sen in operation, pulling
cotton gin, 10 mi, W. Marietta,
nar Lost Mth.; also 3 dise
Avery tractor plow, in A-1 cond.
G..S. Brown, Acworth.
Modl A Case 6 ft. Combine:
modl DO Case Tractor, and
Cas 9 dise Grain Drill with
frt. attachment. J. B. Spears,
Jr., Mansfield. -
ho 4
So phe a ee oe
3 2-H; heavy}
model A|
-SECOND-HAND
pe eee FOR SALE
1_A- 147 plow, 2 26-in. disc,
for Farmall A Intnl] tractor,
only used to turn 30 A, bottom
land. A. L. Sewell, Newnan,
Model H John Deere tractor
on rubber with planting and
cultivating equip., also 1 power
mower. R.
Grove.
Allis Chalmers tractor, 1 row,
complete farming outfit, 3 dise
tiller with seeder, on rubber,
cultivators, planters, distribu-
tors, mowing. machine, row
marker, etc., with some extra
parts. B. Pp: Waters, Glennville,
Route 2.
50 HP boiler and 40 HP en-
gine, and all fixture, good: cond.,
used to run Cotton Gin outfit,
also want an old model Empire
Grain Drill 8 row for repairs.
-L. B. Brown, Homer.
1 large Intnl Grain Drill with
fert. attachment, $250.00.
Phone No. 3855. R. B. Harrell,
Eastman.
A 2H. wagon for sal or exe.
for a 1 H. wagon. Also some
plows for sale. W. L. Ses-
sions, Soperton.
Intnt Farmall F-20 tractor on
rubbr: come see and you will
buy for $450.00: Also want a 4
disc Athens plow, nw of
Slightly used: State price. C.
F. Hays, Jr., Musella.
Cas tractor with eultivating
and planting equipment, for
sale: ahd would like to buy a
Model H I. H. C. tractor, new
or usd, in good cond. Way-
ward: Miller, Ft. Valley; Rt. 2,
Box 50.
SECOND - HAND
MACHINERY WANTED
Wart to buy No. 10 Cane Mill,
mill. Pay cash and come after.
What have you? W. M. Gay,
Postmaster, Abba.
Want 1 or 2-H manure spread-
er. Sol Oden, Blackshear.
Want old Ford Ferguson trac-
tor; regardless of ond. Stan-
levard Dr. S. E.
Want a Syrup Boiler, in good
cond., any size up to 80 gal.
State price at once. Omer Dixon;
Blackshear, Rt. 1:
Want Peanut Picker, within
25 mi. Stone Mtn: G. L. Jack-
son, Stone Mountain. Rt. 1.
Want 4 or 5 HP garden trac:
tor in good mechan. cond., with
preparing and cultivating im-
plements. at reasonable prie.
. G. Harricon; Social Cirele,
P, O: Box 294; -
Want 2 mule disc harrow and
2 thule walking cultivator, in
good cohd. .J. D. preferred.
L. P.\Kicklighter; Glennville.
Want Ford Ferguson tractor
without equipment. State year
model, cond.. and price. P. M.
Haulbrook, Ellenton.
Want Hammer Mill, Grist
Mill,. Corn Sheller and motor.
W. M. Baxter, Ellijay; Rt. 1.
Want power Cane Mill,
running cond. Notify price,
cond., and if will ship to address,
John Lanier, Manassas, Rt. 2.
Want Syrup Pan (evaporator),
size 9, 10 or 12 ft. Prefer 10 ft.
at once. T. V. Moore, Nahuhta.
Want a _40-gal. Syrup kettle,
cheap; also want Acme har-
row; in good cond., 2 H. size,
for tractor work. Name best
ae. Jas. W: Moore; Valdosta,
. : Box 387;
Want 1 A..C/ No. 40 oF
jIntn! 42 Combine; also a 2 or
3 disc Tiller plow and 8-row
Grain Drill... Geo. L. Carnes,
Marietta, Rt. 4.
Want 1 set bevel gears, one
with wooden teeth,. to-run a
heavy Grist Mill. John W. West,
College Park.
Want 1-H. wagon. 4% mi. E:
Clarkston. H. L. Wilson, Stone
Mtn., Rt. 2.
Want 1 a:, Corn Planter,
Guano Distributor, Moyer and
Claude Eubaiik, Smyrna.
Want a 6 ft. Tractor Stalk
Cutter. Clyde Hogg, Buena
Vista.
Want model A Farmall tra-
tor with equip., also Combine
and Hay Press, in good cond.
State condition and price, Selma
Dixon, Chatsworth, Rt. 1.
good shape.
-G. E. Cornelius,
H, Brown, Locust}
all H Tractor with fa
equipment. A. M. Phi
Climax.
L. Green, Jasper, Route 2.
| Deere B tractor on rubb
all Tractor or J. D. mod
| Bonaire.
3 Roller, hors drawn or power)
ley Christian, Atlanta, 2309 Bou-|
tachment, Bush and Bo
in
_ Avenue: :
new anid thermostatic
| Mrs. W. E. Gren, Power
dise harrow, both for 1-H. type.
-H
MACHINERY 4
Want model L or a
Deer or model A Farma
tor, with farming equipm
State th
Jr a
Rout 1.
Want hvy, large, hi
one or 2 bottom trac
A. H. Haslam, Moultrie, is
Street, 6. W. 2
Want Oliver 13 tinal
plow. State cond., and p
Otis Justice, Irwinton, Bo:
Route 2.
Want Cane Mill, good c
cheap for cash, not over 50
summit. Ira E. Lamb,
Route 2.
Want power Cane Mi it
4 dise Tiller on rubber,
Powell, Wrightsville.
Want J. D. model B or
%,
%
Want a 1- H. Wagon,
Want Farmall H or
hew or g00d cond., also ae
and Harrow.
makes, same size.
College Park, Rt. 2.
Want good, used Ford
son tractor at one.
description, age, size tir
ete., and if will del, 20
lia, 5 mi. Collins, and ea
Rev. Jeon Smith, Mana
Rout 2.
Want for cash, model A
quipped; in good eond.
age and price. J, T. Pe
Want Oat Drill, late m
with or without Fertiliz, at
E. C. Bostick, Norman Par
Want. Crawler type
with Diesel engine, size a
30 HP. draw bar, prefer
or Caterpillar, also 8 ft. a
Kilifr 22 or 24 in. dise h
All must be good cond.
Miller, Cornelia.
- Want Ford Ferguson
lat model, in A-1 cond,
ed n rubber, with Mow
row, 2 dise. tiller sub
Give full particulars and
All letters ans. H. V. H
Young Harris.
. F, Mills, Alma. Rte
Want farm tractor an
Tiller, prefer Farmall M
Dere A. State full pa
Herman C. Brewr, Dani
Route 3.
INCUBATORS ANE
_BROODERS
3 Incubators: 2 Ke
350 egg cap. other Kero.,
egg cap. P. L. Poole, To
Route 1, Box 384.
A 24 hen cap. laying bal
all metal, complete with tro
and dropping pans; 3 dec
25.00. Cannot ship. Mr
Lahies, Desstis, 795 E,
Wilscn lc. cabinet In
egg cap. 8 trays, $110.
elec. starter, finisher, an
tery broodr, 750 cap.,:
$100.00; both for $200.
Elee, all-metal chick
Farm Master, 400 cap.,
cend., $10.00. Wont shij
ters ans. A. R. Maddox,
dale. Pnone De 4257, eo,
2 Elec. 100 cap. inci
and convertible Brooders
as nw, $12.50 a. E.
erts; Atlanta, Rt. 5,
(Bankhead and Bolton
Elec Hexagon shaped
and deck Elec.
Brooder, $40.00. Will n
J. 8B. Johnson, Lithia Sp
Want Inc. 200 to 60
could be oil burning, if
Give dtails and pri
David ~ Brinkman, Augu
R,. 38.
Want upright 5 or 10
er for hating system in:
er House and with th
inspecting and payi
Give full particul
first. Herman W. Ing
1815 Dean St.
1 Hots, 50c C: Mis-
awberry plants, TSC |
Cromer McCurley,
om
verbearing Straw-
$3.75 M. No less
plants, $1.00 doz.;
and._ collard plants,
Go re is, $2.60 doz. All
J. Ellis, Cumming. |
owns, $2.00 C; $8.00
M. Sage plants, 20c
sh. No order less than
irs. J. H. Free, Bowdon,
) strawberry plants,
oted, 75c C; $5.00 M.
n Ga. Others add post- |
- sonal checks. Mrs.
V eld, Cumming, Rt.
Wakefield Cabbage
ec C, plus postage.
Mashburn, Cumming,
e strawberry plants,
$2.00, 500; $4.00 M.
Durand, Sey
at:
n Wakefield Cab-
, $1.25, 500! $2. 25 M.
Prompt ship-
Mrs. Martha Waldrip,
ranch, es
stan Wakefield Cab-_
, $1.25, 500; $2.: 25 M.
and 10 M lots, $2.00
cel. Prompt ship-
EB. C. Waldrip, Flowery
Rt. 1.
like seawherey. plants,
300; $2.00, 500! $3.75 M.
oung plants, no checks.
w, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
u Crowns, $2.00 C; $8.08, |
00 M.; White Scupper-
ines, 50c ea. All root-
oe E. H. Patterson,:
.. and Copenhagen
of cabbage plants, $1.25,
25 M. Postage paid.
onner, Pitis, Rt. 1.
ton, Flat Dutch and
agen frostproof cabbage
15
{sage plants,
|500; $5.00 M.
fresh and green, $1.00, |
25, 500: $2.50 M. Past:
R. Chanclor, Pitts.
Raspberry plants, $1.00
el in Ga. Mrs. J. L.
s, Blue Ridge, Bt 2,
ke nails rry plants,
$4 15 M. Del. 5 M up,
exp. col. Money orders
oe ... W. Smith, |
ile, Rt. 2.
_ Lettuce,
Pai cabbage.
Kale, Collards,
Onions, Bermuda)
Any = amt.
35e . doz.
Mrs. H. V.
3 Endive,
A Armstrong
is $2.00, 500
Prompt shipment:
| Hiawassee.
Red, C
Plants, now ready, $2.00 M; 500,
Moline M.
Adairsville, Rt. 3. |
Wakefield Cabbage ;
1.25, 500; $2.00 M. COD.
Mrs. T.. -P. Mussel- |
1, Rt. 1, Phone 4310.
ike strawberry plants, |
-$3.75 M. Lady T.
Del. Prompt /ship-.
Sue Crowe, Gaines-
strawberry plants,
Young planis.
Mrs. Wil-)
Pp nts,
nion plants, $1. 15 M:
900. Orders filled daily.
itzgerald, Irwinville.
abbage plants, $1. 75 |
same day orders.
CR. Gordon Williams, '
root Cabbage and.
i Jersey butter, 3 lbs.,
i Cathey, Clarkesville, Rt. 3.
j and
Bermuda Onion plants,
WW. WwW. Walliams, |
Cabbage
: 500: on 50 M. Del.
dy. KE. See Hall, Arabi,
and Geideton
In | Seu:
150e doz.
Klondike. and | Missionary
strawberry plants, $5.00 M. Del.
anywhere in-Ga. J. A, Renni-
son, Hephzibah, Rt. 2.
Nice, young Klondike straw-
berry plants, $3.00 M. Lady T.
Strawberry plants, $5.00 M. P,
B. Reynolds, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Collard plants, 35 C; $2.00
M. Large spoonful collard seed, |
65c lb. L. A. Crow, Gaines-
ville, Rt 2.
Missionary strawberry plants,
C; Catnip, Peppermint
plants, 75c doz. Garlic, 10c head
or $1.00 doz. Miss Cecil Mc-
Curley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Giant new Gem (real true,
everbearing) strawberry plants,
now full of blooms, green and
ripe berries; bear from May to
December, 25 plants, $1.25;
|$4.00 C; $35.00 M. Add post-
age. C. A. Dobbs, Gainesville.
Cabbage plants, Jersey and
Wakefield. Frostproof, $1.25,
500; $2.00 M. Crystal white
and White Bermuda onion
plants. Same price. Prepaid
in Ga. I. L. Sokes, Fitzgerald.
Home grown well
$5.00 -C.
Tweedell, Lithonia, Rt. 2..
2 yr. old bearing size Mt.
Huckelberry, Blackberry, Dew-
berry, 50c doz. Large Garlic
bulbs, 25c doz. Mrs. Tamar
Teem, Talking Rock.
Sage plants, Catnip, and
Muscadine vines, 20c ea. Gar-
lie bulbs, $1.00 doz. Gooseberry
bushes, $1.50 doz. Mrs.
Turner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
Strawberry plants, large
early berries, $1.25 C.; White
Multiplying Onions, $1.25 gal.;
Scallion Onion buttons, 50c i
postpaid. Mrs. G. fe Taylor,
Buchanan.
Mastoden aN plants,
young and well rooted, $3 00,
Postpaid. -No
checks. W. H. Moon, Atlanta, |
1205 Grant St., S. E.
Missionary strawberry plants,
$1.00 C; $9.00 M. Damp packed.
Prepaid. Mrs. Carl Kimsey,
Sam
red and |2
Raspberry plants,
5 . choice
black; Blackberry,
var., arranged. to ripen in
suecession. State insp., 20
strong plants, $1.50 prepaid.
Add 10c for exchange on checks.
J. M: Nicholson, Blairsville.
*Shallot onions (the greatest
multiplyer known), 25 C;
White multiplying onions, $1.00
gal. Miss Vena Brown, Hart-
well.
Blakemore strawberry, $1.25:
$9.00 M. Klondike, 75e C;
ei: 00 M. Nice Sage plants, 25
ea.: $1.25 doz. P. P. in Ga.
Money Order.
Ellenwood.
E. J., Chas. W: Cabbage!
$1.00; 35c C.. Prompt shipment.
Mrs. Jessie Lovell, Baxley, Rt.
4, |
Klondike Strawberry plants,
$4.00 M. Also nice yellow |
wk., 55c
lb. Mrs. W. VY. Robbs, Flowery
Branch, Rt. 1.
Everbearing strawberry
plants. Well rooted, $3.25 M, or}
$1.75, 500. Del. No orders ac- |
cepted eut of Ga. Mrs. BR. ft.
Chas. and Jersey Wakefield |
Copenhagen Cabbage |
plants. Ready now, $1.25, 500;
$2.25 M. P, P. Clyde Cook,
-|Sendele, 3rd St., 5th Ave., N.
Early Jersey Wakefield Cab- |
| eeee plants, $1.25, 500; $2.00)
M. Now ready. Mrs. Irma
Miles, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Nice Rutabaga plants,
ready to reset, 15e C; $1.25 M.;
$10.00 for 10, 900. Correct count,
Pp. P. in $1. 00 orders. Mrs.
now |
- iP, R. Arnold, Benevolence.
Early Klondike and Red
Gold Strawberry plants, $1.00
fer 150, del. in Ga. No checks.
No stamps. Mrs. Pearl Pinson,
Ellijay, Bt. 2.
Chas. Wakefield Cabbage
Iplants, 25 . Raspberry plants, |
Plus postage. QO. M.je
Mashbura, Cumming, Rt. 9.
Sev. thous. Hunt Muscadine
ernong grapevines, for |
del, in 100 lots
Crowns,
| $2.00 M.
rooted | ~
1irt.,
Mae;
jder free, combine run, 20 lb,
isets, $1.00 gal
ae
Delpher Frost, |
; |seed, combine run; 12c lb., or
Sericea Lespe- | 137.
414e lb. Almost
|Mark T. Warren, Dewy Rose.
jand postage.
| Chatsworth, Rat, 2.
i lots.
i Everett, Whigham.
sg multiplying
Ee Gourds, Ie
How plum trees, |
25 ea.
or daxger, | i Bune
1$30.00" Cc. FOB. R&R. E. Paris,)Wh
Dallas, Rt. qd
2, Box 134,
2 yr. - Washin
$3.00 Boysenberry,
15, $1. ia Thornless Boysen-
berry, 12, $1.00 postpaid. J. W.
Toole, Macon, 33 Burton Ave.
Kudzu crowns free. Come
dig them up, all you want. W.
|G. Whitaker, Valdosta, 316 N.
Ashley St., Pohne 938.
Strawberry plants, $2.00 M.
Charleston W. Cabbage plants,
J.. L.. Strayhorn,
Flowery Branch, Rt, i:
Early Jersey Cabbage Plants,
$1.50 M; 500, $1.25.
del. Prompt shipment. G. L.
|Steedley, Baxley.
Large fresh, extra early zo
and Chas. W. cabbage and
white Bermuda Onion plants,
$1.25, 500; $2.00 M. Del., post-
paid. Prompt shipment. Satis.
guar. F. F. Stokes, Fitzgerald.
Winter Heading Frostproof
Cabbage plants, | Wakefield,
Dutch, Copenhagen; also. White
Wax Bermuda Onion Plants,
$1.25, 500; $2.00 M. Postpaid.
Exp. col., 2000 up, $1.75 M.
L. P. Legg, Rebecca.
SEED FOR SALE
Bur clover seed and damp}.
inoculation soil sufficient to
plant 1 A. by prepaid parcel|
post, $1.00; 1 T. FOB by low
Mi., $20.00. Seed alone, 20c Ib.
J. Turnipseed, Griffin.
Sericea Lespedeza seed, dod-
praned) cand scarified, 30c
50. gal. nest onions,
$1.00 gal.,
can use on farm. Mrs.
Thornton, Bowdon, Rt. 1,
white
B.
Large Red Indian Peach seed,
50c doz. Blue Damson Plum
seed, 125c doz. Add _ postage.
Rosie Crowe, Cumming, Ri 1.
White multiplying onion
lus po
eC: Ss. Majors, Lyerly, Rt.
600 lb. Sericea Lespedeza, 20c
lb. Combine run, 30c 1b.
|Cleaned and Scarified. H. W.'|
Thurmond, Farmington, Rt.
i.
Cannonball .w
1945 crop, $1. 50
ed from nice melons. J.
Bloodworth, Gordon, Rt. 1.
. Gourd seed mixed, thoroughly
dry. Also Gourds, 18-26 in. in
|Roberts, Royston, Rt. 1.
Mrs. |
leorn.
cir., no less than 4 sold. Write
for. prices. . No stamps.
= lb. a ok
lle Ib. for lot.
|deza seed, free of dodder, clean,
Ithis yr. crop, 20c th. FOB R. Bf
|Station. M. O. or check. G. H.
Ledbetter, Cumming, Bt. 2.
Sericea seed, combine run,
12c lb., recleaned and scarified,
17c Ib, Kobe lespedeza seed,
combine run, 10c 1b; recleaned,
dodder free.
5 gals. of Mammoth Russian |
Sunflower seed, and 5 gals.
{colored Lima - Beans, $1.00 gal.,
W. D. Wilbanks, |
from dodder, combine run, 20c
lb. Scarified and recleaned, 30c
lb.
This years,
Cecil Holbrooks,
jretta, Rt. 1.
Fine grade of Harrison Spe-
cial and Gold Dollar Tobacco|
or |!
WwW, P. Brantley, Nay-'|
seed, 2. thls.,
stamps.
lor, Rt. 1.
50c. Coin
Collard seed, 1 tb., 50c; 10 Ib.,|
V. artow |,
$4.00; 100 Ib. $15. 09.
50 gal. of -
onion, $1.00
Red and
jMrs. L. M. Wooten, Camilla.
Old Fashioned
bington ies =
trees,
All plants |"
Vista, Rt. 5.
|jay, Rt. 3, Box 88.
ders ,same price.
$15.00: 1-T. del: up to 40)
Claude A. Smith, Stock-|
| bridge. |Beans, $7.50 bu.
|Buena Vista.
or exc. for anything
ler more.
stage, |/brown 6 wks. table peas, 4 cups, |
|O. preferred.
atermelon seed,
lb. Hand sav-|
a.
|popcorn for best popping, 20c
\1b.,
|ped. Postage not pd.
j cane,
HMasville, Rt. 4.
| 3.
occa Lecacdece acct free ;COT recleaned, graded, in 125}
Claude A. Smith, Stock-|~
Ibridge, Rt. 2. |
1000 Ib. Sericea |
Lespedeza seed, good and clean, |
20c 1b., FOB. Ship in 100 ib.
Alpha-'!
Sassafras root, 40c tb.)
oS oe oe
ing notice was very badly cut
up in our Farm Land Issue, and
for this reason is reprinted
herewith: 86 A. land, 6 mi.
No. Crawford; 92 A. in cultiva-
tion, hal. pasture and. timber.
Good 5 R. house with elec., 1
ten. house; on school bus and
mail Rt. 12 bearing pecan
good peach and apple
orchard, fish pond. Running
water on farm. D. M. Nix,
Crawford.
BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
Red speckled crowder peas,
20c lb., in 3 }b. lots or more;
also a nice cream Jersey milch
cow, 3 yrs. old, due to freshen |
in 15 days, $75. 00 at my barn.
P. B. Brown, Ball Ground, Rt.
de
About 40 He white crowder
peas, clean and sound; also 15
bu, Black eyed Peas, $9.00 and |
$7.00 bu. H. D. Cook : Buena
White peas with black eyes!
for sale.- W. Y. Silvers, Elli-
Early /brown 6 wks. Crow-
ders, make 2 crops, 3 large!
cups, $1.10; Purple Hull Crow-
Cash or M. O.
Mrs. Lon Ashworth, Dacula,
1945 Bunch colored butter
beans, 30c lb.; also nice sun-|
dried peaches, 1945 crop, 45c Ib. |
Add postage. Mrs. Pollie Jack-
son, Waco, Rt..2, Box 94.
2 Bu. early bunch Velvet
Tom Steed, |
Sugar Crowder peas, for eat-|
ing and planting, 50c qt. Paost-
paid or exe. for dried apples,
1945 crop. Mrs. Oscar Millsap, |
Calhoun, Ri. 3.
White Mush peas, table va-.
riety, 15 lb., del.,
- . Mooney, Quill.
Brown Crowder and. early
$1.00; also broom corn seed,
5 cups, $1.00. All postpaid. M.
Mrs. Clarence |
MeMilian, Bacula, Re 1.
CORN AND SEED CORN
FOR SALE
Best grade South American
in 100 lb. bags; or 2c lb
all under 100 Ibs. Seaborn
Nice white clean shell Pop-
Treated for weevils, 12
lb. No less than 50 lbs. a
d ;
Brown, McDonough, Rt 3, Box
Jap. Popcorn (without hull),' S
jtender and good, 10 lb. del,
$2.50. Everett Hunt, Young-
Hastizgs Country Gentle-.
man, early sweet corn, 3 and 4}.
jears per stalk, 40c ih. .
Add
postage. Gladys Fincher, Doug-
400 bu. White corn for sale
at harn. Write for prices. '
Henry Bailey, Hazlehurst, Rt. !
100 ,000 Ibs. golden queen pop,
Ib. new bags. D. Collins, |
Cordele, Rt. 4.
C,
PECAN AND OTHER:
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE '
Pomegranate, 3 ft., 50c; grap-|
es, 2 yr., 2oc; Figs, 2 ft., 50c.;
CORRECTION: The follow-
get
in 10 lb. lots}
Josan Geia, Lawrenceville,
Vy red May Cherry sues
6, 75c; 10, $1.10. Postpaid in Ga.
Cash or M. 0. No checks. S.
Edwards, Ball Ground. re
Horse apple "Be ea.
Garlic, 10c hear $l 09
doz.. Miss Mattie Mecutey,
& Hartwell, Rt. 3.
Lead. var., Apple trees, 3 4
50c; 1 yr. Peach, 30c; Pp
plum, golden apricot, 75c; Fig
white, black scuppernongs, 5
grape vines, 25c; $20.00 C.
papershell pecan trees, $1. "5 ea
Lee Head, Cornelia.
Booking orders for U. s. Govt
insp. budded Pecan trees: Ilir
ois, Curtis, Moore, Big Z, Bra
| Jey, Success, Gen. Douglas M.
Arthur, Krak-ezy, Stuart, -
State and Fletchers
C. B. Biggar, Haddock.
Concord grape vine cutti
from near plant root with
tions for rooting, $12.50 M.
Large Garlic bulbs, 35e.doz. Le
Pearl Hudgins, Flowery Branch, |
alae +e
Schley, Money maker, St
pecan trees, budded true to he
name, 2-3 tt. $1.25 ea.; 3-4
$1.50 ea. State inspected. FO
R. L. Adkins, Cordele, Rt 3.
25-30 Seedling pecans, small
1-2 years old; also about 15-2
old English Walnut trees. or
exc. for good strawberry plan
if party will bring plants
trees. Henry White
Marietta, Rt. 1.
Apricot Plum, 35c ea. or 4 for
$1.00; also 1945 nice dri
nd
| peaches, 60c lb. Mrs. Lee a
Gainesville, Ht. 4.5
Muscadine and May Ch
bushes, 15c ea., 3 for 40c. M
Henry Eller, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Gooseberry bushes, Sar
bulbs, $1.00 doz.; Old fashi
peach trees, 25 ea.; Sage |
| 20c ea. Mrs. Mae Turner, |
esyille, Rt. 6.
Damson plum trees, 3 7 &f.
30c ca. Plus postage. Mrs. Har
dy Rhyne, White.
Lemon trees, 6 for $1.5 B
scuppernongs and Muscad ne
vines, Hazelnut bushes, c!
bushes, June plums, Crab:
All well rooted. $1.00 doz
Mrs. gasie Hugems,
Route 2
Black iocust trees, 15-30 in.
high 20c ea. Add postage.
W. Thomas, Sautee, Rt. 1.
Blueberry bushes, 45c |
Hazelnut bushes, 20c ea., $2.
| doz.; Muscadine vines, 3
id postage. No stamps. Mj
George, W. Bradley, de. er
Route 2.
GRAIN AND HAY .
FOR SALE.
Full grain Oats, in new
bags, 80c bu. FOB: also K
Lespedeza seed; Multiply
nest onions, $1 00 gal. Del. |
Reid, Hartwell, BE 3. :
Fine mixed meadow
hay, cont. seme annual Les
deza and Dallas grass, $27.
| Also, small amt. Lespedeza hi
$30.00 Ton. Prices at my. farn
8 mi. SW Milledgeville on
| ledgeville, 207 N. Col nak
Phone 6586.
3,000 bales. Hay,
my place.
fia r.
| ington, ae -
This years crop, Stewart
| Ib., 40c lb. in quantities of |
lbs. Raymond Edwards, =
{255 Oakland Ave.
Medium size, seedling |
3 Ib. $1.00. FOB. No
Mrs. Katie Alderman, |
505 E. Savannah, '
relative to ancl
SPECIAL NOTICE
Of interest to all patrons of the Bulletin
ested in FEED SACKS:
The Third Assistant Pctmaser General,
ington, D. ., has RULED that notices reg
feed and Other Sackseither FOR SALE or WA
iif EDare NOT PERMISSIBLE nor accopiays
publication in the Market Bulletin. |W:
@shatiot On-| therefore, publish any further notices in. ihe Bu :
30c, 100; or 400 $1.00;
Multiplyi Qnion, $1.00
#. HYNDS, Editor Bull
igh aay Coker Seen
dd Oats, $1. 00 Bu. 2 ey
ings 100 bu. Oats, Pure,
od qual. stock. $1.00 Bu 0. F.
Mathews, Greenville, Rt. 4.
od Lespedeza and mixed
GS, Ballard,
rk Hay for ate Can be
n 9--10 Ton lots.
Bu. Wve; $2.25 Bu. WwW. D.
son, Loganville.
10 Tons Peanut Hay, $15.00
n ty farm. =I. T. Lewis,
5 ae o ood Seed Rye,
uU. Del. My G. McDougald,
Bu. Cokers snd Sanford
Wheat, $2.00 Bu.; 2,000 Bu.
okers seed Oats, $1. 00 Bu. on
m at Penfield and Commerce.
', Sanders, Commerce:
Bright, Clean, heavy and dis-
-free Full Grain Oats. Re-
ned and Ceresan treated to
ent smut. 5 Bu. bags, $1.25
FOB Atlanta. M. O. only.
Ray, Fayetteville, Rt. 3.
000 Bu. Feed Oats, bright
clean, Full grain and Vic-
grain mixed. Contact for
by car load. W. H. Thames,
alley, tes: Phone 2912,
Bu. Rye for sale. Make
= WwW. D. Watson, Logan-
NUTS AND PECANS
FOR SALE
3ig, nice Stewart Pecans, hand
de and graded to a maxi-
~50c del. by prepaid,
| parcel post. No order
. H. M. Moorman,
se, red peanuts $1.25 peck,
White nest Onions, $1.00
; White half runner Garden
ns, 35 teacupfull; Speckled
er peas, 20c Ib.
" more. GE; Brown, oe
vart pecans 3562 Tht FOB
pping point, small quantities
mail; Add postage. Pecan
s, halves, $1.00 pt.; broken,
= t. PP, Mrs, Fred Atkinson,
Id ta, Rt. 4.
his -years crop extra large
wart pecans, 35c Ib. Extra
e Seedlings, good flavor, 30c
Ji FOB. No orders less
5 lbs. No checks. Mrs.
es T. Tanner, Sandersville.
ell filled- out, large Stewart
ns, 40c Ib. del. in Ga., 45c
ere. No orders under 5
fe) checks, W. T. Howell,
Higy ill. =
YRUP FOR SALE
s Gal. Sovehun: Syrup, $2.
n 4-gal. and 14-gal. cans.
"Holt, Villa Rica, Rie 2;
zal. good N. Ga. Cane
at my home $1.50 gal.
0 stands of bees in patten
and supers.
eal heavy syrup for feed
es new 5- at cans, O. E
ESH AND DRIED
UITS FOR SALE
be nice sundried dpeles
n Ist and 2nd zones, 50c
h or M. O. No checks.
i. Geren, Jasper, Rt 2:
nice sundried. peaches,
Also well rooted Blue
Plum, 20c ea. Cherry
its, 25c ea. Butter Beans,
pful. Add postage. Mrs.
Free, Waco, Rt. 2.
Ib: nice Sundried peaches,
See 1945 crop, 2
Alsd. 50 Ibs. |.
a _Stewart and Schley
eae 1b: a ees ML.
Grayson,
d 1945 crop apples:
Pp eelings, worms, 50c
; Bis 1945 crop shade
nd picked sage, $1.50
Mrs. A. H. McBryde,
Es
JW
jlb., postpaid.
Carter,
in 10 Ib.
-|20 ea,
| postage.
VilG. Re, 1, ne 16.
DRIE
F RUITS FOR SALE.
1945 crop Siidviea Hore ap-
C.|ples and LeConte pears, free of
core and peel. 45cc and 40c lb.
lots of 5 lbs. or more.
Currant trees, 1% to 2% gy
rooted, $2.25 doz.
Allie S. Snyder. Sharpsburg.
~ Nice, sundried apples, 1945
crop, iree of:core and peel, 30c
lb. Add postage. Mrs. J. B:
Foster, Franklin, Rt. 2. :
Good dried apples for sale
Mrs. John
Re 4 :
Nice new. crop sundried ap-
ples, free from worms, core and
peel, 10 lbs., $4.50 Del. A =D.
Call, Ellijay; Rt. 2.
1945 crop nice dried apples,
free of core and peeling, 40c
lb. Add postage. Mrs. J. L.
Kincaid, Ellijay, Rt. 2, Box: 75-
_ Nice sundried peaches, 30c lb.
Prepaid in Ga. Money order
only. Mrs. G. W. Dunn, Mc-
Donough, Rt. 3.
150 Ibs. bright sundried ap-
ples, free of core and peel, 50c
Accept cash or
MEO, = Mrs. MM. T= Holden:
Ball Ground.
- Nice dried apples,
Mrs. Henry Eller, Ellijay.
20 lbs. dried apples, June
and Limbertwig mixed, free
of worms, core and peel, 40c lb.
Add postage. Mrs. Earley T.
Loganville, Rt. 1.
B06 Ib.
crop apples, 50c lb., postpaid.
No order less than 5 lbs. No
checks. Mrs. R. F. Chambers,
eae Ground, Rt. 4.
- Pineapple pears, dried,
Stuart pecans for sale.
for -prices. Mrs. = By. Brady,
Cairo, Rte a Box 132.
Large and medium choice
Ga. pie pumpkins: truck load
lots at my. farm or could del.
Now ready to go. T. J. Bailey,
Franklin.
75> lbs. new crop sundried
pears, free of ,core and peel,
soc, 1b;
gal.
doz.
ie
Large. Garlic Bulbs,
Mrs. John Myers, Hart-
well. POI Ps :
1945 Crop nice |
peaches, 50c Jb. Fill orders im-
mediately. Also some _white
nest onions, 50c gal. Add post-
age. Mrs. Ambers King, Bow-
don, Rt. Lo
Nice dried somes 50c 1h
red and green hot pepper, 50c
gal. Also 1 New Hampshire
Red Rooster, $3.00; and 1945
crop peanuts, $4.00 bu. Mrs. J.
E. Sorrells, Royston, Rt. 1.
Quincedonias, 4c Ib.
forsdel.. Mrs. W, B.--Hurst
Mansfield.
Nice sundried rena 30c lb.
prepaid in Ga. Money order
only. Mrs. G. W. Dunn, Mc-
ee Rt. 3. z
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
SAGE: 2
Nice dried leaf sage, $1. 25-15:
35c qt. prepaid. Sage bushes at
in lots of 2, Postpaid.
Accept stamps for small orders.
Mrs. W. H. Silbey, Washington,
Rt Box Jl.
1945 crop. shade dried hand
gathered sad, 90G sb) Cd:
Brown, Toccoa, Eis
Hand picked, shade dried leaf
Sage, 1945 crop, $1.25 Jb. Post-
paid. Mrs. S. M. Smith, Barnes-
ville, Route 1.
BLACK WALNUTS:
Black walnuts, $2.00 Bu. Buy-
er pay postage. Mrs. H. J.
Thompson, LaGrange, Rt. 3.
10 Bu. Black Walnuts, this
years crop. Sound and nicely
hulled, $2. Bu. W. R. Shell,
Senoia.
GOURDS:
100 Martin and dipper gourds,
mailed with seeds in gourds.
Gourd seed, 50 for 25c; gourds
8 for $2.00. P. P. Money Order
only. Mrs.
Tarrytown, Rt. 2, Box 187,
PEPPERS:
Red and green hot pepper, 50c
gal. White nest onion, $1.00
gal; Walnut meats, 90c pt. Add
Ruth Killian, DS:
P. P. Mrs.
3 1/8100. 1b:
Allred, Esom Hill,
Write
Hot red pepper, $1.00.
POG
sundried
~ Ready
~ |erop of white sugar
Felton Warnock, |
LANE
FOR SALE |
3 Ibs. hot Red pepper, $1.50
Ib. postpaid. Mrs. S, A. Phillips,
8 Bia E25 5
Good leaf seasoning Sage,
10--20 lbs. 90e Ib.
Ground red hot pepper $1.25 lb.;
Dried catnip leaves, 25c orders.
V. Keith, Alvaton. -
Ground sage, $1.50 lb.; ground
hot pepper, $1.00 lb; sage plants,
$1.00 doz. All del. Cash or mon-
ey order. Aldora Keith, Gay,
Route 1. SS
ROOTS AND HERBS:
low dock, witchhazel, wild cher-
ry bark, 30c lb. -3 lbs, $1.00.
Also good. chewing tobacco, 10
twists, $1.00; nice walnut meats,
$1.00 lb. Vernie Stover, Pisgah.
basil,
catnip, comfrey, tansy, also. root-
ed sage plants. -Mrs. Clyde Wil.
liams, Cumming. Rt. 4.
SEED CANE:
Govt. improved Big Green
Cane 6 and 8 ft. $2.50 C; have
15 or 20 M. stalks. W. H. Wil-
liams, Meigs, Rt: 2, Box 132.
WALNUTS, _ SHUCKS, FOD-
DER: 10 or 12 bu. blk. walnuts,
some hulled, $8.00 for lot at my
home; lot of Fodder, $2.50 -
bundles, Shucks and cut-shuck-
ed corn,
a
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
\
HONEY WANTED:
Want 50 lbs. good honey, for
own use. Make price, D, F.
Pharr, Lithia Springs.
WHEAT ,SEED WANTED: |
suitable for seed. W. E. Chan-
dler, Tifton.
CORN, OATS, Fic. WANTED:
Wanted 300 bu. or more of
seed oats and 1,000-bu. of ear
corn, 100 bu. feed wheat, and
some field peas. H. L. Williams,
Baxley,. Day Phone, 125; Night
Phone Zt:
Want yellow root, Angelica,
Quote best price deliv. J. R.
Peden, Atlanta, 327 Crew St.
S. W.
Want 1,000 bu. Corn. Will pay
$1.00 bu. J. M. Harris, Way-
cross; Rites.
HONEY WANTED:
Want 40--50 lbs. or more
honey. J. C. Echols, corel,
Star Route.
NUTS WANTED:
Want few Ibs. Chesnuts and
Chinquapens for cash deliv. by
Parcel Post... Fi J. Darouuh:
Carrollton, 18 S. Park.
PEAS WANTED:
Want 5.or 10 lbs. this years
crowder
peas for my table use. Write
.| price and what parcel post will
be.
Mrs. Esther Gordon, At-
lanta, 1292 Sells Ave., SW.
CATTLE FOR SALE.
1 pure bred Guernsey bull,
exc. Maximum breeding, ready
for light service. TB and Bangs
negative. Owen H. Smith, Dah-
lonega.
Want to sell soon as possible,
a 5 gal. milch cow. O. B. Harrell,
Barnesville, Rt. 2.
Nice Guernsey bull calves,
best blood lines, sub. to reg.
from 10-12 mos. old. George M.
Wicker, Americus, Albany Rd.
Fine 9 Mo. old Jersey and
Guernsey cross bull. Good for
stock yearling. Exc. for Jersey
heifer soon to freshen. M. M.
Rowell, Bremen, Rt. 2, Box 47.
5 Springer heifers, wt. 500--
600 Ibs. Each to freshen from
Dec. to Feb. $50.00 each. J.-C.
Whatley, Fayetteville, Rt. 1.
3 milch cows, 2 mules and 120
bu. corn for sale. mi. on Alma
Hwy. V. Holton, Waycross,
Route 1.
Pure bred Butt-headed black
Angus cow for sale at my place.
_1Trippi Street.
E. Dd. Bright, - Americus, 401
ee ee
| good blood lines.
| Kingston, iiss
Red Sackrac, yellow root, yel-.
Herbs, Elecampane, feverfew;
| horseradish, hoarhound,
same price. Albert B.
: McKoy, Newton, Rt. 1.
80 lbs. nice sun cured 1945: Sat
jand female
| purebred Polled Hereford Heif-
| ucts.
Want some Sanford Wheat, |
and Queen of the meadow Root..
males.
+6 mos. old for sale.
Clarkston.
}SPC_ boar, 3%
!about 200 lbs.
Chula, P. O. Box il.
A bull to sell at market price
at once. Mrs. Fannie Owens,
Lawrenceville, Rt. 1. Box 131A.
Reg. red Poll Bull, 2 yIrs. old,
$150.00. Loy Dorsey, Cleveland,
Route 1
2% yr. old Reg. Polled Here-
ford male, gentle, exc. breeder,
S: F, Brewer,
53 mileh cows, grade Jersey
and Guernsey. Will let anyone
pick 45 for $3,500.00. Will not
sell less than 45 cows. Loyd
Keadle, Yatesville, Rt. 1.
6 mos. old black Angus male;
1 Holstein; 1 English and Hol-
stein crossed; also a Mule cheap
for cash. L. G. Kidd, Hapeville,
104 Evans Dr., Phone CA- 4251.
High grade brown and white
marked Jersey calf weighing
about 450 Ibs. Sell or exc. for
OIC 6--8 wks. old shoats.
F. Loach, Stone Mtn.,
Box 297-A.
Y% Jersey-Holstein male year-
ling. 7 mos. old, wt. about 300
ibs. Med... fat. $25.00. J. G.
Wright, Chamblee, 203 Tucker
Road.
Some fresh milch cows, also,
Riot,
beef cows for sale at my farm.
at Jonesboro; also, bunch _of
Wea, pullets,
Jay, $1.00 ed. Del. pullets any-
where in-Jonesboro and Atlanta
area. J. W. Weaver,
Reg. Domino Horned Males
Herefords; also,
ers. Sell or exc. for farm prod-
W. L. Helms, Buena Vista.
1 high blooded Guernsey bull,
| Dam out of an 8 gal. cow. Reg.
No. 385889. Price Reas.
Bunn, Midville.
i ik
Reg. Perdinrds alee you
want: Bargains in good bulls,
6 to 20.mos. old. A. K: Cham-
blee, Sparta.
Reg. Jersey milch cow, Sig-
nald Noble Bettie, No. 1342735;
| milking 2% gal. now; freshen in
May. $85.00 at my barn. George
B. McKenney, Austell. Phone
No, 3711.
2% yr.>- old,
Guernsey, Reg. Gross Paymas-
ter Sire, No. 299711. Good cond.
good markings. Reas. L. E.
Tabor, Albany, Rt. 3, Box 616.
Oct. 9, 1942 and Reg. Bull, calv-
ed Oct. 9, -1942. Both in fine
breeding cond. -Excellent blood
lines (Space does not permit
Reg. ancestry) Mrs. Alfred Dees.
Albany.
HOGS FOR SALE
Reg. Hereford Pigs, gilts. and
2 ages. Reds. priced.
J. E. Humes, Columbus.
Duroc-P C., 22 mos. old. Has
weaned litter of 9; also, 5 of her
gilts for sale. C. R. Rheney,
Harlem, Rt. 1.
Fine crossed sow, wt. 300--
400 lbs. Good shape; A Po. Chi.
12 wks. old pig; also 3 heifers,
% mi. E.
H. L. Wilson, Stone
Mtn., Rt. 2.
Reg. Durocs for sale. Weaned
pigs. All Cherry King, Che-
ckers bloodlines.
Neely, Bartow, Rt. 1.
4 pigs, 12 wks. old, $10.00 ea.:
1 barrow, wt. around 150 Ibs.
also, will take orders on }1 pigs
farrowed Oct. 27. G. L. Wallace,
Ben Hill.
8 Poland China and OIC Mix-
ed pigs, 8 wks. old, $10.00 ea.
M. M. Kirkland, College Park,
Blankinshift Road,
Box 340.A.
A 500 lb. Poland China Sow
for sale. Cannot ship.. Mrs. G.
Stencil, Madison,
25 feeders in good cond., wt.
25--100 Ibs., 20c Ib.; also Reg.
yrs. old, wt.
about 350 Ibs., $55.00. Can not
ship M.-E: Shealy, Oglethorpe.
Pure bred Reg. bigbone deep
red duroc male, 7 mos. old, wt.
Bloodline from
Souths leading herd at Coastal
Plain. Exp. Sta.
| eond. See.
partly broken.
- John.
| anywhere. $80.60.
about ready to
Atlanta,
576 Peters Bldg., JA- 5690.
dowici.
or springer.
thoroughbred d
| Route 3.
Reg. Short horn cow, lesen
So Re Mc-| Brown. Atlanta.
Route 2. :
ae L. Be
Bruns
14 big bone
Hampshire. cross p
old. $15.00 ea., $25.00
ge
Stephens, Rt. J.
HORSES AND Mu
old a pred
College at A
= yr.
State Agri,
Easy to handle and ge le
Price, Cleveland.
Bay mare for sale
yrs. old, sound and he
ee
Lawrenceville, AR.
Mare, coming ores WwW
900 lbs. in good shapt $7.
5 mi: Newnan on olc ]
burg Rd. known as B
Rd., near Hill Apple
Walter Tucker, Newna
ll yr. old black mul :
lbs. Good, sound, gentle.
W.
Atlanta, Springside Dr.
Box 463. se
-% yr. old mare, te ee
horse mule and 1 2-H
BW;
(RO 7B. E, McCrary,
below Mt. Hi
Nice 3 gaited saddle
years old, good- marking
stylish. Gentle but spi
ther: inform. write J
Stone, Waynesboro,
2 black made mule
lbs. ea. eS B. ae
1 good black mare mul
around 1,100 lbs. About
old. Sell or trade for mile
20; = j
vonia. i
2 good saddle hore
old. Sell cheap; also,
milch cows. Would t
grown Turkeys as p rt
ment. -Mrs., Helen RR. ~
Atlanta, Rt. 9. ES
A 7 yr. old mule, $195.0
7 yr. old Horse, $75. 00
Friddell, Ellenwood
Ellenwood 3. ;
Beautiful Roan. ma
old, broken to ride anc
double, $110.00 at my
mi. SW of- Hoboken.
Hoboken, Rt. 1, Box 45.
12> yrs. old dark Bay
Mule and 7 yr. old Da
Mare. W. C. ae R
RABBITS AND CA
FOR SAL
2 (doe and buck) pu
Angora Wool Rabbits
lbs. ea. $5.00 pr.
I. Harrison, Cornelia, Rt.
1 bred N. Z. White Doe
old from 14 lb. stoc
wks. old N. .Z. Whites,
2% mo. old Cross Flem
and N. Zz Whites, $3.0
Millie Smith, Rolston.
White % and Flemish
10. wks. old, $2.50 pr.;
Guinea pigs, +$2.00- pre
males, $1.00 ea. R. = FE
Roy.
2 thorobred N. a
bring oS Nov. 22,
also, F opr N.-Z. Wie
ed) at $8. oo At my hom
624 Sh
Way, NE, At-49%2. :
= Guinea pig mothers -
old females ready bre
Still younger, $1.00;
same price. Prepaid -
D, M. Carter, Madison
2.N. Z. Red doe rabbit
old; 1 N. Z. Red buck
From the famous
Strain? Trio with Pe
Papers, $15.00: John A.
Dalton, 318 Crown St.
Mixed Rabbits, 2 and
-| old, 75 and $1.00 ea.; does
ea.; White Muscovy ducks,
Drakes, $1.50 -ea;= EE
Hetch, = irs. Edm
Barretts. :
N. Z. red doe ithe 6
5 wks. old; N. Z. White di
7 young, 5 wks. ol
N. Z. White Buck
Sell lot for $14.00.
Flemish
, does and oS
ot qts. up. $25.00: to
Also 20--30, chickens,
for sale. Samuel Ty.
Decatur, 313-5th.
1946
plants, $1.10 doz.
Pee ate; 3692 At-
Roddys Lucky
s son of the most
g Toggenburg Buck
muth, and his dam of|p
ity: stock. Very limit-
> this and by
t only. - $7.50.
Ablanta, 93 "Warren
gS
nless, pure white,
ell at a sacrifice at
ees Jr, Moul-
d habicn Milk
ed does to freshen
os. buck kid; 5 yr.
; very fine plood-
high production. Exc.
meat animals. Write
o Grubbs, Demor-
Wagsenbuig Sun-
Chief, No. 78687.
Breeding, Fee $12.
ickett, College Park,
inceton, CA-7816.
2 Lester of Sanny-
i Most out-
sive in Ga.
e. pred: but Bae. nec,
Moore, Valdosta,
ty milkers. State
ave and price, W. O..
Meansville.
peoned = =SieP. .
e the blocky type.
P. GC. boar. Also
Dr. -C. Fisher,
den Ave. N. E. |
P. C. males, 10 to
ceo. 7. sanders,
d hogs, see: 175 to
See me at 1760
a out from E.
: R.M. Barger-
| EB. Pate, Avera.
wt. 950--1050 ee
Ik type, 9 mos. old
nd pay diff. for pr.
TRY FOR SALE
cona April hatch
R. L. Car-
Son, Jr
Malcom, Monroe, Rt. 1.
June pullets, $1.00 ea.
|1R..Chasteen, Locust Grove)
-| cockerels,
BANTAMS: == .
Black Tail Jap pantam | cock-
erels, purebred, $1.50 ea. Also
-| Black and White Checkered
*}Giant rabbits, 7 to 9 wks. old,
bucks, =e 50; does, $2.00 ea.,
FOB. O:s Howard: Robert-
ee
- Sev. Trios Golden Sebright |
: fale $6.50; 2 hens and pul-.
let, Silver Polish, $15.00; W. c.
Black Polish, $7, v0 pre de
Higginbotham, eosevillc, Rt. 4,
Box 500. :
1 pr. Black Cochin bantams,
good stock, $4.00: 6 mos. old
rooster, $2. 00. z E. Pinion,
Dalton.
Speckled bantams, $5.00 trio.
Boyd Williamson, Commerce.
1 purebred Buff Cochin roos-
ter, about grown, $1.50. Also
Partridge size rooster, same
stock, 75 ea. Express. collect.
Mrs: JR: C. a Hapeville,
Ca 4907.
ae Cornish Bantams, $5.00
$8.00 trio. 1 -yr. old and
Boed ones. Also want exc. for
or buy some pen raised quail.
J. L. Berry, Norcross, Box 125.
BARRED, WHITE AND
OTHER ROCKS:
February 1945 hatch pullets:
65 W. R. pullets, 45 New Hamp.
Reds, 50 crossed B. R, and
Black Minoreas, $2.00 ea. Par-
ty furnish coops. Also broad!
ers. W.C. Golden, Manchester,
PY On-Box t2o:
350 mixed Based: and White
Rocks and R. I. Red pullets,
$2.00 ea.; 350 cockerels, $1.25
ea. All 3 mos, old. Also good
cow for $75.00. Mrs. Faris
15 B. R. hens, about 2 ae
old, $2.00 ea. Also 1 Cornish
2 yes old outer: -$2:50. Mrs.
Minnie Malphus, Tusculum.
10 B. R. May hatch pullets,
$1.50 ea., and 1 rooster, same
age and "breed, $2.00 ea. Mrs.
Herbert Hall, Sopertori, Rt. 3.
15 B..R. pullets, March 17,.
1945 hatch, $1.50 ea; 10 B. R.
Mrs. W.
2 AAA Aristocrat B. R. roost-
ers, 5-6 mos. old, $2.00 ea.;
trio. small: type mixed game
bantams, wt. 1 lb.
laying, $3.00 for 2.
Smith, Rolston.
235 AAA Weak: Broilers.
about half and half pullets and
good blooded stock,
Allen Mann,
Mrs. Willie.
nice size for age.
Danielsville.
_|BRAHMAS: ae
Light Brahma ohekeret. $5. 00.
ea.; pullets, $3.00, or lot of 36
for $100.00. 4 mos. old. H. B.
Moyer, College Park, 222: John
Wesley Ave. :
2. large broadbreasted Light
Brahma cockerels, $3.00 ea. < T,
J. Steed, Buena Vista. ve
Few matings of my Light
Brahmas, from 3 to 6 mos. old.
Quotations on request. G. Dor-
sey Smith, Decatur, 444 Mell-
ville Ave. De 1325.
CORNISH, GAMES AND |
GIANTS:
Trio Jersey Black Giants,
and trio Silver S. Hambergs,
$7. 5G? eA trio. = Alse-65. ba CG,
pigs, 7 wks. old, $10.00 ea. L.
R. Holsomback, Forest Park.
3 April hatch long yellow
legs, R. C., heavy breed Dark
crated.. Will exc. or buy one
of same breed. Mrs. W. J.
Hall, Summit.
Trish Gray cocks, 2 yrs. old,
$7.50; Irish Gray Stag, $5.00;
3 Blue Game Stags, $5.00 ea.,
or $25.00 for lot. No hens. R.
Spring hatch Dark Cornish,
also purebred Black. Minorea
cockerels, $2.00 ea, Miss Leona
Simpson, Sparta, Rt. 2.
1945 Cornish Capons, 3-5 Ib.
wt., $3.00 ea. FOB. Money or-
der. Matcom McMillan, Bartow,
PP: -O.- Box. 68:
10 purebred July and Aug-
ust hatch Dark Cornish pul-
lets, $15.00. H. W. Thurmond,
Farmington, Rt. 1.
Pit Games: Pure Irish
Grays, 2 yr. old cocks, $7.50;
early spring hatch Grey and
Shawl Stags, $5.00 ea; Allen
Roundhead hens and Shawl
pullets, $2.50 ea. FOB. ane
% Goode, Bronwood.
| Shear
grown. Hens
_|horn, rooster,
po ext nice, young pit game
cock, also 2 select 1945 hatch
Douglas
stags. Sat.
guar.
eo
Toccoa, Rt. 8, S a
ee ys 2 7 e = .
Few oo 1945 hatch. Game
stags, priced right.
J. Robert Westmoreland, Toc-
coa, Rt.~3, -Box. 92.
6 Cornish | hens snd Code
$2.00 ea, at my place, 6% mi.
So, Gainesville, near the Black-
place.- Miss
Tanner, Flowery Branch, Rt. 3.
Dark Cornish AAA young
roosters, $3.00 ea. Few. -young
hens and pullets, $2.00 ea. Mrs.
- B. ee Commerce, Ra.
20 Dark Cornish hens, 2 yrs.
old, $2.00 ea. Mrs. Joe. Tyson,
Adrian, Rt. es
Pure Dark Coiwish blood-
tested AAA early spring
| hatch pullets, should lay soon,
1 $2.50: ea, Young cockerel.
free with lot of 8 or more.
Shipped in light wt. crates. M.
O. Mrs. Re Sanders, Vienna.
5 purebred Black Jersey
Giant 2 yr. old hens, $2.00 ea.
Cash. No exch. Also want 1
purebred Black Jersey Giant
March or April hatch cockerel
for new*blood for breeding: pay
cash. Mrs. B. H. Purvis, Hel-
ena, Rte1:
June hatch Dark Comtich,
large type cockerels, $1.50 ea.
FOB. Mrs. J.-E. Stone, Adairs-
ville, Rt. ad
HAMBERGS:
15 purebred Neubert AAA
Silver: Spangled Hamber cock-
erels, 4 mos. old, $2.00 ea. A.
L. Milligan, Gainesville, Rt AE
LEGHORNS:
ES Bee E pullets,. about 210
wks. old, $1.00 ea. $1.10 ea. if
shipped. 100 cockerels, same
prices. All FOB. Mrs. 2:
Stone, Lincolnton.
AAAA large type W. L. nop
ao almost 3 mos. old, $1.50
Good stock roosters. Mrs.
D. S. Tarry, ee 912 4
LaFayette St.
50 AAAA W. Fe nalisie be-
ginning to lay, $2.00 ea. for lot,
or trade for Holstein or Guern-
sey heifers. John Pavlakos, At-
lanta, 1807 Constitution Rd.
Phone Ma 8803.
- 200 Eng. 4/7. L. AAAA 6 mos.
old pullets, $2.00 ea. M.-O., No
chks. Mrs. Geo. W. Beasley,
Collins. i
Fine 2 yr. old Brown Leg-
$150. 58.7 G.
| Rogers, Lanier.
30 Rices high quality Leg- |
horn pullets, 10 wks. old, $1.00
ea. Want to sell in lot, all to-
| gether, by express, FOB Val-
dosta. Mrs. Fred Atkinson,
Valdosta, Rt. 4.
300 AAAA W. L. pullets, now
laying 50 per cent, $2.00 ea. at
my door. Wormed and vacci-
nated. Cannot ship. . Mrs. Fred
Adcock, Newnan, phone 777-J-2.
300 W. L. AAA 3% mos. old,
$1.00 ea.; 200 Buff pullets, 85
ea., and 4 nannie goats, all
|bred, cheap. Wilbur Morris,
Douglasville, RED> 3;
Over 200 AAAA heavy type
Eng. W. L. (laid over 300 doz.
eggs and just now coming into
full production.) Sell all or in
25 and 50 lots. G. H. Shafter,
Douglasville, Rt. 1.
200 A-1 W. L. 10 wk. old pul-
lets, 1de -ea-, or [2 wks... old,
$1.00 ea.; 5 mos. old Jersey-Hol
Stein cross heifer, $25.00; her
dam 6. yf Cream Jersey,
gal.), $75.00. Trade for horn-
less grade does or. 2 yr. old fat
hens. Mrs. Nora Smith,
Woodstock, Rt. 1. aoe
250 Brown Leghorn pullets,
AAAA grade, now laying. Make
offer. Guy Mallory, Madison.
Purebred Buff Leghorns, 1
cock and 4 hens. Prize winners
in Atlanta, Augusta and New
York. 1 pr. Black Cochin Ban-
tams, 1 cock and 2 hens Spangl-
ed Old English; 1 young and 1
eld pr. W. L. bantams. Virgil
Dunn hast: Peint= 636 No,
Main St.
MINORCAS:
30 Rush Buff Minorca pullets,
3 mos. old, $1.25 ea., or $1.00
ea for lot. Will not ship. Mrs.
W. D. Reid, Atlanta, Rt a os
374. soe
tons, <20 C; -200,-30e BP. -P. Wal-
lace, Wilson, Martin, Re 2
Satis. guar. |:
MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS
Frances.
- Roswell,
Dalton, Rt. 2.
| PEAFOWLS, PHEASANTS,
-;rence, Atlanta, 49 Warren St,
a Homers, $1. 50 ea.
LaGrange, 307 Park Ave.
prolific
Wrightsville, Rt. 2.
AND NEW HAMPSHIRE):
shire Red hens, $2.00 ea.
Ellijay.
Papes mammoth Black Mi-
norca cockerels, direct stock,
age 6-7 mos., old enough for
service, $2.40 ea; 2, $4.50. Al-
so" shallots - -or multiplying on-
at Black and 2 White- "Minorca.
cocks; 8 mos. old, $1.50
Lockard Bell, Decatur, :
Pharr Rd,
ea.
6 pullets, about 7 mos. old,
and 1 young rooster, mixed
breed, all good breed, $10.00 at
my home, 3%. mi. Northeast
on Roswell-Alabama
Home any day except
Mrs. W. D. Hamrick,
Hwy.
Sunday.
Roswell.
ORPINGTON S:
Purebred S. C.. Eng. Buff Or-
pingtons, 20 pullets, most ready |
to lay, and 2 cockerels, $32.00;
10 pullets, 5 mos. old, and cock-
erel, $15.00. FOB. Money or-
der:. Mrs. C. W. Griffin, Scre-
ven, Rt. 2.
10. fine Buff Orp. March hatch
pullets; $2.00 ea. Also 1 -Ib.
shade dried sage, $1.25. Cash.
Mrs. C. H. Farrar, Jenkinsburg.
2 Buff Orp. roosters, $2.00 ea.
FOB. No chks. Mrs. W. Har-
old Brown, Commerce, Ri 3s
10 fine yellow Buff Orp. pul-
lets, $12.50, and stag free, wt.
214- 3M Ibs., fine layers. Money
order. Mrs. Marie _ = aaeds
PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC:
White Kings, mated |
_very prolific
P. 8: -Tor-
Pigeons:
and working,
breeders, $2.00 pr.-
Nak. 2 We 8378.
$1.00 ea. Racing
Black Schi-
etti and: Blue Gazzi Modenas,
$3.50. pr.. H. W. Rhodes, Jr.,
Tumblers:
Giant Hama the _ famous
Howe str., Silver and Blue bars,
producers of large squabs, very
_ breeders. Limited
number. R. Lamar Brantley,
2 pr. Giant White Runts, from
prize winning pigeons at the
Southeastern Fair. (Squabs wt.
often 20 ounces at 5-7 wks. old),
$5.00 pr. Sam C. Williams, At-
Janta, 305 Forrest Ave., Nw. E.
Wa 5873. j
REDS (RHODE ISLAND
30-40 purebred New Hamp-
FOB.
Mrs. -B. H. Osborn,
Roy. e A
12 N. H. Red pullets, just
coming into production, culled
and wormed.
ea. at my home.
for. same. _ Mrs.
Palmetto.
4 mo. old New H. Reds, $1.50-
$2.00. Also 4 AAA _ Roosters,
6 mos. old, $3.00 ea. Mrs. J. A.
Rauschenberg, Atlanta, 547
Lawton St., S. W.
385 very large dark red AAA.
N. H. pullets, just beginning to
lay, also 2 cockerels, $2.00 ea.
Mrs. Hattie Holloman, Barnes-
ville, P. O. Box 362:
25 R. 1 Red young hens, Co-
lonial best egg strain. Feb.
hatched. . Now laying, $2.00
ea. at my home. Mrs. Eugene
Smith, Monticello, Rt. 2.
2 purebred Parmenter Red
roosters, April hatched, Heavy
laying strain, $2.50 ea., plus 50c
trans. = Charges, = Mrs oJ. Bb.
Brown, Eastman, Rt. 1.
4 A grade SCRI Reds; 2 1944
Cocks; 3 1945 April Cockerels,
ready for service. 5 hens and
T0 pullets, Apr.- hatch. Cocks
and cockerels, $3.00 ea. Hens
and pullets, $2.75 ea. Exp. col.
G. H. Eley, White Plains.
400 or more, 6 mos. old Chris-
tie Strain, N. H. Red pullets,
now laying. Write for price.
Chas. T. McMillan, Gainesville,
Rio:
Between 75-90 ehicks, Se
old Nov. 5. R. IJ: Reds and
Barred R., 35e ea., in lots of
25 or more. Customers pay
Buyer to call
J. H. Gibbs,
1$1.70 ea.
FRt 2
2677 |.
eLe eo
Mrs. L
An
i now. laying,
|pot on 32 Hwy...
Ellenwood.
| lot.
$20.00, or $1.75}.
i tam hens.
exp. charges. Miss Bertha Pro-
Paty Chipley, His 335
Ps
DUCCKS, ETC, "FOR. SA E:
el iaree eS Tom: and
large Turkey hen, 6 Ap i
hatch Turkeys, $50.00 for
also 8 White Wyandotte hens
All in nice shape
Ethel Jones, oe:
FOB. Mrs,
Geese for oe wi M. Rocke
Thomasville, Rt. I,
About 20 M. B. Toe thi
yrs. hatch; wt. from 15-25 lbs
a. Prefer to sell lot at $8.0
ea, but $9.00 ea., if sold sep-
arately. Mrs. Chapman, ae
ler, Rt. 1. .
y large White Pekin Ducks
2 hens, ~$1.75- ea.
~ Aldred, Wadley, Rt *
50. Turkeys (32 toms) for | s
at my place at 40c lb. J. /
Padjett, Lake Park, 5 mi. E
of Lake Park. ie
- White Indian Hinnee Dike
2 ducks and
drake, $5.00 for trio. <A 2
Thompson, Cadwell. ae
20 Black Bronze
Tur keys
Very fine.
Prefer selling alk
one party, 45c lb. Maggie Ww
son, Swainsboro, Rt. .
Br oad Breasted ae }
$28.00 trio.
ed stock, $12.00 ea.
eee
Mrs. Gainer Joiner,
me 2 :
90 young, fat. tender Turk ys
_ |Place order now with $1.00 de-
_| posit for
Thanksgiving.
shipments made. 47% lb. at
home, 2 mi. below AASP De:
Loran cs
24 Turkeys for oe in o
Average wt. 15 Ibs. ea,
10 Jb. Mrs. Li =A? Barron,
Cochran, Rt.: 2.
10 nice wh. duneilens. du
$18.00 for lot, del. fice.
about 6 mos. old. Good he:
stock. Flayton on ee
ma, Rt 4.7 s
6 Muscovy. Pack hens ond
drake, spring hatch. Whi
black, fine, $6.00. Also 3 la ge
white ducks with black V.o
top head, $5.00. Mrs. John
son, Hartwell, Box.
| Howell St.
3 Gobblers PAG
hens. This year hatch, large to
laying. Mrs.
Austell, Rt. 2.
- 30 Speckled Cie
ea.; 40-50 half grown guin
60c ea. 55 White Leghorn hen:
$1.00 ea. Best laying 3
Some are laying, other:
soon. J. N. Carson, Griffin
POULTRY WANTED
BANTAMS WANTED:
ter cheap; also have 2 Musc vy
drakes for sale or exc. fo
hen duck and drake, eithe
Muscovy or Pekin. Ea. pay own
expenses. _ Clyde Baker, Brook-
let Rte ds =e
Want 5-6 young mix. Ba
Must be laying or
soon lay. R. T. McMullon ;
syth, P. O. Box 264.
BRAHMAS WANTED:
Want sev. purebred Giant
Light Brahma hens and 1 roo
ter. State best price in Is!
letter. Mrs. S. J. Vassos, Com
LEGHORNS WANTED:
' Want some young W, L. pu
lets not over 10-15 wks. old.
P. Rentz, Adel.
Want some White Legh n
pullets about 6 mos. old. Pa:
$1.10 ea. del. Herman E. Bry
Chester, Rt. 1. :
ORPINGTONS WANTED:
- Want 3. cockerels hate
spring, 1945 (1 Buff Orpingto
1 RCSL Wyandotte, 1 Col
gian Wyandotte); also Klonc
Strawberry plants for sal .
C $3.00 Ma. Miss: A
Collum, Grantville, Rte
PEAFOWL WANTED: .
_ Want nice female P
reas. price. Give ag
blemishes, state them.
5 Le ee oom
PAGE six
AFBF 0 fal!
Announcement was made this
week by H. R. Yandle, director |
Bot public relations of the Geor-
gia
of U.S. Secretary of Agriculture
- Clinton P. Anderson, the sey-
enth annual convention will
hear R. B. Corbett, secretary-
treasurer of the American Farm
Bureau Federation at the meet-
ing to be held in Macon
Thursday and Friday,
ber 15-16.
Mr. Corbett will come to Ma-
con from national headquarters
im Chicago and will deliver the
-_ principal address on the opening
day of the convention. He will
appear on the program at 2:30
Thursday afternoon, and will be
introduced by H. L. Wingate,
- president of the GFBF.
leaders in the nation.
where he has addressed Farm
_cials of the state organization.
State are expected to fill the
Municipal Auditorium to capaci-
ed, Yandle stated, and
cludes speakers of national note
who are entirely familiar with
problems with which farmers
will be faced during the. post-|
war period.
-wention. He will arrive
Macon early Friday morning
and remain in the city until late |
in the afternoon. The Secre-
tary will fly to the Georgia
' Cox of the Second Congression-
al District.
Mrs. Wilma Sledge,
ian Farm Bureau staff,:
ing the annual report of Mrs.
Joe S. Ray, president of the
_ Associated Women of the GFBF.
Mrs. Ray will introduce Mrs.:
Bureau.
Sessions of the
Women will be held
_ Sey Hotel.
- Macon Telegraph, will deliver
ening session Thurs
response will be made Judge
Treutlen county.
Gov. Ellis Annall, State Com-
Missioner of Agriculture Tom
Linder, members of the Board
: cf Regents of the University
System, presidents of the state
colleges, and other distinguished
Georgians will attend the No-
_Vemab er onvention,
_ Stated.
two-day session will be found in
_ full elsewhere in this issue of
,.
* LIVESTOCK FEED
or all farm livestock, special-
ds sts of the Agricultural Exten-
sion Service declare,
stock.
To Open Meet
ith Address
: Farm Bureau Federation, |
- that in addition to the address:
on|
Novem-.
Secretary Corbeit is one of:
the best known agricultural |
He has
visited every state in the nation.
Bureau meetings, and his com-|'s
ing to Macon is a source of much}
satisfaction on the part of offi-|
te ae caont ait wel Lapestock In Georgia
ay os | growing in the nursery. Firm the soil around the 1
: beginning to insist upon polled |
cattle, and the oldest of all the
polled -breeds in the Aberdeen-.
Angus. It is a proven fact that
ty. during the two-day meeting. |!
The pregram has been complet- |
it in-)
_ The address of Secretary of Scrub cows bred to purebred
Agriculture Anderson on Friday
be the highest of the con-'
in|
convention from Orlando, Fia.,'
where he is scheduled to address | ;
the Florida Farm Bureau Fed-|
ened efforts of farmers to pro-.
| duce good and productive pas-
of act in this
_ will speak on Thursday follow-;
Sledge after being presented for
' her report by W. Lint Miller, of
_ Lakeland, member of the state
board of directors of the Farm' ;
juse of lespedezas and clovers.
Associated
in the:
_ Walter Little Room of the Demp-
W. T. Anderson, editor of The.
the welcome address at the Op-.
The:
W. W. Stallings, of Soperton, in|tained if the pasture is proper-
ly prepared and fertilized.
Yandite:
The complete program for ia) ton president of the Georgia
. the: Georgia Farm Bu
eS reau News. : est im Aberdeen-Angus,
{the following statement:
_ Permanent pastures and tem.
porary grazing crops will furn-.
Ash the best and cheapest feed
wareing | horned cattle is tremendous, and:
: emg:
Georgia farmers to provide year-
round: er azing for their live-
tdure,
Coven Speaker
CLINTON P.
M A
ANDERSON
By M. J. WITMAN
Georgias progress in Sivestnck|
production has been nothing!
short of phenomenal. The days:
of the scrub cattle seem num-
beret. Wherever you go there
jis evidence of breeding up.
bulls produce beef cattle that
will make the medium to high-.
er grades. And that is just
is being done.
In line with the improved cat-
tle are the improved pastures.
The piney weods tracts of the.
South and the eroded hillsides
in Middle and Northern Geor-.
gia are yielding to the enlight-.
tures. The base of most pas-;
tures is Bermuda. grass; and,
connection, attention
should be focused on the new
strain of Bermuda developed by
the Coastal Plains Experiment
Station at Tifton. It promises
to be revolutionary. There is,
one report of a pasture of five:
acres of the Tifton strain | of
Bermuda that supported twenty.-
five head of cattle all summer. ,
There is a greatly inereased
All lands in Georgia can profit-
ably be planted witha the four,
popular strains of lespedeza
mon.
The best adapted clovers are
crimson, Hop, White Dutch, and
Ladino. Some of these will not
do well on upland, but it is sur-,
prising what results can .be .ob-;
The most popular beef cattle.
at present is the Hereford, but,
statistics indicate an amazingly
increased interest in Aberdeen-:
Angus. Many purebred herds
of this breed have been esta-
blished in Georgia.
Mr. Dwight Kennedy, of Clax-
Aberdeen-Angus Breeders As-'
sociation, when asked to give the:
reasons for the increased inter-
made
Cattle producers in Georgia
are rapidly learning of the ad-
vantages of preducing polled
cattle. The losses that occur
from the damage produced by:
the process of dehorning is a
dangerous and expensive proce-'
Aberdeen-Angus
mand a premium of 1 cent to 2:
calves sired by Angus bulls are
well over 90 per cent polled,
while!
ja polled bull of other breeds
may or may not produce a poll-'
ied offspring.
regardless of the dams;
of the
years:
records
shows. throughout the
|prove an. overwhelming num-
ber of firsts, awarded to the
In the International
Show held in Chicago for the)
Angus.
last twenty years more than 70
per cent of firsts went to an,
During the.
|last year steers of this breed
Aberdeen-Angus.
wor 75 per cent of all grand
championships.
Still another great advan-
jtage is the- fact that the Angus
cows are better milkers than
most of the beef cattle cows.
Here in Georgia there is al-
ways great damage caused by
pink eye and cancer eye. There
jis something in the pigmenta-
tion of the Aberdeen-Angus
jthat makes them highly resistent,
to these most damaging dis-
eases.
Tt is also well known that
steers
cents per pound in all the mar-
kets of the Middle West, and are,
rapidly beginning to command
that premium in the markets in
Georgia.
All of these
sound reasons why farmers and
breeders in such large num-
bers are turning to the. Blacks.
PAPERS AIDED FARMERS
Georgia newspapers played an
important part in promoting the
food and feed production prog-
ram during the war. Each year
farmers were called upon to
produce large amounts of food:
and feed to aid in winning the
war and, din the aggregate, they
|met their goals each year and |}
greatly increased production of |
commodities, |!
Newspapers were a leading med-
vitally needed
dum in distributing imformation
on victory gardens, best use of
farm labor, greater production |)
offeod and feed and in explain- ||
Therefore, breeders are
ing the neve, ae such : produe- |
tion,
RKET BULLETIN
3 Planting And Early Gan OF Th .
Muscadine Grape Vineyard
ilregards texture and fertility, growing about e
the heavier soils of the Piedmont area. A medium g
_|frosts. Hence, it is not necessary that they be pl
{on the very highest elevations. However, they g
istraight, or nearly so, and thus tcollining and tre
'maintenance is made easier.
ing the dormant period, November 15 to March 1,
| they should be planted is prepared much the same
F. F. COWART
ree Agricultural Experiment Station,
Experiment Georgia
Museadine grapes will grow well over all of C
gia except the more mountainous part. They are
parently tolerant to a wide variation in goil type
well on some of the lighter coastal plain soils an
loam or sandy clay loam is undoubtedly preferabl
Muscadine grapes bloom during late spring
the blossoms are rarely, if ever, killed by late gp
not be planted in the very flat and poorly drained a
It is advisable to select nearly level or land havi
uniform slope. On such locations the rows can
Muscadine grapes should be set to, the fel
earlier during this period the better. The land on w
as for garden crops. Break, disc, and smooth the
f| previous to planting.
isystem of the plant, after the broken and excessi
ileng roots have been pruned off, about 15 inches |
jand 15 inches in diameter. The plants should.
: jone male vine as every third vine in every th
Another great advantage of:
the Aberdeen-Angus cattle is,
|the fact that
jin early spring at the rate of one-half pound |
| be with a shallow penetrating implement.
com-;
points furnish
| vertical trellis. Place seven foot posts 11% to 2 1
Dig holes large enough te accommodate the re
at the same or slightly deeper level than. they
of th vine as the hole is being filled with topsoil.
cadine vines should be set 20 to 21 feet apart in 1
12 to 14 feet in width. This spacing requires 150
plants pr acre. With the presently recommended
rieties of muscadine grapes it is necessary to plant
(non-bearing) vines in the vineyard along with
male (bearing) vines. A simple arrangement is to
or at the rate of one male te each eight bearing
The Hunt, a dark fruited variety, is best fo
mercial planting. Other good varieties are the Dy
and Thomas (dark fruited) and the scuppernong, F E
ard, and Yuga (light fruited). These same varietie
suitable for home use with the Dulcet and Yuga |
preferable. i
The principal consideration during the fi
years is to get the vine to mature hearing size as
ly as possible.. Proper fertilization, tratning, and
vation are equally important. A complete fert
such as 6-8-6 or 6-6-6 will give optimum results. A
the first season of growth and one pound the se
season. In addition apply about one-fourth po
nitrate of soda per vine in June of the first
growth and one-half pound the second season.
after apply the fertilizer mixture at a rate of
three pounds per vine just previous to discing
the cover crop during spring. Clean cultivate du
the summer and plant a cover crop during the i
be disced down the following spring. Cultivation :
Proper training during the first year is a ve
portant factor in attaining early profitable
During early summer of the first seasons growth
lect one off the stronger growing shoots to form
main bounk the vine. Cut off some, but not all,
remaining shoots in order that the main shoot can
to best advantage. Tie the vine to a stake and e
trellis during the first growing season. Under good
ditions the permanent framework of the vine, con
of a main trunk with shoots in either direction
the trunk along the two trellis wires, can be establ
Best results can be obtained by training on a tw
the soil. Run upper wire on top of the posts and
wire two and one-half feet above soil level.
More detailed information may be secured
your county agricultural agent, State Experi
tion, State Department of Agriculture, or ote
cultural agencies. os
NOTICE
I frequently receive letters from good
| who forget to sign their names. Of course, it
{ possbile for me to answer these letters.
If you desire an answer please be sure
|] Mame and address are correctly given.
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Ag
,November 14,1945
(Continued from Page One)
will be seven times the farm in-
therefore the farmer will get his
venth regardless of Federal laws
ividtial laws.
The trouble is that all : ovieations
made in terms of money. Obliga-
m, bushels of wheat; or pounds of
or meat, but obligations are made
rms of dollars.
Hotise rent is paid in dollars, bank
es are put up in terms of dollars:
nsurance is paid for m terms of
ws. All obligations are in terms
ollars.
It therefore follows that if a farmer
obligated for $1,000.00 and the price
his crops go down fifty per cent he
to all practical purposes in debt
100.00 instead of $1,000.00 becatise it
ake twice as much of his farm
cts to pay the debt. |
On the other hand, if the farmers
me goes down fifty per centsinee |
ational income is seven times the
_Tneome Will also g0 down fifty
s are not made in terms of bales of
incomeit follows that the na-
the farmers debtewill be doubled, but
every person who owes money whether
they work for a salary, or weekly wage,
or an imterest in a business will also
find that they owe twice as much in
terms of their earning capaeity.
If, on the other hand, the farmers
price goes up one hundred per cent, then
the farmer will find that his $1,000.00
debt has in effect shrunk to $500.00
because it. will take only one half as
much eotton, corh or wheat to: pay the
debt as it did before.
~ It will likewise follow that the per-
son worn for a salary or weekly wage
will receive a higher salary and a higher
' Wage in terms of money and will there-
fore-find their debt only one-half as
burdensome as it was before. |
While on the third side of the pie-
ture, we have those who have bank sav-
ings, life insurance paid for, or who are
living on pensions, and are affected the
same as the farmers, salaried persons
and wage earners.
Tf prices go higher, the purchasing
_ power of these persons bank savings,
their life insuranee or their pensions
becomes less and less :
If prices go down this same group
finds their savings, life insurance and
pensions have more and more purchas-
ing power.
This is the reason it is so essential
| to stabilize the value of the dollar so
| that obligations, savings, pensions, ete.,
will retain as nearly as possible a par
| value.
It is my purpose to run a series ef
| these charts in the Bulletin and to write
individual stories explaming some of
these natural eonomic laws which have
been discovered.
Tt is my opimion if Congress would
spend a relatively small amount of -
money to earry the great truths of these
natural. economic laws to the people
| throughout the nation that this would
do more to solve our so-called labor
| troubles and other economie ills than
all of the legislation which it is possible
for Cengress to pass. -
Tt would, in my opinion, de mere
| to solve the great labor unest among all
our people, both high and low, because
an understanding of natural economic
laws would cause us to cease trying by
arbitrary means to solve our economic
ills,
Ye shall know the truth :
And the truth shall make you free. " =
TOM LINDER,
nor Ellis Arnall has ac-
an invitation to address
venth annual session of
eorgia Farm Bureau Fed-
which convenes in Ma-
Thursday; November
a two day session. H.
Wingate, president, said the
nor wall speak to Georgia
members Friday morn-
ovember 16, at 10 oclck.
ded in the audience
is expecied to fill the
-Municipal Auditorium
pacity will be U. S. Sec-
of -Agriculture Clinton
erson, several members
Georgia delegation in
ess; members of the
| of Regents; State Super-
nt of Schools M. D. Col-
mmissioner of Agricul-
m Linder, and other
fuished leaders of the
nd nation. |
rernor Arnall will be in-
ed by President Wingate.
ubject of the choief ex-
es address has not been
lunced, but he is expected
cuss legislative matters
ng to agriculture, and
as tax bill sponsored by
eorgia Farm Bureau
failed to pass at the 1945
n of the general assembly.
orgias young governor
smain in Macon as a guest
Georgia Farm Bureau for
ecial luncheon honoring
ary Anderson, and to
Will Address Farm Bureau
Commissioner of Agriculture.
Pace Demands Increase
In Agriculture Prices
WASHINGTONFarm state; the Home will call it up for a
GOVERNOR ELLIS. ARNALL
ESSURE CANNING
lore starn pressure canning
een done in Sumter Coun-
his year than ever before in
ountys history, Miss Mar-
obb; home demonstration
rports. In addition to
ning for family food supply,
in the county canned
arts of fruits and soup
ogram.
for use in the school |
Agriculture has two major
tasks aheadconvincing labor
and industry of the importance
to them of sustaifiing the mass
buying power of six million
farm families and of maintain-
ing the parity standard for
basie farm commodities, accord-
ing to an editorial in the IAA
Record, official publication of
the Illinois Agricultural Associ-
ation,
My dhast.nen"* FARMERS BUY BIG PERCENTAGE OF PRODUCTION
Anti-farm groups, the edito-
rial states, take the depressed
farm prices of 1939the lowest
period for agriculture in twenty
years except for, the depth of
the depressionas their basis
for figuring that farm prices are
how unjustifiably high.
A new rechargeable battery
for flashlights is said to outlast
400 of the usual dry, cell type.
: i }
Sse . Le ert
representatives tied a demand] Vote.
for increased agricultural prices |
today to President Trumans
call for a boost in labors wages.
Led by Rep. Pace (D-Ga.), they
sought to rewrite the farm pari-
ty formula so as to include the
cost of farm labor in the fair
price computation. :
Parity is deemed to be a
farm commodity price which
will give farmers a purchasing
power equivalent to a former
favorable period, usually 1909-
1914,
Pace told rperters it is as
necessary to. maintain the pur-
chasing power of the: farmer as
that of the laborer.
The formula revision, aaticul:
ture experts said, would boost
many parity prices by approxi-
mately 31 per cent. For exam-
ple the government under pres-
ent conditions would consider
28.4 cents a pound a fair price
for cotton instead of the pres-
tent 21.7 cents parity level: $2.02.
a bushel for wheat instead of
$1.55, and $1.47 a. bushl for
corn instead of $1.12.
The House hag approved the
parity change twice in recent
years but the Senate has not
gone along.
With the unanimous approval
of the House Agriculture Com-
mittee, Pace expected to pre-
in a formal report again today.
He said he did not know when
little consequence.
sent the legislation to the House.
Pace. said possibly labor eosts ae
were not included in the origina]
parity formula because im 1909- -
1814 farm labor outlays were
considered by experts to be of
But farm
wages now are three and a halt
times what they were before the
war, he declared.
The government supports par- _
ity prices through various com-
modity loan or purchase pro- |
grams.
Discussing President Tr uman Ss
Tuesday night speech, Pace said:
The President referred to the -
benefits which come from good
wages for the industrial work_
ers. He could have as well re-
ferred to the benefits which
come thru an adequate purchas-_
ing power in the hands of the
farmers of the nation. -
Certainly the American farm-_
ers today are one of the greatest
markets in the world. The eco-
homic history of the nation
shows that when the farmers
are prosperous the nation is
prosperous.
Farm prices are falling, and
it is.just as essential to main-
tain the purchasing power of the
farmer -as it is to maintain the
purchasing power of any other
group .in the nation. j
Corn belt farmers report that
electric brooders for their early
spring pig crops save one to two ~
pigs per litter.
AUCTION SALE
On Tuesday, November 20, there will be sold
at my home, 214 mi. East Commerce, all kinds of
Farm Machinery, 2 H. wagon, Mule, Horse, Oats, |
Wheat, Corn, Fodder, Hay, Oat Straw and many oth- |
er items not mentioned. Sale begins 10 A. M. Frank
Sandridge, Commerce.
.
EDS WANTED: Sg
Want 12 early hatched N. H.
7 Want - 1 Mallard Drake at
51.50. L. L. Ward, Glennville.
Want a March or April hatch:
Bourbon Red Tom for breeding
urposes. State wt., price. J.
- ay City,
FARM HELP .WANTED
Want sod colored man and
wife to work on dairy farm for
wages. Good 3 rm. house with
ights, water on back porch.
Aust give ref. W,2@: Vickery,
*hristian woman in good health
to live with widow, to help with
shickens,, _ garden, and flowers:
Want. oon with family
to handle 50 cows. Good house,
~ elec., school bus rt., % mi. chur.
Good pay; also, 3 families to
work 2-H crop on 50-50 basis.
Plenty: day work when not in
i i i ; h and conv
crop. SR. S Rutledge. white family to work turpentine} for productive 1-H farm on Savanna re
= Te Se Be ae. : and tend sm. farm near Swains- ie House, lights, water, Le es Write giving full
Want unencumbered white | boro. Good 200 A. pasture.| wood, furn., 9 mi. Decatur, 2 mi.| Want family to tend 1 H.| Rogers, Lanier.
or eats to. live as one of fam-| Ideal for hogs and cattle. Cows churches, stores and school: If|farm, with sufficient help to Exp. Farmer,
ily. Help with poultry, milk} on place to milk for their care. interested in truck farming work 5,000 turpentine faces on health except very 1
cow. Good home and salary.;Good house. Mrs. John P.|comesee, E, H. Walter, Deca-| 50-50 basis, for 1946. L. M. foot), wants job caring
ie W. H. Dixon, Savannah, Route 1. ate ge Island, tur, Pes. Cason, Manor. stock, poultry or leari
Want. good man. who has own|" | Want farmer to grow some tractor at any d
tock, equip., and able to fi-| Want good man with family|tobaceo and work turpentine! POSITIONS WANTED Wife, 2 boys, 7--11
nance self for 760 A. Ideal for
Want a young or middle-aged
-man for farm work for balance
Berto Tuck, Buford, Rt.
Want 2 or 3 H. farmer for
lanta, 183 A. good land, build-
can do and pay. Mrs. Paul
Simmons, College Park, Rt. 2,
Box 398, CA- 9785. ee
on farm. Salary and_ board.
Mrs. Geo. W. oe eNO, Cordele,
1009 5th St.
Want ae. firmer col. or wh,,
own crops; also good 4-H.
reliable Paty
Mrs. PooM.
Johnson, eee
as woe | FAR
Want settled white woman
Want. woman for light work
r sm. 2-H. farm, 50-50 basis,
and extra work when not. busy
eo (known as Decker Farm),
| family for 1-H-crop on 50-50
basis. Have good jand, 3 rm.
family for 2-H crop, 20 mi. At-
lanta, at Jonesboro, on 3rds and
Aths. Contact. J. W. Weaver,
Atlanta, 516 Peters Bldg., Call
JA-5690. fae
Want farmer for 1 or 2-H
crop. Good 4 rm. house, land
and tools furn. On mail and
school rt. Day work furn, when
not in crop. Dwight Kirby,
Fayetteville. z
E0-50 basis, good stock, land and
tools. Conv. school, town and
church. Mrs. J. M. siticnand,
Rosweil, Rt. 1.
milk, wood and garden. furn.
R. Gq Jennings, Macon, P. 0.
Box 891, Phone 1596.5
woman to tend garden, poultry,
etc. Must be clean and reliable.
Fine offer to right family. Ref.
exc. I. C. Nail, Hortense.
Want a reliable colored or
to. work on farm. Man must be
50-50 basis, raising stock, pea-
nuts and corn, Elmer Treisch,
Finleyson, Rt. 1. Ps
4 rm. ceiled house. I have stock.
M. M. Whealler, Alto. .
general farm work. Emory
for 2-H farm with good land,
barn, house, pasture, plenty of
6 mi. N. Temple
Alvin B.
Crews, Temple.
ad
Want farmer, with sm. famliy
Write qualifications.
Roscoe Carden, Forest Park,
Want family, 3 or more relia-
| ble, not afraid\of work. Farm
located 4 mi. S. E. Hephzibah,
85 A. cultivation, excellent soil.
To be farmed on halves. with
tractor and all equipment furn-
ished by farm owner. Good 5
rm, house. Write. J. D. Smith,
Pres. Ga. Better Farm, No. 75,
Augusta, Box 60.2.
.
Want AGE. farmer le faa :
Want farier Tor 2-H crop on}
large tractor and mule farm on|
Want nice clean relia. woman
to help with poultry and other
light farm work, Room, board,
tor and plows, approx. 45 to 50
Acres to cultivate, good 5 rm.
house, elec., new barn, new
grain storage, 1 mi. Rosswell.
John Korizon, pa 762 State
St., N. W, HE-5497.
Want white or colored suple
to live on suburban tract near
Atlanta (Buckhead). Wages or
other basis. Good house, elec.,
well, near schools, churches ana
transp. Good opportunity. Now
vacant. Jason A. Tugegle, Sr.,
Atlanta, 1460 Peachtree St.,
Apt. C- 19 AT-3193.
Want 1 or 2-H farmer for
3. churches. Wood and water.
Mrs. L. T. Chesnut, Moreland.
church, good equipment House,
wood, water, elec. Come see.
Ref. Exe, H. C. Hodges, Ludo-
wici.
Want sm. wh. or col. family
virgin cups; also, need day la-
Want 50-50 share cropper for
good farm on paved road, 5 mi.
from Marietta. Elec. lights,
tractor; other equip. Must-have
force to work 60-70 A. . Sober
ward Way, No Wo
Want exp. -dairyman. . Must
| be sober, white, and dependable.
Want man to operate a sm,
farm consisting of small peach
and plenty of good tools. Near
| good school and church on hwy.,
near good market for vegeta-
bles. Eugene Brown, -Manches- |
Want. honest = exp. farm
help at once. E. B. Travis,
Riverdale.
Want. sober, col. man to work
on farm, % mi. Sandy Spring;
close to bus, school and Ship-
ping center. Good home and
salary, Tractor farming and car-
ing for fine livestock. Mrs.
Robt. C. Watkins, Sandy Spring,
Phone CH-2068,
| Bethesda Home for Boys,
|ture, wood.
FARM I HELP WANTED
Ke
Serviceman preferred. Capable
of keeping up farm machinery,
eds _ OF Black Minorca pullets, house, on school. bus and mail salary. V.G. Bushee jee: and pretty good carpenter. Lees Baldwin, Roe
ow laying or near laying. W.| 11 James C. Bell, Auburn, | ville. - O. F.. Mathews, Greenville,| pyopoct
S. McCarty, Dalton. Rouke t Rouse 2: est man wit:
TURKEYS, DUCKS, ETC., Le Want good farmer on Rane ot
WANTED: (| Want good white farmer with basis, or 3rd and 4ths Have trac- Want inidale. abode honest, | No. ba abits
unencumbered, white woman | to
live in home and_ help.
work. Board and salary. a
Zack Colson, Woodbine.
Want a share cropper for or
2 H. farm. Good land and
stock to work. T. D. Thomas,
Dublin, Rt. 4..
Want white man to work in
dairy. Comfortable living
dress injuiry: to. . B= Corry,
yannan. PO. Box. 1),
drifters need apply. Write or
contact. E. H. Harkins, Atlan-
ta, 145 Hurt St., N. E.-
Board and medium salary. Mrs. : Want sober farmer on 50-50). er. Roy Murray,
WT. ON Atlanta, 1034. C Cap-|. Want at once, couple to live) pasis or wages, for 65 A. good Want farmer for 1 H. crop on Route 4,
tol Ave.,S.. in home with me. Children old) jand, 5.3 A. Tob.; 10 A. cotton.) 3rds_and 4ths; 6 mi. So. Daw- He ae
oS enough to work. Man to farm,|Qn mail and sch. bus rte, near|sonville on Etowah river. School| Want 1- far
bus by house, %4 mi. high school
bus; near churches. Comfort-
able 4 R. house, out-bldgs., pas-
Raise chickens if
market opens up. Good land.
Mrs. Maggie S. Hayes, Dawson-
stock raising. Attractive new| good tractor driver, Lott Paulk,| borer on farm, some tractor ; _ 7 | and community conv.
oe new barn, modern convy.| Wray, Route 1. driving and other work. Chf-} Want a little 1-H farm on and school. Can g
-mi, NW LaGrange. Joe P. Want reliable man to run|ford Smith, Sr., Baxley, Rt. 4. | halves for 1946, with good 4 rm,| White, Marcia
evant, Atlanta, 503 Volunteer house. Go anywhere. Have to Street.
be moved. Walter R. Harrell,
Barnesville, Rt. 1.
Man, wife, 2 children want
ef year and 1946. Board, laun-|:. Want reliable farmer: for sm. 1. -H crop and 3 A. tobacco
iry and reasonable wages. No tice be Ewe oe industrious record. Trenton} on 50-50 basis, hogs on halves Sr oe 2.
afer and drunkard need ap-| and Alto near schs. and churs,| /Unnell, Atlanta, 2540 Wood-| and 1 good milch cow. Good| Far
house, stock and. tools, and
honest man to work with. Live
5 mi. from Swainsboro on Rt. 80
Want good white couple. to tH b 1 Mi ff Hw
aid 25 Mi : Gena h it ga ht q| Hwy. about i OTT wy.) ring, Lithia Springs
good farm i N. W. At-| share house with owner and do city whier, pe se ich Perry Canady, Swainsboro, Herring.
Route 1,
good allotment of tobacco.
ae Mechens a Bx: =
eS ae
with |
chickens and other light farm)
quarters and. good, salary. Ad-}. .
Sa- |
prefer with light
Want job as
for 1946, Raised
Exp. cotton gin
Kirk,
Would like: iS ie
one having few A
Write.
Winokur.
Give full details. J.
Decatur, Route 2.
Want 2-H crop a
good land, :
etc. Prefer:
Buford Hwy. See at
eansville. 1946, Standing rent. 4 rm. house,|_ Want reliable colored family |3 mi. Norcross on
s Want an exp. dairyman. Good hall, porch, sch. bus and mail by for farm, 18 mi. Atlanta. Good| Hwy. WwW. C. Akin
Want middle- aged ox elderly | house with city water, lights, Loa Good barn, pasture. Near proposition to right party. No| Route 1. |
Exp. Dairyman wi
Honest, sober anc ill
rent, good barn an
dett, Roswell.
Want tractor op
with good mode
bad habits. Prefer
Man with 3 in f
job on farm at once
Want job Truck f
Marietta. 25 yrs. ex
as Supt. of farm. E:
- Standing rent or 3rds| Skelton, Dougl 1 and car line: C, N. Roberts, : Want job with 00%
nd 4ths. Call or write Mrs. ouglasyille, Rt, 4. Savannah, Roberts Dairy, Bon- Young married man wants;farm. Can Bie
ni WW: Clonts, Atlanta, 1336 Al- Want good farmer willing to | aventure Rd., Rt. 2! large farm for1946. Want trac-|bine and other farm
: legheny Ave., Ra. 5049. work for me when not in crop tor to cultivate with. Must have| Wife and 3 children:
crop and extra wor
Rains ar eldeit i : nd: I 3 50-5 Come see. Dont write. Ellis} when not in. crop.
ak os oa Hea ace ee a ae Se: = ae ee. basis. Will a oat ee D. Huggins, Savannah, 120 Lib-|C. H. Atkins, Rom
State age, kind | of work you ; Pe ; ery Avenue. Broad Street.
H. farm: also raise livestock: church, woman for light work on farm. Yeo November 9, 1945
ae eee ere ue = ieee hee ae a en oe good pay. Live as onel] : oe
elec chool bus runs by door : Oo amily. oo Ret soe 13 0 <Fie
D. Barton: Hephzibah, Rt. 2. ae equip. Running water| Davis Ellijay, Rt. Beans (Lima), Butterbeans, bulk, per bu, __. tes
Collards, per doz. bunches
Ge sehiaile wails wr cole) ore ee 20 basis te Gea Fresh Fruits and Vegetable
; so wan ;
ed family to share- -crop a 2 make and Re ie ee Want * unencumbered white
Squash, per bu. hprs.
Mustard Greens, per bu. hprs. -
41 Turnip Salad, per bu. hprs.
Sweet Potatoes, Porto Ricans, per bu. pits, 223
Turnips (Bunched), per doz. bunches
GEORGIA AUCTION MARKETS LIVESTOCK SALES |
~ TOWN
a Atlanta Moultrie Nashvil s
RO November eat 7th = th as rivesier ss Tifton
HOG LBS, Bott ete ae eae _ Soft - Hard | Soft - Hard Soft - Hard
er Cwt, : 3 = er Cy
Good to Ghstes 180/240 Sena is a Per Cwt, Per Cwt. Per Cwt.
food to Choice 245/270 | a eo
Heavies 275/350 fe i
Heavies 355/400 i Se ig, Toe oe :
ights 155/175 Feeder. Feeder. Fe a Feedet
ete 130/DN 14.00 16 60. 80 00 ag Hog. | Hoss
ights 14.00- .00- 20.00. 16.00- 19.00 0- "33. 00 .00- 23.
is 180 14.00- 5. | 0 18.0 5.00. 17.00- 23.00
oughs 350/450 . 13.75- is
ee , :
CATTLE : ae g
hoice ao & Heifers Po00- 1650 2 ee era
; trs. & Heifers 15.00- 16.50 12.00- 13. 00 -10.00- 12.00 De00s Teo | Re ee
Sirs & Heitere 11.00- 15.00 11.00- 12.00 9.00- ree 10.00- Se -10.00- 10.50
mmon Strs. & Heifers 8.50- 10.50 ~ 9.00-. 10.00 8.00- 9.00 9.00- 19.00 8.00- 9.00
10.50- 12.50. 10.00- 10.50 10.00- 11.00 10.0045 3400-34, ge
8.00- 9.50 8.00- 9.00 | go0- 9.00 8.00- 9.00 7.00- 8.00 | : (
5.50- 6.75. 7.00-, 7.50 6.00- 7.00 7.00- 7.50 - 6.00- 7.00 :
8.50- 10.50 10. pe a 00 9.00- 10.00 9.00- 10.00 -8.00- 9.00
eee, - 5.00- 5.50 .00- 6.00 5.00- 5.50
10.00- 12.00 | 9.00- 10.00 | - 9 00- 10.50 9.00-* 9.50 -8.00- 10:00 m
13.50=, 15.00: | -12.00- 1400) | 1900- i409 1 fea es
10.00- 12.00 | 11.00- 1200 | 40.00- 11.00 } 11-00- 12.00 | 10.00- 11. 00
- 9.00 | 9. 00- 10. 00 -'8,00- 9.00 ~9.00- 10.00 | 8.00- 9.00.