WEDNESDAY, JANUARY, i5, 1947
NUMBER 18
itorial - By TOM ial - By TOM LINDER
other article entitled Protec-
r Poverty this issue carries facts
ery person in this country needs
new Congress is now convened,
ajority are Republicans.
hairman of the Senate Commit-
Aericultural and Forestry is the
ble Arthur Capper of Kansas.
Japper is a Warm, personal
mine. On numerous occasions
had the honor and pleasure to
e with him on national problems
affect agriculture:
ator Capper is a nationally known
Jeader from a great farm state.
ays of his youth, he trod the soil
s, the great wheat state of
recently wrote, on a trip to
nia. If Senator Capper were in
, Georgia, if you saw and con-
ith him, if you didnt know
he was from Kansas, you would
hat he was a gentleman from
Id South.? The polish and gen-
f the man and his sincerjty of
would undoubtedly challenge
admiration.
committee is Senator Elmer
as of Oklahoma. A man of forth-
courage. Senator Thomas has
bly done more courageous things
ulture than any other man in
few sessions of Congress.
hen, on this all important com-
we have a team in whom the
of the nation can put their
my opinion.
s committee of the House is Hon-
arold Knudson of Minnesota.
ittee, among other things,
e tax rates, imposts and license
t also has charge of tariff rates
reign goods. |
Knudson has been the Represen-
than 30 years. He has served
six presidents on this same com-
_ numerous occasions, I have had
opportunity and pleasure of talk-
With Congressman Knudson. I
always found him interested in the
ems of the farmer who grows Cot-
Peanuts, Sweet Potatoes, Vege-
and other Southern crops. He is,
Continued on Page Eight)
RMERS AND FREE TRADE
ranking Democrat on this all im- -
Chairman of powerful Ways and |
of the 6th District of Minnesota,
a
Great Britain has been and will con-
tinue to be the greatest textile produc-
er for world markets.
Brazil seems to be making the most
progress of any new-comer in the field
of producing raw cotton.
Almost everyone is familiar with the
fact that reportedly Under Secretary.
of State, Mr. Will Clayton, owns forty
percent of the stock in Anderson-Clay-
ton Company:
Almost everyone knows that Ander-
son-Clayton Company are the largest
investors in and promoters of raw cot-
ton in Brazil.
Since this is true, lets see how
hourly and monthly rates of wages paid
to peon labor in the cotton fields of Bra-
zil, in business offices and in textile
mills of Brazil, compare with wages
paid our own agricultural and indus-
trial workers at home.
The. American Republies Unit, Bu-
reau of Foreign and Domestic Com-
merce, reports the following as being
the minimum and maximum hourly,
rates of pay during the year 1942-43 for
18 companies in San Paulo, Brazil:
Prevailing Pay Rates
CLASS Cents per hour
American money
Unskilled labor __________ Bike to Tic
Semi-Skilled labor _______ 5l4ic to 8lac
Skilled labor ________-____ 5lfc to 14c
Watchmen 522 5ikc to 10i%c
Painters _____ semen ors Sees 6c to 15c
Carpenters 23 Se 6c to 1214e
Automobile mechanics _______ 8c to 15c
Welders 250 ae eee 7c to 15c
Electricians ~__________ Bye to 172e
Blacksmiths ______________ 6lyc to 15c
Foremen 22582 e ee Ile to 20c
Assistant foremen
The American Republics Unit, Bu-
reau of Foreign and Domestic Com-
merce, further reports that white-col-
lared Brazilian employees can be hired
on the following monthly basis:
POSITIONS Dollars Per Mo.
Bookkeepers ______-_-_ -_ $40.00 to -75.00
General Clerks __-_____ $25.00 to $40.00
FL ypists: igs Fee $30.00 to -40.00
File: Clerks 2 $30.00 to $40.00
Telephone Operators ___ $22.50 to $35.00
Ignore the average rate actually now
being paid in Southern mills and com-
pare these Brazilian Pay scales with
the 65 per hour minimum rate estab-
lished by law in the United States of
America.
You ask, does not Brazil have a min-
Protection Or PovertyWhich?
imum wage law covering the workers
at all?
The answer is, yes, it does. By Bra-
zilian Government decrees (Nos. 5997
and 5998) the following monthly min-
imum wages were established for the.
Federal District of Brazil. Lower rates.
pe in all other sections of the coun-
ry
The minimum rate in the Federal
District for any and all adult workers
is 360 eruzeiros, .or $18.00 per month!
American money!
For all industrial workers, the mini-
mum rate is 410 cruzeiros, or $20.50 i
month American money!
That is the answer to the carping crit-
jes as to why Georgia farmers and in-
dustrial workers cannot and should not
be subject to such an overburden of
competition as would result from fur-
ther reduction in the tariff rates on iden-
tical or competing products of foreign
growth that would originate in Brazil
and other low wage paying countries.
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, Clint-
on P. Anderson, once said *** Ameri-
ean farmers are or should be interested
in all types of legislation which may,
lead to increased purchasing power
*** Ts there then any reason why ey-
ery farm-minded Commissioner of Ags
riculture, with the interest of the farm-
ers of his State at heart, should not be
interested in the repercussions which!
will fall upon his people through the en<
actment of foreign Trade Agreements
which even destroy the home markets
for our own produced growth of food
and fiber? /
Thank God that the Farmers friends
and representatives in control of the
Congress in Washington will,,in apply-
ing their theory of agricultural econom-
ics to your lives, invoke the use of a
Protective Tariff Policy to protect you
against the poorly paid workers in the
rural slums, the tropical swamps and
jungles of the world.
These few homely factual truths ra
etive to the virtues of Free Trade vers-
us a Protective Tariff will stand like
pulars of clouds by day and like a fire
by night to guide the new Congress in
the Trade Legislation to be effected in
behalf of the American farmers.
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture. |
Stag
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
Adaress al} items for publication and all requests to be put
on the mailing list and for change ot address tv STATE BUREAU
OF MARKETS. 222 STATE CAPITOL: Atlanta.
Cv
>
4a % Qs
. - NATIONAL EDITORIAL
58
OCIATION
Member :
i
notice.
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable
under postage regulations inserted one time.on each, request and.
repeated only when request is accompanied by new: copy of
assume any responsib
Bulletin. =
* Published Weekly at
ility for
Tom Linder, Commissioner,
Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
State Capitol. Atlanta. Ga.
Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta. Ga.
Limited space wil] not permit insertion of notices containing
more than 30 words including name and address.
Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does net
114-122 PaceSt., Covington, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
Execative Office, State Canitol
414-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
Editorial and Executive Offices
-Notify on FORM 3578Bureau 03
any notice appearing in the
Entered as
of June 6 1900.
Yetncc
at
second class matte
August 1, 1937, at the Post Offic
at Covington, Georgia. under Aci
Accepted for
mailing at special rate oi postag:
rrovided for in Section 1103. 4-
.| postage. H. G.
el aA RY ty R.
Mastodon Strawberry
70. C;/.500;. $3.00; $5506 a:
Klondike, 60:-;'500,>-- $2.50:
$4.50, M; Exc. 200 plants for 4
printed sacks alike. Mrs, A. D.
Jones Cumming, Rt. 1. -
Fresh *rostproof Chas. W.
Copenhagen , and ; Flat Dutch
Plants,
Bermuda Onion plants, 500, $1,
$1.50 M; PP. Exp. col.; $1.00 M,
No orders too large. I. L. Stokes,
Fitzgerald. : i
Large, fresh, EJ.and Chas.
W. Copenhagen Cabbage plants,
500 90c; $1.25 M. Del. PP; 5M,
$5.00 Exp. White Bermuda On-
ion plants, 500, $1.00, $1.50M:
Del. Immediate del. Satis.
gaur. F, F. Stokes; Fitzgerald.
Strawberry plans. Exc. var,
7ic_ C; Also White Nest Onion
Sets. 75 gal. PP: Add postage.
Mrs. Abbie L. Davis, Rhine,
Bical, se
Missionary. Strawberry Plants
$1.00 C; FOB. Mis. J. B. Watson
Dawson, Rt. 2, Box 40, 8
Missionary and Mastodon
Strawberry Plants, $1.00 C. PP,
Blueberry plants, 25 ea. Add
Aderhold, Cul-
verton, Rt. 1.
Mastodon Strawberry Plants
$5.50 M; $2.75, 500; Klondike,
$4.25 M; $2.50, 500, Exc, for
Feed Sacks. Ea. pay postage;
Also Apricot Plum Spreuts,
30c ea; 4, $1.00. Mrs. Guy Crowe
PLANTS FOR SALE
Copenhagen and Chas. W.
Cabbage plants, 500, 90c; $1 M;
White Crystal Wax onions, 500,
$1; $1.50 M: Nice, large, strong
plants. W. W. Coffey, Fitzger-
ald. - :
Frostprocf Chas. W. Cabbage
plants, big strong plants, full
count and prompt attention,
$1.50 M; 500, $1; 25c C. No
-staraps, checks or COD -orders,;
Ottis Pittman, Baxley, Rt. 4.
trawberry, bear. large size
berries, large plants, well root-
ed, 50, $1; $1.50 C. Del. 300 mi.
Over 300 mi. add postage. O.
B. Camp, Villa Rica, Box 207.
Chas. W. cabbage plants, 20c
; Ga. Collard, 20c C; also-print
sacks, washed, ironed, 40c a;
White, 20c ea. Add postage. Mrs.
Otis Mashburn, Cumming, Rt. 5.
Cabbage plants, fresh grown,
ready, Copenhagen and - Flat
Dutch, and White Bermuda on-
stens, $1.25 M; 75c, 500.: Special
prices on large lots. Del. PP.
E.-L. Fitzgerald, Irwinville.
Large, stocky, frostproof Co-
penhagen and Clas. Wakefield
cabbage, 500, 75c; $1 M;-5000,
-$4.50; 10 M; $7.50; White Crys-
tal Wax onions, 500, $1; $1.50
M. Prompt shipment. Satis.
guer. J. M, Coffey, Fitzgerald.
. Wonder beets, Iceburg lettuce,
Endive Chinese cabbage, 75c C;
Wakefield cabbage, kale, ruta-
baga, radish, carrots, collards,
broccoli, White nest onions, 50c
C; $4.50 M; garlic plants, arti-
chokes, parsley, 50c doz. Mrs.
H. V. Franklin, Register.
Catnip -plants,' 2, 15c; sage
plants, 25c ea; Red Nest onions,
20c doz; Mastodon strawberry
lants, $1.C.. Add postage. Julia
heat, Varnell, POB 103. ~
Chas. W. cabbage planis, open
grown, cold hardened, purest
seed, and White Bermuda on-
ions, 30c C; 500, 90c; $1.50 M.
PP. Fast service. J. H. Davis,
Mitledgeville, Rt. 5. :
Ga. Heading collard plants,
Boe : 400) $1; $2.25 M; Barly
strawberry plants, large heavy
~ercppers, 80c C. Gladys Duran,
Cumming, Rt. 1.
Klondike strawberry plants,
50c C; 500, $2.50; 75c M; hore-
hound, 40c doz. Apricot plums,
35c ca; 5, $1. Add postage. Mrs.
Lies Hodd, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Copenhagen and C. Wakefield
caobage ptants, $1.50 M; 500,$1;
White Bermuda onions, $2 M;
500, $1.50. Good plants. Del.
Prompt shipment. Mrs. O. L.
Deal, Baxley, Rt. 4.
Caoas. W. and EJ cabbage
plants, $1.50 M; 500, $1. Del.
Prompt shipment. Melvin Deal,
Baxley.
aos
4
PLANTS FOR SALE
Kudzu Crowns; State certified,
2-3 yrs. roots, $25. M; $4 C; 1-2
yrs. Crowns, $15 M; $3.75. C;
Eldorado Blackberry plants, $20
M: $3.50 .C. Maude Hamby,
Greenville.
Chas. and EJ Wakefield, frost-
proof cabbage plants, and white
and. @yelloww Bermuda Onion
plants, 300, $1; 500, $1.25; $1.75
M. -PP; also Marglobe and New
Stone tomato seed, $2.25 lb. R.
Chanclor, Pitts.
-Jersey frostproof cabbage
plants, $1.50 M; plum, fig, quince
3, $1; Washington asparagus, 2
yrs. Crowns, 6, $1; Seventap
turnip seed, 35 1b; Yard Long
gourd seed, 50c cup.- Mrs. John
Myers, Hartwell, Rt.2; -
Chas. and EJ Wakefield and
Copenhagen, frostproot cabbage
plants, ready, white and yellow
Bermuda onions, 500, $1.50;
$1.75 M. Ovie Conner, Pitts, Rt.
t. :
Ins. Chas, Wakefield - and
Copenhagen Cabbage Plants,
$1.50 M PP, $1.25 M my home.
Mrs. Clyde Cook, Cordele, 3rd
St. 5th Ave.
Old fashion. and Cabbage-
Collards, 500, $1.00; $1.75 M;
Wakefield and Dutch Cabbage;
200, 75c; 300, $1.00; Klondike
and Everbearing Strawberry,
65; $1.75. 300: $2.50, 500: Del.
A. C, Garrett, Gainesville, Rt.
lS
Nice, well rooted Sage plants,
20c ea;. Muscadine Vines, $2.50
doz; Gooseberry Bushes, $1.50
doz; Garlic Bulbs, $1.00 doz;
Old Fashion Peach .Trees, 25c
ea. Mrs. Mae Turner, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 6.
Fresh grown Klondike Straw-
berry Plants, 300, $1.50; 500,
$2.25; $4.00 M; Cabbage, 300,
$1.00; Collards, 500, $1.00; $1.50
M; Print sacks, washed, 40c
ea; $4.20 doz. Del. No checks.
C.. W. Smith, Gainesville, Rt.
Be
Klondike Strawberry young
plants, 500, $2.50. No checks.
Prompt shipment. Mrs. Willie
Allen, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Frostproof Chas. W. Cabbage
Plants, 500, $1.00; $1.75 M, Del.
5 and 10M lots, $1.50 M. Exp.
col. E. C. Waldrip, Flowery
Branch, Rt.:1. :
Chas. W. Cabbage Plants, 500,
$1.00; $1.50 M; 10000, $1.25 M,
Col, W. O. Waldrip, Flowery
Branch. sR hs
EJ and Chas. W. Frostproof
Cabbage and White Bermuda
Onion Plants. 300, $1.00; 500,
$1.25; $2.00 M. PP, A. B. Wat-
son, Pitts, Rt. 1.
May Strawberry Plants, 90c
C;. Kudzu Crowns, $2.00 C;
Dried Apples, 50 Ib. Mrs. J. B.
Jones, Dahlonega, Rt. 1. :
Cumming, Rt, 1,
Everbearing Strawberry plants
50c C. PP, in Ga. No checks.
we R. L. Livingston, Wadley,
Everbearing large sweet var.
Strawberry plants, 50c C. 10c
-postage ,for Ist C, and 5c for
additional Cc. Packed in damp
moss. Mrs. J. H. Robinson,
Ellaville, Box 34. .
Klondike strawberry plants,
50c C; Large Red Indian Peach
Seed, 50c doz; Purple Hull
and Sugar Crowder peas, 20c
lb; 5 lbs. shipped, Add postage.
Rosie Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Klondike Strawberry Plants,
500, $2.75; $5.75 M, Mrs. Mell
Mashburn, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Splendid var. . Strawberry
Plants, 65e C; Seullion Onion
Plants, 50c. C; Spearmint, 25c
doz. Del. to sec. zone. No checks
Mrs. Annie Patillo, LaGrange,
Rt, 4.
Large, well-rooted Sage
Plants, 5, 50c; $1.00 doz; Extra
large bunch Sage, 5, 75c; $1.50
doz. Damp packed, PP. Mrs. A.
Horsley, Waco, Rt. 2. Box 55.
Mastodon Everbearing Straw-
berry Plants, $4,835 M; 500,
$2.25. PP. in Ga. MO. Mrs, J
Avirett,. Blakely, Rt. 1.
Mixd Strawberry Plants;
Great Wonder Berries, Jewels, '
Gibson, Red Golds and Lady
T, 75 C; Rooted Sage and
Black Raspberry, 6; 50c. Add
postage. Mrs. Lona Blackwell,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
Red Raspberry, Himalaya,
Red, Yellow June Plum, $2.00
doz; Black Walnut, best var.
Bronze Scuppernongs, Black
Muscadine, 50c ea; $5.00. doz;
Blueberries, $5.00 C. PP. Mrs.
C. B. Robinson, Bowdofi.
Strawberry Plants, 36 C.
Mrs. Tillmon Anderson, Jesup,
Rt. 2,
Chas. W. Cabbage
500, $1.00; $1.50 M, All del.
ship by return mail, Dewey
Mathis, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Spring Shallot Onions, 40c
(ek Missionary Strawberry
Plants, 75c C. Mrs, Cromer
McCurley, Hartwell, Rt. ae
Copenhagen Cabbage Plants,
now ready for shipping. Geo.
W. Calhount, Cordele, 1009
5th St. Phone 504-W.
Well rooted sage plants, $5.60
@z- PP sam Tweedell, Litho-
miay ant. 2:
Chas. W. Cabbage Plants,
500, $1.00; $1.50 Ne Dele
Prompt Shipment. Good plants
and good count, Claudie Mathis
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Frostproof Chas. W. Cabbage
Plants, 500, $1.00; $1.50 M. del.
Prompt shipment. Full count
_ Frostproof Chas. W. Cabbage
Plants, 500, $1.00; $1.50 M.
del, Prompt shipment. Full
count guar. Theodore Mathis,
i,
Cabbage and pencil size White]:
Red Raspberry Pats, $1.00
doz. Del. im Ga. Mrs, Sas
Williams, Blue Ridge, Rt. .2,
Box 132. . a
berries, 45 C; Mrs.
Turner, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,
Ramie
Ga. heading Collard Plants
25e C;- 400, $1.00; ..$2.25 M;
Harly Bearing: Strawberry; 80c
C. No checks. Add _ postage,
Hees Duran, Cumming, Rt,
2
EJ Wakefield Cabbage
Plants, $1.25 M. PP. in Ga,
J. S. Griffis, Baxley, Rt. 4. ~
Mt. ~ Huckleberry _ Plants,
bearing size, 75c doz; Wild
Strawberry, 25c doz; Hazel-
Tom Kittle, Carrollton, Rt. 5. _
-| Americus, Rt. 1.
crop, hand cleaned and _select-
Plants,
nut Bushes, 3, 75c; Yellow Root
white. or print sacks. Mrs.
Naney. Henderson, Ellijay, Rt,
3, Box 49. ;
Mastodon Everbear. Straw-
berry Plants, young, well
rooted, $8.00 M; small orders,
$1.00 M. PP Promvt shipment.
Mrs. Clay Bennett, - Flowery
Branch. Ye
SEED FOR SALE
*3 or 4 tons Kobe Lespedeza
seed, combine run, 10e lb. R.
A. Allen, Jackson, Rt. 4.
Kobe and Korea Lespedeza
seed, Samples and prices on ve-
quest. L. A.. Caldwell, Gay,
Clemons Small Okra Seed,
d0e cup. Send Postage. Mrs. J.
L. Hamby, Lavonia.
75 lbs. pure, good Long Green
Pod Okra Seed, 90c lb. W. E.
Dunn, Brooks, Rt, 1. ;
40 lbs, hand saved, selected
shade dried,
or Black Diamond Watermelon
seed, $2.00 lb, MO. PP. Mrs.
Grady Stanford, Smithville, Rt. |
2, eBoy es ; aoe
Kobe _ Lespedeza, cleaned,
tested, 16 lb. FOB. Ralph S:
Collier, Comer.
White Bunch Butter Bean
Seed, 35c lb; White Half Run-
ner Bean Seed, 40c cup; Broom
Corn Seed, 20c Ib; Gourd Seed,
Bu. var., 12 seed, 10c Mrs, R. C.
Albertson, Lawrenceville, Rt.
Ds ~~
oe
200 lbs. hand selected Black
Diamond or Cannonball Water-
melon Seed, $1.50 lb, A. J.
Swanson, Fairburn.
* 400 lbs. Cannoball Water-
melon Seed, hand picked, and
sundried, 91.50 Ib. PP. F. C.
Boyett, Colquitt.
Several tons Kobe Lespedeza
Seed, combine run, 10e lb. You
furnish sacks. Ed Carter,
Cannonball Melon Sed, 1946
ed, $2.00 lb. Miss Vena Brown,
Hartwell.
3 tons Korean | Lespedeza
Seed, No Johnson Grass, 7c
jb. Combine run; Also 2nd yr.
Kudzu Crowns, $10.00 M. Omar
A. Harper, Elberton, Rt. 3.~
Tender Brown Striped Half
Runner Bean Seed, also hand
saved: watermelon seed, Or-
ange Meat, Stone Mt. Can-
nonball, from . large melons;
Also would like to furnish
party 2-4 lbs. butter wk. Mrs.
C. H. Rhodes, Canon, Rt. a
200 lb. -hand selected Per-
kins long green Okra seed, 60c,
About 40 lbs. Hastings Imp.
Perkins Okra Seed, 1st yr, for
pest offer. R. H. Mitchell, Car-
rollton, Rt. 1. :
1000 Ibs. Sericea Lespedeza
Seed, cleaned and scarified,
20c lb, FOB. K, F. Mitchell,
Martin, Rt. 1.
Gour Seed, thoroughly dry,
$2.00 Ib. Smaller quantities
sold. No stamps. Mrs. T.
Thomas. Thomasboro.
White nice and clean Multi-
lying Onions; 75 gal, Add
eiece, Mrs. B. A. Weeks,
Dial. 5
Seed: Wakefield and #.
ch Cabbage, $1.75 1b; To-
Be Stone, $1.50 lb; Marglobe
$1.75 lb; Yellow and White
Bermuda Onion, $2.10 Ib. del.
Lee Crow, Gainesville, RG 2.
Box 143.
Recleaned Sericea Seed, 1946
crop, No odder, 12c lb. Mark
a
. Lady T. and, Cordon, Straw.
45c doz. Add postage. Exc. for)
|more, $1.00
1946 Cannonball} 2
lb. Clarence F. Morris, Stuckey. |.
cleaned, 15c
seed, 5c Ib. Eh.
con; Rt: Reis
*& Kobe Lesped
cleaned, tested, 1
bags. -Geo, BE.
fin, ee Ar es
Good, clean,
Black - yamond,
Seed, $250 Ib. H,
Hiram.. Se
Seed, the earli
ripen in 60 di
$2.50 Tb, Mrs,
Hartwell, Rts
90c Tb; 11-Ibs. or.
PPYan Gas Je Cee
"Foccoa,, Rt 2.77
1000 Ibs. Genuine Can
Black Diamond Melor
hand saved, . fron
melons. State tes
germ. $1.25 AC
E
Birdson, Gordon
_ Cannoball Wa
hand saved, shade dr
selected melons, govt
percent germ., $1.50
for price on 100 Ib.
Bloodworth, Gordon
Grade A Kobe
seed, 12c lb. in 1
Mrs. J. M. Bobo,
Old Fashion
plying Onions,
nie M. Harmon, C
Cannonball Water
$1.00 lb. W. W, Will
man. cc
1946 crop Cannonb
seed, $1.25 lb; 1946
Melon Seed, $2.00
100 jb. lots or more.
Pinehurst. ~ :
Best grade f
bacco seeds, saved
talk, 60c ounce, PP
champ, Eastman, R
Smal. Prolifie
Eng. Peas, 50 1b;
rlong pod Okra . Seed
No checks or stamps.
melon Seed, 94 pe:
$2.00 Ib. Add postage
80 lbs. New Imp.
der Green Pod O
crop, exe. germ.
75c lb.-5 lbs. or 1X :
H. Allred, Ball Ground,
100 lbs. Bene Seed
quail food) 25c lb. Ex
ler lots, 30c lb, p
40 lbs. Ky. Wonder
25c lb.- Roy Harrell,
ville, Box 334.
21 Ibs. hand save
Diamond or Cannonbal
ermelon Seed, $1.00
Farmer, Milledgeville,
Box 168, ; 4
5 tons Kobe Lesped
Combine run free o
grass and ot ;
weeds, 10c lb. H. C
Janta, 876 Park St.
4959. oe
10 Ibs. mixed tu
50c lb. Add postage.
Earl Tibbitts, Dallas,
Nice White Mul
ions, 60c gal. Ad
Cora Mae Lord, M
Bean
white, good var.,: lk
nip Seed, 25e cup, Add p
Mrs. Noel Payne C
at
Bunch Butter
Korean Lespedeza
clean, combine run,
FOB. Jerry W. Teasley,
ton, Rt. 3. i i
Worlds Cha
Onion Sets, multiply
a hill, $1.25 gal. Mrs.
Holloway, town
Old Time Scallion
Buttons and Sets, $1.
Print Sacks, 100) lb
ea; $2.30 for 6;
Gainesville. >
|T. Warren, Dewey Rose.
ea. L, A. Crow,
Ree ge
ee Bo.
-
: on - oN REE _ FRESH AND DR
: _ FOR ) OR FRUIT FOR SALE
ean| 10 bu: shelled Whatleys pro-| Schley and Stuart Pecan trea Native . wila Blackberry, Nice dried apples, free of
B0e cup; Sage
-Gaflic plants,
M. Johnson,
and
eked, 40c large!
&, 15 Ib, 5| A
Half Runner
lc lb; Exe. for
like; 5 lbs. for
tage. Gemima
Ke Rts 8,
_ Crowder
Prepaid in
pted; Also
ibe _tabl.
ler, Titus.
ittle Lady an
peas, 60 lb. PP.
checks.
eenville, Rt. 3,
ybeans, $7 bu. del.
Barnesville, 716
n Soybeans, re-
; nywhere in.
s00
Rt. 2.
Calhoun, *
hite Brown-eyed
bu. FOB; 30
ind Velvet beans,
a
beans and mix-
$6.50 bu; Black
1elon seed, cert.
Downs, Ander-
yellow prolific
selected, $4 bu.
H. H. Alex-
L.
good solid ear
My barn. J. A.
bu. in 75 bu.
eae
{$1.50 bu.
Miller, Wadley, Rt. 1.
0| Whitaker, Mansfield, Rt. 1.
| pire cottonseed, $8.50 ea. Cwt.
, mit, Rt. 2.
| bu. Riley C. Couch, Turin.
.| Rt 1
| Baxley.
i figs, 20c ea; $2 doz; Red, Yellow
lifie corn, not seed corn, $2 bu.
Alex Barfield Louisville.
500 and 600 bu. good corn,
at my barn. W. B.
SOTTON SEED FOR SALE
DPL No. 14 cottonseed, Ist.
yr 1 var. gin, $9 per hundred
ae ee E. H. Cheek, Lavonia,
Ruckers Empire cottonseed,
1,250 lbs. make a 500 bale, 43
percent lint, staple 1.16 in., 5
lock bale, 50 bolls make 1 Ib.
this year, made over 2,000 lbs
on 4A. $3 bushel. W.T: Rucker,
shland. ata ,
1,800 lbs. Cokers No. 9 cot-
tonseed, Ist yr., $8 C. Mell
Cokers 100-wilt strain 4 cot-
tonseed, also limited amt. Em-
at farm; $9.50 per hundred lbs.
to ship, Otis M. Cowart, Sum-
Empire cottonseed, Ist. yr.,
ginned 1 var. gin, recleaned, $3
-%,000 lbs. Cokers 100-wilt
strain, 5, new 100 1b. sacks, $8
ewt. FOB; also 7,000 lbs. DPL
Ist yr. cottonseed, $7 per hun-
dred lbs, FOB. W. R. McKib-
ben, Locust Grove.
- Cokers 100 strain 7 cotton-
seed, $7.50 ewt; Pure Whatleys
prolific seed corn, $1 pk; $3 bu.
H. W. Thurmond, Farmington,
PEANUTS AND PECANS
SALE
_ Certified GFA (Spanish:
type) Peanuts, yield this past
fyr. up to 3800 lbs. to acre.
Write for full particulars and
prices. Ray Taylor, Tifton, Rt.
Ay 3
New crop pecans; Stewarts,
35c lb; Schleys, 45c lb. FOB.
M. F. Jones, Metter, Rt. -1,
Box 111.
del, No less 10 lbs. Single
shipment. Mrs. Mary Thomas,
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Leading var. Apple trees, 50c:
1 yr. Peach trees, 18-24 in., 30c;
2 yrs. Paper Shel! Pecan trees,
3-4 ft., $2. Lee Head, Cornelia.
Concord, Niagara and Fred-
onia grape, leading var., June
Bud peach, 18-20 in., $1.50 doz;
Austin Dewberry, Morrison, St.
Regis and Golden Queene rasp-
berry, Thornless boysenberry,
$1.25 doz. PP. in Ga. State insp.i
Gail H. Emberson, Ringgold.
100 or more Seedling Peach
FOB; Strawberry plants, 50c C.
S. A. Fleener, Richland.
Purple Scuppernong vines, 1,;
2, 3, yrs. old, 25; Blac: Musca-
dine vifies, 1, 2, and 3 yrs. old,
20c ea; Black Cherry trees, Hol-
ly trees, 3-6 ft., $1 ea. All FOB:
M. F. Jones, Metter, Rt. 1, Box
111. i
Brown Scuppernong, Brown
and Blue, 15 ea; $1.25 doz;
latge Black Walnut, 20c each;
$2 doz; Muscadine vines, Kudzu
Crowns, $2 C; $17:50 M; Sage
plants, 10c ea; $1.doz.> W. A.
Moon, Waco, Rt. 2.
Red Fig, (4 rooted,) $1; &
Seedling Peach trees, $1. Mrs.
V. M. Johnson, Shellman.
Scuppernong vines, rooted,
large, white var, 50c ea; 3, $1.25.
PP. No checks, COD or out-ot-
State orders. Isla Hamilton,
Alamo, Rt. 2.
Pecan trees, guar. true to
name, budded, yar. of Stuarts,
Schley, and Moneymakers.
Write for sizes and prices. Cal-
vin Harman, Stovall..
_, Limited no. Scuppernongs, of
the brown or sugar var. rooted,
50 . H. T. Hill, Sale
Pecans, about 100 Ibs. Schleys |
-145c lb; 30 lbs. Stuarts, 50c lb.
trees, 2-3 ft., yr. old, 10c each. |
1-2 ft. $1.25; 2-3 ft. $1.50; 3-4
ft, $1.75; 5-6 ft. $2.25 ea; 8-10
ft. Stuarts $3.50 ea: FOB. Cash.
R. L, Adkns, Cordele, Rt. 3.
400 well rooted Hunt Musca-|
dine vines, $30.00 Ere 100, FOB.
George E. Auger Sharpsburg, -
Brown Scuppernong vines,
rooted by layering, from true
var. stock, 50 ea. Add postage.
W. B. Bass, Swainsboro, Rt. 1,
Box 173: -- :
Yellow White Press Peaches,
| Crabapples, Yellow Red Pluins,
Goose Berries, Black Haw, Wild
Cherry, Muscadine vines, 1 ft.
10c; 4 ft, 40c; 5 ft, 50c. Add
postage. Exc. for print sacks.
ee Alma Colson, Toomsboro,
ry
All lead. var. apple trees, 3-|-
4 ft, 40c 2-3 ft., 30c; Peach,
18-24 in., 30c; pear, 3-5 ft., 75c
grapevines, 2 yr. Concord, Nia-
gara, Lutie, 20; Scuppernong
vines, 50c ea. W. H. Alexander, |
Cleveland. :
_ Light and Black Scuppernong
Grape plants, rooted, 25c each.
Mrs. W. A. Harrell, Alma.
Celestial fig trees, 25 to 40c
ea; also Peach seedlings, from
Ga. Belle and Elberta seed, for
sale. A. S. Johnson, Pelham.
Scuppernong plants, nice 3
yrs. old vines, State insp., 60c|
ea; $6 doz. including one male.
FOB shipping point. Whatley
Davis, West Point, Rt. 1. -
Tung oil trees, 20c-45c ea.,
$20 'C; Sweet Gum, Sweet Bay,
and wild Tea-Olive, 25 ea;
Freestone peach, 25c ea., $20
C. Mrs. B. Brady, Cairo, Rt. 1,
Box 343.
Scuppernong, Muscadine Vin-
e,s, Blue Damson Plums, Early
May Cherry, Everbearing Red,
Black Raspberry, Garden Goose
berry, $1.25 doz; Catnip, Balm,
Hoarhound, 3, 25c; Garlic; 50c
doz. Mrs. M. L. Eaton, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.
Red Raspberries, (bear 3
times yearly), $1.00 doz;
Gooseberry, 6, 75; $1.25 doz.
Hazelnut, 75 doz; May Apples
and Yellow Root 75c Ib. Add
postage, Martha Eller, Eflijay,
Re 2: :
Hazelnut Bushes, $1.25 doz;
Blueberry plants, 45c doz; Pop-
corn, 25 lb. No stamps. Miss
| Dura Bradley, Bowdon, Rt. 2.
Blueberry plants, 45c doz; $3.
C; 500 for $15.00; Muscadine,
35c ea; Hazelnut, $1.25 doz.
No stamps. Add postage. Mrs.
G. W. Bradley, Bowdon, Rt. 2.
Leading var. Peach Trees,
$3.50 doz; $35.00 C;:Grapevines,
pe doz; $20.00 C; Seedling
each, $1.00 doz; $5.00 C; Black
Walnut $3.00 doz; $10.00 C. Mrs.
E. B. Travis, Riverdale.
Tame Cherry Bushes, of the
best kind, 4 for 80, Add post-
age. M. M. Cochran, Pisgah.
Brown Turkey Fig Trees, 2-3
ft., State insp., field grown,
moist packed, 75c ea; 3, $1.95;
$6.95 doz. PP. J. Loran Cash,
Ellenwood.
Niagra and Concord Grape
Vines, Blue Plum, Crabapple
and Sour White Apple, 3, $1.05
or $3.00 doz. State insp, and
PP. Mrs. Nathan Weatherby,
Ball Ground, Rt. 4. _
Horse Apple, Mulberry, Black
Walnuts, Hickory Nuts, Ga.
Persimmons, 50c ea; Currants,
Gooseberry, Black, Red Halls,
Huckleberry, 10c ea. Rooted,
5-8 ft. PP. on $1.00 orders. No
checks. Josephine Raley, Mitch-
ell.
Apple, R
ed, Yellow Delicious,
Winesap, Red J
une, Bet) Sore
rest, $1.25 ea; Peach, Ga. Belle,
Wreeetet 75c-$1 ea; Grapes, $1.25
$1.50 doz; Figs, Celestial, Blue
Turkey, 25 $1 ea. C. M. Dwight,
Atlanta, 1035 Capitol Ave. MA
3671.
Tung Oil 1 to 2 yr. seedlings,
10c ea. No order less $1. Leoa
Ozmore, Colquitt, Rose Hav-
en.
Old fashion Peach trees, 25
ea: 5, $1.00; Muscadine Vines,
20c ea; 6, $1.00; Black Haw
Bushes, $1.09 doz. No checks.
Mrs. W. H. Norrell, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 6. 5
Apricot Plum, 35 ea; 5, $1.
Crabapples, 20e ea. Mrs. B. G.
Bennett, Cumming, Rt. 1.
| either, and Male Scuppernong,
| Purple Top turnips, my place.
Muscadine, Plum Trees, 15 fo
$1.50. Lois. Woodruff, Green
ville, Rt. 5. ;
Celestial Figs, 1-6 ft., rooted,
50c to $1.25 ea; 5 or more pre-
aid; Jap. Shogoin Turnip
eed, 60 Ib. Eng: Peas, 50c lb.
PP. Malvin Collins, Whigham.
Sweet Purple Figs, prolific,
early bearing and Scupper-
nongs, wonderful flavor, sure-
bearer, 50c ea; Bearing size/of
$1.00 ea, Selected Blueberry,
Rabbit Eye and High Bush, 3
t. plants, 35e ea. Mrs. Maude
ranger, Reidsville.
HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
Honey Bees, $2.50 for entire
a ae R, Clarke, Covington,
eds
3 new 9 frme dbl. glass vis-
ion hives with supers, made
of apple and lemon boxes, $8
Flora Ave. NE.
2 colonies Italian beens in 10
frame hives, factory made,
metal covers with inner cov-
covers, 2 supers to hive, plenty
of honey for broad rearing,
good cond., $10.00 ea. del. here.
C, S. Hall Hartwell, Rt. 2.
GRAIN AND HAY
-FOR SALE
12 tons Peanut hay, $11 ton
FOB my barn. M. L. Shealy,
Oglethorpe. :
150 bales lLespedeza_ hay,
cured without rain, $27.50 ton.
My farm. G. W. Darden, Wat-
kinsville.
Carload Spanish Peanut hay,
$12.50 ton. FOB in car. J. oS
McLeod, Shellman.
25 tons Spanish and 50 tons
Runner Peanut hay, $25 ton.
Del. 100 mi. and good roads;
also 300 bu. corn, $1.50 bu. Fred
Flanders, Dublin, RFD 6.
at barn in one lot also 1% Al
collards for truck, $1 doz. at
farm. J. O. Williams, Perry.
Ril
3 tons pea hay, $35 ton; 2 tons
O-too-tan bean hay, $30 ton. |
FOB. W. L. Wilson, Stapleton. ;
POTATOES AND OTHER
VEGETABLES FOR SALE
Truckload fine collards, free
of lice or worms, also some fine
turnips, at my place. 4 mi. N.
Forsyth, 1 mi. off St. 42. W. D.
Watson, Forsyth, Phone 4003.
Truckload collards, and some
Jerry Cox, Forsyth.
Truckload turnips ready now
and cabbage in truckload in
about 10 days. Tom Griffin,
Ocilla. :
INCABATORS AND
BROODERS
2-4-deck Finishing brooders,
100 ea. deck, $10 ea. my place.
J. C. Wilson, Dunwoody, Peach-
tree-Dunwoody Road.
2 used Incubators: Buckeye oil
burners (can be changed to elec)
both good cond., 4608 cap., each,
$50 ea. at my place. John W.
Barrett, Cleveland, Rt. 1.
2 No. 17E Buckeye In., 210-
wcap., good cond., $25 or $15 ea;
1 Wishbone Brooder, 1,000 cap.,
$15. FOB, or come after. Mrs.
K. C. Hawthorne, Cairo, Rt. 3.
Brewer Hot water outfit for
raising turkeys and chickens,
$300; 2 Hawkins Million Dollar
hen growing and finishing bat-
teries, $75 ea. J. B. McLeod,
Valdosta, Rt. 3.
2 Jamesway oil Inc., 1,000 and
2,000 egg cap., first class cond.,
at my farm, 142 mi. W. Lithonia
on. Covington Rd.. John W.
Young, Lithonia, Rt. 2. |
2 little Putnam brooder heat-
ers, $4 ea. postpaid. Mrs. Don
Donaldson, Decatur, 726 South
ea. I, A. Manley, Atlanta, 166
2.
12 tons Peanut hay, $12 ton|
|gal. 6 mi. S. Hazelhurst.
jroned, 40c ea.
land ironed, 40c ea. COD. Mrs.
lt. R. Roper, Cumming, RED.
Candler St., DE 2405.
core, peel, and worms, 50c lb;
also Cream Powder Peas, 30c
cup. Ex. for print sacks: 1 cup
for ea. sack. Ea. pay postage.
Mrs. W. I. Cook, Felton, Rt. 2.
Sundried Apples, 55 lb. PP.
Claude H. Miiler, Cherry Log.
Dehydrated Figs, 50c Ib. Add
postage. No checks. L. B. Me-
Whorter, Roopville, Rt. 1
Hatching Eggs: Extra large
BR and WL 300 egg stock $1.75
15; W. Giant, WR and RIR cross
15, $1.50; 10 WL pullets, lay-
ing and rooster, $27.00. Mrs.
D. S. Terry, Quitman, 912 W.
LaFayette St. ;
Nice dried apples, free of
worms, cores and peel, 50c Ib.
Mrs. Fred Franks, Hiawassee.
5 lbs. nice, unpeeled, ripe,
dark sundried peaches, $2.50
del. in 2nd zone. MO. Mrs.
Estelle Wilson, Aslanhd. :
SYRUP FOR SALE
.
a
No. 1 Table Syrup, made from ~
green sugar cane, 6-1 gal cans,
del. in Ga. for $12.50; one-half
gal. by parcel post for $1.15 ea.
D. . Crow, Colquitt.
400 gal. Ga. Cane Syrup, $2.39
gal for lot or $15 per case. FOR: |
John S. Edwards, Marietta, Ra
La
150 gals. very good bright
and heavy Ga. Syrup for sale, at
my place, 4 mi. S. Pulaski. TY.
C. Dekee,. Register.
~ 200 gals. good Ga. Cane Syrup
$2 gal. Lowell Adams, 5 mi.
Douglas on Baker Hwy at Tan-
ners Farm. Lowell Adams,
Douglas. Sage
Feed syrup for sale. Bring
big mouth vessels for less than
5 gal. O. E. Norton, Fairburn.
700 cans good Georgia Cane
syrup, $1.50 gal. 11 mi. South-
west Camilla at Branchville. G.
W. Wearham, Jr., Camilla, Rt.
my place.
Donalsonville.
syrup, $2.00 gal.
Perry Spooner,
1000 ga] pule Ga. Cane Syrup
in: gal. cans, 6 to case.
farm. W. W. Mitchell, Musella.
50 gal. cans good syrup, $2.00
W.
A. Gay, Hazelhurst, Rt. 3.
60 gal. Sugar Cane Syrup
in gal. cans, $2.00 gal. FOB. B.
F. Hunter, Surrency.
-1000 gals. clear, bright, pure
G. Cane Syrup, $2.00 gal. My
farm. Ben T. Ambrose, Vien-
na, Rt. 3.
1000 gals. syrup in gal. cans
for sale; Also want 11 tons
peanut hay, and 9 bu. 90 day
Velvet Beans. State price del.
G. L. Slaten, Stillmore.
110 gals. pure Ga. Cane Syrup
$2.00 gal. W.. J. Powell, Col-
quitt. 2% mi. W. Eldorendo.
702 gals. No.1 Sorghum
Syrup in gal. eans, $2.25 gal.
M. T. Sanders, Commerce.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
see Se ents eee
SACKS: :
White, 100 lb. cap., wash-
ed, Chicken Feed Sacks, 25c
ea; 25 or more, 20c ea. Add
postage. Mrs, Guy A. Grant,
Gainesville, Rt. 7.
Print Sacks, 100 lb. cap., SOG
ea. Add postage. No COD or
personal checks. Mrs: in =G.
Duck, Braselton.
print Feed Sacks, washed
se Not PP. Mrs.
W. E. Martin, Gainesville, Rt.
ery :
Nice Print Sacks, 3 and 4
alike, \45c ea; White 25 cs.
No holes or mildew in any.
Add postege. Mrs. M. L. Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Print Feed Sacks, was ed
I
Unwashed white feed sa
95ce 6a, COD. Mrs! G. E. Be:
nett, Cumming, Riterke
2600 gal. good pure Ga. Cane
My .
Ea FOUR
Forest Acreage
Poorly Stocked,
Mosely Reports
Although Georgias forests oc-
cupy 25 million acres (or two
out of every three acres of the
entire state) about one-fifth of
these forests are poorly stocked
according to Robert L. Mosely,
marketing and management
specialist for the State Depart-
ment of Forestry. :
Some of this area, he points
out, will reseed and restock it-
self with volunteer stands if fire
is. excluded successfully, but
much of this acreage is in such
a condition that, to obtain an-
other crop of. quality timber,
the landowner. will have to
plant seedlings,
This great need, -Mosely
says, points up the necessity
for two forward steps in for-
estry in Georgiastatewide
forest fire protection and great-
ly expanded state tree nursery
facilities. Even with these
achieved, it will take upwards
of twenty years to put all the
now wasted acreage in the state
to work growing trees.
The legislature is expected to
consider the Department of
Forestrys Statewide Forest
Fire Protection and Tree Plant-
ing act during: the session
which begins next Monday,
Pine Grove FFA
Member Winner
Highest Honor
Ralph Hamm, the Star Geor-
gia Planter for 1945-46 is a
member of the Pine Grove FFA
ehapter at Valdosta, Ga., has
eted honor in the State Asso-
ciation through his outstanding
accomplishments as a member
of FFA and a student-of voca- -
tional agriculture. Ralph, a very ~
modest young farmer, is an 18-
year-old senior in the Pine
Grove High School, and has
done well in becoming estab- |
lished in farming. He began |
taking vocational agriculture in|
1943.
His accomplishments are as
follows: a well-rounded feeding :
program for livestock, beef cat- |
tle particularly; he has a pure-
bred Hereford bull, two cows,
three steers and one pure-bred
boar sow and seven pigs. In ad-
dition to his livestcok program, |
- he has five acres of corn, four |
acres of oats followed by cow- |
pea hay, and has already gath-|
ered over five tons of hay and
improved 7 acres of permanent
pasture,
Ralphs project program has
been so real and genuine fol-
lowing improved practices un-
der the guidarice of his voca-
tional agriculture teather, M. J
Lane, that the whole farm
through his father is being im- |
proved in a similar manner. The!
two are improving 30 acres or
more pasture in the coming|
year with Ralph having already |
cut and treated fence posts at |
the school creosoting vat for the |
pasture.
All of his livestock, fertilizer, |
and feed for his crops were paid | |
for by cash earned by his proj-|
ect program, and his father: now |
owes him money. Ralph is serv-
ing as president of his local
chapter, and has demonstrated
his ability as a leader in the
community,
| tion of a cold frame.
MARKET BULLETIN.
Feeling as Soil Tells
When to Start Garden
When You Can Make a Mudpie From Your Garden Soil,
It Is too Wet to Spade,
When Slightly Moist Soil Crumbles Easily In Your Hand,
It Is Time to Spade.
Experienced gardeners iearn
much from feeling the soil, Most:
important of all the conditions that
can be tested by getting your hands
in the dirt, is the moisture content.
For spading, cultivating, and seed
sowing, soil which is neither too wet
nor too dry is best. Wet-soil should
| never be worked, and. heavy soil
when dry can be as hard ag a brick;
while the same soil with the right
degree of moisture may be ag asy
to work as a sandy loam,
If wet soil is spaded, it usually
forms hard clods which may hold
together all season to do harm in
many ways. Seed should not be
sown, or plants set out, in wet soil.
You. should not even walk on it,
until it dries out sufficiently.
How ae tell when this point is
The most reliable test is a simple
onecall it the mud-pie test. Pick
up a handful of soil and pat it be-
tween your palms as you used to do
in childhood; if it holds together
and makes a nice amnud-ple, then it
is too wet,
There is a point between the: two
extremes of too wet, and too dry
when a handful of soil, patted be-
tween the palms, will crumble, It
is not dry, but slightly moist, yet not
wet enough to hold together in a
mud-ple, At this point, even clay
can be spaded easily, and will break
up Without. forming clods. When
the test indicates that this favor-
able condition prevails, do not de-
lay, otherwise the soil may dry out
unduly, and compel you to wait for
heavy rains to restore the right de-
gree of moisture.
Winter Task for Gardener
won the highest and most cov- -
Is Building Cold Frame
HINGES
ANGLE IRONS
Tt] eon ALL CORNERS
HOOK TO
HOLD SASH
UP WHEN
NEEDED.
<<
A garden task which canbe per-
formed in winter is the construc-
Every gar-
den should have one: in every
month of the year there is impor-
tant service which it can render,
In some form cold frames have
been used by gardeners for centu-
ries; originally they were pits open
to the sun in which plants -were
sheltered from cold wind. Since
glass has been available, to keep
out cold air but let in the suns
| warmth, cold frames have become
more efficient and useful.
Standard glazed sash are difficult
to get this year; but various glass
substitutes are available which can
be stretched on light frames and
serve the same purpose, while be-
ing much lighter than glazed sash,
; and unbreakable.
To make a cold frame is so easy,
any one who can wield a saw and
hammer can do it, It is usually
made 3 by 6 fet, or some multiple
of this, for the reason that standard
hot-bed sash are of these dimen-
sions. But a cold frame (or a hot-
bed either) may be any size you
wish, to fit old windows, or frames
STANDARD SIZE COLD FRAME SASH
IS 3X6 FEET, DOUBLE GLAZED.
of any convenient size.
The frame should be construct.
ed of heavy boards, of cypress, |
white pine or some wood which re-'
sists rot. Dig a hole in the ground
slightly larger than the size of the
frame. It should be at least a foot
deep. Into this hole put the frame
you have built so that 6 inches of
it is beneath the surface and the
remainder above. This will.insure
that no drafts enter from beneath,
Construct the frame so that the
front is 6 inches above the surface,
and the rear, 12 inches. It must
slant toward the south, where the
winter sun shines. It is well to
hinge the sash at the top of the
frame, so it can be easily opened
for transplanting purposes and air-
ing. :
A sunny spot in the garden, pro-
tected as much as possible from
the full force of winds and drivifig
rain, is the best situation for the
cold frame,
now to dig in the garden, but the
sash may be procured and the lum-
ber frame made, so that when the
first warm days arrive you are:
It may be too cold ||
10) Wednesday, January:
Mote Sunshine i Ga ite
Is Trend Tauehs by Wat
A Sunny Garden Near a Terrace,
Annual flowers require sunshine;
so do vegetables, and so do you.
Gardeners by the million who dur-
ing the war devoted their attention
to food production learned the value
| of sunshine both to gardens and to
, themselves, and came to the con-
/ clusion that over most of the coun-
| try both gardens and homes had
been too much shaded.
Gardenmg in the sun proved to
be delightful as well as healthful.
Natural suntan was obtained more
easily than by ia long trip to the
beach; and they were astonished by
the vigor of growth shown by flow-
ers in the sunny vegetable garden,
as compared with those in crowded
| beds and borders, competing with
the roots of trees and shrubs for
food, and limited to a few hours
daily of the life-giving sunshine.
This. experience is making a
change in many gardens, whose
owners are determined no longer to
be forest people, inquiring about
wish to grow, whether it is one of
the few subjects that do well in
the shade.
They are making changes: which
open their homes and gardens to
serve a definite purpose, either: of
every attractive flower which they}:
the sun, with shade only in care-
| fully. planned places, where it will
1- MARIGOLD.
CARNATION FLOWE
2-MARIGOLD-
SINGLE FRENCH.
3 NASTURTIUM-
Fe ALYSSUM
design, or function. There
ing to equal the shade of
when one is resting after -
exercise in the sun; but t
not be appreciated where
so many trees no Sunshine
etrate their canopy,
Even about the house, sur
needed. To reduce the nui
trees and shrubs and to in
color nto front yard plantii
nual flowers may be plantec
low spring bulbs, which pro
first flowers of spring. Itb
planted deeply, they need
lifted each year; and.
nuals may be sown above
soon as the ground warms
The plan which accompa
article shows how to arr
attractive planting of mi
nasturtiums and alyssum__
of a terrace, and as a bor
walk. One of the tall, c
type marigolds is used
ground, with a single re
ety of dwarf habit in front
To border the walk, pl
nasturtiums, of the single.
ble tape, with alyssum, eit!
or violet next th walk.
turtiums. are yellow o
sum. violet queen - wil
La Killing Frost Sets.
Two key dates which govern gar-
den operations in the spring are:
|The date when all deep frost is out,
and the soil becomes dry enough
to spade; and the date after which
tender plants are reasonably safe
from frost.
Hardy plants, ~which are those
that stand light frosts without in-
jury, can be sown as soon as the
ground can be worked; and this
date is dependent more often upon
rainfall- than upon temperature.
Tender plants cannot be sown or
set out, until danger of frost is
over; and if they are started in-
doors, or ina hot-bed or cold frame,
the time to start them is from six
to eight weeks before the frost-proof
date.
Inquiry among gardeners in your
locality will establish the date
which is generally accepted as
frost-proof, The map which accom-
panies this article was prepared
from United States Department of
Agriculture weather reports, to
show the average date of the last
killing frost of spring in various
cities,
This average date is not 8 frost-
proof date, because just as there.
no average man, ein # no vi
age weather, vic
Average Date of Last Killing Frost for Principal Cities.
Department of Agriculture Weather Reports
of Chicago, tor aah,
ae es
ready for serious: gardening, ogee j
age date of the last frost
period of years is May sR ir
of those years ki tr
curred much later,
The latest frost on re
where is likely to be thirty
er than the average. There i;
some risk in gardening, anc
not be avoided, So garden
determine on a date some
between the average date of
frost, as given on the mz
the latest recorded frost, @
ty days later.
Inquiry in your locali
ably disclose that practice |
termined the reasonably
for setting out tender pla
Chicago it is May 15, splitt
difference between dl
date and the latest record
If you have any trouble fi
out for your own localit
the nearest weather bi
your gardening friends,
Hardy seeds may be so
doors with safety thirty day:
the averaye last frost inte
ed the frost is out-of the
and it is : stool we r
never W 3
eager van ee to
gee started. -
gtleed
mean Joss
- Wednesday, January: 15, 1947
AH Younger Girl
Canning Project
Winners Selected
Thirty 4-H club girls and six
home demonstration agents
have been selected to receive
awards for outstanding work in
th 4-H canning project for
younger girls, Mrs; Martha Har-
_ rison, assistant State 4-H club
eader for the Georgia Agricul-
tural Extension Service, an-
nounced recently. 3
_Four-H girls between the
ages of 10 and 14 who pertici-
ated in this project were judg-
don the basis of records show-
ing the quarts of foodstuffs
canned with and without as:
sistance and on exhibits of
tanned foods at community and
county fairs and. other meetings.
_ The project, designed to en-
- courage younger 4-H girls to
_take an active part in canning
for their families and utilizing
_ products grown on the farm, is
Sponsored by a large Georgia
sugar. refining concern (Savan-
nah Sugar Refining Co.), Mrs.
Harrison said.
District winners who will re-
ceive $25 U. S. Savings Bonds
are Lee Wheeler, Greene Coun-
Betty Langston, Spalding;
mmie Lou Murdock, Polk;
lary Joyce Story, Houston;
Enid Tanner, Montgomery.
- Home demonstration. agents
who will be awarded $25 Sav-
ngs Bonds for outstanding
ork in promoting the cann-
ing project for younger girly
are Miss Lizzie Buchan, Wash-
ngton County; Miss Frances
Lowe. Bibb; Miss Carole Jones,
Gook;. Miss Sue
manuel; Mrs, Kathleen Cars-
, DeKalb, and Mrs. Myrtie
ibley, Spalding. _
-Four-H club girls who will
eceive cash awards of $2.50
re Martha Davis, Hahcock
County; Imogene Duncan,
: Miriam Smith,
Jeanette | Holcomb,
Betty McGuire, Car-
roll; Betty Lumpkin, Muscogee;
-Areatha Ann Jones, DeKalb;
Lavenia Ann Herndon. Meri-
wether; Kathryn Phillips, Spal-
ding; Juanita Holmes, Pickens;.
Roberta Wheeler, DeKalb, and
Jo Anne Rowe, Meriwether.
_ Mary Ella Phelps, Mitchell;
Sylvia Jane Wood, Houston;
Betty Lucille Kovac, Houston;
Mae Hall, Bibb; Betty Jean
Wade, Crisp; Marjorie Ann
Sherrod, Thomas; Genia Mae
Council. Twiggs; Doris Floyd,
Twiggs; Doris Bennett, Glynn;
Mary Ellen Johns, Emanuel;
Katherine Cowart, Bryan, and
uby Harbin, McIntosh.
A. Wilcox County 4-H Club
boy, Harold Clinton Gibbs,
grew 65.5 bushels of corn on one
ei showing the farmers in
Wilcox county that by following
recommended practices the av-
grage corn yield in the county
@an be doubled.
linton was one of 47 club
embers in Wilcox County
jompeting in a corn production
tontest in 1946, Profit from the.
ne acre of corn Clinton pro-
uced amounted to $58.78, ac-
ording to County Agent W.,
Tillis,
Club members participating
1 the corn contest kept detailed
ecords of all expenses, in-
uding farm labor, mule labor
nd rent of land,
arieties of corn used in the
Evelyn Bozeman, Twiggs, and}.
Stanford, |
| Prolifie and
Has Something
New In Nuts
National Peanut Council News-
letter is of interest to Georgia
ae in the peanut-producing
elt:
-R, B. Jenkins, of Sumner,
Ga., who has been experi-
menting for two years with
Argentine peanuts, believes
that he has something that
may revolutionize peanut
From six peanut kernels that
Jenkins obtained enough to
plant a shori row this year,
This row produced a pack of
nuis about three times the
size of the Virginia Jumbo
and with three or four kernels
in each hull. Next year, Mr.
Jenkins plans to plant half an
acre with his peck of nuts
which produce vigorous vines
which spread over the ground
much like runners, The nuts
gtow wild in Argentina and
are used there for hog feed.
New Development
Steps Up Yields
Of Naval Stores
A few farmers scattered:
throughout the south Georgia
naval stores belt are - demon-
strating that applications of
sulphurie acid to pine trees to
stimulate the flow of gum is
no longer in the experimental
stage, but is a sound commercial
practice. ;
With slash pine a 40 percent |
solution of acid, and with long-
leaf a 60 percent solution, ap-
plied at the rate of one quart
per 1,000 trees for each treat-
ment, maintains the flow of
gum twice the normal length
of time.
. Also, according to Ray Shirley
naval stores specialist for the
Georgia Extension Service,
where a tree continues to yield
a supply of gum for six to seven
years when chipped once each
week ag is the usual practice
without acid, the same tree
yields gum more years when
acid is used because it is chip-
ped only half as often.
Introduced by the Southeast-
ern Forest Experiment Station,
Lake City, Fla., the practice of
stimulating the flow of gum
with acid was used to some ex-
tent during the war. When acid
is applied and trees are streak-
ed weekly, gum flow is increas-
ed 40 to 60 percent over nor-
mal production. When trees
are streaked every other week
and acid is applied, the gum
flow is about equal to that from
trees streaked each week with-
out the use of acids,
The Extension specialist
said that when acid is used it
is important to prevent * this
from getting into tins and
aprons and into the cups of
gum. He advised placing an
acid resistant cover over the
cups while spraying is in pro-
cess.
Another handicap in the use
of acid has been the lack of a
satisfactory spry gun for, ap-
plying it. Mr. Shirley pointed
out, however, that a new type
Jead container in the form of
a spray gun has been made and
this gun is acid resistant and
withstands rough handling.
This new type spray gun should
be available at an early date
from naval stores equipment
dealers,
Indiana Yellow, Early Dent
and one hybrid, Florida W-1.
Clinton Gibbs used Whatleys
fertilized. with
500 pounds of 2-112-6 per acre
and 150 pounds of nitrate of
test included Whatleys Pro-
White Dent, Woods White,
_| MEATS;
The following story appearing
in the December issue of the
growing in South Geovgia, |.
he planted last year, Mr,
MISCELLANEOUS _
FOR SALE.
WALNUTS AND WALNUT
| 1946 crop black
free of hulls, $3.00 bu
shipping chgs. Mrs,
Harris, Sandersville, R
lb. Prompt shipment,
Black Walnu
Dockery, Dahlo
1.
J.
nega, Rt. 1.
Mason, Moreland,
BUTTER:
Fresh Country Butter, 65c lb:
Add postage. Mrs, Herbert. E,
Richardson, Bowdon, Rt, 1,
3 lbs. fresh County - Butter
wkly, 65c lb. PP> Mrs. J, A.
Ellis, Waco, Rt. 2, Box 34.
CRACKLINS:
Cracklin, ground
5 Ibs. per bucket, $1.75; Lard
in lots of 40 lbs, per can, 50c,
lb. Guar. Express, Mrs, arley
T. Carter, Loganville, Rt. 1,
Choicest fresh Cracklings, 3
Ibs, $1.00. Add postage, Mrs.
H. a Bivens, Powder Springs,
or unground
Rt
EGGS:
Jersey White Giant Eggs, se-
lected from Range flock, $2.50
setting. Prepaid. Promptness
guar. Moline M; Landrum,
Adairsville, Rt, 3,
Eggs from my Nat'l laying
contest hens, records 200-249,
30c ea; 250-303, 45 ea. Sire
by ROP males 300 egg ped.
Pullorum clean. J, L. Whitten,
Lithonia,
FEATHERS:
Several lbs. Goose Feathers
for sale, reasonable. Mrs, Fan-
nie P. Lanier, Metter. .
GOURDS:
500 gourds, from 8-30 in, in
cir. $50.00 for lot; FOB. N.
W. McLeod, Cuthbert.
HERBS AND ROOTS:
Garlie Bulbs, large, 40 doz;
Med., 30c; Hoarhound, clumps
35c; Peppermint, 35 doz;
Watercress, 60c doz, bunches;
shade dried Sage, 30e cup. Mrs.
J. M, Hall, Calhount, Rt. 1.
Yellow Queen of the Meadow
Sassafras Roots and Wild Cher-
ry Bark, 30 1b; Catnip, Hore-
hound, Peppermint plants, 40c
doz. Mrs. G. C. Hester, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.
State Officers
Will Now Issue
Warning Tickets
All State Highway Patrolmen,
State Foresters and State Fire
Wardens were issued books of
summonses his week for use in
the current forest fire preven-
tion campaign undertaken by
th Georgia Department
Forestry.
Its a brand new kind of sum-
mons, however. It requires the
recipient to appear before the
Court of Posterity to answer to
the charge of endangering the
states mighty timber resources,
Actually merely a warning
ticket, the summons will be
served by State patrolmen on
motorists _observed throwing
lighted cigarettes or cigars
from their cars and by State
Forestry officials upon those
observed being careless with
the use of fire in or near wood-
jands. :
The ticket is signed jointly
by State Forestry Director J.
M. Tinker and Major W. E.
Spence, director of the State
Department of Safety, ._
It is unique in his state and is
part of the general drive by
the Department of Forstry to
point the need for a sate-wide
Soda as a side dressing.
Sa eo | F
walnuts, |
Add
Ivy N.
of |-
~) ) MARKET BULLETIN:
a Ne reece
STV ND
DE t
PAGE FIVE
Please check your n
copy of the Bulletin, If it
the unnecessary one may
for regular weekly copies
issue, please wsite direct
~ IMPORTANT
-way, please let us know or if you are getting two.
copies at either one or more addresses, advise so that
and always in giving notice of CHANGE OF AD-
DRESS, please give both the NEW and the OLD AD-
A} DRESS; When desiring to
t Meats, $1.00} |
ame and address on your :
is not CORRECT in every
be taken off the list:
coe
be put on our Malling List
, and for any copy of any
to: The Market Bulletin,
aalacs Walnut Meats, 40c|| 222 State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Root, 36 ine wee pes, welow|| "THANK YOU FOR YOUR CAREFUL ATTEN-
ler, Ellijay, Rt, 3. || TION AND COOPERATION to the above request.
ARTICHOKES: KE. H.
100. bu: i .
Hokes, "86, 1b; 0 Ihe ele
508 or more, 7e Ib. FOB.) |= MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS ;
No ord i
uiries ans, No checks |... FOR SALE FOR SALE
Print, 45 ea, White 25c ea
No checks. No stamps.
postage.. G. T. Brown,
Ground, Rt, 1.
Print Feed Sacks, 100 lb.
eap., washed, free of holes, 3
alike, 35c ea. Cash or MO. Add
postage. Dennis Roper, Gain-
esville, Rt. 1,
ARTICHOKES:
Imp. White Artichokes, 8c
lb. 50 lbs. or less, 7e lb. 100 Ibs,
No less 25 lbs. sold. FOB. No
checks. E, F. Mason, Moreland.
BUTTER:
Fresh country butter, . 70c
lb. postpaid, MO. Mrs. J. E.
Hope; Gainesville, Rt. 1.
EGGS:
Mammoth Black or Buff Mi-
norca eggs. All letters ans.
J. D. McDonald, Milledgeville,
701 Wayne St.
GOURDS:
Small striped, Nest-egg, and
small round gourds, 5c, darning
10c ea. Mrs. John Weaver,
Temple.
HERBS AND ROOTS:
Red Sassafras, Yellow, Bear-
foot, colts foot, spice wood,
sweet gum, Queen of Meadow,
Yellow Dock, Willow Root,
Birdock, Snake, Blood Root,
30c Ib. Exc. for sacks. Virnie
Stover, Pisgah. :
PEANUTS AND PECANS:
Certified .GFA (Spanish
type) Peanut Seed, yields up
to 3800 lbs. to acre. Ray Tay-
lor, Tifton, Rt. 1.
About 30 lbs. Stuarts and 50
Ibs. Schlys, del, at 45c lb. Mrs,
H, L. Williams, Baxley,
Large Red Peanuts, 3 and 4
in pod, thresher run, 16 Ib. in
50 Ib. lots. Cash. G. E. Douthit,
Sylvester, Rt, 3,
POTATOES:
10 tons grade PR Potatoes,
4e lb. to trucks only. John B.
Pope, Fitzgerald.
1200 bu. nice PR Potatoes,
$1.50 bu. K. I. Helmey, Marlow.
TOBACCO:
Good chewing tobacco, 10
twists $1.00; Sage, 2 cups, 25c;
Sage plants, foxgrapes, Rolston
Apple, gooseberry, red. cherry,
hazelnut, 3 trees, 30c, Exc. for
print sacks, R. Stover,
Pisgah.
WALNUTS AND WALNUT
MEATS:
Nice, black walnut meats, 90c
lb; mix. col. tender cornfield
beans, 50c Ib; Dry Sage, 50c
qt. Well packed; rooted sage
6, 50c. Mrs. Willie Gtrindle,
Dahdllonega, Rt. 1.
Oily walnut meats, $1.00 pt.
horseradish, comfrey, calamus,
50c doz; balm, field multiply-
ing strawberry, June baring,
Mtn. huchelberry, 25c doz. Mrs.
Presley Fowler, Diamond.
Sev. bu, black walnuts, not
hulled, nice and dry, 1946 crop,
$1.25 bu, J. H. Phillips, Gay.
Catnip, Hoarhound, Pepper-
mint, Wild Cherry Bark, 30
lb. Martha White, Dahlonega,
Rt. 1, Box 37.
MEATS (FRESH and CURED:
18% lbs, sugar cured hick-
ory: smoked shoulder, yr. old
$9.50. Del. to 8rd zone. P. W.
Harrison, Holcyondale.
- Guar. Oakwood Smoked Meat
Ham, 75c 1b; Side, 65 1b. Shoul-
ders, 55 lb. COD. E. C, Hurst,
Ball
forest fire protection system,
100 lb. cap Feed Sacks,
Add
Print sacks, 100 Ib. cap, 3 for
$1.00. PP. Mrs. Frank Gober,
Dougherty.
Print sacks, washed, free of
holes and mildw, 45c ea. PP.
ee Wetherford, Gainesville,
a
White Feed sacks, 23c ea;
Print sacks, 40 PP. Mrs, Irene
Pierce, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
Print feed sacks, washed, 40c
ea. Prompt shipment. No COD
or checks: Mrs. H. W. Sum-
merour, Gainesville, Rt, 2.
SACKS: Sacks, 100 lb. cap.,
Print, 3, $1.35; 6, $2.45; $4.75
doz; $37.50 C. Prepaid by mail;
White, 25 ea. PP. No COD.
No checks. Major Crow, Gaines- ~
ville, RFD 1.
Print sacks, free of holes, 40
ea; White, 25c ea. Mrs. Major
Crow, Gainesville, RFD 2. (Not
same family as Major Crow).
Print sack, free of holes and
mildew, 45e ea. No COD. Mrs.
woe Robinson, Gainesville,
Print feed sacks, free of holes,
and mildew, 45 ea. No COD.
gepold Snow, Gainesville, RFD
Print sacks, 100
ea. PP. Fr
Ville, Rt. 1.
Print sacks, washed, 40c ea,
Ee Ray Burtz, Gainesville, Rt,
Ib. cap., 40c
Smith, Gaines-
200 Burlap sacks, 3c ea. You
pay freignt. P. Pulliam, Toccoa,
706 Broad street.
All kinds print sacks, washed
and ironed, 40c ea. Mrs. J. W.
Thomas, Gainesville, Rt. 9.
Print sacks, 100 ib, cap.,
washed, ironed, 40c ea. Miss
Ruby Corn, Cumming, Rt. 3.
Print bags, washed, free of
mildew or holes, 40c ea., or 35
ea. in 100 Ib. lots. Mrs, EB. 1,
Tatum, Dawsonville, Rt, 2.
Print sacks, raveled, washed,
free of holes, 35c ea. Sample on
request. Send stamped envelope
ee Will J. Hall, Dawsonville,
100 Ib. cap,, print sacks, 30
ea. Add postage. L. C, Cole:
man, Flowery Branch, Rt. 3.
Print sacks, 100 Ib. cap., wash
ed and ironed, 38 ea. Del. J,
B. Alexander, Cornelia.
Print Feed Sacks, 100 Ib, cap.
40c ea. Cash or MO. Add post-
age. Mrs. A. E. Nix, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 5.
Print Feed Sacks, washed
and ironed, free of holes, 40c
ea. Odd postage. Mrs. Roy
Holtzclaw, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Print Sacks, washer, free of
holes, 35 ea; White Sackes,
washed free of letters and holes
25 ea, Mrs. J. W. Peck, Gain-
esville, Rt. 8.
Smooth Print Sacks, 40c ea;
Coarse Woven Print Sacks, 30c
ea. All good cond., washed,
starched, ironed. Mrs. KE. L.
Kennemore, Alpharetta, Rt. 1,
Nice Print Sacks, 100 Ib. cap.
free of holes, stain or mildew,
3 alike, $1.00, Add postage.
Cash or MO. Miss Elsie Smith,
Cumming, Rt. 5.
Print Feed Sacks, washed
and ironed, free of holes, 3, $1.
PP. Cash. Mrs. W. S. McDan-
jel, Cumming, Rt. 2.
Black walnut meats, Red Hot
Pepper, nice shade curd sage,
all $1.00 1b; shade cure hoar-
hound, 50 Ib. Postpaid. Mrs,
Meigs.
Nathan Weatherby, Ball Ground
Ra 4 as
se et cee
WANTED |
Exe. red or white pest on-
fons for White or Print Sacks,
100 Ib. cap. Ea, pay postage.
Mrs. S. J. Walker, Dallas, Rt.
SEED WANTED: es
Want a few Moon and Star
Watermelon seed. S. A. Thomp-
gon, Quitman, Rt. 2,
Want 1,000 lbs. Sericea Les-
eza seed. H. M. Taylor,
- Douglasville.
Want few hundred Ibs. Seri-
ea and 1-2 tons Kobe Lespe-
ceza seed, some Oat Straw,
Hay and Ear Corn in shuck, all
del. to my farm, mi.
Jonesboro, Hwy. 54 Address:
L. Jackson, Sr., Aitlanta,
1368 Ponce de Leon Ave. NE.
SEED CANE WANTED:
Want some Seed Cane. Give
: eee. Dr. G. W. Heriot,
avannah, 7 W, Jones St.
SUGAR CANE WANTED:
Want some old washioned
Green Sugar Cane for planting,
also Certified PR Sweet pota-
toes for bedding. A. J. Adams,
Chula, Rt. 1..
SEED WANTED: Want 20
bu. Yellow Crowder and 20 bu.
Field peas, the kind best for
feed, and 20 bu. pure Purple
Skin Porto Rica Sweet Pota-
toes. Want potatoes last wk. in
Jan. E. E. Hi'l, Columbus, 221
10th Street. :
_ Want Pea Seed known as
Sunptuous. Must be pure and
good cond. Quote price. E. W.
Reid, Conyers, Rt. 2, Bex 27.
POTATOES WANTED: Want
21-22 bu. Sweet potatoes. Can
use field tun. Advise. Will
come after and haul away.
James Barnes, Augusta, 1320
Walton Way.
MISCELLAENOUS
FOR SALE
SAGE: Good Leaf sage, hand
picked, shade dried, $1 Ib; 5-10
ibs., 90c 1b; Ground, $1.50 Ib;
Dried Catnip leaves, $1.25 lb.
25c and 50c orders filled. Vir-
gil Keith, Alvaton.
Fresh ground Sage, $1.50 1b;
$1-45 1b; 10 lbs, $1.40 lb. MO
or cash. Aldora Keith, Gay, Rt.
1.
_ Ground Sage, 15c cup; Sage
Seed, 10c tbl. PP. Mrs. Joel C.
Elliott, Marietta, Rt. 2.
1946 Sage, hand gathered,
shade dried, $1; 3 lbs. up, 90
lb; Sundried Apples, peeled and
cored, 60 1b; 5 Ibs. up, 50c Ib.
Mrs. Ruby Brown, Toccoa, Rt. 2.
_ Hand gathered, shade dried
Sage, $1. 1b; 3 lbs. up, 90c lb;
Sundried apples, cored, peeled,
60c 1b; 5 lbs. up, 50 lb; Black
Wa'nuts, 4 lbs., $1. Mrs. Claude
Edmonds, Toccoa, Rt. 2, Box
143.
Home cured, hand _ picked
sage, ground, $1 1b. My home.
-- Mariah Brown, Richland, Rt. 3,
Box 48. 2
Dry sage, $1 1b; Shallot onions
25c C; Peanuts,
PP. Myrtle Pace, Temple, Rt. 1.
WALNUTS: 1946 crop Black
Wainuts, hulled and dried, $2
bu. Exp. col. Cash or MO. No
checks. Dewey Gulledge, Ab-
beville, Rt. 1, Box 70.
SACKS: Printed feed sacks,
washed, ironed, free of hols,
mildew, 40c ea. No checks.
Ethel Crowe, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
Print feed sacks, 40c ea. No
COD. Mrs. Nee! Payne, Canton,
prute (3:
Print sacks, washed, 40c ea.
Mrs. L. C. Jones, Cumming, Rt.
tia
Print Feed sacks, 100 lb. cap., |
washed, 25c ea. Mrs. Earley .
Echols, Cumming, Rt. 4.
Print. chicken feed
washed, ironed, 35c ea.
home. Mrs. Vernie Harris, Cum-
ming, Rt. 4.
:-Print. sacks,
starched, ironed, 40c ea. No
-ehecks or stamps. All PP. Mrs.
W. N. Mullinax, Alpharetta, Rt.
ae
Print sacks, 10 Olb. cap., free
of holes, mildew, 35c ea. No
checks or COD. Mrs. Gordon
Kemp, Murrayville.
10 Ibs., $1.40
es |
sacks, |
My | my barn on hwy,., 1 mi. E. York-
clean, no_ holes, |
WANTED
\
BEES WANTED:
Bees in old fashion bo:
hives. Advise fully. Will vome
after at once and pay cash.
- L. Hallman, Nahunta, Box
EGGS WANTED:
_ Exe, 15 eggs of Dark Cornish
Game or Bantam (Show Stock)
for same No. eggs from f-
lowing bantams: BB Red Gan.
Golden or Silver Seabright:,
or ahy rare bantams. W. P.
Franklin, Harlem.
FEATHERS WANTED:
Want good duck feathers at
best price. Mrs. James Pearson,
Coosa, Re. lL
Want good feathers. Advise.
Mrs. J. M, Dupree, Byrom-
ville, Rt. 1.
PECAN TREES WANTED:
Want 6 true to name Pecan
Trees of med. size. Advise.
Mrs. R. G. Braselton, Braselton.
SACKS WANTED:
Want print and white 100 Jb.
cap. feed sacks, not washed,
Exc. strawberry and cabbage
plants. Write: Mrs. P. R. Arn-
old, Benevolence.
Exc. 100 Klondike Strawber-
ry Plants for 3 print sacks
alike. Ea. pay postage. Mrs.
Laz Wiggins, Buena Vista, Rt.
Want striped Print Sacks.
Advise. Mrs. J. N. Harrell, El-
laville.
SEED WANTED:
Want some _ seed Velvet
Beans, Osceola and 90-day. of
high germination. Advise. T.
E. Oden, Blashear, Box 8.
Want 20 bu. Field Peas,
200 Ibs, Sorghum Cane Seed,
500 lbs. Kobe Lespedeza. Quote
price your station, advising
kind and cond. J. T. Mitchell,
Dunwoody.
Want 30 bu. Red Skin PR
Sweet Potatoes for seed at
ur
P. Puckett, Jesup. ;
Want 1 bu, sound 90-Day
Velvet Beans. Advise. Mrs. J.
M. Bobo, Hartwell. ;
Want 1 or 2 bu. Bunch Vel-
| Lawrenceville, Rt. 2.
Want 100 lbs. ea, Korean and
Kobe Lespedeza Seed, sacked
for shipment by freight. John
. Loch, Stone Mountain, Rt.
iG
TOBACCO WANTED:
Want 2 lbs. tobacco in the
leaf, Mrs. Tom Cowart, Ring-
COTTON SEED WANTED:
Want Summerours cotton-
seed, pure and kept pure and
siraight at Gin. Advise. J. V
McClure, Acworth, Rt. 1.
PEANUTS WANTED:
Want 3 bu. old fashioned
runner peanuts, -in hull, for
seed, at once. D. A. Ard, Warm
Springs, Rt. 1.
PLANTS WANTED:
Want 100 Raspberry plants.
State var. size, price. Claude
Eubank, Smyrna.
ROOTS, BARK AND HERBS
WANTED:
Want few lbs, Yellow Willow
Root bark, also other
and bark. Advise. J. E. Roberts,
Decatur, 732 Sycamore Dr.
SACKS WANTED:
Exc. Ged Everbearing Straw-
berry plants at $2.50 M. Mrs.
M. Conner, Warner Robins, 818
MeArthur,
Want 100 or more unwashed,
100 tb. ap. Print Sacks. Mrs.
\J. E, Robinson, Nicholls, Rt. 1.
|
|
CATTLE FOR SALE
Heifer calf, 3 mos. old, $10 at
| ville. R. M. Ethridge, Dallas,
Rt.
4,
3, Jersey-Guernsey Springers,
| March-April Sell but prefer exc.
| for Heifer calves, 8-12 mos, old,
|
|
| nearby. Some, see. Do not
write. R. P.. Steinheimer,
Brooks. :
3 Fresh Cows and 4 Spring-
ers for sale. Robert Dial, Lo-
ganville. :
once. Must be Govt. insp. L-
vet Beans. W. E. Holcombe,,| 1
roots |.
Want Print and White Sacks.
ea ee
_ MISCELLANEOUS | MISCELLANEOUS.
Reg. Hereford Cows, bred and
open Heifer Calves and young
bulls sold individually or en-
tire herd. H. A. Chamberlain,
Austell, Rt. 2 Silver Creek
Ranch.
4 Reg. four yr. old Horned
Hereford Cows, 6 mos. old Heif-
er Calf at side, $625.00. Farm
located 1 mi. W. Bishop. J. W.
Smith, Bishop.
Ped. Hereford bull, fine cond.,
$300 my farm. 1% mi. Lilburn.
H. J. Haas, Atlanta, Box 2090.
Jersey cow with 2nd calf 1
wk. old. J. B. Hodges, Guyton.
Red Jersey milch cow with 6
mos. old male nd calf, $75.00
cash. Mrs. L. S. Lively, Vidalia,
507 Main street.
Purebred Guernsey bull, 7
yrs. old, ready for service, $75.
G. Y. Tygart, Nashville.
2 reg. milking Shorthorn bull
calves, 6 mes. old, 400 lbs; few
young , cows, 1,400 lbs, some
springing and 3 with young
calves. Calvs priced $100 and
up. George Larsen, Desoto.
_ Extra large Holstein cow, 3rd
calf, now milling, giving lots
milk, $140. Write. D. C. Me-
Gahee, Townsend, RFD 2.
HOGS FOR SALE
PY et REY
ders to be del. around Feb. Ist.
A. L. Moss, Lula, Rt. 2. :
SPC, 3 yrs. Brood sow, reg.,
also\2 ea. males and females, 11
wks. old, reg. buyers name, $25
ea. George E. Watkins, Griffin,
Rt. A. es
50 PC purebred 10: wks. old
pigs, $12.50 ea. M: T. Sanders,
Commerce.
One OIC thoroughbred sow,
yr. old last Dec.,. bring 2nd.. lit-
ter of pigs Ist. of March, about
250 Ibs., $65 my home. Samie
Willis, Lavonia, Rt. 1.
lbs., $15. Fred Willis, Lavonia,
Rt. 1. ;
40 shoats OIC-SPC cross for
sale. R. P. Rowe, Moreland, Rt.
25 good OIC pigs, ready after
Jan. 20, $10 and $12.50 ea. W.
W. Sampler, Ramhurst.
_8 Black African Guinea pigs,
8 wks. old, $12.50 ea. Mrs. Ed
Bledsoe, Carrollton.
Nice SPC sow, good disposi-
tion, with 8 pigs, 2 mos. old,
dan 28, wt. 200 lbs. For quick
sale. Mrs. Pearl Smoak; War-
wick. :
Bred Duroc Sows and Gilts,
for Apr. litters, Dams _ select-
led from best Duroc Herds in
corn belt, several cross mat-
ings of Hyland Lucky and Seco
Lo Down. Robert W. Wilson,
McBean, Care Wilson Acres.
2 good sows, bred Sept, 23
to White OIC Male and 2 good
White Shoats, about 250 lbs.
Bargain. Ralph Danger, Wood-
stock.
2 Duroc and PC eross Gilts,
from 15 pig litter, about 60-75
lbs., $20 ea. Mrs.) M. F. Gaddis,
Quitman, Box 427.
Cherry Blocky Boars, exc.
blood jines and reg. 442 mos. old
$30.00 ea. S. C. Noland, At-
lanta, 161 Spring St. N. W.
2 OIC Gilt Shoats, 50-60 lbs.
$15.00 ea. My place. Wont ship.
Froy Fowler, Alphareita, Rt. 1.
Purebred PC Sow, yr._ old,
$45.00, 7 pigs farrowed Nov.
28, 1946, $10.00 ea. All or any.
Raymond Robinson, Greenville.
Cherry Red, reg. blocky, Du-
roe Pigs, some related, life
treatment against holera, $20
up. Male ready for light service.
H. L. Williams, Baxley.
6 SPC Boars, dbl. treated for
cholera, farrowed Oct. _ 10,
1946, reg. in buyers name,
reasonable. Willk ship. Fran
Whitehead, Bogart.
Thoroughbred OIC Male Pigs,
8-12 wks. old, $25.00 ea. ship-
ped and reg. in buyers name.
Dan Helms, Buena Vista.
Reg. OIC Pigs, from Clear-
wide Pearl, Sited by Ogdens
Model, direct from Silver Brook
Farm, $25.00 ea. Kermit B. Gr
gan, Panetta, Rt. 4 Box
Essex pigs. Now booking or-.
One OIC shoat, wt. around 53} =
land, Rt. 1.
C. B. Hadley, Chipley, Rt. 1.
15 pigs, 2 mos. old, $5 ea. My
barn.
Rt. 2,
-OIC Pigs, imp. short nose
blocky type, 8 wks. old; reg. in
buyers name, $25.00 ea. Fur-
nish male and female unrelated, | L
for small nice
Pony. Mrs. Hel
inoculated and ready to_ ship.
WwW. H, Nix, Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
1% OIC Pigs for sale Jan. 27;
Also mule and some calves.
Mrs.-Norman Eller, Morganton.
_ 8 mos. old blocky Duroc
Pigs, 1 male, 2 females
in buyers name, $25.00 ea.
Floyd Smith, Harrison,|-
reg. |
Harvey C. Jordan, Buena Vista.| j5 7.
Reg. OIC 8 wks. old pigs for}
preeders, papers furnished, $20
ea. at my place. T. W. Morrison,
Winterville, Box 48. Phone 1.
SPC. 2*yr, old sow, $55.00
200 lb. gilt, $40.00. Both Reg. |-
and bred to SPC boar; 18 mos.|
old, Reg. boar, $40.00; 6
male and female pigs, 14 wks.
ea.
ea. :
_ Extra choice litter of 10 fieshy |
type, Reg. Duroc pigs, 4 males,
6 females, 8 wks. old Jan. 1., $20
ea. crated. Ernest P. Carter,
Baxley. - seat
12 OIC and BPC cross pigs,|
farrowed Nov. 22, $10 ea. my
farm, at 8-10 wks. old. Crate and
ship at 12 ea. K. D. Sanders,
Eatonton, Rt. 2. - ;
4 shoats, 45 or 50 lbs. each and
8 pigs for sale, reasonable. Trade |
for corn or grain. E. F. Thomv-
old, sub. to reg. $10.00-$12.50/ _
vendre, $100.0
of, Gard
Pr. white
yr. old, $4.
man Park, Rt.
1 buck, $1.5
H. Maule
son, Farmington, Rt. 2, Box 151.| 5 3.
_ Imp. Blocky type OIC pigs,
in buyers name, $22 ea. Ready} }
to ship Jan. 28. Treated and
crated. J. H. Roquemore, Amer-
ieus, RFD 2. . Ube
White OIC hog, about 125 lbs
ea., $25 ea; also other farm
items for sale. Come, see. Rome}
and Calhoun Hwy. Robert Ben-
heit, Plainville, Ris le. :
HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE
Fine Saddle- Horse, 1200 lbs.
9 yrs. old, exc, cond., gentle,
ped. and
woolers. M
ville.
"| $15.00 for lot.
janta, 161 Wa
good natured, sure of foot. L.| 1
P. Puckett, Jesup, Phone 94: |
2 large mules, 2H wagon,
cheap for- quick sale; Also 100
bu. corn. A. E. Pate, Sr.,
Nice 5 gaited saddle horse,
10 yrs. old, very gentle, $150.00}
FOB. Harry S. Petty, Dawson.
Pr. Mules, 7 yrs. old, around
2300 Ibs. and 2H wagon, 3%
mi, Sycamore. F. A. Camp, Syc._
amore, Rt. 1. :
Pr. smooth mouth mare
mules, over 1100 lbs. $190.00
or $100.00 ea; Bay 5 gaited
gelding, about 12 yrs. old, 900!
Jbs., $75.00. A=1 cond. and will
work anywhere. M. L. Shealy,
Oglethorpe. ; ; :
Slightly crippled mule for
part time farming, $35.00 or
trade for farm equipment such
aS spike harrow, Gee-Whiz,
1H disc harrows, etc. W. R.
Briggs, Newnan, Rt. 2, }
2 Black Mare Mules, 1100-
1200 lbs., ages 6-11 yrs., and 2
mare horse colts, almost iden-
tical in size and same color,
1000 lbs, 2 yr. olds. Reasonable.
Some mules for sale reason-
able. S. D. Hartison, Kathleen.
2 good mules,.sell together or
separate. C. B. Nix, Daniels-
ville. : :
2 good mare mules, good size,
work anywhere. H. J. Hines,
Sharpsburg. iv
Blue mare mule, good worke:,
8-9 yrs. old, 1,300 lbs., $225.00.
Mrs. J. H. Trice, Barnesville.
Eitan de
Nice mare, 214 yrs. old, broke
to plow; no plug, in good shape,
$125. P. A. Phillips, Palmetto.
Good, gentle, mare (horse,)
about 1,000 Ibs, $100 or exe. for
good milch:cew. Johnnie Stev-
ens, Douglas, Rt. 3.
_ Black Mare Mule, about
1000 lbs. 6 yrs. old, gentle,
work anywhere, cheap for cash
A. L. Johnson, Byron, Rt. 2
More- |-
2 Tog Milk
Saanan Buck
At Stud: Reg.
Chikaming Coli
Bucks. Do
if necessary.
Decatur, 3200
Re Cre 58eee
Purebred
Tog, young B
pe youn:
1 gal. Dam,
name. J, s
boro.
3 heavy. m:
all to freshen
but not reg. |
ple.
86.
Saanan Doe,
freshen in 3
does to fres
young Saanan
pers; Also wan'
hog 3-6 mos. 0!
son, Douglas, Rt.
a ae
ing 4 qts. at my }
Buchanan. Hoyt.
anan, Rt. 2.
Rock Alpine;
Nubians, from
6 yr. old Black Mare M
1000 lbs. for sale at _m
3% mi, N.
Douglasville. T
ule, |
farm
Guinea Bull, large
e e;/ Also want
7 Jersey col-
ok Guinea Pig, stay-
8 awks. old, Feb,
ise H. P. Boswell,
|
e old fashion little
ebred Black African
sor Pigs, Advise.
arksdale, Milner.
ZW Buck Rabbit, yr.
-* particulars. i
ochelle, Rt, 2.
Or
The following telegram. to the Memphis Cotton
Trade Journal replying to a telegram from them. iy
self-explanatory:
NIGHT LETTER. .
Atlanta, Georgia, D
Seton Ross, Managing Editor,
Cotton Trade Journal,
Memphis, Tennessee. (
Received your wire asking following two questions:
_1. Unless import barriers reduced, where would
foreign countries obtain means buying U. S. Exports.
cotton particularly? gee eas
: 2. Lh Ue Se ataritts high, wont foreign countries
bar imports U, S. Cotton through prohibitive tariffs?,
Answering Government records disclose that
in the five-year period immediately before the out-
cember 30, 1946.
\NS; 1 trio Blue
ay hatch, $4; 2
.19; 2 trios W. Leg-
hatch, $3.75 per trio.
of Silkie Bantams.
Black tail,
Partridge
ins. W..O, Thomas,
East 40th.
Bantam purebred
50 ea, Will ship.
, Stone Mountain,
2 fine Golden
tam roosters, $1.00
tock rooster, 50c;.
aveler pure pit
Randall Grif-
. H. Holsom-
, 802 So. Harris
S: Fine, large
ch hatch roost-
_ Buff Minorca
0 ea; eggs,
C.-R. Sorrells,
(HITE AND OTH-
B. R. hens, now
C. L, Ben-
HE AND OTHER
White Rock
id-in good cond.
L 1 rooster same
00, Mrs. Gee Shan-
ks, 2% yrs. and
-lbs. ea. Both
ood spurs, $7.90.
_ express. Jasse
diton, Rt,
ames, 10 stags,
rish, Gray, Blue
Roundhead,
e, also about 200
. Sammy = E.
34, 102 Rooker
e Dark Cornish,
ooster, $5.00; 4
Pe tOR, Service,
; Eggs, $1.50
iy
$6.50
kes, Sylvester.
pa,| old, $1.50 ea. for lot. FOB John
White and|-
-|nish, pure and large type, $10
break of the war, under operation of reciprocal, trade
agreements, agricultural exports declined almost in
toto. 4 : : :
. Imports of agricultural products increased approx-
imately one and three quarter billion dollars per annum.
/ Exports of American industrial products increased
: sot me
approximately one and three quarter billion dollars
per annum. Agriculture lost all that industry gained.
This makes American agriculture sustain payments
for all exports of all industrial products...
: Foreign buyers of American industrial products
therefore get their dollars out of American agriculture.
All real friends of agriculture vehemently resent this.
America does not*now nor will in the future produce
more cotton than domestic requirements if imports of
foreign substitutes are excluded by high tariffs,
Under reciprocal trade agreements in five
period before the war the U. S, imported the equiva-
lent of thirty-three million bales of cotton in the form
of cotton, cotton manufacures, jute, rayon, and other
cotton substitutes.
Most pulpwood for rayon manufacturing is im-
ported. : :
With high protective tariffs America would pro-
duce a very small exportable surplus,
It is of small moment to American agriculture
what other countries do with regards to tariffs,
Likewise, it is of small moment to American in-
dustry because the agricultural states are the main
market of American industry. Whatever market Am-
-year
*}erican industry gains in foreign countries it will more
.'than lose in the agricultur
al states on account of agyri-
cultural imports destroying the buying power of agri-
cultural. states.
America has a well balanced economy and only
needs to do a limited amount. of foreign commerce.
Nobody can profit by trading only for the sake of
trading in foreign commerce. Foreign trade is in the
long run a matter of barter. We must accept goods for
goods. Therefore our trading must be limited to things
that we ned and we do not need agricultural products
which we can or should produce for ourselves,
Study of government figures shows beyond doubt
that forty-three -billion dollars of imports from 1919
to 1929 caused our economic and financial collapse as
well as the army of unemployed factory and industrial]
workers. We do not want a repetition of this. There-
fore, I am unalterably opposed to these so-called re-
ciprocal trade agreements.
: TOM LINDER, :
Commissioner of Agriculture,
POULTRY FOR SALE POULTRY FOR SALE
CORNISH, GAMES, GIANTS:
: ; LEGHORNS: 60 best grade
50 White Giant AAA April
t W. L. March pullets, now lay-
pullets, from. Linstrom, be- ing, $2 ea; cheaper in large lots.
ginning to lay, $2.50 ea, FOB.| Mrs: Travis Haines, Forest Park,
E. M. Stephenson, Summerville.| Rt. 1. : :
Several nice Pit Game
Cocks and Stags to sell at once.
R. E. Pate, Avera.
25 real Pit Game Cocks, 8 to
24 mos. old, 4 to 7 Ibs. wt.,
Warhorse and Greys, $5.00 and
$6.00 ea. Guar, good as the
best. G. M, Walden, Gibson, Rt.
2 ;
400 Eng. W. L. pullets, best
grade, no. culls, $2.00 ea. FOB.
J. B. McLedd, Valdosta, Rt. 3.
15 W. L. 4-A grade, April hens
and 2 roosters, $40.00 or trade
for OIC gilt for breeding. 1 mi.
No. Burwell, Mrs. Ethel Motes,
Bowdon, Rt. 2.
35 large type 4-A grade W.
L. March 1946 hens and 20 AAA
W. L. April 1945 hatch, no culls,
$90.00 or $1.75 ea. Come after
or send crates. Mrs. J. W.
Buchan, Ambrose.
MINORCAS:
Mammoth Black and Buff
-|Minorea baby chicks from pull-
orum tested flocks. Also eggs.
All inquiries ans. J. D, Mce-
Donald, Milledgeville, 701 N.
Wayne St.
MISCELLANEOUS CHICK-
ENS: Crested Black Polish,
Indian, Mohawk str., Cornish,
Papes. Black Minorca, Brown
Leghorn, Brahmas, all pure-
bred, large type. Mrs. Helen R.
Traveler brood cock and 2
hens, .$12.00; 1 Black Breast-
ed Red Stag and 2 hens, $10.
C. H. Baldwin, Atlanta, Rt. 8,
Box 589. j
2 ea. 2 yr, old roosters, Cor-
nish and N. H. Red, also 3-Cor-
nish and 2 Red, March hatch,
$2.00 ea. at my place. Mrs. N
E. Harrell, Alma.
Trio White Laced Red Cor-
Money order. Mrs. J
Martin, Rt. 1.
100 large W. L. laying hens,
14 mos. old, $1.75 ea. for lot; 50
Everlay Brown L. about 16 mos.
oS: Harron,
' Iphone No. 3196,
PsA POULTRY FOR SALE
MISCELLANEO
| friers, ready Feb. 1. Some ready
.| will .exchange
i
a PAGE SEVEN
POULTRY FOR SALE *
US: EHICKENS
Broilers and Friers:. Wyan-
dottes, Rock cross, fat, 2 lb, $1;
2%, $1.25; 3 lb., $1.50 ea. Mrs.
G. L. Carver, Macon, 796 Pat-
terson Street. . i
30-young hens, 1 yr. old all
laying, B..R., R.. I. Reds, White
Ply, Rock, $1.50 ea. here at
Oscar Lucks farm, 12 mi. below
College Park. M. A. Holsen-
back, College Park, Rt. 2.
250 N. H. Red and B. R.
how, wt. over 2 Ibs. 45 Ib.
or ship lots of 10,$1.25 ea. Mrs.
larly T. Carter, Loganville,
Ge ik. Sel Lees
ORPINGTONS:. 4 Buff Orp-
ington roosters, Feb., 1946 hatch,,
$2 ea at my yard. Will not ship.
Miss Pearlie Mitchell, RFD 1. -
ORPINGTONS: 10 purebred
Buff Orp., hens and rooster,
Batt ~Orps slightly mixed,
$22.50. Mrs. E, H. Garner, Bu-
ford.
PIGEONS: :
18 pr. common pigeons, mated
and working. Make offer or
for chickens.
Jimmie Crawiord, Jr., Chipley.
REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRE
AND RHOLE ISLAND):
Dark str-R. I. Red cocks and
cockerels, from heavy layers,
blood tested, $3.50 ea. Mes,
Dan Donaldson, Decatur. DE
2405. .
REDS: 40 NH pullets, just be-
ginning to lay, $2 ea. Mrs. Ed
Bledsoe, Carrollton. e
100 April hatch, 4-A_ New
Hampshire Reds and Barred
Rocks, beginning to lay, $2.50
and $2.00 ea. or good proposi-
tion on lot. C. M. Henderson,
Palmetto, Rt. 1. -
REDS (New. Hampshire and
Rhode Islands) 7 Permenter
Red April pullets, $2 ea; same
age and str. rooster, $3. A. R.
Cousins, Greenville, Rt. 3.
25 AAAA. grade N, H. Red
hens, all laying, $2 ea., at my
door or send crate and will ship
not prepaid; 3 fine cockerels,
$2:50 ea. Mrs. G: C, Clifton,
Millen, Rt. 1, Box 157. :
N. H. Red 3-A grade 11 wks.
old pullets, $1.50 ea; 1 nice cock-
erel free with 15 pullets. P. B.
Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
1 Donaldson R. I. Red Yr, old!
rooster, $2.50. Mrs. R. C. Mal-
lette, Flovilla, Rt. 1, Box 2.
1 fine purebred NH Red cock-
erel, $2 FOB; also fine Poll 9
by Reg.-male. Mrs. B. H. Os-
born, Roy.
10 April hatch N. H. Red pul-
lets, now laying, $22.50 or $2.50
ea. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin,
RG oe :
SPANISH: White Face Black
Spanish chickens: 4 hens and 3
roosters, $3 ea. all or part. Mar-
vin D. Pierce, Parrott.
REDS: 160 RI Red Hens, Feb.
1946 hatch, from leading con-
test flock, $2.25 each. FOB. G.
L. Stripling, Macon, Rt. 3.
100 AAAA NH Red Pullets,
Mar. hatch, laying between 20-
25 doz. eggs a wk., $2 eae See
any time. Cant ship. Mrs. R.
W. Roper, Summerville, Rt. 4.
10 RI Red pullets, Apr. hatch,
now laying, $25. Come for them.
Mrs. R. L. Williams, Boston.
WYANDOTTES: 5 hens, 1
rooster, 19 mos. old S. L. Wyan-
dottes, $10 for lot. Mrs. J.C.
Brown, Helena.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS,
GEESE, ETC::
Large Bronze tom, 4 hens and
2 Bourbon Red hens, well fed,
lay soon, fine for raising, 1%
yrs. old, $50 for lot; also want
two, 6 or 7 mos. old heifers,
good stock. Mrs. Ethel Jones,
Lula, Rt. 1.
April hatch trio B. B. Wagon
Wheel Bronze turkeys, $40 exp.
col; also bookin gorders for
eggs, 15, for $10. Wm, L. Me-
Calley, Jr., Atlanta, 630 First
National Bank Bldg.
Turkey tom wt 35 lbs., $15.
FOB here. T, F. Hicks, Adel.
3 Muscovy Duck hens, $2 ea.
Richardson, Forsyth, 2 mi, So.
iohe! oo Street, Atlanta, Rt. 2, Box 564.
mos. old bull, and % Poll sired| 1
VED OL VAE Pi
TURKEYS, GUINEAS! +
GEESE, DUCKS, ETC,
FOR SALE:
7 MB Turkey toms, 12-14 Ibs.,
12 mos. old, $8 ea; 8 hens, 10
mos.*old; $6.50-ea.. Ship any-
ley, Danburg, Rt. 1, Box 48.
1 1946 April hatch big BB.
Bronze Gobler, 50c 1b; also 6
White Guineas, $1 ea, My place.
NEC? Carter, Valdosta.
7 colored Indian Runner
ducks, 3 drakes, 4 hens, about
yr. old, $1 ea. Exp. col. or trade
for other poultry. Billy Dur-
den, Odum; Rt.-1.
1 onely Turkey Gobbler, 19
Ibs., 55 lb, Write first;
Fred Atkinson, Valdosta, Rt. 47
2: Whit Muscovey Ducks, now
laying, and 1. drake, $10.00.
Mrs. W. T.,Maynard, Newton. :
Bronze and Black Spanish
poules, 65c lb. on foot, Miss Eu-
genia Humphries, Macon, Rt.
Do. (5 mi. N, at end of Twin
Pine Drive.) i
Few extra fine world prize
winning M. B. Turkeys, direct
stock last yr. Contact. Mattie
Gaskins, Nashville. -
Fine April 1946 hatch 20-25 ib.
double breasted bronze toms,
60c Ib. at my place on Campbell-
ton. R.-R. ad. Earnest, East
Point, PO Box 283, RA. 7245,
Bronze Turkeys, tom and 3
hens, April hatch, $25.00. Ne
checks. J. T. Short, Hamilton,
Rie
1 mixed turkey tom, March
1946 hatch, $13 or 50c lb. Mrs.
Omie E. Faircloth, Pulaski, Rt.
be
White Holland turkeys, for
breeding at reasonable prices.
Mrs. Arthur G. Smith, Sharon,
Rigas
Turkey, 2 2lb. tom, for sale
at my home. Cant ship. Mrs.
R. H. Hicks, Stockbridge, Rt. 2.
1 ea. B. B. Brenze 22 lb. tom
and 15 lb (yr. old,) 45e lb. Mrs.
HE. S. Talley, Ohoopee, Box 51.
1. pr. 35 and 25 1b. Wagon
Wheel B. B. M. B. turkeys, Apr.
1945 hatch, at my place, near
Hapeville. Cant ship. J. B.
King, Mountain View. CA 9002.
Wagon Wheel B. B. Bronze,
March Toms, 30-35 Ibs., $18;
hens, laying $12 ea., $28 pr.
Dark Cornish roosters, 9 mos.
old, $3 ea; young hens, $2.75 ea,
MO. Mrs. R. C. Sanders, Vien-
na.
13 ducks, 4 drakes, $1.50 ea.
or exc. for chickens or milk
goats. H. L. Brown, Rhine, Rt.
. Bronze turkey, April hatch,
around 27 lbs., 50c lb. J. E.
Parker, Jr., Ludowici.
10 Muscovy ducks, laying,
1946 hatch, $1 ea; 4 drakes, $1.50
ea. also SPC sow and 9 pigs, All
FOB my farm. T. T. Hattaway,
Davisboro. ; 3
POULTRY WANTED
ANDALUSIONS WANTED:
Want 6 or 8 Young Blue Anda-
lusion Hens and 1 Rooster.
State age and price. Mrs. Lea-
tha Tanner, Alma.
BANTAMS WANTED:.
Want 3 bantam hens and 1
rooster, any= kind. Pay 50c Ib.
for hens and 60c lb. for roost-
ers. To be sent COD. Advise at
once, Mrs, M. D. Cofield, Fay-
etteville, Rt, 2; Box 39.
BARRED ROCKS WANTED:
Want 1 BR rooster, about 1
yr. old. Mrs. A. J. Powers, Pine-
view, Rt. 1,
BARRED ROCKS WANTED:
Want 2 Domineck Barred Rock
cockerels. Advise full partic-
ulars. Mrs. Nona Clackum,
Kennesaw, Rt. 1.
GAMES WANTED:
Want Pit Game (Not Cornish)
cocks, not over 3 yrs. old, 6 lbs.
or more, good eyes, plumage,
feet, bill, ete. Pay Exp. and
$1.00 Ib. and send crates pre-
paid. Dudley Pri@es, Atlanta,
1678 Emory Rd. NE.
GEESE WANTED:
Want well grown Toulouse
or Emden female geese for
breeding purposes. Mrs. H. E.
F. L. Baker, Jr., Enigma, Green
Acres Farm, : 5
Fant, Athens, 230 Normal, Ave.
where: MO only. Bennie Fend-*,
Mrs. ~
ay
PAGE EIGHT ~
| (Continued from Page One).
of course, vitally interested in Live-
stock, Dairy and Grain since he hails
from the State of Minnesota:
Mr. Knudson is recognized on Capitol
Hill as a great champion of all Ameri-
can Farmers as well as of American
Industry. ;
HAROLD KNUDSON BELIEVES
THAT THE AMERICAN FARMER
OF EVERY SECTION IS ENTITLED
EXCLUSIVELY TO OUR DOMES-
TIC MARKET FOR THE SALE OF
ALL AMERICAN PRODUCED AG-
RICULTURAL PRODUCTS.
This is true whether these products
are in a raw state, semi-manufactured
or manufactured. Of course, every
farmer in Georgia knows that I believe
in this same doctrine of The. American
Market for the American Farmer.
_ Mr. Knudson, myself and every
friend of the farmer believes that the
American Farmer is entitled to cost of
production plus a reasonable profit. Of
course, cost must include labor as weil
as all other cost. Mr. Knudson recog-
nizes, as does everyone. who gives any
mature thought to the subject, that the
American farmer can not receive an
American price in the domestie market
unless farm products are protected by
tariff walls, the same -as industry.
_ There are many good} men in this
Congress, both on the Republican and
Democratic side. Too many times in
the past the interest of the farmer and
- MARKET BULLETL
FARMERS AND FREE
of the country, have suffered because of >
partyism in the halls of Congress. -
Tt is all right for a man to support
his party to the limit until his duty to
party and his duty to his government
come in conflict, then if is time for pa-
triotic Americans to remember that:
He, who lets his country die
lets all things die and all
things dying curse him.
But he, who makes his country live
makes all things live and all
things living Bless him.
Georgia has very able Representa-
tives in the Halls of Congress, both in
the Senate and in the House.
In addition to the experienced men
from Georgia, we have several very able
new Congressmen, Honorable James C.
Davis, DeKalb, representing the 5th
District; Honorable Prince H: Preston,
Statesboro, representing the Ist Dis-
trict; Honorable Henderson Lanham,
Floyd, representing the 7th District,
and Honorable Don Wheeler,
representing the 8th District.
I know that all of these new men are
of exceptional ability and make a splen-
did addition to the Georgia delegation.
80 years of Free Trade as far as the
cotton farmer is concerned, look down
upon us. For 80 years, the cotton
farmer has been treated as an outeast,
buying in a protected market, selling at
world prices. ;
So hopeless has been his strait that
State.
Bacon,
industry was largely maintained o
aly the terrible price of World
as been able to bring him into
equitable position. ; a
The same is largely true of all -
ican Farmers. ee
For 80 years, industry of this cot
try has advocated tariff walls.
For 80 years, Southern -Demoer:
have advocated FREE TRADE.
It remained for the last decade to se
a Congress smart enough to give them
both what they ask for at the same time.
Congress did this by the simple :
pedient of delegating its constituional
power to fix tariffs to the Secretary of
In the office of Secretary of &
the internationalists such as J. P. Mi
an and Company, The Standar
ompany, Anderson-Clayton Cot
Company and others have their m
placed to do the trading with fore
countries for American Farmers.
The result has been that the fa:
was put on a FREE TRADE basis
protective basis. . =
This is bad for both Agriculture
Industry. It is good for no one
a few international traders. _
TION OR POVE
RTY in this
issue: Ra
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture
| POULTRY WANTED
LEGHORNS WANTED:
Want 3 W. L. Roosters, not
over 2 yrs. old, at reasonable
rice. Advise. J. R, Hindman,
elena.
Want 100 Big Type W. L.
pullets, not over 6-7 mos. old,
no cells. F,. M, Carney, Dalton,
PEAFOWL WANTED: Want
2- or 3 colored Pea hens. W. C.
Kendrick, Griffin.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE,
DUCKS, ETC., WANTED:
Want pair turkeys, geese, pig-
eons, and White Silkie bantam
chickens. Advise fully. Mrs. D.
eres West Green, Box
Want hear from party having
@ young Bourbon Red turkey
tom for sale. State age, wt., and
price. Want for breeder. Mrs.
Eula B. Cochran, Roberta, Rt.
1, Box 67.
| POSITIONS WANTED
47 yr. old white man wants
job driving truck or tractor on
farm. Exp,. Jim Hote, Flint-
stone.
Mother and 2 daughters
want job working in dairy
or take job on truck farm.
Experienced (Husband an _ in-
valid). Mrs. Annie Lee Hayes,
Swainsboro, Rt. 1. .
Middle aged couple want
work on farm as caretakers,
prefer near small town, on
good road. Must have house
to live in. Chas. Shrum, Fitz-
gerald, Rt. 3, Box 150.
Young man wants job on
farm, or about 10 aeres on
halves and extra work for
wages when not in crop. Have
wife and 2 small children,
Want at once. Phone before
7 a. m., or after 6 p. m. No.
1459-W. Lee Spivey, Thomas-
ville, Rt. 5, 524 Parnell St.
Want job on farm as care-
taker and mechanic, also exp.
all kinds of livestock, poultry,
hay and grain farming, etc. See
1 mi. Dunwoody, or write.
Homer R, Sharp Chamblee,
Rt. 1. pith aes arse
POSITIONS WANTED
Want dairy jub on farm with
Christian people, 21 yrs. old,
just self and mother. James
Hone Atlanta, 228 Woodward
ve, :
Couple want a good, rich,
small farm, good house, water,
some chickens and hogs,
on
50-50 basis; tend cow for
milk and butter. Also. exp.
carpenter work. With arty
who will do as promises. die
Padgett, Hapeville.
Want dairy job bottling milk
and helpin feed cows, close to
Atlanta. 8 in family, W. M.
Johnson, McDonough, Rt. 2.
Want to farm small farm near
Atlanta with 4R house with elec.
on or near hwy, traveled by
bus or interurban. Edwin Mor-
ris, Atlanta, Rt. 9, Box 69.-Ma.
8345.
Want water power grist mill
on shares Jas. W. Drake, Rome,
305 W. 9th St.
2 men and 3 women desire
work on fruit or vegetable farm
all capable and able to work.
Have to be- moved. Mrs. Pearl
Ledford? Dalton.
Want good corn and wheat
mill job on halves or wages, 25
yrs. exp. T, F. McDonald, Ma-
eon, Rtas
Want job driving tractor on
farm or dairy work. Need 3R
house with elec, and water.
Prefer near Atlanta. A.
Want job on farm for reason-
Carter, Aragon, PO Box 56.
able wages, board and laundry,
dle Ga. preferred. E. H. Smith, |-
Valdosta, 208 W. Crow Ave.
2 Agricultural College Stu-
dents want work in an Apiary
during summer vacation. Exp.
ref. exc. James Sirmans, Jr,
Homerville.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want family (2 plow hands)
for 2H farm, 50-50 basis. Large
3R ceiled house, elec., school
and mail route. Extra good land
pasture with running water,
plenty wood, tools, good mules,
Carl Perry, Monroe, Rt. 3.
FARM HELP WANTED
House (rent free) to reliable,
honest farmer who is also good
carpenter, white or colored, to
repair same without cost for
labor and who will do other
carpentry, painting, etc, on
farm bldgs. on farm at a rea-
sonable wage. Garden, etc. G.
W. Darden, Watkinsville, RFD.
Want 1 or 2H farmer at
once. Good land, house and
outbldgs., good stock, riding
cultivator, school bus and mail
route. F. M. Dillard, Coving-
ton. Rt. 5.
_ Want man 18-45 yrs, to work
on farm, $30.00 mth. wages,
room and board, 1A tobacco.
C. E. Bishop, Lake Park, Rty 1.
Want help for 40 or 50A
good land with 3R house, good
barn, plenty wood and pasture,
school bus and mail route, 6
mi. town. Standing rent. Ralph
E. McGill, Dawson, Rt. 1, Box
76.
Want reliable white women
for light work on farm. Write
W. Overstreet, Lenox.
Want 1 or 2H farmer, 50-50
basis. Good stocks, tools, fair
house, outbuildings, pasture,
chicken houses, for 6000. Gcod
land. Dont write, see Lon Lit-
tle, Lawrenceville, Rt. 1.
Want dependable white wo-
man to live as one of family
in home with modern conven-
W.|iences and help with light work
on farm for salary. Write Mrs.
L. W. Luttrell, Hamilton, Rt.
2. Phone Hamilton 2060.
Want reliable white or color-
ed family for 1 or 2H farm,
50-50 basis. Good land, 3R
house, good road, mail route,
bus line, elec. H. O. Stephens,
Fairburn.
Want 2 white or colored 2H
croppers on 50-50 basis. Grow
cotton and corn, good land,
stock and plenty tools, 2 good
6R houses, near school _ and
churches. Must be good work-
er. J. H. Gregg, Concord,
Want large family to work
4 or 5H farm, with practically
new tractor on shares, 7R house
and 4R houses and elec, avail-
able. Alfred Mitchell, Senoia,
Rt. 2, pe a
H farm, 50-50 basis.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want reliable white or colored
families for 2H and 1H farms on
halves. 4R houses, good land,
good stock, lights, water and
wood, school bus and mail rt.
Near 3 churches. R. L. Veal,
Covington, Rt. 2.
Good 1H farmer, white or col.
50-50 basis, tractor available,
3R house, elec, pump in well.
13 mi. Atlanta, good land, plenty
wood. E, W. Robinson, Ellen-
awood.
Want good farmer for 200A
good peanut land. Can be work-
ed with tractor. Jesse Cutter,
Desoto. .
Want sober, industrious farm
family (not interested other
kind.) Good house, electricity.
School bus to Jonesboro by
door. Extra work exp. carpen-.
ter, truck,
Fred Barber,
change Place
Bldg.) CY 2052.
Want manito milk 12 cows,
and other dairy work. 3-R.
house, water, wood, garden
furnished. $15 week. Write or
phone. W. E. Sutton, Fort
Gaines, phone No. 311.
tractor operator.
Atlanta, 19 Ex-
opposite Hurt
Want good farmer for 2 or 3
Good to-
bacco allotment. On school and
mail rt. by door; also want trac-
tor driver. White or col. At
once.. Write or see. Walter Grif-
fis, Odum.
Apples, boxes
January 9, 1947
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
FARM HELP WAN
Want exp. family for d.
Elec. milkers. Good 4R ho
8 mi. Decatur, at once. Ref.
quired. John Thompson, ~
tur, 737 Sycamore St., De
look after stock and other
chores. Good house an
Mrs. P. M. Johnson, Lo
pump in yard, located 2%
West Bluffton. Mail and sc
bus by door. A. M.
Bluffton. ee
Want family to work on
by the day. J. H. r
rott.
Want 2 H. farmer, hone
sober, white or col., 50-50
preferably one who wa
grow some cotton but
would be look after diver;
farm and dairy in my abse
Must have ref. 1 mi. No. R
dale on Clark Howell R
C. Smith, Riverdale,
Jonesboro No, 2599.
Want reliable party to w
Virgin turpentine faces, 50-
basis, also some farm wor
Baker, Ellenton.
Want good woman, 40-60 yrs
to look after poultry, garde
and other light farm ch
Reasonable salary, room
board, with family of 2 onl
Mrs. L. P. Couch, Buchan
Beans (Lima), per bu. hprs.
Beans (Snap), per bu. hprs.
Beans. (Pole), per bu. hprs.
Mustard Greens, per Ga. bu.
Onions (Green), per doz. .
Peppers. per bu. bkts.
Radishes, per doz. __.
Spinach, per bu. bkts.
Squash, per bu. hprs. _.
Sweet Potatoes. per
Cabbage, per 50 lb. sacks
Collards, per doz. bunches ___-________________
Eggplant, per bu. hprs.
bu. bkts.
Tomatoes, repacned, 50 lb. crt.
Turnips (Bunched), per doz. ______
Turnip Salad, per bu. hprs.
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