Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1947 October 1

Skip viewer







WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1. 1947

NUMBER 3




















































ial By ai By TOM L LINDER:

the Federal Reserve Banks
the currency and eredits in
States. They thereby pre-
the first depression after
1. The complete story of

ard of Governors had done
) of what the result

es at the time by the.

time since and just as he is
order. to collect 15 billion dol-
Wall Street International

ce, Italy and Holland, - we
ur doors to import under the
collecting war debts.

we had imported 43 billion
oods of all kinds.
rmy of unemployed. We
the Wall Street stock mark-
made it impossible for the
survive by shipping gold to
were floundering helpless-
storm on an economic

THE NEW DEAL
darkness there suddenly
NEW DEAL.

eal raised the price of
20.00 an ounce to $35.00 an
all foreign gold. All those
in the United States were
ender their gold and their
ites-at $20.00 peg ounce.



eal on every. American citizen
r gold certificates. But
A eople did not under-
Therefore, they did not

an ounce for
the gold in the world,
1 suddenly realized that,
ul this gold, there would not
Loney to carry on the pro-
Ss we abandoned. the gold
nd began printing green-
ied by gold.

to 1947, currency was in-
- from 6 billion to 30



ur Land And





ar, as, ae Road of Goy-

-would have been in terms

e Boies, just as ng has

which they had loaned to Eng-

We had

$15.00 was. collected by 7



crease in volume of money, prices of
labor, and prices of commodities ad-

- vanced in about the same proportion as

the increase in the volume of money.
The result has been that our national
debt is about 5 times as. large as it
of dollars.
Private debts are 45 billion dollars.
This is 5 billion more in terms of dollars
than the total of private debts after
World War 1. But when we consider

-that the dollar is only worth 20 cents,

we must realize that private debts ac-
tually are only about 9 billion pre New
Deal dollars, which is about 25 per cent

| of the real amount of private debts
Samer. orld War 4.

It thus becomes
obvious that private business has con-
ducted itself about five times as cf-

ficiently as the National government.

FARM INCGME DETERMINES
NATIONAL INCOME

It has been demonstrated time and
time again that the income from farm
products and other raw materials de-
termines the National income.

It should be evident and obvious to
every thinking person that the Na-
tional debt, private debts, State, Coun-
ty and Municipal debts can never be
paid except with the same kind of
money under which they were created.
Farmers, white-collar workers and
other groups whose wages and prices
were sub-standard in 1932, still have
sub-standard wages and prices. Those
groups who were receiving parity or
above in 1932 are still receiving above
parity. The real problem still is equal-
ization. The answer is equality of
prices. The fatal mistake would be the
lowering of prices in general.

The administration in Washington is
wildly floundering and running from

pillar to post. It is lost in a maze of
its own making. It has no idea which
way to turn.

FUTURES EXCHANGES

The Seeretary of Agriculture, Honor-
able Clinton P. Anderson, is running
around like a nigger in a graveyard.

The statments he makes one day are
absolutely in contradiction to the state-
ments he made the day before. Through
ignorance and lack of moral courage, he
has become the Number One enemy,
not only of agriculture, but of the en-
tire nation. Today he is wildly shouting



-as Milent as the tomb.



Read Education Article on Back Page

against the gamblers on the futures ex-
changes. Why? Because the price et
grain has gone up.

When the same speculators were sell-
ing wheat and corn and - cotton and
other farm commodities short at starva-
tion prices, nobody could get a chirp
out of the Department of Agriculture in
Washington in protest of this robbery,
of the men and women on the land.
Readers of the Market-Bulletin will re-
call that at that time I wrote a number
of articles protesting the governments
permitting the farmer being pillaged by
the futures commodities exchanges,
ealled upon the Secretary of Agricult-
ure, the Secretary of Commerce and the

~Attorney General who constitute THE
BOARD, to protest the pillaging of the

farmers, but the halls of the United
States Department of Agriculture were
Not a word could
be heard from the Secretary of Com-
merce or the Attorney General.

I called upon the Congressmen and

Senators for an investigation of the pil-
laging of the farmers by these futures
exchanges. I called upon them to pass a
law abolishing the exchanges. Not a
sound came from that august body.
Why are futures exchanges bad when |
farm prices are high but are not bad.
when farm prices are low. I do not
know the answer why. I do know that
the record shows no protest of futures
exchanges when prices are ruinously
low.
TAXES

The National debt is about 260 billion
dollars. Outstanding medium of ex-
change is about 30 billion dollars. For
each $30.00 of money in the United
States, there is a National debt of $260,
There is a National debt of $8.67 for
each dollar of money in the country.
This means that without counting any,
interest, the federal government must
collect every dollar there is in existence
in taxes eight and two-thirds times to
pay this enormous debt. If it were pos-
sible for the government to operate for
eight and two-thirds years without
spending a dollar and if every dellar in
existence was collected in taxes each
year, it would take eight and two-thirds
years to pay the debt without interest.

If the federal government collects 20
per cent per year, it. would take forty-
three and one-third years to pay the
debt without interest if the government

(Continued on Page Sev en)



















can FS

Z



GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN

on th_ , jailing list and for change of address to STATE BUREAU
OF MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITO, Atianta.

NAL EDITORIAL
NATO ASS



OCIATION
a



of notice.

Bulletin.
Published Weekly at

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

Limited space will not permit insertion of notices centain-
ing more than 30 words including name and address,

Under Legislative Act the Georgia M y 1
not assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the

114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.

Market Bulletin does



Tom Linder, Commissioner.

Markets, 222 State Capitol,
: Atlanta, Ga,

By Department of Agriculture
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of



Entered as second class matter
August 1, 1937 at the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia, under Act
of June 6, 1900. Accepted for
mailing at special] rate of postage
provided for in Section 1103, Act

of October 8, 1917.
Executive Office,

State Capitol



Ailania, Ga.
Publication Office

State Capitol. Atlanta, Ga.



114-122 Pece St., Covingion, Ga,
Editorial and Executive Offices







FARM LAND FOR SALE

FARM LAND FOR SALE >



150 A or more, running creek,
2 A tob. allotment, bottom land,
good for pasture and general
farming, near church and school.
12 mi. Valdosta. Mrs. Victora
Jackson, Ousley.

135 A farm, 20 A hog and
20 A cow pasture, 400: apple
frees of good variety, always

bears crop, some cherry trees, |

grapes and peaches, nice 4R
house, plenty outbldgs., for sale.
Frank J. Watkins, Rolston.

107 A farm, near Royston, has
crop growing now, productive
rolling land, pasture, branch,
barn, good 4'R house, near mail
and school rt., reasonable pay-
ment, bal. terms, for. sale. Ivan
H. Smith, Royston, Rt: 1.

76.9 A good level land, 3 mi.
N. Cordele, on Hwy. 41, 58 A
in cultivation, rest in pine tim-
ber, 54 bearing pecan trees, 25
5 yr. old peean trees, 9 peach
trees, 1 A in grapes, 5 yr. old,
6 R house with bathroom, and
1 tenant house both with lights
and water, 2 good barns, chick-
n house. School and mail rt:
by door. Entire farm under
fence, 4 A pasture, $15.000 cash.
LL. E. Kimbrough, Vienna, Rt.
pee

585 A fine level land, Coweta
o., 130 A in new hog wire pas-
ture, 6 R house, and tenant
houses, plenty water, fine stock
farm, 100,000 ft. saw tim., 2000
cords pu'pwood, for sale. See:
J. D. Taylor, Moreland, Rt. 1.

Land suitable fcr agricultural,
industrial and other purposes,
Jocated in heart of city of Wad-
ley, adjoining Central of Ga.
RR, close to main business sec-
qion, terms or cash. Real bar-
gain for prompt sale. Write for
further information to M, B.
Smith, Washington, D. C., 1321
Columbia Rd., N. W. or E. A.
Speir, Wadley, Ga.

406 A, 4 dwellings, barn,
growing timber; wired in good
pastures, good land, mail and
school rt., church 14% mi. Ideal
stock farm, running water, hwy.
through place. 5 mi. Carlton in
Oglethorpe -Co. J. R. Johnson,
arltony hie. 1,

293 A, 8 mi. W..Dublin, Lau-
rens Co., Rock Creek, 2 spring
branches bordering place, 110
A cultivation, bal. timber, -4 a
tob. allotment, two 5 R houses,
Jarge peach orchard, 2 public
roads, titles clear. R. H. Lee,
Dublin, Rt. 5.

12 A, running water, has house
with 768 sq. ft. %-mi. paved
road, eight of mile electric line,
gell at bargain for cash, or terms.
E. L. Colston, Cornelia, Star
Rt.

20 A, 9 mi. Atlanta, on Rt.
54, has 8 R bungalow with bath

and elec., barn, garage, crib, 15)

A-open, branch, $13,000. cash.
W. D. Kelley; Conley, Rt.:1.

50 A, comptetely under fence
but 5 A; 22 A basic pasture, year
around branch, rest under cul-
tivation, 2 A woodland, 35 A
jowland, New 5 R ceiled: house,
completely wired, 55 ft. x 32 ft.
barn; smoke house, 12 ft. x 20 ft.,
both wired. 3 mi S. Bremen,

around 8 mi N. Carrollton, and}

mail 2 good roads to hwy. near
churches, on sehool and mail
rt., Leon Chaney, Bremen, Rt.
1, Box: 74,

265-300 A farm and pecan or-
chard adtacent to residential
section of city of Macon, fine
for dairy, truck or general farm-
ing, 80 A 20 yr. pecan orchard.
small herd Hereford cattle of
Domino strain, all cheap, quick
sale. For further information see:
F. M. Dees, Macon, Rt. 2. Tel.
702 W.

101 and 1/3 A, 6 mi. N. Craw-
ford, 5 R house with 9 ft. hall,
outb!dgs., small tenant house,
60 A in cultivation, plenty wood,
some saw timber, churches,
school bus rt., and mail, pasture
with plenty water, for saie. H: T.
Rice, Crawford.

148% A, 65 cultivation, 5 R
house, REA service, good land,
bale of cotton per acre, 2. 2
tob. allotment, no tobacco barn,
plenty pine timber, 12 mi. W.
Pelham, near school and store,
pasture, 2 young mules includ-
ed, $6,000. O. C. Brinson, Whig-
ham. :

50 A land, for sale, near
church and school. Write for
information. Ben H._ Silver,

Talking Rock, Rt. 1.

108 A good fertile land, Fan-
nin C0470) R:. house; sbarns2
branches, 7 good springs, RFD
and school bus service. Near
good Grammar and High School,
churches and stcres. Write. Mrs.
J. V. Twiggs, Morganton, Box
32.

175 A in S. Gilmer Co., good
house and outbldgs., 18 A creek
bottoms, some upland, cleared,
some timber} good _ pasture,
plenty water, close to church
and school, on RFD, $20.00 A.
Or exc. for good house and small
acreage. Or other property. C.
C. Southern, Talking Rock, Rt.
ile

Land in high state of cultiva-
tion in blocks of 25 AC; 45 AC,
30AC, 100 AC, 200 AC. Only I
house on farm but ideal for one
who wants small farm to build
on and work at public work.



Dillard Wood, Bowdon, :

in

| school and mail rt.,







153% A fertile land, 4 mi.|.
|| town, 95 A open land, 10 head

cattle, tractor, disc plow, har-
row, cultivators, planters, dis-
tributors, side delivery rake,
weeder, other tools, two-thirds
under fence, main road, REA
line, school and mail rt. New
house and barn. Reasonable. A.
W. Holman, Leslie, RFD 2.

332 A more or less, 2-42 mule
farm cultivation, fenced, free of
stumps, test in long leaf pine
and. oak timber. 6 R dwelling,
bath, screened front and back
porch; Mail and school bus Rt.
3 ten. houses out-bldgs., near
church and RR, 40 mi. below Al-
bany. Fine .well, Cash. Mrs.
Jesie F. Collins, Camilla, Rt. 3,
Box 13.

40 A, on Hwy. from Union
Point to Athens, 150 yd. front-
age on power line and RR, most
m cultvation and pasture, 2 R
house with stock chimney, 5 yr.
old mare, 2 cows, sell separately
or together. Will swap for house
and 1 or 2 acres around. Union
Point or Greensboro. H. R. Alli-

-son, Bairdstown.

154 A, 45 A bottom land,
7 R and 3 R house, good out-
bidgs., fish pond stocked with
fish, good orchard, plenty run-
ning water, elec. lights, all on
paved hwy. mail and school rt.;
Also new Ford tractor and im-
plements with place only. Nor-

man C. Low, Talking Rock.

68 A good land, 4 R_ house,
spring, good pasture, water,
plenty wood, 1 mi. church, 8 mi.
S. Douglasville, Sell or rent 1

_H. or 2.H crop or sell for $2000:

W. A. Holt, Winston, Rt. 1. ~

200 A Jefferson Co. on Ogee-
chee River 4 mi. Louisville, not
now in cultivation, has: fine
stand young pine. and hardwood
timber. Ideal , dairy or
stock farm. has small lake stock-
ed with brem and bass, nice club
house fully screened. Deep ar-
tesian well. REA available soon.
For further information. and
price contact: J. R. Murphy, Jr.,
Louisville?

125 A farm with about 90 A

cultivation, pasture with
spring and some timber. On
200 yds.
pavement, REA and dwelling
wired, out houses have slated

floors especially adopted for}-

chickens. Elec. water , system,
$5500. Mrs. I. O. Cox, Butler.

240 A, Haralson Co., good rich
land, about 150 A in cultivation,
good pasture on river, rolling
stores and school bus, mail rt.,
good neighbors, close to church.
3 good houses, 3 good barns, oth-
er bldgs. All: weather road. 44%
mi N. Buchanan. Charlie G.
Summerville, Buchanan, Rt. 1.

72 A, 8 or 10 in cultivation,
little saw timber, good pasture,
1 mi: off hwy., $1,500. $500.
down. Bal. on terms. Claude D.
Sosebee, Cleveland, Rt. 1.

100 A, 13 mi, Five Points At-
Janta, 2 houses, barn, pump,
river bottom, trade for duplex
West End Atlanta. I. W.. Stokes,
Austell, RFD 2.

225 A Habersham Co., 1% mi.
RR frontage rt. 15-23 Atlanta
to Ashville, make an ideal in-
dustrial site, or general farm-
ing. Could be cut into smal!
tracts for summer homes, be-
ing only 5 mi. S. Tallulah-Falls,
plenty water, creek, springs,
$20.00 A. W. B. Ellard, Cornelia,

100 A farm, 1 mi. city limits,
near paved hwy., highly im-
proved, watsr and lights from
city, 3 dwellings, barn, tob. barn,
other bldgs., pecan trees, fruits;
and grapes, $18,000.; Also 750 A
cut over N. Ga. Mountain land,
$2.50 A: No bldgs., near Dah-
lonega. Mrs. M. F. Gaddis,
Quitman.

10114 A, 14 mi. Gresston, about
65 A in cultivation, good timber
and pasture, 2 houses and barns,
school and mail rt., REA line
being constructed, $2,500. Archie
R. Holt, Gresston.

80 A good land, 6 R house with
elec., fairly good outbldgs., good
spring, school in sight, mai! by
door. Good Mica mine. Mrs, J.
M. Reynolds,

Box 94. >



live-|.

Blairsville Rt. 1,}





85 A,.2 houses, 1 nearly new

wired for elec, 6 A in Stark| tion,

Bro Apple Trees, good land,
plenty of water. School bus in
front of door. Close to good
school church and stores, $6,000.
(Call Rt: 9828). Mrs. Tessie Fer-
guson, Dallas, Rt. 4. ;

56 A land, 30 in cultivation,
remainder. in woodland but
suitable for cultivaticn, unde1
fence, fine cotton tobacco, and
peanut land, 7 mi. W. Metter,

Candler Co. 1736 district, 4% mi.|4
school and church, mail rt. by]:
door, dwelling house, outbldgs. |
for sale. See or write. Mrs. E.
L. Warren, Stillmore, Rt. 1. i

160 A land, 5 R house, 3 R

tenant house, tob. barn, pack}.
U3; sBale

house, other outbldgs.,
cleared land, 548 A tobacco al-

167 A. goo
land, about

Dougherty Co.,
public Rd., just
60 A. fenced,
er, 3 R. hous

187. phon

lotment, some pecan trees, school] gGairy

and mail rt. 5 mi. Alma, 1 mi:
Hwy. W. A. Edwards,
Bed.

Eight-tenths A land, 4 R house] ~

not finished, elec. available,
close to salt water, good fish-
ing and hunting, just off paved.
road, 1-mi. Darien. Mrs. J. H.
Mitchell, Darien, Box 321.

Alma,},



terms
ee. J,

20 A, 2 mi. Rochelle on Abbe-| 4

ville hwy., good timber, pond,
5 A cleared, fine location, for.
sale. J. M._ Day, Alpharetta.

"383A, Randolph Co., 300 A

cultivation , 250 under hog and}
barb fence, 13 A in bearing pe-|
cans. Water piped to house and| ~
mule barn. 6 R dwelling, tenant

and -mail rt.|..-

houses, school L
Some land broke for oats. Can
give posession Oct. 15. $6,000
cash. Bal. of $12,000 payable un-

til 1964. T. L. Surles, Cuthbert, ;

Ris sees

17 A good bottom: land, 2:
houses, (3R), on hwy. 41, just
outside city limits Barnesville.
TB: Wood, Barnesville.

1050 A stock and dairy farm,

/Washington- Co., 900 A cross

fenced, 3 separate pastures.
with running water, well grass-

ed;.35 A hog fence, 100 A cul-|

tivation. Main house, 2 tenant
houses, smoke house, barns, im-
plment sheds, REA .power. 7
mi. Foremost Dairy Plant, 7 to
75 mi. of 6 stock market sales
barns. Lease for 5 yr. period at.
$500. yr. Mrs. Aldren H. Hale, |
Hapeville.

29 A, heavily wooded, ap-

garage, other modern conveni-
ences. Cement outhouse and
workshop. Elec. and phone. 18%
mi. N. Atlanta, $17,500; Also

| White Frame House, living room, |

2 bedrooms, bath, other conv.

Fruit trees and grapes. Lot 544x} j

371. $13,000. Mrs. Ruby A. Pal-
mer, At!anta, 745 House Rd. N. E-

111 A, 3 dwellings, 1 deep
well, good location, $50.00 A.
Cash or terms. Mrs. J. F. Ray,
Arlington, Rt. 2, Box 79.

400 A, good farming land, & :

pastures, 5 R dwelling, 2 barns,
3 tenant houses, on school and
mail rt. E. F. Bane, Butler. e

475 A. Hancock Co,, 125 cul-
tivation, 80 pasture, 5,000 cords
pulp wood, 300,000 ft. saw
timber; new 6 R house, Elec., 5 |

and 2 R. houses. 14 mi. Greens- |

boro, 12 mi, Sparta. $6,000.00.
R. C. McKown, For@st Park.
Atlanta, phone CA 9587. :

CORRECTION NOTICES:

98-%2 A. tract on Hudson
River, Franklin Co., fair house
and barn with practically new
tin roof. Kentucky wide board
entrance and new boundary
fence. Highly productive land,

9 A. lespedeza, approx. 25 A.
river bottoms. $1,500.00. Fred
Barber, Atlanta, 19 Exchange
Place, S. BE. CY 2052.

About 46 A. land, all in
woods, nearly all could be put
in cultivation; lake site, saw
timber. reserved being cut now,
near Barnes Mill Rd, 2 mi.
East Marietta, $1,000.00. Cash
or terms. J. T. Brown, Alpha-
retta, Star Rt. phone 5173.

750 A, 135 A in bottom land,

5. settlements, barns and out-|.

mi NW Ab

farm, 45 a
75 A creek bo
farm, 4 plots. |
water on )
F. M. Jennings,
St. Phone Ra. 6
273 A, 3 dwel

3 barns, crib, g)
house, 130 A cu

pastures, 60
2 dam sights, m

rts., 4m N;

paved road.
and churches.
vated, real bar,

it

-acre. W. Morga:
prox. 3000 timber, 2 streams. | VON1a. Gy
Rustic house, 2 bedrooms, bath, |

fire place, gas heat, connecting}

30 A farm lo
i 8



of Mr.

bearing orchard
of fruit), origina
ideal for truck
stock raising, goo
ture, $3,500. 3
terms if want
man, Roy.

129 A, 2 mi,
R houses, elec.,
water, all unde
96 -A, 2 mi. town
house, 1 barn; 70

no gullies, lies be:
home, large sha



bldgs., 1 mi. site of oil well
drilling. J. L. Taylor, Fran

x






ni. 3 H farm in cultivation, saw

bee phone, very
; eged business

imber, i nactate
ood timber,

, near, paved road,
0. Bie Bowen,

house, good
itbldgs., school and
line by door, good |
re under wire,

ti her 2 broil-
3 wells, 15

- ranch, all in
ive sold timber, |
Buildings

. Mary Pavers).

phe tatee High
ing upland, creek
dian

ng pebbly soil, 10}
Oss. fenced, 6 R
dwelling, elec.,|
water to barn,
cilities, 5 R hse. |

mill timber, 5.

pecan, grape. vines,

msolidated sch.,

young mule,

10,000. iL his
ee

lpwood, plenty
E ellent stock

mail and school
einen, Rt.

one ieececel
paved road
an wired and
R. house, 3 bed
ater, lights, phone,

e, Shelters, oth- K

ast out city limits,
hburn. :

SE Mansfield,
ys about %

.| timber, $30.00 A; 25 per ct. cash,
,|sale. Mrs. J. B. Carlton, Moul-

/.| fireproff brick; $5,000.
_ | Newsom, Sandersville.

alee

0.) for peach orchard. Mrs. L..K.
A Brookshire, Cleveland.

State farms open, good land and}

.| churches and schools, good road

: tivation, large good dwelling,

_| water in pasture, school bus at

"| Stewart, Nahunta, RFD 2.

: -| trees, plenty wood, gome saw

270 A shee no, 107, th thee
let Worth Go; 127, A in cul-
| tivation; tob. acreage, nice young



bal. over period. of 6 years, for

| trie, 803 Second St. S. E.

272A farm, Washington Co.,
4 mi Sandersville on public rd.,

,|timber and pulpwood, $5;000; 200
A timber and mineral land,
Glascock Co., on paved hwy.,
'timber mineral and clay for
2G

730A good grey land, 8 mi. N.
Thomaston, 150 A open, bal:
woods, pine, poplar, oak and
hickory timber, 4 springs, 4
wells, one good pond site, over
6000 ft. road frontage, no build-
ings, $10.00 A. Terms. Mrs. J. E.
English, Thomaston, 204 Jackson
Ave.

91.8 A fine land, 54 A in cul-
tivation, 4 R and 2 R house
lights, 2 good wells, school and
mail rt. 10,000 ft. pine saw
timber, 15 A pasture, 10 A sec-
ond bottom land, 34 mi. paved
road, near churches, 5 A per-
manent hay crop, for sale. De-
witt T. ONeal, Sao Rt.

90 A more or less, good 6 R
house, 2 barns, with-elec., 2 good
pastures, about 7 mi. E Cleve-
land, fine location, close to Holi-
ness church camp ground. Fine

666 A, 4 mi. Louisville, % mi.
off paved rd., 3 houses, 3 barns,

neighborhood, 300 M ft. saw tim-
ber, long term and low interest,
$25.00 acre; 188 A on same road,
level land, 9 houses and 2 barns,
115 Ain cultivation, 100 M saw
timber. For sale. B. H. Warren,
Louisville.

12 A farm, 5 mi. Cleveland,
yy mi. hwy. just completed, near
big camp ground, handy to

| by. same, topped. Mail and
school bus by door. 10-A cul-|

2 A pasture, running water,
lights and water in all buildings,
good pump right to power line,
2 good chicken houses and barn.
|N. M. Kenimer, Cleveland, Rt.

-%5, A, 40: cleared, Randolph
| Co., all fenced, crossed fenced,
6 R house, barn, other buildings,
elec., elec. pump, plenty wood,
some saw timber, good stream

| door, priced to sell; part cash,
ood terms. Dont write. Come
ee. 1% mi. E. Carnegie. Paul
;| Coleman, Carnggie, Rte 2;

Eas About 12 A more or less, about
ly A cleared and fenced, all kind
-| plow tools, planter ete. new
Pinder weeder, 1 H wa on, 1H
Hay Rake, good 6 yr old farm
mule, about 20 head hogs, sac-
rifice for $2500. cash. Mail and
school bus by door. Alfred H.

48. 6 A fertile land, 5 R paint-
ed house, barn ~ with cement
_| floor, stables and long shelter
on rock foundation, bermuda
_| pasture, running water, fruit

timber, ideal place for cattle
and hogs, land lying idle now,
large cemented spring back of
house, $3,000. Mrs. J. G. Bur-
den, Elberton, Rt. 2.

55 A good fertile land, 8 mi.
N.*E. Cordele in Dooley Co., 4
mi. SE Vienna, for sale. W. 1Eh
Faircloth, Cordele, 506-7th Ave.

187 A land, John Deere tractor]
and tiller, nearly new, 50 A bot-
tom, plenty water, lights, mail
and school bus rt., 5 R house,
eiee: Ralph McCay, Ila, POB

oF Ay 2 dwellings and barns,
fish pond, 1 mi. town, 125 yds.
No, 24 Hwy., $5,000. easy terms.
John E. Bragg, Sardis.

107 A farm, 60 A cultivation,
20. A pasture, some bottom land
pasture, 50, 000 ft. saw timber,
homestead and good _ tenant
house, 2 barns, other outbldgs.,
2% mi. town, 100 yds, from
paved road, school bus and mail





ute by. door, elec. in both

a A farm on Rogas Rd., well
watered, timber, $3,000. G. M.
Byrd, Lizella, Rt. box lok.

202% A, west of Irwinton,
3% mi. city limits, on big Sandy
Creek, fine for timber and farm
land. Known as land of de-
ceased Virgel Cummings Es-
tate. Just off Macon Hwy. For
sale. Contact Avery Pearson,
Glenwood.

- FLOWERS AND SEED
"FOR SALE



Lt., Dark Blue, White, Red
Tris, 10, $1.00; Large. Trumpet
Daffodils, 50c doz; $3. C; White
Spirea, Red Flowering Quince,
Red Crepe Myrtle, Pink Al-
mond, Yellow Jasmine, White
Dogwood, 50e ea; 10, $4. Mrs.
ECS B. Robinson, Bowdon.

~ Blooming Size Bulbs: Single
Blue Hyacinths, Snowflakes,
20, $1.00; Royal Robe Violets,
rooted, 6, $1.00; Fragrant Pur-
ple Violets, 2 doz. $1. Mrs. R.
P. Steinheimer, Brooks.

Thrift, 50c doz; Dbl. Pink+
Var. Althea, Pink Weigela cut.,
8, 50c_. Rooted Forsythia, Wei-
gelia, Pink Almand, Red Crepe
Myrtle, White Spirea, 50c ea.
Mrs. Ruth Head, Bremen.

Bulbs: Dbl. Jonquils, $3. C;
She parapet Red, Yellow Can-
nas, $3.00; King Alfred Jon-
quils, Orange Day Lilies, $2.50
C; Royal Blue Easter Lilies and
Violets, $1. doz. Add postage.
Mrs. Beatrice Mosley, Bremen,
rRt. 2, Box 86.

Mixed Dbl. Cannas, New daz-
zler Red, Little Gem Yellow,
King Humbert, several colors,
German Iris, 60c doz; Purple
Lady of The Lake, Red Yar-
row, Purple Violets, House-
leak, 35c doz; Elephant Ear
(Caladium), 30c ea. Mautile
Harrison, Bremen. N

Globe. Arborvitae, 10-14 in.,
$4, doz; Boxwoods, 6-8 in. ex-
tra well rooted, $3. doz; Pink
and White Rhodendrons, Eng.
Dogwoods, $2. doz. Bog Wilson,
-ed, reasonable. Mrs. Irene Kel-
Blue Ridge.

7 large Boxwoods well shap-

|iey, Blairsville, Box 31,

Dbl. Yellow Jonquils, $2.50 C;
King Alfred Jonquils, White
Narcissus with a Yellow Cup,
$2.C; Dbl. Yellow Cannas, 12,
$1. Exe. fors print sacks. Mar-
tha. Womack, Buchanan, Rt. 1.

Large no. different flower-
ing shrubs and plants, Cannas,
Lilies, Elephant Ears, etc. for
sale. Come after. Mrs. Homer D.
Taylor, Baxley, Rt. 4, Box 145.

King Alfred Daffodil, Orange
Day Lilies, White ~ Daffodils,
Purple Lady of The Lake, 30
doz; 4 doz., $1.00; Blue Iris,
10c ea. Add. postage. Mrs.
Herman Nixon, Bremen, Rt. 1,
Box 99,

Yellow Forsythia, Blue Iris,
Tiger Lily, 15c ea; Also King
Alfred Daffodils, Orange Day
Lilies, White Daffodils, for
Sale. Add postage. Mrs. Fred
Mosley, Bremen, Rt. 2.

Plenty Hedge Plants, (the
stay green kind), 25 C. Del. in
lots 100 or more, or exc, for
print sacks, 100 plants: for 1
sack 100 Ib. cap. Mrs.
Thornton, Bowdon.

Pink, White Monthly Rose
Bushes, 1 yr. old, 35 7ea;.. 3,
1 $1.00; 2 yrs., 50c; 5, $2.00; Cut-
tings, 5c ea; Christmas Honey-
suckle, 3, $1.00; Pink Thrift,
60c doz; Blue Hydrangeas, 50c
ea; 3, $1, Mrs. P. R. . Arnold,
Benevolence.

Boxwood, 14 six yrs..old, 5,

four yrs. old, for sale. Mrs. G.
W. Thornton, Bremen, Rtv 2,
Box 70,

Sweet Blue "iolets, 2) doz,
$1. Mrs. R. L. Silver, Cuth-
bert, Rt. 5. :

, Mixed. cols. Fall Pinks,

Orange Day Lilies, Blue Iris,
Single and Dbl. Yellow Jon-
qguils, 50e doz; Salmon _ col.



$5,000. % cash. R. L.
ub Rt 2.

Mums, 65c doz. Add postage.

8. | Combs,



rs. W. J. Reece, Cartecay, ~







ie ea a re ee 2 THREE
FLOWERS AND SEED | FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE ~ FOR SALE



1 Rooted White Lilac, 2 brid-
al wreath, 1 Purple Lilac, 2
Pink Almand, 1 Pink Abelia,

6 Jan. Jasmine; 2 Red and 2)

Purple Crepe Myrtles, 50c ea;
Orange Day Lilies, mixed col-
ors.. German Iris, 60c doz. Mrs.
E. B. Thornton, Bremen.

King Alfred Jonquils
White Paper Narcissus, $2. C;
Dahlia Bulbs, $2.50 doz; Tulip
Bulbs, Red Mums, $1.50 doz;
Pink Thrift, $1. doz. Add. post-
age. Mrs. Florence Leathers,
Buchanan, Rt. 1. :

Bermuda Easter Lily Bulbs,
produce 5-10 flowers per plant,
$5;-06z>- $36. CG: Mrs. 2 V.
Stephenson, Comer.

Rooted Shrubbery: 6 Pittis-
poriums, $3.00; 10 large size
Ligustrums, $5.00; 50 deep Red
and Pink Crepe Myrtle, $20.00;
50 Gardenias, $25.00; 9 cols.
Cannas, $1. doz; Bulbs of Daf-
fodils, White, Yellow Narcissus,
$2. C. Mrs. J. R. Camp, Cor-
dele.

Jonquils, Single Orange Day
Lilies, Iris (3 col), $1. C; Tiger
Lily Bulbs, (small, 2nd yr.
growth), 50c doz. Miss Eula
Cox, Canton, Rt. 2.

Large rooted cuttings Gold-
en Showers, 10 cuttings, $1.00;
or exc. 1% doz. for 3 Print
sacks. Ea. pay postage. L.
Blackston, Camilla.

Govt. insp. Dbl. Yellow Ja-
ponicas, $1..ea; Blooming size,
all cols. Azaleas, $1. doz. Add
postage. Mrs. D. H. Evans,
Cartecay.

and

Fragrant Yellow Narcissus,
free blooming Yellow Daffodils,
$1.25 C; White Narcissus, 40c
doz. Add postage. Mrs. G. B.
Smith, Cordele, Rt. 3.

Jap. Iris, 8, $1.00; Bearded
Tris, 16, $1.00; Stokesia, 8, $1.,
Hemorcallis, Dr. Regal, 8, $1.,
Perennial Phlox, Deep Pink
and White, 16, $1.00; Seedling
Cherry Laurel, $1. C. Add post-
age. No orders less $1. Mrs. L.
A. Berry, Cordele, Rt. A.

The Blue and white lily
(very fragrant). Sell or exc. 1

dozen for good, white, 100 Ib.
cap. sacks. Mrs. A. M. Lane,
Vienna. Rt. 1.

White, purple Iris, 12 roots,
50c; Feb. gold daffodil bulbs,
$1.25 C. white Fairy lilies, 50c
doz; yellow, thornless rose, 20c
ea; white, yellow button mums,
35e doz. Mrs. Gussie Conner,
Villa Rica. Rt. 2.

Gold Dust Day lilies, canary
color, height 14-18 in, 1- of
first to bloom in Spring; de-
sirable for borders. 4 for $2.00;
12, $5. Postpaid. Mrs. Rosa G.
Poole, Valdosta. Box 112.

Yellow narcissi bulbs, 50c C.
Mrs. Guy Winn, Vienna.

Geraniums, mix. col. 6, $1.00;
pansy plants, 40c doz; 50, $1.50;
$2. C; Shasta daisies, 50c doz;
$2.50. C; Sweet Williams, 50c
doz. Mrs. M. P. Combs, Wash-
ington. Rt. 2.

Pansy Swiss giants, 35c doz;
$2. C; white Roman hyacinths,

blossoming size, $1.65 doz;
hardy. carnations, 12, 60c; hy-
brid Amaryllis, 2-% to 3 in,

dia. $5. doz. 50c ea. Mrs. F. M.
Sr., Washington.

Broad leaf, privet hedge, 1-2
ft, one cent ea., baby breath,
Van Hootii, pink spirea, but-
terfly bush, Eng. dogwood, al-
theas, rooted, 35c ea. Tiger lil-
ies, 30c ea. No order less $1.
Exe. for sacks. Mrs. W. H. T.
Acree, Toccoa,

Tea-olive, holly, jasmine,
Umbrella china, red, white dog-
wood, crabapple, magnolia, 1-5
ft., 10c to 55c ea. Star of Beth-
lehem, 30c doz. Add _ postage.
Exc. for sacks. Mrs. Alma Col-
son, Toombsboro. Rt. 2.

Confederate jasmine, -sweet
bay, tea-olive, magnolia seed-
lings, 15c;:/mix. bulbs. $1;. C;
purple Xmas, June cactus, 10c
ea; large, white, flowering
jew, oxalis, five cents ea, Add
postage. Exc. for sacks, Mrs.
Wavy Lewis, Toomsboro,

| goldenbells, jasmine,

myrtles, purple lilac,



Gardenia cuttings, 15c ea. 2
for. -25c; January jasmine, 15
bunch; Rosemary, 20c bunch;
Quen Annes Lace, 10 bunch,
2 for 25c. Mrs. E. B. Warren,
Toombsboro, Rt. 2.

Magnolias, tea-olives,Umbrel.
la China, red holly, jasm a3,
crabapple, red, white dogwod,
Sell or exc. for sacks. Add post-
age. Mrs. Mattie Colson,

Toombsboro.

Very double crimson Orien-
tal poppy seed, also mix. poppy
seed, 13c packet, prepaid.
Stamps accepted. A. J. Will-
oughby, Waco.

Dbl. altheas, blue hydrangea,
white, purple wisteria, nan-
denas, 50c ea. all col. fine can-
nas, $1. doz; yellow and paper
white, Feb. narcissus, jon-
quils, daffodils, $1. C; red
spider lilies, 50c doz. Mrs. E. ly
Smith, Wadley.

Green and white striped, red
and green striped and grein
wandering jew. 3 nice cuttings,
25c, plus postage. Mrs.
P. Hunt, Atlanta,
Dr, -S. W.

Shasta daisies, mix. ,col. Iris,
65c doz; orange day lilies,
tame violets, 35c doz; wild iris,
purple foxglove, $1. C; old
fashioned gold button mums,
2,, 29c. Add postage. Exc. for
sacks. Nancy Henderson, Ellls
jay. : wi

Daffodils, Star of Bethlehem,
Orange Day Lilies, tame vio-

1600 Evans

lets, wild iris, $1. doz; snow- -

balls, hibiscus, 35c ea; altheas,
pink D.
Perkins roses, 3, 50c. Add post-
age. Mrs. Mollie Henderson, Rt.
3, Box 49.

Everblooming begonias, red
and white, 20c ea; red and
rose geraniums, 15c ea; Fern

Myrtle.









Z





cuttings, 10c ea; hollyhock and .

10c teaspoonful.
Self, Kingston.

poppy__ seed,
Mrs. Hansel
RFD 1.

Shrubbery, 2 dif. white spi-
rea, 1 single, purpl, pink crepe
flower-
ing pear, yellow Rose of Shar-
on, dbl. altheas, weigelas, any
rooted? 4, 25c; cuttings, 10, $1.
Mrs. Graham Eley, White
Plains.

Govt insp. azaleas, 2-4 ft.
cannas, yellow, purple Iris, $1.-
50 doz; japonicas, blooming
size, 75c ea. Rooted Boxwoods,
50c ea; snowballs, dogwoods,
35c ea. Add postage. Mrs. L.
F. Evans, Talona.

Emperor jonquils, $1.50 C,
$12 M; large, dbl. Daffodils, 65c
doz. $2.50 C. Mrs. Nora Brown,
Tallapoosa. Rt. 1.

Many col. Geraniums, begon-
ias, coleus, hydrangeas, Ama-
woods, wax ger. red and pink
oxalis bulblets, few ferns, hy~
ryllis, dif. Evergreens, box-
drangeas, pussy willows, 35c to

"$2. ea. Rooted. No order less $1,
Talla= ~

Write.
poosa.

Mrs: F.- Ryan,

Butterfly lilac, fragrant lem-
on. and dbl. yellow and bronze
day lilies, also justicia, bloom-
ing size, 3 for 50c. Myrtle Pace,

Temple. Rt. 1.

Red King carnations, $1.00
doz; Fluffy Ruffle and aspar-
agus ferns, 25c ea. Susie An-
drews, Thomasville, Box 641.

Purple Spike border plants
(Orphedium), paper white and
yellow center Chinese narcissi,
yellow jonquils, white snow-
drops, field run, $1; C. Add
10ec on checks: and 25 extra
per hundred bulbs for postage.
Mrs. O. S. Fields, Thomasville,
407 No. Madison St.

Dbl. yellow japonicas (blooms
ed 3 times this year), 50c ea.,
3 for $1.00; Ivis lilies, 60c doz.
Add postage. Miss Verna Silver,
Talking Rock.

White, Butterfly, Calla lily
bulbs, dif. Geraniums, snake
cactus, pink, rose, sultanas,
Angel Wing, Speckled leaf bes
gonias, pink hydrangeas. Ori
ental Cherry, 25c ea. rooted,
Exe. for Sacks, white or print.
Mrs. Jos. Gibbs, Rebecca, Rt. 2.















PAGE foun

FLOWERS AND SEED
FCR SALE

Bulbs: Darwin mix. tulips,
Fanacy pink, $1. doz; Ragale
Jilies, monster size, 40c ea; med.
10 for $1.00; butter and eggs,
daffodils, 25 doz; azaleamums,
85c doz; silver lace vine, 2 for
60c. Add postage. No order
Jess $1. Mrs. Miles Tanner,
Sandersville.

Hastings Ist yr. mix. also
curved, 12 col. Marigold seed,
10c C. or 25 pint; also Willets
Winter peas, 35c lb. Postpaid.
Mrs. J. W. Edwards, Spring-
vale. Rt. 1.

Blooming size Bermuda East-
er lily bulbs, $2. doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. Sadie Shearhouse,
Springfield.

6 cuttings of green~ and
white wandering jew, 25c. Mrs.
Elsie Owens, Smyrna, Rt. 1,
Care. L. G. Hefner.

Bearded German iris, about
35. choice named varieties mix-
ed, not labeled, 15 for $1.00; 35

for: $22-Mrs; Sib. Duckett,
Talking Rock. :
Yellow dbl. japonicas, 3 for

$1.00; Fall pinks, 6, $1.00; yel-
low iris, 9, $1.00; jonquils, 12,
$1. August lilies, 6 for $1. Add
postage. Jemina Crump, Talk-
ing Rock.

King Alfred daffodils, 50c
doz; King iris, 65c doz; dbl.
yellow japonicas and altheas,
50c ea; snow on the min., 40c
doz; goldenbells, 25c ea; Mtn.
azaleas, 25c ea. 5, $1. Exc. for
Print sacks at 30c ea. Miss Vel-
vey Hensley, Talking Rock. Rt.
2

- Long spiked Emperor, single.
double daffodil bulbs, dry,
ready to plant, $1.50 C; bloom-
ing size Dutch blue iris, orange
brown day lilies, 50c doz. Add
postage. Tamar Teem, Talking
Rock.

Glad bulbs for sale or exe.
for sacks: 2 doz. for 3 sacks.
Mrs. James Wimpey, Screven.

Giant Amaryllis, Hybrid, mix.
rare col rs, 1-2; yr. bulbs, 5c,
10c, 15c ea; large bloomers, 25-
50c; Regale lily, 10c, 15c-20c
ea. Stock imported from Hol-
Jand; Also limited amt. Creole
Easter bulbs, 5, 10, 15c ea. Not
P. P. Jos. H. DunNett, Sandy
Springs.

Flame Red Montbretias, tall
cluster Daffodils, 50c doz;
Deep Pink Crepe Myrtles, love-
jy Fringe Trees, Carolina Cher-
ries, (evergreen), 3 var. Hyperr-
cum, Eunoymns, Snow Gar-
Jands, 35c ea; 2, $3.50. Mrs.
Maude Granger, Reidsville.

Geraniums, Ferns, May Lilies,
$1: ea; Reoted Cape Jasmines,
50c ea; Red and Green Hot
Pepper, 75c ea; 1947 Crop Dried

Apples, 75c lb. Add carrying
charges. Mrs. J. EE. Sorrells,
Royston.

Thrift, Pink Verbena, mixed
col. Cushion Mums, le ea; Red,
White, Salmon, Purple, Sultana,
Cactus, Ferns, Oxalis, Red,
White, Begonia, Geraniums, 10c
ea; 4 col. Hydrangeas, 25c ea.
Add postage. Mrs. Lester Phil-
lips, Royston, Rt. 1.

Striped Running Dew, de ea;
Red and Pink, Rose Geraniums,
Red, White, and Pink Begon-

ja,.Salmon and Red Sultana, 10c:

ea; Boston and Sprengeri Fern,
15c ea. Mrs. Leilar Phillips,
Royston, Rt. 1.

Boxwoods, about 150, 2-3 ft.,
must be moved before Ist Dec.,
Bulbs, Long Trumpet Jonquil,
Narcissus, Snowflake, Blue
Dutch Iris, Tulip, Hyacinths,
at my home, Gilmore Car stop
(South Smyrna) at Cooper
Lake. Drive west to 3rd house.
Mrs. W. F. McCurley, Smyrna.

Easter Lilies, 6-7 in. bulbs,
$3. doz; 5-6 in., $2.40 doz; 3-5
in., $1.45 doz. Harold A. Brew-
er, Lumber City.

Bird of Paradise, 75c ea;
Pink Thrift, 50c doz; Hastings
Giant Pansy Plants, 50c doz;
Dbl. Pink Hyacinths, $2. doz.
mixed; Sweet William Plants,
%5c doz. Miss Cecil McCurley,
Hartwell, Rt. 2.

FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE

Bird of Paradise, 75c ea; Re-
gale Lily, Orange and Yellow,
$1. doz; Lemon Lily, $1.50 doz;
Pink Thrift, 50c doz. Miss Mat-

Geranium and Begonia .Cut-
tings, 30c ea. Color; Red, White,
Wine, White and Pink mixed,
Dark Red, Red and White Be-

Hahira, Rt. 2. _

Gardenias daffodils (double),
very fragrant, 40c ea. Limited
amt. Mrs. H. L. Jackson, Albany.
P, OF Box did;

17 Boxwoods, mamoth, 30 yr.
o'd Gardenia, large, var., Cam-

fie Wills, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.

Large, hybrid Amaryllis bulbs,
from choice stock, 3 for $1.00
postpaid. Mrs. Gilbert Martin,
Americus, Rt. 1, Box 33.

600 purple Roman hyacinth
bulbs, blooming size, $4.00 C.
No chks. Mrs. A. G. Smith, Ar-
noldsville, Rt. 1.

deep yellow. with light
yellow tips) bulbs, 20 for $1.00
and you pay postage. Mrs. L.
Q. Clifton, Augusta, 1241-15th
St:

Dry, blooming size paper white
Narcissus, $1.50 C; 30 doz; dbl-
orange day lilies, 20c doz. $1.00
Cc. Add poser Mrs. arn Smith,
Austell, Rt.

Cannas, of ay pink sal-
mon rose, $1.00 doz; large pur-
ple Iris, 50c doz Tiger lilies, med.
S26 3, 25c; purple foxglove,

dy of the Lake, 20c doz., 50
Gs mix col. larkspur seed, "10
for tbls. No chks. Mrs. Clyde
Logan, Austell. Rt. 2.

Night blooming Cereus, 3 ft.,
(has blooms now), Orange canna
lilies, goldenglow plants. If in-
terested, write. Mrs. Lela
Broome, Atlanta, 417 Calhoun
St. N. W.

Dbl. orange day lilies, 40c
doz; white iris, 60c doz; red,
purple verbena plants, 50 doz.;
gardenia cut., not rooted, 60c
doz. Add postage. Mrs. Julia
Singleton, Atlanta, 1139 Hall
Ave. SE MA 4184. :

African violets, 3 plants for
$1.00 (while they last), Postpaid.
Mrs. Connie P. Duncan, Atlanta,
1294 Emory Circle N, E. DE 5425.

Gladiolus bulbs, mammoth
white, $1.00 doz; mix. lavender
and salmon, 75c doz; picardy
salmon No. 3 bulbs, 35c doz.
Mrs. M. W. Randall, Atlanta, Rt.
9."Box-365.

African violets, mgny var.,
25c ea: up; hydrangea, gerani-
ums, begonias, swainsnoia vines.
Mrs. J. D. Lightsey,. Atlanta,
876 Barnett St. :

Begonias, dbl. pink, white and
red, 50c; Gloxinia leaves, 5 for
$1.00. $2.00 orders postpaid.
Minimum orders $1.00. Jean
Wilson, Atlanta, 943 Green-
wood Ave., N. E. :

Thrift, large pink flowers, $1
bu. Bring- hamper Hemerocalis,
large divisions Hyperion, Ophir,
50c; Mikado, 3 for 50c; Vulcan,
red, $1.00 ea.;
ide. Many others. Mrs. Tull C.

Waters, Atlanta. Browns Mill
Rd. CA 6892.

Pink Anemons, pink, per
phlox, large daffodils, large,

blue, birdfoot violets, $2.00 C;
16 choice roses, $2.00; all- col.
dogwoods, Mtn. laurels, pink
Cherdkee roses, $2.00 doz. Sa-
aie Wilson, Blue Ridge.

Rose col. Perennial Phlox, $1;
Snowball Bushes 5c ea; Lilac
Bushes, 3, $1.00 del. Mrs. Bessie
Baggett, Douglasville, Rt. 1.

Mountain Laurels, Ivy, Tooth
Brass, Black Gum, Honeysuck-
les, Dogwood, 40c ea; 3, $1.00
Fall Pink, Butter and Egg,
March Flowers, Flag, 50c doz.
Add postage. No checks. Dollie
Person, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Rhododendrons, Mtn. Laurels,
Spruce, White Pines, _ Grey
Beards, Crape Myrtles, Red Spi-
rea, Star Jasmine, Kerria, Jap-
onicas, Azaleas, $1.00 doz; Pink
Thrift, Dutch, Spanish Iris, 50c



doz. Mrs, M. 1 Eaton, Dahlon-
ega, Rt. 1 i



tie McCurley, Rt. 2, Hartwell..

gonia. Miss Lucy Mae Parker,

ellia, large blue hydrangea, Ef-}

Large - daffodils (ares cups,

Queen of May,



| FLOWERS ND SEE

FOR SALE

- Lilies: Dewberry, 50c don Wa-
ter, August, 2, 25c; Blue Iris,
Day lilies, 30c doz. Mrs. Martha
White, Dahlonega, Rta Ly oe
ies

_ Mixed cols, Perennial Phlox,
Mums, Thrift, Hibiscus, 40c doz;
Many cols. large Iris, 50c doz;
2 each, Tiger, Tritoma, and Pur-
ple Lilies, Tulip, Glad, Peren-
nial Sweet Peas, Hyacinths, Lit-
tle Ball Pinks, Oak Leaf Hyd-
rangea, large Dahlias, for 5c.
Add postage. Mrs. Willis Grin-
dle, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.

Mixed col., large Iris,
Pink Thrift, 50c doz; Yellow
and Spotted Cannas, J
Flowers, 40c doz; Hardy Hibis-
cus, 6, 50c. Add postage. No
chks. Mrs. Lona Blackwell, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1. :

Mixed col. A ks 5c doz;
Pink Glads, Dewberry Lilies,
Golden Glow, 50c doz; Water
and August Lilies, 3, 25c; Nar-
cisus, $1.00 C; Orange Day lil-

lies, Blue Iris, 30c doz. Mrs. Mar-|

tha White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,|
Box 37.
Jonquil, Narcissus and Daf-

fodils, all nice dry bulbs, 4 doz.,
$1.10; White Narcissus Bulbs,
6 5c. No checks. Mrs. Lon Ash-
worth, Dacula, Rt..1. >, .

Blue Ridge Azaleas, 25 ea.;
$2.00 doz; Mixed, $1.00. doz;
Outdoor Mt. Winter Ferns,

Glads, Silver Iris, 50c doz; Red)

Locust, Tree Lily, Black Haw,
Birch, 25c ea; Walnut Meats, $1
pt. Add postage. -Mrs. Presley

Fowler, Diamond.
- Bulbs per doz: avinddnns lily, | li

1 in., $1.00; 2 in., $2.25; 3 in.
$3.50; 4 in. $4.50; 5 in and over,
$5. 00: Dbl. blue. hyacinths and

: Empress daffodils, $3.00. W. A.

Suromer, Forest Park.-

1000 mixed bulbs, $8. 50; 500,

$4.50; $1.00 C. Consisting of yel-

and daffodils; 14 bu. bulblets,
$4, 50 All del. Mrs> E. Foun-

tain, Ft. Valley.

Azaleas (native), Flame, Cal-
emdulecea (known as the most
beautiful flowering tree), $3.00
doz; Boxwood, Semperviren,

_Eng., dogwood, 4-6 in. $2.00 doz.
Maude Hamby, Greenville. -

Bridalwreath, large bushes,

others. Exc. for clump; catnip, |

ground ivy rose bushes, others.
Exc: for sacks. Bring sacks and
get flowers 24% mi, No, Ellijay

on Blue Ridge Hwy. Write first.
Mrs. E,W. Thrasher, Ellijay.

Blooming size Bulbs Big
Giant Yellow Daffodils, $1.00)
doz; Light Blue~ Hyacinths, 2}
doz, $1.00. No orders less $1.00.
Ri E. A. Smith,: Greenville.

3s

African Violets, Pink Rauty,

| Biue: Boy, Blue Girl, Neptune,

White Lady, Mary Wace, Topaz,
Saphire, $1.00 ea; Leaves, 4, $1.
Few other kinds. Prepaid. W. W.
McEver, Gainesville.

Dwarf Boxwood, rooted cut-
tings, $5.00 C;. Stout Bunch
Plants, $25.00C; Nandianas, Li-:
gustrums, English Ivy, Vinca
Minor, Sweet. Violets, $1.00 doz.
Lois Woodruff, Greenville,

Glossy Leaf Ligustrums, tall
var., 3 yr. plants, 12-15 in, high,
15e ea; 50~plants, $6.25; $10.00
C. Add postage. Miss Daisy El-
lis, Gainesville. ;

2 Heavy field grown Old Eng.
Dwarf Boxwood, 7 yrs. old, 6-

8 in, 50 ea; 4-6 in, 25c ea. Less |

in lots 100 or more: Also King
African Violets, $2.50 C. Mrs.
O. D. Woodruff, Greenville.

Pink Hyancinth Bulbs, 12c ea.
$1.25 doz; Red, Pink, and -White
Peonies, 35c ea.; Cape Jasmine,
rooted, White wax Textured
Flowers in pots, $2.00 ea. Add
postage. Miss Bessie Martin,
Gainesville, Rt. 6.

Gardenias, 10-12 in. plants, 2,
$1.00; Stocky full top Boxwood,
6-8 in., $2.00 doz; Dixie Bril-
Jiant Crape Myrtle, 2-3 ft., $3.00
doz; Red Violets, Cuculate Ru-
bra, $2.00 doz. All rooted.
prompt shipment. Raymond
Robinson, Greenville.

Daffodils Bulbs, $1.00 C; Jon-
quil, 75 C; 300, $2.00 Cash. No

checks. Fanny SRE Buford, |.
{Rt 1.



Blue} *
March.

i : | Asst.,
low jonquils, butter and eggs}

as Wooten,
Bird of Paradise, DUG ea: |



Royal Soups 3, $1. 00
Trumpet . (Creeper Vine, 30 a.

Ophopoghan and other flo



Or for print sacks. Miss" Josi

Hamilton, Baxley, Rt. 2 a

White Narcissus, Velione one
quils,; Butter and Egg, 40c doz;










Daffodils, 30c doz; White Wis-| q,





teria, Spirea, Lilacs, . Hibiscus, |.

50c. Add postage; also large

bunch White Oleander and a} ee

row of Privet Hedge, at m

home. Mrs. Arthur Meeler, Be sarees

hop, Rt. 1, Box 191.

- 3 of each: Phortenias, 8-12 in.,

White Easter Lilies and Box-
wood for sale. exc. for print)
sacks, 100 lb. size, 3 bulbs, for).
4 sacks, 4 Boxwood for 8 sacks. |
Mrs. W. A. Sosper, Bowdon, Star

Rt. :

Scotch Brooms, 1-% ft., Abelias, ae

1-% ft., Nandinas, 6-8. in., Gar-

denias, 6-8 in. $1.00. No less Bos

than 3 of a kind at this: price.

rs. Floyd Ses | Pury

ties

. Paper. White, Yellow Content
Narcissus, Butter and Egg, and] 1:
Jonquils, 75c a Little Yellow |
Chinese Sa-|

Narcissus, 60c

cred . Lilies, Bie ae Exc. for|*

sacks. Mrs. H. B. McGill, Bron-| _
| wood, :

Small Palms, 50c ea.; og, si 25:
6, $5.25; Large lot Nareissus,,
market price. B.- 0:
Brunswick

Crape Myrtle, Dbl Pink Wan
egated Althea, Dbl. Gardenias,
Waxed Leaf Ligustrum, Japon-
icas, Roses, Privit Hedges, Abe-
ia, Hydrangea,

$10.00-$20.00 C. Add postage.

Mrs. B. Brady, Cairo, Rt. 1 So

343. :
Water Cabate, Hyactin, Wa.

ter Poppy, 6 one kind, $1.00; 6);
Unrooted Pink| 4

$1.00;
Purple, White Violets,
doz. No chks. Mrs. A. D.
son, Cairo, Rt. 2. ie
Mixed Iris, $1.20 C;
Queen, Black Prince, 50, $
Jonquils, Daffodils, ao
Cream Daffodils, $1.10.

$1.00
Brin-

: Aza-

leas cuttings, eee Rose, :

Flame, 25. 60c; Red Cedars, |

small, 60c doz; 12 in., 6, $1.20. | st

Mrs. it M. Hall, Cathoun, Rtsi

Milk and Fine Lilies, 20c ea.,
Red Seven Sister Running Rose,
25 ea; ean 25 ea. Mrs. ne

amilla. ;

Blooming. size Bulbs: White
Narcissus, $1.75 C; Yellow Jon.
quils, $1.50 C; Yellow. Butte
and Eggs, 50c doz. Miss- ote G
McLane, Hartwell. >

One hundred. Bird. of Rara- |
dise Plants,

6-20 in., 30c ea;
5, $1.00; Yellow 4 O'clock, 10c
pulb:: Pink Almond, Garden)
Sage, 2, 25c; $1. doz. Add post-

age. Moss packed. Miss Lena |

Crump, Hartwell, Rt. i. os es

Sweet Williams,
plants, bloom this cane $a
Yellow Jonquils, $1.25 C; Blu
Roman Hyacinths, -
Miss Nora McCurley, Honeywell |}
ite 2.

New Phillipine (White Lily
Bulbs, blooming size, 3, $1.00;
Daffodil, Jonquil, Narcissi |
Bulbs, both White and Yellow,

200, $1. 60; $6.50 M. Prepaid.)

Mrs. Carl -Kimsey, Hiawassee.

Wisteria, 25c}
35 and 50c ea.; Tung Oil Trees,

May | Ri
2021:
81.605),

4 varieties Cannas, 75e doz;|.

large |p.

$1. 50. doz. a

Fussell, M diso:

Bermuda Easter Lilies, $1.50] ing

and $2. doz. eS Ina Wootten,
Harlem. - :

Rooted Sweet Purple
lets, Lavender Thrift,
Verbena, large Yellow Jonquils,
Daffodils, dif. col. Petunias,
25c doz; Green
Shrubbery, 25c rooted. Mrs. R.
J. Fleming, Lincolnton, Rt. 2.

Well rooted - Pink Thrift, 25 |
doz; Rooted Gardenias, 25 ea.
Mrs. G, R. Bailey, Lavonia, Rt.

Vio-

Gardenia, 2-3 ft, (rooted), 2,
75c; Narcissi, Jonquils, 3 doz.,
60c; Mums; Red and White, 30c

doz; Y- Pinks, 2c: doz; Purple doz

Lilac, rooted, 25c; Ini

Pink |



urpl

and = White|

size, 25c do:

Amarilla, 5c

plemee cS


































































































LOWERS AND SEED |
FOR SALE

| FLOWERS AND SEED
WANTED





ili :
He Wild

olets, ee

ed -Crape My-
ink Red pt

ra 10c;

ivy, White sonic ee

leas, $1.00 doz; Pink

e, Bl e Violets,
x G loves, Pur-

bow Moss,

| labeled, 25,
| size Blue Siberian
| doz; $1. C. Mrs. Newt E., Spence,
e Carrollton, Rt 5

4 var. Jew, 3 Ferns, 3 Coleus,
3 cols. Verbenia, also seed of
Red, Pink,
| mixed, Sell or exc. for print
!sacks. Nan Kown, ani tevalle
| Rt. 3. :

. Day Lilies,
. Gigcat Fairy (Salmon Pink),
Twinkle Q(arge Dark
| Red), $1; ea; Jonquil Camper-
; | nelli, blooming, size, 5 doz., $1.
. Whitten, Chula.

500 nice By oceaeen Plants, 25-
36 in. high, for sale. W. P. Wil-

50c ea;

:| Del. Mrs. W. H

i Bite itl Pirple: Center, Iris,
| 40. doz; Narcissus, Daffodils,
Jonquils, 25 doz; Oxalis, Rain-
-English Ivy, 30c
bunch; 2 yr. Marechalneil roses,
rooted, 50c ea.
Saldoz, Mrs. D. M. Hughey, Fair-
2 mount. Rt. 1, Box 159. |

German Iris, 12-15 dif., ner
Blooming
45c

$1.25;
Iris,

White

; Golden

son, Crandall, Rt. 1.

| Tiger - Lily Bulbs, blooming |
: size, Double, 20c ea; Single, 15c
-|ea; Blue-Roman Hyacinths, $1.-
**)|25 doz; Pink and Red Oleand-
5 ers, $1.50. Add postage. Mrs. G.

|P. Nunn, Crawfordville.

_ Geranium Cuttings,
_|Sultanas, 6, 25c; 12 kinds Iris,
Garden Fuchsia, 25c
Mixed Spring Blooming

: se doz;

5c

cuttings,

Hibiscus,

Giant,

ea;

Bulbs, $1: C; Coral Plants, 25c.

Good roots.

?| Crawfordville.

Purple Verbenas, Hibiscus, Jas-
s.|mine, Lilac, 15 ea; 7, $1.00;
| Weigelas, Rose cut., Iris. Sweet
Williams,
weUbes

Pink | Christmas Cactus,

'35c doz:

Mrs. Annie West,

Red,

Boxwood
$5. C. Add postage. Mae
2 tie Duran, Cumming, Rt. 1c:

Speckled Leaf Wax Cactus

Plants, for small -pot plants,

5e

Pink, Red, Purplish Sul-
ae tanas, | rooted, ne ea;

a cut;
oid ;| pink, white, red Conch begon-

jas, 10c cut, ferns, cactus, etc.

,| Weigelias, :
, |) cedar, Easter rose, yellow jas-
mine, Calycanthus, Silver Map-
"le, rooted, 25 ea; Iris, Orange
Deutzias,
| weigelas, 25 doz. No Fla. ord:

| |D

TT,

,| Mrs. Ralph Williams, Cumming.

Holly plants, well rooted, $1.
- |ea.Add postage. Mrs.
ie Cantrell, Cumming. Rt. 1.

Mixed col. tulips, 15, $1.00;

bridalwreath,

ay Lilies, 50c doz;

lilac,

ers. Gladys Duran, Cumming.
Riel :

Vitaes,
Forsythia. Eagleagnus, Philadel-
,| phus, Crimson Quince, pink Al
mond, bush Honeysuckle, Wis-
teria, - Daffodils, Jonquils, per.
Ageratum, Roses. Mrs.

Cone and Pyramid Arbor-|
Spirea,

3-6 ft, 4 var.

Ward, Adairsville, Rt. J.

Star of Bethlehem bulbs, 25c
doz; 65 C; 15 pot flower cut-
tings, for $2. 25. Exe. pot plants
for Blue yard Hydranges or Os-
trich Plume fern;
-| large (100 yrs. old) Boxwood.

Cc.

also extra

f se Ed Stone, Adairsville, Rt.

s, 35 ea; Lem-
a ea; Fox-

ostage. No

rtrude ae ELli-

es enquils 50, $l. 00; red, yel-
| low dahlias tubers, $2.00 doz.;
pink Rain lilies, 25, $1.00: Thum-
berger plants, 15 ea; Wisteria
plants, 25 ea: No order less

ve 00. Mrs. J. B. Driver, Adel.

Ga. Easter lily bulbs, blooming
size, 15c, 35 50c ea; bulblets,

(large size); large

an $1.00 C. 10 percent discount 100
> | lots

red

Amaryllis bulbs, 3 for $1.00.

Easter lily bulbs, $2.00

n| No orders less $2.00. Miss Mar-
: garet L. Drives, Adel.

doz;

Narcissus bulbs, 25 doz. Add

| size,



postage on orders less $2.00 Mrs.
Alma Moore, Adel.

Bermuda Easter Lily Bulbs,

60c doz;

Yellow Butter

; Wide and narrow Jew
10c ea; Wild Iris
Ferns, _ 30c doz.







asst. blooming sizes, 60c doz;
Picardy Glad Bulbs, blooming
Picardy Glad
Bulblets, $1. 15 pt. Add postage.
Miss Ivey Dugger, Oliver.

and Bgg,
1 Prime Rose, Winter Moss, 30c

cut-
and
_ Add
, Oz

25e

1

Ele

Mixed col. Iris, Yellow Nar-
cissus Bulbs, $2. C; Christmas
Cactus, Deep Pink, 40c
Blooming size Pink, Yellow

Bulbs Jonquils, Yellow and

elyn Ww. Seago, Pinehurst, Rt. 1.

fred, Laurens Koster, Paper

}A. J. Stanton, Newborn.

Rooted asst. Rose, 1 yr. cut-
tings, White American Beauty,
Red Nandenia from seeds, all
25e ea; Pomegranate, 1 yr. old,
several var. Pot Flowers. Write.
Mrs. W. E. Stowe, Newborn.

Will sacrifice large collection
of dif. House Plants at once.
Enough to fill large green
house. Cannot ship. Write or
come. Mrs. T. C. Bee. Newnan,
RG 3e

Yellow Japonicas, $1. ea;
all col. Azaleas, $1. doz; Brid-
al-Wreath, 50c ea; Goldenbell,
|85e ea; Govt. insp. Add _post-
age. Mrs. J. B. Farist, Oak Hill.
Sell only in Ga.

_ All col. Azaleas, ~75c doz;
Snow Balls, 50c ea; Sweet
Shrubs, Indian Arrow, 75 doz;
Canna Bulbs, $1.-doz; _ Lilies,
Velvet Rose, 50c ea; Mums, 25
doz. All rooted. Govt. insp. Add
postage. Mrs._ Elsie Cantrell,
Oakhill.

Pink, Blue and White rooted
Pot and Yard Hydrangeas, 3,
$1.00; Red Flowering: Honey-
suckle, Silver Leaf Vine, Weep-
ing Willow, Forsythia, Gar-
denia, Bridal Wreath, 2, $1.
Mrs. John Myers, Hartwell.

Sweet White Narcissus, big
ones, 3c; Med., 2c; small, 1c.
By doz., hundreds or thousands: ;
Glads, 3c: Lemon Lily, 35 ea;
Spider Lily, 3c; Tiger Lily, 3c

a. A, W. Little, Hampton.

Mixed Single and Dbl. Hol-
lyhock Seed, 10c tbls. Add
postage; Red, White. Pink with
White Eye, rooted Verbena
Plants, $1.75 C. PP. Mrs. D. T.
Gates, Hamilton, Rt. 1.

Finest Super Giant Trumpet
Daffodil Bulbs, now ready, 75c
doz. Add postage. Mrs. John R.
Brown, Hartwell, Rt. 3.

Blooming size bulbs, Dbl.
Yellow Butter and Egg, Yel-
low Jonquil, Fragrant White
Jonquil with Yellow Cup in
Center, 75c doz; $2.10 C; Bird
of Paradise, $1. ea. Mrs. Pearl

| MeCurley, Hartwell, Rteok,
All cols. Azaleas, 75 doz;
Snowballs, 50c ea; Sweet

Shrubs, Indian Arrow, 75e doz;
Canna Bulbs, $1. doz; Lilies,
50c ea; Velvet Roses, 50c ea;
Mums, 25 doz. Add postage.
All rooted. Mrs. Janie Wad-
dell, Oakhill,

400 Blue Roman Hyacinths,
de ea; 300 Small Nandinas, 7c
ea; 25 Valne eis. $1200 1 Old
Fashion Lemon Lilies, 10c Cuts.
Beauty Bush, Photania, Bank-
sian Yellow Rose and others.
Add postage. Mrs. J. M. Mc-
Millian, Palmetto.

Pink Thrift, 50c doz., red,
white, pink dbl. geranium cut-
tings, 15c ea. Postpaid. Mrs. A.
L. Trowell, Oliver.

Self rooted roses, 1 and 2: Oi
old, single hyacinths, Sie:
jonquils, dbl and single daf-.
fodils, Narcissus and many
spring bulbs. Miss Mary C.
Florence, Durand.



FLOWERS AND SEED
WANTED





Want exc. dark orange can-

color. Mrs. J. G. Davis,
Grange, 1304 Brownwood.

Want all kinds of Begonias,
rooted, such as, Beefsteak,
Guinea Wing, Leopard, Rex,
Watermelon, Conch and Maple
Leaf. Advise. Mrs. R. T. Mc-

La-

Mullan, Forsyth, P. O. Box 264.
Want Golden Spur Daffodil



ea;
Center Lantanas, 40c ea; Mixed |

White Narcissus, $1.50 C. Ev-

Daffodil Bulbs: Like King Al-
White Narcissus, each $1. doz.

_|Red Peach, Muscadine Grape

na bulbs for some. of another |\/

_Exe. Tiger lily bulbs for red
Spider lily bulbs. M. C. Cole-
man, Flowery Branch, Rt. 3.

Want dbl. rose, also pale
pink altheas, white, pale pink
or purple crepe myrtle, white,
rose or pink Oleanders, also
sev. doz. lilacs and camelias.
Mrs. W. P? Sowell, Atlanta, 1102
Springdale Rd.

Want exc. garlic bulbs and
seeds for pure White jonquils
or Daffodils, or white Roman
hyac th bulbs. Advise. Mrs.
J. B. Stevens, Moreland. Rt. 1.

Want. white Spider lily and
red and white Amaryllis bulbs.
Advise. Mrs. Luther Johnston,
Glennville. Rt. 2.

PLANTS FOR SALE

Strawberry Plants, $1.30 C;
Scallion Onion Buttons, 60c qt.,
Sage, teacup, 15c. PP. Mrs. G.
C. Taylor, Buchanan, Rt. 1.

Sage Plants, Old Fashion
Peachtrees, Yellow, White and

Vine, 20c ea. Rooted. Mrs. W.
H. Norrell, Gainesville, Rt. 6.

E. J. Wakefield Cabbage, N.
C. Short Stem and Ga: Cab-
bage Collard, Burgess White
Bunching and White Bermuda
Onion Plants, 300, $1.00; 500,
| $1.75; $3.00 M; Sage, Garlic,
Asparagus, $1. doz. Mrs. Bessie
Baggett, Douglasville, Rt. 1. ~

Imp. Strawberry Plants, $5.
.ME;- Dorsetts; $1. C;, Exe. for
print sacks, 100 plants for. 4
sacks. Each pay postage. Mrs,
Eva Waldrip, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Pure Blakemore Strawberry
Plants, true to name, Ist. yr.
plants, 500, $6.00; $10. M. Del.
Mrs. Ray Hemphill, Flowery
Branch, Rt. 1.

Everbearing Strawberry
Plants, $3.00, 500. Young, ready
for prompt shipment. Mrs. Wil-
lie Allen, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Ga. and Heading Collard
Plants, 30c C; 555, $1.00; $1.50
M. PP. Moses Davis, Milledge-
valley Rt= 5, Box 126.

Large Early Bearing Straw-
berry Plants, rooted, 50c C; $4.
M. Add postage. Jay ~ Hayes,
Gainesville, Rt. 1.

* Ga. and Heading Collard, 300,
$1.00; $1.90 M; 5000 up, $1. 65
M. exp. col. Strawberry, Klon-
dike, 200, $1.00; 500, $2.25; $4.
M; Big Jim Everbearing, 90c
Cc; 500, $3.75; Sweet Pepper,
30c C. C. W. Smith, Gainesville. f

Sage Plants, $1. doz; Rooted
Grapevines, 40c ea; $4.50 doz;
All PP. L. J. Ellis, Cumming.

Imp. Gibson, Great Wonder-
berry, Red Gold Strawberry,
75e C; White Iceburg Black-
berry, Red Everbearing Rasp-
berry, rooted sage, 6, 50c; Gar-
lic, 50 doz; Horseradish, 8, 50c;
Peppermint, 24, 25c. Add Dost:
age. No checks, Mrs. Willis
Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt.- 1.

Kudzu Crowns, state certi-
fied, 2 to 3 yr. roots, $1. doz;
$4. C; $25. M; 1 to 2 yr. crowns,
$2.75 C; $15. ML. Maude Hamby,
Greenville.

C. W. Cabbage Plants, fresh,
green, 300, $1.00; 500, $1.50;
$2.50 M. PP. R. Chanclor, Pitts.

Everbearing Strawberr y
Plants, early bearing, large,
rooted, $1. C-; H. M.. Duffee,
Forest Park, 3 Ernest Dr. Phone
Ca. 6547.>

Everbearing strawberry
Plants, 50e C. Or exc. 200 for 4
feed sacks, 100 lb. size, Each
pay postage. Mrs. B, Thornton,
Bowdon.

Ga. Collard Plants, 35c CG;
Strawberry Plants, large, early,
heavy eroppers, 80c C. Add



bulbs earliest var. Advise. Mrs.
ill Rt 1,



EAS

losal and 100 Ox Hart,

Stamps accepted. Will C. Smith,
Roy.

oe mination tested, $15.







Conrons Giant Mastodon
Everbearing Strawberry Plants,
$1. C; Yellow Clingstone, Plum,
Peach, Yellow, Red Old Fash-
ion Peach Trees. White Eng,
Sage Plants, rooted, -20c ea.
Mrs. Mae Turner, Gainesville,
Rt. 6.

Collard Plants, 500, $1. 00;
$1.50 M. J. H. Davis, Milledge: =
ville, Rt. 5, ox 126. ;

Bearing size
Dewberry Plants, - 50ec doz;
Giant Garlic, 25 doz. Add.
postage. Tamar Teem, Talking
Rock.

Dorseits Strawberry Plants,
$1.C; Improved, $5.50 M. J. On
Waldrip, Gainesville, Rt. 1. Es



















Blackberry, -











Early large Klondike Straw-
berry Plants, 50c C; Large Red
Indian Peach Seed, 50c dozj -
Yellow Crookneck Squash Seed,










10c tbl. Add postage. Rosie

Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1. sai
Mt. Huckleberry Plants,

bearing size, $1. doz; Little




Pink Early Tender Bean Seed,
White Hal Runners, 35 teacup, __
Add postage. Mrs. Nancy Hen-
derson, Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box 48,

True to name Mastodon
Everbearing Strawberry Plants,
$1. C. PP. Prompt shipment.
Mrs. Clay Bennett, Flowery
Branch, Rt. 1.

Mastodon Everbearing Strayre

berry Plants, 80c C. Prompt ;
shipment. Miss Martha Bennet,
Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.

























































































SEEDS FOR SALE



Large Red Nest Onions, $1.25
gal. Mrs. Guy Burton, Logan-
ville, Rt. 2.

Mixed turnip seed, 25c cup}
1947 Sage, nice and clean, $1.
lb. Mrs. W. E. McDaris, Cant-
on, Rt.

10 tons Blue Lupine Seed,
germ. 91.50, combine run, 4e
Ib. at farm. G. B. Sinquefield,
Harrison. :
2 tons Simpsons Sweet Lu-
pine Seed, germ. 91 per ct,
purity 99. 50 per ct., sacked in
100 Ib. bags, 20c lb. J. L. Speir,
Bronwood.

Blue Lupine Seed, 4%4c Ibg-
Victor Grain Oats, $1.25 bu.
All even wt. bags. J. D. Duke, ~
Fort Valley.

New Crop Collard Seed. $19.
CWT. Exp. prepaid. W. W. Wil-
liams, Quitman.

Oats and Blue Lupine Sced
Screenings, suitable for winte
er cover crop, 3c lb. -FOB,
Fred Dockweiler, Cordele, Rts
4,



Purple Globe turnip seed, 50
lb., in 4 or more lbs. Also
a 25 Ib. Ham, 75c lb. Postpaid,
PB. D.:Shipp; Hiram, Rt. 1ses

Red Sweet Nest Onions, $1,
gal. Exc. 1 gal. for 4 print sacks
of 100 lb. cap. good cond. Mrs.
M. Lane, Vienna, Rt. 1.

Rooted St. Augustine Grass,
$1.50 bu. Miss A, Dixon, Alma.

Red Spring Shallot Onions,
$1. gal., Old Time Red Scallion
Buttons, $1.25 gal. Prepaid. M.
C. Crowe, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Striped Half Runner Bean
Seed, 50c large cup. Exe. {ot
feed sacks. Oma Barnes, Ele
lijay, Rt. 3.

Tomato Seed: 200 Blue Min.,
(runs to 14 ft., 100 lbs. to vine,
wt. up to 2 lbs) and 200 Col-
with
for--20,

culture instructions



Ga. Collard Seed, recleaned,
cwr.

siititr | eae ator.

. B. Jolly, Kingston, Rt.
Red small Onion Sets, 25 to



postage. Gladys Duran, Cum-]|30 in a hill, freeze wont kill,
ming, Rt. 1, Green Hot and Red Pepper, $l.-=
Gem Everbearing Strawberry 20 a EE. Mey TT siolloways
Plants, 90c C. Exe. some for Cobbtown, Rt, 1.
bearing. size tame Black or Red 10 bu. new crop Long Hull
Raspberries; 1% doz. for 100] Crowder Pea Seed (without
strawberry plants. Each pay|rain), $8. bu. for lot.. Shipped
postage, Mrs. A. M. Grier, Al-| FOB. J. A. Taylor, Coolidge,
jto, Rt 1. : Rios : \












_ SEEDS FOR SALE

SRUIT TREES FOR SALE |







Purple Globe Turnips, Ga.
ollard Seed, %4 Ib., 30c; % lb.,
50c; 90c Ib. Add postage. Mat-
tie: Duran, Cumming, Rt. 1.

_. Old Time large White Half
Runner Bean Seed, treated for
weevils, 60c lb. in 10 Ib. lots;
~65c Ib. in less lots. Mrs. T. A.
ohnson, Canton, Rt. 2.

5 Striped Half Runner bean
seed, guar. tender, 30c cup, 50c
lb; White Half Runners, 40c


















$1. $1. 25 ea. F. M. Combs, Sm,
Washington.

postage.
Cumming,

pernong,
Small English Walnut
Henry Whitfield, Marietta, Rt.
ai

2, 3, and 4 ft. fig trees, 75c,

Rooted Fig eee. 50c ea. Add
Mis. 1. os@antrell;
Re Ll:

Small Black Walnuts, Scup-
Old .Time Peach, 5
Trees.






cup, 60c Ib. Del. through 2nd
zone. Bonnie Smith, Gaines-
Pyille. Rt. 2.




FRESH AND DRIED
FRUIT FOR SALE

}



Seven Top turnip. seed, 40c
Ib; Early York and Flat Dutch
cabbage, $1.50 1b; Green and
Red hot pepper, 50c gal; finest
~ everbearing. strawberry plants,
$1. C. Mrs. Johny Mers, Hart-
well.

100 Ibs. Seven Top turnip
~ seed, sound, clean, 40c lb. 5 or
more lbs., 35c lb. Postpaid. Al-
so N. H. Red March _ pullets,
$3. eafor 5 or more shipped.
~ M. O. only. J. Y. Davis, Martin.
ARt 2:









BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
Old Fashion Half Runner
Beans, 1947 crop, 45c cup. Can
fill large orders. Exe. for print

sacks. Mrs. Hoke Ashworth,
Canon, Rt. 1.

~ White Sugar Crowders (look
like White Black Eyed and
very good tbl. peas.), $10. bu.
Add postage. L. D. Todd, Dan-
ville, Rt. 2.

White Bunch, 7 or 8 wk.








gal. at my home.
Caudel, Homer, Rt. 1, Box 109.

lb; Peppermint, Catnip, Spear-
mint, Balm,
doz; Grub and Star Root, $2.50
lb. Mrs. Delmar Fender,
lonega, Rt. 1, Box 35.

Fruit, 50c Ib; Good sound and
Clean White Nest Onions, $1.
gal. All PP. Mrs. Bonnie Weeks,
Dial.

White Nest Multiplying Onions,
$1. gal. Del Cash or: MO. Mrs.
Gober Murphy, Jasper, Rt. 2.

free from peel and worms, 4ic
lb. Add posetage. Mrs.
Rhodes, Ranger. Rt. 2.

Nice lot scuppernongs, 35c
J. Manley

_Nice Sundried Apples, * 50c

Horehound, 40c

Dah-

Nice Sundried Sour Cooking

Clean Dried Apples, 46c 1b;

About 15 bu. Winesap Ap-

ples, $2. bu; Also Tender White |
Half Runner Bean Seed, hand
shelled, 45c large cup. Sold on-
ly in 2 cup amt.
Franks, Hiawassee.

Mrs. Fred

Nice sundried horseapp'es,

N. E.



Tender Beans, early, 30c large
cup. Add postage. Mrs. Isa-
ye! Hall, Dawsonville, Rt.1.

White Table Peas, 20c 1b;
Dry Sage, $1. lb; Half Runner
Bunch Beans, and Comodore
Bunch, 2 cups, 30c. Myrtle
Pace, Temple, Rt. 1.

Old Time Tender Speckled
and White Half Runner Blue
_ Goose Peas, 25c lb."in 5 lb, lots;
. Red Multiplying Onion But-
tons, $1. gal. PP. Miss Gennia
Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.

Good Tender Garden Bean
_. Seed, White, Cream, and strip-
ped Half Runners, Cornfield
big White Crease Back -and
Cut Short Beans, 50c -large cup.
Exc. for feed sacks, 4 for cup
of beans. No checks. Mrs. Ok
Gable, Ellijay, Rt. 3.




















_ CORN AND SEED CORN -
FOR SALE










_ 125 bu. Corn, $2.50 bu. Hen-
oy Butts, Warm Springs.

1% A Fresh Corn, ready for
market the 26th and 27th this
month. 1 mi. Lakemont. W. A.
Kelley, Lakemont.

Several hudred bushels new
white corn on cob, $2. bu. at
my farm. 15 mi. S. Statesboro.
_ Mrs. H. V. Franklin, Register,
Rt. 1, Box 20. Phone No. 3631
Statesboro.

100 bu. Hastings Prolific
Corn (new), 6 mi. W. LaGrange,
for sale. E. B. Pattillo, Gabbet-
ville.







ae : :
PECAN & FRUIT TREES
FOR SALE



Muscadine and Scuppernong,
Grape Vines, Red and Black
Raspberry, Garden Goose ber-
ries, May Cherry and .Blue
Damson Plums, 6, $1.00; Hazel-
nut, Blue Berry Bushes, $1.
doz. Moss packed. Mrs. M. lL.
Eaton, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,

Rooted Hazelnut, Crabapple,
and Apricot Trees, 50c ea. Add
postage. Mrs. D. J. Bennett,
-*=Cumming, Rt. 1.

Leading var. Peach Trees,
$3.75 doz; $35. C; Grapevines,
$3. doz; $25. c; Black Walnut,
$4.80 doz; $37. 50 &: Seedling
Peach, $1.50 doz; $15. C. Mrs.
E. B. Travis, Riverdale. _






























a
a

ts





Athens, Phone 3338J.

SYRUP FOR SALE



Best grade Ga. Sugar Cane
Syrup, made from imp. govt.
green cane. Have 900 gals. for
quick delivery, $1.75 gal. can.
A. A. Britt, Thomaston.

40 gals. syrup, $1.25 gal. Mrs.
J. B. Wilson, Summit, Rt. 2.

800 gals. pure Ga. Cane syrup,
bright, average wt. 10 lbs. per
can., Cannot ship. John W.
Hand, Hazelhurst, Rt. 3,

3000 gals. heavy feed syrup,

cattle, hog and chicken feed,|

in new 5 gal. cans, 40c gal. O.
E. Norton, Fairburn.

100 gal. syrup, $1.50 gal. at
my place. Cannot ship. J. G,
Joiner, Soperton.

2000 gals. pure Ga. Cane Sy-
rup in No. 10 cans. J. E, Stead-
ham, Bainbridge.

Good Ga. Syrup in No. 10
Cans; ote
Marlow. ae
GRAIN AND HAY

FOR SALE



500 bu. Wheat and 500 bu.
Oats, for sale. W. A. Simpson,
McDonough. Phone 114.

Recleaned Victor Grain Oats,
$1.50 bu; Recleaned Sanford

Wheat, $3. bu. E. V. Vaughn,

Bogart.

Victory Grain Seed Oats, $6.-
toper-) bu. -bag. YOR. J. 2.
Lowe, Fort Valley. Care Whet-
stone Farms. -

Oats,
well

Turners Bancroft Seed
recleaned, graded, pure,
developed, heavy grains, $1.75
bu. Shipping charges paid on 25
bu. or more. R.. M, Turner,
Royston.

Good recleaned Cokers Ful-
grain Oats, in good bags, $1.
bu: George Watkins, Griffin,
Rt. A.

Good grade of
Bermuda and Meadow Hay,
$25. bu; Bright Wheat Straw,
50c bale. All cut with binder
and baled without rain. K, E:
Rucker, Elberton, Rt. 6.

Quality hay, scientifically
baled by new Holland and Case
balers. Lespedeza $35. ton;
Mixed Grasses, $27.50 ton. Del
5 and 7 ton lots. H. W. Vaughn,

clean bags. Ralph S. Collier, |

gal. W. A. Dasher, |

Lespedezd,

_ GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE



Wong Barley (does not smut),
$2.25 bu; Sanford Wheat, $3.
bu. L. P. Singleton, Fort Val-
ley, Rt. 3.

Blue Lupine and Seed Oats,
for sale. Morris B. Williams,
Byron, Rt. 1. Phone Co. 477M
2.

Pure Ga. Exp. Station Lega
Oats, Cokers Victorgrain No.
5 recleaned, treated Seed, $1.75;
not treated, $1.50; Pure Ga.
Station Sanford Wheat, $3.25]
bu; Sunrise Beardless Barley,
$2.25 bu. No noxious seed. R.
D. Tatum, Palmetto.

Coker Victor Grain Seed
Oats, $1.75 bu; Sanford Seed
Wheat, $3.50 bu; FOB my farm.
You furnish sacks. 10 mi. N. W.
Cochran, J, E. Larsen, Cochran.

2 and 3 cars lespedeza hay,
new crop, small amt. crab
grass, $27.50 ton FOB cars. L.
F. Easterlin, Andersonville.

Fulgrain recleaned seed oats,
1947 crop, $1.80 bu. Shipping
charges collect. A. P. Smith,
College Park, P. O. B. 208.
Phone Ca. 3439. or Ca. 3176.

Victor Grain Oats, recleaned,
tested, $1.50 bu. in new bags;
Combine Run, $1.15 bu. in

Comer.

500 bu. Rust Proof Oats in
5 bu. bags, $1.35. Sample on
request. R. S. Smith, ve
tony: Box ATL.2 <5

Hasting Seed Oats, pure ee
sound, $1.50 bu. at barn. R. P.
Rowe, Moreland, Rt. 1.

200 bu. Sanford Wheat, $2.75
bu., 150 bu. Fulgrain Oats, $1.20
bu. FOB my farm. All sound,
bright, combine run, suitable
for sowing: with drill. G. W.
Darden, Watkinsville.

1000 bu. Lega Oats, reclean-

man. Monticello.

200 bu. ist. yr. Coker Ful-|
grain Oats, recleaned, treated,
in 4 bu. bags, $2. bu; 2000 lbs.
Hairy Vetch Seed, 23c lb. R. A.
Allen, Jackson, Rt. 4.

200 bu. Sanford Wheat, re-
cleaned, $3. bu. at. my barn.
Free of noxious weeds. J. C.
Sewell, Ashland, Rt. 1.

Good clean Coker Fulgrain
No. 7 Seed Qats, 1st. yr., free
| of obnoxious Seed, $2. bu; pure
Sanford Seed Wheat, $3. 50 bu.
|R. C. Coueh, Turin.

Fulgrain Oats, $1.50 bu; Sane
ford Wheat, $3. bu. J. Cc. Lee,
College Park, Rt. 1. Welcome-
all Rd. % mi. off Roosevelt
Hwy. :

Fulgrain oats, Sanford and
Gasta wheat, all recleaned,
Mrs. J. O- Smith; Commerce,
Rt. 4. :

yr., from Experiment Station,
$3.50 bu. Dr. E. -C; . Fischer,
Sharpsburg, Rt. 1.

Bright Sanford - wheat,
cleaned, in new bags,
$2.75 bu., Vietor grain oats,
$1.25 bu. All sacked, FOB..N.
E. Hartwell, Rt. 3.

Baled hay, Lespedeza with
mixed native grasses. G.
Ballard, Monticello, phone 4291.

Baled Lespedeza hay, $30.
ton; Cokers Hardired seed
wheat, $3.50 bu. Recleaned. H.
B. Wall, Madison, Rt. 4.

Victor oats, $1.50 bu., Sanford
wheat, $3.25 bu. All Ist yr.,
recleaned and bagged. C. H..
Murrow, Farmington, phone
2698. :

Te-



CATTLE FOR SALE



Milch Co, full blooded Holstein
Guernsey crossed, Ist calf, 2 gal
daily, $100. without calf; $150
with 4 mos. old male calf. Mrs
Epsis B. Cobb, Egypt.

Reg. Jersey Cow, ist calf (5
wks. old) better than 3 gals,

Heifer, heavy producing stock,

[ake

ed, Ist. yr., $2. bu. W. G. Red- |

200 bu. Sanford Wheat, Ist. ;

$225.; 5 wks. old reg. Jersey |"





Reg. Guernsey Bull, ready for | ;
service. R. E. Bagwell, rie ty

Rt. 1.

Several Horned and Polled
reg. Hereford Bulls and Heifers,
6-10 mos. old, $125.-$200 ea. J.
L. McElroy, Bowdon, Box 123

Jersey Bull with reg. papers,
-10 mos, old. J. J. Terry, Alpha-
retta; RRA:

4 reg. Guernsey Bulls, from 4].
-14 mos. old, exceptionally well.
bred, well grown for age. $50.-
$100. ea. W. C. Britt, Snellville.

Milch Cow and 3 calves, gen-
tle, for sale at my farm. Morris
B. Williams, Byron, Rt. 1. Phone |

Co. 477 M2.

Reg. Polled_ Hereford Bull,
1st. prize winner at county
fair, 3% yrs. old, $225. Papers
furnished. J. W. Dumas, Fay-|
etteville, Rt. 3. 14% mi. N. Ken-|
wood.

Reg. Guernsey Bull, 8+mos.
old,* Sire Riegedale Majestys
Peer, Dam: Riegedale Viscounts

-Amelia, class F, exc. type. well}

rown, 12308 lbs. milk, 605 lbs.
at. Frank Agnew, Summerville,
Rt. 3.

1 cow, couple of reg. Tawey
Heifers, several grade Aberdeen

Angus Heifers, 6 mos.-1 yr. old,|.

also few bred Angus Cows with
calves at side. L. T. Long, Bre-
men, Rt. 1. At Little Vine ch.

Shorthorn Bull, age 1 yr., reg.
with American . Shorthorn |
ers Asso, E. Lo Kemp, Lyons Rte

ced

Reg. Jersey Bull, 1 yr. old,

from sire Legal Tender Fountle-|
roy, from Athens Dam Rill pail}.

Arctotis Linda,. from Ga. Jer-|

sey Cattle Club. Reg. in buy-|-

ers name, $125. at my barn
Warren Smith, Jackson, Rt. 1.

Jersey Heifer, 11 mos. old,

bargain at my home. W.M. Tur-|
ner, East Point 401 We Yetrs

Ave.

Black Angus, Herefords, Hol-|

| Entire herd including Here-/
-|ford Bull, some young steers and











Duroc and :
old> and ea;







treated and ieee 7
$20.00 ea. Jim 3B B
son,

Mixed bieed: 6 wks.
$10.00 ea. Will not
Byrd, Augusta,

10 OIC Pigs, 6
males, short nos
in. buyers name,

dbl. treated for ch
Lance Bogart,


























9 renee S.
old, $20. ea; or $150,
Wormed, treated, eg.
























Big Bone Gunica, ert
S. P. CG, for sale. W.
College "Park. BR











steins,. and Guernseys. Charles E. H

N. Chandler, Milledgeville. |

3 mos. old Jersey Bull, good
cond., $60. See at my home. Wal-
lace Poss, Danielsville, Rte ds

Grade Herefords: 4 young |
males, 3 mos. old, about 300
lbs.,.$60. ea; one-half and three-
fourths Hereford Cows, breeders,

$125.-$150. ea. Mrs. F. R. Kenne-| _

dy, Stone Mountain, Rt. 2. Phone
Clarkston 3781.

Reg Guernsey Male. 18 mos. |
old, for sale, H. W. Thurmond,
Farmington, Rt. le

4 reg. Horn Type White Face |

Cows, 2- with calves at side, 1
reg. bull; 3 purebred White)
Face cows, 2 with calves at

|side. Sell or trade for tractor and}

farm machinery. F. or: Corry, |
Siloam. ;

Reg. Hereford 4 mos. old Pigs,
breeding stock, from Grand
Champion stock. Frank P. Sin-|
gleton, Fort. Valley.

Young Jersey Bull. 6 gal. ae :

sired by 4 Star Bull, Observer,
volunteer blood lines. Reg. in
buyers name, crate and take
to station, $50. Hugh L. _ White,
Stockbridge.

Purebred Gurnsey Cow, bred
to reg. Gurnsey, _ heavy milker,
freshen in Nov., $125. before
freshening; $150 after. Mrs.
Belle: Joiner, Soperton, Rt. 2.

12 High Grade Hereford Cows,
bred to reg. Hereford Bull. Calve
in early spring. No culls. One 2
yr.-old reg. Hereford Bull. Ph.
A081 after 6 p. m: F. M. ae
gers, Conyers.

Reg Guernsey Bull, 15 mos.
old, ready for light service,
Grandson of Riegedale Majesty
and of Prince Maxim of Quail

Roost, out of good dam and good |

individual, $100.00 W.A. Talia-
ferro, Blue Ridge.

Reg. Hereford Bull, 16 mos.
old at my farm, 3 mi. NE Plains,
Reg. Polled Hereford Bull, 9
mos. old, very gentle, easy to
na Age Eo Er, Jordan, aati

ts

Reg. Ayshire Bull, best Pein

: Howard Thaxton

| $25 ea; 2Ve-yrs.

Beg. Flere ord :
old, well marked, fror
12, reg. in buye 5




Reg. Hereford
sire from Yalehur:
in buyers ni
Irby Jackson, CE











Pigs, 4 females,
ea. with pap:
Sei male. Hen






Reg Duroe
few gilts,
lines.




kill in good or :
/home, Joe Moses, |
ib Columbia D.

Mixed breed pigs,
$10.00 ea. Will not
Byrd Augusta Har

OIC Pigs, 8 w
furnish male and
related, | inoculated,
where, a guar.




























Reg. oIc Male, ab
old, short nosed, bl
with papers;
same type, 8 wk:
with papers. Will shi
checks. Giles Cheek,
ville, Rt. 2. i

28 purebred Tamw
treated and ready for
15, at 8 wks. of age.
F. Soul, Atlanta,
tree Rd. Call Ch
Pers :
SPC Bigs, 4 gilts, :
wks. old, reg. in a

papers, $75. at F.
ship. M. M. Murr
cus, Rt. A,

Hereford
-Bromville-
hoice, d





































ing, porn April
ale cheay







$65. Jobnson Crone:
Ville; as



Carters-|



e federal government epllecis in
oe ear oo per cent of all

apy 10. ee the payermment




pal Income will necessitate



Jefferson-Athens -

_ pens, Ri. 2:

40 oe entitled to].
oe RA. Hartley,


























: tee ea. Mrs. M.

Brown, 4) yr.

av. wt, 1000 Ibs., one and plow, $100. L.

$50. ea. Frank Hamil-

Ray, oe: Rt. 2,| 2683.

aL a dollar for: Cy lae else
: that oe hree and one-third

en Ae Glee! 20. per cent on ee

income. A 10 per cent fall



- HORSES AND MULES
FOR. SALE

Hwy. Turn

Black Horse Mule,
ie | 1100 lbs., work anywhere, $100.;
Also 1 red mare, :
where, approx. 1200 Ibs., $159.

At Union City. J. N. Hose,. Col-

and Pc Shoats cross-| lege Park, RFD 2, Box 332, | farm, close to. Pee a8 56 50\. bake

6 in family, 1 in
Desire house, barn, water, and | ture,
pasture. R. M. Morgan, Byron,! for cow

work any-|ton, RFD 2.

Extra good Jack, 6yrs. old,! and self. All exp. in dairying. rt.,
about 900 Ibs., easily controlled,} Waymon E. Herring,
seed: breeder, priced to sell, FOB Rt 3.

my barn. K..S. Price, Cleveland. |.

old Gelding| wages. 3 A tob. for
|}sound and fat a cultivator

F. Tiencken,
1.50.; other two, 10 to . Savannah, Rt. 3; Box 115.

Shetland Pony,
white spotted, gentle,

black and

n ; $135. Can arrange for delivery.| . :
1300 ibs. $325. FOB.|R. W. Garth, Greensboro. Phone {78 ? farm: anywhere.

18 mos. old Mare Mule Colt} house on school rt.

an increase of 2 per cent in all taxes and
it cannot be avoided. As _ prices yo
down, taxes must Bo up in the oe ra-
tio.
ILL - HOUSED, ILL - CLOTHED
e AND ILL-FED

Sometime: ago we heard a lot of talk
about those groups in this country who
were ill-housed, ill-clothed and ill-fed.
At that time, it was not suggested that

-those who were well-housed, well-cloth-

ed and well-fed should be pulled down to
the level of those who were ill-housed,
ill-clothed and ill-fed. The idea then
was to raise the income of the ill-fed
groups to the level of those who were
well fed. This is still the proper thing
to do.
. FOREIGN AID

Whatever we should do in the way
of foreign aid must be done by the sac-
oe of those who live in America.

POSITIONS WAN TED



POSITIONS WANTED






li you just have enough meat to
around and you have to divide it: with a
destitute neighbors, you have to e
less meat.

The juggling of figures, the changing
of names from Jend- ease to loans or
other paper maneuverings does not
change the basic law. It is wrong to tr
to fool the people again by makin
them think that their trouble is hig
prices. This will simply plunge the en
tire nation into another more terribl
depression than anything we have ever
seen. High prices, with a half loaf, is
much better than low prices with no
loaf at all. It should ever be borne i
mind that the only tinie we have ha
government soup kitchens and govern- |
ment breadlines was when farm prices
were the lowest they have ever been.

~ TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agriculture







































FARM HELP WANTED





Exp. man with 14 yr. old

Want light uate on truck {-

family; wife, 14 yr

Macon,

: Reel.
Want. job cattle raising for
family.
Cons. job as overseer. Can give

Co. John F. Pruett, Naylor.

Young,| wants job tractor or truck driv-j}land, 5

calf, sow and chickens.

Want plenty cotton to pick,
Black Horse, 950 lbs., cheap for | boy (work after school) wants | With good house, elec.,
-| $65, 6 mi. from Athens just off dairy work. Can milk 45 cows. oe ee oe move any|Bradley, Templey, Rt. 1.
WME: 9-c aylor,

right at Jackson and Clark Co. Use Surg Milgers. Move any | Rt. 1, Box 104 A.

,| line. Edward E. Archer, Ath-| time. H. E. Ginn, Butler, Rt. 2. Man with small family wants | 1948. Good land,

Want one or small 2 H crop|job driving tractor, truck and| available, 4 R house, mail and
approx.| for 1948 on 50-50 basis. School | bull dozer. Can drive any type| school rt.,
and mail Rt. Roy West, Coe tractor. Am able and willing| drunks. H. M. Carter, Griffin, S

to work. A. R: Smallwood. Nor-/| Rt. C. :
1. Westbrook Farm.

Want a 1H crop for 1948 on} 50 basis or 3rds and 4ths. Good

cross, Rt.

~Want 1 or 2 H farm, standing | Church. W.
rent, either Turner or Ben Hill| Bowersville. Hart Co.

Co. Give full particulars. A. J.
references. Lowndes or Berrien Adams, Chula, Rt. 1.

X-GI wants good 2H farm for| live with
Man with boy 18 yr. old}1948, standing rent, with good | Room, board,
room _ house,
Want! school and mail rt.,
place where can. keep heifer| water, near Villa Rica, Carroll-
Good} ton, or Temple. Clyde Gable,! woman to live on farm and
Matthew | Villa Rica, Rt. 1.













































PR 2!

g old mule and
00 at my barn.
Brookhaven.

wt. 1000 Ibs. no knots,
anywhere, $100.;
bull, 18 mos. old; S75:
d, big bone. Guinea 18.
$75 -Rever Wade, At-

2 nn Walling Horse,
10 Ibs., work to plow
m, may be with foal
trade for equal value.
_ White, Stockbridge.

Healthy ~ Horse Mule,
ork anywhere, $75.00.

olored work type,
Mare Horses, 24% yvrs.

Will not sell sena-
eee Chipley,

Has on Wie Rica od
SO) oe Box i:

about 1306 Tbs, $395.
Ray, LaFayette,

yr. old, blaze face!

wl Have you? Re Eek

d 1 d Mute, $75. or exc.



d hogs Hey. Hodges,




(has small rupture) for sale or

| exc. for Game Chickens, Geese

or Billy Goats.; Also exec. 3_nice|
Panic. Milk Goats for a nice)

yearling, either sex. J. F. Well-

born, Rock. Spring.

3 Ga. raised mules, 900 Ibs.-
1150 lbs., 3 and 4 yrs. old, sell
together or separately, $550. for
the 3. R. E. Avery,. Social Cir-
cle, RFD. Hwy. 12. 8 mi. O08

F Covington.

Pair 8 yr: old mares, apprix.
800 lbs. -ea.,
$250. or trade for Jersey or
Guernsey Cows or Springers.
Roy G. Jones, Decatur.

Pr Mules in good
around 1200 Ilbs.,

shape,
$300.00 5 mi.

-S.. Duluth. Francis N. Franklin,

Duluth, Rt. 1.

Saddle Pony, 4-5 yrs. old,
about, 700 lbs., $150. at my farm:
16 mi. S. W. Camilla. Fermon

-C, savas, Sorelle, Ro: 25 Box

90.

Mare, 7 yrs. old, gentle, sound,
work anywhere, ride, $140. or

"| trade for good corn, P. W. Har-

rison, Halycyondale.

Pair dark bay mare mules,
6 yrs. old, 2300 lbs.; sound, good
qualities, well- built, ete. Reason-
able price. W. H. Wills, Alpha-
retta.

7 yr. old gelding work horse,
works single .or dbl., sell or
trade for anything can use; W.
T. Torgeson, Cornelia, Star Rt.

















~ AUCTION SALE

C Bithcesiees Polled Shorthorn Breeders
will show and sell at Auction: 50 head pure-
led Shorthorn Cattle, including serviceable

we with calf at side, bred and open
vestock Auditorium, Moultrie, Fri-

work anywhere, | 1





Riner, Lyons, Rt. 4, Box 15.

Want 1 H crop on halves, at
least 30 A. Good mules, tools,
house, water. Am 28 and wife
24. No children. Dont drink.
Harold Powell, Loganville, Rt.
2. :

Want good 2 or 3 H crop. If
3 H would want 2 houses.
Must be good land for cotton
and corn. Drunks need not
write. J. E. Meeks, Dacula, Rt.

Want good 2H crop, 50-50
|basis or standing rent, with
good christian man. Must be
moved, (3 or 4 loads). Good
land for cotton and corn: Don't
write if drunkard. N. W. Meeks.
Dacula, Rt T3

260 yr. cold white man. with
wife and 4 children wants tob,,
chicken, hog or truck farm Yor
wages. Want house with elec.
No bad habits and am healthy
C. C. Phillips, Lithonia; Rt. 2.

_ White woman and 3 _ sons,
large enough to help with farm L
work, wants job on farm for| Small family for farm near At-
reasonable wages with house,
wood, water
own furniture. Mrs. Alta Smith,
Atlanta, 388 Rawson St. S. W. | 6598.
EON

FARM HELP WANTED

White man wants to operate
good stock farm.
mail Rt., near church, in good
community. Lifetime exp. farm-
ing and stock raising. Paul Pud-| cotton crop.Remain for 1943

vis, Eastman, Rt. 4.

ice honest white fam-| garden, pasture,






Want good woman for ligh
water,| work on farm. Mrs.: Buddy











Valdosta, Want a man with help ee a
ote

work 2H crop on halves i102,
tools, elec.










7 mi. S. Griffin. No-

Want family for 2H crop, 50.

scheol and mail| ceiled 4R house, good land,
school. | young. mules, farm tools, pas=<--
wood, well water, stable
or mule. Mail and
school bus by door, %4 mi. Bap.
Te oe

Want nice uneneumbered
woman for light farm chores,
2 grown people.
reasonable sal. x
elec, | @ry. Mrs. John -W. Roberts,
outbidg., | Bowman, Box 5. : ae

Want on encumbered white
help with goat dairy and chick-
ens, also some: farm work,

Small salary. Write. Mrs. W.
School. and B. Poyner, Ellerslie, Rt. 1. :

Want family to pick out 1947 :
crop on 50-50 basis. Hugh L.
White, Stockbridge. :

Want middle aged couple or ~
lanta. Good offer for right peo-

furnished. Have|Ple. Bruce E. Bridges, College
Park, Janice Drive. Call Ca.



Want white man with several|
in family to help on irrigated
vegetable farm near Atlanta,
Trade for bal. this year or =
next. Nice house, elec, wood,
$2.50 .a day.





ily to tend 1 H crop and raise | $3. a day when can drive truck
chickens on halves. 10 mi. be-| or tractor. R. F, Sams, Clarks-

low Dahlonega. Bus and mail| ton. Phone Clarkston 2211.
rt. 4-R_ house,
See. No letters. Russ H. Wel-| erly woman, unencumbered, to
chel, Dawsonville, Rt. 3.

Want unencumbered
woman to do light

pasture, wwell.| Want nice middleaged or eld-



do light work on farm, $5. wk
white/ and, home. Laura Hartline,
work on| Rising Fawn.





Want work on small poultry | farm. , board and small} Can employ 2 men on farm
or vegetable farm near Atlan-| salary. Mrs. David Murray,} and a clean woman for light
ta. Have 35 yrs. experience,:| Oglethorpe, ne 3s farm work. 5 R house, wood,

married but no children; Al-
fred Steerman, Atlanta, Rt. 8
Box 390. Care C.A. Wilkes.

Want good 1H farm on halves
or 3rds and 4ths. 4 R house irf
Fulton Co. No backwood place.
4 -in family. John Gibson, Al-
pharetta, Rt. 2.

Want 2 or 3 H farm. Will use
my tractor for operations.
House with conveniences if
possible. H. C. Thomas, Mont-

icello.

Want job as caretaker. Can
milk cow and drive car. No de-
pendents. William Hackett,
Macon, POB 1192.





machines and
work. No milk house work. $25.

weekly, furnish house, and 2



t 1 ilking | Sarden, pasture and elec. furn~ _
Nene eae ished. Top farm wages to right
fs family. J. A. Land, Clayton:

Want colored family (no bad

qts. milk daily. Write. H. C. Mc-| habits) to work on peach farm,

Elroy,
Rts 528

Decatur,

Stewart Rd.,|2 mi. Ft. Valley. J. C. Adkins,

Ft. Valley, 209 N. Macon St.







ABERDEEN-ANGUS CATTLE SALE

The Georgia Aberdeen- Angus Breeders Assn.,
~will hold their Annual Fall
Fair Grounds,
cows with calves at side, bred and open heifers and
4 bulls, selected from 17 of the TOP herds in the
state will be offered. W. Tap Bennett, Sales Mer.,
Savannah.

Sale at the Southeastern

Atlanta, October 30th. 50 animais.!





























eee



sie
= Want white



- Editorial By TOM LINDER
~ So much propaganda has been put out seeking
a show illiteracy in the Southern states, that it, 1s
time for the truth to be told.
The following table taken from the United
States census of 1940 is most illuminating. The
figures opposite the names of states show the ay-

erage number of years schooling in each state:

x





















Gaitfornia? 2258s 10.8 THnois oes Se oi 88
_ Mass, 10.7 lowa 8.8

Nevada 10.7 Kansas: = S185
Selita eee re Se 1 OT. New. Jersey > SBS

WMiabamar sts e103 Ohio? 5 ee ees a Osb

Washington 10.0 Rhode Island ____._._ 8.8

Arizona .. 9.6 Minnesota __...

MViainie ts s.52 Seen See 9.6 South Carolina
Oregon 2 So e968 South Dakota .... Aue OUT,
_ Florida 3 9.5 Indiana. es EE BG

Colorado _ ea | Pennsylvania

Texas 9.3 North Dakota __

Idaho - 9.2

Connecticut 9.1 - Wisconsin _

Montana _ eat Georgia __.

New Hampshire eet Maryland

Michigan ssn so 90 = Missouri :f2 8 84

New York 2253 = 57 79.0 Virginia 222 te Os0:

Vermont pes Louisiana ______ SA Osd
_ Deleware New Mexico Re cata Oem

Mississippi ______. Arkansas). 228.1

Nebraska 7 2 North Carolina _ 8.1

W. Virginia _ Tennessee SN 58:0

pW eyorming =. a Kentucky 2-225 Serco a)



The above figures are for white people only
and does not include negroes. e

It is interesting to note that only six states
a ten or more years of education. It is interest-
ing to not that only two states on the Atlantic-
~ Seaboard have ten or more years, namely, Ala-
pbama and Massachusetts. The other four states,
California, Nevada, Utah and Washington are
along the West Coast and on the plateau between
the rockies and the Siert a-Nevadas,

SOME COMPARISONS

Note from the above that insofar as white peo-
~ ple are concerned, Pennsylvania has 8.6 years,
New York 9.0 years, Ulinois, 8.8 year's

88 years. The white people in the Southern
states have in Alabama 10.3 years, Florida 9.5

years, Georgia 8.4 years and in Tee 8.9

year.

B The average for Pennsylvania, New York, [-
linois and Ohio i is 8.8 years for white people, while

the average in the four Southern: states, namely,
Alabama, Florida, Georgia and 1 Mississippi is 9. 3
years. Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Mississippi
actually have one-half a year longer schooling on
an everage than the four heavily populated
Northern states who think they are some pump-
kins,

NEGRO EDUCATION

The number of years schooling for negroes in

the states of different sections necessarily show
a different picture because of the fact that there
are So many negroes in the Southern states in pro-

portion to the white population.

As 4n illustration, the state of Iowa ae a little
More than one percent of negroes, while the state
of Mississippi has forty-nine percent negroes.

Everyone knows that the edueation of negroes
is a tremendous drain on the resources and assets
of the white people in the Southern states.

Not only that, but everyone knows that on the

and Ohiol

average, the negro is not capable of taking the!

same education as the whites.

If; New York, Pennsylvania, and Wlinois! had |
forty-nine. percent. negroes to cope

with,

would undoubtedly have the lowest education

standards and the greatest amount of reeds of},

any state in the Union.
WHENCE ILLITERACY

A study of the figures of the census bureau
brings out very clearly the fundamental reason} ii
for illiteracy.

This can be summed up as. follows:
1. In the South it is the negro.
-2. In the Southwest, it is the Mexican.

Generally speaking the states A
negroes, fewest Mexicdns and fewest emigrants

are the states of highest standards of oe
You would know this ane being told ni

you?

The state of Iowa has 44 percent ee

(less than 5 years schooling), while Mississippi} ce
has 8.0 percent ey Cless than 5 years school- |: ni

s white population has 8.8 years of
has 8.9 years:

ing), but Iowa
sehooling, while Mississippi
schooling for the white people.

Any number of comparisons might be derivedlen

from these figures of the United States Census

of 1940, but space does not permit going into all)

of them, ;
fey CONCLUSION Reg SRS
It is impossible after a study of these aoe to

escape the conclusion, that the white schools in aoe

the South are far superior to the average.

This conclusion must be drawn for the reason}.

that with smaller teachers salaries, fewer days in

school and with less regular attendance, the stu-|.

dents in the Southern schools attain a higher de-
gree of education than the students on an average
in the schools of the nation as a whole.

the nation.

Before anyone undertakes to. federalize
gram, it woul be best to raise the standard of -ed-
ucation in New York, Pennsyvlania and Jlinois.

Let them sweep around their own door, then they!
can help us clear 2b

Let them get the beam out of their own eye, |:
then they can see the mote more clearly that is}

our yard.

in our eye. Let them get rid of communistic ideas
fostered in their schools, colleges and universities



they |.

fewest

Those who give out misleading data about il:
literacy in the South, should tell the truth. They |i
should examine the methods used in conducting |:
the white schools in the South and adopt them for ol

_ OL} go
nationalize the schools under a federal aid pro-|

chard and
ture. Must |

| Senoia.

3. In the North and Kast, iteis the conglomera- ie
tion of emigrants, many of whom have been}
brought illegally into this country by a commun- le
listically inclined administration. -

~Want ma ;
raise hogs

of) Want 3

is, ee }
Want pee

and then tell us how to be constitutional Ameri- oy

cals. : i

Let them restore belief i in an all wise and merici-|

jont
nati Oe Clark, ae nm

ful God as the only power on which the
ean rely for safety and then they can tell us what
is wrong in what they sneeringly neler 0 as one

Bible Belt.

In Gloaing this article, it ment not We amiss

to consider whether or not unlimited aid to Godless

nations is either wise or justified.

Want good
2H Roe

Shouldest thou help the ungodly, and love 3 mi.

Therefore is

them that hate the Lord?



FARM HELP WANTED | FARM HELP WANTED

FARM HELP WANTED





Want reliable
man, small

middleaged
family, for truck
and flowers. Nice 6 R house
and salary. 15 mi. Atlanta.
Good ref. required. M. W. Sxal-
lings, Atlanta, 1663 Gordon
Sts: W.

Want reliable white family
experienced farming and tend-
ing turpentine. Near Swains-
boro. Ideal place to raise cattle
and hogs, large pasture, fenced.
Mrs. John P. Hughes, St. Sim-
ons Island.

family, man to
and do other
work on farm. Must have ex-
Perience with milking ma-
chines. Good house. L. E. Buch-
anan, Conyers, Covington Hwy.

Want family, 2 plow hands,

help in dairy
land, 2 mules, tools,
wood, outbldgs., large 3R
house, elec. lights, school and
mail. Carl Perry, Monroe, Rt. 3.

pasture,



for 2 H crop, 50-50 basis, good



CORRECTION: Want inencunmbered middle:
Want unencumbered white aged or older white woman to
woman, 40-55 yrs. old to do)
light work on farm. Room,
board, reasonable salary. Live
with elderly couple. 6 mi.
town. Mrs. M. L. as Al-
pany; Ria:

Want white man and ae
with small family, for 1H farm;
live in home with retired
farmer, 72, and 2 grown sons.
W. C. Wilcox, Rhine, Rt. 1.

do farm chores. Room, board, |

lparty. Reply at once. Mrs. Roy
Jackson, Lovett. :

its,

by mth. or part of cro

Mrs. uD Bradfield, Dou



wrath |;
upon thee from before the Lord. el Chron. 19:2.

FARM HELP WANTED | 1

live as member of family and |

salary. A good home to right}.

Want single white man that
does not drink, nor other hab-|-
to live as one of family 5
and reasonable salary, to farm| I
for 1948. for 194

fe Schoo
Elec. Want one
ish self. C. D. Ebe
ta, 811 paeines SE