Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1948 April 28

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TOM LINDER

aria SY

SoMnM ISSIONER





WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1948

NUMBER 33







ial By TOM LINDER



ys ago the House Agri-
ommittee was split asunder
nt over the repeal of taxes
nargarine.
inal reason for the tax on
arine was that oleomargarine
nufactured from foreign vege-
= Phis by-product of foreign

by slave labor, came in di-
in the United States.
er produced by American






















































in order to protect the
n farmer against this unfair

re. recent years, manufacturers
ed some domestic oils such as
L oil, peanut oil, ete., in the-
are of margarine. On the
vf the use of domestic oil, there
ereated a demand for the re-
on margarine and other





meeting of the House Agri-:
Committee, the Congressmen
es producing cotton and pea-
rrayed against Congressmen
states,
ated that the entire farm pro--
jeopardized because of the
nt over taxes on margarine.
IDE AND CONQUER
during the last World War,
a lot about the principle of
nd conquer. ? Well the Inter-
Fats and Oils Trust has done
to the American Congress-
ile the Congressmen from the
iddle West were at war over

against each other that they
ly joimed forces with the
nee of international oil to
dairy farmer and the cot-
nut farmer of his domestic

g to figures released by the
ment, imports of foreign
have been inereased 300
ing a two
foreign oils

vENTH INSTALLMENT



tion, passed a tax on oleomar- |

The controversy be- -

xes, they were so engrossed



increased from 600 million pounds to
two billion pounds annually.

Most of these Congressmen from the
South and the Middle West have re-
peatedly supported the International
program of Reciprocal Trade Agree-
ments, the World Trade Organization,

Goneva Charter, World Bank and the

United Nations Organization. These
Congressmen from the South and Mid-
dle West have delegated their own Con-

stitutional authority (un-Constitution-

ally) to a few millionaires in the State
Department and have given those mil-
lionaires in the State Department the

power to sell both the dairy farmer and

the cotton and peanut farmer out to

-guch International Trusts as Unilever

of Rotterdam and London.
The Congressmen from the South
have been jealous of the Mairy farmers
of the West, and the Co (gressmen from
the West have been jealous of the cotton
and peanut grower. Both have been
unwilling to cooperate with the other,

but strangely enough both the Congress-

men from the South and the Congress-
men from the West, or at least a ma-

_ jority of them, were perfectly willing to
cooperate with the International Fats

and Oil Combine to cut the throat of the
dairy farmer, cotton farmer and the pea-
nut farmer.

Jf the Congressmen from the South
and the Congressmen from the West
would protect the American farmer
from the International Oils and Fats
Combine, then there would be ample
markets in the United States to con-
sume all the butter and all the cotton-
seed oil and peanut oil that we could
produce. 1

It is the same old story of the two dogs
While they -

who fought over a bone,
fought over the bone a third dog stole
the bone away.

While our Congressmen fought over
the relative merits of butter and oleo-
margarine, they permitted the Inter-
national Combine to steal the American
market from both of them.

When will our Congressmen grow up?

SIXTY PER CENT OF PARITY

There is now pending before the Sen-
ate Agricultural Committee a so-called
Long-Term Agricultural Program. This
program provides for support prices on
basic crops to ranges as low as 60 per
eent of parity. The present support
price is 90 per cent of parity. This Bill





would reduce the Southern farmers sup
port price 33-1/3 per cent.

Readers of the Bulletin will recall
that some weeks ago I pointed out that
Secretary of Agriculture Anderson was
advocating the addition of farm labor.
costs to the formula for determining

parity. At the same time, I pointed out _ Ss

that through the other side of his mouth
Secretary Anderson was opposing the
addition of family labor in arriving at
parity.

Tt should be obvious to any thinking |













person that what Mr. Anderson had in a

mind was to add the cost of labor to
wheat and corn and other crops that are.

_produeed and harvested by hired labor.



On the other hand, on such crops as oe
cotton and tobacco, which are produced

and harvested largely by family labor,

=



no labor cost would be added to de- Wee

termine parity. The result of this would
be rank discrimination against the
farmers of the South.

In the second place, one of the main
objects was to divide the farmers and
Congressmen from the South from the
farmers and Congressmen
West. Again the idea is to divide and
conquer.

Take a large corn grower or wheat
grower in the West and add on his labor
cost to determine parity and then give
him 60 per cent of that parity as a sup-
port price and the result is that the sup-
port price per bushel of corn or wheat
will remain substantially what it is now
under a 90 per cent support price.

On the other hand, take the ordinary,
cotton farmer and the tobacco farmer

- and do not add on any labor cost in fig-

uring his parity and give him a support
price of 60 per cent of parity, and the
Southern farmer has his support priea
reduced exactly 33-1/3 per cent.

The effectiveness of this divide and
conquer program of the United States
Department of Agriculture can now be.
seen in the fact that the farmers, or or-
ganizations such as the Farm Bureau
and the National Grange have been di-
vided in their own ranks.

The National President of the Farm
Bureau lives in lowathe greatest corn
State.

At the National Meeting of the Farm
Bureau those Westerners succeeded in
forcing the National Farm Bureau Fed-
eration to endorse the reducing support

(Continued on Page Hight),

from the









GEORGL A MARKET BULLETIN |

an th_ ailing list and for change of address to STATE BUREAU
OF M. RKETS, 222 STATE CAPITO",, Atlanta. ;

__ NATIONAL EDITORIAL
ISSOCIATION








under postage regulations inserted one time on each request
and repeated only when request is. accompanied by new copy
of notice. ;

Limited space will not permit insertion of notices content





Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does
not assume any responsibility for any notice appeating in the:
Bulletin, nor for any transaction resulting \from published
notices.

Tom Linder, Commissioner.
Published Weekly at
By Department of -Agriculture
114-122 eace St., Covington, Ga.

Notify on FORM 3578Bureau of
Markets. 222 State Capitol,
Ailania, Ga.

Entered as second ciass 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







Address all items for publication and all requests to be put ||

Goldin,

[ A _ ||good cond., both $50.
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances. admissable |

ing more than 35 to 40 words, not including name and address. 1













-of October 8, 1917.
Executive Office,

State Capitol



State Capitol. Ailanta, Ga.
Ailania, Ga.
Publication Office



Editorial and Executive Offices

114-122 Pece St. Covingion, Ga.

jary motor, cuts 12 ft.









- SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE

SECOND HAND MACHIN-
ERY FOR SALE



Praetically new Rubber Tire
Top Buggy, used about 200 mi,.
cost $187.50 when new; sell for
$100. Jess Holbrook, Forest
Park. (2 1/2 mi. S. Hapeville.)

4, Lel: 9755. :

Turner Power Hay Baler,
Wisc. motor, good cond., for sale.
W. V. Pendley, Gainesville, Rt.

te

New Rubber Tire Wagon,
$150.00; No. 6 Allis-Chalmers
Combine, needs some repairs.
Have parts. $350. H. W. Vaughn.
Athens. Phone 3338 J.

Case 5 Disc Tiller Plow, Mule
Planter, 1H Peanut Weeder, KP
Fertilizer Distributer. 1H Cot-
ton Duster, four 1000 cap. Elec.
Brooder. Economy King Cream

Separator. Good cond. C. L.
Jordan, Americus, Rt. 2.

Three 80 Saw Lummus Auto-.
matic Gins, complete, like new,
with extractors, seed scales, all-
steel press with or without elec.
motor, ginned Jess 35 hundred
bales, easy terms if desired. J.
H. Dorminy, Jr., Fitzgerald.

2 New Tobacco Barn Stokegs,
never uncrated, $127.37 ea. Exe.
for reg. Angus, Jersey, Holstein
er Guernsey Young Bulls or
Heifers, no scrubs wanted. Dav-
id YT. Jennings, Americus, PO
Box 84.

Sears Hammer Mill, $100.00;
Sears Cream Separator, 459.
Wilmer Brandt, Clarkesville.

F-20 Farmall Tractor, good
cond.,
4 disc tiller with grain box,
$1150. Wilbur Slade, Hawkins.
ville, Box 125.

J. D. 5 Disc Tiller with seed
box, and a Rotary Dirt Remover,
all good cond. Write for prices
and particulars. J. R. Bryant,
Chipley.

J. D. Planters for sale at right

price. J. L. Watkins, Madison,
Rit.
4 Can Farm Master = Milk

Cooler, used 5 mos., like new,
$250. Roy E. Bartlett, Riverdale,
Old National Hwy

3-80 Saw ae Air Blast
Gin, complete, sell very cheap.
J. T. Warnock, Tarrytown.

Baughman all steel Lime
Spreading Outfit, complete,
$750. J. H. Dorminy, Jr., Fitz-

erald.

King 10-23 B and B Harrew,
$125.00; McCormick - Deering,
16X28 Smoothing Harrow, $160.
Oliver 4 Bottom Turn Plow,

_ $100. J. T. Gibson, Decatur, 1000
S. Cai Ver Rd., Rt. 1. Phone Cr.
2258.

feeders,

with new tires and new!



Ridiig 2 row Cultivator,
good cond., $25. S L. Turner,
McDonough.

Intl. Walking Cultivator, gocd
cond., $50. W. L. Graham, Un-
adilla, Hts tes

2 Row Hand Cotton Duster,
we H. D. Lancaster, Juniper, Rt.

Intl. A two row tractor,
mos. ol@ used very little, all
equip., planters, fertilizers and
cultivators, Ist. class cond,
$1400. C. M. Pippin, Albany.

Horse Drawn Mowing Ma-
chine and Rake, 2 H Turn Plow;
Also 3 1/2 yr. old Horse Colt
(saddle type) cheap. J- H.
Smith, Perry, POB 15.

Planters .and fertilizer hop-
pers for WC _ Allis-Chalmers
Tractor, (hoppers recently re-
built by factory) good cond.
Harry A. Edge, Ellaville, RFD
1 g y

New Gem Dandy Delux Elec.
Churn with 1 gal. jar, but is ad-
justable from 1-3 gals., all for

$15. Roy R. Daughtry, Metter,
Riis 2:

Bottom Plow, 2 Disc Athens

Plow, Mowing Machine, Grad-
ing Scoop, etc. All or part. Con-
tact. J..M. Dempsey, Chamblee.
Phone 4351.

4-4 Drum Cen-Tennial Cot-
ton Gin, ball bearing cleaner,
complete with waffle
iron gauges, all in good cond.
Make offer. W. P. Roche, Dub-
lin.

2 Dbl. Unit Intl. Milkers,
cond., $100. C. C. Carnes, Eat-
onton, Rt. 2.

Intl, 42-R+ Combine, good
cond. at my _ place. William INE
Wood, Sharpsburg.

Fairbanks-Morse 7 1/2 H. P.
Z, 550. RPM, Style B, Hopper
Colled Gasoline or Kerosene
Engine, used for pulling large
peach grader and packer, fine
shape, used very little, $110.00.
FOB or seed.. Hugh M. Camp,
Moreland.

J. B. Portable Feed Mill with
60 HP Waukeska Motor, good
cond. Write for full information,
Wilbur Slade, Hawkinsville,
POB, 125. Or Call 95.

14 ft. Folding Weeder for

Fordson Tractor, used 1 day,
$65. J. R. Hancock, Griffin, Rt.
Cc;

DeLaval Separator, No. 12
size, good cond., well cared for,
$39. 00; Also Acme HEsrow, (2

_ Ne



10)

|Mill, R. D. Cole,



- SECON HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE



, SECON
| MACHINER





g ideals 2 Row Sprayers, used
10 hrs. $100. for both. i M.
Draketown.

No, 13, 3 Roller Chatencoud:
Syrup Mill, and Syrup. Pan,
made of copper, 10 ft. long,
at my/
home. J. T. McClung, Hiram.

Intl. Pick-up Hay Baler, $600.
For details contact: R. T. Smith,
Decatur, 215 Church St. Phone



||De. 1716.

Farm Dinner Bell, $15.00;
light Chattanooga 2 H Turner
Plow, $12. Will not ship. Ans.
all letters. Lester Massey, Dan-
ielsville, - Rb ss

1 of each: 48 in. Rock Grist
Mill, complete; Power Corn
Sheller, Harvey Feed Mill,
good cond. Sell all or part, rea-
sonable; J. M. Haman, Amboy.

Almost new Farmall B
Tractor, complete with starter,
lights, power take off and belt
pulley; Also mounted 16 in.
plow to sell with tractor. List
price asked. C. W. ae
Nashville, Rt. 2.

40 Allis-Chalmers all crop
Harvester, Ist. class cond., $400.
R. E. Ogletree, Perry.

Holt 38. Combine with auxil-|
(cleans
seed so much better that we get

;extra 5c bu. for oats). E. W.

Bruner, Albany, Rt. 3. Tel. 1713-
W.

W. C. Allis-Chalmers, used
about 50 hrs. with new culti- |.
vators and planters, power lift,
for sale. Z. T. Houser, Jr., Scott.

1 of each: Set Covington
Planters, Ferguson Cultivator,
Ford Tractor Jack, Davis Feed
Grinder, Pulley for Ford
Tractor, all new equip., never
used. Sell together or separate-
ly; Also 1 ~ used Ferguson
Tractor. Write. A. C. Zittrover,
Springfield. Or phone 2022.

Intl. 42 Combine, good cond.,
$400. af my farm. J. K. Peavy,
Unadilla.

CORRECTION: 1-42 in. Corn
_ practically.
new, With sheller. Come see at
Washington Rd. between East

Point and Red Oak at Double

Bridges. H. C.\ Neal, College|
Park, Rt..1.
Allis-Chalmers 40 all crop

harvester, for sale. W. L. Easter-
lin, Andersonville. Phone 4246.

Intl. Riding Cultivator, $25.00;
Fowler Cultivator, $5.00:
Rowe Cole Grain Drill, $20. J.
P. Higginbotham, Bogart, Rt. 1.

J. I. Case Pickup Hay Baler,
size NLP, A-1 cond. $750.|
Phone: 32> Ee 8; Burroughs,
Danielsville.

Homemade Tractor, running

Complete Dairy Equip.;. Vic.
tor 4 Can Cooler with agitator,
$300:00; one 3 Brush Elec. Wash-
er, $60.00; Hand Capper, $20.,
3 gal. hand filler, $10. Cans,
etc. Only used about 7 mos.
Good as new. G. J. Davis, Rome.
Rt. 2. At Bells Ferry. _

4-70 Saw Continental Gins,
ball bearing, brush type, plain
breasts, 4 special CC feeders,
Pneumatic feed control, good
cond. Bargain if moved now.
Luther M. Harman, Carrollton,
Rite 25

* Wheat Cradle, good cond., 3,
A Oliver Turner, $10.00; Joe
Harrow, $1.50. All good cond. Cy
M. Adcock, Adairsville, N. Main
St:

2 Case Model.L Tractors, 1
Farmall 20, 18 Disc Rome Bush
and Bogg Harrow, New 16 Disc
Athens Plow, IHC, 1 row, Corn
Picker. All perfect cond. L. An-
del, Perry, 4 mi. So. U. S. 41.

3 1/2 hp Bolens Huski Gar-
den Tractor, Turn Plow and
Planet Jr. attachments, good as
new, $225.00; Also 6 can Victor
Milk. Cooler, used very little.
Cheap for cash, J. F. Ween, At-
lanta, Rt. 4, Box 317.



Planting 3 and fertilizing
equip. for she) Deere Aor .B.
actor in cond., for sale. |

all

'}and 3 cans, keeps fruit and ree

ale

cond., $75. cash. Arnold Blalock, >
Canton, ites:

Farmall Tractor, B
Disc Tiller, Power
and Bogg Harrow.. Tr: to Z
tiller bought new last Sept.,
used -v, ry little. Sell for cash.
W.. rtman, Hoe eee
RFD el; Garden Valley. :





planter, and cultiva r,
(cost $460.00). B.

lanta, 2188 Edison
Phone Ch.- 7482.

with cultivaters and planter,
disc harrow, 2 disc plow, 6 row
cotton duster. Sell cheap. W. sor:
Hardman, Commerce, Rt. 4.

1 Pea Thrasher, and some
tools. To be sold Sat, May 8,
1948 at 10:000 oclock at my
home near Brandywine School.
Mrs. W. L. James, Alpharetta,
Rite eds :

-Do Mor Farquhar Iron Age,
2 Row. Plant Setter, perfect
cond. Joe Mundy, Meansville.

W. C. Allis Chalmers tiller
Harrow, all equipment, in good

pair, at my farm 8 mi. So. War-
wick. W. A. Davis, Warwick, Rt.
2, phone 373.

Front cutivator for Ford

E. Agridge, Camilla, Rt. 3.

Cultivator for Farmall H
tractor,.good cond., for sale. J.
F. Smith, Camilla, Rt. 37

52-R Intl. Combine, practical-
a new, A-1 cond., $800. John
L. Robison, Ailey, Box 36.

1941. Case Tractor with new
motor disc plows and dbl. see.
harrow, for sale. Charles Mor-
ris, Morganton.

Automatic Can Sealer, good
as new, for sealing No. 1, 2, 2 1/2

etables 100 per ct. Mrs. a
Hayes, McDonough, Rt. 3.

A2C Peppy Pal Garden Trac-
tor, 11/2 hp Cinton engine, rub-
ber tire, turn plow, disc harrow
and cultivator hitch, used very
little, reasonable cash price at
home. Miss Mary Sherard, Com-
merce, Rt. l.

Ford - Ferguson, Graham
Holmes Bermuda Plow; Front
Cultivator for Ford-Ferguson
Tractor, for sale. W. V. Brannen,
Unadilla.



SECOND HAND |
MACHINERY WANTED



Want 1 Drag Pan for grading.
Prefer 1H pan, but will buy
large one. W. H. Rochester, At-
Janta, 401 St. John Ave., Rt. 9,
Box: 287.

Want Farmall or other 1]
Row Tractor to use for parts or
one that can be fixed up. L. A.
Powers, Griffin, Rt. C.

Want J. D. 4 Disc Tiller on

rubber. C. R. Belcher, Perry,
Ret. 2. ee
~Want planter, distributor,

with all attachments for model
L or LA John Deere Tractor,
good cond. T. W. Nayson, La-
Fayette, Rt. 4,

Want front wheel _ barrings
for old model Ford Tractor,.
steel wheels. May cons. buying
whole tractor. List barring price
in letter. Scott Bailey, Law-|P.
renceville, Rt..1.

Want garden tractor, good
cond., with attachments. Give
best cash price and describe
fully. Edward L. Bell, Stone
Mountain, Rt. 1.

Want McCormick and Deer-
ing, self propelled, 12 ft. cut.
combine. Write giving full par-
ticwlars. W. Harper, Osierfield.
Want good used Cole Corn
Planter, Db. Hopper,
drawn. Give most reasonable }
price and address plainly. Cc. 0:
Crosby, Rt. 1, Box 113.

Exc. 1st. yr. D-and PL No. 14

ct. or more lint, strictly

other farming and blacksmith

.cond. except planters need re- |

tractor, good as new, $50. Tom}
-|Plants,

| Strawberr:

mule |$










































































































D. or Intl. M.
Ground.

Want L Henker
Combine to be a
mower, no junk. Rou

; ms Danielsville.
_ Husky Garden Tractor, prac-. eae
tically new, with turn plow,

also suitable. for tun
$165. FOB. Contact
State Prison, Reids

Super Hatcher Ele
ulating Incubator,
good shape, $25.

/4 Compartment 3
cap. 100 chicks to
age, $25. All FOB.
Knight, Elowery. Bri

Brooder for 500 cl
}or electricity, $30. at
E. M. Cox, Jr., Griffi

: ee

" Marelob and ut, e
now rea
Govt. insp. PR Plant,
King Pepper, $3.

Miss Florence, 0: uin
Rt. 2

Marglobe Tonia
C; 500, $1.35; $2. M; W.
muda Onion, 500,

All PPPs 3H< Davis
ville, Rt. 5. aes

Hastings large
Strawberry Plants, $1.
permint, Catnip, 7.
Meee McCurley, H

large.
Plants,
oe $ ae Pe

Hastings

Rtz2.

1, acre:

Plants, 40c C: $2.
Wonder Sweet. Peppe
$3.75 M. Add postage.
peeks Vane Smith

Marglobe Tema
grown, strong and sto
to ship, moss pack

500, $1.00; $1.75 M. D

|W. G. OQuinn, Surre

PR Plants, state | 2
fied, improved, or ye
now ready, 5000, = F.
Hele :
PR and 100 to he.
Plants, govt. insp., .
and up, $3.50 M. W.
Bristol.

Red and Pink Ski d
govt. i

Del. in Ga: Edwar
Surrency.

Nice rooted sage pl

lea; Blackhaw Bushes
| Horse Radish, 20c,

b

lic Bulbs, $1. doz. Mr
Parker, Gainesville, Ri
Red Skin PR- Plants,
insp., $4. M. Del. i
Apr. 20. Send check wi
W. H. Hutto, Surrency

oe Plants,
PPL. J. ants FS

aks ow A

Maltodon Strawb
Cc ee 500; Be Mi

ee Hood, Gainesull

Large 1 and
Crowns, semesan

Cottonseed (big bolls) 43 per| Go



Planting (untreated), for |








full count, ready
FOB. pris Light-







ity: Egg Plants, 50c C.
ed same day received.
illie Lightsey, Bax.





nts, now ready for
full count guar. $4.
eal, Patterson...





D. *Copperskin Pota-

full count guar., $3.

and Flat Dutch

s M; 500, 75e. EB. F.
Solas







Bae seed grown
cutting, $4. M.. Del.;

ae L. D. Lightsey,





nsp. and ore Red
yw Skin PR Plants, $4.
No- checks, George
reven, ose

PR Plants, $3.50 M.
aylor, Alma.

esistant Earliana, Mar-
omato Plants, 40c ce
Chas. W. Cabbage, 25c
r 500. In Ga.- only. Mrs.
mole: Benevolence. ;

erry Strawberry, Sugar

Dewberry, Raspberry

$2. 75 doz; Wild. Cherry,

_ Yellow Dock; Witch

ellow Root, May Apple

$1. Ib. Bonnie Abercvom-
eral Bluff.

obe and Rutger Tomato
$1.50 M; Red and Pink
Plants, govt. insp., $3.-
Now ready. John T.
, Surrency, Rt. 2.

ato Plants, $2.50 M; Calif.
and Pimiento Sweet
lants, $3.25 M. Vernon
Baxley, Rt. 4,

grown. (Arasan treated
ilt resistant, Marglobe
tone Tomato Plants, 45 C;,

ull Nose Sweet Bell

DChAOzZs-\$l5) Cs. Ege:
(Black Beauty), 45c doz;
Artichokes, 45c doz; 50
Add postage. Mrs. VY.
son, Shellman.

yperskin . Potato Plants,
, $3: 75 M; 5 M lots, $3.-
, $3..M. Marglobe, Rut-
tehard Tomatoes, $3.
packed. Prepaid. Apr.
Bedell. Ne HgexiEob,

Heading var.
Plants, $2.50 M; 40c C.
rs. J . Li. Hall, Americus,

lants, treated, $2.50
$2.75 shipped. Ready
og Annie Moore,

Red Skin PR
Marglobe New
$2. M. All ready.
Lightsey, |

Erato, $2. M. All del.
=! Arabi, Rt. We

has M

; | doz.;

- | grown,

. and freated Red |-

>|rick, Rabun

S PLANTS FOR SALE

Wyerbeaniag Strawberry, $1.
C; Gibson, Wonderberry, Red
Gold, 75c C; Red, Black Rasp-
berry, rooted Sage, Horsemint,
, 90c; Peppermint, Garden
Horsemint, 24, 35c; Garlic, 40c
Black Walnut. Meats, 80c
Ib. No checks. - Add postage.
Mrs. Willis Grindle, Dahlonega,
Ris. 1

Early bearing. Strawberry
Shenae large var., 50c C; 500,
$2.00;. Ga. Collard, 25 C; Red
Speckled Crowder, White Black
eyed Peas, 30c lb.; Purple Globe
Turnips, Ga. Collard, 90c Ib.
Add postage. No checks. Mattie

Oe

.|Duran, Cumming, Rt. 1.

Marglobe Tomato, good and
|strong, 50c C; 500, $1.25; $2.25
.|M; Improved PR, $4. M; Black
eaae Egg Plants, Calif. Won-
der Sweet Pepper, 60c C. Plenty
of plants all through June. PP.

in, | Leroy Lightsey, Baxley, Rt. 3.

_ Millions stocky new ground
; paper wrapped, moss
packed, $2. 25 Ms 00S oh b0:
Quick service. Careful handling.

Big strong etecky New Stone
Tomato, 50c C; 500, $1.25; Calif.
Wonder Sweet Pepper, Black
Beauty Egg Plants, 50c C.
Plenty plants through June. Or-
ders filled same day. received.
PP. Buford Lightsey, Baxley,
Rt3: ;

coli, Brussels, Beets, Chinese
cabbage, Endive, Lettuce, Swiss
Chard, Kale, Cabbage, Carrots,
Marglobe tomatoes, 75 Cs Arti:
choke, Asparagus, Parsley, Cel-
ery, Cauliflower, Eggplants,

doz. Del. Mrs. H. V. Franklin,
Register,

Marglobe and Stone Tomato
Plants, 300, $1.00; $2.75 M; Hot
| Pepper, Calif. Wonder Sweet,
and Black Beauty Egg Plants,
$3.50 M; 50c C; Cabbage, $1.75
M. All prepaid. R. Chancelor,
Pitts.

" Marglobe Tomato Plants, $2.
M; 75c C. Del. No checks. Geo.
Griffis, Screven.

- Pink Skin PR Plants, from
vine cuttings, $3.50 M; Also
Imp. Marglobe Tomato, moss
packed, 50c C; 75c, 200; $2. M.
Del. to 3rd zone. J. F. Gruber,
Odum, Rt. 2.

and Rutger Tomato, moss pack-
ed, full count, prompt shipment,
25e C; 500, $1.25; $2. M. Charles
A. Gibbs, Abbeville, Rt. 2.

Plants, stocky, open field grown,
mossed, full count, 35 C; 500,
$1.50; $2.25 M; 5M, $10. Can
furnish large amts. W. F. Rowe,
;Abbeville.

Red P. R. Potato plants, ready,
$4. M. L. Dixon, .Surrency.

A. R. Jones, Pelham, Box 107.

- Good, stocky Gold Dollar to-
bacco plants, $2.50 M. PP. Mrs.
Frederick Atkinson, Valdosta,
Rts:

P. R. potato plants, now, $3.
M. 5 M or more, $3. M. FOB.
D. M. Cason, Bristol.

Marglobe Tomato Plants,
grown from certified wilt proof
seed, $1.50 M. Del. W. W. Wil-
liamson, Bristol, Rt.-1.

Rutger and Marglobe Tomato
Plants, 35c C; $2.25. M; Chas. W.
Cabbage, 25c C; $1.75 M; White
Bermuda Onion, Iceburg. Let-
tuce, and Beet Plants. Well
rooted and mossed. No COD.
Add postage. Mrs. H. L. Brit-
tingham, Guyton.

Limited No. disease free, cer-
tified, Copperskin PR Sweet Po-
tato Slips, 40c C. Shipped Exp.
|Col. Check or MO. Mack Pat-
Gap, Voc. Ag.
Teacher, Rabun Gap Commun-
ity School.

P. R. Plants, cert., govt. insp.,
$4. M. Denvis Dixon, Screven,
Rites

Marglobe Tomato Plants,
grown from certified wilt re-

;}|Sistant seed, large strong, $1.75

Del. D Williamson,



5 eek

George W. Gaff, Fitzgerald, Rt..
1.

P. R. Potato slips, inSp., Broc- |

Peppers, Climbing tomatoes, 35c:

Open field grown Marglobe

Marglobe and Rutger Tomato.

State insp: P. R. sweet potato |
pen $2.50 M. Booking orders.



PLANTS FOR SALE.

3 kinds collard plants, 65c C;
New Burbank Tomato, 25c doz:
75 C; Egg Plants, 75c C; Hot
Pepper, 25c doz; Calif. Plants,
30c doz; 75c C. Mrs. B. Brady,
Cairo, Rt. 1, Box 343.

PR Plants, $3.50 M; 10,000,
$30.00; Marglobe Tomato, $2.50
M; 10,000, $22.50; Cabbage
Plants, 400, $1. PP; Exp., $1.50
M. All ready. RYO Parks,
Darien.

White and Yellow Bermuda
Onion Plants, 30c C; 500, $1.00;
$1.50 M. PP. Solomon Davis,
Milledgeville, Rt. 5, Box 126.

Chas. W. Copenhagen, Market
Cabbage Plants, $1.50 M; Mar-
globe and Rutger Tomato, $2.
M. B. F. Mallard, Savannah, Rt.
1, Box 378.

Pimiento and Calif. Wonder,

Sweet Pepper Plants, $3.25: M;
Rutger Tomato, $2.25 M. Mrs.
Ina Griffin, Baxley.

Large stocky blooming size
Marglobe, Break O Day Toma-
to, 500, $1.25; $2. M. Del. PP.
Roots mossed and wrapped.
Satis. guar. F. F. Stokes, Fitz-
gerald.

Rutger and Marglobe Tomato,
$2. M; Ruby King Sweet Pepper
and Cayenne Hot, $3. M. Mrs.
J. W. Rowell, Graham.

Rutger and Marglobe Tomato,
from: certified seed, $2. M. M.
A. McNeal, Graham. E

Govt. insp. PR Plants, now
ready, $3.50 M. in 20,000 lots;
$4. M. any order below. Book-
ing orders for Apr. 26 del. Frank
Merritt, Screven, Rt. 1.

Govt. insp. and treated PR
Plants, $3.50 M; 5 M and up, $3.
M. Ready now. B. D. Brannen,

Bristol, Rt. 1, Box 73.

Tobacco Plants, $3. M; $2.00;
500. Mrs. M. F. Gaddis, Quit-
man, Box 427.

Marglobe Tomato Plants, $2.-

|25 .M. Del. Moss packed. J. B.

Griffis, Mershon, Rt. 1.

Govt. insp. and treated Cop-
perskin PR Plants, now ready.
$4. M. Del. PP. A. J. Griffis,
Patterson.

Govt. insp. and treated Pur-

ple and Copperskin PR, Plants,

$3.50 M. Del. Good plants.

Prompt shipment. L. C. poet

sey, Screven, Ree 1:
Marglobe and New Stone

Plants, full count, moss packed,

$1.50 M: 2000 up, $1.25 M; 500,
$l. Wo R. Lightsey, Screven.

Certified Yellow Skin PR
Plants, now ready, $2.50 M. W.
T. Gray, Camilla. ;

Govt. insp. and treated PR
Plants, red and pink skin, $4.
M; New Stone and Marglobe
Tomato, $2. M. Del. Moss pack-
ed. Prompt shipment. Omar
Lightsey, Screven, Rt. 2.

Marglobe Tomato Plants, 40c
C; $2.50 M; Large Sweet Pepper,
50c C; $2.50M. Moss packed.
Leo J. Patterson, Baxley, Rt. 4.

Imp. P. R. and La. Copper-
skin, govt. insp. and treated,
Potato Plants, $4. M; over 5 M
$3.50. Del. J: E. Arnold, Sur-
RENCYeo Loe

Marglobe and Rutger Tomato
Plants; 30:-C; 500): $1.25; -$2,
M. GaeHes A, Gibbs, Abbeville,
Rt,2;

Rutger Tomato Plants, 30c C;
500, $1.25; $2.-M. P. L. Gibbs,
Abbeville, Rt. 2.

Rutger Tomato Plants, open
field grown, full count, prompt
shipment, 35e C; 500, $1.50; $2.
M; 5 M, $9. PP. W. F. Rowe, Ab-
beville.

La. Copperskin. and Ga. PR
Plants, insp., 500, $1.50; $3. M;
Tomato, 500, $2.25; $4. M; Ber-
muda Onion and Chas., Copen-
hagen and Marion Market Cab-
bage, 500, 75c; $1.10 M. No
cheks, W. C. Hamby, Valdosta.

Govt. insp. Sweet Potato
Plants, PR and LA Copperskin,
$2.50 M. R. N. Redmond, Pel-
ham, Rt. 1.

Calif. Wonder and Ruby King
Pepper, good plants, moss pack-
ed, ready now, 65c C; $2.50 M.
Del. Hiram Lightsey, a
Re 2



bearing



PLANTS FOR SALE
a f 4

PR Plants, govt. insp., now
ready to ship, $4. M. J. W. Deal,
Patterson. J

PR Plants, govt. insp., prompt
shipment, $4, M. FOB. Wade
Aycock, Surrency.

Red and Pink Skin PR plants,
govt. insp., $2.75 M. FOB. Now
ready. Full count. Ready to su,
Alge Lightsey, Surrency, Rt.

Marglobe Tomato Plants, o
50 M; Copenhagen Cabbage, $2.
M. Full count. Prompt ship-
ment. Prepaid. L.

Guar. G.

?|Steedly, Baxley.

Large quantity Red and Pink
Skin PR Potato Plants, Rut-
gers, Earliana, and Greater Bal-
timore Tomato, all govt. insp.,
and certified, ship mixed orders,
500, $1.75; $3. 25 M. FOB. Bax-
ley. W. H. Morris, Baxley, Rt.
see

Marglobe and New Stone To-
mato, moss packed, $1.50 M;
Govt. insp. and treated P R
Plants, Red and Pink Skin, $3.
M. Del. Good count and prompt
shipment. Omar Lightsey,
Screven, Rt. 2. x

State insp. PR Plants, Pink
Skin, $2.50 M; Big Gem Ever-
Strawberry, heavy
bearing, $1. C; $7.50 M; Cab-|
bage, 40c C; $2. M. Lee Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.

Pan American and Marglobe
Tomato Plants, $3.50 M. J. C.
Scruggs, Harlem.

Govt. insp. Copperskin Pota-
to Plants, $4. M; Marglobe To-
mato, $4. M. All del. C. E. Mor-

ris, Baxley, Rta:

SEEDS FOR SALE

Sage Seed, 1947, 20c tbl; 1 oz.
(3 tbl.); 50c; 420z., 25e C; Mar-
tin Gourd, 50 seed, 25c; Peer-
less Tomato, 1 tbl., 15c; Yoz.
(5 tbl) 50c; Okra, 6 ozs. 30c. PP.
Miss Lillian Hardin, White.

White Half Runner Bean
Seed, guar. tender, 40c cup;
Also Mauls Spineless Okra
Seed, 35c cup. Del. Mrs. C. D.
Sellers, Ellijay, Rt. 2.

White Half Runner.and White
Bunch Bean Seed, 35c lb; 3 Ibs.
$1. Add postage. Jay Hayes,
Gainesville, Rt. -1.

Striped Half Runner Garden
Beans, nice and tender, for
sale. PP. Mrs. .G. B. Barrett,
Cornelia, Star Rt.

Citron. Seed, 75c lb; Early

Green Okra, 35 teacup; Jones

Yellow Meat Watermelon, and
Bonono Mushmelon, each 50
teacup; Speckled Crowder and
purple Hull Peas, each 25c Ib.
Add postage. Rosie Crowe,
Cumming, Rt. 1. . \

600 lbs. Sericea Lespedeza,
27c lb; 18 bu. Red Tanner Soy

Beans, $6 bu. G. C. Miller,
Rockmart.
Genuine Sims Watermelon

Seed, $1.75 lb; 5 lbs., a Mixed
sound Okra, 50c lb; 3 lbs., $1;
Sundried Apples, free of worms
50c 1b; 6 lbs., $2. Del in Ga.
Ola jones, Grayson.

Genuine Georgia Sweetheart
Watermelon Seed, govt. tested,
94 per ct. germ., hand saved,
from personally selected mel-
ons, $1.50 1b. Miss Carolyn
Bloodworth, Gordon.

Cream Colored Crowder Peas
$6 bu.; Also want to buy some
Guinea Hens. H: R. Adams,
Buford Rt. 1.

Striped Half Runner Bean
Seed, guar. tender, 40c cup; 70c
lb; 5 lb. lots 65c Ib, Del. Bonnie
Smith, Gainesville, Rt. 2.

White and Striped Tender
Half Runner Garden Beans, 35c
large cup. Miss Fannie Clark,
Calhoun, Rt. 1.

Tender White and Early
Speckled Half. Runner Also
White Tender Cornfield beans.
Sound and free of weevils. 40c
teacup, 3 cups. $l: Miss Gen-
nia Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.

White Tender Cornfield
Beans, 35c cup; Early Striped
and White Half Runner Beans,
Very Tender. 35c cup. PP. in
Ga. Mrs. Mattie Little, Ball
Ground, Rt, 1.

40 bu. Browneyed White
Crowder .Peas, clean, sound. $9
bu, 24% bu.-bags. FOB. Harvey





Cc, eae Buena Jee ae

SEED FOR SALE

Red speckled Crowder Peas,
30c Ib; 10 Ibs. $2.75: Stond

$1.25 lb.; White Pole Butter-

Rt.1:

field Beans, large cup, 40c. Add
postage. Bell Botts,
BR ceely

About 80 Ibs.
Speckled Peas, 35c lb.; 10 IDB.
Okra, 80c lb; Also Butt Orp-
ington Eggs, 15 for $2.00. All
COD. John H. Smith, Sanders-
ville, Rt. 1, Box 248.

7 Sister Tender Cornfield |
Beans, large cup, 40c. Add
postage. Fred Thomas,
alle Rel;

Fresh pure Cannonball and
Black Diamond Watermelon
Seed, hand saved, from selected
melons, govt.

et.germ.;~$1 1b.- in small lots;

Pole Beans, 40c; 6 lbs. String-
less Green Pod Bunch Beans, .

About 40 Ibs. Cuban Queen
Serghum Seed, 15 ib. 4 mi,
N. Fayetteville. Willie Turner,
Fayetteville, Rt. 2:

Calif. Multiplying Beer Sead,
25c start. Mrs. Lou Ell Green,
Smyrna.

Good No. Ga. Cane Seed at
my home. aoe Martin, Dawson-
ville, Rt.

aa, Bunch and Mixed
Colored Butterbeans, 30c cup;

cup. Exe. 1 cup for 1 print
sack. Each pay postage. Mrs.
English Roach, Royston, Rt. 1.

Old time Tender Striped
Garden Beans, weevil treated,
40c large cup. PP. Mrs. A. KS
Grier, Gainesville, Rt. 5.

Old Time Garden Bean, Big
White Half Runners, Striped
and Cream Half Runners,
White Creaseback and Cut-
shorts, 50e large cup. Exe. for
feed sacks. 2 cups for 4 print,
2, for 5 white. No checks. Ed-
ward Gable, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

Tender
Half Runner Beans, 50c cup;
Long Tender Pod Okra, 30
cup. Add postage. Will exe.-
for sacks' in good cond. Mrs,
Amos Hensley, Ellijay, Rt. 3.

Tender Garden Half Runner
and Black Pole Bean Seed, 30c
lg. cup; 4 cups, $1; Speckled
Crowder Peas, 25 Ib; 15 Ibs.,
$3.50. Add postage. No checks.
Gladys Duran, Cumming, Rt. 1,

Bean Seed, free of weevils, 35

large teacup. Prompt shipment,

a Belle Crowe, Gainesville,
eee

Tender White Half Runner
garden Beans, 35c teacup;
Speckled Half Runners, 35 cup;
or 3 cups, $1; Knee High 2 Har

-Seed Corn, $1. 50 for 10 lbs. P.

B. Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1,

Recleaned Hagari Seed, 8
lb; $7.50 CWT or more. Walter
E. Dellinger, Rome.

Ga. Heading Collard Seed,
clean, $1 lb; 4 lbs., $3; Cala-
mus Houseleak, 45c doz;

Small Asparagus Clumps, 50e%
Yarrow, 50c doz; Large Rasp-
berry bushes, $2. 15 ea.; small,
75c. All PP. Mrs. Alice Harri-
son, Bremen.

Old Fashion Speckled Cuts
short Cornfield Bean Seed,
tender, no weevils, 60c Ib; Also
Old Time Pumpkin Seed, $1 for
Se matchbox full: PP. fs,
Dupree, Acworth, Rt. 1,

Black Diamond White Waters.
melon Seed, $1.50 lb for lot;
5 Ibs., $1.60 lb. PP. A. C. Me-
Carvey, Charing. .

1000 lbs. Genuine Cannonball
Black Diamond Watermelon
Seed, $1 1b; 500 Ibs. Ga. Sweets
heart melon, $2 lb All state
tested and Semasan _ treated,
W. O. Birdsong, Gordon,

Green Glaze Collard Seed,
1947 crop, 2 Thls. 25; 10 Thls.
$1; Bushel and Long handi
Dipper Gourd Seed, 15e doz:
2 doz; 25c; Butterbeans, cols
ored and white, 30c ib. PP. Mrs,
J. A, Wilson, Martin.

Calif, Multiplying Beer Seed,
25e: good start. Coin or stamps



Mrs. Sallie Floyd, Rockmar&
Rt ;

PAGE THRER

Mtn. Watermelon Seed, Ist yr.

beans, 30 Ib. All new seed. No.
checks. G. L. Duran, Cumming,

Real tender 7 Sister canes

Crandall,

Red Hull

Crand- :

tested, 94- per

50c Ib. in 50 Ib lots. J. i

Bloodworth. 5
4b. Perkins 7Olmau

Seed, 75c; 1 lb. Ky. Wonder

40c Ib. G. M. Moseley, Menlo.

White Velvet Okra Seed, 30

Cutshort and White

Brown Striped Half Runner












































































































































oa







melon, 60c 1b; 25 Ibs.,

5c lb. Add Postage.
_ Cane Seed,

_ @ shorts, Striped Cornfield, all

mond Watermelon, $1 lb; Okra
_ seed, $1 Ib: Pantene 5 lb.
_ Add postage. Mrs. C.

_ Seed, recleaned, fine for syrup

_ PP. Money or MO. No stamps.

ee Rt

-Butterbeans, 45c lb. J. N. Car-

\xipe, machine threshed, 15c lb.

oi. sib-- PR. > Thy Parks, Com-
_ merce,

. 20c large cup. Add postage.



PAGE FOUR



SEED FOR SALE

SEEDS FOR SALE



Water-
or more,
B0c 1b; 75 lbs. Giant Green Pod
Okra Seed, 60c Ib; small lots,
Joseph
Milledgeville, Rt.

50 Ibs. Cannonball

A. Farmer,
2 Box 117.

_ 4 bu. Honey Drip Sorghum
AC Abe a. Eorkttle:
Temple, Rt. 1.

25 lbs. White 6. wks. Beah
Sed, White Creaseback, White
tender, Weevil Treated, 45c
eup: White Blackeyed Peas, 25
cup. PP. Mrs, W. J. Reece,
Cartecay. 4

Pure Pride of Ga. Water-
melon (ripe watermelons in 60
days) Seed $1.75 lb; Large pkt.
(% A size) 50c; Col Bunch

son, Griffin, Rt. C.

100 lbs. Cannonball Water-
melon Seed, 75c lb; Black Dia-

H. Sledge,
Byron.

Pure Honey Drip Cane Seed,

in $5 bu. FOB. No orders for
Jess 10 lbs. Horace Darnel,
Winston.

Striped Half Runner Bean
Seed free of weevils, 35c large
cup; 3 cups, $1 Add _ postage.
oe R. Garrett, Gainesville,

t

142 tons Honeydrip Cane
or for planting for feed.

East, Oxford Rt. 1.

Ga. Collard Seed, 20c 1b;
White Purple Hull Peas, 17%e
Ib.; 1 pk. Browneyed Groade:
12 lb; Brown or Clay Crowd-
ers, $8 bu. FOB. Randall Rog-

Duzds

ers, Andersonville.
_ Several hundred lbs. Serecia
Seed, cleaned and _ scarified,

1W2%e Ib. H.'R. Clarke,
ington, Rt. 2.

White Bunch and Col. But-
Yerbeans, each 30c large cup;
White Velvet Okra, 25c cup.

Cov-

Mrs.
Rid

Cannonball Watermelon Seed,

English Roach, Royston,

Rt: DF
Okra seed, 1947 crop, clean,

S. W. Lorren, Calhoun, Rt. 1.
en feed kind, 25e Qui: 'H. Hill,

Giant Sunflower Seed, chick-
Pavo, Rt: 1.

Black a Watermelon
Seed, $1 Ib. Exc. 20 lbs. for reg.
male pig of any breed; Velvet
Bean, Field Peas. or lespedeza
Seed, Starling Yawn, Vienna,

Striped and white half run-
mer Garden Bean, 50c extra
Jarge cup. Mrs. B. H. Patterson,
Fiowery Branch, Rt. 1.

White slightly Half Runner
seed Beans, earlier, more pro-
lific and much larger pods than
Dixie Wonder, tender at all
stages, % lb. 5c: %, 45c; 85c
Tb. FOB. S. A. Beavers, Cum-
ming, Rt. 5.

Tender White Garden Bean,
Striped Half Runner and
Brown Cornfield Bean Seed, 3
cups, $1. PP. in Ga. Mrs. N. B.
Overby, Flowery Branch.

Beat the Bee Cane Seed, 15c
ib. small lots, $5 bu Clean and
Bound. No orders less 10 lbs.
eee Hart, Douglasville, Rt.

White Cornfield Cutshort
Bean and White Half Rene
Bean Seed, 35 big cup;
big cups Green pod Okra, $1. is
or 25c cup. Add Postage. Mrs.
A. W. Mulkey, Quill.

500 lbs. Hastings New Dixie
Honey Cane Seed, No. 592, $25
for lot. Del. within 50 mi.
Marietta. M. S. Woodward, At-
Janta, 3905 Tuxedo Rd. N.W.
Phone Ch. 8832.

Red Multiplying Onions, 25c
. Prepaid to 2nd zone; Exc.
for print or good quality white
sacks. You pay

postage on
Backs. Mrs. Viola - Busbee
Hawkinsville, Rt. 3, Box 32.

Good Tender Cornfield Bean,
White and Colord mixed,, or
all White, 50c cup. PP. Mrs.
Adam Whitaker, Cherry Log.

Pure pride of Ga. Water-
melon, $1.25 lb; Perkins Long

Garden White, Tender Half
Runner bean seed, 40c large
cup; little white Mush pea, and
speckled running butterbeans,
25e cup. Mrs. Florence aene

Kingston, Rt. 2.

Mammoth Sunflower Seed,
35c qt; Gatlic Bulbs, grow to
5 in. 8 for-25c;Vigorvine To-
mato, 300, 25c. PP. Mrs. Willis
Smith, Rolston.

600 lbs. Brown Crowder Peas
recleaned, weevil treated, in
100 lb. bags, 25c 1b; 40 Ibs. Ky.
Wonder Bean Seed, 40c lb;
10 lb Mildew Resistant Canta-
loupe, $1.50 lb; 15 Ibs. Hybrid
Long Green Cucumber Seed,
S1225-bse PP: Roy Harrell, Fay~
etteville.

Cannonball Watermelon, large
CUD. 0DCseole20r Ibs Rocky Ford
Cantaloupe, large cup, 75c; $1.75
lb; Col. Bunch Butterbeans, 39c
lb; Hastings Syrup Cane Seed,
5c Ib; at farm. Mrs. S. T. Wil-
liams, Waco. Rt. 2.



BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE

~



10 bu. each: 90 day Running
Velvet Beans, $6 bu; Mixed
Peas, $5.50 bu; Brab Peas, $6
bu. A. S. Lynch, Lumpkin.

6 wks. Peas, 25c lb; or $18
CWT. PPR. Wilton Harper,
Wray, Rt. 2.

90 Day and Osceola Velvet

Beans, $6 bu; Brown, Black
and White Crowders, $10 bu.
FOB here. Lelius Helms,

Buena Vista.

Bunch Butter Bean (white),
35c lb; 2 Ibs., 60c; Also Lady
Finger Peas, same price. 1947
crop. Mrs. ; Landrum,
Adairsville, Rt. 3.

Brown Tender 6 wks.
Beans, String Beans hand
shelled and free of weevils, 25c
Jarge cup with postage; 50c lb.
ee Mrs. B. H. rely Clarkes-
ville.

Good Tender White end
Colored mixed ,Cornfield Bean
Seed, 50c large cup. PP. Mrs.
Adam Whitaker, Cherry Log.

60 bu. Clay, 10 bu. New Era
Peas, $5.50 bu. at my barn.
L. D. Tolle, Midville, Rt. 1.

12> bu. Half Yard Peas,
bu. Good for canning
table. R. |H. Maye,
ville, Rt. 1.

Grandmothers Old Favorite
Cornfield Beans. bears till
frost, Striped Half Runners,
50c lb. PP. Not less 1 Ib. sold.
a J. W.. Dobbins, Hiram,
ted.

About 10 Ibs. Whip Peas, 10c
lb; few lbs. each white and Red
Crowder Peas,
Watermelon, grows to 40-50 lbs
on any kind ground, 10 tbl.
seed, Add postage. Mrs. Myrtie
Loggins, Gainesville. Rt. 5.

Brabham Peas, $6.75; New
Eras, $6.25; Specks, $6.50;
Mixed Peas,$6.25; Iron Peas,
$6.75- bu; White Purple Hull
Peas, $12. 50 bu. L. G. Downs,
Andersonville.

Nice Col Bunch Butterbeans,
35c Ib; 3 lbs., $1. Add postage.
Money or MO. No stamps. Mrs.
Harris Hall, Carrollton, Rt. 3.

4 bu. Era Peas, weevil free.
$6 bu; 2 bu. Mixed Peas, $5.50
bu; 3 bu. Brown Crowders, $6
bu. Friendly Greer, Midville,
Rit 2) BO mae tO,

White Peas, Browneyed, exc.
for table or planting, 20c Ib.
Del. by parcel post 5 Ibs up.
J. R. Reeves, Jr., Draketown.

White Hull Cream Colored
Peas, 4 cups, $1; Purple Hull
Crowders, 3 cups, $1. Add
postage. Mrs. J. M. Johnson,
Shellman.

White Tender Half Runner
Garden Beans, White 6 wks.
Bean Seed, tender, weevil
treated, 45c cup; 7 lbs. good
Okra Seed. 35c lb. Mrs. J. H.
Evans. Ellijay, Rt. 2.

17 bu. 90 Day Velvet Beans,

$7
and
Wrights-

*| good and sound, $5.50 bu. FOB.

Holeomb
boro.

Gatan Soy Beans, 98.48 per-
ct. Purity; Germ., 86 per ct.,
(tested Mar. 22, 1948), $7 ba.
10 bu. lots; $7.50 less than 10
bu. FOB. James 8B. -Bartch,

Chapman, Greens-



Green Okra Seed, 40ce Ib. J.
P. Dukes, Griffin, Rt. C.

Augusta, 37 Mounted Rt. Box
680, Phone 3- 3466,

Seed}

10c Ib; Jones)

BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE

Extra good White Bunch
Table Peas, 35c lb; Heavy bear-
ing Black Pole and Striped
Half Runner Bean Seed, 50c
large cup. Mrs. W. V. Robbs,
Flowery, Branch.

15 bu. Yellow Sugar Crowder
Peas, $6 bu. for entire lot. A.|
H. Conner, Pitts, Rt. 2.

Colored Beans, 25c lb. Exc.
for white sacks. Mrs. Ernest
Brown, Swainsboro, Rt. 1, Box
153-A.

Few cups each of Brown
Crowder Peas, White bunch
and col. Butterbeans, 45c tea-
cup; few qts. Spanish Pink
Peanuts, 25c qt. PP. Mrs. G. C.
Taylor, Buchanan, Rt. 1.

White Mush Peas, 50c lb; 5
lbs. and over, 40 1b; Long
green Crowder Peas, | 5 tee
$1.75. PP. D. A. Law, Chula. |

Sugar Crowders. Blackeyed
and Cream, 20c lb. here; 25c lb.
mailed; Imp. Rocky Ford Can-
}taloupe, $1 lb; Yellow Meat
Watermelon Seed, $4; White
Dutch clover and Dallas grass,
85c. B. R. Woodliff, Alpharetta,
Rick:

Seed Crowder Peas:
Speckled (Pole Cat),
Hull, Browneyed and
Brown Crowder, 5. cups, $1;
Running Butterbeans, 3 cups,
$1; Dried Figs, 50c Ib. Add
postage. H. EE. Richardson,
Bowdon, Rt. 4. :

1947 crop Col. Bunch, slightly
mixed with white, and col.
Running Butterbeans. weevil-
free,+3- lbs: PP 35-1b. Mrs.5 a.
S. Mullins, Milner, Rt. 1.

White and col. Butterbeans,
for sale or exe. 1 lb. for 1
print sack. Write. Mrs. H. L.
Smith, Pendergrass.

6 wk. Tender Half Runner
(bunch) Garden Bean Seed, 30c
teacup. PP. Mrs. Roy Holtzclaw,
Cumming, Rt. 1. -

Blackeyed and Cream Crow-
der Peas, large cup, 25c; also
Collard seed. 50c cup. Add
postage. Mrs. P: E. Traylor, Re-
becca. -

10 bu. Brown Crowder Peas,
recleaned,; $12 bu. J. H. Bra-
zier Jr., "Zebulon.

Striped and White Half Run-
ner, Tender Bunch Beans, 35c
lb. Mrs. S. M. Gunter, Law-
renceyille, Rt. 1.

Red Speckled Crowder Peas,
30e cup; 4 cups, $1; Tender
Cream Half Runner Garden
Bean Seed, 45c cup. Exc. for
sacks. Mrs. Carl Smith, Ellijay,
Rt.3:

2 bu. Sugar Crowder Peas,
hand shelled, 25c lb. in 10 Ibs.
or more, Add postage. No letters
ans. Mrs. Emmer M. Puckett,
Buford, Rt. 1. Box 50.

Green Hull Sugar Crowders,
20c lb. Send postage. No less
$1 order accepted. J. P. Hol-
brook, Alpharetta, Rt. 1, Fran-
cis Ra.

Big Brown Crowder Peas,
25c lb. Heavy Bearing Okra
Seed, 50c lb. R.. J. ,Holland,
Empire, Rt. 1.

Cutshort Beans, White and
Colored, 20e cup; Crowder
Peas, 20c cup. Add _ postage.
Mrs. J. S. Wyatt, Ranger.

Early Brown 6 wks. Peas,
bears 2 crops, fine, green early
for. truckers, 6 cups, $1 PP;
$10 bu. FOB; White or col.
Butterbeans, 5 cups, $1; Streak-
ed Half Runner and Blue- Pole

Red
Purple
6 wks.

Beans, 4 cups, $1. PP. in Ga.
Clarence McMillian, Dacula,
Rtacls ;

Blackeyed Crowder Peas, 25c
lb; 50 lbs or more, 20c lb; Mush
Peas, 35c Jb. Marvin B. Burt,
Dawsonville, Riwe

- Brab Peas, $6.50 bu; ee
led, $5.50 bu; Browneyed
Crowders, $10 bu. FOB. C. A
Walker, Ellaville.

60 bu. New Era Peas, 80 per
ct. sound, $6 bu; 90 day Velvet
Beans, 70 per ct.-,sound, re-
cleaned, $6 bu. H. C. Daniel,
Waynesboro.

Beans, $6 bu. Bunch, $7 bu;
Black, White Browneyed and
Brown, Crowders, $10 ~ bu;
White Purple Hulls, $10 bu.
FOB. Wm. L. Helms, Buena
Vista.

150 bu. Ala. Brown Crowder
Peas. good cond, $10 rie a



R. Walton, Tignal, Rt

90 Day and Oceola Velvet}



ing, Atlanta, oP)

vilian pay check of better

At this question Major Th
rrapid. calculating.

sergeant with one child and

for service over three years
$696 for his wife and chi

speaking of and of course

year cash money.

Relations DepaceneaE adn e for oe
Air Force Recruiting. Service, New Post

Air Force Bes Siation
is estimated that the lowest pay that a man
sibly earn upon entering service is. equiva D
of course that is absolutely the short

How much in actual cash take-ho
listed men that work here make,

I. dont iknow off hand |

per year in actual take: home ee Bi

and bigs $3,960 per year. This
real value of the many araS such as

It was then that Bl
Blanton enlisted Paeee Ye April 20 2

The Pe farm also raises aouade
Pvt. Blanton likes farm life very much C
to ogy all of his es up-to- date on his





















































He was Tight |
than $200

Blanton
omas smiled and

e i
I find that he

amounts to
Id and of

does not |



BEAN: AND PEAS
FOR SALE








7 bu. Velvet Beans, $4.50 bu.
Will ship; Also 4 tons good
Peanut Hay, $20 ton. G W.
Hambrick, Ellaville, Rt. 1.

Col Butterbeans, 30c 1b;
Prolific Bearing Okra, 30
large cup; Brown Turkey Fig
Sprouts, rooted, 75c; Black};
Crowder Peas, 2 crops a yr.,
40c lb. Add postage. Mrs. H.
G. Greene, Carnesville.

White Browneyed and Brow
Crowder Peas, clean, sound,
15c lb. in 100 lb lots or more.

Harvey C. Jordan, Buena
Vista. fi
White Purple Hull Peas,}

small lots, 25 lb; $10 bu. Wylie
Smith, Adairsville, Rt. 2.

White Conch and Mush Peas,
30c Ib; Large Brown Crowders,
and few Henderson Butter-
beans 130 lb. sh OB = dan ake
Strange, Swainsboro, Rt. 4.

7 bu. and 50 Ibs. good Speck-
led Peas, $6.50 bu; Also RI
Hatching Eggs, $1.25, 15, Car-
tons returned. No checks. Mrs.
G. C. Clifton, Millen, Rt. 3, Box
1157. Phone 334-R2.

White Tender and Speckled
Half Runner Garden Beans, 35
teacup; Also. Red Speckled
Crowder Peas, 30c Ib. in 5 Ibs,
lots: G@. T. Brown, Ball Ground,
Ritaets

Table Peas, Purple Hull, ana| 1
6 Wk. Crowder, and :
Browneyed White Pea, 5 cups,
$1.25; Tender Brown 'Streaked
Half Runner, extra fine, 5 cups;
$1.50. No checks Mrs. Lon Ash-
worth, Dacula, Rt. 1. :

Tender Striped and White

Mt. and Marglobe Tomato Seed,

ville, Rt. 2.

Selected, hand shelled, Green
Hull Crowder Peas, sound, free
of trash, 20c lb. for lot of 6-8
bu. J. W. Bennett, Roswell.
Near 2nd. Bapt. Church.

New Era Peas, $6.50 bu;

loxi Beans, slightly damaged,
$6. bu. L. A. Caldwell, Gay.

_ 40 bu. 90 Day Running Velvet

large |

Half Runner Bean, 30c cup; 40c} Wi
Ib; Collard Seed, 55c Ib; Stone} Ch

Slightly Mixed Peas, $6. bu; Bi- |.








































































field Beans, 50c cup. M1
ter Dobson, ae un, -

make good
wees and |

25 bu. Seed: Con fi
lected, from 2 ear sta
Golden Prolific, $4.50
Palmer H. Greene,

100 bu. ~Ch
shuck, $2 bu. for
2 mi. Grayson. |
TORS: ve 2.

eee Corn, long yello
good popping, shelled,
Also 50 bu. soun
Corn in Shuck $2
eds B. eee Hiaw

| $1.50 lb. Azzie Crow, Gaines- es :

Coker's. 100 wilt r
ton seed, sound, oe



Beans, in 1 bu.
ae FOB, Wi
nol



-2 1/2 bu.
ship. D.













COTTONSEED FOR SALE



Big Boll Cot-
; ginned 1
oggs, Atlanta

W. Rt. 8.

t Cottonseed,
_ Beans, $6;
$6.50 bu. FOB
sterlin, Ander-

Exp. Station
ttonseed, Ist

without any

from other]

Empire, Coker, Ist. yr. cot-

|tonseed, for sale. G. H. Clark,

Griffin, Rt. AL :



GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE

_10 tons Peanut Hay, $20 ton
vat my farm. J. K.: Peavey,
Unadilla. s u

Lespedea Hay, $40 ton baled.
T. W. Simmons, Douglasville,
Rte

Nice bright cured fodder, for
sale at my barn. J. W. Hood,
Cleveland, Rt. 4.

Grass Hay, $35 ton;
grasses, $33 ton. Del in 5 ton
lots. H. W. Vaughn, Athens,



| Phone 3338 J.



2 Pee
hould Be Haryested as
seed of garden peas
d yield is small com-
ace they take.
cool weather crop, and
where spring comes
is time-for them to
ot weather arrives; or
tier of states where
tively cool. x
first sowing of peas

early as possible,
that the finer varieties,
inkled seed, may decay
cold and damp too
are sown. Smooth
not decay so easily.
of as high quality as

comes late and sum-
ickly, only one crop of
) be successful, and
dwarf variety Bont
the most favorable
ew gardens, or old



Soon as Pods Become






















SS oS

Plump

ones where peas have not been grown

before, the seed will grow better if

inoculated with a bacterial culture
which can be obtained for that pur-
pose.

Seed should be sown at least 1 inch
apart in the row, in fertile soil. Plant

food should be applied at the rate of

4 pounds to 100 feet of row, either

mixed well with the soil before sow-
ing, or spread in trenches on either
side of the row, a little deeper than
the seed are sown. The seed should
be covered 1 to 2 inches deep.

In sections where weather condi-

tions are favorable to peas, it is pos-
sible to grow them in twin rows six
inches apart; in the space between
the rows the weeds are pulled, but
[the soil is not cultivated. In less fa-
vorable sections however, single rows,
regularly cultivated, will be found
more dependable,









it

continue to chorus:
sen, leafy foods. The
they insist, is deficient
and mineral-rich

t supply all summer
wn ie. The home garden,
wiss chard and New
ch, which quickly reach
d continue to produce
ntil freezing weather
























ing; and germina-
cult if sown when
arms up. ees =
sow one or bgth of
greens, remember that
pbenceoly and are
ed. Pees
New Zealand spinach
ushel basket, but only
of its many branches
se are quickly re-









| All the mustards are
| and are much esteeme

Few Green Leaves

f Lack in U.S. Diet

earliest crops, it will be ready to cut
in a month, and new leaves will grow
to replace those that are cut. Chard
has a distinctive flavor which many

prefer to spinach, and children usu-

ally like it better.
The mustard, family. provides several
varieties of greens. One known

in 21 days from sowing, and if the
roots are left undisturbed will pro-
duce eight or nine crops in the season.
ick erowing,
in the south-

ern states.,

. Garden sorrel is a hardy perennial, ;

which will:live over winter and pro-
duce greens. It does best in light
shade. f

Kale is a fall and winter plant,

sown in June, the plants set out in
rows two feet apart, they will produce
leaves which stand freezing, and are
improved in flayor by that experience.
Collards are a member of the cabbage
family which do not make heads, but
leaves with cabbage flavor. ;
_All these greens are rich in minerals
and vitamins. and are valuable in the
% ass met .

Quality Fresh tender Johnson!
Mixed:

as |.
Tendergreen will produce edible leaves |

tered intodo not list for
















MARKET BULLETIN |

Notice!

We receive many complaints from parties whoreply-
ing to notices in the BulletinNEVER receive an ans-
wer, although a self-addressed, stamped envelope is
frequently enclosed with the letter or order for a reply.

When a notice is published in the Bulletin, regarding
Positions and Farm Help Wanted, or item listed for
Sale, In Exchange For, or Wanted... it is the duty of
the party in whose name the notice is listed to answer
immediately every letter, card etc., that he or she re-
ceives regarding said notice. This is not only the busi-.
ness way of handling transactions, but a matter of
politeness as well, and patrons of the Bulletin OWE
|this courtesy (both to yourself and to the Bulletin),
whether you fill the order or not; failure to do this
makes the prospective customer lost confidence in you.

Also, we cannot urge too strongly the absolute ne-
cessity of satisfactorily completing all transactions en-

sale or exchange any item

that you do not actually possess, and under no circum-
stances allow others the privilege of useing your name
and address to their notices.
THE RESPONSIBILITY of your
tice and YOUR OWN PERSONAL NAME AND AD-
DRESS MUST BE ATTACHED to YOUR NOTICE.

YOU MUST STAND
INDIVIDUAL no-



SYRUP FOR SALE

EGGS FOR SALE



Best grade So. Ga. pure Cane
Syrup, bright, heavy, No. 5 cans,
75c; No. 10, $1.50. Ship any amt.
W. D. Dasher, Lake Park, Rt. 1.

100 gals. pure Sorghum
Syrup, 1947 crop, good thick and
bright, in 1/2 gal. glass jars, $2.
gal. in large amts., $1.50 gal.
J.T. McClung, Hiram.

400 gals. good Ga. Cane Sy-
rup,, $1. gal. G. W. Worsham,
Jr., Camilla, Rt. 2.

11 Bbls. good, heavy Ga. Cane
syrup in 35 gal. cap. barrels,
$20. Bbl., also 150 gal., in cans,
75c can. Entire lot del. within
75 miles. J.C. Exum, Pavo, Rt:



EGGS FOR SALE





Brown. Leghorn Eggs, 16,
$1.25. PP. Mrs. L. D. Elliot, La-
vonia, Rt. 1.

Australian Gray and white
Holland Turkey Eggs, from 30
unrelated matings, $3 doz.
Postage 15c extra. Mrs. R. J.
Miller, Augusta, Rt. 37.

Purebred S. C. Buff Orping-
ton Eggs, 15, $1.25 PP. Crates
to be returned. Miss Ronie
Johnson, Shellman, Rt. 1, Box
Dos

Dark Cornish Eggs from 3A
hens, 15, $2. Del. Box to be
returned, Mrs. -A. T:- Thee,
Jessup, Rt. 2.

M. B. Turkey Eggs, $3 doz.
Will ship exp. col. Mrs. John-
nie Davis, Decatur, 3130 Als-
ton Dr. S. E. Cr. 3170.

Guinea Eggs for setting, 18
for $2. Exc. for print sacks,
washed and free of holes. Mrs.
T. M. Harris, Milner. :

White Holland Turkey Eggs,
$3 doz. H. D. Guthrie, Pine
Lake, PO Box 82.

Dark Cornish and N.H. Red
Eggs, 15, $1.50; 2-settings $2.75;
50 Eggs, $4, 60, $5. C.O. Sikes,
Sylvester. i

Full Mixed Bantam Eggs. $1
doz. PP. Jerry Mayfield, Elli-
jay, Rt 3.

| Money. No checks. Mrs. Mary
-Power, Marietta, Rt. 3.

Jersey White Giant Eggs se-
lected fiom choice range flock.
$1.50 setting; or-2 settings, $2.75

. in Ga. Mammoth White
Pekin Duck Eggs, same price.
/Moline M. Landrum, Adairs-
ville, Rt. 3.

Guinea Eggs, 17, $1.35. Gui-
neas are speckled, some nearly
white; Also 10 Dark Cornish
Hens, good stock, $2.25 ea. Mrs.
Mamie Stone, Adairsville, Rt. 2.

Eggs: Lakewelder, Buttercup,
Biack and Buff Minorca Colum-
bian and silver Laced Wyan-
dotte, Ancona, 15, $2. Del. PP.
E. M. Hotchkiss, Savannah, Rt.



AGO ROR 87ers)

Guinea Eggs, $1.50, 18. MO or.



M. B. Turkey Eggs, $3 doz.
Exc. for print sacks, 1 doz for
9 print sacks; Also. N. H. Red
Eggs, 15, $1.50; or. exc. for
garden seed or potato and
other plants. Mrs. Roy Herod,
Adairsville, Rt. 3.

SACKS FOR SALE

Print sacks, washed, ironed,
$1, for 3; Odds, 28c ea. Add
postage .on small orders. Mrs.
G. L. Tallant, Cumming.

Nice Print sacks, ripped and
washed, free of holes, 30c ea.
Add postage. MO. No checks.
vee Carl Howard, Gainesville,

oe

Print sacks, 100 Ib. cap.,
washed and ironed, free of holes
and mildew, extra large, 35 ea.
Add postage. Mrs. Etta C. Ta-
tum, Dawsonville, Star Rt.

Print cloth. sacks, 3, $1.00;
$3.75 doz; $27.50 C; White sacks,
21c ea; 50 or more, 20c ea. Pre-
paid. MO preferred. Major
Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

. Nice print sacks, 100 lb. cap.,
ripped, washed, free of holes
and mildew, 3, $1.00; odd sacks,
30c ea.; with holes, 25c ea. Mrs.
E. A. Whelchel, Gainesville, Rt.
8.

300 print sacks, washed, free
of holes and mildew, 3, $1. COD
orders preferred. Mrs. W. .
Meadors, Cleveland.

16-200 lbs. sacks, washed_and
without holes, 25c ea. FOB. Ar-
thur Owen ,Barnesville.

Nice print sacks, 100 lb. cap.,
raveled, washed and ironed, 30c
ea. Add postage. Mrs. Howard
Stephens, Cumming, Rt. 2.

Nice fast colored print sacks,
free of holes and mildew, wash-
ed, 35c ea. PP. Mrs. R. A. Wal-
drip; Flowery Branch, Rt. 1.

Print sacks, washed and iron-
ed, 25c ea. COD orders. Whites,
washed, 15e ea. Shipped
promptly. Mrs. Sam _ Croy,
Cumming, Rt. 3.

~ Nice print sacks, 100 Ib. cap.,
washed, free of holes and mil-

dew, 3, $1. PP. Orders filled
promptly. Mrs. Gordon Kemp,
Murrayville.

Nice print sacks, washed and
ironed, no holes; extra large
size, dark or light colors, 35c ea.
Add postage. Ship COD if pre-
ferred. Mrs. Jodie Wilson,
Gainesville. Rt. 8.

Smooth print sacks, 35 ea. 2
or more each color; Odd print
sacks, 25c ea; White, 15c ea; Un-
bleached smooth, good grade,
18c ea. All large size. Add post-

age. Mrs. Noel Payne, Canton, |

Rt: 3.

Print sacks,~100 lb. cap., 3,
$1.00; $3.75 doz; $27.50 C; White,
100 lb. cap., 21c ea; or more, 20c
ea. All prepaid. MO preferred.
Major Crow, Gainesville, Rt. 1.



_ PAGE FIVE. ~
SACKS FOR SALE



\
Print sacks, 30c ea; Whites,
20c ea. Add postage. Mrs. Otts
Mashburn, Cumming, Rt. 5.

Washed print sacks, 32c ea;
White, $3. doz; 25c ea.; Print,
$3.90 doz. Lee Crow, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 2, Box 143.

Print sacks, washed and irons
ed, $3.75 doz. Add postage. Mrs.
T. R. Locke, Cumming, Rt. 1.

200 white sacks, 100 Ib. eap.,
free of holes, unwashed, 20 ea.
PP. Mrs. W. A. Edwards, Eall-
Ground, Rt. 1.

Extra large print sacks, wasn-
ed, ironed, no holes, fine weave,
Ist. quality, 35c ea. Add pust-
age. COD if preferred. Mrs,-
Annie Nix, Gainesville, Rt. 5. -

Print Sacks, washed, 100 Ib,
cap., 30c ea. Add postage. Mrs.
A. K. Grier, Gainesville, Rt. 5,

Nice print sacks, washed,
good cond., 3, $1.00; 12-25 in-
lots, 25c ea. Add postage. Mrs,
George Hubbard, Gainesville,
Rises :

Nice print sacks, washed,.
good cond., 35c ea. Add postage.
Mrs. T. L. Lawson, Gainesville,
Rt. 8. :

Nice washed and ironed
print sacks, free of holes, 100
Ib. cap., 30c ea. Add postage.
Miss Lula Cook, Canton, Rt.
2s

Print sacks, washed, ironed,
free of holes and mildew, 30
ea. Add. postage. Miss. Bessie
Cook, Canton, Rt. 2.

3 washed print or 4 white
100 lb. sacks, $1.10. PP. Mrs.
Ethel Sanders, Buchanan, Rt. 2.

Print Sacks, smooth weave,
35c ea; Odd sacks, 1 of each
color, 25c. All in good cond.
Add postage. Mrs. Noel Payne,
Canton,Rt. 3.

Print sacks, 3, $1. Add post-
age. No exc. No checks, Clar=
ence Anderson, Cleveland, Rt.

Print sacks, washed and
ironed. Add -postage. Send
money with order. Mrs. H. D.
Bennett, Cumming, Rt. 3.

| Extra large print sacks, fre@
of holes and mildew, 35c. PP.
Mrs. R. H. Clark, Gainesville,

Rist.

Print sacks, free of holes and
mildew, 24c ea. Add postage,
M. .C.. Colenvan, Flower
Branch, Rt. 3.

Nice print sacks, washed and
free of holes, 30c ea: odd, 25
ea. Add postage. Prompt ships
ment. Mrs. Newman Hughes,
Cumming, Rt. 2.

50 White. Sacks, 10 Ib. cap.,
'good, $9. for lot, including
transp. Money .back if not sat
isfied; Also 25, 3A. N..H. Red:
Pullets, to lay in Aug. Write,
W. J. Ellison, Givard,

Good print sacks, washed
and ironed, no holes, 23, $1.
PP. Mrs. Chas. Sosebee, Cleve-
dandy tees

Print sacks, washed, ironed
30c ea; Odd sacks, 25c ea. Ad
postage. No checks. Mrs. Chas,
H.,Slaton, Gainesville, Rt. 5.

Print sacks, tripped - and
washed, 3, $1.00; in lots of 50
or more, 30c ea. Add postage.
No checks. Mrs. Carl Howard,
Gainesville, Rt. 5.

Print sacks, 30c ea
18c ea. All 100 lb.
postage. Mrs. Theo
Gainesville, Rt. 5.

Print sacks, 38, $1. PP. N@
checks. Eston Young, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 9.

Large -print sacks, washed
and ironed, free of holes and
mildew, 35c ea. COD if pre
ferred. Add postage. Mrs. G. Az
Wilson, Gainesville, Rt. 6.

Nice print sacks, washed and
ironed, 3, $1.00; $3.75 doz. PP,



s;Whit
cap. Aca
Hughes,

Mrs. Edd Hope, Gainesville,
REALS

Print sacks, washed ang
ironed, 35 ea. COD. Mrs. My
R. Roper, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Print sacks, washed, free 4
holes and spots, 3, $1.00; $3.4
doz. Add postage. Mrs. C. Re



Garrett, Gainesville, Rt. 5.























et
ay













- free of holes, 15c ea.



PAGE SIX



Mrs. A. K. Grier, Gainesville,

RULED;

- Print sacks, washed, free of
holes; 3,0 $1. PP. Mrs: 7G. 2 L:
Shuemake, Gainesville, Rt. 1.

Print sacks, Washed, 30c ea.
Add postage. Mrs. Earl Knight,
Gainesville, Rt. 1.

White sacks, 20c ea. for good
ones, not perfect, 10-15 ea. At

my farm. E. T. Evans, More-|
Jand.
Large print sacks, 100 lb.

eap., washed, free of holes and

mildew, 3, $1. Orders filled
promptly. Mrs. Pete Kemp,
Murrayville, Rt. 1.

Nice print sacks, 100 lb. cap.,
free of holes and _ mildew,
washed, 3, $1. PP. Mrs. Gordon
Kemp, Murrayville.

-500 White Sacks, 100 lb. cap.,
No or-
ders less 50 sacks, accepted.
Ralph Dangar, Woodstock, Rt.
aM:

New Print Sacks, smooth, 100
Ib. cap., good cond., washed

- and ironed, 35c ea. Add _ post-

age. Mrs. Clifford Reece, Wood-





LOCK. = Rit
Print sacks, unwashed, 30
ea. Add postage. No checks.
Clarence Anderson, Cleveland,
Rie 2:
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE

FEATHERS:

-Nice new, white, downy
feathers, 90c lb. Sample on re-
quest. Mrs. Mary Collins,

Gainesville, Rt. 1.

FRESH AND DRIED FRUITS:
30 or 40 lbs. Dried Apples, no

worms, peel, or core, 50c Ib.

Georgia Nichols, Clarksville.

Nice Dried Apples, 35c lb. Del.
Mrs. R. L. Davis, Rolston.

Nice Bright Sundried Appies,
free of corn, 25-30c lb. FOB. Del.
in 25 and 50 lb. lots. Mrs. B. H.
Osborn, Roy.

FRUIT TREES:

White Eng. Peach, 35c ea; 4,
$1.00; Goose Plums, 40c ea; 3,
$1.00; Blue Damson Plums, '35c
ea; 4, $1.00. Add postage. Mrs.
Effie Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1.

HONEY BEES AND BEE SUP-
PLIES:

. New Crop Honey, No. 2, table
use, six 5 Ib. jars per case, $5.
ease. FOB. No checks. Send MO.
B. B. Bryan, Hortense.

20 lbs. Beeswax, strained and
moled, several colors, $13.00; or
60c lb. Cash or MO. No COD.
George L. Green, Jasper. Advise
how to ship,

MEATS:

2 salt. cured hams, 30-35 lbs.
e@a., guar. sound and dry, 60c lb.
Del. in Ga. Write for exact wt.
R. L. Gray, Blairsville, Rt. 3.

Guar. Oakwood Smoked
Young Tender Hams, 8-12 lbs.,
75c lb.; Sides and shoulders, 50c
Ib. C. B. Hurst, Meigs, Rt. 1.

Real choice strips smoked ba-
con, home cured, 55c lb; Also



' Ga, raised, flue cured, 1947
crop, rich mellow. chewing to-
bacco, 5 lbs., $1.00; Smoking, 6
Ibs., $1. in Ga. only. M. B.
Swain, Alma.

Flue cured Chewing Tobacco,

5 Ibs., $1.00; Smoking,,6 Ibs. $1.
No checks. Mrs. Joe McLeod,
Surrency, Rt. 2.

WALNUTS:

Walnuts, nice, sey hulled, $2.
bu; Walnut Meats, $1. pt. Pre-
oaid. Mrs. T. C. Withrow, EIli-
Hays. ls

PECANS: Mixed Papershell
Pevans, 35c lb. Or. exc. for good
white sacks. Mrs. R. S. Kimber-
ley, Empire.

ROOTS AND HERBS: Cat-
nip, Horehound, Peppermint,
40c doz; Sweet Ann, 50c doz;
Garlic Bulbs, 50c doz; Red
Everbearing Raspberry, $1 doz
Moss packed. Add postage. Mrs.
Odie Grindle, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.



MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED



BEES:

Want sev. good Bee Hives and
Bees. Prefer near Stockbridge.
Advise. J. S. Huckaby, Atlanta,
976 Underwood Ave. SE Ma
6030.

BUTTEBEANS:

Exc. 2 gal., nice, sundried ap-.
ples for 1 gal. white butter-

beans. Ea. Pay postage. Write
first. Mrs. W. es Clarks-
ville. Rt. 3.

EGGS:

Want 1 setting large, BlOgey
type Dark Cornish eggs, also
some Indian freestone paches.
Del. to me. Advise. Henry L.
Bryan, Attapulgus.
FEATHERS: \
Want 2 or more lbs., Duck or
Goose New Feathers. Write best
cash price. Mrs. J. E. Stone,
Adairsville, Rt. 2.

Want 6 lbs. goose feathers.

Canton, Rt. 1, Box 35.

GRAIN STRAW:

Want buy Grain Straw in

Dixie.
GOURDS: 5

Want. Old Fashion Large
Sugar Gourds and small ones

(without handles). Mrs. E. P.
Crawfrod, Newnan, Box 174.

DATS AND WHEAT:

Want 1,000 bu. Oats and 500-
600 bu. Wheat, FOB sacked, and
could uSe several hundred bu-
shels Soy beans. Advise prices.
E. K. Fowler, Athens. Rt. 2.

PEANUTS:

Want 250-300 lbs. small or
improved Spanish Peanuts for
seed. All mail ans. Mrs. H. Dar-
rell, Augusta, Rt. 2.

PEANUTS AND PECANS: -

Exc. 4 nice print sacks for
peanuts or pecans or some of
both at 40c. lb. Mrs. M. Ollie
Richardson, -Marietta, Rt. 5.

PEAS:

choice smoked homecured Want some Su

gar Crowder
shoulders, 45c lb. Roy R. Daugh- Peas (white pea with pink eye,
try, Metter. or pink speckled variety). Ad-
PECANS: vise. Mrs. A. B. Rich, Pelham.
Pets Recents be peauae es ERG Le Cups Wey Hee
remass $5. bu: ose Ihe cn ner Bunch beans for 2 cups

small amts. No prepaid. E. C.

McKoy, Newnan, POB 534.

10 lbs. Stuart Pecans, $3. Del.
N. Thomas,

in Ga. George
Thomasboro.

30 lbs. Seedling Pecans, $4.00;
22 lbs. nice Stuart Pecans, $5.
All well filled, not rancid. N. E.

Reid, Hartwell, Rt. 3.
ROOTS AND HERBS:

Sassafras, Elecampane Root,

35c 1b; Catnip, Horehound, Pep-
Ivy,
35c doz.
Martha White, Dahlonega,

permint, Balm, Ground
Tansy, Garlic Bulbs,
Mrs,
Bt) Bos 1s

Yellow Root, 35 lb. Add post-
Belle West,

age. Mrs. Sallie

Clermont Re 2b

White, Big Black-eyed peas, the
Bunch kind. Mrs. George Hub-
bard, Gainesville, Rt. 5.
PLANTS:

Want 500 good, tough Head-
ing collard plants. Mrs. J. D.
Wilcox, Hazelhurst, Rt. 3.

Want Spanish sweet potato
plants. Mrs. R. C. Stover, Pis-
gah.

Want potato plants. Advise
kind and price, the earliest date
you can ship. Also want Velvet
Bean Seed. Write. W. C. Burn-
sed, Ellabell.

Exe. 1/2 gal. white Velvet
Okra seed for P. R. sweet pota-
to plants. Advise. Mrs. Glenn
Bsaswell, Alpharetta, Rt. 2.



Send price. Mrs. D. C. Bell,

truck. or car lots. W. H. Moody, |

Want 100 feed sacks, 100 lb.
cap., free of holes, for oats.
Write cheapest price. L. C. Day-
is, Fort Valley, Rt. 3. i

Will exc. 1 qt.
Crowder Peas for 3 print sacks;
Also strawberry plants for
sacks, $1.50 C.. J. M. McLaugh-
lin, Greenville. ~

Exe. sev. hundred field grown
Rutgers tomato plants for 100
Ib. cap. sacks, Print or White.
Cannot ship later than about
May 15th. Mrs. J. D. Morris,
Wrightsville, Rt. 3.

SEED:

Want Tbl. Spoon Senna Seed,
25c. Tbl: Write in full detail.
Mrs. J. E. King, Sharpsburg, Rt.
1, Box 187.

TOBACCO:

Want 10 or 12 Ibs. Red, Air-
cured Tobacco for chewing, pre-
fer twisted, but will buy in
leaf. Advise. D. H. Brackett, At-
Janta, P. O. Box 622.

WHEAT:

Want 200 bu. treated wheat
if price ig cheap enough. Write

=

RED: 3) Box 113:
PLANTS: Want Burgess Im-

Advise. A. L. Barry, Atlanta,
4480 E. Conway Road.



CATTLE FOR SALE



4 reg. Jersey Cows, all fresh-
en in May. W. P. 4 Chappel,
Newnan, Rt. 1.

Reg. Shorthorn Bull, 14 mos.
old, with reg. certificate. Clyde
Ledford, Blairsville, Rt. 3.

Cream Col. Jersey Cow and
Calf, freshened in March, good
milker, $125. at barn. 4 mi. N.
Hampton. Troy Conkle, Hamp-
ton, Rt. 2. +

2 fine Jersey Cows, one fresh,
other freshen soon. Both give
exc. quality milk-and butter.
Easy to milk. Suitable for pri-
vate use or dairy. See. Dont
write. 4 mi. E. Buford,
Zion Hill Church. Frank Cain,
Buford, Rt. 2.

Purebred Guernsey Bull, 2
yrs. old, around 600 lbs., $75.
at my home. J. N. Hose, Union
City.

1 reg Brahma bull, 5 yrs.
old, and 6 grade Brahma cows

very gentle. $2,400 for lot. CG.
R. McLeod, Pineview.

Several Grade Gene
cows, fresh in, for sale. G. C.
Byington, Bolingbroke.

2 reg. Shorthorn Bulls; A
Roan 14 mos. old, other, Polled

7 mos. old, for sale. G. C.
Smith, Camilla.
Thoroughbred Black Angus

Aberdeen Bull for public Ser-
vice, 4 mi. W. Cornelia on Star

Cornelia, Star Rt.

Black cow to freshen in July,
about 2 gals. milk now, $85.
G. L. Turner, McDonough, Rt
oy

A fine white face Hereford
Bull, good stock, about grown,
large for age, 1000 lbs or over,
$200. G. H. Clark, Griffin, Rt. A>

Young Jersey Cow, Ist calf,
fresh in, and one Jersey-Guern-
sey crossed, freshen in few
days with 2nd calf. P. W. Jones
Forsyth, Rt. 1.



HOGS FOR SALE

1 Proven Berkshire Boar, 22
mos old, Grandson of Borens
Epoch, sire of large litters, $85.
Cc. J. Hardman, Commerce.

SPC Pigs, 10 wks. old, reg.
in buyers name. M. J. Black-
mon, Pinehurst,

2 sows, 8 boars, reg. SPC,
breeding stock, nearly 4 mos.
olds $25:ea ineateds: 7 ue. 2;
Smith, Tifton, Rt. 1, Box 177-E.

Reg. OIC Pigs, 10-12 wks. old,
out of prize winning stock, short
nosed type, $25. ea. Now ready.
W. L. Helms, Huene Vista.











Browneyed |,

price. David Benson, Louisville,

proved Colossal tomato plants..

near

and one 6 mos. old heifer. All

Rt. at my farm. E. L. Colston,





aa MARK .ETIN.
| SACKS FOR SALE _ MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS i0GS FOR SALE
os FOR SALE WANTED is
Print Sacks, 100 Ib. cap, Strong visas ole
washed, 30c ea. Add -postage.|TOBACCO: u SACKS: Male and Female Hampshire

Pigs, 4 mos. old, $25. ea; 10 mos.
old, $75. ea. Reg. buyer's name.
Will se: _C. N..Dannals, Jr., At-
lanta, P. O. Box 947.

Fine Sow and 6 Pigs, $45. my
place on Knoxville and Byron
Hwy. E. S, Morris, Fort Valley,
Rts 2:

Reg. Hereford Boar, 2 yrs.
old, winner of 1947 Ga. State
Fair Champ., for sale. L. P.
Singleton, Fort Valley, Rt. 3.

Reg. OIC Male Hog
Young Sow for sale. W.
Sampler, Ramhurst.

Reg. Dufoc Pigs. 1 litter of 12,
and one of 11, few days over 11
mos.
tow.

P. C. Shoats, 2 gilts, 2 boars,
good stock, 100 lb., $21.00 ea. at:
ny barn. No checks. J. Q. Rey-.
nolds, .Gay.

~ SPC. Male Pigs, $35. ea. Or 4
at $25. ea. Well marked. good
bloodlines. Reg. in buyers
name, treated and crated. FOB.
Mrs. L. W. -Seago, Pinehurst.

BoD) shoats, gilts and barrows,
100- 125 Ibs. or more, $20.00, $25.

and
W..

Blocky type Duroc Jersey
Pigs, 4 mos. old, males and fe-
males, reg, in buyers name, $25.
ea. Crates returned at my ex-
pense. W. D. Askew, Davisbore,
Rt2. Box tas

Several SPC Males and Gilts,
out of Metter Queen, No. 720198,
dbl. treated and wormed, 50- 60
lbs. Ship and furnish papers in

|buyers name, $20. and $25. ea.

3illy Rooks, Metter, Rt. 2.

7 OIC Pigs, 8 wks. old Apr.
11th,, Sire-Direct from the gen-
uine breeder s assn., True Beam
R No. 165: Dam!Miss Dills No:
226326. $25. ea. FOB. with pa-
pers. C. D. Dilworth, Carnes-
ville, Rt. 2:>

Fat Boar Hog, 400 lbs. or more.
$60. cash. I.- J. Stacy, Cisco.

Reg. Duroc Boar, 3 mos. old,
$25. Herbert Mathews, Warren-
ten. ~

Blocky type Cherry Red Du-

roc Pigs, 8-12 wks. old, reg. in
puyers name, treated and ship-|

-|ped, male or female, $20. ea. J.

H. Bennett, Screven, He 2, Box
47.

Hampshire Pigs, top blood
lines, farrowed Dec..2 -and 5,

Reg. in buyers name. FOB.
Crated and shipped. Wilton Har-

-per, Wray, Rt. 2.

Reg. OIC Pigs, $12.50 ea. with-
out reg. papers. Cost more with |
reg, papers. Ready by April 24..
No shipments. Come _ after.
Frank Hamilton, Norcross, Rt. 1.

SPC Boars and Gilts, good
stock, $25. ea. here. O.
Rhodes, Advisor, FFA Chapter,
Sycamore.

OIC Pigs, short nose, blocky,
from prize winning sows, sired
by Grand: Champ. Boar of SE
Fair in 1947, inoculated and reg.
buyers name, $25. ea. at 8 wks.
old. W.-H. Nix, Alpharetta.

Reg. OIC Boar, 1 yr. old with
papers, $50. T. J. Woth, Atlanta,

13125 E. Shadowlawn Ave.

Pigs sired by reg. Poland
China, also - Percheron Mare
turning 4 yrs. old with mule
colt, for sale. J. T. Gibson, De-
catur, Rt. 1, 1000 S, Candler Rd.
Phone Cr. 2258.

Hereford Pigs, 2 mos. old,
reg. buyers name, not related
pairs, $50. pr; $25. ea. FOB. Le-
on Watson, Unadilla, POB 214.

SPC Pigs, Service Boars, Bred
Gilts. All champion breeding.
Reasonable price. F. H. Bunn,
Midville.

OIC Pigs, from litter of 12,
reg. in buyers name, dbl. treat-
ed, $25. ea. FOB. J. A. McAl-
lister, Jr., Atlanta, 69- oe St.
Nie,

ing, reasonable price. Bert

Hobbs, Carrollton,







Care Oak
Lawn Dairy Farms,



old. Sloan McKay, Bar- |

and. $30. ea. B. P. C. Crossed} __
with OIC. K. D. Sanders, Eat- |.
onton.

males, $25.00; Females, $30. ea.1

Reg. Duroc Gilts, best breed-|i

Extra fine reg. 2
roc Jersey boar, Geo
Sire, Tru-Type, Dam,
Miss Crimson. Splendi
er, Some very fin
him. $100. to prevent i
ing. See any time. R
Soperton, - 2

Stock Hogs, reason:
crate and dog to
-|See: M. L. Cothren,
land, Brunswick, | Ri

Reg. Duroe Jersey
| wks. old, Gilts, $35.
$30. ea. Reduction o
Ben Hutchings, Carr,

Day old Heifers
6000 lb. productio
Guernseys. Wilmer
Clarksville. :





a ee calf, 2e
Brown, Sycamore, R
150. -

ee. Hereford : B
old, $45.00; 4 reg.

Reg. in buyer's nam
Epetn, Philome

1 Horse Mule, abel
work anywhere, age
Sood i ee

"1 Mare, 3 yrs. old,

broke; 1 Mare, 5

ly broke, 1200 - Ibs.,

price; Also Brood So:

WwW. M. Fritts, Washin
NTs a 1/2: mi. S a
Park.

Good 12 yr. old pl ov
sale. ee ae &

$100. or trade on sm
or other value: R. a ;
luth, Rites

7 yr. old: Black Hor:
wt. between 900-10!
bargain. J, A: Wilbank:
worth, Rt. 3. :

Pr Smooth | Mouth
White Horse, 1000
Brown Mare, 1050 Ibs.
good workers, make.
ao or $65. ea.

E, Boston. CaN
(Bost Bios

Good Mare Mule,
$150.00; Also 1 Horse,
$75. Both work
Trade for @attle. Davi
Marlow, RFD 1. Near

H.jtheran Church.

Black mule, 4 1/2
wt. 1000 lbs., or more,
work anywhere, $200
Carr, College Park, Rt
Riverdale Rd.) _

For Service, young
stallion and young
home, 1 1/2 mi, W.
just off Dahlonega
Co. K. S. Price, Cley
4.

Mare mule colt, 2;
round 900 lbs., very
or trade for milch
Jones, Hahira,-Rt. 1

7 yr. old. Black M:
anywhere, $140. See:
land, Dalton, Rt. 2. ae

Beautiful Black an be
gaited Pony with 4 w

ing legs, gentle, go
sell reasonable at my

S. Chickamauga. Alfo
Chickamauga, Rt.

Good 1200 Ib. forma:
sale or trade for
mare or horse thats
will do light work Cr
Byron, Rt. 1.

Mule (oun bu

yi











earing Rabbits,
. Mrs. J. N. Ad-






uck Rabbit, 8 1/2
d, $2. Talmadge
ywery Branch, Rt.





ite Rabbits, $3. pr.
portation. E. C:



n. Rabbits, 12 wks.
ck, $10. pr. Mrs. O1-
RE






mteyl ~
abbits, 4 1/2 mos. old
0 ea; 9 wks. _ old,




igs, 3 females, bred,
le; $12.00; Few half
50 ea. FOB. Cash. B.
rawfordville.






_ ping-eyed White
sale, or trade for
es or apples or any-
se. Mrs. T. R. Chas-
locknee, Rt. 2. =i



AND GOATS
FORSALE



oats with young kids,
og. and Saanan, about
ld, exc. breeder, for
letters. Come see. Joe
s, Eastman, Rt. 6. 4
astman.



d Saanan Doe, now
with reg. papers, Tat-
01, $35.00; also purebred
Buck, 6 mos. old, rg.:
102, $25. Sylvester,





_ heavy
solid white, naturally
ded, easily milked, big
nd 6 gts. daily, gentle,
-M. J. Miller, Luthers-





high producing Saanan
yats. Sacrifice herd be-

in, Hapeville, 3692 Atlanta
hone Ca. 1884. _

-Alphine Doe Kids,
mos. .old, 2 ready to wean

d), bargain at $10. ea.
for Hampshire or PC
100 Ibs. or more. Ed-
pson, Douglasville, Rt.



h short haired hornless
Does, 4-5 qts. daily,
ings, 1 kid, 8 wks. old,
Iso yard eggs and
nilk for sale. W. J. Sum-

h, 4 qt. Toggenburg,
_Sandburg-Black Moun-
C. strain. Sell or trade
mule at my home. Mrs.
mith, Arnoldsyille. |

og. goats, fresh March
vy milker, and buck kid,
e. Mrs. Wm. H. Mayfield,
Rt. 12, Box 329. Ma

#: Want a Jersey Milch
at over 5 yrs. old, easy
plenty butter, not less
daily. G. C. Clifton;
3, Box 157. Or phone

purebred Aberdeen An.
Calf and about 4 grade
W. L. Abbott, Atlania,
oint Dr. N. E. Phone

0 1 mo. old Holstein
es; and 1 Hog. Advise.
idia Bennett, Pine-

.






ill health. Mrs. F. E..

_{ only: Mrs,

-e. |now or at 8 wks. old, $1.

Want Guernsey or Jersey

Milch Cow, fresh in, with not

over 2nd. calf. Must give 4 or
5 gals. daily. Not over 30 mi.

| Perry. C. R. Belcher, Perry, Rt.

2
HOGS:
Want SPC Boar, ready for

service, Reg. with Natl. PC As-
soc. R. D. Whaley, Nashville.

Want 2 pigs, any full breed,

Chapman, Canton, Rt. 4.

Want pigs or shoats, from
White County, or on road to
Gainesville. Give breed, age
and price. C. C. Greear, Helen.
HORSES AND MULES:

Will trade Horse for good
Mule. M. B. Norvell, Decatur,

\118 Ellington St.



POULTRY FOR SALE



ANCONAS AND AUSTRA-

-|LORBS:

Black Australorps; 13 hens,
lay like leghorns and large as
giants, bred for eggs and meat,
and 1 rooster, 10 mas. old. Stan-
ley L. Howard, Oconee.

_ 24 Sheppard Famous Ancona
Hens, now laying and 2 Roost-
ers, 2 yrs. old, $40. crated and
shipped prepaid in Ga. James

|Swearengin, Rossville, Rt. 3.

BANTAMS:

Exhibition poultry: trio Part-
ridge Cochins, $12.50; Pen 5
Barred Rocks, $20.00: Trio Dbl.
Breasted Short .Shanked Dark
Cornish, $18.00; Dark Cornish
Cockerel, $7.50; Pair White Or-
pington Hens, $8.00; Trio ea.,
Dark Cornish Bantams and
White Cochin, $10. trio. Jack
Altman, Savannah, 115 E. Wald-
burg.

Bantams, $3.50 pr. C. S. Winn,
Dunwoody, Phone Chamblee
4068. /

Pr. purebred Golden Sebright
Bantams, for sale. Hubert Mil-
ler, Dudley, Box 13.

15 purebred Buff Cochin

MO only. L. F. Wilson, Griffin,
Rt. 5

_ 2 White Grown Bantam
Roosters, $1. ea; Common
pigeons, 50c ea; Also large Gray
Doe Rabbit, $2.00; and 12 wean-
ed young rabbits, all colors, $1.
Trade for anything can _ use.
Billy Durden, Odum, Rt. 1.
BARRED ROCKS: |

Original strain, Parks BR
Roosters, 8 wks. old, $2. ea. L.
J. Mooney, Quill.

|CORNISH, GAMES, & GIANTS
. Pure Game Stags for sale or:

trade. John L. Towns,
Rt. 3.

_15 pure Dark Cornish Game
Hens, $2. ea; Also 1 Rooster,
same strain, $3. No checks. MO
Charlie Peacock,

Dallas,

Eastman.

| 80 Dark Cornish Pullets, 8
}Wks. old, $1. ea.. No checks. MO
only. Mrs. Jewell Dowing, East-
man. :

_ 4 Jersey Black Giant ifens, 1
yr. old, laying every day. Show
quality, $5. ea. Pat McGee,
Cumming. - :

1/2 Ib. Pit Game Cock and
few Stags, wt. 4 1/2-5 1/2 lbs.,

'|$1.25 Ib; Roller Pigeons, $4. pr:
\few extra Roller Cocks, $1.50
ea. Billy Turner, Union Point..

A nice R. H. 1/2 Warhorse
Stag for sale or trade for Pii
Game Hens, prefer Doms Ran-
dall Griffin, Gainesville, Oak
St. :

Trio Dark Cornish, $7.50; N.
H. Red Rooster, 1 yr. old, $2.75;
N. H. Red and Cornish cogs
Eggs; $1.50, 15. C: . Sikes, Syl-
vester.

LEGHORNS:

20 White Leghorn Pullets. al
laying, AAA, yr. old, in Aug.
$2. ea. Mrs. John W. Heasiey,
Rambhurst.

30 White Leghorn Roosters,
from Colonials best egg grade
chicks, Mar. 15 hatch, 75 ea.
ea:



or shoats, cheap for cash. H. A.

~Pr. purebred Buff Cochin

Hens and 1 Rooster, $15. FOB.

Notice!

All farmers and persons purchasing baby chicks
from peddlers should beware of such peddlers.

This department has had many reports of peddlers
of baby chicks selling sexed cockerels, particularly



White Leghorns for White
distressed merchandise.

heavy losses from death of
that the health status is qu

1 overheated or chilled in h
: If you purchase baby
names and identity as it is
swindled.

It is recommended tha

than from free-lance peddl










Warning!

Rocks or some other breed.

It is our information that these peddleds are dealing in
Numerous complaints report

these chicks due to the fact
estionable and that for sev-

|eral rays old before the sale, probably being denied
feed and water. for this length of time and possibly |

auling around the country.
chicks from such persons,

demand their dealers license number as well as their

so often happens that after

the sale is made and the peddlers are gone, in a few
days or weeks you will realize that you have been

t you purchase your chicks

ers.

from reputable local dealers or hatcherymen rather



POULTRY FOR SALE>

FARM HELP WANTED



7.

MISCELLANEOUS
ENS:

_ 238 fryers, 2-3 lbs., $238. for
lot, or $1.25 ea. E. M. Cox, Jr.,
Griffin, Rt. A.

ORPINGTONS:
_ 10 Yellow Buff Orpington
Hens, laying and Roosters, $2.

ea. Mrs. Marie Holland, Dalton,
Rt. 2. :

CHICK-

PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, QUAIL, DOVES,
ETE. :

Per pair: Pheasants, $10.00;

Quail, $8.50; Doves, $3.50; Au-
stralian Ducks, $6.00; Fancy
Show Type Bantams, $4.00; All
kinds Pigeons, $1.25-$4. No
checks, nor COD. 25c extra for
crating and shipping. Mrs.
Helen Street, Atlanta, Rt. 2.

REDS (NEW HAMPSHIRE,
RHODE ISLAND, AND OTH-
ERS):

2500 N. H. Pullets, 7 wks. old,
AAAA grade, $1. ea. Pullets
been wormed, and will lay in
July. Ship in your crates or
make delivery here. Roy Har-

|rell, Fayetteville.

R. I. Red Chicks, dark strain,
biood tested, heavy layers, $3.50,.
25; $12.50 for 100. PP. Mrs. D.
Donaldson, Decatur, 726 S.
Candler St. f 2

10 nice, large 4 A grade N. H.
Red Hens, 5-7 Ib. ea. part laying,
1 cockerel, $21.50 or $2. ea. Ship
if other party furnish coops and
pay all charges. No checks MO
preferred. Mrs. Clarence Mc-
Millian, Dacula, Rt. 1.

TURKEYS, GUINEAS, DUCKS,
GEESE, ETC.

Plenty domesticated wild
|Mallard Ducks, half grown,
$1.25 ea; three-fourths grown,
$1.50 ea; No less. 3. shipped.
Send MO. Mrs. Eliza Guilfond,
Blackshear.

Blue and White Gander, $3.
at my farm; Goose Eggs, 5, $2.
PP. Mrs. J. E. Matthews, At-
Janta, 1324 N. Hightower Rd.

POULTRY WANTED

TURKEYS, GUINEAS, DUCKS,
GEESE, ETC.:

Want 2 prs. Toulouse and 1
pr. Brown or White Chinese
Geese. Give age and price. G.
D. Fain, Edison:

Want 1/2 doz. White Guinea
Hens and 1 White Guinea
Rhostey. Roger Tanner, Davis-
boro.

Want 4 Turkey Hens. State
age, breed and price. Mrs. B: G.

FARM HELP WANTED





Want reliable unencumbered
-country-reared good woman,
no bad habits, good health, for
light work on farm near town.
Live as one of family with 2
adults, salary. Miss Pearl Solo-
mon, Macon, 479 Orange St.



FOB, C. L. Hand, Bowdon, Rt. 2.



'|Johnson Ave.

_ | sary).

To good man: 1 or 2H crop
for lint cotton or part of all
crops produced. Good land, fair-
ly good house and barns, and
pasture, in Fayette Co. Flat
Creek Section. Part of Loyd
Farm. Mrs. A. L. Bradshaw,
Macon, 126 Washington Ave.

Want small reliable family
with one who can drive tractor
for 1H crop, 50-50 basis, 1 mi. S.

{Union City on ACL RR. J. H.

West, Union City.

Can use two or three fam-
ilies, white or colored, on my
farm. Houses, wood, etc. furn-
ished. Pay $3. per day and up.
See me on farm on Hwy. 54, be-
tween Jonesboro and Fayette-
ville. R. L. Jackson, Jonesboro.

Small tracts of land to let out
on usual basis and prices to
people near Atlanta or Decatur
who are prepared to cultivate
land. B. O. Fussell, Atlanta, 889
Edgewood Ave. N. E.

Want young and settled man
with family to help in 40 cow
dairy. Exp. necessary in hand-
ling milking machines. 4 R
house, paved hwy., 7 1/2 mi.
Madison. Contact: A. L. Saine,
Madison.

Want reliable party for chick-
en and vegetable farm inside
city limits of Forsyth. Fully
equipped new house with hot
and cold water, gas and elec.
|Would cons. on shares with re-
liable party. See: Tack Yates,
Forsyth. Or phone 4886.

Want woman for light work
on farm, $5. wk. and private
room and board; Also want man
for tractor work. John Deere
exp. preferred. C. I. Belt, Mid-
ville. ;

Want. reliable unencumbered
man to look after small chick-
en and vegetable farm. In city
limits of Forsyth. Reasonable
salary or profit by share basis.
See: C. J. Yates, Forsyth, 310
Phone 4886.

Want farmer for good 2 or
3 H farm, 50-50 basis. Good
land, stock and tools. 5 R house
with lights, on school bus rt.,
3 mi. N. Temple on Taylor-Gin
Rd. Write or call. S. D. Shock-
ley, Temple, Rt. 1. Phone 2692.

Want white family to help on
truck farm near Atlanta. Nice
4R ceiled house, with elec., gar-
den, wood, $3. day to man able
to farm and drive truck and
tractor.. R. F. Sams, Clarks-
ton.

Want at once a smart reliable
man to work with small tractor
(if smart, no tractor exp. neces-
Furnish room, board,
laundry and reasonable salary.
Off duty Sat. noon to Monday
A. M. Come at once prepared
to work. D. F. Peters, Douglas-
ville, Rt. 2.

Want exp. farmer. Furnish
good 4 R house, with elec., ac-
comodations, garden and good
community, school bus, church.
Reasonable salary. J. P, Simp-
son, College Park, Rt. 2, Phone










Want middleaged white w
man for light work on farm. |
milking. Reasonable salary. R.
L. Evans, Stockbridge, Rt. 2,0

iis

%



Want honest and sober mars
ried man to operate small stoc
farm on_ shares. References
from church and business as-
sociates necessary, also sm
amt. of capitol. Prefer man
with FFA or 4H training. Write.
E. E. Tedd, Atlanta, 18007
Rhodes Haverty Bldg. Se



























Want good woman for light
work on farm. MHouse,: elec.
lights, near town. No objection
to children. Mrs. Joe Lanier
Sorrells, Athens, Rt. 1. ;

Want clean honest white wo-
man, unencumbered, to assist
with light chores on farm. Live
as one of family and small sale
ary. Mrs. Zack Colson, Wood
bine. ot

Want nice white lady, 35-65,
for light work on farm. Live a
one of family and small salasg
with Christian couple. W. 4,
Sanders, Portal, POB 61. Hwy
80.


















Want white woman for light
work on farm, garden, ete. Must
be honest. and willing worker,
$35. mth. salary. Advise. A. Ie
Thackston, Hiram, Rt. 1.

Want reliable respons& le - 3
middleaged couple, white oP
colored. Man capable of making
field crops and - maintaining
tractor equip. with limited sups
ervision, wife to assist withi
garden, etc. House, elec., con. te
store, churches. and_ schools
Write: R. B. Whitney, Chipley,
Rite:

Want several G. I.s to raise
cattle, 50-50 basis, on your farni
or one where you live. Can tak@
on the job training. Must know
cattle. Write. Dont come se,
Must furnish bond to cover cat
tle. J. W. Suggs, Fairburn. -

Want at once a middleaged
sober man for farm work. Or
unencumbered woman with @
plow boy. Write or see. W. Ha
Doyal, Palmetto, Rt. 1. i

Want reliabe white woman tq
do light work on farm and liv
as one of family. Room, boar A
laundry, and reasonable salaryy
Mrs, H. A. Hall, Jonesboro,. Rt
ie oa

1








































POSITIONS WANTED |








































- Alone, middleaged, white ral
who has lived on farm most o

life, want to get in home with
sober, christian family and as
sist with farm work of all kindy
for small salary in _ religioug
community. Advise at once. Rx
W. Hames, Atlanta, 805 1/2 Ma
rietta St. N. W. fi &

Want job working with
peaches on Peach Orchard. Ca :
drive tractor and truck. 5 iff
family can work. Need 4 t
house. John J. Edge, Locus} =
Grove, Rt. 1. . a
White man, wife, 3 small
children, exp. farming, want

job caretaking or day work o:

farm for wages. House, lights,
wood and water. A. E. Smith,
945 Marietta St. N. W. (Rear)

Atlanta. (!

Wart dairy farm on share or
cash basis. Am experienced,
Clyde May, Athens, Rt. 3.

Single white man wants work
on dairy or beef cattle, or poulk
try. Board and salary. Prefey
with nice people near church.
Marvin Rhodes, Martinez, Box
37. ee
Want place on farm with
couple raising chickens, etc.
Work for 50-50 basis or salary.
Mrs. Hatie G. Tupper, Harlem,
Boxe Ntesas ;

55 yr. old man with 2 plow
hands wants 1H farm on 50-56
basis. Gwinnette County pre
ferred. W. T. Payne, Atlanta,
Rt. 2, Briarcliff Rd. N. E.

35 yr. old, exp. most j
kind farming, go anywhere, |
want job with reliable peopig i







f
j



any

.on farm. Miss Maebell Humphe f

rey, Milledgeville, 401 S. War





Apt. 6.





Cal. 6859.



St.



PAGE BIGHT









or Louisiana.

| Dace

_ gress ands se Take inte Senators ole -eivili
cannot well defend the South - against | oa
these Republican onslaughts. Sica
For fifteen years, most of the Demo- |

Penny Wise And
- Pound Foolish

(Continued from Page One)

* price for farm crops to as little as 60 per

eent of parity. :
The National Grange has already
~ acquiesced in reducing the farmers sup-
. port price.

The fixing of any support. price by the
Federal Government-carries with it the
power to limit acreage and production.
Strangely enough the Long-Range

Farm Program was not introduced by
a Senator from either the South or the
West. It was introduced and sponsored
by Senator Aiken, of Vermont.

Ts it possible that the State Presidents
of Farm Bureaus and National Granges
in the Southern States are going to
quietly acquiesce in this sell-out of the
Southern farmers? I hear no voice in
Washington from the Farm Bureau or

he National Grange from Texas, from

~- North Car olina, from Florida, from Mis-

sissippi, from South Carolina, from
Georgia, from Arkansas; from Alabama
Farm Bureau _ officials
and National Grange officials from the
South where are you? When will you
sound a elarion eall to arms and put th

mighty forces of your organization be- ,
hind Southern Congressmen and Sen-

ators for equality: of treatment for the
_ farmers of the South?
Ave the men, women and children who

labor in the cotton fields and tobacco

' patches to be forever discriminated
against ?

The Democrats who are now in Con-







crats now in Congress and the United
States Senate have been rubber stamps
and their past record is indelibly fixed
in support of anti- farm legislation such
as the Reciproeal Trade Agreements,
International Food Committees, Geneva
Charters, World Banks, The United Na-
tions and the Marshall Plan. :

They cannot at this late date repudiate

their own record and attack the Repub-
licans for doing the same thing that the

Democrats have done for fifteen years.
In 1854, at the expense of American

taxpayers, Commodore Perry, with the.

American Fleet, forced Japan to open
its doors to economic commerce. We
civilized (?) the Japs, taught them the
art of modern war, shipped them eleven
million tons of war supplies and then
used the Atom bomb to wipe them out,
all at the expense of the American tax-

payers and the blood and suffering of

American men and mothers.

At the expense_of American taxpay-
ers, American soldiers shot their way in-
to China and forced it to set up Inter-
national settlements so that the hordes
of China could be exploited-by the In-

_ ternationalists of America. In the end,

this experiment has cost the American
taxpayers billions upon billions of dol-
lars. .At the expense of American tax-
payers, Admiral Dewey destroyed the
Spanish Fleet at Manilla and we freed

the Philippines from Spanish rule. In the

end, because of this, we experienced the
terrible drama of American
captured by the Japs (whom we had

soldiers










































Teo Congo, os vies
that the British Gove
a gift to the Interna
fit of the American
~and the farm equip
can farmers need.

_ After World War 0 te al

-eades later that we
building of another

fe | out
CHANGH =
TOM TINDER






Gommiesiones of



Do not be discouraged!

You may not be able to see the har-
vest where you have patiently sown the
seed, but be assured of this: no seed is
lost.

The. truthful word manfully spoken,
the earnest effort honestly made, the
noble creed consistently heldthese are
~ things which do not perish; they live on
and move the world and mold the des-
tinies of men long after you are dust.

_ Leave cowardice to the coward; leave
servility to the slave. Be a manproud,
though in homespun; free, though in a
~ hut.

Own your own soul!

Dare to listen to your own heartbeat.
Between you and Gods sunlight let no
shadow of fear fall.

What is there to live for, if you are
never to think, never to speak, never to
act, save as the echo of some master you
dread? Better the death of the brave

- than the long misery of mental serfdom.

Not always is it easy to know the
rightvery often is its road rough.
~ Human praise ean be won by shorter
- routes. Honors and riches are not al-
. Ways its rewards. Pleasanter days and
ealmer nights may be yours if you float





ID FI





smoothly down the tide of policy, steer-
ing deftly by the rules of the expedient.
But has life nothing loftier than this?

- Tg there no divine voice within you that

calls for better things? Is there no
great pulsebeat of duty within you
no flame of the warrior spirit, when in-
solent wrong flings its gage of battle at
your feet?

Are you willing that the right shall
eall for aid, and you give no succor; that
truth shall plead for help, and you De
no witness?

Ts the sacred torch of ifenee ecea
on from hand to hand down the ages in
which brave men dared to keep it light-

edto find you unwilling to hold it
aloft?
Shall the temple of civie freedom,

reared by the great men who are gone,
stand vacant, calling mutely, calling
vainly for votaries at the shrine?

Was it all a mockerythis long
struggle your forefathers made for
justice? Is it an idle talethis story of
the heroism with which the rights of
the people were slowly won?

Not sonot so! - Levity may slight
and ene ne disfoser the bless-



AND FEAR |

(Editorial by Senator Thomas E. Watson)































ae purpose, of hi h-mi
sacrificebut they are
the signal fires of the
kindle heroic hearts to d
You may have desp nd
will not despair. You
stumbled, but. you will no
will rouse yourself and pres
You will do your dutyfor ih
religion. ;
Tf wrong triumphs, 4 au on
you as a partner in the crime.
Tf the light dies out in t
the people, the curses of the
shall not blast your ume
You will be a man
pendent, ready for w
the last, to the creed Ww
approves.
_ Men like theseand no others
ing to keep alive the sacr d
fathers kindled; are going to |
_the foul heresies that intperil 6
are going to fight to the deat
who would turn back the
man ae and are gol