jitorial By TOM LINDER
ly after four oclock on Monday,
ary 13, 1950 the 1949-50 session of
eorgia Legislature adjourned sine
bringing to a close the regular ses-
for this two-year period. Any other
@ before January will be an extra
n.
he subject of agriculture this
ture has proven to be the most
anding in my experience. All the
josed legislation affecting farmers
ived full and serious consideration,
he final action taken was in keep-
with the rapidly developing _live-
x, poultry and dairy business in the
s well as Farmers Markets and
agricultural subjects. The Leg-
wre passed by large majorities an
ate insecticide and fungicide
ure, an act to clarify and simplify
tilizer laws, a milk bill for the pro-
on of Georgia dairymen, and made
s on Farmers Markets and for
further progress in the eradication
ontrol of disease in livestock and
large number of Senators and
esentatives who actively and ef-
ely espoused the farmers cause
the thanks of the farmers of the
-and the very able leadership in
| houses made the splendid record of
Legislature possible. Therefore, on
lf of the farmers of the State I say
The Farm Bureau
his Legislature contained more mem-
who are also members of the Farm
au than any Legislature in my
wledge.
proposal to create a nine-member
rd to handle livestock and also a
posal to put the dairymen under the
Health Department was referred
Agriculture Committee No. 1 in the
ise. This Committee consisting of
e than fifty members had an over-
ming majority who were members
he Farm Bureau.
orty-seven of these members were
nt when the bill was passed upon
he majority voted against the bill
recommended that, it do not pass.
ctically all of the Farm Bureau
bers of the Committee told me they
not familiar with the billthat it
ver been explained to them before
that it did not represent the wish-
he thinking of the rank and file
sion for improving marketing con- -
2
fi
oH
Georgia Farmers
Tom Linder, Commissioner
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1950
members of the Fatm Bureau in their
respective counties. Many members of
the Legislature and Senate who were
members of the Farm Bureau, but were
not members of the Committee also told
me they were not familiar with the bill
and knew nothing of its contents until
it was aired in the Committee and, there-
- fore, they were opposed to it.
The measure would have taken all the
livestock and dairy work out of the
hands of the Commissioner of Agricul-
ture, (elected by the people) and the
Department of Agriculture, and would
have placed all of this work in the hands
of appointed board members and under
the Department of Health. This was a
vicious bill because it sought to under-
mine an elected, constitutional official
and would have substituted control of
affairs of the farmers of the State by a
group of hand-picked appointees.
Under the terms of the proposed bill,
ninety-five percent of the farmers of
Georgia would have been deprived of
any representation whatsoever in the
gdministration of livestock, dairy and
poultry laws. Under the provision of
the proposed Act the members of the
Board would have been selected from
members of livestock, poultry and dairy
associations while the ninety-five per-
cent of farmers who are not mem-
bers of any association would have been
entirely ignored. A great many of that
ninety-five percent are members of the
Farm Bureau in many counties in Geor-
gia.
Every farmer in Georgia however
small his operations may be, has a vote
in the election of the Commissioner of
Agriculture and every farmer however
small receives equal consideration and
response from the Commissioner of Ag-
riculture when any request is made for
help in any way._Under the proposed
bill every farmer, big and little, would
have continued to pay all the expenses
as he is doing now, but he would have
been deprived of any voice whatsoever
in the administration of his own affairs.
When the members of the General As-
sembly, including that large number
who were Farm Bureau members, real-
ized what the effect of the measure
would be, they were almost unanimous-
ly against it.
On three different days the members
of the Legislature were invited into the
Scuate Chamber in the afternoon to hear
the facts from representatives of the
Federal Government, with whom the
NUMBER 24
Commissioner of Agriculture is in close
cooperation, and to hear facts from
Georgia farmers and dairymen. <A num-
ber of dairymen who came to Atlanta to
appear in favor of the bill completely
changed their minds when they heard it
explained and they became the strongest
opposition to the measure.
The decision, after full discussion for
several days by the members of the Leg-
islature, was fully reflected in the vote
to give some additional funds to the
Commissioner of Agriculture for carry-
ing on livestock, dairy and poultry work.
'The vote in the House was 159 for and
only 12 against, while the vote in the
Senate, after full discussion, was 45 for
and only l against. This seemed to fully
satisfy every one except about six mer
who were trying to use the name of the
Farm Bureau against the knowledge
and wishes of its membership to further
the selfish interest of the authors of the
bil. :
Those of you who read the Market
Bulletin two weeks ago remember the
facts given at that time, showing that a
better job had *been done in Georgia im
the control of tuberculosis and Bangs di-
sease than in any other Southeastern
State notwithstanding the fact that
other states had spent a great deal more
money than Georgia. You will remem-
ber also that in the first ten months of
1949, according to the United States De-
partment of Commerce, Georgia anc
Delaware were the only two states
showing an increased income from the
sale of livestock. It should also be re
membered that during the last ten yeari
(teorgia has developed the second larg
est broiler producing industry in_ th
United States and in 1949, this broile
industry alone accounted for about sixty)
initlion dollars of the States income.
in remembering all of this, it is also
important to remember that the Com-
missioner of Agriculture in Georgia ha
only about $125,000.00 per year to du
the whole job as against Florida with
1,560,000.00 a year under a Livestock
Board, and as against large sums spen*
in other Southeastern states. Georgic
and North Carolina stand at the head o+
the list. :
Milk d
Under the terms of the Milk Bill.
sponsored by Senator Zellner of Mon-
roe County, I believe we will be able tc
do mofe for the dairymen of Georgi:
than we haye ever been able to do before
This meastre requires all fluid milk.
(Continued on Page Hight)
#AGE TWO
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
Address all items for publication and all requests to be put
on the mailing list and for change of address to STATE. BU
REAU OF MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITQL, Atlanta. -
JATIONAL POR
ASSOCIATION
[aseptic
AGT ES
Sao
of notice.
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable
under postage regulations ingertedone time on each request
and repeated only when reaoest i+
Limited space will not permit insertion of notices-contain-
ing more than 35 to 40 words, not including name and address.
~--ampanied by new copy
Bulletin, or
notices 2
Tor: Linder, Commissionei
Published Weekly at
nor anv
Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does
not assume any responsibility for any notice avpearing in the
transactic>
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
nublished
Markets, 222 State Capitol,
Atlanta, Ga.
By Depariment of Agriculiure
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau o
of June 6,
of October 8, 1917.
Executive Office, State
Entered as second class matte
August 1, 1937 1t the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia, under Act
1900. Accepted for
mailing at special rate of postage E
provided for in Section 1103, Ac
apitol
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
114-122 Pace St.,
Editorial and Executive Offices :
Covington, Ga.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
SECOND HAND
ACHINERY FOR SALE
Will no ship. J.
Set of planters and cultiva-
tors for John Deere A or A,
used two seasons, $350.00. 2
mi. W. Louisville. Grady Means,
Louisville, % Daniels Dairy.
One Row B Allis-Chalmers
Tractor and Cultivators, $500.
Roy Sullivan, Byron, Rt. 2.
1.M Intl. Tractor, cultivators,
planters, fertilizer attachments,
3 disc hydraulic plow, 4 dise
Athens tiller, harrow, good
cond., $2500.00 Charlie Mitch-:
am, Durand.
6 ft. Case Tandem Disc Har-
row, 16-22 discs, $150.00; New
4 Intl. 2H Riding Cultivator,
disc tillers, full set of sweeps
etc., $80.00;
on rubber, body and spring
seat, good as new, $100.00. J.
C. Cutter, Blue Ridge, Rt. 2,
Box 247. -
H Oliver Turn Plow, Culti-
vator, Corn Planter, $10.00 ea.;
Covington Planters, $60.00. FOB
Trade for pigs. G. W. Stoker,
Conyers, Rt. 2; Lake Rockaway.
16 in. Rock Meadows Corn
Mill, Hammer Mill, Corn
Shucker and Sheller, Platform
scales and other equipment,
togethr or separately, Frank
Kiker, East Ellijay.
Allis-Chalmers B 2 Disc til-
ler, harrow, cultivators. On
Warner. Robins Rd. C. W.
Bryant, Macon, Rt: 3.
Elec. Brooders, 400 cap, one
200 cap. Ist. class cond., com-
plete, $25.00. Cannot ship. S.
W. ASpeley, Augusta, Mt. Rt.
37.
5 HP Rototiller Garden Trac-
tor, perfect cond., $450.00. J. T.
Todd Jr., Austell, Rt. 3. Box
31-A.
McCormick-Deering Combine,
in good cond., ready for service,
for sale. J. T. Coffee, Eastman.
1949 model Farmall Super A
Tractor, starter, lights, finger
tip control, belt, pulley, Fert.,
attachments. Cult., 2 disc til-
ler, tanden harrow, 6 row cot-
ton duster, J. D. side delivery
rake; used about 700 hours.
$1,800.00. 'G. B. Free Jr., Lilly
Phone No. 2.
3 Drum type, thermostat
operated, wood burning Brood-
ers, 1200 bird cap., ea. 2 have
only fired for 1 batch of chicks,
all for $30.00. W. T. Torgesen,
Cornelia. Star Rt.
1H Bradley Wagon.
Garden tractor, large Huski
with turning plow, very little
used and in top cond. $140.00
cash. A. C. Wilson, Atlanta,
1600 Boulevard N. E., HE 4859.
One F-12 Farmall tractor,
A-1 cond., $400.00. O. M. Moore,
Morgan.
Bermuda Grass Harrow, $5.
Come see. Willie Walsh, River-
dale, Rt. 1. (on Dr. E. F. Gib-
sons place).
2H Walking Cultivator (south-
ern), used very little, $25.00.
Lamar Williams, Sycamore.
John Deere Model M, 1949
Tractor, cultivators, planters,
used very little, practically
new, $1400.00; Monroe Hydrau-
lic Lift, good cond., $150.00. G
W. Anderson, Leaf.
12 in. Dbl. Bottom Plow
(new) for Ford or Ferguson
Tractor, reasonable. Claud E.
Robinson,.Jr., Greensboro, RFD
1;
Mighty Mire Garden Tractor,
new motor, dise turner, culti-
vator, sell cheap: R. C. Brown,
Rome, Rt. 6. (Morrison Camp
Ground).
Good 1 H Wagon, rubber
tires, $20.00. L.. G. Macomson,
Roystn, Rt. 1.
Ford-Ferguson Tractor, Model
46, 1 each Bush and Bog, and
Leveling Harrows, Mower, Rake
and 2 McCormick-Deeriag Com-
bines, (52 R), 11 Row Oliver
Grain and Fertilizer Drill. John
Clark, Grayson, Rt. 1.
1H Wagon, good cond.,
sale cheap. Near Vanna.
Robert Bond, Royston, Rt. 2.
4 Dise Athens Tiller on Rub-
ber with seeder (used 3 days),
good as new. J. A. Shaw, Union
Point.
Dbl. Dise Silco, 24 in. Plow,
perfect cond., $175.00. Mrs. L.
J. Walker, McRae, Rt. 1.
4 Sears Farm Master 2100
cap. Superhatcher
used 3 seasons, good cond.,
$79.50 ea.; Humidaire 1500 cap.
Incubator, and 1000 cap. Hatch-
er, used one season, $150.00
FOB. Howard Johnson, Ameri-
cus, Rt. 2 % Koinonia Farm.
Allis Chalmers C tractor,
with planters, cultivators, har-
row and fert. attachments,
$885.00. Brown Eubanks, Rey-
for
J.
Incubators, }-
nolds. Rt. 4,
SECOND HAND |
MACHINERY FOR SALE
i
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE |
L, A. John Deere,
plow, cultivator, planters, dis-
tributor, harrow, stalk cutter,
good end. 7 mi. Douglas on
Willacoochee Rd. Joe McKin-
non, Kirkland, Rt. 1.
Set of cultivators and plant-
ers for Model A or B John
Deere Tractor, good cond. W.
E. Thompson, Rutledge.
Chey. Tractor, motor ~over-
hauled, uses no oil, good for
heavy farm work, $50.00; Chat-
tanooga Riding Dise Plow, $10.
M. 8S. Morton, Rossville, Rt. 5,
Box 33. (Tel. 84-3792).
1949 Farmall Cub with lights,
starter, power lift, take-off pul-
ley, cultivators, fertilizer. dis-
tributor, cotton planter, corn
planter, 10 disc harrow, A-1
cond., $950.00. Cash. H. V. Wil-
liamson, Eastman, Rt. 2.
A 2H thimble skein wagon,
good cond., reasonable fr cash.
L. T. Gearin, Clermont. Rt. 1.
Thornhill 2H vee good
cond., fot sale. Robert F. Bal-
lard, "Milner.
2H Wagon, good cond., $25.
E. Alred, Tal-
lapoossa, Rt. 2.
75 bu. cap. Bradley Manutre
Spreader, perfect cond., except
without tires, used less than 2
days, $170.00. Cecil Travis,
Riverdale, % Travis Farms.
(Tel. Ra. 6185). BE Bee
1 pr. Steel Wheels and Lugs,
14 in. wide, for H Farmall
Tractor, reasonable, N. J.. Bax-
ley, Sylvester, Rt. 1.
J. C. Case Model H-10 B
Hammer Mill, used about 16
hrs., good as new, complete with
bogging attachment, 2 screens,
% and % in. $125.00 at my
farm 5 mi. N. Louisville. Mil-
ton Beall, Stapleton. a
John Deere M Tractor, with
power take-off, cultivating
equip., used about 3 wks., good
as new. Big discount. M. B.
Watson, Sylvania, % Pfeiffer
Hotel.
2H Plow, $8.00; Two Planet
Jr. Plows, $15.00; and other
farm equipment for sale. G.
Wakins, Graymont. i
Intl, Model A Tractor, start-
er, lights, power take-off, lift,
2 row Planter, cultivators.
Phone 4422. E. P. James, Ameri- |
cus, Rt.aD,
3 Unit Conde Milking Ma-
chine, cheap. H. H. Moore, At-
lanta, Rt. 1, Box 292.
Allis-Chalmers Tractor, B
model harrow, mower, 2 disc
plow, and feed mill; Also pr.
Mules, cheap. Lewis McKoy,
Turin, Rt. 1
Letz Corn lCrishert large
enough for dairy or cattle farm,
thrashes okra seed, shells and
separates corn from cob; Up-
right \Grist Mill with GMC
motor, good cond., $425.00 or
sell separately. James M. By-
ron, Jonesboro, RFD 1.
5 ft. Dbl. Sec. Harrow, J. D.
with new 20 in disc on front
section, good cond.,
Lloyd Vickers, Wray. ,
Good 2 H Wagon, choice of
Moline or. Owensboro, size 2-
34, 1%, and 2 in, tires, one
practically new, at bargain;
other farm tools including
Chattanooga 64 turn, and per-
fection Steel Beam Plows, dbl.
and single. Horace Darnell Sr.,
Winston.
2H 3 Roller No. 13 Syrup
Mill, complete with 10 ft.
self skimming copper pan,
good cond., Sell or exc. for
corn or hay at market price.
Isom Lee, Felton, Box 15.
F-14 Farmall on rubber,
power lift, take-off, planters,
cultivators, 4 dise Int. tille,,
and seeder on rubber, good
cond. $800.00. H. G. Mann,
Covington, Rt. 2.
bottom
$90.00.
1H 3 Row Grain Drill, ferti-
lizer attachment, disc, wheels,
almost same as new, $25.00.
Ship anywhere. Aaron Wagner,
Blairsville, Rt. 2.
JD. No. t4 Combine, good
cond., cut 3 crops, $575.00. E.
1B); Patrick, Jackson, Rt. 3. (Tel.
No. 6837).
Planting Outfit for oo
B Tractor, good cond., 375. 00,
at my barn. E.. H. Toole, Mia.
ville, RFD 1.
F-14 Farmall Tractor, on good
rubber, cultivators, planters, 3
disc J. D. Plow with seeder at-
tachment, 14 ft. weeder, dise
harrow, reasonable. J. W. Fine,
Americus, 127 S. Lee St.
1 open Buggy, and good 2 H
Wagon, good cond. Sell rea-
sonably, or exc. for anything
can use. W. D. DeLong, Ros-
well.
Farmall A Tractor, power
lift, good cond., cultivating,
planting equipment, 2 disc til-
ler, 12 disc harrow, peanut
plows, tractor weeder, $1000.00.
W. L. Graham, Unadilla, RFD i.
1948 John Deere H Tractor,
planting and cultivating equip.,
Bush and Bog Harrow, J: D..
Tiller, all automatic control,
A-1 cond, Bargain. Lester Coop-|
er, Braselton.
New style Gasbivetor. good
motor block, transmissiou, and |
rear end for old style Fordson
Tractor. Bover piggeee Jasper,
REC. oo
Slightly used 4 dise Tiller for
John Deere M Tractor, for sale
or exc. for bottom turn plow
for J. Deere M Tractor. B. F.
Bowen, Register, Rt. 1.
2. Disc Plow, practically new,
for VAC Case Tractor, for sale,
LW. H, every Moultrie. :
Peanut Sheller and Treating
Machine, complete with elec.
motor. J. R. Wilkes, Barney.
Farmall A 4 Tractor, fully
equipped, planters, cultivators,
distributors, 3 disc J. D. tiller,
10 dise King smoothing harrow,
exc. cond., priced to sell. F. S.
Bohannon, Jackson, RFD 4.
1949 Ford Tractor, planters,
cultivators, 2 disc plow, field
cultivator, utility blade, side
dresser, belt pulley, etc., rea-
sonable. See: W. D. Jones, Car-
rollton,. Perry St.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY WANTED >
Want Mower for Ford-Fer-
guson Tractor. State price. M.
L. Foster, Palmetto, Ret; Al:
Want No. 6
Combine, in good
N. B. Deaton,
Want Peanut
Ford Tractor. E. L,
Douglas, Rt.
Send cash, stamps,
Willingham, Sav
Box 187.
Copenhagen,
Chas. ae Cab
M; 5000, $5.00; W
Onion, 500, $1.00; $1
ders mixed. I. L. St
gerald.
Frostpidl /
Dutch Cabbage,
Now booking ord
fied PR Cooper
plants, $2. M. C ul
ity guaranteed
liams, Naylor.
Certified: Bune
Sweet Potato, $4.
$37.50. Harry | Tutz5
Care Leeland Farms.
Kudzu Crowns, roo}
ry, 300, $1.50; 500,
M; Lady ay 50 $
No checks. c. D.-Cr
ville, Rt. 2; ?
Strong Bildkempre:
ry, 75e C; 500, -$3:252
Imp. Plants, 65 C; 500,
Prompt shipment, No |
nor checks. Horace
Gainesville, Rt. 7.
Clas. W., Hany ;
hagen Mkt. Frostproof C
Ga. Collard, White
rooted. Satis. guar. Mix
sired, 300, 75c; 500, $14
M. Del. Prompt shipm
Crenshaw, Pitts, P. O.
Beets, , Endive,
Chard, Bermuda dnd
ions, Cabbage, 75c
flower, Parsley, Tom:
plants, 2 doz., 3
Franklin, Regis
Curled Parsley
doz. PP. Mrs. J:
Lithia Springs, R
Klondike Stra
500, $2.50; Chas.
White Bermuda
Garden Sa,
"Wakefield deck
Cabbage, Collard,
$1.10; $1.80 M. De
: Gainesville, Rt. 2,
Sage plants, pe
-Want one rear Tractor Wheel berry, 6,
for 1943 model B John D. Trac-
tor, also used Hay Baler on
wheels, with motor. W. E. Gar-
rett, Bowdon.
Want No.
tanooga Syrup Mill or Pan in
exc. for 10 -nice Muscovey
Ducks, Drakes. 10 Allen-Rif,
and Irish Gray Stags. J. F.
Wellborn, Rock Springs. S
Want 1 anvil for farm Black-
smith shop, live anvil, not dead.
State price. F. F. Fulghum,
Douglasville, Rt. 2.
Want 2nd. hand, 2H Riding
Cultivator, in good eond., rea-
sonable. Give description and
|price delivered. N. Ellenburg, |
Wrightsville, Rt. 3.
Want 2nd. hand Tractor, Bush
and Bog Harrow. Prefer J. D.,
but cons. any heavy kind. G.
W. Courson, Baxley.
Want Riding 2H Cultivator.
Must be in good cond. and
cheap. State all information.. ee
Jeff Veal Sr., Sandeaere
13> -or, 14 Chat- |:
_ Cabbage and (
Wire or phone for
Williams, Quitm: ir
Everbearing Str
doz. at my home.
nor deliver. Mrs.
ene 670 Flo
. (Be. 2005).
eee Eve
bear until frost
Bonnie ou
Tea Se een ae Stat
50c; See eherny
0; Collard seat
dd? postage, Mrs.
4 Toomsboro, Rt. Rt, 2.
ring Strawberry,
f; Exchange for
sacks. Each pay
| only in Ga. Liz-
oo Rt. 2, Box
x White Bermuda
from. Hastings),
15; $2. M. PP. Miss
, Pinehurst.
own _ Copenhagen, | @
7, Wakefield, and
: ead. Cabbage, 15c
ipt shipment. Exc.
r print sacks. Each
. Mrs. Joe A, Wha-
an, Rt. 2, Box 166.
Strawberry, 500,
. Add postage. No
vet Mashburn,
hagen Wp Eee Cabbage, Cab-
Chas. W Ez J. aa Copan:
bage Collard, fresh, green and
Bermuda Onion, 309, 75ce; 500,
$1.00; $1.50 M. Prompt ship-
ment, _PP. R. Chanclor, Pitts.
Fresh White Bermuda Onion,
Oe ; 500, $1.25. PP.- Harris
ightsey, Baxley, Rt. 3.
Himalaya berry plants, $5. C;
also burdock, yellow dock,
spearmint, catnip, horehound,
vinca minor and lambs quarter
& rows 10 ft.), Jerusalem Oak,
I, $2.50 M. Add posta
Nore Smith, Arnoldsville.
Kudzu Crowns free. Come to
my home and dig. Will not ship.
1/2 mi. from town on Zebulon
oe Concord Hwy. James C.
xford, Concord, Rt. 1.
SEED FOR SALE
ae E. J., Chas.
ag gen Cabbage; Also
al Wax Bermuda
' sg) 500, $1.00;
e M Cabbage.
es Ws
=
"guar.
; Baas
een
age, Copenhagen,
lory, 500, 75c; $1.4
; White "Bermuda
M; 5 M, $5.00. Full
h delivery. BB:
winville.
Bearing Straw-
$7.50 M. Prompt
Add postage. Mrs.
on, Gainesville, Rt.
Bice 15e C;
500; $3.50, PP. No
Annie Strickland,
; 2 Klondike
_Blueberry Bush,
je doz.; Plum, Crab-
=6; $1. 00; Garlic
~ doz. Add postage.
Eller, Ellijay, Rt. 2.
rary) 500,
pL PP. Eva
in ille, eR ",
u Crowns, $10. M
Rone
cup. Add 12 postage
Mrs, A. Hors-}
t. Rt. 2, Box 40,
a Onion, -50c C;
eberg Lettuce, 50c1
Lightsey, Baxley,
1 rawberry, 70c C;
M; Klond ike,
0; $4. 25 M. Mrs. A,
etl:
eel. doz; --Cab-
EP cainip, $i. doz.;
e Bird House
ee 00; Blueberry
Bulbs, 15e doz.
. A Nor-
oe
ya 300, $1.00;
5000 up, $1. 5 exp,
s. C, W. Smith,
2 ee 60
5 $4.75 M; Sugar
- Blue Damson
Scuppernong
z.; Brown
Beans, 50
Mrs. Lee
mt 1 sees
abbage, and | Ga.
500, - 00;
] wie i:
i
1200 Ibs. Kobe Lespedeza
seed, recleaned, in 100 lb. bags,
14e lb.; few lbs., recleaned- Ga.
Collard seed, 65c lb. Postpaid
in Ga. George H. Lasing, Jr.,
Americus, Rt, 1.
White multiplying onions, $1.
gal.; peas, white mush, large
kind, lady finger and 6-Wk Sas
slightly imperfect, 20c lb. or
exc, for pure white bunch but-
ter beans or for 100 lb. sacks.
se Lester Wilson, Claxton, Rt.
40 lbs. Ist yr. super-red heart
Stone Mountain . watermelon
seed, $1.50 lb: G. A. Walls,
Hampton. y
~ White, tender hull bunch gar-
den bean, 49 seed, 3 cups, $1.30;
striped cornfield beans, called
Adams beans, 50c cupful. Del.
Mrs. A. F, OKelley, Maysville.
90-Day Velvet beans, ger., 85
per ct., $5. bu.; also 60 Ibs., Per-
fection Pimiento pepper seed,
$1.25 lb. L. K. Davis, Anderson-
ville.
Cannon Ball watermelon
seed, $1. lb.; Garrison, $1.50 1b.;
Smaller amounts, 50c cupful.
Mrs. Walter Conner, Wayeross,
| Rt. 2, Box 70.
Striped Half Runner bean
| seed, 50 large cup ful. Mrs. c
B. Robinson, Bowdon.
135 sacks clean Kobe Ee
deza seed, for sale. Joe A. Dav-
id, Dewyrose. Harper Station.
1 bu. white onions, multiply-
ing var., grow young, tender
onions the year round, 40c gal.
Also white Velvet okra, 20c cup.
a Gus J. Reece, Marietta, Rt.
Large amount Clemson Spine-
less okra seed, of finest quality,
50c lb. PP or trade for print
sacks. Mrs. R. H. Turk, Pine-
view, Rt. 1, Box 17A.
12 lbs. Mammoth Russian Sun
Flower Seed, 32 lb. 5 1b. lots;
"| Mani 35c lb. Plus postage. Mrs.
Mamie Bell, Charing.
1000 Ibs. Recleaned Sericea
Scarified, 20c lb. L. B. Park,
-| Commerce, Rt. 2.
1000 Ibs. recleaned Sericea
Scarified, 18 lb. Roy Park,
Commerce. ;
Pure White Black. Diamond
eenitlon, $1.25 lb.; 5 Ibs., $5.
PP, Send MO. Edwin Alexan-
der, Douglasville, Rt. 3.
2000 lbs. No. 1 recleaned,
scarified Sericea Seed, in 150
lb:: bags, 25c lb. FOB. W. S.
4 Mixon, Griffin, Rt. 3.
Pride of Ga. Watermelon
-] seed, improved, ripe melons in
460 days), very sweet, tender, $2,
lb.; Large pkt., 50c. J. N. Car-
son, Griffin, Rt. C,
50 lbs. Imp. Long Green aoe
hand picked,. cleaned, 50c lb.
CODE ES aA: Ellington, Law-
renceville, Rt. 3.
Mammoth Russian Sunflower,
60c pt.; Okra, in pod, 75 pk.;
Summer Time Pie Pumpkin,
for table, 25c pk.; 5 pks., $1.00;
Gourd, 25 pk.; 5 pks., $1, PP.
Did. Ellis, Cumming.
Kobe Lespedeza Seed, com-
bine run, in large quantity, 8c
lb. L. A. Caldwell, Gay.
About 100 Ibs. Tender Long}
Green Okra, 50c 1b.; 40c lb. In
5 Ib. lots, Add postage. Glenn
| Vaughn, Covington, Rt. 3.
af. _Marglobe and Rutger Tomato,
h grade, $1.60 Ib. Del. W. O.
dri Branch, Rt. 1.
. Mrs.
| ville.
Okra, 50c cup; Old Time Lit-
tle White Half Runner Garden
Beans, rae, White Soe
$1. cup. Mrs. T. H. Wade,
Talking oct. Rt. 1.
30 lbs. La. Dark Green and
70 lbs. Long Green Prolific
Okra, 40e lb, COD. Doyle Fow-
ler, Curryville, Rt, 1,
Hales No. 36 Cantaloupe, $2.
lb.; Banana Muskmelon, $2.50
lb., Mixed Gourd, 25 pk.; Sa fe,
Garlic, Catnip, Peppermint,
doz. Exe. for sacks. Mrs, Diese
Baggett, Hiram,
500 lbs, Genuine Cannon Ball
Black Diamond, 1 yr. Okla., 93
per ct, germ., $1. lb.; Original
Ga. Sweetheart, 98 per ct. germ.,
$2. Ib. Grown for seed only
from selected large melons. W.
'O. Birdsong, Gordon.
Martin and Dipper Gourd
Seed, 35 GC PP; Hand shelled
(2 ears to stalk) Seed Corn,
weevil resistant, 20c qt.; $1.25
pk:; $4. bu. FOB. Earl Stuckey,
Blackshear.
Heavy bearing Black Pole
Bean Seed, 50c large cup. Add
postage. Mrs. W. V. Robbs,
Flowery Branch, Rt, 1.
700 lbs. Kobe Lespedeza seed,
No. 1, recleaned, 14e lb.; 200
lbs. Kobe, pasture grade, No. 2,
recleaned, 9c lb. Julius Hulme,
Hartwell, Rt. 1.
Multiplying Calif. Beer seed,
25 a start.
lie Floyd, Rockmart, Rt. 2,
Okra, ~ certified sea
Spineless, eo to.2-10-- Tbs, =
more, 55 PP 100 Ib. oie
pees Ae FOR. 3... Coch,
Flowery Branch,
Any quantity up to 7 tons
Kobe Lespedeza Seed, combine
tun, 8e-lb. at farm. W. S.
Loftis, Atlanta, 45 Mangum St.,
S. W.(Tel. Ma. 2838-9).
Col. mixed Bunch Butter-
bean Seed, 20 cup. Exe, for
chicken feed sacks. Mrs. H. C.
Boone, Maysville. eo
Recleaned Kobe Lespedeza |
Seed, 12c lb. FOB shipping
point. G. W. Darden, Watkins-
1800 ~lbs, recleaned Korean
Lespedeza Seed in even wt. 100
lb. bags, 7c Ib. Omer A. Harper,
Elberton, Rt. 3.
Black Diamond Watermelo,
75c lb.; Cannon Ball, 50c Ib.;
Okra, Yellow Crook Neck
Squash, $1. Ib.; HB-36 Canta-
loupe, 50c Ib. Add postage. Mrs,
C. H. Sledge, Byron, ?
Bliss heavy everbearing and
little prolifie Market Garden
English Pea, mixed, 50 lb.; 3
Ibs., $1. PP, Mrs. H. W. Law7
Chula, 5 i
Good tender Ky, Wonder Pole
Beans, Striped and Little -Pink,
Cream Col. Half Runner Gar-
den, tender Okra. Sell or exc.
for sacks in good cond. Each
pay postage. Mrs. Andrew Wiil-
son, Carters. q
Kobe Lespedeza, recleaned,
bagged, tested, purity 98 per
ct.; germ.; 90 per ct., $13. Cwt.
Joe D. Murrow, Farmington,
6 tons Kobe Lespedeza, 10e
lb.; Combine run, 14e lb. Re-
cleaned. H. C. Allen, McDon-
ough, Rt. 3.
Fine quality Clemson Spine-
less Okra, 35e lb. Add postage.
Exe. for sacks or soe seed.
Mrs. R. H. Turk, Pineview, Rt.
1, Box 17 A.
5 lbs. white seed watermelon,
Black Diamond, $1. me Ibe: M.
Hall, Temple, Rt.
Old fashioned okra seed, 25c
cupful, 50c lb.; also Klondike
Strawberry plants, 500, $2.50;}
Chas. W. cabbage, 30c C.:; 500,
$1.00; garden sage plants, 10c
ea., 90c doz. Del. Mary Ruth
Phillips, Royston,
15 Ibs. 1949 crop good, long
green pod okra seed, 50c lb. or
40c lb. for lot. Add postage. W.
E. Herbert, Commerce, RFD 5.
CORN AND SEED CORN
FOR SALE
o COD. Mrs. Sal-| A.
250 bu. Yellow Conn, $1. 25
bu. H. H, Ray, Greenville, Rt, 2;
Good Golden Prolific Seed
Corn, heavy yielding, $1.25 pk.;
$4.25 bu, us J H, Good, Cordele.
150 bu. good corn, $1.25 bu.
at my farm, 8 mi. S. G. B. Mc-
Coy, Warrenton, Rt, 1.
Dan Youngflood Hard Flit,
100 bu. per acre Seed Corn, $6.
bu. At my place. 7 mi. So. P. L.
Street, Jr., Nicholls, Rt. 3.
' Pure Whatley Red Cob Pro-
lific Seed_ Corn, nubbed and
shelled, $1.50 pk. PP. H. W.
Thurmond, Farmington, Rt. 1.
Shoe Peg Seed Corn, red cob;
deep grains, $1.15 pk.; 1/2 bu.,
$2.25; $4. bu. Plus shipping
aes W. R. Garner, Cordele,
Golden Yellow Pop Corn, 10
lb. PP; Or 6c lb. plus postage.
Mrs. W. F. Rolan, Rome, Rt. 6.
Good White Milling Corn in
shuck, $1.25 bu. at os barn, on
highway, I mi, E,-d, f, English,
Fayetteville.
Red, and Long Golden Yel-
low Pop Corn, each 20c pkg.
Add postage. Mrs. H. A. Chas-
tain, Ray.
Whatley Seed, and Yellow
Corn, ist yr. hand nubbed,
shelled, free of weevils, $1.25
pk.; $4. 50 bu. J. E. Locke, But-
ler, Rt. 1.
Hand. shelled. and selected
Stanleys prolific seed corn,
weevil-resistant, $8. bu., $5. per
E/2eDWs 85 peck. M. O. or cash.
W, Brewer, Colquitt, Rt. 2.
100 bu. white and 60 bu. yel-
low corn, slipped shuck, $1.25
a T. me Chandler, Luthers-
ville.
Whatleys. cert. seed corn, se-
lected, recleaned, excellent
cet even wt., $4.50 bu.;
Whatleys, from cert. seed but
not cert., excellent quality,
$3.75 bu. All selected, reclean-
ed and in even wt. 1 and 2 bu.
oe bags. O. M. Ware, Marshall-
ville.
Hastings white prolific seed
corn, Ist yr., planted far enough
from other corn last yr. to pre-
vent mixing, $1.45 specks PP:
$3.50 bu. plus carrying chgs.
4yTom Wood, Fairburn, Rt. 1.
Hastings. yellow, prolific
corn, selected, 1st yr. a pure,
$1. peck, Del. in Ga. . Mos-
ley, Austell,
Hastings super prolific field
selected seed corn, also yellow,
Ist yr., and 100 bu. seed Velvet
beans, ger., 95 per ct. or better,
gathered without rain, each, $5.
bu. T. H. McDaniel, Reynolds.
COTTONSEED FOR SALE
50 bu. Empire Cotton Seed,
1st. yr., kept pure at gin, $1.50
bu. FOB; Also Ga. Collard:
Seed, 49 crop, recleaned, 50c
Ib.; or 50c cup. PP..Joe Rain-
water, Carrollton, Rt. 1.
Empire wilt resistant Cotton
Seed, Ist yr., kept.pure at gin.
P. J. Sayer, Bowersville.
500 lbs. Cokers 100 wilt Re-
sistant Cotton Seed, Ist. yr,
from certified seed, $5.00 Cwt.
FOB. M. B. Reid, Hartwell, Rt.
3
Recleaned Ga. Experiment |
Station Ist. yr. New Empire,
Wilt Resistant: Cotton Seed, gin-
ned 1 variety gin, .7c lb.; Coker
Fulgrain Seed Oats, certified,
$1.50 bu. Riley C. Couch, Turin.
Cokers 100 wilt
Cotton Seed, Ilst. yr.,
resistant
ginned
-one variety gin, $6.50 Cwt. M=
A. Smith, Lavonia, RFD.
1,000 lbs. sound, pure Em-
pire, wilt-resistant cottonseed,
$7.00 per hundred, or $8.00 de-
linted and treated FOB here.
W. J. Thurmond, Greensboro.
1 ton Cokers 100 wilt-resis-
tant cottonseed, Ist. yr., $10.00
Cwt. Herman Strange, Cobb-
town.
- Sev. hundred lbs. Manleys
new Empire storm- proff cot-
-tonseed, for sale. Willie wo
Riverdale, Rt. 1.
Cokers 100, Wilt-Resistant
cottonseed, about 85 per ct. ger.,
kept pure at gin, $4.50 per hun-
dred, at my home. W, T. Allen,
| Sweet Potatoes,
Danielsville, Rt. 1.
Nowell, Macon, Rt, 3.
COTTONSEED FOR SALE.
50 tons Cokers 100 wilt-resis-
tant cottonseed, grown and gin-
ned pure, $100. 00 ton, FOB. R.
E. Aycock, Monroe.
D&PL No. 15 cottonseed, Ist
yr., pure seed, $100. per ton, ~
FOB. Any amount. O. W. Hill,
Greenville.
Pure Cokers 100 cottonseed,
ist... yr.,. $10.00 Cwt.
Roks, Stapleton. RFD 2.
FLOWERS AND SEED
FOR SALE
CORRECTION: Spring bloom-
ing shrubs, $3, doz.; self-rooted,
everblooming Roses, bloom this
be $5. doz. or 50c, 75c and $1,
Single, blue hyacinths, Chi-
pees sacred lilies, $1. doz.; Oak
Leaf hydrangea, 25c ea., Euony-
mus hedge, $10. C. Miss Mary
C, Florence, Durand.
POTATOES FOR SALE
Seine ef
Old Fashion White Bunch
Yam Seed Potatoes, $4. bu. for
entire lot of 20 or 25 bushels.
Shipped FOB express col. MO
with order, Mrs. Clarence Mc-
Millian,.Dacula, Rt. 1.
41 bu. pure Copper Skin PR
Bunch Potatoes, $2.25 bw; $2.
bu. for lot. Bedding potatoes
only (not table size). J. P. Hays,
Buford.
200 bu. Copperskin PR cert,
Potatoes, $2.50 bu. W. M. _ Pitts,
Thomaston, Rt. 4,
Select Bunch Seed Potatoes,
$3. bu. at farm. E. M. Clapp,
Byron, Rt. 2.
Pure No. 1 Bunch PR Seed
5e lb. FOB.
Carlton Sawyer, Cuthbert, Rt. 4.
4 yr. cert. bunch PR No, 1
Sweet Potatoes, $5. bu. FOB my
farm. J. G. Lowe, Milledge-
| ville, Rt. 4.
About 40 bu. Yellow Skin.
Bunch Sweet Potatoes, 6c Ib.;
and 25. bu. Running Porto
Ricans, Fild run, cert., 5c Ib. B.
F. Keller, Sr., Greenville.
35 bu. good Copperskin Sweet
| Potatoes, $3. bu. FOB my farm,
H. H. Simonton, Richland, RFD
De
Approx. 50 bu. Pink Skin
Bunch Potatoes, sweet, for seed .
purpose, Lee,
Bluffton.
Pink Skin P. R., also few bu.
Trish Potatoes, at my place.
Won't ship. Mrs. Lon C. Harris,
Dallas, Rt. 1.
Old Time Bunch Yams (fork-
ed leaf kind), $5. bu. and buyer
furnish sacks and pay shipping
chgs. Mrs. Lon Ashworth, Da-
cula, Rt. 1.
Sweet potatoes, yellow P. R.,
Bunch Yams, sound, good size,
5c lb. at potato house, or my
RR Station. W. W. McPherson,
Villa Rica.
Govt. insp. Bunch potato
seed, Tifton Exp. Station vari-
ety, $3.50 bu. at bank; $3.75 bu.
at RR Station. L. R. Goodson,
Barwick.
600-700 bu. Cert. Copper Skin
P. R., sweet potato seed, for
sale. Apply my place. H. S.
Baxter, Blackshear, Rt. 2.
$3. bu. Morris
BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
rr
Old time goose _crowder
speckled peas, 2 lbs., $1. and
postage. Exc. for sacks. Mrs. J.
C. Way, Lambert.
20 bu. Clay peas, not mixed,
cleaned, in 2 bu. bags, slightly
damaged, $4. bu.; 10 bu. pure
Tron peas, cleaned, in 2-1/2 bu.
bags, $5. bu. My place, 1 mi.
West Louisville. G. T. Daniel,
Louisville.
Old time Speckled and whits
tender Half Runner beans, 50
teacupful; early white lightning
okra seed, 40c teacupful; Blue
Goose and Speckled Crowder
peas, 30c lb. 5 lb, lots, PP in Ga.
Miss Gennia Brown, Ball
Ground, Rt. dog
Gatan Soy beans, recleaned,
in 2-1/2 bu. bags, $6. bu i L. C.
Chesley ae
cup, 3 cups,
BEANS AND PEAS _
FOR SALE
GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE
See ao
PEANUTS Al
FOR SALE.
White bunch butter peas, 35
$1.00; white skin
cucumber seed, 13c spoonful, 2
spoonfuls, 25c. Mrs. R. A. Nolan,
Rockmart, Rt. 2.
15 bu. 90-Day Velvet beans,
A-1, $6. bu. FOB. J. A. Weaver,
Bartow, Rt. 1.
Very prolific pole butter
bean seed, 30c lb. Mrs. W. L.
Daniel, Albany, Rt. 3, Box 407,
100 bu. 90-Day Velvet beans,
$6" bu. FOB here. W. M. Bow-
den, Manchester,
Velvet beans, new crop, test-
ed for ger., for sale. Mrs. E. W.
Childs, Omaha.
Mung beans, 35 Ib. 5 lb. lots;
early, tender Speckled Half
Runner garden beans, 45c cup-
ful; also large rad peanuts,
jiand picked, washed and dried,
$1.75 pk., $6.75 bu. Add post-
ag P. B. Brown, _ Ground,
eek
White Bunch Butterbeans for
sale or exchange for good grade
print sacks, 1 lb. beans for 1
sack. Each pay postage. Mrs.
_ Mae McKibben, Felton, Rt. 1.
Good tender Garden Beans,
Striped, Pink MHalf Runners,
Mixed Brown Cutshorts, Gray
Speckled; 50c cup. Exc. for
print sacks, 2 cups, for 4 sacks.
Dessie Vick, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Few bu. No. 1 Runnirg Vel-
vet\Beans, $4.50 bu.; Good Brab]
and Clay Peas,-few Crowders,
$3.50 bu. FOB, Enclose pet
card for number of bushels.
M. Moore, Buena Vista.
300 bu. Beane Crowder peas,
early, heavy bearing variety.
J. S. Todd, Lyons, Rt. 2.
_ Brown 6 Wks. Crowder peas,
bears 2 crops, 5 cups, $1.25;
Purple Hull, 4 cups, $1.25. No
tae Mrs. Lon Ashworth, Da-
eula.
White Bunch Butter Peas, 3
cups, $1.00; 35 cup; White Skin
Cucumber Seed, 13c Tbls.; 3
spoons, 25c. PP: Mrs. R. A.
Nolen, Rockmart, Rt. 2.
20 bu. 90 Day Runner Velvet
Beans, $6. bu. C. B. Hicks;
Reynolds.
White Bunch Beans, sound,
free of weevils, no tough hulls,
45c large cup. Mrs. M._J. White,
Gainesville, Rt. 1. Ss
Velvet Beans, Osceola and 90
Day Running, $6. bu. Cash with
order. F. B. Jackson, Wrights-
ville, Rt. 1.
200 bu. Brown Crowder peas,
early, heavy bearing variety, $6.
bu. J. S. Todd, Lyons, Rt. 2
Red Bunch Butterbeans, 40c
tsp.; Garlic, 30c doz. PP. Mrs. G,
C. Taylor, Buchanan, Rt. 1.
Few bu. Mixed Field peas,
Cs
sound, bright, $5. bu. W.
Sewell, Care S. E.~ Vandiver,
Lavonia.
Red Speckled Crowder peas,
30c lb. in 5 lb. lots; White Ten-
der Half Runner Garden Beans,
end Sveckled Half Runners, 50c
cup. PP. in Ga. Go Tt. Brown,
Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
Blue Java and Mung Peas,
each 35c lb. in 5 lb. lots; Old
Time Speckled Half Runners,
45c teacup. P. B. Brown, Ball
Ground, Rt. 1.
Recleaned Brab Peas, sound,
$5. bu. Fob; Schley and Stew-
art Pecans (mixed), sound, well
filled, 10 lb., $3.00; Livsey Wa-
termelon Seed, sound, pure, $2.
Tb. PP. J. M. Jones, Grayson.
, GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE
Several tons Lespedeza Hay,
$20. ton at my barn; Also re-
, leaned Kobe Lespedeza seed,
12c lb. Phone 7374 W. L. F.
eye: Macon, Rt. 3, Houston
es
800 bales Kobe Lespedeza
Hay, $25. ton at farm. C. V.
Miller, Haralson. (Tel. Ca. 1906).
New crop Peanut Hay, del.
anywhere in truckload lots, av-
erage 6 tons. A. J. Singletary,
Cordele, Rt. A.
Lespedeza Hay, $32.00 ton;
poe Grass Hay, $27.50 ton.
el, 4-5 ton lots, radius of 100
ag D Murrow, Farming--
50 tons mixed hay, baled at
my home, for sale. Jim Brook-
ing, Covington.
Kobe Lespedeza, baled. and
Sericea, cut when 10-12 in.
high, any amt. John L. Conrad,
Franklin. (Phone 2604).
1 ton recleaned No. 2 Korean
Lespedeza seed, $9. Cwt.; $175.
ton. FOB. John T. Cline, Oxford.
(Phone, Covington 3478).
Cokers Fulgrain Oats, $1. bu.;
Also Lespedeza Hay for sale my
place on Jonesboro-Fayette-
vile Hwy...Hugh Jackson,
Jonesboro,
15 tons mixed Hay, Peavine,
Grass, Fla. Presley, free of rain
and poison, $30. ton at my barn.
8 mi. N. Perry, U. S. 41, High-
way Haven. EB. G . Fountain, Ft,
Valley, Rt. 1.
_ Good bright Lespedza Hay,
raked and baled, all leaves on,
$25. ton at my barn. A, D. Wil-
son, Maysville.
10 tons extra good Runner
peanut hay, no dust nor poison,
$12. ton; also 15 bu. extra clean
Brabham peas, $5. bu. All at m
ee James Watson, Richland,
Rt.
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Bronze aneninng mugca-
dine grape, black walnut, hazle-
nut, 3 yr. size; red and yellow
plum sprouts, 7 for $2.00; garlic
bulbs, 80 doz. Mrs. C. B. Rob-
inson, Bowdon.
Chinese Chinquapin Trees, 2
yr. 4 ft., all bore last year,
$1.50 ea. James Hobson, Jasp-
er.
Pecan Trees, govt. insp., Sch-
ley, Stewart, Money-Maker( 6-
8 ft., $3.00; 8-10 ft., $3.25. Cal-
vin Harman, Stovall.
2 to 3 ft. Seedling Pecan
Trees for style. W. L. Easterlin,
Andersonville.
Huckleberry Bushes, bearing
size, 50 doz. Sassafras. Root,
4 doz. plants, $1.00. Add post-
age. Exe. for print sacks, Miss
Mary Ruth Silver, Talking Rock
Rt. 2.
Seedling Peach Trees, $1.50
doz.; $10.00 C; Grape Vines,
leading var., $1.80 doz., $15.00
C; Black Walnut, $5.00 doz.;
leading var. budded Peach,
Plum, Apricot, $4.80 doz.; $35
C. Tel. No. 152-J-3. Mrs. E. 8.
Travis, Riverdale.
State insp. 1 yr.- Concord
Grape Vines, $1.25 doz.; $8.00
C; 1 yr. Golden Muscat and
Seedless Concord, $2.25 doz.
Prompt shipment. PP in Ga.
Gail.H. Emberson, Ringgold.
Pecan Trees: Schley, Stewart,
and Money-Makers, 5-6 ft.
$2.75 6-8 ft., $3.00; 8-10 Ltr
$3.25. Calvin Harman, Stovall.
Currants, Figs, 25c ea.; 5, $1;
Mastodon Strawberry, 65c C;}
Green Okra, 25 cup; Collard,
30c cup. Add postage under
$1.50. Mrs. ae Smith, Austell,
Rt.: 33
Blue Buck Huckleberry,
10e ft. to 4 ft. Exe. for dried
fruit, peas of any kind, or sacks.
Add postage. Mrs. Jas. Connell,
Dublin.
Pecan trees, State insp., true
to name, Stewarts, (Stuarts)
and Money-Makers, 1-2 ft.'50c;
2-3 ft., 75c; 3-4 ft., $1.00 ea.
FOB. R. i. Adkins, Cordele,
Rt. .3. :
Mulberry, black walnut,
hickorynut, catawba, black lo-
cust, persimmon, horseapple,
cherries, 50c ea; Himalaya
blackberry, 10c ea. $8.00 C;
Goose Currant berries, 25c ea.;
$20.00 C. All rooted, 1,2,3 ff.
$1.00 orders PP. Josephine
Raley, Mitchell ;
Crabapple, Yellow or Red Plum|
Red Spanish peanuts in hull,
$2.00 pk.; also. purple hull
Crowder peas; 25 lb., 5 Ibs.,
$1.00; and long handle Dipper
and Martin gourd seed, 15 doz.
2 doz. 25ce. Mrs, J. A Wilson,
Martin. i
Imp. White Spanish peanuts,
$5.00 bu. FOB. Bushel orders
only. Mrs. Rebecca Golden,
Bremen, Rt. 2. :
15 bu. imp. Spanish pea-
nuts, hand picked, bright, clean,
seed, $1.50 pk., $5.00 bu. also 2
bu. purple hull speckled peas,.
bright, clean, $6.00 bu. Not PP.
K. S. Lindsey, Lizella, Rt. 1.
Large shelled seedling pecans,
mostly halves and well filled
out, 95e lb. PP. Mrs. Marion
Toler, Americus.
Large red peanuts, hand pick-
ed, washed, dried, fine for seed
or eating, $2.25 pk., $6.50 bu.jt-
red speckled erowder peas, 30
lb., 5 Ib. lots. Add postage. G.
T. Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
Lange, filled Stewart pecans,
25c Ib. and postage; also nice,
dried apples, 40 1b. and post-
age. Mrs. J. H. Lawrence, Mid-
dleton.,
EGGS FOR SALE
Pit game eg geet Clarets, R. H.
Nigger, RH Travelers $3, for
15. Trade for Shawineck
Hopkinson Warhorse rae
Hoyt Hilton, Buchanan. Rt. 2.
Yard Eggs, fresh, 50 doz.
Hwy. 41, three mi. N. Jones-
boro just above hwy. _C. D.
Casey, Riverdale.
Giant 8. G.. Black Minorca
Eggs, 15, $3.00; 30, $8.00. PP. L.
B. Millians, Newnan,
Purebred, heavy, Dark Corn-
ish Eggs, 16, $1.70; 80, $3.30;
Cartons returned at once; Also
2 Oct. Hatched Cockereis of
same, $2.00 ea. MO only, Miss
Cora B. Patterson, Ty oe Rt.
1, Box 35.
White Cornish Bantam Eggs,
champion producin,
doz. white Laced Cornish,
prize Winners, $8.00 doz.; Also
Cockerels, $38.00 e John A.
Fuller, Atlanta, 677 Lillian Ave.
Ss. W.
Purebred Dark Cornish eggs,
heavy, broad brested, long
legged type, $1.60 per 15. PP.
Mrs. Fred f. Johnson, Dawson,
Ht: 2s
Black Leghorn Eggs, 15, $2.50.
Mrs. Bessie Baggett, Hiram.
Jersey Black Giant Eggs, 15,
$1.50. W. L. Morris, Atlanta,
444 Collier Rd. N. W.
2745).
HONEY BEES. AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
gtrain, $33
(Ve. |-
eink. "gece oe
*-1949 Ext. honey, 1-10 db. pail,
del., $2.75; 4-10 Ibs., Exp. -Col.
$8.00; 2-55 gal. bbls., 15 lb., 2
lbs., 1948 honey, 12 lb. Bbls.,
Yo be returned when empty.
Rev. Curd Walker, Soperton,
Gale :
5 Pat. hives aaner bees,
smoker and good many supers,
at my farm. Mrs. Epsie Beasley,
Egypt.
Bee supplies and Honey Ex-
tractor, some new, some used,
for sale. Dr. E. H. Hawkins, At-
lanta, 1639 Harbin Rd., S. W.
Pure Ext. honey: 6-10 Ib. tins
to Cs., $11.50; 12-21/2 lbs. big
mouth glass jars, $6.50; 24s-16
ounce round glass jars, $5.75;
24s-12 ounce, $4. Shipped day
order received, John A. Crum-
mey, Jesup, Box 117.
SACKS FOR SALE _
Print Sacks, 100 lb. eap.,
washed, ironed, good cond., 25
ea. Plus postage. Mrs; -J.-2GC:
Burdette, Gainesville, Rt. 5.
Print, washed, good cond.,
25ce ea.; $3.00 doz.; $22.00 C.
Add postage. Mrs. Ray Dungan,
Gainesville, Rt. 7.
100 lb. cap. Print Sacks,
washed, ironed, free of holes
and mildew, 25 ea; 3 sacks
free with every $5.00 order.
Add postage. Dorothy _Grizzle,
Gainesville, Rt. 4.
Print Sacks, washed, ose
cond., 25 ea.; odds, some with |
small holes, 5, $1.00. PP, in
Ga. Mrs. C. W. Parks, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 9.
Print Sacks, good cond., 100
Tb. cap., washed, ironed, 25
ea. Send 3c extra per sack for
postage. Mrs. Marcus Fowler,
Gainesville, Rt. 1.
White Sacks, 100 Ib. cap,
free of holes, mildew, and let-
ters, 20e ea, Prompt shipment.
Add postage. Mrs. Hershel Al-
lison, Gainesville, Rt. 7.
Dark Print Sacks, 25 ea.;
odds, 20c ea. All free of holes,
and mildew. Add postage. Mrs.
Eva Waldrip, Gainesville, Rt.
1; Ses
- Print Sacks, 100 Ib. eap., free ahs
of holes, spots, and mildew, rip-
ped, washed, ironed, 3, $1.00;
$3.75 doz.; odds, 25 ea.. Mrs.
Annie Strickland, Gainesville,
Riel.
Sacks, washed, ironed, prints,
25 ea.; Whites, 20e ea.; un-
washed whites, 15e ea. COD.
Add postage. Mrs. Hoke Mar-
tin, Gainesville, Rt. 7.
100 lb. cap. Print Sacks,
washed, ironed, free of holes
and Mildew, 25e ea. Add post-
age. Mrs. Ben Webb, Alpha-
retta, Rt. 2 (Douglas Rd.). :
Print Sacks, 100 Ib. cap.,
lls
Table grade Honey: One each
10 Ib. pail, $2.75; 8 Ib. pail,
$1.50. Prepaid through 3rd. zone
B. HE. Sheppard, Savannah,
1222 E. Henry St. 2
Good grade Honey, from new
equipment, cleanly handled,
new 5 lb. glass jars, $1.50; 2%
lb., 75c. George W. Tyler, At-
lanta, 1256 Moreland Ave., S.E.
(Hwy. 42). (Tel Ma. 2995).
8 Hives Italian Bees with
queens, seven shallow supers,
about 3-4 foundation drawn,
equipment including queen ex~-
cluder, ete. $85.00. (Tel. Ca.
6007). Carlton L. Snider, Hape-
ville, P. O. Box 388.
. About 65 (8 frame) Hives of
Bees on straight wired combs,
with one shallow super on each,
$6.00 per hive. Plenty of sup-
plies. J. D. Ball, Rebecca.
Few colonies of Italian Bees,
cypress Pat Hives, metal covers,
4 frame extractor, power or
hand drive, other bee supplies.
Make offer. . H. Se ee
Siena
ripped, washed, 25 ea. Del.
Mrs; M. B. Scroggs, to, Roe
Print Sacks, free of holes. and
mildew, unwashed, 25 ea.;
odds, 20c ea.; washed, 30c ea.
Mrs. Sam Ridings, Ball Ground,
Reo ae )
Print Sacks, 100 Tb. cap.,
ie ironed, unraveled, 25
-Add postage. Mrs. Gus
Souchee, Cleveland, Rt. 1.
Print Sacks, washed, free of
holes and mildew, 25 ea.;|
$2.80 doz, Add postage or COD.
Mrs. Roy L. Bennett, Cumming,
Reh 3
Good quality, smooth. white|
sacks, 15 ea. Plus postage. Mrs.
Ford Pirkle, Cumming, Rt. 3.
Print sacks, washed, ironed,
free of holes and mildew, 3,
$1.00 PP. Mrs. Charlie Early,
Dabloneesy Rt. 1>
' White Sacks, perfect ey
unwashed, 6, $1.00, PP. E. B.
Vaughan, Dunwoody.
Odd print sacks, 20_ea. Plus
Dawsonville. _
| Ship COD. Mrs.
postage. Mrs. Otis. |
PRO
ee
Baad
Mashburn, | in
washed, free. ne
dew, 25 ea. Add po
Glen L. Pirkle, Flo w
Rt. do
Print. ee Ww
holes, 25e ea. Add
COD. Mrs. N. C, |
Rt ds
Smooth Print:
holes and mildew, |
sped, 25e eaj
small holes, 15
age. Mrs. Emory
dergrass, Rt. 2.
Print sacks, 100.
ed, free of holes
25c ea, PP in Ga.
L. Yeager, Murrayy
Large size Print
ed, 25e ea. PP. No
stamps. Prompt ship1
Joe Ingram, Dawsonv:
Good.smooth 100
print sacks; washe
holes, spots,
$1.00. Ptus |
shipment. Mrs. P:
Washed, ironed
100 Ib. cap., free of
mildew, 3, $1.00. Ad
Miss Lula Cook, Cant
Thick White Sacks,
cap., free of holes, mil
letters, bleached, 20
checks. Prompt shipr ne
Tom Pilgrim, C
acks, 100 Ib. cap
ood cond., Prints,
Whites, without letters,
Add postage. Prompt sh:
MO or COD. Mrs. Idell I
Gainesville, Rt. 8. 2
Print Sacks, 25 ea. N
orders. Mrs. E. A. Wat
pharetta, Rt. 3. os
200 Ib. White Gu:
washed, 35c ea. Plu
exe. some for print sack
sample. Mrs. H. E. Rick
Bowdon, Rt. 1. a
Print, washed, ironed,
cap., free of holes and n
30c ea. Add postage. Miss
Cook, Canton, Rt; 2.=
- Print Sacks, was
cond., 25 ea. Add
Clermont, Rt.
Print Sacks, Wi
holes and mildew, 2
postage or COD.
Meadors, Sievelnd
Good grade r
free of holes and m
ed, raveled, 25 -e
ea. 12 or more PP.
Black, Cleveland, F
Print Sacks, washi
free of holes and mi
ea., $20.00 C. Cash o} *
Mrs, Pearl Moore,
RFD 2. Cae ;
- Sacks, washed, i
cap., free of holes, '
ea.; small holes, 1
washed, 10c ea, Pri ni
Unwashed, 25c ea.
Mrs. H. H. Rich:
ville, Ries
Large. Print |
ironed, free of holes
4, $1. 00 Add postag 5
sacks, free of .
4-.$1-00; PP, No %
Ezra B. Wee Cur
,
100 Qb. cap. _prin
nor mildew, 25 ea
age. Mrs. Jeff coe
Reiilia
_ White sacks, 15.
ed, 20c ea. All
free of holes and 1
Mrs. R. A. Bailey
Rt. 2.
as gee
L NEOUS
FOR SALE
ks, washed, iraned,
\dd. postage. Mrs, Ford
pemraing, Rt. e
uality White sacks,
., washed, 15 ea.;
Wood, | Flowery
Do fide of holes and
, 25c ea. COD. M. C.
encase Branch, Rt.
a
grade White sacks, 12c
D. or add postage. MO.
soleman, Flowery Branch,
Tb. cap. smooth print
25e ea.; 50, $11.75. Plus}
GOD. Mrs, --H. 1.
Flowery Branch, Rt.
aa
washed White Sacks, 100
ss good ane free of
d mildew, 5, $1.00. PP.
i ton Gravley, Marietta,
Print Sacks, 100 Ib.
ashed, ripped, free of
5 mildew, 25e ea. PP.
ds, 20c ea.; unwashed,
E Add postage. Mrs.
ES Kemp, Murrayville.
~ 100 Ib. Print Sacks,
free of holes, mildew,
PP. in Ga.; odds, 20
nwashed, $20. 00 Cc. plus
e. Orders filled promptly.
te Kemp, Murrayville,
Tae
t , 100 Tb. eap., washed, na.
nor mildew, 25e ea.; PP.
.. Cash or MO. Mrs. Harr v
pager, Murrayville, Rt. 1.
en Flour 24 Ib. sacks,
$1.00 and postage. Mrs.
Summers, ae Rt.
asd "good _cond.,
oles and mildew, 25e
is, 200; odds, small holes,
z. Add postage. No per-
checks. Miss Lola Maddox,
a s, Rt. 2.
rint sacks, good quality,
2d, ripped, ironed, 25 ea.;
} for lot. Add postage. No
s nor stamps. Mrs. E. R.
5 ag Gainesville, Rt. 7.
. Print Sacks,~25 ea.;
) Ib. cap. 20e ea. 5,
1 washed, free of holes
, PP. in Ga. Mrs. E.
ee Rock, Rt.
ie
White Feed sacks,
hol and mildew, 15e
mpt shipment. Mrs. H.
m1 erour, Gainesville, Rt.
E sacks, washed, ironed,
-; Odds, $2.40 doz. PP.
MM. White, Gainesville,
1 t sacks, 100 Ib. cap., dark
sht, 25c ea.; No COD nor
Mrs. O'Dell Wilson,
po Rt. 8,
iss 100 lb. cap., dark
te pe ea. No COD nor
G. A. Wilson,}
1 Rt. Be ce
t sacks, 100 lb. cap., free
les. and mildew, ripped,
ironed, good cond., 3,
5 doz.; odds, 25c ea.
rs. Annie Strickland,
le, ea its oe
, large 100 Ib. cap. print
washed, good cond., 25c
ite, unwashed, 150 ea.;
&
2 on small orders. R._H.
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
sacks, 100 Ib. cap.
, T5e; $2.75 doz.; white
cap, 25 ea.; 5, $1.00.
WwW, Gainesville, Rt. 2.
sacks, $3.00 doz.; 50,
1.50 C; White, 10, $2;
0; $17.50 C. PP, Cash
der. No checks. Major
ai aesville, Rt:
qui Print, 100 Ib.
les and mildew,
. Add postage.
washed, 20c ea. Add
ae seed, 39c cup.
Print, 25c ea.; 3, free with
every $5.00 order. White, 6,
$1.00. Add postage. Mrs, Y. G.
Grizzle, Gainesville, Rt. 4, es
Print, 100 Ib. cap., free of
holes and mildew, 30e ea. Add
postage. Mrs. Bessie Samples,
Gainesville, Rt. 5.
REN 4
White Sacks, 6, $1.00. Akal
postage. Cash, MO, or CO
Mrs. Major Tinsley, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 5. :
Print sacks, 100 lb. cap., not
washed, free of holes and mil-
dew, 20c ea. Plus postage. T. J.
Garrett, Sarah. ou
Print Sacks, 100 Ib. cap.,
ripped, washed, free of holes
and mildew, 25c ea. Add post-
age. Mrs. E. A: Whelchel,
Gainesville, Rt. 8, Box 10.
100 Ib. smooth print sacks,
washed, ripped, ho spots, holes,
nor mildew, 25 ea. Plus post-
age or 30c ea. PP. Mrs. C. R.
Smith, Gainesville, Rt. 8. ;
. Print sacks, washed, ironed,
free of holes, 30c ea. Plus post-
ge or COD. Prompt shipment.
Vis. Jodie Wilson, Gainesville,
Rt. 8.
White sacks, 6, $1.00. Add
postage. Cash or MO or COD.
rs, T. T.~ Cantrell, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 5.
100 Ib. Print Sacks, washed,
free of holes and mildew, 25c
ea.; $2.75. doz. Add postage. Mrs.
Guy Chambers, Gainesville, Rt.
55
= Print Sacks, washed, ironed,
good cond.,' 25e ea.; $24.00: C.
Exe. for large White peanuts.
Mrs acC: Jones, Gainesville,
bet,
Print; sacks, 100 (1b. --cap;,4
tipped, washed, free of holes
and mildew, also white, 25e ea.;
$2.75 doz. Add postage. Mrs.
Carl Howard, Gainesville, Rt. 5.
Print sacks, washed, ironed,
100 lb. cap., 25e ea.; plus post-
age. Cash or MO or COD. Mrs.
Clayton Holbrook, Gainesville,
Rts 2.
' Print sacks, washed, ironed,
100 lb. cap., 2 or 3 alike, 25e
-ea. Plus postage. Cash, MO,
COD. Mrs. Marvin Martin,
Gainesville, Rt. 7.
CORRECTION: Large Print
sacks, washed, good cond., 20
ea. and postage. 100 or more in
order postpaid. Mrs. A. D. True-
love, Clermont.
White feed sacks, 20e ea.;
prints, 25 ea, All 100 Ib. cap.,
and washed; 25 lb. prints, 10
|ea. Add postage. Mrs. Dan Ter- |
ry, Quitman, 910 W. LaFayette
St.
450 large print sacks, $4.75
for 2 doz.; white, 50 for $5.60.
ee DED Woodstock. -
ELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
Martin and Dipper gourds,
25c ea.; Mixed sizes, 10c ea.;
Gourds for sale. Send stamp-
ed envelope for information.
Mrs. L. M. Wooten, Camilla.
MEAT:
Fresh, cured, hickory smoked
Side Meat, 6c lb. and postage.
LNo order less 1 side. Write. be-
fore ordering. Bunyon Weeks,
Dial.
ONIONS:
Old fashioned white multi-
plying onions, $1. gal. Mrs.
Odas Silver, seed Rock, Rt.
PEPPER: a
Dried Red Hot Pepper, $1.40
lb.; 10 or more lbs., $1.25 1b. PP.
Mrs. Nathan Weatherby, Ball
Ground, Rt. 4.
5 lbs. red hot pepper in pod,
1949 crop, $1. lb. postpaid; less
than 1 lb. postage not paid. Mrs.
H. S. Mullins, Milner.
TOBACCO:
Whole Leat pec Tobac-
co, 5 Ibs., $1.00; 12 lbs., $2,00.
Prepaid. pet Lightsey, Serev-
en.
WALNUTS & WALNUT
MEATS:
Black Walnut Meat, $1. 1b.;
Also Kudzu Crowns, $1. C; $8.
M; Mastodon Everbearing
Strawberry, 75 ; Catnip, Pep-
safras and Yellow Root, 45c lb.
Add postage. Miss L. M. White,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1, Box 35.
Black Walnuts, hulled, dried,
$1.50 bu.; Early
ning Okra Seed, 40 teacup;
Wine Peach Seed, 25 Thls.;
}Dry Sage, 30e qt.s Large Nixon
Muskmelon, 50e teacup. Mrs.
ae Little, Ball Ground, Rt.
"Black Walnut Meats, 50c pt.
Miss Etta Alexander, Jeffer=
son, Rt. 2. 4
MEAT:
Hickory Smoked Hams, 22
Ibs., 65 Ib.; re 25 Ibs.,
60c 1b.; Middlings, 1 Ibs., 50c
Ib. Add Postage. J , Stalcup,
-Marietta, Rt. 5.
PEPPER:
Dried Red Hot Pepper in Pod,
$1. lb. No less 1 lb. to customer.
Mrs. H. S. Mullins, Milner.
SYRUP:
7000 gals, Old Sugar Cane
Syrup, in gal. ognes 25c gal. 100
gals. or more; ong. per gal. for
less. Howard L. Barfield, Fort
Valley, 128 Church St. (Phone
4283).
5000 gals. heavy feed syrup,
35c gal. Shipped ih 86 gal. steel
bbls. only. O. E. Norton, Fair-
burn, \
500 gals. No. 1 new Ga. Cane
Syrup, in 100 gal, lots. Guar.
satis. Gus Rowla and Tifton, Rt.
2, Waterloo Rd. (Tel. 1349J).
ARTICHOKES:
Artichokes, ie Ib.; Larger
amt, cheaper, en. ML
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
Combs, Washington.
ROOTS AND HERBS:
Yellow Root, Colt Foot, Blood
Roots, Red Sassafras, Yellow
Dock, 30 lb.; May Apple Roots,
50e Ib.; Also Fresh Walnut
Meat, large pieces, $1. lb. Add
postage. Mary Ellis, Pisgah.
Peppermint, spearmint, hore-
hound, catnip, featherfew,
balm, tansy, 40 doz.; yellow
root, sassafrass, 40c Ib. mas-
todon everbearing strawberry
plants, 75c C. Add postage. Miss
Mary caus Dahlonega, Rt.
ila
SAGE;
Only 1 lb. Leaf Sage, $1.00; 2
lbs. Ground, $1.25 lb.; 1 Yb.
Dried Catnip Leaves, $1 00; 20
bunches Green Mullen, 20c
bunch, 3, 50c. Virgil Keith, Al-
vaton.
New hand picked Leaf Sage,
shade dried, $1. lb. PP. Mrs.
Frank Miller, Lula, Rt. 1.
mixed, 50c C. Send stamped ent
velope for seed; Also Crack-
lings, 50c .qt.; Purple Hull pea
hazel, peppermint, yellow dock,
plood, yellow, Bo sassafras
root, 3 lbs., sh. for sacks.
R, C. Stover, Pisgah.
FEATHERS:
Dry picked seat feathers,
free of wing and tail, 40c lb.
del. Z. J. Lee, | Oak.
FRUIT:
Bright Dried Apacs Golden
Delicious, free worms and
core, 70c lb. Del. Mrs. Willie
Smith, Roy.
25- 100 Ibs. nice, clean Goose
Feathers, ae Tb Will ship. No
checks. . Glyde Phillips,
Se eae
Nice, new White Downy
feathers, 60c Ib, Del. Sample on
request. Mrs, Mary Collins,
Gainesville, Rt. 1,
GOURDS:
Nest-egg and other Gourds
(no Martins), 5 to 20 ea.; gourd
seed, 10c s eT Mrs, John
Weaver, Temple,
Big Size ee ane with
short necks, ready, 25e ea. PP;
Mrs. C. A.
_ Mrs. W. E. Meee
also seed, 15e pkg.
Hammond, Fitzgerald,
Rt. 4
Bushel Gourd Seed, 10c doz.;
permint, Tansy, 40 doz.; Sas-{ 3.
White Light-| 2
Artichokes, $1. 3. Tobacco,
10 twists, $1.00; Walnut meats,
$1. lb.; Gooseberry, Sage, root-
ene, $1. 00; wild herry, witch-
- } Lakelan
yPEPPER:
Red and Yellow Hot Pepper,
2 spoons, 25; mixed pumpkin
seed, 50c cup; colts foot, 16c
doz; bunches; Mt. Huckleberry,
50 for 50c. Not PP. Mrs. Lee
Butler, Dahlonega, Rt. 3.
Very Hot Pepper (pod size of
pea when green, same stalk
grows pepper for 7 yrs.), 4 yr.
old stalks, red ripe pods, 18, 25c.
PP. Exe. for Red Nest Onions.
Mrs. R. F. Finley, Lavonia, Rt.
E,
ROOTS:
Large type Bamboo roots for
transplanting, 50c-$1.00 setting,
at my place. Emory C. Williams,
Marietta, Rt. 3, Box 277.
ROOTS AND HERBS:
Yellow Root, Wild Cherry
Bark, 25 lb.; Queen of the
Meadow, 40c lb.; Raspberry
Sprouts, 90c doz. add postage.
Mrs. Willard Bennett, Fair-
mount, Rt. 2.
Catnip, Horehound, /Pepper-
mint, Balm, Tansy, Garlic bulbs,
40c doz.; Horseradish, Aspara-
gus, $1. doz; Elecampane,
Birdock, Yellow Root, 50c 1b.;
Star Grass, 90c doz. Exc, for
sacks. Mrs. Martha White, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1, Box
Sassafrass root bark, 60c lb.;
Yellow, 3 lbs., $1.00; birch park,
wild cherry, 50c Ib. Postpaid.
Darrell Butler, Dahlonega, Rt.
4
Catnip, 6, 25c; also white vel-
vet okra seed, 5 cupful; May
Cherries, 6, $1. 00. Add postage.
Mrs. W. Cc. Fowler, Ellijay, Rt.
Yellow root, Queen of the
Meadow, Rattle Weed, Sassa-
fras, wild cherry bark, 3 Ibs.,
Yellow Root, Sassafras, Wild
Cherry Bark, Witch Hazel, Cu-
cumber Bark, 35c Ib.; Garlic,
| Peppermint, Ground Ivy, Balm,
35 doz.; Ratshane, 50c lb. PP.
Mrs. Susie Wilson, Loving.
FRUIT (DRIED):
1940 crop nice, peeled and
core taken out Sundried apples,
free of worms, 4 lbs., del. 3rd.
zone, $3.00. Cash or MO only.
Mrs. Estelle Wilson, Ashland.
ROOTS AND HERBS:
Sassafras, spicewood, yellow
dock, Queen of the Meadow,
Yellow, colts foot, wild cherry
bark, sarsaparilla, wild plum,
willow root, sweet gum bark,
3 Ibs. $1.00. Exc. for print
sacks or dried fruit. Mrs. John
Myers, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
WALNUTS AND WALNUT
MEATS:
Black walnut meats, nice,
clean, large pieces, $1.00 Ib.
Add postage. M. M. Cochran,
Pisgah.
Walnut meats, 80c Ib. and
postage small orders; 10 lbs. or
more 80c lb. PP in Ga. Mrs.
Lillie Albertson, Dahlonega, Rt.
Ve
Black walnut meats, 60c pint.
Miss Etta Alexander, Jefferson,
Rt. 2.
MISCELLANEOUS |
WANTED
eel
CORN:
Want 200 bu. old corn for
cow feed. Advise. Ralph Dan-
gar, Woodstock.
PEAS:
Want sev. bu. six weeks
brown crowder peas. Write. E.
H. Hart, Pavo. Box 54,
SACKS:
Exc. nice, bunch butter-beans
for good grade print sacks: 1
Ib. for 1 sack. Ea. pay postage.
a
Mrs. Mae McKibben, Felton,
Rtas }
TREES:
Want some seedling peach
trees, yellow and white press.
Advise. rs. Joe Strickland,
$1. 00; also yellow plum, spice | per seed. Advise. Mrs. Maggie
apple, May cherry, 2-3 ft. Turner, Riverdale.
shrubs, $2. doz. Add postage. Ww ; ee
z A ant swap 8 nice, -clean |
ae See Se print sacks, for 2 gal. good,
| short joint, 36 ft. or more. State
Craver, Albany, 102 N. Jackson
~ MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED __
PLANTS:
Want 100 healthy St. Regis
Red Raspberry plants. Quotd
price delivered to Marietta, Ga
C, A. Hill, Atlanta, 605 cS State
Office Bldg.
POTATOES & POTATO SLIPS |
Want 50 or more bu. Sweet
Potatoes. Must be govt. insp. H.
C. Ledford, Commerce, Rt. 2.
Want 20 bu. Bunch Potato
slips for beds. Must be pure and
reasonably priced. Exc. Purple
Hull: Speckled Peas, at $6. bu.
or pay cash. Go after if not
over 50 miles. P. H. Woodard,
Chauncey, Rt. 1.
SACKS:
Want some dark Feed Sacks.
State size, color, and price. Mrs. _
W. M. Smith, Irwinville.
Want good grade print sacks
for nice White Bunch Butter
Beans; 1 lb. beans per sack.
ah Mae McKibben, Felton, Rt.
SEED:
Want 4 or 5 bu: Pure Bunch :
Velvet Bean Seed: O. A. Hall,
Summit.
Want Old Fashion 120 Day
Velvet Beans. H. H. Mann, |
Lyons.
Want Old Fashion White
Multiplying Shallots. Exe. print
sacks for same. Elsie Smith,
Cumming, Rt. 5. *
-Want to exc. 10 lbs. Brown
Speckled Crowder Peas for 10
lbs. Red Hull Speckled peas, al-
so 5 Ibs. peas for 2 gals. white
nest onions. Mrs. L. N. Cooper,
Zebulon, Rt. 1. ENE
Want some chicken-eye pep- _
sound white multiplying onions
for planting. Ea. pay postage.
Write first. Mrs. L. W. Ken-
nedy, Clarksville, Rt. 3.
SYRUP:
Want Ga. Cane Syrup made
from Green Cane raised with-
out nitrate of soda, or any kind
fertilizer. G. T. Chaffin, Monti-.
cello, Rt. 1, Box 3.
TREES:
Want some young Catawba =
trees. State price and size. D.-
L. Grantham, Brookhaven, Box
378.
TOBACCO: i
- Want some Tobacco (chew-
ing kind). Write particulars. A.
a Morris, Waycross, 385 State
t. geen
WALNUTS: :
Want 100 lbs. Black Walnuts,
50 lbs. seedling Pecans. R. I.
Gibbs, Atlanta, 1603 DeKalb
Ave., N. E. 3
ARTICHOKES:
Want sev. bu. Artichokes. Ad-
vise price. William R. Edwards,
Dawson, College & 9th.
BERMUDA SETS (COASTAL):
Want Coastal Bermuda Sets,
suitable for pasture planting.
Quote price and when plan to
dig. W. C. Carpenter, Jr., Tif-
ton, Rt. 5. S
CANE ROOTS:
Want 1 doz. Jap. Cane Roots,
price. E. M. Lee, Omaha.
COTTONSEED:
Want 20 tons Stonewilt cot-
tonseed, Ist>yr. preferred, not
treated nor delinted. State ger.
and price. C.. H..-Kitchens;.4=3
Gough. :
EGGS:
Want 60-75 Buff Leghorn
Eggs, for hatching. State price
delivered. Chas. W. Eaton,
Greensboro, Rt. 2.
GOURDS:
Want few gourds about size
of small orange. Mrs. Walter
W. Barrett, McRae.
PEANUTS:
Want large Jumbo Peanuts.
Prefer Bunch. State price. Geo.
7
PEAS: _
Want 1 peck Bla x Eye, and
1 peck plain row d
peas. Advise. W. R. Wooc
wanee, Rt. 1.
mes
CATTLE FOR SALE _
Reg. Guernsey Bull, 20 mos,
old, out of Normandie Lassie,
for sale or trade for young
rev. Milk Strain Shorthorn Buil.
D. N. Crapo,.Sr., Griffin, Rt. 4.
Purebred Guernsey milch cow |
mos. old heifer calf.
old, extra gentle,
black mare. Sell 3 together
or seperately, at my farm.
Mrs. Epsie Beasley, Egypt.
with 2
Miso. 3 yr:
Young, reg., Guernsey bulls,
ready for light service, from
high bloodlines. Reasonable
prices. F. H. Bunn, Midville.
HOGS FOR SALE
1 bred OIC sow and 3 OIC
blocky type shoats, about 140
lbs., also 1 Hereford boar, about
140 lbs., for sale. Frank Kiker,
East Ellijay.
Reg. Red Star Duroc pigs, 75
to 100 lb. wt, $25. ea, W. Ken-
neth Turner, Macon, Rt. 3.
Phone 393 W-3.
S. E. Fair Grand Champ.
bloodlines, fast growing meat
type SPC pigs, 9 wks. old, dbl.
treated, wormed, $20. ea. with
pers. Sat. guar. George
rownlee, Jr., Ben Hill, Rt. 1.
Large, nice SPC gilts and
boars, Reg. buyers name, $45.
and $50. 2 fine strains sired by
Wonder Boy, son of Tip Top
model, 1947 Reserved Grand
Chapion of Ind. C. R. Morgan,
Americus, Rt, 4,
Reg. SPC hogs: bred, 15 mos.
old gilt, $75.00; sev. good gilts,
7 mos. old, ready to breed,
$60.00 ea. All treated, crated,
-FOB, my place, 4 mi. S. =.
Mrs. L. W. Seago, Pinehurst,
Riot.
Reg. big bone Guinea boar, 20
' mos. old, 250 lbs., wt., out of
litter of 15, $60.00, or trade
for Berkshire sor Hampshire
boar. J. Y. Edwards Jr., By-
ronville, Rt. 1.
Purebred: Duroc gilts, bred to
unrelated pure males, $40.00.
Will not ship. Robert Lee, Tif-
ton. Rt. 4.
_ Hampshire gilt pigs, modern,
blocky type, 12 wks. old, $20
ea. FOB. Not eligible for reg.
as sire was purebred but not
reg. Dams are reg, Wilto Har-
per, Wray. Rt. 2.
Reg. OIC Pigs, 6 mos, old, }
$20. ea, with papers; $15. with-
ae. Lee Berry, Sandersville,
10 Black Big Bone Guinea
Pigs, 8 wks. old, $10. @a.; 2, $25:
shipped. Mrs. Will Howell,
Mitchell, Rt. 1.
Reg. Black Essex Boar, 11/2|
yrs. old, about 300 lbs., best
_ bloodlines, life cholera treat-
ment, blocky, $85.00; Purebred
Black Essex Pigs, blocky,
mos. old, subj. to register, $25.
ea. W. B. Winters, West Green.
(Phone 1613).
__8 wks. old Black African
Guinea Pigs, $12.50 ea. E. O.
Bledsoe, Carrollton, Rt. 3.
3 Blocky Type OIC Shoats,
125-140 lbs., 1 Hereford Boar, |
about 140 lbs., $25.-$30. ea., 7
mos. old, for sale. Frank Kiker, '
East Ellijay.
One litter of Little Bone
Guinea Pigs, crossed with Big
Bone, or full stock, be 9 wks.
old Feb, 13th., $10. ea. at the lot,
Will not ship.~A. D, Warren,
Stillmore, Box 202.
Hampshire Male Shoat, born
August Ist, from Grand Champ.
of Area Show, reg. in buyers
oe J. L. Kellum, Comer, Rt.
Big Bone Guinea Pig, 31/2
mos. old, registered stock, $20.
At old Ben Ilendricks Place.
James C. Warren, Metter, Rt, 1,
Box 181. :
Reg. Duroc Pigs, 9 wks. old,
Cherry Red, blocky, $20. ea.;
2, $37.50. Papers in buyers
name. Ship anywhere. Queen
Sadie No. 978066; Bred to
..). Murphy Best, No. 397081. J. A.
- Brown, Felton, Rt. 1,
- Some service Essex Males,
Pires, $37.50 ea, Hoyt Moss,
la,
| pigs, for sale. L. P. Sin
3)
Reg. Hampshire Pigs, born
Nov. 25th, 4 males, 1 female,
from F. F, A: pig chain sow,
ee good, $25. ea. FOB. Reg.
Wuyers name, Jack Wheeler,
Crawfordville. *
OIC Pigs, 8-10 wks. old, reg.
buyers name, $25. ea.; Furnish
unrelated pairs, bred and open
gilts, males ready for service.
H. W. Nix, Alpharetta, Rt. 3.
Reg. Blocky Duroc, 5 mos.
old, $35. ea. Hoyt Douglas, Al-
mia, Rt. 4.
Reg. SPC pigs, from prize
winning herd. Mrs. L
Holmes, Ranger, Care-
green Farms.
OIC Female >
blocky, 8 wks. old, reg. in buy-
ers name, from champion
bloodlines, crated, shipped, and
registered, $33. ea. A. V. Rock-
er, Pulaski.
Reg. SPC Pigs, Feb. 28th del.
at 9 wks. old, best bloodlines,
cut of sow weighing 550-650
Ibs., Erte each litter, $22. ea. at
my place; $27. FOB. L.-C. Black,
Folkston, Rt..1.
35 blocky Feeder Pigs, ready
to wean, $7.50 ea. at lot. Del.
within 150 miles with small ex-
tra charge. Approx. 9 mi. N.
Louisville, 8 mi. . Stapleton.
Harold Sheppard, Stapleton.
Reg. SPC Cham#tons: Blocky
type,. Weanlings, $35. ea.; Serv-
ice Boars, Open Gilts, $55. ea. |
Sired by 2 champs., 48 and 49 |
G. S. F. Adult. Show. Dbl. }
treated, unrelated pairs. Ship
anywhere. Quitman Barrs,
Eastman, RFD 6.
2 Shoats for sale. Make best
offer. Willie Walsh, Riverdale,
Rig:
Nice OIC and Berkshire pigs,
short nose, blocky, 7 wks. old,
your choice, $10. ea. 1 mi. E.
State Prison near Buford. J. C.
Cain, Buford, Rt. 2.
Extra nice, short nose, blocky
OIC_ Male, 15 mos. old, gentle,
good breeder, $45.00;-Reg. buy-
Ever-
short nose,
ers name, crated and shipped; |
Or $40. at my home without
pers 4 mi. N. Bowdon, near
oplar Springs Church. C. L.
Hand, Bowdon, Rt. 2. :
Reg. Bred Hereford Gilts, and
gleton,
Fort Valley, Rt. 3. .
SPC and Big Bone Guinea
pigs, assorted sizes and prices.
Cannot ship. A. E. Burgess, Li-
thonia, Rt. 3. (Browns Mill-
Klondike Rd.).
SPC Hogs, very best blood-
lines, all ages, both sex, reg.
in buyers name, Jife time treat-
ment. Ship anywhere.
Blackmon, Pinehurst.
HORSES AND MULES ,;
FOR SALE
2 Black Mare Mules, smooth
mouth, 1150 lbs. ea., work any-
where, no blemishes; gentle,
2H Wagon, A-1 cond., other
equipment, $275.00, E. L. Ding-
ler, Meansville.
Throughbred Ky. Mare, subj.
register in buyers name, 5 yrs.
old, broken, gentle, reasonable.
G. S. Easterling, Savannah, Rt.
3, Stephenson Ave., Box 476.
(Tel. 3-5305).
Black Mare Mule, 1250 Ilbs.,
gentle, work anywhere. T. W./
Simmons, Douglasville, Rt. 3.
Horse Colt 9 mos. old- Jan.
31st., for sale or trade for hei-
fer or hogs. L; H. Patton,
Blairsville, Rt. 4, Box 108.
2 good Mares not matched;
one 5 yrs. old, 800 lbs., $100.00;
other 8-yrs. old, 850 Ibs., $65.00;
Also some equipment, 1H and
A.| Marietta, Shiloh Rd, R. M.
. Reasonable.
| thing,
M. J.)
$40.00; Purebred Nannie, 1 yr-
2H plows, ete. Sell or trade for
hay, grain, or cattle. W. T.;:
Torgesen, Cornelia, Star Rt.
_ Reg. Tenn. Walking Horses:
10 mos. old Sorrell Filly Colt,
Sire, Best Chance, out of reg.
Wilson mare; Red Sorrell, 10
yrs. old Mare, bred to Allen
Wilson Allen; 2 Filly Colts. Sell
or trade for hay, corn, oats.
John Goforth, Gainesville.
Male Goat, milk type, 8 mos.
old, $8. here at barn. W. H. Har-
vison, Pendergrass, Rt 1.
Gray Mare,-7 yrs. old, 1200
lbs.; gentle, $100.00; Mare Mule,
8 yrs. old, 1200 lbs. sound
$175.00. Both work anywhere,
O. E. Johnson, Sharpsburg; Rt.
Ie : :
Sound Mare Mule. 950 lbs.,
$50. Or exe. for yearling or
shoats of equal value; Also
good 2H wagon, $35., or exc. for
1H wagon. F, W. Jones, Fay-
etteville, Rt. 3, ee
2 Mare Mules, 950 lbs., good
workers, $175, at farm. 5 mi. N.
Hughes, Kennesaw, Rt. 1.
Pr. good Mare mules, good
cond., one 6*yrs. old, 1250 Ibs.,
other, 9 yrs. 1000 lbs., at my
place. Luther L. West, Fair-
burn, Rt. 1. :
Good Mule, 1150 lbs., 6 or 7
yrs. old, for sale. See: G. I
Wood, Fairburn, Rt. 1. (At Fife,
Ga.). Or call Atlanta, De. 3954.
Extra good team mules, 5-6
yrs. old, 1000-1050 lbs. ea., 1H
and 2H wagons, 2H Mower, 2H
Cutaway Harrow, 4 Drag Pans,
2 Turn Plows, 3 Iron Bean
Plows, Sell or trade for tractor
on rubber. with automatic lift.
W. T._Brown, Atlanta, 837 Me-
Millan St. N. W. (Tel. Em. 3108).
Red Horse Mule, good cond., |
works well, 9 yrs. old, for sale.
Mrs: Ed Bledsoe, Carroliton,
Rvs
Pony, large Shetland, Brown
and White Spotted, Mare about
8 or 9 yrs. old, 550 lbs., gentle,
also cart. Reasonable, or exc. |
for yearlings of equal value. D. |
H, Strickland, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.
Good 12 or 13 yr. old Black
Mare Mule, 1000 Ibs., for sale,
or exc. for young Heifers, any
pect W. J. Thurmond, Greens?
oro.
Spotted Stallion, 3 yrs. old in
June, safe for anyone to ride.
Exe. for calves.
Sam Thomas, Ramhurst, Rt. 1.
2 yr. old Bay Colt (Stud),
$95. R. C. Moore, Vinings.
7 yr. old saddle horse, wt.
1100 lbs., 5 gaited, $125. Can
furnish papers. Fred Brady,
Toccoa. Big A Road.
Good 7 yr. old horse, grey,
about 1100 lbs., work to any-
for sale at my _ place.
Doyal Weaver, Draketown.
Bay mare, 800 lbs., 7 yrs. old,
works and rides good; safe for
children to handle, $100. or
trade for big work mare, 1200
lbs. or more. Roy A. Nichols,
Watkinsville, Rt. 1. :
cow or shoats. J. B. Mosley,
Austell.
Matched pair mules, wt. 1200
lbs., ea, Sell separately if de-
sired, Call MA. 4170, or write. |-
J. H. Allen, Atlanta, 401 Chero- |
kee Place, S. E. : ;
SHEEP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
2 long haired, All White,
Billy Goats, 6 mos., and 1 yr.
old. Sell or exe. for 2 white
Nannies, Hens (no bantams),
sheep, guineas, geese, Black
Essex Pigs, gr any breed calves,
Lizzie H. Speer, Fayetteville,
Rt. 3, , ~
Reg. Tog. Billy at stud. Fee
$5.00; Purebred Tog. Billy, 1
yr. old, papers in buyers name,
old, $40.00. All 6 qt. stock. Mrs.
Geo. Leckenby, Jonesboro, Rt. |
1, Box 413.
Nice Nannie Goat, 1 gal.
daily when fresh, Sell or exe.
for another that is fresh in.
Mrs. O. 8. Harrison, Cleveland,
Rts
Goats to freshen soon, some
registered, $25.00 ea. and up.
Irondale Goat Herd. Tel. Ca.
1386. Mrs. E. Irons, Atlanta,
1428 Moody Dr., S. W.
Fresh or soon to freshen pure
Saanan, and Toggenburg Milk
Goats, highest milk production
records, registered and unregis-
tered stock. None at giveaway
prices. Guaranteed. Morris San-
ders, Vidalia, sa)
Py
+} later. L, L. Coleman,
| 8. E. (Tel. De. 7467).
Mule .for sale or trade for}
TBE 6097.
About 100 each nice young.
Ewes and lambs, mostly brown
face, $8.00 ea. at my place. E..
Dean, Odum. ie
Reg. Saanan Buek at stud,
sire of Champion Milker in
U. S., 1949 fresh does, $25.00
ea. up; Bred Yearling-and bred
Milk Does, also yard eggs. W.
J. Sumlin, Atlanta, 730 Grand |
Ave. N. W. (Tel Be. 5393). -
Purebred (not reg.) Saanan
Does, fresh and to freshen soon,
3 with horns, 3 naturally horn-
less, $35. ea:; Hornless Buck, 2
yrs. old, same breed, $12.50;
Hornless Buck, 2 mos. old, $5.;
Tog. Does, $15. Exp. Col. Mrs.
L. W. Smith, Maxeys.
Fresh Holstein Milk Goat,
large, with billy kid, 3 wks. old,
good milker, 1 Brown to freshen
Mt. Airy,
Rt. 1, (Black Mt, Rd, 11/2 mi.
Ne Dix Hill) s) 2 ee Pee 2
RABBITS AND CAVIES_
- FOR SALE
Ped. NZ Red Reg. Doe, ready
to breed. Exp. collect. Write.
Mrs. C. W. Jones, Elberton, Rt.
ie 3 ue
White and Grey Rabbits, 2-3
mos. old, healthy, $2. pr. Will {428
i
not ship. L. M. King, Atlanta,
1387 Avon Ave., S. W. (Phone
8202). ;
Large White NZ Buck Rab-
bit,-$2.50. Write before sending
money. Mrs. N. M. Nicholson,
Talona. :
2 pr. Junior Giant Chinchilla
Rabbits, 8 wks. old, ancestors
grand champions, with pedi-]j
gree, $5. ea.; without ped., $3.
ea.; 2 open does, 8 mos. old,
same stock, $8. ea., or exc. for
White Silkie Bantams. ~ J. S.
Querry, Statesboro, Rt. 2.
Trio Chinchillas, 2 mos. old;
buck unrelated, $10. Ship any-
where RR Exp. Collect. John L,
Parrott, Macon, 2366 Miller
Field Rd., Rt. 6.
Ped. and reg. NZW, NZR, and
Calif. Jrs. and Srs., from best!
show bloodlines. Write for
description and prices. All in-]
quiries ans. C. P. Houston,
Atlanta, 1445 McPherson Ave.,
2 mos. old, heavy wt
mon iG
Advise. L. T. Pe
HORSES:
for a brood mare,
that will pull true
and plow, steady.
Lawrenceville, Rt. 2
amauga, Rt. 1.
40 AAA White
Apr, ace alee 60
2. ea, Crate and
$2. extra. J. E. B
ly. re :
About 300 Rice
Leghorn Pullets,
(get about 3 cases
week), red combs, no
ea. No less than J
Plus chrgs. Henry
EELON Ribs Tee
10 White Y
Hens, beginning to lay,
ea.; 1 Giant Rooster,
allas,
ao
yirds, some UP:
$6.50 or $2.50 pr.;
youngsters cheap. R.
Brantley, Wrightsvill
chilla Trio, buck unrelated, $10. } Knowle
Ped. papers r :
anywhere. Exp. COD. John L.!
Parrott, Macon, 2366 Miller
Field Rd.,*Rt. 6. . : ze
NZW and Gray Rabbits, $3.
pr.; Black, $3. pr.; Mixed breed,
just weaned, any breed, $1.25].
ea. Tom Chapman, Tifton, Rt. 1, } -
Box 8B.
CATTLE:
furnished. Ship|
(mated) sold in pe
Chinese Ringne
LIVESTOCK WANTED | full pi
Want 40 or 50 head Beef or A
other Cattle for pagturing at
my farm on shares. Good pas-
ture, plenty of water. Write or
see at once. 5 mi. Acworth, 1/2]
mi. off Dallas Rd. James Wo- o
mack, Acworth, Rt. 2. |
Want to exchange 14 mos. old
Jersey Male, ready for service,
for heifer or cow. Roger S
Cobb, Marietta, Rt. 6.
Want*=reg. Polled Hereford
Bull, and 2-3 Heifers, ;
open or_bred, registered or
grade. Advise fully. N. E.
rett, Bowdon. sets
HORSES AND MULES: fs:
Will trade Milch Cow for
small horse or mule that will
work anywher on farm. Must
be gentle, easily handled by a
woman. Maggie Lee Grant,
Cedartown, RFD 1, Box 162
(East Point Settlement).
RABBITS:
Want NZW, also NZ Red doe
rabbits. State price and age.
Mrs. H. H. Brandon, Riverdale,
EE: hy Sie
HOGS:
Want purebred Blue Guinea
male, about 8 wks. old. State
price, etc. A. W. Brewer, Col-
quitt, Rt, 2. i
Exch., good corn for shoats. ;
2
ata
either ] 7 -
old, $1.25 ea. Tra
cow, mule or an;
M. H. Stockbridge,
old, 70 per ct. i
$2.25 ea. FOB my
trading some for
good mule or ho:
State wt. and price. P. E. Lott,]
Atlanta, 1520 North West Dr.
bruary 15, 1950
/
PAGE SEV buy
LTRY FOR SALE
POULTRY FOR SALE
Red Pullets, laying, $2.00
my place. Mrs. Charles
nb, Statesboro. (Across
drive-in theatre),
A grade NH Reds, Mar,
5 per ct. laying, $2. ea.
t, Mrs. M. F. Stanley, At-
163 Flat Shoals Rd., S.
NH Red Hens, last spring
h, about all laying, $20.00.
| Mrs. I. S. Teagle, Sr., Cor-
eRt. 2.
Hampshire Red Hens, 1
ster, unrelated, $21. or exc.
pigs of equal value..C. O
ng, Cuthbert, Rt. 3.
purebred NH Hens, 1 yr.
id two 2 yrs. old, $1.75 ea.
urnish crates. Mrs, B. H.
is, Helena, Rt. 1.
fine 4A grade NH Red
s, 14 mos. old, laying, $2.
Send crate. No checks. Mrs.
Clifton, Millen, Rt. 3, Box
sr poultry diseases. Guar.
_ R. Woodliff, Alpharet-
1. (Phone 3861). ,
JH Reds and White Giant
lets for sale. L.. G. Young,
masville, Rt. 2.
RKEYS, GUINEAS,
CKS, GEESE, ETC.
wackless Ducks, $3. pr.;
stovey, all white, $4. pr.
anywhere. Clemon B. Wil-
Acworth, Rt. 1.
Turkeys, 6 hens, 3 toms, 1
old, $50. my place. Will not
p. Lee Gibson, Ringgold, Rt.
| Pekin Ducks, 2 drakes, $9.
Come after. Mrs. Zora
mn, Scottdale, Woodland
\
0 large White Pekin Ducks,
r laying, 1 drake, $1. ea. at
home. Otis H. Dewberry,
lapoosa, Rt. 1.
B. Turkey Hens, 1 .Gob-
$35. Mrs. W. J. Padgett,
Beet. 2 | N
| Bourbon Red Turkey Gob-
, 6 mos. old, $6. ea.; One
laldson strain RI Red Cock-
8 mos. old, $2.50. Cannot
C. H. Parantha, Stone
ain, Box 278.
k and White Muscovies;,
$1.50; Drakes, $2.50 ea.;
_ Mrs. M. F. Gaddis, Quit-
nm, Box 427.
ONAS:
Ancona 3-A grade pullets,
os. old, $20. with rooster
$1. extra if shipped. Crate
Exp. Col; Loeated near Mc-
eys Pond. Mrs. Janie K.
ig, Midville, Rt. 2, Box 111.
ISTRALORPS:
0 Black Australorp hens and
roosters, 10 mos. old, very
, all hens laying, $25. Cant
ip. 5 mi. Milledgeville Road.
5. W. Teasley, Augusta, Rt. 37.
AMS:
veral Common Bantams, 6
, 1 rooster, $5. No checks.
Reece, Cartecay.
Dark Cornish Bantam
rs, (no hens), $2. ea.; Al-
1 pr. Half Grown Guinea
po2.00 pr. .C. HR: Greene,
wick, |
Sebright Bantams, purebred,
yr.; Mixed Sebrights, $2.50
Pullets all laying. Ship ex-
, mot prepaid. J. T. Spier,
,s 5 purebred Dark Cornish
5. white Japanese Silkie
Roosters, grown birds, $7.50.
Can ship express, H, G. Deas,
Gracewood.
Dark Cornish and Mille
Fleur Bantams, andMongolian
easants, closing out stock.
Fred A. Coreaux, College Park,
F10 N- Madison St. (Fa. 5143).
Seven 11 mos. old Austra
White Hens and 1 Rooster, $22.
te O. D. Posey, Lizella, Box
~Rantams: Modern and Old
English Black Breasted Red
Games, RI Reds, mixed Ban-
tams, Golden Pheasants, in full
color. B. H. Holsomback, East
Point, 302 S. Harris.
Purebred Black Cochin ban-
tams, 8 mos. old and 1 yr. old,
$3. pr. plus Exp. Chgs: Mrs.
Ruby Winkle, Atlanta, 1461
Eastland Rd., S. E.
BARRED & OTHER ROCKS:
15 AAAA BR PuHlets, Mar.
hatch, $1.50 ea. my place, 3: mi.
Kennesaw. Will not ship. Mrs.
Sear C, Garrison, Kennesaw,
18 Plymouth Rock Hens, 7
mos. old, laying, $30. Leonard
E. Hensley, Ramhurst, Rt. 1.
10 White Rocks, (hens), 1
Rooster, fine stock, $25. Mrs. S.
H. Smith, Keysville.
BRAHMAS: Z
Master mating, 4-A, blood-
tested, large, heavy, 1 yr. old
ight Brahma hens, $2.50 ea. 1
roostr, $3. Mrs. W. H. Whitak-
er, Sandersville.
CORNISH, GAMES, & GIANTS
5 Hampshire Dark Cornish
Laying Pullets, 8 mos. old, $9.
or $2.25 ea. FOB. Mrs. Mamie
Stone, Adairsville, Rt. 2.
Best bloodtested, heavy, yel-
low legged, Dark Cornish
Young Roosters, $3. ea.; Also 5
large English White Leghorn
Hens, $10. MO only. Mrs. R. C.
Sanders, Vienna.
5 Dark Cornish Hens, 1
Rooster, $2. ea. FOB. Exc. for
corn at $1.25 bu. Mrs. A. T. Lee,
Jesup.
Claret-Round heads, 6 big
hens, 1 yr. old stag, $35.00;
Some nice large hens, 1-4 yrs.
old, $5. ea. R. R. White, St. El-
mo,'Tenn., Rt. 3, (Resident of
Flintstone, Ga.).
Dark Cornish Pullets ~ and
young hens, $2. ea. Mrs. O. L.
Craft, Lavonia, Rt. 2.
Hens, 1 yr. old in March, $12.
Or trade for good corn, pota-
toes, wheat. J. E. Granger,
Reidsville.
6 Cornish Cocks: two 11/2
yrs. old, others 1 yr. old, $2.50
ea. E. E. Turner, Alto, Rt. 1.
10 Dark Cornish pullets, pure-
bred, long yellow legged type,
wt. 4 lbs. up, some laying, $15.
oe guar. H. B. Hill, Commeree,
peaks
3 young Tom Turkeys, 60c lb.
Cannot ship. Miss Etta Alexan-
der, Jefferson, Rt. 2.
1949 hatch (May) turkey hens,
$5. ea. or 50c lb. Mrs. W. L.
Daniel, Albany, Rt. 3, Box 407.
2 young turkey hens and tom,
for sale, my place, 8 mi. East
View, Rt. 1.
WYANDOTTES:
2 Mar. hatch, 1949 fine Cock-
erels, pure Silver Lace Wyan-
dottes, $2. ea. Exc. for 2 same
age, and breed. Mrs. S. P. Jones,
Riek
Lula, Rt. 2.
LIVESTOCK AUCTION
Tri-County Livestock Auctions will be held at Hub
nection (about 5 miles from Covington on Ga. Hwy.,
0. 12), every Monday at 1 P. M.
1
ivestock Auditorium,
uction sale Reg., Hereford-Polled Hereford cattle,
zing on bulls, but will have females also...
Pineview. J. J. Davidson, Pine-+
POULTRY FOR SALE
4 purebred large White Pekin
Ducks, laying, 2 drakes, $2. ea.
Exp. Col. Mrs. Otis Mashburn,
Cumming, Rt. 5..
2 BB Turke Toms, 1949
hatch, 20-25 lbs. ea. $8, ea.
Ship anywhere. MO only. Mrs.
Fannie. Findley, Danburg.
POULTRY WANTED
a
BABY CHICKS:
Want to raise chickens on
halves to 6 weeks old. State
terms offered. Miss Pluma
Chadwick, Dalton, Rt. 4.
PIGEONS:
Want few Silver King Pigeons
near Savannah. State offer.
Thos. L. Jewett, Savannah, 1105
East Henry St.
TURKEYS, GUINEAS,
GEESE, DUCKS, ETC.
Speckled Guinea Hens. Quote
price. Z. A. Godwin, Atlanta,
1250 Moreland Ave., S. E. (Tel.
Ma. 2995).
Want 10 Spe Guinea
Hens and 2 oosters, O. Z.
Floyd, Lavonia, Rt. 1.
Want 3 female Geese. State
kind, age and price. Walter J.
Stegmeyer, Savannah, Rt. 5,
Boxm439.
Want Brown Breasted Bronze
Tom Turkey, 1949 hatch. Must
be thoroughbred for breeding,
at once. Loyd Handy, Young
Harris, Rg. 1.
Want about 3 each, Hens and
Males, African Guineas, 1-2 yrs.
old. Advise. T. J. Woth, Atlanta,
3125 East Shadow Lawn Ave.,
N. E. (Tel. Ch. 4280).
Want 15 or 20 Broad Breasted}
Bronze Turkey Hens, 1949
hatch. Give best price. Mrs, J.
N. Carson, Griffin, Rt. C.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want white or col. man for 1
H crop, good land, stock, handy
to everything, water in yard.
See: J. A. Lance, Oak. (Ca.
6862).
Want sober farmer for 40 A
farm, 3rd and 4ths, or standing
rent. 5 R house, barn, pasture;
Also 5 R house within 10 mi.
Gainesville, Hall Co. garden
patches, suitable for old age
pensioner. H. V. Johnson,
Gainesville, 559 E. Broad St.
Want middleage white wom-
an to live as one of family and
do light work on farm. Room,
board, $30. mthily. salary. Mrs.
H. O. Rogers, Austell, Rt. 1.
Want experienced Flour Mill
Operator for my 50 bbl. midget
marvel mill. Must be sober, re-
liable ,honest. Can furnish
house with good salary. T. R.
Thomas, Cumming.
Want. small family to work,
50-50 basis. Iand already broke.
Most of tobacco wood cut. 4 R
house, elec., also want one who
can operate tractor and truck:
Write or contact. C; M. Collins,
Collins, Ga., Rt. 1.
Want intelligent, quiet, re-
fined couple for small, well
equipped: farm near town; ey-
erything furnished, for help in
plant growing, pulling, ship-
ping, etc, and to grow some
truck crops, mainly sweet po-
tatoes. No drinking. Morris
Sanders, Vidalia.
Want middleaged, white man,
married, to do light farm work.
Must be able to make repairs on
farm buildings, etc. Pay com-
mensurate with work. Must be
sober, honest and reliable.-Good
home. J. W. Mangham, Ameri-
cus, Rt. 1:
Want single man to help work
2 H farm at once. $30. mo.,
board and laundry. Contact or
write. No loafers or drunks, G.
W. Whitley, Ocilla, Rt. 2.
Want farmer for 1 H crop, 4
R house, on halves or 3rds and
4ths. No drunks. W. M. Evans,
Fairmount, Rt. 1.
Want good, sober, white or
Moultrie, Friday, February
rite. W. E. Aycock, Moultrie.
col. family to work on farm,
day wages of $8. day with
patches, wood, water, house and
Pouce m school Rt., 71/2 mi.
frorey. Will move. Write for
further details immediately. B.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want reliable white man for
2H crop on halves; with 4 R
house, lights, on school bus,
mail rt., good land, pasture, wa-
ter. Come at once. E. W. Tid-
well, Alpharetta, Rt. 1.
Want 1H farmer on 3rds and
4ths; 4 R house, school and mail
\rt., 3 mi, E. Cumming. Good
Jand. L. J. Ellis, Cumming.
want reliable white farmer
with enough help for 2H crop,
on halves. Good 4 R_ house,
lights, water, mail, school rt. 15
mi. Atlanta. Will furnish 15 A
cotton, corn, tpuck crops. Phone
Ve. 4137. N. J. Jordan, Atlanta,
712 Parkway Dr., N. E.
Want Herdsman with H.LR.
experience. State experience
and qualifications. No liquor
heads need apply. Joe L. Young,
LaGrange, Box 522.
Want farm family to help on
large irrigated truck farm. Need
man able to plow and drive
truck and tractor; others able
to pick vegetables. Several nice
houses with electricity. Pay $3.
daily to man, house, garden,
wood. R. F. Sams, Clarkston.
(Phone 7322).
Want white or col. man with
small or no children, to do gen-
eral farm work, some tractor
work, $3. daily. Must have ref-
erences,, sober. Mrs, Hugh L.
White, Stockbridge, Care Echo
Valley Farm.
Want experienced poultry
men or women to raise highly-
bred chicks on fair partnership
arrangement. Edward S. Moses,
Columbus, M. R. No. 2, Esqui-
line Hill.
Elderly woman wants young,
or middleage woman to do light
farm work on small farm, live
with me. Pay normal salary,
room, board. Mrs. James L.
York, Clarkesville, Rt. 2.
Want sober man with family
to grow Camellias and Azaleas,
also other plants. Must be ex-
Sele oess R. B. Wheeler, Kib-
ee,
FARM HELP WANTED
pA eee
Want refined. white woman
for light~chores on farm with
elderly couple. Room, board,
and small -salary. Exchange ref-
erences. W. R. Fetzer, Marlow.
Want reliable, white young
woman, clean, healthy, to help
with light farm work on farm,
Prefer person born and now liv-
ing in country. Live in home,
adult. family. Receive small sal-
ary. Mrs. George Rowell, At-
lanta, RFD 6.
Want middleage woman for
light farm work on farm. No
field work. Clothes, room, board,
salary. W. A. Holloway, Jones-
boro, Rt. 1, Box 410.
POSITIONS WANTED
Re
Man with 4 in family wants
job on farm working for wages
by day or month. Boy 21 yrs.
old. Need good house, wood,
lights. Prefer Fulton or DeKalb
Co. Have to be moved. John T.
Moses, Locust Grove, Rt. 1.
Want job on farm. water. gar-
den, and potato patch; any-
where North of Butler. Need 4
R house, elec:, wood. $3. daily
salary. Frank Saylor, Americus,
Rt. 1.
46 yr. old, single man, wants
job at once on farm, Overseer
or wage hand. Can drive trac-
tor and handle Avery walking
cultivator, $15. week, board,
laundry and live as one of fam-
ily.Sat. or no pay. M. I. Morgan,
Savannah, 2025 Texas Ave.,
Phone 4-4387.
Man with family, wants farm
work. Experienced, also: can
handle farm tools. R. H. How-
ard, St. Elmo, Tenn., Rt. 4.
(Resident_of Ga.).
Young, white couple, 4 small
children, both born and raised
on farm, well experienced in
farm work, want a 1 H farm on
halves or for reasonable wages.
Clarence Jordan, Atlanta, 517
Luckie St., N. W. Apt. 393. AT.
4685. : :
to:
NOTICE TO ALL CERTIFIED SWEET |
POTATO GROWERS
Get your sweet potato tape orders in early and
avoid congestion and delay in getting your tape. As
soon asinspectors in your territory certify your sweet
potatoes to be free of insect infestation and plant dis-
ease, kindly fill out your Growers Affidavit, showing
that potatoes have been properly dipped before bedding,
the number of bushels bedded, and send this affidavit
C. H> Alden, Director, Georgia Department of
Entomology, 432 State Capital, Atlanta.
will NECESSARILY have
and household.
PROPERTY, HOUSES
ROOMS FOR RENT and
before March 7.
J. Gilmore, Macon, Rt. 5.
FARM LAND Edition
Our Spring Special Farm Land Supplement will be
published March 15. FARMS FOR SALE, FOR RENT,
WANTING TO BUY and WANTING TO RENT, and in
EXCHANGE FOR GEORGIA LAND notices MUST
REACH the Bulletins Office, 222 STATE CAPITC..
Atlanta, NOT later than NOON TUESDAY, MARCH 7.
All notices of this type received after NOON, March 7,
PUBLICATION ... THERE MAY BE NO EXCEP-
TIONS OF ANY KIND FOR ANYONE to his RULE.
Notices for this Land Edition MUST NOT EXCEED
sixty (60) words, INCLUDING name and address and
telephone number (if desired).
if necessary to meet the requirements.
have more than ONE FARM or tract of land in the
Country, then the TRACTS MUST be consolidated into
the ONE NOTICE OF NOT MORE THAN 60 WORDS,
including name and address... AND ONE NOTIC
ONLY TO AN INDIVIDUAL or to MEMBERS OF IM-
MEDIATE HOUSEHOLD, EXCEPT WHERE different
farms are OWNED by separate members of a family
POSITIVELY NO NOTICES FOR REAL ESTATE
AGENTS, nor CITY (small towns are permissibe)
(alone),
OTHER BUSINESS PROPERTY neither OUT of
STATE PROPERTY will be published ... GEORGIA
FARM LAND AND GEORGIA FARMS ONLY. This
in accordance with U. S. Postal RULING, governing
our SECOND CLASS MAILING RATE.
SEND IN YOUR FARM NOTICE IMMEDIATELY
E..:H.
to be OMITTED FROM
rill be CUT
ALSOif you
Notice:
APARTMENTS or
WANTED, STORES and
(Continued from Page One)
buttermilk and chocolate milk for hu-
mzn consumption in Georgia to be
Grade A milk. It also provides for the
Commissioner of Agriculture to make
standards, rules and regulations which
must be uniform throughout the State.
It provides that cities, towns and coun-
ties can make standards higher than
those fixed by the Commissioner of Ag-
rieulture, none of which must be lower.
than those provided for by the United
States Public Health Milk Code. Under
this bill the Commissioner of Agriculture
will fix standards higher than those pro-
vided by the United States Milk Code
and this will automatically shut out
milk from other states which is produced
under standards not as high as those re-
quired in Georgia.
Readers of the Bulletin will remem-
ber back in 1947 that the State Health
Department maintained milk cows in-
fected with Bangs Disease at the Sani-
tarium, at Rome, Georgia, for T. B. Pa-
tients for a period of five months and
refused to dispose of these milk cows
until the article in the Market Bulletin
forced them to do go. :
The Health Department at that time
was operating within the requirements
of the United States Milk Code and I
certainly do not propose to have stand-
ards as low as the Health Department is
now carrying out. Diseased cattle have
no place in a dairy herd and milk from
diseased cows will not be permitted to
ve sold under the new law. Because of
the fact that we have been successful in
reducing infection in Georgia herds so
much lower than our neighboring states
will work no especial hardship on Geor-
gia dairymen, but will be of tremendous
benefit to them. .
This will likewise be of the greatest
iiuportance to the consumers of milk
and milk products in Atlant
towns and cities in the State
Senator Ztliner and his coll
entitled to highest commenda
their perseverance and public
initiating and pushing to a
historic measure. = |
The Commissioner of Agi
deeply appreciates the splenc
done by the members of the Ge
sembly, recognizing the cor
quired to unfalteringly carry
these important: measures, and
vide additional funds for m
erations, livestock and poultr
control, and hereby pledges hin
renewed efforts to the end that
ture-record in Georgia shall
better than in the past. An
members ef the General Assem
have reason to remember wit
their efforts and success in
these important measures,
TOM LINDER,
-
POSITIONS WANTED
POSITIONS WANTED
POSITIONS WANTED
POSITIONS WANTED |
5 Commissioner of Agricultur
POSITIONS W
Veteran, 25 yrs. old, mar-
ried, 1 child, wants job on farm
for wages or shares. Can raise
chickens, drive tractor, do any
kind farm work. 21/2 yrs.}letters ans. Mrs. Esther Plymel,
schooling in agriculture. Can{ Valdosta, Rt. 3, Box 178,
move at once. Thomas M.
Sparks, Ball Ground, Rt. 2.
Want job on farm. Experi-
enced tractor, truck driver. Not
much experience in dairying
but willing to learn. 33 yrs. old
with family. Must have water
in yard. Prefer lights. Close to
school rt. Rual Jones, Care G.
T. Scott, Barnesville, Rt. 2.
60 yr. old man wants job on
farm doing general repair and
some mechanical work. Go any-
where for right offer. 4 or 5 R
house with lights; school and
mail rt. Wife, 2 girls. Honest,
sober, willing to work. P. C.
Dickens, Ocilla, Rt. 1, Box 379.
tractor driving,
ton, Rt. 1.
Rt. 5.
tending Chickens,
Pryor, St., S. W.
Want farm work on farm. 35
yrs. old, good health. Can do
any kind work but milk. Live
as one of. family, $15. wk. All
Want large 1H farm on halves.
Large family. Well experienced
general farm
work. Go anywhere. Need 4-5
R house. John W. Queen, Camp-
Young man wants job on
farm driving truck, tractor, or
both. Wayne Butts, Blairsville,
on farm
other light
farm chores for wages; Also 10
A land for son to tend. Self, son,
daughter-in-law to work. 3 or 4
R-house, preferably with lights.
Mrs. Mary Green, Atlanta, 373
Want_light work
_ Young man, wife, baby, want
job on dairy farm. Experienced
with milking machine, operat-
ing -tractor. Need 3 R house,
lights, geod water, reasonable
wages. Can move at once. Have
to be moved. E, C. Shumate,
ge L. G. Boss, Loganville, Rt.
or month.
Elderly
Man with wife (7 children),
want crop with -good honest
man, good worker.
er. Can -drive truck, tractor, or
most any kind of farm machin-
ery. Have to be furnished. Plen-
ty work until crop time. Want
20-25 A cotton, 4 A corn, garden
patches. James _ Southern,
Chatsworth, :
Young man wants job on
farm for board, laundry, and
salary. No bad habits. M. J.
Biba Colbert, Rt. 2, Box
07. i
Sober man wants job by day
but go anywhere. Contact: Mrs.
Manda Venable, Macon, Rt. 4. 4
wants place on farm with good
people doing light work on
farm. Good health. Prefer So.
Ga. C. E. Jackson, Douglas, 820
E. Ward St. : i
{ Man with small family wants
onest, sob-# place on farm for wages. 3 or 4}
room house with lights, water,
no furniture. Experienced truck
and tractor driver, mechanic,
caretaker stock, :
chickens. Start work at once. H,
L. Underwood, Care R. W. Un-}
derwood, Dalton, Rt. 4.
Want farm work on farm for
$18. wkly., or $3, daily. 3 in fam-
ily (one child). Am 25 yrs. old.
Need house, wired. Lewis Lay-
field, Cordele, Rt. 2, . ;
Farmer wants farm
or working with chicken
tle. Jake Pruitt, Lithia Sp:
_ Unencumbered white
35 yrs. old, wants light
work on farm for roo!
and salary. Neat, clean,
worker, All letters ans.
ieee Valdosta, 411 E.
| Ave. sores,
Prefer Coweta Co.
Christian Couple
home, elec., in or
i,f lanta. | Experienced.
cattle, hogs,} Richardson, LaGrange.
laway Ave. _ x
Hard working fa
40 yrs. old, want:
S
Ga. farm. ee
boys. Mrs. W.
Disease Free Sweet Potatoes For Mar
Sweetpotatoes, one of the principle food
_erops of Georgia, are subject to diseases in the
~ field and to rots in storage and transit.
The diseases attacking the potatoes in the
field. may be divided into three types of dis-
eases. , These are root, stem and leaf diseases.
Some of the diseases that attack potatoes in
storage and transit are soft rot, ring rot, black
rot, dry rot, Java black rot and charcoal rot.
A program to control sweetpotato diseases
is as follows:
1. SEED SELECTION: Use only certified
stock free from bruises, spots and discolored
ends. Black rot hasbeen found in apparently
- well-healed bruises. A
2. TREATING SEED: Dip the selected po-
tatoes in a solution of Semesan Bel or Mer-
curice Chloride. These disinfectants kill only
spores on the surface and do not replace seed
selection.
3. BEDDING POTATOES: Location of
the siteBed where sweetpotatoes have never
been planted or bedded before. It is also
important to remember that beds should be
above such a spot as clean land can become
infected by drainage from diseased land.
Heating Bed. If it is desirable to furnish
some heat for early plants, use the flue-type
or electric hotbed, cheaply:constructed, so it
can be moved each year. Stable manure is
never safe as it nearly always contains some
disease organism.
Bedding. Avoid bruising and place pota-
toes so they will not touch.
4. INSPECTION OF BED: This takes place
when draws are about ready to pull. If any
of the plants are yellow and show black or
discolored lesions at the base near the old
potato, it is not safe to use any of them, as
this indicates black rot. In watering, spores
lon
will get on many other plants that look sound.
5. SELECTING FIELD FOR PLANTING: |
The field must not have been planted in po-
tatoes before nor should it be in an area
where water will drain from such a field.
Also, there must not have been stable manure
applied for at least 3 years, and no field can
be used where rotten potatoes have been fed
to hogs .
6. INSPECTION OF FIELD FOR STEM |
ROT: If you find yellow plants sloughing off
at the roots in July and August you have
either bedded an infected potato or have
planted where potatoes have been before. This
disease lives indefinitely in the soil. and can
build up until no potatoes can be-grown in the
field. If one such plant is found do not save
any for seed, but sell immediately for table
stock.
7. VINE CUTTINGS FOR SEED STOCKS:
Cut vines only from fields with no stem
rot and plant them above field planted
from draws, never below. This is an import-
ant step in avoiding diseases brought out on .
the draws. SS
8. HARVESTING: Handle sweetpotatoes
; carefully. Place them in crates in the field,
using the crates that are to go in the storage
house. Do not throw in heap rows. Cut or .
bruised potatoes must not go in storage. If
any black rot spots show when dug, sell im-
mediately. Such potatoes will have many
infections that you cannot see with the eye,
and will not keep in any kind of-storage- Dig
before frost. The soil and air are full of
fungi that will attack a potato that has been
nipped or even badly chilled. Aso do not
leave them exposed to a hot sun for an
ger than necess 2 ( g
Adan
| wood, Rt.1.
9 .STORAGE: If stored in
it thoroughly. Burn all old
sweepings from last year;
mice; shut up tight and disin
potassium permanganate and
aldehyde per 1000 cubic feet
can substitute 1.3 oz. of bleaching
1.7 pints of formaldehyde f
Whichever is used, place the
separate containers near each
start at the rear of the hous
pour the formaldehyde on top
then get out and shut ap ia
24 hours. Place the baskets or
house before this fumigation.
Whichever is used, hill or hi
disturb pgtatoes any more thar
be helped after they have been
ed. Any moving spreads spores.
very important not to throw
on the floor or even out of th
house. These should be gotten ou
posed of. If left around the spore
back and infect the sound potat
This program for control was.
a circular prepared by the D
Plant Pathology, College of Agricul
ens, Georgia, and the Georgia
Entomology.
For further information about |
tatoes or curing houses for the st
tatoes contact local coun
For information concer