OF om Linder,
Commissioner
Dea Bro her Colson: sae
be: received your. letter and editorial
Clipping from the aanbe Morning Tri-
; E which I
sae and call hi s a to. the
Let's is the =e i the case,
- gause certainly we should all want to be
w abiding citizens whether in public
life or in private life.
The Law of the State of Georgia speci-
fically provides that all persons who buy
and sell milk, cream, ice cream, ice cream
mix etc., for the purpose of resale with-
essing it into a finished product,
lk and cream brokers. _
law further provides that all milk
cream brokers must, before doing
y business in Georgia, secure a license
from the Commissioner of Agriculture,
and pay a fee of $10.00.
The law further sets up certain pro-
3 visions to insure the health of the people
inst unsanitary milk and requires
E k, including buttermilk, choco-
r verages sold in the
e A mille, re
ssioner of oe. shall make
rules and regulations and set up stand-
ns of the laws.
is guilty of a misdemeanor in each case.
The law further provides that no milk,
m, ice cream, etc., can be brought
. been granted for that purpose by the
Sommissioner of Agriculture, and not
mn until investigation has been made
into the source of such dairy products
and the handling of such dairy products,
and they have been found to have been
dled under standards
an those provided for
r products @riginating in the State
rgia.
irther provides that when
bootleg milk being
Georgia. - The |.
sapereriale very =
I will very - deaply. appreciate itif you
ill take this matter up with the editor _
a
ce the purpose of carrying into |
complying with the provisions of the law
nto the State of Georgia until a permit
g
question that Iam m reproducing it in
so that all consumers of milk and |
on this
"WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 30; 1950
NUMBER 52
SHALL WE ENFORCE OUR MILK LAWS 10
- PROTECT THE HEALTH OF OUR CHILDREN?
the ovataiantonee of Agriculture finds
-any milk or-such dairy products origi-
nating within the State, or without the
State, being sold in Georgia in violation
of these laws, it is the duty of the Com-
missioner to add to such dairy products
a harmless. coloring matter so that all- |
_ persons. who might buy or consume such
dairy products: will be put on. notice that
it does not comply 9 with the Ceae Law.
Second :
Georgia Laws specifically set out a.
twofold purpose that moved the Legisla-
ture to the enactment of these statutes.
First, to provide and insure an adequate
supply to the consuming public, especially
children, of wholesome, sanitary and
chealthful milk and dairy products, and
second, to nurture, encourage and develop
the dairy. industry within the State.
Third
In the North Central portion of the
United States, over the years, there was
developed a great butter and cheese in-
dustry. The milk produced for these in-
_ dustries has never been produced for
consumption as fluid milk. Some of the
states involved had no sanitary laws or
regulations until last year. Others had
very lax Feaninvions, both as to health of
| Evidence==
The letter below is probably re-
ferring to the milk which I have
refused to allow to enter Georgia
-and because of which the suit was
filed against me in Federal Court.
August 24,- ee
Mr. Tom Linder,
Commissioner of Agriculture,
State Capitol,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dear Sir:
congratulate you on the stand that you took
in the Georgia Market Bulletin on the date
of August 16th regarding the milk situation
and the price of the milk products in Geor-
gia. | om in ~complete accord with you in
South | contact quite a few dairymen
and | wish that ail of the commissioners in
you are faking. We here in Alabama are.
being subjected to supposedly grade A milk
that is produced in Mississippi under pine
trees and delivered here at a cost to the
distributors of $4.50 per hundred pounds,
while we are trying to hold up a price that
is in line with yours. You can readily see
why | like the proposal that you made in
the Bulletin. | would like to get about twen-
ty conies of the Bulletin that | have made
mention of so that | could place them in
the hands of some interested narties.
Trusting to hear from you at an early
date, | am,
Yours truly,
Dennis E. Conniff, Jr.-
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
1 would like to take this opportunity to ~
this matter, In traveling throughout the
the South would take the same stand that -
q
the cows giving the milk and as to the
handling of the milk.
The records of the United States De-
partment of Agriculture show that the
prevalence of Tuberculosis in cattle and
Brucellosis in cattle have been very
high due to the laxity and lack of proper
laws.
-As a by-product of butter and cheese
plants, there was a great deal of skim-
med milk with solids, not fats, that were
left over. It became a most profitable
business to take this skimmed milk from
butter and cheese plants and _ con-
dense it or reduce it to powdered milk
and ship it into the states of the South-
east. Here it could be made into butter-.
milk or recombined into whole milk or
used in various and sundry ways. The
farmers who produced that milk in the
Middle-West received pay only for the
butter fat content for that milk, and for
that reason, the skimmed milk comes
free to the processors and can be sold at
cutthroat prices in other states.
As vata above, this milk is produced
without adequate sanitary protection and
is handled without such protection, and
in many cases, is produced from cows
infected with Tuberculosis and Brucel-
losis.
The big interstate distributors have,
in the past, purchased these slops and
used them to make milk and other dairy
products and to create an artificial sur-
plus of milk so as to force the local pro-
ducers of milk to sell their good whole-
some home-produced milk to the plants
at surplus prices.
The producers in Georgia, and some
other states, are forced, by law, to pro-
duce milk from herds that are regularly
tested for Tuberculosis and Brucellosis,
and. to provide themselves with suitable
-dairy barns, costing lots of money, and to
provide suitable facilities, including hot
and cold water, etc., all of which cost lots
of money, and which makes it impossible
for them to produce wholesome Grade A
milk in competition with these cheap by-
products of Northern processors of but-
ter and cheese plants.
It follows, therefore, as a matter of
common sense, that milk, which is re-
combined from these unwholesome pro-
ducts or whole milk to which these pro-
ducts have been added, cannot be Grade
A milk in the sense intended by the
Law Makers to protect men, women and
children of the State.
So far as the case of Mr. Darlington
is concerned, the facts are as follows:
Fourth
Mr. Darlington is simply a milk ped-
dler with no source of supply of his
own whatever. He simply backed his
truck up to a plant in Jacksonville and
bought a load of milk which he hauled
across the State line in violation of law
and peddled it out in Georgia in utter
disregard of the laws on the books.
In the very nature of things, there
was no possible way for Mr. Darlington
to know what kind of milk he was buy-
ing and selling.
Only those men who operate all the
details of the Southern Dairies could pos-
sibly know the nature of the milk being
sold. It might be wholesome milk from
local dairies properly inspected. It might
(Continued on Page Four)
aye ee. pe pee
GEOR
YEAU OF MARKETS.
GIA MARKET BULLETIN:
Address all ttemsvtor publication and all requests to be put
n the mailing list amd for change of address to STATE BU
222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
: | AsSoctat{on
I
fe
and repeated on!v
of notice
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admtissable
ander postage regulations inserted one time on each request
when reauest is accompanied by new copy
Limited space will not permit insertion of notices contain-
ing more than 35 to 40 words, not including name and address
Under Legislative Act the
Bulletin ron for any
notices
Tom Lindr, Commissioner
Published Weekly at
114-122 Pace St.,
not assume anv responsibility for any notice eenearing in the
transaction rest ss
Covington Ga.
Seorgia Market Bulletin does
ram published
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau
Markets, 222 State Capitol
Atlanta, Ga.
By Department of Agriculture
5%
{ntered as
August |. 1937
of June 6.
of October 8, 1917
Executive Office, utate
second class matter
1t the Post Office
at Covington. Georgia, under Act
1900. Accepted for
mailingat special rate of postage
orovided for in Section 1103. 4c1
apito!
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga
Publication Office
114-122 Pace St..
Editoria] and Executive Offices
Covington, Ga
7
PLANTS FOR SALE
PLANTS FOR SALE
Wakefield and Flat Dutch
cabbage, Collard, Marglobe,
Stone, Rutger tomato, 35c C;
400, $1.10; $1.9 M: targe lots
cheaper; Sweet pepper, 25c C;
$1.50 M. Lee Crow, Gainesville,
Rt; 2.
Fall Heading cabbage and
collard plants, 50(, $1.00: $1.75
M; strawberry, 200, $1.50; 500,
$300; $5. M. W. H. Branan,
Gordon.
Nice, well rooted Mastocaon
and Klondike strawby plants,
59c ; 500, $250; $5. M. Add
postage. Prompt shipment. Mrs.
Guy Chambers. Gainesville, Rt.
ae
Chas. W., .and Flat on
cabbage, Stone tomato, also
Collard plants, ready, 300, $1.;
500, $1.50; $2.50 M. del.; $2. M.
Exo. Col. Marcus Williams,
Gainesville, Bitse
Strawberry plants, 70c C;
~ 500. $3.00: $5. M; Klondike, 60c
C; 500, $2.75; .$4:75. M;. Scup-
pernong vine cuttings, /
doz.; Catnip, 25 bunch. Add
postage. Mrs. Lee Hood, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 1,
Strawberry plants, Mastodon,
70c..C- 500, $3.00; $5. M; Klon-
dike, 60c C; 500, $2.00; $4. M.
Mrs A. D. Jones, Cumming, Rt.
<
a
Early and Late Strawberry
plants, 50c C; also red nest on-
jons, $1. gal. PP in Ga. Mrs.
C. WrDeane, War2sboro, P.
. Box 82.
Marglobe tomato plants, 250
OraS2-MissCash or WM OL Jay
Reed, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
Strawberry plants: Wonder-
bearer, Gibsons Red _ Gold,
Early Jewel, 75c C; everbear-
ing, $1. C; white Iceherg Black-
berry, red Raspberry, _horse-
radith, rooted Sage, 6 for 50c;
gZarlic, 25c; Peppermint, 40c.
Add postage. Mrs. Willis Grin-
dle, Dchlonega, Rt. 1.
Blakemore strawberry plants,
young, $5. M; 65c C; 500, $3.00.
Prompt shipment. Damp pack-
ed. M. O. only. Add postage.
as G. H. Smith, Gainesville,
fle
Marglobe and Rutger tomato,
from cert. seed, 60c C; 200,
MAO. 200, $2507 500; 2$2.-255
$3.56 M. 8 in. plants. By parcel
post: Hot and Belle pepper,
eggplant plants, 25 doz.; cab-
bege. collard, 300, $1.00. Mor-
ris Sanders, Vidalia.
Big juicy strawberry, 200
plants, $1. Satisfaction. R. W.
Eaves, Grayson.
Collard plants now ready,
30c C. $2. M. FOB. G. E, Wal-
@xin Gainesville, Rt. 1.
4 50c |
sired. Good, tough plants,
Coastal Bermuda stolans,
loaded on your truck at my
farm, 10 M., $10.00; 50 M., $45.;
100 M., $80. By Exp. not pre-
paid, $1.50 M. D. Jj. Harrison,
Blackshear.
Sage and catnip plants, $f
doz.; also 12 Dipper yourds,
$1.60. PP. L. J. Ellis, Cumming.
Sage plants, 14, $1.00; 6, 50c.
Good rots, damp packed, past-
paid. Miss Lillian Hardin,
White, Rt. 1.
Early large Klondike straw-
berry plants, 50c C; also early
green long pod okra seed, 25c
large teacunful. Add postage.
ae 100 lb. can. print sacks,
good/ cond. Rosie Crowe,- Cum-
mung, Rt 1.
Strawberry: Tuer beaines $1.
C; Mastodon, 70c C; $5. M;
large Klondike, 60c Cc; $4, M.
Well rooted, large plants, all
improved. Mrs. Guy Crowe,
Cumming, Rt. 1.
Large berry, early Klondike
strawherry plants, moss pack-
ed, 50c C. Add postage. Mrs.
Gilbert Evans, Gainesville, Rt.
5
Rutger and Stone tomato,
Ruby King pepper, 500, $1.00;
$1.40 M. del.; 5M. up, $1. M.
Exp, ~Col.; Ga. Collard and
Wakefield cabbage, 300, $1.00;
$1.80 M. del. 5 M. up, $1.50 M.
Exp. Col. C. W. Smith, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 2.
Rutgers tomaio, Dutch cab-
bage, and Ga. collards, 400,
$1.25; $2.20 M; at field, $1.50 M.
Robert C. Smith, Gainesville.
Hts
Marglobe,/ Stone, Baltimore
tomato, Ga. and All Green Col-
lard, lar ge. C. W:, All: Variety
and Late Flat Dutch cabbage,
open field \grown, 300, $1.00;
500, $1.50; $2.20 M. Del. Good
plants, prompt shipment. L. M.
Garrett, Gainesville, Rt. 4.
Late Flat Dutch, All Head,
Early aud large C.!W,. cabbage,
Heading Collards, Marglobe,
New Stone and Gr. Baltimore
tomato, 400, $1.25; 600, $1.65,
$2. M. Del. and will inix as de-
all
sizes, A. C. Garrett, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 4. j
Late Flat Dutch cabbage
plants, 200, 40c; 300, 55e. Add
postage. Mrs. Henry. Eller, Elli-
jay, Rt. 3.
Cabbage plants, $2. M; Col-
lard plants, $1.75 M. Roy Grin-
dle, Dahlonega, Rt. 1. .
Klondike, Lady T., Blake-
more and Everbearing straw-
berry plants, 75c C; $7. M; Mtn.
Huckleberry plants, 2 doz., 75c.
Add postage. Mrs. John How-
ard, Cleveland, Rt. 1,
- PLANTS FOR SALE
Ce eee
Mastodon strawberry plants,
75c C; 300, $2.00; 500, $3.50.
Good count, prompt shipment.
No chks. Mrs. T. N. Jarrard,
yainesville, Rt. 7.
Late Flat. Dutch and Copen-
hagen cabbage plants, $1.60
M; 300, 55c; 500 for 80c. Add
postage. Mrs. Doyle Eller, Elli-
jay, Rt. 3.
Mastodon strawberry plants,
75c C; 300, $2.00; 500, $3.50 PP.
ae mpt shipment. No chks.
_ Annie Strickland, Gai sines-
Vv eA a Row
Mastodon strawberry plants,
5c C; 300, $2.00; 500, $3.50 PP.
Prompt shipment. No chks.
Mrs. Fannie Strickland, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 7.
Ga. collard plants, 300, $f.00;
$2. M; Klondike strawberry,
75c C; $250 M; nice Leaf Sage,
good dry, 25c large cupful;
Tansy, 15 doz. Mrs. pgm Lo-
gan, AustelLRt. 2. |
Sage plants, 2c ea.; hoar-
hound and catnip, 20c bunch;
crabapple trees and muscadine
grapevines, 6 for $1,00; Ever-
bearing strawberry plants, $1.
C. Add postage. Mrs. Mae Tur-
ner, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
SEED FOR SALE
50 lbs. Ga. collard seed, new
crop, 13 per ounce, or $1.00
tb. plus postage. 'S! J.. Foss,
Brooklet, Rt. 1.
Tender white Half Runner
bean seed, 40c teacuptul; white |
Bunch butterbeans, 25c teacup-
ful. Add pestage. -Mrs. Theo
Hughes, Gainesville, Rt. 5.
White mush fea seed, this
yrs crop, 35c Ib. in 10 Ib. Tot,
and add postage: Hand picked.
Mrs. W. B. Hester, Blakely.
White multiplying onions, $1.
gal., plus postage. Mrs. J. B.
Atkinson, Lawrenceville, Rt. 2,
Box 18.
Bur clover seed, in the bur or
hull, Write for prices. Mrs. A.
B. Prickett, Maysville.
1950 crop Thornton str. re-
seeding Crimson clover sed,
99 percent pure, ger., 89 per=
cent, no turnips nor mustard,
in 50 Ib. bags. 50 Ib. Mark T.
Warren, Dewey Rose.
Tender Speckled and White
Half Runner garden beans, ea.
kind, 50c teacupful; white nest
onions, $1.25 gal. scallion but-
tons, same price. Add postage.
Miss Genia Brown, Ball
Ground, Rt. 1,
Nice white onions, grow in
large clusters, $1.00 gal. Add
postage. Mrs. S. A. Browning,
Ailey. Rt. a
Blue Lupine seed from lupine
grown successfully for 6 yrs.
above Fall Line, tested for ger
and purity, $5.00 per hundred
Ibs. Norman Johnson, War-
renton.
Old fashioned yellow bloom
and a few purple bloom Striped
Half Runner bean seed, ea., kind,
large cupful, 50c PP. This yr.
seed, weevil-free. No stamps
nor chks. Mrs, H. N. Samples,
Flowery Branch Rt. 1.
Collard seed, 50c lb.; improved i
Mush peas, large cupful, 25c.
Add-~15c postage. Mary Shrum,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 1., Box 109.
Striped Speckled or White
Half Runners, 50c per measur-
ing cup; Yard long beans, 25
seed, 15c. All treated for weevils
Eng. peas, 25c cup; Sage, 2&c
cup; white multiplying onions,
$1.25 gal, PP. Stamps OK. A.
S. King, Lawrenceville, Rt. 3.
Old fashioned, multiplying
beer seed, fresh, big start, 25c
and 3c postage. Mrs, Ella Green,
Smyrna.
Home grown Ky. 31 Fescue,
recleaned, ger., 88 perct., 75c
lb. Can ship. B. R, Woodlifs,
Alpharetta. Rt. 1, phone 3861.
Fresh Calif., multiplying beer
seed, 20c start, or 12 for $1.00
postpaid. Mrs, Earl Fincher,
Waco. Rt. 1.
Champion green glazed Col-
lard seed, 4 tbls., $1.00; 8 for
$2.00 PP. Make offer on lot of
12 lbs. Mrs, T. T. Holloway,
Cobbtown,
&
Crimson Clover, Volunteer |
var., pure seed, 99.20; weed
seed none, Ger. 88, date tested
July 15th. No sales less 1,000-
lbs. Can del, by truck, $55. per
hundred tbs. No Mail. or COD
orders. M. W. Gunn, Zebulon,
RFD LL s
Ky. 31 Fescue seed, free of
Rye grass, recleaned, 50 lb.
bag, 50e Ib... A. B. Smith;
Gainesville, 429 Academy St.
Dixie reseeding Clover seed, |
cleaned, grown on farm here,
69c lb. in large lot, at tarm.
Marvin Maddox, Winder Rt. 4
GRAIN AND HAY |
* FOR SALE
Winter grazing Oats and Rye-
grass mixture, about 50-50. tine
for grazing, 4c lb. here. Jas. B.
Woods, Brooks. phone Seno.a
208-J
4,000 bu. Wickor Oats, 90c bu.
at my. barn. . Le .Vickery
Dewy Rose (near Nuberg)
Turners Bancroft seed oats,
.recleaned, graded. High ger. and
purity. 1 to 25 bu., $150 bt,
50 to 100 bu, $1.45 bu. 100 bu.
up, $1.40. bu. Sacked in 4 bu.
bags. L. M. Turner, Royston.
3 M. lbs., Rye grass, 12 3
1500 lbs., rye grass Alta Fesu
mixed, 40c b.; 1500. Ibs.,
str., Reseeding Crimson "clover,
50c ib. 800 lbs. Serecia lespedeza |.
25c Ib; 200 bu., Bancroft and
300 ba, Victor grain oats, $1.25
bu. Recleaned, ee. oT: ay,
Commerce. aes j
101% tons Biue Lapine very
good ger. 5c lb., for lot; sev.
hundred Bu. Victor grain oats,
$1.25 bu. At my place. Davd
Simpson, Cochran. .
Woods Fulgrain Qats, $1.25
bat. FOB? farnit 2D: Cash,
Flowery Branch.
JGood seed Oats, Texas Rust-
proof 14, recleaned; will treat
if desired. Milton Minchew, Jv.
Macon, Rt. 3.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE. ~
APPLES:
Eating, cooking and canning
apples, 1 bushel or truck load.
Special price for truckers at
orchard. John ais Miller, Cor-
nelia. :
Appies for truckers, $1. bu.
and up at packing house at or-
chard. C. M. Miller, Cornelia.
Dried Horse- apples, 1950
crop, 50c Jb. Mrs, J. E. Petty-
john, Summerville, Rt. 4. -
Dried apples, 75c Jb. Mrs.
Fred Franks, Hiawassee
BUTTER: 2
8 lbs. nice fresh Butter ship-
ped weekly. Price sent by re-|
quest. All letters answ red
promptly. Mrs. R. R. Marlow,
Franklin, Rt. 2.
BEANS: :
Red and white bunch butter-
beans, also Blue and white, very
prolific Half Runners, all, 49
cupful; strawberry plants, $1. 30
C; and_Sage, 25c cupful. Post-
paid. G. Taylor, Buchanan. Rt.
BEES: ea
Single story, 10 frame B2e
hives, State insp., $6.50 ea, FOR.
Jack Girardeau, Tifton, P. 0.
Box 339. F 7
CORN
About 1 truck load each,
Roasting Ear Green Corn, and
Green Forage (Corn),
place at Memorial Dr. and
Main. Phone-No. 3061. S. W.
Maddox, Stone Mountain. ~
About 25 bu. Corn, $1.40 bu.
and about 10 bu. hog feed corn,
$1.25 bu, At my barn. J. B.
Mosley, Austell.
HONEY:
1950 crop Strained table
honey, 6-5 lb. jars, $6.00, one
60 lb. can, $8.50 FOB. Quality
guar. Prompt shipment. H. L.
Hallman, Nahunta. Box 25. _
Fancy Gallberry and Tupeio
Comb honey, No. 1, table grade, |
12-20 oz. jars per Cs. $4.00; 12-}
2% jars to Cs.. $7.50. FOB. All
labeled. T. H. Flowers, Jesup.
oi
'| Dillard.
at my}
White ~ guin
$1.25 setting. J. N. Ca
Griffin, Rt. Ci,
Mrs. Mary Collins, Gainesvi
Riera Z
Nice, pew, . white
feathers, 60c lb. del. Sat.
Mrs. Mary, Collins, Gain
FIGS;
\ Turkey Figs, 8 qt. bask
full, $1.50 at my home
Little 5 Points. Engage 1
do
Martin and Dipper
25c ea.; Mixed. Sea
Mrs. W. E. Wooten, Camill
HAM: ae
Dixie | ten
|25 doz.; Hot, Green and.
Pepper, 12c- cup; Hot, D
and Parched Red Pepper,
Ib. Add cies Mrs.
SAGE:
Dry Sage, 35 Beats
40c doz. PP. Mrs. ;
Nice, new Beef Tallow,
10 Ibs, 50c lb. or exe. 2 :
for 4 print sacks. Add pos
Advise/first. Mrs. ;
Flowery Branch, Rt~1..
TREES (FRUIT): |
Camphor and Tung Oil T:
6 in. to 2 ft., 50c ea. at pl
Fred H. Emery, Atlanta,
St. Charles Ave. N. E.
- Small Wild Cherry an
phor Trees, and Pa
to plant now, $1.00_
either kind, $5. 60. B
889 Edgewood A
State insp., leading var. J
can trees, Stewarts, or e.
to $3.00 ea. FOB. M
some, Sandersville.
Camphor tree shrubs, 75.
oe 25 ea, Mrs. Viola C. BY
.M2
10 reg., Jersey heifers,
4 small ones, and 1 non-rel
bull ready for light servi
extra. good breeding. W. H. N
Alpharetta-
Exc. Reg., beef type She
Horn bull, 3 pe old, wt. 1
Ibs., $350.00.
5 heifers and. 1 male
mos. old,
Wt. 350-425 bs,
burn. Bits 22 5
Reg. Black Angus
Barbarian of Rosemere, 16
old, about 1 M. Ibs., ver
lines, =e for light serv
$300.00. J . E. hitehead, Oli
3 Jeae: purebred
bulls, marked perfect
ble to reg. Domino
$250.00 and
breeding.
F. W. Reu
spectively.
a Diggs
Reg. Jersey cow, 3 gal
lst calf, Wt. 800 Ib: :
Baxter, No, 509937. Born
Loar T948,. Solid color,
e and switch, $100.
- Marvin Maddox, Win-'
oung Tecsey, excelient
, $145.00. my place, on
old Hereford bull, reg.,
ee and a~ 7 mos.
same stock; oe
sale or trade =
- Hereford bull,. Mork
or. for corn and oats. W.
avle Sie 1, oe. Oraland
everai nice tyne and reg.,
hma bi and heifer calves,
nd some ready to
Frank S. Broad-
Box 44,
- $300. 00. Guarantee no
. Exc. for equal val-
in-use. J, Herbert co
; for sale or trade
livestock, feed or tractor.
d Collins, Cobbtown.
Mare, 1200-1300 Ibs. wt.
vwhere, plow, work to
H. wagon, ride under
d not fast, gentle, easily
trolled, $100.00. Mrs. N. i
aims 20g ;
vr. old mare mulg, with-
blemishes, sleek, No bad
braken to work any-
e. wt. 900 Ibs.,- $75. cash
peace cattle. 1S M. Moon,
iu.
"Martin, eae Rt. gf
Mare mule, 900 lbs.,
: bred White nage Here-
d hogs and pigs. Bargain if
ght in groups consisting of
2 bred gilts and 6 pigs,
ks, Id. J
v ., Marietta,
jar Meade Farm.
) pigs, Soe Mast-
ce stock, med. blocky
igs, either sex, $25.00 ea.
. re Sanders-
aire yi
ype pigs, 6-7 wks. old,
as
ys: slocky built 8 yr. old, |.
buck from.
extra choice maie,
a 125 Ibs., $50.00; bred |
$
my place, or ship for ees" 00 Reg,
buyers name. I do not pay
shipping chgs. Clemon B. W'l-
bur, Acworth. Rt
Reg. big bone Ghanea- OIC
cross, also Big Bone and Essex
cross, 6 wks. old pigs, $10.00 ea.
*|my place, or $11.00 ea. if shipped.
Rever Wade, Alto, Rt. 1..
ing, stayfat kind, $21.50 ea. O
VP. Sinquefield, Harrison.
3 females
and 1 male, $15. ea. ce farm.
Cant -ship, R..M.
Winder, Rt. 4.
Duroe Jersey male hog, sub.
blood but not reg.
|to reg., ready for service, 1 yr.
old. wt. 120 Ibs., $50.. George
Raffield, Dublin Rt. 5, Box
L783 see
-OIC blocky type nee 7 far-
rowed July 5th, 9 farrowed
July 11th, and 10. on August
ard., $10. ea. at 8 wks. old, my
place. Wont ship. Mrs. S. A.
Sage Palmetto, Rt. 1. (Rico
Rd) ao
Purebred big eae Bike
Gaines School Rd.
Full blood stock Duroe male.
2 vrs. 6 mos. old. Reg., $75.00.
eee Copeland, Sates Rt.
+ <Box613
2 reg., Berkshire male pigs,
s.,| about 80 lbs,, ea, for sale. Dav-
mT; Jennings, ee 1
O. Box 84.
RABBITS AND/CAVIES
\2( FOR SALE*
1 giant Chinchila buck, 1 yr.
old, fine breeder, $5.00;
10 wks. old, rabbits, $2: ea. J.
O. Adams, Ty Ty. es
1 pr. White Angora FapBute.
pure stock, $5. or exc. Raleigh
Pruitt, Lavonia, ARE: <2.
Ped. Eng. Angora wool rab-
bits from reg. stock, all ages,
bred does, $5. ea. doe and
aes $8.00; juniors, $5. pr.;
Best bloodlines. Ped. papers
furnished, shipped RR Exp:
Col. Letters ans. John C. Fields,
Griffin 1018 W. Poplar St.,
Phone 3682.
old Coal trio,
seperate litter, bed.
papers furnished. Ship Rk Exp.
2 mos.
2 Grabbits. 5 N. 2. Week WKS:
| ota, 4 black and white Dutch,
7 wks. old. $1.50 ea. Perry Holt,
East Point, CA 6359.
1 ped. Sandy Flemish buck,
6-1/2 mos. old, $5. or exc. for
-|heavy Chin buek, ped.. good
stock and about same age. R.
Lamar Brantley, Wrightsville,
ate 2: :
Trio English Angora rabbits,
prize winning stock, $10.00. Mis.
Helen Mullinax, Quitman, Rt.
4, Box 66.
Full N. Z. W. Yr. old doe
with 5 young 6 wks. old, $6:00
for lot; also 2 full blooded
Heavy Weight Chinchilla does,
i| Grady Panter, Dial.
Ready for immediate FOB
shipment, 15 bucks, healthy, well
dev., Ped. furnished: 2 Hwt.
Chins and 1 N. Z. W., 7 mos.
old, 4 Hwt. Chin, 4 mos., 5
a] N, Z. W., 4% mos. 1 Checkered
Giant and 2 Black and 2 Black
Giant, or 2 pr. Black Giants, 12
wks. Spencer Strange, Hartwell,
602 Savannah St.
3 ped. Hwt. Chinchillas, 5
-twt. Chinchilla does, ready to
does, sev. young cross- breeds.
Must sell at once. E. L. Lester,
| Fort Vahey.
_ 1 ea, N. 4 Red doe, mated,
and buck reasonable price, at
my h-me. Mrs. Edna C. Pettit,
Decatur, Rt. 1, (Tilson Rd) DE
7588,
Genuine Cal-Cross Hybrid
rabbits from best producing does
-| Juniors, $4.00 ea.; Seniors, ready
to mate, $8.00 ea. Shipped COD
anywhere. Mrs, Jack Sanders,
Macon, 131 First St.
Full stock little bone Black
a African Guinea pigs for breed-
Big Bone Guinea pigs, full
Maddox. |
boar, 11 mos. old. reg., buyers
name, $55. my place. Won't:
ship, Jack Tappan, Athens, |
some
OD. John L. Parrott, Macon, |
2366 Miller Field Rd., Rt. 6.
6 mos. old, $6.00 or $3.50 ea.
breed, 2 N. Z. White senior.
FOR SALE.
eS
Buck, 3 does, 8 wks. old, gray
white Checkered giants, $12:00,;
2 black-white Checkered does,
large, Yr, old, $6.00 ea.; 3 pr.
giant gray Chinchillas, 8 wks,
old, with ped. papers, $10.00 pr,
M. QO. Exp. paid in Ga. Norton
co ets 506 Madison
ve,
iN. Z Whites exclusively. Ped
and reg. stock. Good bone and
type, large litters and heavy
ers. All ages for sale. Sat.
guar, Walker E. Smith, Atlanta,
2684 Collier Dr. N. W., (Rt. 8)
RA 9990. :
SHEFP AND GOATS
FOR SALE
buck, T-7923, gentle and natur-
ally hornless, born Mareh 1J,
1947, $25.00 crated, FOB. S. P.
Tapley, Yoodbine.
2 fresh, reg. Tog. milk goats,
I grade Nubian, will freshen in
November, sev. grade Saanazs
and Toggenburgs, freshen in
December, make fine winter
milkers. See to appreciate. H.
A. Stahl, Moultrie, 410 Hiil-
crest, -
2s ie white Saanans, 1 and
2 gal. milk daily when fresh,
also 2 stock goats, ready for
light service, 1 bill kid. All reg.
Sell. reasonable. Mrs. D. *.
Peters, Douglasville. Rt, 2.
LIVESTOCK WANTED
x
CATTLE:
Want party to furnish Cattle
and Hogs and Feed, and let me
raise them on Halves, on my
farm, 4 mi, No. Axson. Write
if interested. Tom Spivey, Ax-
son, Rt. 1.
Exe. good 1 H. wagon, with
a mule hitched, for a broke
steer, wt. 500 to 1200 lbs. Give
or take difference. J. F. Well-
born, Rock Springs.
~ Want good, clean, heavy mil-
ing springers or cows
young calves, Bangs and T. B.
tested, no culls; David T. Jenn-
ings, Americus, P. O. Box 84.
Want big Springing heifers,
near by. State price and exact
location. E. E. James, Tucker.
Rt. Ak
owe 100 head of Reg., Red
Poll cattle. Advise fully, John
W.-Giddens, Swainsboro.
Want unlimited quantity pro-
ducing milch cows or heavy
springers. Write giving quanti-
ty and location. All letters ans.
Lester Heath, Carrollton. Rt. 4,
Care Bearcreek Ranch.
HOGS:
Want reg. straight-nose Berk-
shire gilts, State what you have
and price. J. L. Ellison, Hamp-
ton. Rt. 2.
HORSES AND MULES:
Want good, gentle, mare mule,
not too old, wt. 1,000 to 1,100
Ibs., good worker and reason-
ably priced, not too far away.
E. W. Morris, Winston. Rt | lL
POULTRY FOR SALE
ANDALUSIANS:
Rooster and 3 hens, Blue An-
dalusians, 1950 hatch, $7.59;
2 Wild Mallard drakes, 1950
hatch. $1.00 ea, Frank Gina.
Atlanta, 1287 Meropo}itan Ave.
SE. WA 1116.
BANTAMS:
Golden Sebright bantams, 10
hens and 8 roosters, 12 and 14
wks. old, full blood, $1.00 ea.
or exc. for 2 nannie and 1 buck
goat, 6 mos. to 1 yr. old Bring
goats and get chickens. J. S.
37.
9 purebred Polish Crested
bantams, $10.00 or exc. for same
amount heavy breed pullets. A.
H, Bohannon, . Atlanta, 513
Seminole Ave. N. E., WA 7423.
Bantams, 4 pr. White Wyan-
dotte, $4.00 pr.; 3 pr. Dark Corn-
ish, $5.00 pr. Blue Ribbon Win-
ners at Show last July. I. H.
Moore, - phegemee eer
Street.
oom
with | 1
ship. John C. Fields,
Querry, Statesboro, Rt. 2, Box
BARRED AND OTHER ROCKS:
16 White Rock pullets and 2
ecockerels, 10 mos. old, $2.00 ea.
at farm. Mrs. Ethel McGinnis,
Lawrenceville. Rt. 1.
CORNISH, GAMES AND
GIANTS:
Purebred White Laced Red
Cornish, March hatch, direct
from breeder, $7.50 trio. J. C.
Herron, Martin. Rt. 1.
2 nice pit game hens for
sale or exc. for a 2 yr. old pure
Cuban game cock. C. L. Grif-
fin, Gainesville. 712 Oak St.
Pure Dark Cornish April and |_
May hateh cockerels, for saic.
H. W. Thurmond, Farmington.
April hatch Cuban Bite
J | games, 2 pullets and stag, $5.60;
1 purebred, reg., Toggenburg
stags, large enough to crow,
$2.00 ea. Ship in light crate
COD here. S. O. Huff, Monticel-
lo, Rt. 3.
15 purebred Dark Cornisn 1
yr. old hens, some laying, and
1 cockerel, $30.00 or $2.00 ea.
-for hens and $3.50 for cockevel.
Ns COD. J. O. Harrell, Glena-
ville. Rt. 2.
HAMBUGS:
5 Hamburg hens and rooster,
$7.50 for the 6. H: C; Walraven,
Dallas.\RFD 1..
LEGHORNS:
8 Black Leghorf hens and
cockerel, about 1 yr. old, $12.20
here. Money Order. J. F. Me-
Neal, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
1,000 choice White Leghorn
pullets, Colonials best grade,
15 wks. old Must be picked up
at my farm. C. H. Jordan, Lula.
MINORCAS:
Direct Pape sir., Black Min-
orcas, 7 pullets and 1 cockerel,
April 26th hatch, $25.00. Mrs.
tT. LL. Wallace, Atlanta, 469
Metropolitan PL S. E_
PEAFOWLS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC. FOR
SALE
Common pigeons, all colors,
fast breeders, 3 pr. $2.00. M. 9.
Curtis Branch, Jr., Enigma. Pt.
Peafowl, pheasants, quail and
Bronze turkeys. See these at
my farm. All this yrs hatch.
Mrs. Helen Street, Atlanta, Rt.
2. phone CH i777.
10 White King pigeons, bred
from Rices stock, some mated,
$20.00 or $2.25 ea.; also 1 ea.
Brown Leghorn and White Leg-
horn. direct from Carters, March
1950 hatch, $2.00 ea. FOB.
Ronald Dunn, Chauncey. Rt. 1.
1 pr. big size pigeons, White
and Silver Kings crossed; good
squab producers, $4.00. Grady
Panter, Dial
2 blue peafowl hens, 1349
hatch, $25. or $15. ea. FOB. C.
H, Crumbley, Greensboro,
Quail, 3-12 wks, old, ready
for stocking, $6. pr. B. L. Wal-
ters, Fitzgerald, Box 44.
REDS (N. H., R. L, AND
| OTHERS):
Best AAA N, H. pullets, bred
to lay, Feb. 15th hatch, started
laying last of July, Pollorum
treated and culled by Co. Agt.
$2.25 ea. M. O. Shipped in light
erate. Mrs. R C. Sanders,, Vien-
na.
10-15 fine purebred N. H. hens,
1 yr. old, now laying. $2.00 ea.;
All FOB. Mrs. B. H. Osborn,
Roy.
25 N. H. Red 6 mos. old pul-
lets, $1.50 ea. my place. Will not
Griffin,
1018 Poplar St. phone No. 3682.
N. H. Red hens.-16 mos. ol4,
laying 50 perct. $1.50 ea. Exn.
paid in Ga., on lots of 10 also
White Rocks, same offer. Mrs.
J. B. Collier, Cochran.
10 purebred N. H. pullets, 6
mos, old, $1.50 ea. Clarence
Burns, Jr., Cochran. Rt. 4.
500 pullets, 4 and 5 wks. old,
R. I. Reds, ?armenter str., Lez-
horns, Hanson and Babcock str.
Very fine, J. E. Humes, Colurn-
bus.
500 best grade Christy N. H.
Red pullets, 17 wks. old, $1.50
ea, No culls. 1 mi. No. Alpharet-
ta Lamar Woodliff Alpharet-
-| dleaged
TURKEY, GUINEAS, GEESE,
7 White and Biue geese
large type, $2.00 ea.; 41 White
Pekin ducks and drakes, $1.00
ea. Can not ship, Lucille Wilson,
Murrayville. Rt. 1.
1 Green. Heeded drake, $2.00
or exe, for 1 pr. Fantail pigeons
at $1.50 and difference. Raleigh
Pruitt, Lavonia. Rt. 2. :
genuine Chaumie-
re foundation siocx turkeys,
$25.00 pr.;\also few extra hens,
70e Ib. D. J. Higginbothiam,
Savannah, Rt. 6. (Skidaway
Rd.) :
Several pr.
POULTRY WANTED
ANCONAS:
Want a purebred Ancona ig
| cockerel, reascnably priced. E. i
R. Daniel, Thomaston. Rt. 4.
AUSTRIA AND WHITES:
Want about 75 N. H. or
Austria-Whites, 3 or 4 A pullets,
6-7 nos. old, healthy, no culls.
Write best price, .what you
have and _ location. Cressa
L. Stone, Calhoun, Rt. 2.
BRAHMAS:
Want 25 young pullets of the
pure Brahma breed; kind that
grow feathers on the feet. Write,
Mrs. Chas. A. Dean, Summer-
ville. Rt. 4.
REDS:
Want 20 or 30 N. H. pulleis,
Feb. or Mch. haich,-4-A or 3-A
grade, within. 20-30 mites.
Advise. Mrs. J. E. Stone, Adairs-
ville Rt. 2. : a
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, GEESE
Want some Muscogee ducks, ,
turkeys and peafowls. R, i.
Branch, Jr., Bishop.
Want 1 pr. White Emden ge-
ese. Advise. _Thomas Gs Wyliy,
Tennille.
Want some
wlineas. Quote prices,
Elam, Albany.
Want 5 hens and rooster,
white Guineas, 6 mos. or lyr.
old. Advise best price. Mrs. my
T. Long, Lavonia. :
white African
CAB
FARM HELP WANTED :
Want col. man, middleaged,
with family to do traetor work
and general farming. Work for
salary or patches and part sal-
ary, also interested in hogs. 5
R. house, lights, water-spicket
in yard. If interested in life-
time job write. J. L. Giddens,
Cordele, Rt. 1. Phone No. 631-
R2.
Want man
share _
middleaged col.
with small family. to
crop 75 acres with mulesy
Geod 6 R. house and water,
near bus line. Write. C. Harris
Bateman, Byron.
Want reliable couple to live
in home with owner on farm,
Jocated near Villa Rica. Must
have own livestock and farm
implements. Smal salary. Cone
tact. Mrs. Henry McLarty, Ate
lanta, 2230 Peschtree Ra.. N
E., HE 0371. ;
Want. farm family to help
gather cotton crop 1950 and
make 1951 crov: man that can
handle Fermall BM, 3 disc plow.
Have 2 crops. Fair cotton al-
lotment. Standing rent or part
ercp. Must be -good workers.
Come look it over. H. W.
Jones, Commerce, Rt. 5.
mid-
light
year
Fair-
Want man and wife or
woman to do
farm chores on _ farm,
around job. E. F. Clanton,
burn, Rt. 1.
Want ambitious
work on halves. Raise cattle,
%2s and chiexens. I furnish ~
capital, farming ols, > ete.
House with electrici on mail
and school Rt. Dont answer
unless honest, settled, thrifty
and willing to work Siate full
details. Bartlett Baynes, Su-
wanee, Rt. 1.
couple for
Want elderly col. woman, in
good health, na bad habits for
light farm chores on small
farm. Mrs. R. W. Murray, Sr.,
Savannah, Rt. 5, Box 168.
Want capable and sober trac-
tor operator and maintenance
raan. E. C. Phillips, Columbus,
P. O. Box 588.
PAGE FOUR | ce
MIL
(Continued from Page One)
be milk that was recombined from pro-
ducts shipped in from Wisconsin, Min-
nesota, Missouri, New York or any other
place. If so, even the orperators of the
plant would have no knowledge of the
kind of milk they were making. It might
be wholesome locally produced milk to
which had been added some of these
powders or condensed skimmed products.
It might be local milk mixed with other
milk that had been shipped on truck or
rail from anywhere. There is no limit to
the possibilities that might be involved
in this milk, and the State of Georgia
has no way of knowing about this milk
being put out in Jacksonville by the
Southern Dairies Plant.
_ If the Commissioner of Agriculture,
of Georgia, had gone to Jacksonville and
undertaken to investigate the operations
of a milk plant in Florida, certainly the
owners and operators of that plant would
have been within their legal rights to
refuse to submit to such investigation by
the Commissioner of a different State.
Not only that, but for the officials of one
State to undertake to inspect businesses
in another State without an invitation to
do so, would create endless confusion and
would constitute a trespass on private
property.
Fifth ;
The State of Florida has-no good milk
to spare. Florida, needs a wholesome sup-
ply of Florida milk. I know this is true
for the reason that when milk being
sold in Georgia, in violation of these laws,
out of Tallahassee, was stopped by the
Commissioner of Agriculture, that some
Florida officials came to Atlanta and
FARM HELP WANTED
FARM HELP WANTED
went before the Milk Guat Board seek-
ing permission to ship milk into Georgia.
In the hearing before the Milk Control
' Board, the facts were developed that
the milk supply in Florida was so short
that Florida Milk Inspectors were travel-_
ing through Minnesota, Wisconsin and
other states seeking a supply of milk to
ship into Florida. They were creating
a supply of the kind of milk that they
have out there, in Florida, and then
wanting to ship it into Georgia.
At that meeting before the Milk Con-
trol Board, I stated to the Florida Offi-
cials that if Florida was producing a
surplus of wholesome Grade A milk
beyond its own needs, then that would
be time enough to take up with the State
of Georgia the question of shipping some
of that milk into Georgia, and that so long
as Florida people were having to drink.
a large percentage of their milk from by-
products of plants using unsanitary milk,
that Florida needed every gallon of milk
it could produce. There would be no pos-
sible benefit to the people of Florida. by
the shipment of milk across the State
line, the ony possible beneficiary: would
be the: interstate distributors of milk
products. The people of both Florida and.
Georgia would suffer because of the
practice.
Sixth
The very fundamental purpose se all
milk laws is to protect the health of the
people. The discoloring of milk found
to be sold in violation of the law, is the
lightest possible penalty. Certainly such
milk should never be used by the State
for institutions of any kind, or for chari-
table purposes or for distribution to the
poor, because if the milk is not known
to be sanitary and suitable for sale for
those able to buy it, it would be a trav- ~
POSITIONS WANTED
_ PROTECT THE HEALTH or ol
s
POSITIONS WANTED -
the case to pre}
one who openly and wantonly
and disregards the laws of |
table purposes na run
ing diseases to those i beeau
their See are the most
teptible to suc
the Legislature provided fog
qclpration. = suck walle ad that
statements, the .
wis filed against me ix Jeff
Superior Court was heard befo
Thomas on Tuesday, the 22nd of
and was dismissed. Judge Thom
dismissing the Plaintiff
that if he should gr
poste a pu
doing the very things which it is
uty to, do under the. laws of the Ss
| Seventh
people of Florida.
Georgians any way, <
see them have
Certainly every good citizen will
to hold up the hands of any public offi
in carrying out the laws as agains
wie kindest regards, :
TOM LINDER |
Commissioner of Agricult
Want 2 farm families. Good
house with elec., on school] erate farm and
and bus Rt. Close to churches,
5 mi. nice town, Carrollton.
Must be able furnish selve:; to
go into Grain, Cattle, Hogs|neau, Toccoa.
and gen. farming. Write. Lies- Want tober
ter Heath, Carrollton, Rt. 4.
Care Bearcreek Ranch.
Want woman of good char- labor, and
acter and no bad habits, to
Want man with family to op-
start
beef herd, also small truck
crop. Located in Stephens Co.
near Avalon, R, L. Le Tour-
good working
family with one or two capable
of operating tractors for day |
crop. Like
have you move at once. J. C.
share
Want job on farm; can drive
tractor and truck, worked on
farm all life time. Can furnish
as many as 2 hands to work,
sober, willing workers.
small
Care George Redden.
_Nice, white woman wants
light farm work with good, re-
live in home with 3 in family,
and help with light farm
chores on small place. Koom,
board and small salazy. Let-
ters ans Mrs. W. V.. Ussery,
Eastman.
Want hand for gen farm
work, able and willing to work,
milking cows, picking cotton,
pepper ete. Private room and
board. Write or see. Oscar W.
Hayes, Culloden, Rt. 1.
Want man and wife, over 40
white or col., to take care
of garden, yard,- chickens and
maintenance around small farm,
Good house with lights, and
water available. Half mi. city
bus line. State wages wanted.
A. F. Witte, Atlanta, 983 Fern-
eliff Rd. N. E.
Want white woman, about
25, from country, with some
knowledge about looking after
chickens, turkeys, peafowls,
hogs, cows, etc., healthy and
with ret. from last place work-
ed, $37.50 month, room and
board. Mrs. Helen Street, At-
Janta, Rt 2
Want neat, clean, reliable
middleaged woman to live With
family of three on small farm
and do light farm chores.
Write. Mrs. J. S. English, Bos-
ton, Rt. 1.
Want good farmer,
and dependable, for 1,
H. farm. Good land, good
houses, good mules, tractors
and equipment. James J. Pal-
mer, Tennille.
Want woman, not over 40 for
work on small farm, Light
farm chores. Room, board, in
family of 2, small salary start-
ing. Must be healthy, or dont
apply. Clarence H. Camp,
Clarkesville, Rt. 2, Box 28,
reliable
2 or 3
_Johnson,
Cruse, Madison, Rt. 3.
Want single man, under 60
for yr. round light farming
and flower gardening, $15. wk.,
room, board and laundry. No
drifters nor drunkards, Call or
write. F. L. Clark, Columbus,
806 Lamore St. Phone 2-4174.
Want reliable, middleaged
white woman to do light farm
liable people on farm, prefer
with no children. Board and
salary. Easy to get along with.
Mrs, Leona Bloodworth, Grif-
fin, Rt. C. Care W. KE. Cham-
bly.
Want job on Guin,
Lummus, exp., prefcr
within reasonable
Murry,
in Ful-
who
Man, ih time @xp., gen. and
ruck farming, tobacco, cattle,
hogs, poultry, operate and re-|T
pair any kind farm tools, ma-|on_ halves.
-chinery, ete., would like to get| boro, Rt. 4.
: Jesse | Jocated on big farm for. sowing | | care
Redden, Silver Creek, Rt; 1.) Fall: grain, and take over as
- | Overseer for 1951.
rett, Eastman, Rt. 5.
Would like ie contact man
with farm in So. Fulton area,
would be
dairying or raising cattle on
shares. Joe E. Smith, Atlanta,
780 Clemont Dr.,
Want permanent place with.
elderly, good,
Want job on "farm: Honest,
sober, easy to please, upright,
chores, care for poultry, etc.,|ton Co., or farm
$15. week, room and meals;| distance. Also tractor operator,
live in home as one of family.|and as labor foreman; accept
ao Mabel P. Prance, Quit- Caretaker job near Atlanta. Ave,
, Room and reasonable salary.
Want good farmer to op-|hos, Baldwin, Atlanta, 371
erate 2 or 3 H. farm on share
basis for 1951. Good house,
lights, on Mail and Bus Rt. 6
mi. S. E. Fitzgerald. Tobacco,
cotton and peanuts, good pas-
ture. Come see. Dont write.
John B. Pope, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4.
Want elderly Christian, hon-
est, man and wife, healthy, no
bad habits, for light farm work
on farm. Prefer. can drive car
or tractor. Modern living quar-
ters. John D. Anderson, Dal-
ton, Box 323.
Want sober, white farmer to
cultivate 40. acres, standing
rent or 3rds and 4ths.. Good
pasture, 5 R. house, 3. stall
barn. Located 10 mi; So.
Gainesville in Tadmore Dist.
8 A. cotton allotment. Also 5
R. house and patches. H. V.
Gainesville, 559 KE,
Broad St. Phone 1031 J.
POSITIONS WANTED
31 yr. old man wants job on
farm. Wife and 3 sons, 1 large
enough to work. Am exp. in
farming, also in handling trac-
tors and other farm machinery,
Jack Martin, Danburg, Rt. 1.
Pulliam St. S. W.
Want job as
man on farm:10 yrs. exp.,
tractor, truck, other farm
equipment; Raised on farm. 40
yrs. old, 5 in family. Can be-
gin Nov. Ist.
Ref. exch. Wm. J. Bohannen.
Fitzgerald, Rt. 1, Box 234.
50 yr. old man, wife and
grown son, wants job helping
gather cotton crop. Have to
be moved and want good house
at once. Wiley H. Bramblett,
Columbus, Rt. 1, Roper Ave.,
Benning Park, Care Cpr. Robt.
T. Talbert.
Want job at Dairy,
exp., need 5 R. house, elec.,
on Mail and school bus Rt. to
high school, and near church.
Maintenance
Stafe wages and full informa- |},
tion. H. C. Swoftord, Bruns-
wick, Rt. 1, Box 15].
56 yr. old man with 38 yrs.
exp. in Gins, operating and in-
stalling, building, Gin. machin-
ery, etc. Will accept position as
Supervisor of modern: Cinnery,
Murray system preferred. Sal-
ary and. board. Best of ref.
Oren Bowers, Canon, Box ate
Phone 49-M-1,
Permanent job-
exp farming and tractor driv-
ing. Room, board and $15. wk.
James M. Reed, Lawrenceville, |
Rt. .3, Care Jas. E. Forrester.
Want Dairy job, 34 yrs. old,
small family, 10 yrs. exp. Ref.
can be furnished. B. B. Wig-
gins, Se Rt. 1, Box 103.
on farm. Am 59 yrs. old, in
good health, abie to do paint-
ing, look after chickens, stock,
carpentering,
yard work, etc. J. W. Lawrence,
Gellege Park, 203 East Mercer
CA 9008.
i. Ma Gar (
interested in}
or Gin cotton: for
bandle labor. Ji.
N. E., Apt. 1.
reliable family,
tractor on
4 RL house
jeast $20.
patches,
and crop
good | wages.
hee
Moultrie, Friday, ea 15. Write:
8 yrs. | Moultrie.
reiday Sept. 15. pae will be. Sse yo
heifers and 15 bulls, 8 to 18 m
W. Lae aoe